Showing posts with label mom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mom. Show all posts

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Craft Hope Project 23

I have been wanting to have a craft group to do one of Craft Hope's projects for a while now.  Craft Hope is a blog with a major impact. Blogger, Jade, has projects regularly and tens of thousands of crafters make things and send them in to be dispersed all over the world. 

So, finally, when Project 23 came out, I decided to get together with some of my MOPS mommas and have a mini sewing party. This project was for pillowcases dresses to be sent all over... to a school in Jordan, an orphanage in Costa Rica, Tanzania, and more.  We came together for gumbo and snacks and got to work.




We had 6 women and 4 sewing machines going at a time!


In the end, we made 11 dresses ready to be shipped! We tried to make a wide variety of sizes, following this amazing guide of sizing info and more. 


We hope this spreads some love to 11 little girls!





Monday, October 21, 2013

Freezer Meal Marathon!

In the past, I have done a lot of freezer meal preparations on my own.  I have even done a few meal swaps with other moms. Thanks to Pinterest and wonderful food bloggers, there is a crazy amount of information about this online. I have a close friend who is 7 months pregnant with 3 kids. She really wanted to do a freezer meal cooking marathon to alleviate some household duties and, conveniently, my freezer was running low. I ran out of chicken stock for the first time in.... I don't even know how long. I ALWAYS have it on hand.

We talked about what common meals we typically prepare for our families and I shared my experiences with projects like these.  We went to the newly opened New Orleans Costco to see what products they offer for this endeavor since we needed some bulk shopping prices. After browsing for FOUR HOURS, with our FIVE KIDS... we started to formulate a plan.

We decided on 2 meats... chicken and ground beef. Mostly because Costco has organic options for these 2. The chickens are sold in 2 packs of whole chickens and the ground beef is sold in 3 packs of 1.3 lb sections (basically 4 lbs). With these 2, we would make Chicken and Dumplings, Chicken Pot Pie, Baked Cheesy Chicken Penne, Beef Enchiladas, Shepherd's Pie, and Baked Ravioli. Also, we would cook some extra chickens just to shred and be able to pull out to make chicken salad sandwiches, or to put on a salad, or to throw in anything else, something I love having on hand and recommended. We also decided to prepare Bacon Shallot Quiches and Chocolate Chip Cookies.

After feeling like my brain was going to explode making the shopping lists, I decided to start putting everything into a spreadsheet. It made everything so much easier. I just entered the ingredients, quantities, and units of measurement. This made it easy to enter how many recipes we were preparing and multiply, then reorganize the list to combine everything. The master lists:


The grocery shopping lists:




All food items were purchased at Costco and Whole Foods. From Costco, I purchased the chicken, ground beef, bacon, cheddar cheese, onions, chocolate chips, frozen organic veggies, butter, eggs, and organic spaghetti sauce.


Seriously. 10 whole chickens.

Two at a time, into my huge stock pot they went! For every 2 chickens, I added 4 whole carrots, 4 celery stalks, 4 onions, 20 whole peppercorns, 2 tablespoons of salt, and 4 whole dried bay leaves.


 Then covered with water - about 20 cups is what my pot would allow. I bring it to a boil over medium-high, cover and lower to about medium-low for 2 hours. This should typically yield 32 cups of chicken stock, so after the chicken cooks thoroughly and is removed, I add the remaining 12 cups of water to the vegetables. 

Every time we had chickens cooking, I prepared another dish while waiting. So the first night, after grocery shopping for hours for everything we needed, I went with the easiest dish. Unfortunately, this is the only picture like this that I took. I really intended on taking more photos, but just got too busy. We had our hands full cooking so much with 5 kids running around. Whole Foods has these organic cheese raviolis in their freezer section and we layer meat sauce, ravioli, meat sauce, cheese, ravioli, meat sauce, cheese. Buying as much cheese as we needed, we went with blocks of cheese and shredded or grated it all with my food processor. It didn't save us much money, but anything that we could cut, we did. My friend has a larger family so we did two 13x9 pans for her and four 8x8 pans for me. We did foil pans just to make this whole project easier. After filling pans, we covered in freezer paper, wrapped in foil, labeled with instructions, and put in gallon sized ziploc bags or wrapped the larger pans in plastic wrap.


