Saturday, August 25, 2012

Remodeling outside, cooking/baking, and that sweet little girl

At our house, the big project the last couple of weeks has been the chicken coup -slash- storage shed on the southeast corner of our property. For a long time it was a scary, dark, evil little shed, tucked away in the farthest corner of our property, that I refused to go visit. Now I'm banging around, rolling out chicken wire, arguing with Nate about how best to build a run for the chickens. It's nice to see it repaired and made useful.

One of my brothers is coming over for a few hours next week (I think) to do some work around the house. I plan to have him clean, prime and paint the coup/shed, and to finish the stairs on our front deck. The last few days have been focused on getting the two areas ready for those tasks. I needed to cut some more pieces for the deck and purchase several parts (bolts, screws, etc.). The shed needed significantly more work -- weatherproofing wrap, siding, trim, etc. Despite several long hours yesterday afternoon and most of today, we're still not quite where we need to be. Monday afternoon/evening will also be devoted to getting the last few things ready before my brother comes on Tuesday.

Here are some pictures of the evolution of the shed:







In totally unrelated news: I once again tried out some new recipes this week. For dinner there was pulled pork in the slow cooker on Thursday, which was nearly a disaster except some brilliant suggestions from Nate saved the day. Lasagna "roll ups" yesterday (Friday), which were not as quick and easy as I expected, but were quite tasty. Somewhere in there I tried homemade oreos.... They turned out as yummy little chocolate cookies, not at all like oreos. I'm disappointed but at least it wasn't a failure. I also made some healthy breakfast "cookies" that I really hoped Baby Girl would eat (she didn't) but that, surprisingly, Nate loved and even wanted a second batch. Finally, this morning I made cheese crackers (kinda like cheezit imitations) that also seemed like they were going to be a disaster because the dough wasn't coming together and they weren't getting crunchy when they baked, but with patience and a little extra oven time they turned out nicely. Baby Girl ate a few of them. I'm not totally sure what she thinks... jury's still out for her.

(In the morning I am going to make an apple crumb bread... very excited about this one! I've got fresh apples from my mom and hopefully about 30 minutes of free time.)

Speaking of the baby, she's doing great, glad you asked. She's sassy, mullety, and fat. She's standing quite a bit now -- even trying to do it on her own without help. Wednesday at the "baby sitter's" house she had a tough day, then Thursday she had a great day. Go figure. I enjoyed hauling her around in the Bee, though. It's good exercise and fun.

Ah nuts, I just noticed the time. I better add the pictures and get ready for bed. Hopefully I'll find time to talk about fruit and bike carriers soon!

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Tried my hand at two new treats this week

A couple of weeks ago I went on a Pinterest spree. I found a pinner with tons of dinner and dessert recipes that sounded delicious, and she was linked to lots of other great pinners, so I started repinning everything. Problem with me is that I really do like to bake and cook, and I really wanted to try making the things I pinned! So then I had to actually organize and print the recipes. That's what I've been up to with some of my free time lately! (By the by, if you want some great recipes, check out the "Food I Have to Make" board by https://pinterest.com/sfarmer2).

This week I tried out several new recipes, including two desserts. Here's my recap:

It's zucchini season and I've got an abundance (despite giving them away to neighbors, co-workers, siblings, and parents, and putting them in nearly everything we eat). So first I tried my hand at a chocolate, chocolate chip zucchini bread. The recipe calls them cakes, but I reduced the sugar and I think they are really more like breads. Here's the recipe I started with (which is an adaptation of a Food Network recipe, apparently).

As I was mixing ingredients, I thought to myself, I should replace the sugar with agave. Problem is, agave is a wet ingredient and regular sugar is a dry ingredient. So obviously I need to make some more adaptations. Because I like to take it easy on the sugar, I reduced the recipe to 1 cup of agave. I also only had two eggs in my fridge (original calls for 3). That's fine, since I was trying to re-balance the wet-dry ratios anyway. I also reduced the amount of oil to 1/2 cup (and I used olive oil because I'm weird like that). They came out somewhat dry. Not in a bad way, at least not so that I minded, but I think most people would want a little more moisture. So I'd say go for the full cup of oil. OR you could amp the agave back up to the whole  1+1/2 cup, since the resulting product was more bread-like than cake-like. Finally, I cooked the loaves for 50 minutes, which was a tad too long.

