Friday, December 31, 2010

Quel petit gourmand!

Well, Fielding is eating human food kind of out of nowhere, and he FREAKING LOVES IT! He was fussing at the dinner table on Christmas Eve, and to quiet him, Chris let him suck on a piece of ham, and then on a chunk of butternut squash. He went completely crazy for them! So the next day I mashed some banana and avocado together, and, same thing—he couldn’t get enough!

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We started Sawyer on solids at 7 months, and I remember that it took him, like, 6 or 8 weeks to even catch the vision of what we were trying to do. He would just let the food spill down his face, stare at me, then smear it all over his tray. I remember the day when I saw something click behind his eyes—“Oh! this goes in my belly and keeps me full! and it’s not bad eats either!” At that moment he leaned forward like a baby bird and opened his mouth. WELL, the minute Fielding saw the banana-covered spoon, he grabbed it with his hand and shoved it in his mouth. Since then he’s had carrots and sweet potatoes and rice cereal, and the freezer is starting to fill up with little portioned purees that I’ve made for him. He is a total, total gourmand.

Farewell, sweet buttermilky poops of the breastfeeding baby. Hello, total stinkers.

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Sawyer was really excited that he and Fielding were eating carrots at the same time.

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I did it all by self.

Bummer. The pics are a little too dark to see the extent of the silliness. Sawyer, now that he has his own bathroom stool and cup (who knew that that would be what pushed him over the edge into independence?) is now all about going to the potty and doing EVERYTHING by himself. He emerged the other day with his pants on backwards. We both thought it was so funny that we turned Fielding’s pants around backwards too and took some pics.

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

The successful maiden voyage of a cool xmas gift

 

In part because my food blog is now pretty much definitively defunct, and in part just because we got this awesome pancake pan for xmas, I’m going to bore everyone with the tale of Sawyer’s breakfast this morning.

Behold, the zoo animal pancake pan! Thanks Matt, Rach and kids, it’s awesome!

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Sawyer helped me prepare the “healthy” pancake batter (silken tofu, banana, egg, almond milk, barley flour, rice flour).

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We filled the wee indentations.

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And when we flipped them? Animal cakes!

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Clockwise from top left: monkey, lion, giraffe, elephant. Sawyer ate SIX of these little cakes this morning.

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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Christmas discovery

Sawyer was amazingly uncurious Christmas morning. He wandered past this bizarre, hulking thing several times, and Chris finally had to tell him, "I think Santa left this for you; why don't you take a look!" As you can see, it's a totally awesome and shallow gift, good for cheap thrills and not much else. Bring your kids over if they want to try it!




Thursday, December 23, 2010

Happy Little Boy

A glimpse into Fielding's winning disposition:

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Christmas Train!

Tonight’s holiday activity: Christmas train at the orchard town center!We’d tried to do this two weeks before, but got there after the train had stopped running. But this time: success! The little thing chugs around the mall for about 15 minutes, sending toddlers into a wish-fulfillment swoon.

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Afterwords we had promised Sawyer that we would drive around a little to see Christmas lights, because he’s a little obsessed with them. We found this insane Christmas house in the neighborhood south of ours. When we stopped to take this pic there were three other cars circling to admire. I have really mixed feelings about this kind of thing (energy use being the foremost concern), and yet somehow I am as thrilled as Sawyer when I see such a bombastic holiday display.

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Friday, December 17, 2010

Holiday Baking is done!

Ooo, look at these rows and rows of sugar-dusted and chocolate drizzled puffs of holiday light and cheer!

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Here’s an example of the plates that Sawyer and I put together with all the goodies that we made. See recipes below, if you’re interested.

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On the top left are Pfeffernusse: http://www.vistawide.com/german/christmas/pfeffernuesse_recipe.htm

To the right of that, Peanut Butter MnM cookies: http://www.familycircle.com/recipe/cookies/holiday-peanut-butter-cookies/

Next is the chocolate gingerbread cookie that was previously posted.

Below that are pecan crescents (supposed to be hazelnuts, but I couldn’t get them!): http://www.familycircle.com/recipe/cookies/hazelnut-crescents/

To the left are my favorite dark chocolate fudgy cookies, which you can find on my now mostly defunct cooking blog )-: http://pregnantladycooks.blogspot.com/2010/02/dark-chocolate-valentine-cookies.html

And in the middle are peppermint meltaways: http://www.landolakes.com/recipe/2720/peppermint-meltaways

Wrapping paper project

 

One of our Christmas craft activities this week was to make homemade wrapping paper, and then do a little gift wrapping. So I got rolls of poster paper at the Hobby Lobby and Sawyer helped me pick out a bunch of holiday stamps. Toddlers detest well-ordered art, preferring randomness to predictability, which you can see from this small sample of our stamping project. But he loved it, and we made just enough to get all of Chris’ presents wrapped.

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And how cute does this look under the tree?? Brown paper packages tied up with string…

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Here is our tree, btw.