After assembling the ravioli dishes, the chicken was done. We shredded the chicken and froze to keep on hand.  To the stock, we added the water, strained and divided the stock into 8 quart-sized bags. The onions and carrots also got puréed and saved in bags to add as hidden vegetables to dishes (works best with ground beef dishes).

Our full day of cooking, we put 2 chickens in and in the meantime, started working on quiches. We made 6 quiches - 2 for each of us and one for us to eat each day of cooking. Seriously. They're that good. I have added garlic to this recipe in the past and it has been delicious. It slipped my mind this time. Costco had this bacon that was SO GOOD. Being that quiches are liquid, we flash froze these until hardened, covered in freezer paper, wrapped in foil, labeled and put into ziploc bags. 


When the chicken was done, we shredded it and used the stock to make chicken and dumplings. We cooked 2 of these recipes. The only difference is we used 16 cups of stock instead of 12. We didn't do the dumplings. Instead, we measured and froze the dry ingredients, ready for the half and half to be added and dropped into the dish once heated. The 2 whole recipes were divided up into 4 gallon sized ziploc bags. One recipe usually feeds our families and has leftovers, so we divided it and the dumpling mix for 4 meals.

We put the next 2 chickens in and while they were cooking, we worked on shepherds pie. I get a lot of freezer meal ideas from Once a Month Meals. Even if I don't fully stick to the recipe, I use her blog to reference how to freeze and reheat meals.  Instead of any cream soups, we made an onion mushroom gravy with a butter roux, chicken stock, and a little heavy cream. We mixed the ground beef with the gravy. The layers went ground beef/gravy mixture, frozen mixed veggies, whipped mashed potatoes, and topped with shredded cheddar cheese. We did two 13x9 pans of shepherds pie. I intended on two 8x8 pans but they were too shallow for this dish. 


When the next 2 chickens were done, we shredded them for chicken pot pies. Whole Foods has whole wheat organic pie crusts in their freezer section. Before our next freezer meal endeavor, I plan on testing making our own pie crust from scratch, but was not up to testing for this round. Instead of using 2 cups of frozen veggies like in this recipe, we used one pound for each recipe. We assembled 4 chicken pot pies. And we used this seasoning mix. It is SO yummy! We flash froze until hardened, covered in freezer paper, wrapped in foil, and put in gallon sized freezer bags.



After cooking 4 chickens for the day, we had some stock leftover from what was used for the day's recipes. Enough to fill 9 quart sized bags. That was a wrap for our one real full day of cooking that our schedules allowed.

The next morning, I was able to fix 2 more chickens and the enchilada dish after bad weather caused my plans to cancel. While the chickens were going, I browned another 3 pack of ground beef and doubled the enchilada sauce from this recipeThis was the one time that my quantities were off. We calculated that this would make two 13x9 pans (10 enchiladas each) and four 8x8 pans (5 enchiladas each). We only got three 8x8 pans though. No biggie. I layered enchilada sauce, rolled enchiladas (seam down), covered in enchilada sauce, then topped with shredded cheddar cheese. When done, the chickens were shredded for the next dish and the stock set aside.

The last day, I put the last 2 chickens in and in the meantime made this chicken Alfredo dish with the shredded chicken from the previous day. I have done it before, but I don't do the sun dried tomatoes for this dish. I do add spinach though. This time I used frozen whole leaf spinach, but I have sautéed fresh spinach to add to this dish in the past. This filled 3 8x8 pans and 1 13x9 pan. The last 2 chickens were shredded and frozen for later use.

In the end, this is what I stocked in my freezer. Not pictured is the shredded chicken, 5 other frozen quarts of chicken stock, the cookies, pureed onions and carrots from the stock, and 3 gallons of chicken stock that will be used this week for different dishes. This is what is in my freezer only.  There is also a huge stash in my friend's freezer. Marathon was a success!





Monday, October 7, 2013

Classroom update!



