A large family, homeschooling, adoption, special needs, whatever strikes my fancy, sort of blog.

A large family, homeschooling, adoption, special needs, whatever strikes my fancy, sort of blog.
Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts

Sunday, October 17, 2021

Our Autumn Break Week



There was no school Wednesday, Thursday and Friday this week, due to teacher retreat, so the kids and I had a nice 5 day weekend.  


We decided to make spooky pretzels for Katie to take to school for Monday's party.  


Like my high tech double boiler?


When I was a teen, my step mom had a fancy wooden chocolate stirring implement in the kitchen.  We just use a chopstick.  


Double duty, as it both stirs the chocolate and picks the pretzels out.  


This was super simple, literally just pretzels, chocolate chips, and eyeballs.  


But we had fun, and hopefully the kids at school will like them.  



I love biographies, and we have a biography bookcase in the library, but we also have a little section of biographies in the younger kids' section, and I finally got around to putting up a small sign to designate that.  


We received the book Camp Max from author Penny Reeve!  She's even got coloring pages and teaching notes for it on her website.  


This was one of the books I picked up at the book fair last weekend.  I think I'm going to do a space theme in January.  


I've been setting aside all the Autumn/October/spooky books and now that we're through Fire Safety Week and Indigenous Peoples' Day, I put them all out.  


I'm now starting to set aside the Thanksgiving/Christmas books as I run across them.  


Acting on a hot tip I got from a librarian Facebook group, I picked up some new books and stuffed animals at Kohl's.  They sell for $5, but the clearance ones are only $2.50, and that makes me happy.  


Grumman and Fiona have come to a grudging acceptance of one another.  There's still a lot of chittering between them, and the occasional hiss or swat, but they can both hang out on my bed at the same time now, which is huge progress.  


Those tiny dots in the field are the middle school flag football team.  Katie has practices 3 days a week now, so I'm getting some extra time in the library while she does that.  (Although I stayed in the car and read a book one day.)  They have a scrimmage soon, and they're going to be playing a school a couple towns south of us after that.  

Unfortunately, a couple of Katie's team mates are immature middle school boys who made comments about Katie being "as fake as her leg."  I'm planning to have them read Molly The Pony and Winter's Tail this week.  


It's turning into space heater weather here, and Fiona is a fan of it.  

Saturday, January 16, 2021

Books and Spices


Normally, we just power through most holidays, except Christmas, but I'm feeling like we'll be taking Martin Luther King, Jr. day off, at the very least, and depending how things go, we might do a light week next week.  


We're already 111 days into our school year, so we could totally skip a week with no repercussions.  I'm just sort of feeling like focusing on other things right now.  


What better way to start off our week than with a new stack of books??  


The Fallout cookbook was a special request from Josiah, which prompted us picking up several new spices.  We also spent 90 minutes in the grocery store, hunting down obscure ingredients.  We ended up having to order browning sauce from Amazon, since the staff said our store has been out of it for months.  


Kind of fun that this coincided with our study of India, known for it's spices.  We're supposed to have done a turmeric science experiment over a week ago.  I finally bought the turmeric, and it still hasn't quite happened yet.  I think we need a couple more days to fully finish India up right.  


Josiah made several recipes from the book, to create a whole meal, including a drink.  


Stuffed baked potatoes with corned beef and a horseradish/dill sauce.  


Burgers on pretzel buns, with sauce made using the cola recipe.  We did substitute muenster cheese for swiss, since I'm not a fan of swiss, and Josiah doesn't like cheese at all.  


Cheesecake with strawberry glaze.  I got to teach him how to fill a pastry bag, and how to pipe a star.  Since it's not often I get to teach my big boy anything, this was fun.  

I also showed him how to put air in the tires this week, since Matilda [the minivan] doesn't like the cold, and often tells me one of the tires is low if I leave the house while it's cold.  She's a little bit of a diva.  


I finished reading my second book for this year.  A Cat's Tale - A Journey Through Feline History was a cute book.  It was heavy, physically, since the pages are glossy, and there are lots of pictures of this cat in various costumes.  It starts in Egypt, and tells stories of cats from then forward, eventually ending up in the United States.  The book mentions Dewey, and it reminded me to put the kids' version of the Dewey book that I read last year on hold at the library for the girls.  