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Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Chocolate Gingerbread Men Recipe

As requested:

  • 3 1/4 cups all-purpose flour, plus
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 2/3 cup cocoa powder, sifted (preferably natural cocoa powder)
  • 1 tablespoon ground ginger (not more than 2 months from purchase)
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 2/3 cup vegetable shortening
  • 1/2 cup dark brown sugar, packed
  • 1 large egg, room temperature
  • 3/4 cup unsulphured molasses
  •  

  • 1 Position racks in the top & bottom thirds of the oven, then preheat oven to 375 degrees F.
  • 2 With shortening (not on ingredient list) to grease several large baking sheets, then set aside.
  • 3 In a large mixing bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa powder, ginger, cinnamon, baking soda, salt, baking powder & cloves until spices & coca are evenly distributed, then set aside.
  • 4 In a 2nd large bowl, & using an electric mixer on medium speed, cream shortening & brown sugar until smooth & airy, about 1 minute.
  • 5 Beat in egg & then the molasses.
  • 6 Turn off mixer & add prepared flour mixture, then AT VERY LOW SPEED beat just until crumbly bits of dough form, but not until the mass begins to cohere into a ball.
  • 7 With flour lightly dust a clean, dry work surface as well as your hands.
  • 8 Turn dough out & knead just until it forms a smooth mass, about 30 seconds.
  • 9 Divide into thirds & cover them with a clean kitchen towel.
  • 10 With flour lightly dust the work surface again & roll one of the thirds to a rectangle about 1/4 inch thick. Flour the dough & a rolling pin only as necessary.
  • 11 Use a large gingerbread-man cookie cutter to cut the dough into the desired shapes, then use a metal spatula to transfer them carefully to the prepared baking sheet(s). Gather any scraps, lightly dust again with flour & roll out a 2nd time, creating additional gingerbread men.
  • 12 Decorate the cookies with the raisins & red hots, using one for the eyes & the other for the mouths. Additional red hots can be used as buttons on their coats.
  • 13 Bake for 4 minutes, then rotate sheets top to bottom & front to back.
  • 14 Bake another 4 minutes, or until cookies feel dry but still are a little soft.
  • 15 Remove from oven & cool on the baking sheets for 2 minutes before transferring the cookies to wire racks to cool completely.
  • 16 Cool the baking sheets for 5 more minutes, then regrease them before baking additional batches, as necessary, OR work with 2 additional baking sheets, preparing them while the others are in the oven.
  • For royal icing with meringue powder: beat 4 cups powdered sugar, 2 tbs meringue powder, 1 tsp vanilla and 6-8 tbs water on medium high for 7-10 minutes until soft peaks form. Add food coloring and thin with water if necessary. If using pasteurized egg whites, sub 3 oz. egg whites for powder and water. Beat whites and vanilla until frothy before adding sugar, then beat 7-10 minutes.

    Making Gingerbread Men

    Today’s activity advent adventure was to make and decorate gingerbread men—sounds a lot like gingerbread houses, but we chose to do chocolate gingerbread, for one, and then opted to decorate exclusively with frosting, no candy this time. I’ve actually spent a lot of time expressing how much I loathe rolling out dough and cutting cookies, going to the extremes of hyperbole to express what I’d rather do than make cut-out cookies, but, in truth, IT WASN’T THAT BAD. So I take back everything I’ve ever said about it. It was even kind of fun (she says sheepishly), though maybe only because the cookies got thicker and thicker with every batch, which means I probably unconsciously cut my labor by a third.

    On an unrelated note: I LOVE MY MIXER. Few things (by ‘things’ I really do mean inanimate objects) are bringing me as much joy this month as my beloved Kitchen-Aid. What a breeze it is to whip up several batches of cookies and finicky frosting like royal icing. Thank you, Ebay, for helping to make my mixing dream come true. SO, here we are making the dough, which was, I confess, entirely TOO snackable.

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    And….the requisite shot of the chocolate-faced kid. Chris is all: “when are you going to stop doing that? oh, here’s his face covered in chocolate! and here’s his face covered in spaghetti sauce! and here’s his face covered in XX…!” When it stops being funny to me, I guess. Or when Sawyer becomes self-aware enough to notice that he has chocolate all over his face and therefore becomes less messy, which will be kind of a tragic hallmark of adulthood.

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    While S napped I did the aforementioned rolling and cutting…

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    …and baking.

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    Now we’re all suited up with our bags of colored royal icing. Sawyer was making a hell of a mess of my icing bags until I had the idea to put a rubber band around each one at the top of the icing bulb.

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    He started with minimalist technique—monochromatic, simple squiggles.

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    And then he became possessed by the sheer joy of squirting colorful sugar-ooze over everything in sight, and adopted a more expressionistic tactic.

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    Things went downhill from expressionism to what I’m calling “wide-scale botched autopsy.”

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    Here are all my little guys, dressed in technicolor duds. See if you can find the one in the leisure suit and the one with the hippy shawl.

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    GUUUUUUTS.

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    Saturday, December 11, 2010

    Candy Cane Festival at Hammond Candy Factory

     

    Today’s activity (the blog is almost all caught up!) was the candy cane festival. The line was looooong, and it was cold—we were surprised to see that most of the festivities were outside. While Fielding and I held our place in line, Sawyer met the local celebrities.

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    Once inside the hard candy flowed. Hammond specializes in handmade shaped candies, like ribbons, candy canes, sugar sticks, etc.

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    After visiting the area where they make the candy, the kids have a chance to write a letter to Santa on the wall—there were a few that made me laugh:

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    And here’s Sawyer’s:

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    Gift shop = more sugarplum dreams than any kid can handle.

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    Last stop, xmas train:

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    Thornton Winterfest

    One great thing about our activity advent idea is that we’ve been discovering and exploring events in the area that we weren’t aware of before—the Thornton Winterfest has been the biggest surprise so far. We went on Friday night, and will definitely be including it in future years.

    It’s in the Thornton City Park, which was filled with hundreds and hundreds of small Christmas trees, as well as a Santa’s village of miniature houses.

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    The elves’ workshop:

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    In the center of the area is a HUGE tree and an ice skating rink.

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    Around the periphery are various stages and tents, including an ice sculpture exhibit.

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    Sawyer’s really obsessed with Frosty right now.

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