In the end, here's my recipe for...

Chocolate, Chocolate Chip Zucchini Bread with Agave

2 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup cocoa
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt

1 cup agave*
2 eggs*
1/2 cup olive oil*
2 teaspoons vanilla
2 packed cups grated zucchini (don’t peel it)
1 cup chocolate chips

Preheat oven at 350 F. Spray two 9×5 inch bread pans with nonstick spray.

In a bowl, stir together flour, cocoa, baking soda, baking powder and salt. In another bowl, mix the agave, eggs, oil and vanilla. Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients along with the zucchini and chocolate chips. Stir until combined, and divide between the loaf pans. Bake for 45-50 minutes, or until the tops are cracked and springy to the touch. Makes 2 loaves.

*Note: This bread might be a tad dry for some people, so depending on your preference, consider adding one more egg or another 1/2 cup of oil. If you need a sweeter and more moist bread, then add another 1/2 cup of agave.

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My other new dessert recipe this week was a strawberry cream pie. We took it to our friends' house on Friday evening and it was a hit -- a simple, cool dish for this hot weather.

The recipe I used called for a graham cracker crust and instructs you to make a huge batch of the creamy filling. The lady must have one freaking hue pie dish -- she doubled the whipped cream and cream cheese from the original recipe! You also have to slice up a carton of strawberries. In the end, it wasn't hard work, but it did take about an hour to assemble. It was the only thing I was able to accomplish during naptime on Friday.

Now that I've been through the recipe and tasted the resulting pie, I recommend some adaptations for the adaptation. I'm not going to rewrite the recipe -- I'll just refer you to the source and give you my notes (whenever I get a chance to remake the recipe with some of these changes, I'll actually post it... but since the suggestions are untested, I don't want to give you a "bad" recipe).

I like a thicker graham crust, so I used about double the crackers. Somehow the resulting amount of crushed crackers was not much larger -- about 2 cups, instead of 1+1/2. I also used chocolate graham crackers, instead of the regular kind. (The original recipe calls for a classic pie crust. It would be a different flavor, but also yummy, I'm sure!) Also, I should have added more melted butter to my crust, since it was thicker.

There was no way all that creamy filling could fit in my pie plate, so I had to scrape a bunch out and now it's just hanging in my fridge. I'd suggest using the "whipped" cream cheese than comes in an 11 or 12oz container and about 1+1/2 cups of heavy cream. (In other words, I think you should use more of the creams than the original recipe, but not as much as the adapted recipe.)

I didn't try agave in this recipe but I wanted to! With all the sweetness of the strawberries and chocolate, I think you could sub in 1/3 to 1/2 cup agave and it would be plenty sweet... but I'm am a tad worried that the cream filling would become watery...? Maybe not, if the agave were whipped in the cream rather than the cream cheese? Hmm. Something to try.

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With that, naptime is almost over and I need to put a cinnamon bread in the oven! I must run. Hope you all had a lovely week.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Burley Bee for Baby and ME!

Right before the baby's bedtime, I wrote a brief list of things I wanted to accomplish before I went to bed. It ended with a typical entry, "Blog?" Nate noticed my list and did a couple of things for me; I got distracted while completing a task and ended up spending half an hour cleaning up something that wasn't on my to-do list. Typical, right? By the time I was done, I was tired and did not want to do "Blog?" or anything involving my brain.

So I'm just going to share the briefest of updates, which is that my (AWESOME!) mom got a bike trailer for Baby Girl. Happy early birthday to me! It's a Burley Bee, used but in really good condition. (I am still thinking about getting a baby bike seat, too... I haven't made up my mind.)

I love the Burley. It is really cool. It has room and buckles for two kids, plus space enough in the back for a bag of groceries or whatever else I might want to haul. I'm going to get a different "hitch" for it, though -- one that will make it quick and easy to take the Burley on and off my bike.