Speaking of cats, this pampered feline got a new perch from which to disapprove of us.  It's between my sewing room and bedroom, in the master suite, where he hangs out the most.  


This was a project Hannah did from the Cattastic Crafts book.  It... had some hiccups along the way.  


I was trying to get a picture of Grumman playing with this new toy, but, well, he's a cat.  So, what we have instead is a picture of Josiah, making the grocery list for his video game meal.  With a fluffy photobomber.  

Speaking of felines, we watched a documentary about Leopards on Disney +, and the girls watched Secrets of Wild India.  Aside from some evolutionary content, they were pretty good.  


We're currently in the tail end of Year of the Rat.  The next year coming is Year of the Ox.  
 

The girls haven't noticed the pattern yet, but I've been having them draw Chinese Zodiac Animals this week.  


With 12 animals, I figured we'd use the last week of India, and still be able to finish all of them while we're learning about China.  


I think I might have them do a small version of all 12 together at some point.  Maybe as a library bag.  


Sigh.  Can you tell the guide paper was printed landscape?  


Tuesday was Rubber Duck Day.  We got a free duckie from the car wash.  It's the little things that make me happy.  


More books.  Starting to set aside China books for when we get to that.  


Also got a couple of books about the White House, as this seems relevant to current events.  We don't watch the news on tv, so the girls haven't heard anything about the storming of the Capitol, or the coming inauguration worries, but it seems like a good idea to give them some additional civics knowledge at this point.  


We did some more "real world math" using furniture ads.  I asked the girls to pretend they were setting up their first apartment, and choose the furniture they would need.  The next day, I asked them to make a list of at least 10 (non-furniture) things they would need.  The resulting discussions were really eye opening.  I had to explain a lot about what comes in an apartment and what doesn't.  I ended up drawing on the white board the floorplan of my first studio apartment with all the provided amenities in brown, then using the orange marker to fill in furnishings that I added to it.  

One of the girls said she wouldn't need a dresser; she'd just keep all her clothes in the closet.  So I asked if she had hangars on her list.  Then I asked if she was planning on hanging socks and underwear and pajamas.  We talked about laundry rooms and the need for a laundry basket or bag, so you don't drop your underwear in front of your neighbors.  We talked about all the different types of soap you'll need to buy.  We talked about the different types of towels they'd need.  They knew they'd need beds, but neither had sheets, blankets, or pillows on their list.  

This project was a little disheartening to me, with questions like, "Do I have to buy a bathtub?" and "Doesn't a house come with a table?"  Hopefully, this helped them begin to understand what various items cost, and the things they'd need when they're on their own someday.  


More books.  I'm feeling a little bogged down in books right now.  The last couple of times we've gone through the pile to sort out which ones we're ready to return, there were a lot of books that one girl read but the other hadn't yet.  Hopefully lots of reading will occur over the 3 day weekend, and we can get down to a manageable number again.  


I recently said that Grumman is not a lap cat.  But he's a contrary beast, and so, one day while I was eating lunch with my feet up in front of Netflix on the iPad, he came over, looked up at me, hopped into my lap, and settled down to melt into the space heater with me.  He stayed longer than I expected.  


I sewed!  I recently showed some masks on Facebook, and had requests for more Valentine and Shamrock masks, so I went to the fabric store to pick up heart and St. Patrick's Day prints.  I saw this USMC fabric and had to get some for my favorite Marine.  



I made pillowcases, and I was rather pleased with myself for making one open on the left and one open on the right, so the words are up on both when they're next to each other on the bed.  


Getting the room ready for Sam, I put the pillows on the bed, and Grumman immediately hopped up and asked me to open the blinds.  He loves windows, and will pat the blinds and look at me to open them for him.  Hoping Sam doesn't mind a little cat hair.  


Oh Grumman.  

Sunday, October 25, 2020

Vampires and Pumpkins, Oh My!


When I realized the English program I'd chosen wasn't working for Katie, I scrambled to find some other language arts thing else for her to work on.  What I came up with was having her finish one of Jack's old spelling books, and a grammar workbook.  


Well, she polished off that spelling book this week and looked at the blank page at the end wistfully and said, "There should be a certificate or something."  Um, gimme a sec, I can totally make that happen.  I had found some blank certificates during the Great School Room Purge, so I whipped one out and wrote it up for her.  


It was such a simple thing, and it made her so happy.  Hmm, I wonder if I can find a bird themed printable certificate to use when we finish Flying Creatures...?  Maybe present the girls with noisy stuffed birds to go along with them?  


Feeling like autumn around here.  Super easy pumpkin spice cupcakes.  Literally spice cake mix, canned pumpkin, a bag of chopped nuts (pecans, I think), cream cheese frosting, pumpkins and leaf sprinkles.  I don't even like pumpkin, and these were good.  


We might have to make them again with mini chocolate chips in them.  Mmm!  


We learned about Vikings this week!  The girls built model Viking ships from cardstock, and watched 2 Viking documentaries from the library.  


In studying Norway, we learned about the artist Edvard Munch, famous for his painting The Scream.  Art Projects For Kids has a Scream-inspired project that we tweaked a little.  


The original was a crayon resist, but we did the person on a separate paper and cut it out and glued it over the watercolor blow painting.  


I couldn't quite get the girls to give me a scream face, more of an "Ahhh" like you'd say at the doctor's office.  


Paul's replacing a sink in one of the downstairs bathrooms.  Grumman, of course, has to be in the middle of everything.  


Books


Books


And more books.  
 

I was doing my weekend lesson planning before we started Norway, and I saw that the passage we'd be reading in Window on the World was going to be about Romania.  Hmm, day trip?  And down the rabbit hole I went.  Because I tend to get a little carried away when there's a "theme" involved.  


Romania is the home of Transylvania, the home of Vlad the Impaler, the inspiration for Bram Stoker's Dracula.  (There's even a castle that has totally cashed in on the tourist trade there.)  

So we read about Romania, we got library books about Romania, we watched videos about Romania, and we made a vampire craft.  


Even though I never did any "spooky" stuff with the older kids.  


And look at that.  The sky didn't fall.


When the girls were doing their Scream faces, one asked, "Should I color the face yellow? Or orange?"  Ack.  Time to get people colors markers.  


We all tried to figure out what color we were.  I assumed I'd be closest to the color "paper" but if I could dilute "bronze" a bit, I think that would be the best match.  


Honestly?  They're all a little off.  


I am tempted to try some real art markers to see if we can find closer matches.  I've seen there's a Crayola 24 pack coming out.  Maybe I should have held out for that.  


One of the assignments in the girls' Europe packet was to make their own flag, or copy an existing European flag.  We killed several trees with this project, as Katie started cutting without a real plan.  It probably would have been easier without Grumman laying on her project.  


Hannah looked at the Flags of Europe page in her flag book and decided to go with Poland.  Personally, I would have chosen to design my own flag.  Hmm, maybe purple, with 9 turquoise hearts in the upper left corner.  


These are Lapland Felt Squares.  (The other suggested craft for Norway was Rosemaling a chest, which we did not do.)  Last time around, we made these as small ornaments for our around the world Christmas tree.  


Poor Grumman had two revolting developments this week.  The shelter sent me a text saying Bertie was not thriving there, and could we pick her up and continue to foster her?  Poor little thing.  She was 2# when she went back, but by the time her name came up on the surgery schedule, she was no longer 2#.  She was only 1.6# when I picked her up.  Her frame is growing; her face is bigger.  But she's fluff and bones.  So she's "home" and she's eating and purring, and enjoying all the attention.  Grumman is Not Amused by this.  

The second revolting development was a costume contest email from SPCA.  I, of course, thought Grumman would make a dignified vampire.  I could just imagine him sitting tall and majestic.  The reality was somewhat less than impressive.  He's not a big fan of costumes.  I didn't end up getting a submission worthy photo.  I'll have to try again another day.  Something to look forward to.  


Our library pickups come in brown bags.  I decided we could repurpose a couple of them for loot bags for the drive through Halloween event we're planning to attend.  


I also had the girls journal what they'd like to dress up as, suddenly realizing I hadn't even thought about that, since we won't be doing a traditional harvest carnival this year.  


In fact, we haven't even made it to a pumpkin patch yet this year.  This weird, weird year.


Pumpkin drawing instructions from Art Projects For Kids.  We've done a few of their guided drawings now, and I like them.  


Happy pumpkin season!