Monday, April 30, 2012

...eat? Funny Veggie Plates



Stuck in the doldrums of lunchtime?  Do you often hear, "What else can I have?"  I recently viewed a post at Whole Foods on a Budget and it made me remember that I used to hear those same groans at lunchtime (and still do occasionally, I will admit), but then one day inspiration struck.  It was one of those slow days when we didn't have leftovers in the fridge and we pretty much only had vegetables.  Although my 5 year-old son loves veggies (it took a lot to get him here; more on that another time) I could tell it wasn't a good day to hand over a bowl of lettuce leaves.  What did I do?  I decided to play with the food until it made a funny face!  When I heard the question, "What's for lunch?" I announced, "A Funny Veggie Plate!"  Curiously he ran to the table to look.  He was so tickled with his lunch that now a regular lunchtime request I hear is, "Will you make me a funny veggie plate, please?!"  I don't know about you, but I love to hear my son ask to eat bell pepper and tomatoes, and to consider it a treat to boot!  If your kids don't eat a lot of vegetables you might not be able to hand over one of the plates I show here, but you can make mini faces with some veggies and fruit.  Start small and work up to more and more veggies as the weeks go by!  While you're at it, boost your own health by making yourself a funny veggie plate.

Simple designs can be made out of almost anything.  Pinwheels, flowers, bugs!  Also try asking your kids to help!  I handed my son a plate with a variety of vegetable fixings and had him design his own funny veggie plate!  Check out some of the plates I've made in the past!

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

...clean? Homemade Tooth Powder


I recently wrote about some of the homemade household products we use.  Tooth powder seems to be the one that garners the most odd looks and comments from people.  It seems unbelievable to most people that  we don't use something as basic as toothpaste, even the "natural" ones.  I will admit that other than at my in-laws house, I've never used the natural toothpastes.  My son and I switched straight from Colgate to the recipe you'll find below.  Why?  Well, why not?  What do you think your toothpaste looked like before they added the liquid ingredients and all those chemicals?  Most likely it was a powder.  Why pay for someone else to add liquid into the ingredients you can put together yourself? As and added perk, no more exploded toothpaste tubes in your airline luggage (not that we fly anymore...want to know why?)


The following recipe is one that a friend of mine gave to me, but I'm not sure where she originally obtained it. She's seen the same results I have since she and her daughters have started using it.  Both of our dentists have even remarked on our clean teeth.  I don't know about you, but no matter how well I brushed my teeth growing up, the hygienist always had to scrape and scrape. Yuck.  Farewell cavities!


Check out the recipe!


...clean? Cleaning Naturally


Lather, rinse and repeat... Massage in conditioner, leave on hair for 3 minutes, rinse well... Hold hairspray six inches from head and depress button and spray in bursts to reach desired coverage... Apply generous amount of body lotion to dry skin to achieve luxuriously smooth legs... Fill detergent slot with desired brand, add fabric softener and bleach... Spray bathrooms or kitchen counters and wipe clean with damp cloth, rinse surface well.


Doesn't anyone use anything natural anymore?  Why is there a need to buy a product filled with supposed carcinogens just to make our hair shiny? We constantly slather chemicals all over (and in, but that's another issue) our bodies from the start of the day to the finish.  The experts tell us that all of these products are perfectly safe for us and that they will make our hair, skin, clothes, and counters strong, smooth, soft and bacteria-free respectively.  How did we ever manage to live without these expertly concocted products before their arrival?  Quite easily in fact.  Before we began applying mousse to our hair and styling it just so, we managed to get through the day.  Before we had to have clothes that smelled of "fresh laundry" scent and were oh-so-soft to the touch we just wore clothes smelling of actual fresh air and had them soften as we wore them.  Before we sprayed chemicals on our counters, we used a little elbow grease and scrubbed them with hot water.  Somehow the generations managed to live long enough to get us here today.

Monday, April 23, 2012

...eat? Chicken Tortilla Soup




Remember how I stretched that chicken last week?  Well if you'll recall, one of the ways I stretched it was to use the bones to make a giant pot of chicken broth and then turn that chicken broth into Chicken Tortilla Soup.  Doesn't it look delicious?  Searching Google will give you numerous recipes for this soup, each one a little bit different. Want to find out how I made it?

Sunday, April 22, 2012

...eat? Farmers Market Pasta Salad

I thoroughly enjoy cooking, baking and generally just playing with ingredients.  Sometimes I create wonderful treats and sometimes my family has to choke down my failures.  A while back I started wondering if I should buy a new crock pot just so people wouldn't see mine and know which food I brought to functions. Then I discovered that people had been seeking out the dishes I usually bring. I had somehow managed to amass a "following" since it was well known that I tend to bring healthy food that they genuinely enjoy. 

Friday, April 20, 2012

...eat? Stretching a chicken


And by "stretching a chicken" I mean how can we make a whole chicken (a 5 lb bird) last for several meals.  And by "several" I mean four dinners (for 3 people each), a pot full of broth, a lunch (for all three of us again) and several freezer portions of food. 

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

...spend and save? Thrifty on a budget

(Disclaimer: Let me start by declaring that we, as a family, are not the least bit poor and are in no way miserly. We do, however, want to use our money in a way that will glorify God and not just spend it on ourselves simply to make our lives "easier" or more convenient. )


One often thinks that anyone posting, writing, or talking about being thrifty would be advising on how to do something inexpensively, but thats not usually the case.  Thrifty, by definition simply means "using money and other resources carefully and not wastefully" and is no guarantee that the idea is low-cost.  For example, have you ever noticed how many DIY and "thrifty" activities are in fact terribly expensive endeavors? Cook from scratch!...but buy these wonderfully expensive pans and this exquisitely costly mixer first.  Sew your own clothes!...but make sure you have the new super-triple-deluxe sewing machine and these pricey craft scissors.  Make your own soap!...but make sure you have these overpriced soap molds designed to only do one thing, mold soap.