My mom brought it to us on Friday and I took Darling out on Saturday morning for half an hour, going up and down the street. At first she absolutely refused to wear her helmet, so after several minutes of fighting and pleading and trying to trick her, I gave up and decided to take a really slow lap around the block, to distract her. It worked. After the one lap, I was able to stop, get the helmet on her, and continue riding without fuss. I managed to get one okay picture of her in the Burley with the helmet (obviously, when we stopped, she'd try to yank it off... she'll get used to it):


I also got a little video of her riding along. Lest you think I was being unsafe, know that I took the video mostly "hands free." I hung the camera backwards around my neck (down my back), reached around to push the start button, and rode slowly down the street. For the first part of the video, the camera got shuffled toward the pavement. Then I must have scooted it or something because you can suddenly kinda see Darling again. Right after the camera was back on her, she started babbling a little bit. It's very cute! So you can either endure the first 18 seconds of weird video, or just advance the video to the 18th second, and you can watch her and listen to her talk for a few seconds:


Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Now that it's later, here's lots more!

You probably don't care to hear about MY GARDEN. But it's our first big garden, and it's doing great, and I like to give updates! If you don't care, just skip along to the section on books...

Our zucchini plants are huge, starting to get out of control. They get way too much water. Nate is big on watering them every morning. I keep trying to tell him no, they're fine, they can get a light watering most days and they will be perfectly content, but he thinks we won't get any veggies off the plants if they don't get water. Well, I picked 12 zucchinis yesterday and added them to the seven I picked on Friday. I think the plants are doing fine.

For the record, the 12 zuchs did not come from one plant. Some how I ended up with three plants. I promise you, I only deliberately planted one. The other two were supposed to be other types of squash, but I guess I got my seeds mixed up or something. The strangest thing is that none of the three zucchini plants look alike (each have different shaped leaves) and the zucchini they yield is unique (one yields dark and skinny zuchs, one light and plump, and the third in the middle of these two extremes).

Almost none of my squash-family plants (including the pumpkins) ended up as planned. There's a scallop squash that was supposed to be a zucchini squash (or maybe a crook-neck; I can't remember exactly -- but not a scallop). There was supposed to be an acorn squash. Two pumpkins ended up in the main garden, where they are going crazy and making a mess of things. They were supposed to be in a different part of the yard where they would have plenty of room to run wild, but again, I must have mixed up the seeds when I planted them because it's a mess. In fact, I had to cut back a lot of the pumpkin runners in the main garden area because they are taking over, attacking the onions and such. Sad.

Half the corn came up and is going strong, the other half is struggling. They are in two long rows, and the healthy half are in a lower-elevation part of the garden, so I think they get more moisture. Before it became garden, that area also had more compost-like material enriching the soil. I'm noting this for next year, so we can make sure the "upper" area gets extra compost.

Some of the onions are struggling. No surprise. Onions like cooler weather; ideally they should have been harvested by now. But I didn't get them in the ground early enough, so they aren't big enough yet to harvest. Hopefully they will weather the heat and I'll get a good yield in another month or so.

The tomatoes are happy and have been thriving in the heat. I had a lot of "volunteer" plants again this year. I made room for as many as I could, so there's about 10 of them around the backyard (not including the four that I deliberately planted). It will be too much fruit when it comes to bear, but I can probably give some away at church. Oh! And to my mom. She didn't get to garden this year. .:Sad face:. for her.

The bell peppers are still growing slowly. I'm just praying that they yield something before the end of the season. Next year I will get the seeds started earlier in the green house, for sure. I also need to do more research on how to make them happy, and put them in the sunniest spot in the garden.

Finally, the sunflowers: small but cute. They are out front in the side yard. We ended up with about 25 plants. They are all for chicken food and I have no idea how much we'll get from them or how long it will feed the chickens, but I'm hoping the fresh squash and pumpkins will feed them for a couple of months, and then the dried corn and sunflower seeds will make it through a few more months. Nate's parents say that chicken feed is expensive (of course, we're just going to get two chickens, which is a lot less expensive to feed than 20+ animals.)


