Sunday, September 30, 2012

Overheard

Two funny incidents I need to share...

The first happened a few months ago.  At the time, J's favourite CD was a lullaby one of original songs promoting breastfeeding (a free gift from WIC, you can download it here).  It featured one song that goes, "It's alright, it's okay" multiple times, in multiple verses.
Source: breastmilkcounts.com
So when I overheard him singing "It's alright, it's alright, it's alright" in a somewhat tuneless way, I was about to correct him to include "it's okay".  Then I heard the next line: "She moves in mysterious ways."  It seems that the dozen times he has heard Mysterious Ways by U2 in his life has had an impact - even if it was out of tune!  (I don't get to play 'my' music much any more.  Possibly the first time he heard this song was in utero when we went to see U2 in concert in Vancouver.  His hearing was supposedly developing that week and he sure kicked along with the vibrations.)

The second incident was this week.  A wee while ago I was throwing our recycling in the community bin at a local school when I noticed the library had been culling their big books collection.  Being an educational magpie, I swooped up anything that looked like emergent reader stuff before the rain started and brought it home.  J had a blast (and still is enjoying) turning the giant pages and having me read to him.  He even can 'read' along with me for some bits.


One of his favourites is a book called It Came To Tea by Hope Hucklesby (not to be confused with Judith Kerr's The Tiger Who Came To Tea).  It is about an intimidating stranger coming to door, shyly requesting help with a puncture, and eventually he is invited in for tea, where he turns out to be quite sweet.  The illustrations feature a very shaggy, muppet-ish monster with knobbly knees.

Anyway, I am doing something else when I notice J playing with his motorcycle and toy lion (shaggy mane!), saying something in a deep voice over and over again.
That's when I realise he is quoting the book, using his lion as 'It' and his motorcycle as a prop: "Bike's got a puncture.  Could use a patch or two.  I'm not sure how to fix it -- do you know what to do?"

A good reminder that he soaks up everything he is exposed to, and then it comes back in some form!

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Balloon Festival

Last night we took the boys to the Plano Balloon Festival.

J has liked balloons ever since we read a Clifford book about a hot-air balloon.  (It's a phonics reader, so nothing outstanding in the plot!)


We weren't counting on the traffic hold-ups, so we missed seeing the balloons take off from the launch site, but we could see them as we walked the mile into the festival area.  It was 6pm and still 96*F (35*C)!  That's Texas for you!


There were thousands of people there, and lots of balloons (big and small).

We had our picnic tea and perused the band, while soaking up the atmosphere.  J got a free balloon, which he was very excited about and waved his hand so much that it flew away about 5 minutes after taking this picture!

We tried to stay for the 'glow' show, where the balloons are lit up by the fuel burning in the dark, but the boys got too antsy.  It was just as well we left when we did.  We got caught in the first of the traffic snarls as people left (still more were arriving - in a cooler 86*F/30*C evening) and it could have been MUCH worse.


Next year we'll try to get there a bit earlier.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Pulled Pork and BBQ sauce

Pulled pork sandwiches are pretty popular here, so here are my recipes, cobbled together from multiple ones found online to suit what we had in our pantry.

Slow-Cooker Pulled Pork

5 lb boneless pork shoulder (butt roast)
1 1/2 tsp ground black pepper
1 tsp cayenne pepper
1 tsp dried thyme
1 tsp garlic powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup water

Combine spices and rub on meat.  Put seasoned meat in a 6 qt slow cooker.  Add water.  Cover and cook on LOW 6-8 hours / HIGH 4-5 hours, or until tender.  Remove meat and rest 10-15 minutes.  Pull apart with two forks, slice or chop meat.  Serve with barbecue sauce on soft rolls.

Not-Your-Traditional Barbecue Sauce

(This was heavily adapted from an online recipe - one of the few that didn't include root beer, because I don't like it - but is mangled beyond recognition from its source... mostly because I kept adding stuff!)

4 oz apple sauce (1 baby jar!)
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/3 cup red wine
1/2 - 1 Tbsp hot chilli sauce (start low!)
1/4 cup soy sauce
1/4 cup ketchup
1 tsp dry mustard
2 cloves garlic, crushed
1/2 tsp Vegemite or Marmite
1 Tbsp molasses
1 Tbsp balsamic vinegar

Combine ingredients over low heat.  Simmer for 30 minutes, or until thickened to your liking.  Cool and refrigerate.

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Before and After

At last, C is fiberglass free!  (If you want to see the backstory, see here.)  I promised I'd post pictures of C after his cast came off, and the damage he had inflicted to the cast itself.  So here are the 'before' shots.
 Check out that pristine white cotton padding, and beautiful blue fiberglass webbing!
And here are the 'after' shots, taken just before we headed to the hospital.


Scuff marks and worn-down toe to prove C can move!

It has been funny watching C get used to moving without the cast on again.  He is still crawling as if it is still there (lifting and rotating from his hip) but we're told this is usual for the first wee while.  He sure is loving the ability to bounce with both knees, and to stand with straight legs too.


He is certainly enjoying life.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

What I've Been Watching...

I love our Amazon Prime membership, especially the instant video selection.  Here's what I've been watching lately:

Cake Boss

A family run bakery in New Jersey and the fun (for me!) of watching them construct and decorate elaborate cakes for weddings and other functions.  A long way from my buttercream efforts.  I'm halfway through season 3!

Rubicon

N and I have enjoyed this spy thriller series.  It's a pity it was cut after one season.  The finale was a bit weak after the suspense had built up, but it still left some things unanswered.  Room for a second series for sure.

Life

Another cop show, but with a quirky main character.  Detective Charlie Crews has been interred in prison for the last 12 years.  His conviction was overturned and he has returned to the force, with a new outlook on life.  We're partway through the first series so far, and it's rather compelling.

Inspector Lewis

I love BBC Masterpiece drama, and we've eventually caught up to the current season screening on PBS.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

From my Kitchen...

We ran out of pancake syrup the other day.  I just hadn't got around to getting it, so when I spied a simple recipe in one of my Destitute Gourmet cookbooks, it was sure to be made!  3 ingredients later we have a yummy syrup for less than I can buy it, and it tastes better.  Not to mention, no high fructose corn syrup or other additives in sight.

I didn't have the usual vanilla essence in the cupboard because I've got some heavenly pure vanilla essence from Mexico that we bought on our San Antonio trip.  (Along with the vanilla flavour, there is a delicate aftertaste reminiscent of coconut, despite the only ingredients being alcohol and vanilla beans!  It gives a slightly tropical hit to the syrup.  Mmm.)

Homemade Pancake Syrup

Simmer 1 cup of brown sugar with 1/2 cup of water until the sugar dissolves and stir in 1 teaspoon of vanilla essence.  Simple, eh?  I think you could probably fake maple syrup if you substituted maple flavouring - just like a bought one!

At the moment, my syrup is masquerading in the fridge as molasses because I haven't relabelled the jar. I hope it lasts longer that way. :o)

Alongside pancakes, I've enjoyed a swirl of this syrup in our homemade yoghurt.  (My 'go to' yoghurt flavour is honey and a dash of cinnamon.)

We've had our EasiYo maker in North America for the longest time, but I can't afford the packet mixes here (and I'd have to get them sent from California).  So this option is out.

I don't have a candy thermometer so it makes heating milk to the right temperature a little hard, but I've experimented successfully with adding an active plain yoghurt to warmed milk and then putting that in the EasiYo, but the results were variable and the process messy.

Then I found this recipe to make yoghurt in a slow cooker.  Perfect!  I set the timer and I don't have to worry about getting the right temperature, and it makes a 1/2 gallon (2L)!  I skim a bit of the whey off the top before I scoop it into containers (so it is thicker), and it's done.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

What I've Been Reading

I've had a few books on the go lately and thought I should share.
(All images from www.amazon.com)

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

This was a compelling read.  I've heard great reviews of the movie but wanted to read it first.  It may have been because we are here in the southwest, but I could 'hear' the voices of all the characters so clearly.  I'm glad we live in more enlightened times (comparatively), but I fear there are still echoes of these relationships still sounding.

Canning for a New Generation by Liana Krissoff


A girl after my own heart.  As I've been looking for canning / preserving recipes over the summer I have been restricted by the lack of variety in recipes, and that many of them call for way more produce than I can deal with (i.e. start with 100 lbs tomatoes).  This beautiful book has adventurous recipes (cardamom plum jam, cumin and paprika pickled turnips, etc.) alongside more traditional ones (strawberry preserves, grape jelly, all-purpose tomato sauce, etc.), and uses a variety of preserving methods (fermentation, freezing, water-bath, freeze-drying, overflow).  It also deals with smaller batches, which is ideal for me.  I hope this copy is available in the library next time I find I have a glut of something from our food co-op.  The tomato sauce is really good, by the way!

Agatha Christie and the Eleven Missing Days by Jared Cade


I love reading Agatha Christie mysteries and thrillers.  She is definitely the 'Queen of Crime' for me, so this biography was interesting to read.  I had completely missed the fact she was a 'missing person' for 11 days in 1926.  The book is an account of her life and draws deeply from family sources and Christie's books.  It was a bit sad in places, and given her dislike of any reference to her disappearance, I felt a little guilty to be reading about it in such detail!  It has made me want to go back and re-read some of her mysteries and find some more of her pseudonymous works (under the name Mary Westmacott).

Extra Yarn by Mac Barnett


And something lighthearted to finish with.  Extra Yarn is a picture book with delightful illustrations by the conceptual artist for Coraline, Jon Klassen.  It follows the knitting of Annabelle, whose box of yarn always has some extra.  And it has a little moral for the greedy too. ;o)