I wanted to briefly update on our home classroom space. We quickly outgrew our little hallway classroom when we started Classical Conversations. This new space was already set up like this with the mantle, table, and chairs. It was not used for schoolwork  - just crafts and snacks mostly. It is basically in our "great" room though, so I am trying to make it match the surrounding decor. "Great" room sounds silly - we have a small house, but through some renovations, we have opened the floor plan significantly so our living room, dining room, and kitchen are mostly one undivided space, other than  structural necessities.

I bought a few Deka hanging systems from Ikea and use them to display the subject matter for the week. On it, I hang worksheets, visual aids, mini timeline cards, maps, and our science and history acts and facts cards. I love that I can clearly see what all we have going on and can just pull things off the clips when ready to use.


I finally came up with a system for cumulative reviewing. I have this little photo box that has 4 sections that you can pull out. I pulled up images of fabrics used in my living room and printed for the outside of the box. The 4 sections each have 6 weeks of material for me to reference when quizzing Blaine. They have all material we have learned and mini maps for the geography for each week. Then I hand cut envelope pockets from some coordinating scrapbook paper I had in my hoarder closet that I have mentioned before in a previous post. I printed squares for all 24 weeks of curriculum with subjects for each (I will add as the weeks go by). All they have are week numbers and subject so I can reuse them for all 3 cycles. We divided the squares up between the 5 envelopes and will pull them out throughout the day to go over material. I am trying to think of a way to make it fun - probably reward stickers to go with it. I'll figure it out, but I feel like our homeschool is lacking rewards and discipline.  I am also considering something along the lines of a red/yellow/green light to go along with a reward system.

On the mantle, I keep our globe, review box (for my reference), supplies, and random things pertaining to our schoolwork. I've been trying to get the kids to say the Pledge of Allegiance lately, so I framed the flag to go above it. Last 6 weeks, our science studies focused on ecology, but we are about to start some astronomy, so we have the telescope out and ready! 

Opposite this area is a roll top desk with my desktop computer on it. It is very convenient to sit Blaine at the table and direct his attention to the computer for expansion YouTube videos.

I am still trying to get a loose routine going for us. I just can't seem to figure that part out. I'm still not sure that I want to.  I feel like a major bonus of homeschooling is that you don't have to set alarms, but I am trying to figure out what to designate for certain days/times. I also have to work around the things on our weekly/bi-weekly schedule of CC, MOPS, PE, Little Friends Club, and basic errands.  All of this while retaining flexibility. These first 6 weeks of CC, I feel like I've at least partially figured out what works for Blaine and what doesn't, so I'm hoping by the end of these next 6 weeks, I will get more of a feel for our rhythm.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Homeschooling: CC - Cycle 2 - Weeks 4, 5, and 6

I am late posting what we did for weeks 4 and 5. We have a busy week and weekend ahead of us, so here is what we've been doing and what we have planned for the week.

History
Week 4:
The Magna Carta and the Hundred Years War. Blaine colored while I read.

Week 5:
The Hundred Years' War, Joan of Arc, and the Plague (age appropriate discussions with some sword fighting play involved).


Week 6:
The Renaissance!  Specifically, we are learning about Shakespeare, daVinci,  Copernicus, and Michelangelo.  I plan on elaborating a little on each of them throughout the week and coloring these as we go.


I'm going to show Blaine this virtual tour of the Sistine Chapel. Something fun that I am planning on doing is taping some paper to the bottom of our junior size table and laying on our backs to draw and color.

Geography: More puzzles!
Week 4:
European Rivers (printable)


Week 5:
European Cities (printable)


Week 6:
European Mountains (printable)


English: Cut and paste activities each week.
Week 4:
Nominative Pronouns



Week 5:
Objective Pronouns
<temporarily down>

Week 6:
Possessive Pronouns


Art
Week 4:
Abstract art. We classified things into 2 categories. Real or abstract. Obviously there are more categories than these 2, but for a 4 year old, these 2 will do for now. We took a field trip for a lunch date to see my oldest friend, Martine, and check out some artwork in both her condo and her gallery.
Blaine said this one was his favorite.

Week 5: Perspective
I made this cut and paste and we talked about horizons, vanishing points, and shadows.  We put the people on the sidewalk appropriately and shaded where their shadows would be according to the sun's position.

Week 6: Final Project Week
We combined the last 5 weeks of our fine arts skills and with his tutor's leadership, Blaine drew this owl mom and baby! I'm so proud of him!




Math: Skip Counting 
Week 4: 7 and 8

 Week 5: 9 and 10

 Week 6: 11 and 12


Science:
Every week we did some worksheets that I downloaded from C3.
Week 4: Natural Cycles - Carbon and Oxygen, Water, and Nitrogen 
Week 5: Reactions to environmental change - Adapt, Migrate, and Hibernate
Something funny I have to share... This week we talked about some funny things like how Daddy shaves his hair short in the summer because it is hot and how Paw Paw Chuck grows his beard out in the winter to keep his face warm. 
Week 6: 6 forms of pollution

Latin
Week 4:
We repeated last weeks 1st Conjugation Imperfect Tense exercises (here)

Week 5 and 6:
1st Conjugation Future Tense cut and paste (with handwriting practice)

Monday, September 9, 2013

MOPS!



I am so excited that MOPS is finally starting again. MOPS meets every other week for 2 hours. There is free childcare provided, breakfast, coffee, speakers and small group discussions. I joined this amazing group of women when Blaine was 1 and I was 3 months pregnant for Vivienne.  I was desperately searching for companionship with other moms.

I cannot express enough how much this group has changed my life. It was scary going through struggles of motherhood alone.  Exhaustion, postpartum depression, breastfeeding issues... you name it. MOPS has given me a support system that every mother should have. They have brought me dinner when I had a newborn. They have held my babies when I felt like I was about to cry or pass out.  They have helped with birthday parties. They have gone grocery shopping and running errands with me to help lend a hand.

If you're interested in joining - we have 2 different MOPS groups - night MOPS for working mothers (new this year!) and day MOPS for stay at home mothers.

Night MOPS starts tomorrow night from 6:30-8:30 at someone's home, so I won't be posting the address.  If you would like to attend, please get in touch with me and I'll send you the information!

Day MOPS starts THIS THURSDAY from 9:30-11:30. For more information - feel free to get in touch with me or click here.


Thursday, September 5, 2013

Homeschooling: CC - Cycle 2 - Week 3

This week is not over and we have not completed everything listed here, but I thought I would post anyway. 

History
Week 3: We learned about Eleanor of Aquitaine, Richard the Lion-Hearted, and the Crusades. Blaine did some coloring pages while I read and we made a sword and shield with cardboard, paper, and foil. 



Geography
Week 3: Western European countries - I made another puzzle (printable here). Blaine really seems to like these. I will probably do one every week. 


English
Week 3: Cut and paste activity


Art
Week 3: Upside down drawing activities. If you read this post, you will know that Blaine LOVED THIS drawing activity. He was so excited when he flipped the paper over and saw what he had drawn.



Math
Week 3: I have to be honest.  Blaine has a very difficult time with numbers.  We do our memory melodies and these cut and paste skip counting activities very quickly because I am still working very diligently with him trying to get him to do basic counting. He is showing some improvements, but math has always been a frustrating challenge. I'm open to suggestions.



Science
Week 3: Parts of the food chain. I googled some more random clip art and came up with this cut and paste activity. We took an unexpected trip to the aquarium and insectarium this week and seized the opportunity to learn hands-on about some consumers and decomposers.  Also, we talked again about week 2's topic of consumer types: herbivore, carnivores and omnivores.  We had fun guessing what each animal was by what we observed in their habitats. Our timing was perfect for a few exhibits, seeing the animals being fed.  Blaine will also play a food chain game that I found, available here. 

Seeming underground, in a dark room of the insectarium, I took the one and only picture of our downtown adventures. Here's Blaine on a huge worm... a decomposer!



Latin
Week 3: We are still learning verb conjugation endings - imperfect tense. Nothing fun to show. I did do a cut and paste activity and later we combined our Latin with handwriting exercises. Here are printables for both.  Our tutor came up with a cute pictorial available on C3 that Blaine enjoys and has been very helpful.



That's it!