Now on to my next topic, one of my other favorite things: BOOKS

A couple of weeks ago I read Memoirs of a Geisha. It's a moderately dense book and takes a little while to get through. We own the movie and I've watched it several times, so it was playing in the back of my mind as I read. I was impressed at how well the movie tracks the book. It picks up on a lot of subtle details from the story line, even though it didn't have the time to get in to everything.

Apparently that put me in an Asian mood because last week I read Pearl S. Buck's timeless classic, The Good Earth. Oh... such a good book. The story was very dense so it lasted me most of the week. When I wasn't reading it, I was thinking about it. I was still  "digesting" it days after I finished reading. In fact, I'm still pondering motives and themes. It is the kind of story that literature teachers probably love to assign to students. I know I would have loved reading it for a class in college, and being able to participate in discussions and write a paper or two. I'm thinking about writing a paper on it just for fun. (It's that good.) It was a hard  read, though; it's not a standard "western" story where everything works out and the characters live happily ever after. Parts of it left me deeply troubled and saddened -- I have to remind myself that it's only a book, not a true story.

Now that I'm physically done and mentally almost done with The Good Earth I need a new book. It's August, so I can get a new "free" book on my Fire this month. I don't know what to read, though! Suggestions anyone? Grandma? I'd like to check out another Susan May Warren book but I haven't seen a free one that appeals to me. I might have to just buckle down and pay for Duchess.

My friend who is an author will be publishing a new novel by the end of the month, Queen Witch. I get to be a beta reader and I'm waiting for her to drop a copy of the manuscript in my hands. Any day now... I'm very excited! I'm hoping she might let me tease out a bit of the story line here on my blog. I might even interview her about the book, just for fun and promo. You should all be sure to download a copy when it's available and support my inspiring, aspiring friend! I'll let you know when and where you can get it.


Before I move on to the beloved topic of Baby Girl, I have a few OTHER updates...

Nate's best friend (and his lovely wife and their kids) moved into town one week ago. We've been out to see them twice -- the first of many visits! They are really easy people to spend time with, and I just adore the wife. She's a sweet woman and an amazing mom. She doesn't know it, but every time I'm with her I'm quietly watching her mothering skills and trying to pick up as many tips as possible. She inspires me; I want to be just like her.

I got a haircut this week and chopped it in half. I guess the new 'do is kinda cute.With the heat, I've just had it up, though. Whatever. It's just hair.

Nate and I are continuing to remodel in the basement, mostly in the hallway and utility room. Nate framed the door for the water heater, so there's a whole section of the wall under the stairs that's now ready for drywall! I asked him to buy a drywall knife-saw and I am ridiculously excited to use it. I've been doing a lot of wiring work in the basement. I was just going to add an outlet in the hallway, then I decided to replace (i.e. update) several sections of wiring, and I moved a light switch, and now I'm feeling so confident  in my skills that I'm going try and rewire a big section of the utility room. Doing wiring makes Nate uncomfortable but I've been reading a how-to book on basic wiring and electricity, and I don't have a problem doing the work. Plus, it's fun! A bit of puzzles and problem-solving. (Where does this why go? How do these things connect?) The downsides are that it's dirty, so I can't chase my kid around while I'm working, which means Nate has to watch her; and it takes awhile because you have to be very careful. Hopefully I can find enough time this week to finish the parts that I've started so we can get the power back on to the currently shut-down half of the basement.

I've had water on my mind a lot lately. Maybe it's the heat, or The Good Earth or Dune, or my obsession with Africa, or maybe just because I'm a hippie. (Probably all of those reasons and more.) Whatever the reason, thoughts on how to use less water and preserve/reclaim water have been swirling in my head for quite some time. Last week I ended up spending a whole evening doing research on rainwater collection and storage systems. Nate and I have been discussing this topic for quite some time; he wants to store water to prepare against a natural disaster or Armageddon, and I just want to save some money and create a more sustainable home (For once our extreme differences in opinion are a non-issue, yay!)

I chatted with my awesome mom about my research, my hopes for our system, and the possibilities. She went into research mode (gotta love it when that big brain gets set on a task -- there's no stopping her!) and found a place about 20 minutes east of here that sells slightly-used barrels for a bargain. So on Friday Nate and I took the baby out to the store and picked up five 55-gallon barrels for the price of two brand-new ones. (Nate and Kimmy, we should chat, I think you'll want to check this out.) We've lined them up at the back of the house and are planning to pipe them together, then hook up one of the rain gutters to divert the runoff into the barrels. I ordered a filter for the gutter. We also need to install an overflow valve.

Eventually we'd like to set up barrels at three or four different places around the outside of the house. It will be a tricky balancing act -- we need rain in the summer, when it doesn't rain much; they will be totally full in the winter, when we won't need rain. Hopefully we can set up enough of them to store rain in the spring that will last us through a month or two of summer. Someday I'd love to make a system that feeds some of the water back into our house, or at least into the sprinkler system. How cool would that be? We could do something like this:


At long last, here's a mix of general updates and things to do with BABY GIRL...

Nate goes back to work next week, and I go back to working part time. I will have to be in the office one more day each week, but since I will be on a reduced schedule it will only a couple more hours a week in the office. Still.... I'm not wholly thrilled about being in the office another day a week. I'm not as productive from the office, and I don't like the environment. Being at home brings me much closer to a decent work-life balance. While I'm researching away at my day job, Baby Girl will have a couple of days a week with grandma, and then a couple days a week with a friend from church. My mom very generously got a car seat for the sitter to use for Darling. It was an unexpected blessing, and frees up the money I was going to spend on a car seat for use on a bike seat!

That's right, the biking fever is intense in our house. Last week's 10 mile race got me in the mood for more. I have been back at it a little bit in recent weeks and looking forward to more time out, and taking my daughter for rides. I just ordered Darling a helmet; I'm looking at bike seats.

WeeRide LTD Kangaroo Child Bike Seat
I'm particularly interested in this bike seat (from Amazon, available here): The WeeRide "Kangaroo" child bike seat. Instead of the traditional seat that goes behind the rider, this one is designed to sit right behind the handle bars, in front of the biker. That's appealing for several reasons, but also has its drawbacks. There's a Britax-brand seat that goes behind the rider which also appeals to me, but its a little more expensive.
I'm still in the research phase, so we'll just see where my analysis leads me. (Don't worry, I'm not going to drag you through every option and indecision with this purchase!)

My mom is helping us look for a bike trailer. She found a promising ad from someone who lives near her current house. Hopefully the trailer will be in good condition because the price is quite reasonable!

Now how about a few words exclusively on my beautiful daughter?

Baby Girl is becoming significantly more expressive. She's been clapping for awhile, and is just now mastering waving. She loves to wave at people driving by or people in the store, which tends to make people very happy -- it's really sweet. We're working on teaching her ASL signs. She has her own sign for "up" when she wants to be held (she makes a Y with her arms). She can do the asl sign for "more" food, but she's still learning that one. I'm not sure if she really understands what it means, but she will sign "more" when we're at the table feeding her. She can also do the sign for "milk" but I don't know if she's connected it to the white drink in her sippy cup. In general, Darling is very interested in signing and I wouldn't be surprised if she started picking up more things soon. I love it.

Her spoken vocabulary is still very limited (mama and dada, mostly) but she has "baby words" for things. Yesterday, for instance, when she was eating black beans for breakfast, she pointed to the dish of beans and said "bla-ba" and signed "more". So I think "bla-ba" is her version of black beans. She also has a word for water... kinda like "ar-rrr". And she definitely understands a lot of our words, but you can only tell by her face or body reactions. Still, I'm loving this phase where we can interact more and understand her needs!

In just the last week, Darling has started to stand up and "cruise" around. I've been telling people for ages that I want her to start standing and walking (I'm tired of holding her and fighting her when she wants to crawl in unclean or unsafe places), but now that she is getting on her feet, I'm a little sad. I realized that walking will be the end of crawling... it's just sad to see the end of a phase. But she really is a big girl and it's appropriate that she gets on her feet. To that end, here's a parting picture (obviously from bedtime) of my little stander: