I’m Back!! And I’m bringing Quinoa Pancakes With Me

So after nearly a month without a computer and Internet I’m excited to be back among the blogging. I must say that being unplugged leads to a far more productive mama. In my absence I have spent more time in prayer, been able to reorganize, cooked, cleaned, sewn etc. My house has been cleaner and running a bit more smoothly without my time being consumed online. I do, however, need it to earn my income, so I guess my lesson is that I need to get better about balance. One of my time saving, don’t I feel smart tricks is preparing breakfasts in advance. The boys are happy to reheat burritos and run out the door or to toast some waffles and slurp up a kefir smoothie. We can get several days out of a double batch of my quinoa pancakes. Some mornings I can barely pull myself out of bed let alone prepare a healthy, warm, and filling breakfast, so having a stockpile of breakfast items in the freezer is very helpful.

If you’re not familiar with quinoa you should take some time to get acquainted. Quinoa is a grain, but it is high in protein. It has a slightly nutty texture and taste, plus it’s very filling. The speech therapist brought food flash cards for the turkey this week and we had a good laugh over the fact that he didn’t know what french fries were. This is not saying he’s NEVER had french fries, but it’s such a rarity it’s just not on his radar. He does know what quinoa is and will eat it prepared in a variety of ways. One of his favorites is quinoa pancakes. They cool up nice and thick and are great for those breakfast for dinner nights.

1 1/2 cup whole wheat flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1/8 tsp salt
1 TBS honey
2 eggs
1 1/2 cups milk
1 tsp vanilla
1/2 tsp cinnamon
3 TBS oil
1 cup cooked quinoa

optional 1 cup fresh or frozen fruit, raisins, nuts, bananas, pumpkin puree, applesauce etc. It’s really easy to add things your family enjoys.

– Combine dry ingredients (flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, cinnamon)
– In another bowl mix milk, honey, eggs, vanilla(if using purees and them now)
– Whisk together wet and dry mixtures, until just combined
– Fold in quinoa and any add ins
Batter will be lumpy

Pre-heat griddle and drop 1/4 cup of batter to make pancakes. I have a size 20 spring loaded scoop that is perfect for portioning pancake batter, but a 1/4 cup measuring cup works good too.

We serve ours up with applesauce or apple butter and a side of fruit. I don’t have to feel guilty because I know the boys are getting a nice serving of protein, their bellies will stay full till lunch and they aren’t hyped up on sugar as they head out to school. We love to make these with pumpkin puree and use clove instead of cinnamon. We usually re-heat them in the toaster oven, but even microwaved these don’t get soggy.

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Why Handmade Matters

The bat came back. He just couldn’t stay away, away, away. Feel free to sing along. Needless to say it’s an extra shot of espresso kind of morning. We will be back to hole blocking again today not that we could even find any more to fill. Dang he’s wiley! Speaking of wiley it feels as if the inmates are running the asylum this week. Child of the eldest variety has shirked his dish duties. He somehow managed to get to bed last night without doing them and then to sneak out for school this morning as well. That’ll teach me to get to distracted wrangling the littles. Or maybe it’s my sleep deprived state that has me off my game.

Even toddler child is in rare form, this child is the reason we have a padlock on the fridge, so I shouldn’t be surprised by his antics. What mom you have to change the baby’s third poopy diaper before 9am? Don’t mind me while I jump the baby gate and climb up the shelf and dump out as many board games as possible before you come to stop me. And then while it’s being cleaned up he returns to the living room and pees on the floor. He’s potty trained to the point where the only time he wears diapers is for bed. He knows when he needs to use the restroom and will tell you he has to go and usually goes on his own. However, his newest trick is to pee on the floor, not in his undies, just to busy too go to the bathroom apparently. I respect that being a boy he can pretty much pee where ever he may be, but my carpeted floor is just unacceptable. His dad says, “If I were there I’d show him to go outside with me.” Well, I think that’s half the problem several weeks ago he was shown to pee on the road side and out in the woods on various outings where there wasn’t a potty available.

But craziness aside I actually have something important to discuss today. Supporting small, local, and handmade businesses. If you’re active on Etsy you may be aware of the recent uproar. If you didn’t even know Etsy had forums I’m going to share a little with you. Last week Etsy published a featured seller piece like it does regularly. To which Regretsy published this. The scandal has become referred to as Baligate. Yes, Etsians have a good sense of humor in spite of feeling as though they have been sold out. The general consensus among businesses that are single person operations it is: 1-unfair to lump us in to compete with companies who outsource their production and sell mass manufactured items. 2-If Etsy has made a shift from being a handmade market place the customers deserve to know this. 3-The terms used to define how a shop can operate on Etsy are poorly defined and leave much to interpretation. 4-Etsy has yet to really address the concerns of its community and has taken the road of censorship.

Out of the hoopla several groups have stepped up to defend handmade. The Craft Star, which launches soon stands to be a strong competitor to Etsy. They have build a very interactive fan page on Facebook and seem to have learned from Etsy’s recent errors. They are defining handmade and are holding to what buyers and sellers alike expect from a handmade venue. I’m excited to see what the future holds for this company. Additionally, a new team has emerged on Etsy. Team Handmade is focusing on defining handmade and hoping to offer Etsy shoppers a way to be confident that their purchases are in fact handmade. You can find them on facebook here.

For me supporting handmade and small/local businesses is important. True, being a handcrafter myself it’s important for my household that people are supporting handmade, but it’s greater than just any single business. Given the current state of the economy it’s more important than ever to keep your money flowing where you live. I try not to talk politics, but I tend to agree with those who have concerns about the outsourcing of jobs to other countries where labor is available at slave wages. This could lead me to a discussion on fair trade and how even your electronics are “hand made” by someone, but that doesn’t fit my idea of handmade.

When you purchase handmade you are supporting a family, a college student, a recently laid off factory employee. You are putting your money towards some one’s mortgage, groceries, medical bills etc. You’re helping someone like you, your neighbor, family, friends. You are not buying a boat for a big CEO or funding the next bank bail out. When you contact a handmade business you are communicating with the person behind the product. The person providing you with individualized customer service is the same person drafting patterns, cutting materials, assembling items, and sending them to your home. They do these things while caring for children and elderly parents, while putting meals on the table and tending to laundry, they are more than just a part of the business they are the business and they wear a dozen other hats throughout their day.

I think every small business dreams of great success and hopes to grow to be the next Apple or Starbucks, etc. Afterall, even the biggest companies started in some one’s basement. But these businesses no longer claim to be small or handmade. They have grown and with it they have given up certain aspects of their business in trade for being a large company. I think it stands to reason that if you grow to be a mass marketed company you have outgrown venues such as Etsy or Artfire. The heart behind these venues has been to be a launching platform for the little guy. Shoppers come to Etsy expecting to find handmade, vintage, and supplies. Imagine the frustration of going to a handmade site and finding that the items you’re shopping through are in fact made in a large factory and available in hundreds of shops across the world.

Crafting is a part of your culture. Before the age of blogs, pinterest, and youtube people passed their skills down through the generations. Mothers taught their daughters to sew, knit, bake, etc. These skills were expected to help run a home. Nowadays these abilities are novelties and if you want to learn you have to seek out a class or someone with experience to teach you. Before chain stores we sought those who had perfected their skills, the local butcher, the corner metal smith, you knew the farmer who supplied your milk and the tailor who sold your suit. Supporting handcrafters keep these skill alive and helps to show we value these abilities and since many offer tutorials, classes, and share their know how we are keeping these skill sets in our culture. It would be a sad world to lose the creativity and practicality of being able to make things with your hands.

If you are looking for handmade items and supporting handmade business is important to you I encourage you to become educated on the business you are considering buying from. Look for the person behind the business, they are happy to build relationships with their customers. Do they have a blog, facebook, twitter, etc where they show their work and their products and the personality behind the shop? Ask questions if you’re unsure of something or if it seems suspicious. If it’s very low priced odds are it’s not truly handmade. True craftsmanship is a time investment and artisan deserve to be compensated for their time. You’re buying a usually unique product made with care and love. You’re getting a piece of the creator because they have put the blood, sweat, and tears into the work they produce. Crafters can often produce many of the same item, but if you do a search you shouldn’t be able to find the exact same item available in a dozen other shops. You may find similar items as many people can find the same inspiration and even small businesses sell their wares to other boutiques, but if every shop has the same pictures, descriptions, and is claiming they made it odds are at least one of them is reselling someone else’s work and in most cases that someone is a low wage earning employee in a dark factory.

Every purchase you make is a vote for the company. Let your money speak where it matters.

Posted in business, etsy | 1 Comment

Work in Progress not Wednesday

I had intended to post yesterday, but it’s been a crazy week. Really no more chaotic than usual, but it felt like the chaos was a steady stream rather than small bursts.

The bean is now a walker! It’s been very exciting, but of course adds a new level of crazy to the mix. It’s also an end to babyhood in our house which I find a bit sad.

I talked to my mother this week. We have a very strained relationship and this was our first chat in nearly a year. It wasn’t quite bad, but I’m not rushing to make this a regular thing either.

As the school year heads into the final stretch the boys have various activities we end up shuttling between and then I have the regular, cooking, cleaning, and running of my business.

This morning was filled with excitement as I woke up at 2am and found something flying around my room. I originally thought it was a moth and that the quiet, dark, and my hardly conscience state made the whooshing sound louder than it was, then it came careening towards my head. A BAT! Yes, a bat, had somehow infiltrated my home and was whirring around my room. I pulled the blanket over my head and crawled out of the room with the baby hidden under my protective quilt. After settling the baby in the living room I decided that surely the many episodes of Billy the Exterminator had made me qualified to rid myself of my new house guest. I donned my blanket again, feeling a bit like Harry Potter under a cloak of invisibility. I debated getting a bat or other object, but since my plan was meerly to slink in and open a window, so he could find his way out I wagered I didn’t need it. I couldn’t see or hear him. He must have settled somewhere, I pulled back the curtain and out he springs. Ack! I screamed like a little girl and dropped to the ground he was a slight ways away from me on the ground and I should have pulled it together enough to throw a box over him or something instead I sat with the blanket tented around me praying it would fly the other way so I could sneak through the adjoining closet and out via the boys’ room, which I did. Checked on the bean who was happily playing with a puzzle; apparently this is fun time for the 1 year old. Cracked open the bedroom door to spy on the bat who had hung himself from the shelf and seemed to be getting cozy. I had already talked myself out of calling my uncle to come rescue me and decided that it might be time to declare a temporary draw while the troops (meaning I) get some rest and regroup. I cautiously reached through and pulled the pack n play out of my room, so the bean could go back to sleep and shut the little flying bugger in. Come morning he had found a new place to hide and it rook some hunting to capture him. This I left to my uncle as he has animal experience. And apparently the light of day makes me less brave. I am willing to co-exist with creatures of the night, but I refuse to be roommates, unless he’s willing to cover his share or the rent, well maybe… I will cautiously be sleeping in my own bed tonight. And instead of working on my many projects I will be taking a nap this afternoon.  

You may be wondering what I’m working on.

3 baby blankets that are cut and need sewing.

This cardi that just needs the edging finished (okay, yes, it’s for me):

This head that will become a super cute waldorf doll(not for me):

I also have a couple shirt designs to finish tweaking, and several more important blogs to write. One on the importance of handmade and a couple tutorials involving quinoa and pail liners, though not at the same time. The days are hardly long enough.  

Posted in WIP Wednesday | 2 Comments

Homemade Citrus Cleaner

Just what the title says; today we’re making citrus cleaner at home. Sometimes I really enjoy the smell of citrus cleaners and the reality is that the oils in citrus fruits do have good cleaning abilities, but the price tag on many available cleaners can be high and there are often added chemicals.

First collect your orange peels. I often throw mine in my sink disposal and let them sit for clean and freshen the stink hole. So resist the urge and throw them in a jar. Depending on how big a batch I want to make it can take me a couple days to fill my jar.

Once full of peels you fill the jar with vinegar and let it sit for about a week and a half. By the end of the first day you can see the vinegar taking on an orange tint as it pulls out the oils. I pour the solution into a spray bottle or use it to refill your Swiffer and then you can throw the peels down your disposal or to the compost heap or whatever it is that you do with your organic “garbage”.

So easy!

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Everyday Wheat Bread

Many moons ago I started making bread for my family and while everyone enjoyed fresh baked bread on the side of meals the recipes left much to be desired when it came to being able to use the bread to make sandwiches or french toast, etc. I then set out to find a recipe that included whole wheat flour, didn’t require the specialty extras like wheat gluten, tasted good and could hold up to a sandwich prepared by the man I married. Shouldn’t be to hard right? It took me nearly 2 years. But now that I have it figured out life is great and my children no longer look longingly at rows of bread in the grocery store as we cruise on by.

There is something soothing about making bread by hand. Sure I let my happy purple Kitchenaid do most of the grunt work, but I love the feel of dough working between my hands and the counter and thinking of the generations of women before me who have prepared bread for their families in similar fashion.

Ingredients:
2 2/3 cup warm water
2 1/2 TBS yeast
1/4 cup oil
1/3 cup honey
1 cup oats (rolled, steel cut, etc)*
3 cups whole wheat flour
4 cups all purpose flour
2 tsp salt

*I really love the texture of steel cut oats and if you choose to use them I suggest adding them to the water and letting them soak a bit before adding the yeast.

In your mixing bowl add your water and yeast and let the yeast proof for about 5 minutes. Then add the oil and honey and mix it in well, letting set for another 5 minutes.

In another large bowl combine oats, flours, and salt. Mix well and then add to yeast mixture. Stir well. I use the dough hook attachment and just let it run until the dough is mostly combined. Depending on the humidity I sometimes have to add more flour, but this can be done while kneading.

I’ve been known to skip the kneading step all together if I’m in a hurry or feeling extra lazy. I just let the mixer mix longer. But if you’re kneading this is where you turn your dough unto a floured surface and knead your little heart out for about 10 minutes or until the dough is soft and elastic.

Lightly oil a large bowl and place your dough in to rise. I love using my Excaliber food dehydrator’s bread rising setting, but whatever method you use is fine. Dough should double, usually within an hour to an hour and a half.

Knead dough a few more times and then shape and place into 2 loaf pans. Bake at 375 for about 25-30 minutes, until golden brown.

Place on wire rack to cool for about 10 minutes and then remove from pan to finish cooling.

I always cut the first heal off and eat it with butter while still warm. It’s my special mommy treat for doing all the work. It’s my little red hen moment.

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Great Cloth Diaper Change 2012

This morning I loaded up the kidlets and trekked into town. This always seems like such an adventure because these days I’ve become a bit of a homebody. But we joined a group of like minded parents at Baby Junk in Omaha. Last year the Real Diaper Association and families across the globe broke a world record for the most diapers changed at once. We sought to break that record again this year.

My older boys are obsessed with the Guinness Book of World Records. I really just wanted to go play with other cloth diapering mamas, but I thought it would be fun for them to get to say they were at an event in the record books. All morning they were pretty excited about it. They got to participate in some musical activities on the sidelines too.

We staked out our spot and the bean got into position. I didn’t get shots of the actual change, but I assure you it was cute and fun.

Since we were in Omaha anyway we decided to spend a couple hours at the zoo. It’s nice to have the pass and just get to wander around for a little while and not feel like you have to make a whole day out of it. The turkey was very excited.
I didn’t accomplish anything productive around the house today, but dirty laundry will keep.
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Pizzarific Pull Apart Bread

I was a hold out and then this week I gave in to Pinterest. My biggest concern was that it would be a total time suck, my next was that would never have a good idea of my own ever again. Like Facebook I couldn’t resist forever, so I’m now a member of the pinterest community and exploring what pinning means to the masses. I found this and thought, “nummy I must make!” But of course it needs my own spin. My favorite pizza comes from a little place in Anchorage known as Moose’s Tooth. They have the best whole wheat crust and bread sticks and this pizza called The Backpacker. The Backpacker is pizza meant for veggie lovers. Don’t get me wrong I love me some meat, but this pizza is delish; spinach, sun dried tomatoes, cloves of roasted garlic, artichoke hearts, olives, and chunks of feta, with an oil based sauce. Very Italian! When I crave pizza this is where my memory goes and my mouth waters. It’s like home! So my pull apart bread is going to reflect this gourmet pizza.

Starting with my bread. The original poster used canned (gasp) dough. I have  a recipe I pilfered that I use most of the time to make pizza dough. We have homemade pizza regularly and this is my go to crust, so we’re going to use this. I will say that I use honey instead of sugar and usually it’s of the raw local variety. For this recipe I mixed some pizza seasoning into the dough when adding the flour. Adding Italian seasoning or the herbs included in these seasonings would have the same affect, which is flavor throughout your bread.

Entering the assembly stage I discovered we were out of olives and feta. *pout*

Once the dough had risen I rolled it into little 1″ balls. I placed the little balls into a pan that i lightly coated with olive oil and sprinkled sun dried tomatoes, fresh spinach, mozzarella cheese, roasted garlic, and chopped artichoke hearts throughout. It’s layering and alternating and making sure it’s all placed evenly. Before going into the oven it looked like this:

I baked at 350 for about 30 minutes. I originally did 20 and eldest child took it out of the oven. The picture below reflects that 20 minute doneness. You can see it had to go back in to reach golden brown, but my vultures, urm, children pounced before I could get another picture.
I consider it a success if it gets inhaled and this did. I look forward to playing with the fixings. We love BBQ pizza and Hawaiian and sausage etc, so I foresee lots of combinations.
Posted in recipe | 2 Comments

Pins and Needles Facebook Giveaway

The fan page for our congo needs a little help. We’re a handful of “likes” away from having enough to claim our own url/username. That’s kind of important. In regards to being found on Facebook. So I have decided to offer up a free shirt as a giveaway if you like the fan page. When we reach 50 fans we’ll randomly select one of our fans and they will get to pick, size, color, design etc. Yay, right!? So tell your friends, family, and the lady sitting next to you on the park bench. We know you’re both facebooking on your smart phones while your kids eat sand anyway.

One more time in case you missed it; Pins and Needles Congo on Facebook.

I will not be offended in any way if you also like the Turk and Bean page or choose to follow me on Twitter. In fact doing so will likely increase your odds of winning things in the future; just sayin.

You know you want a shirt like this of your very own!
Posted in giveaway | 1 Comment

Hack Your Swiffer

I’m pretty sure the Swiffer revolutionized floor cleaning. At least it did for me. And notice how it’s become a part of household vernacular; “I have to swiffer while the kids are napping” or “the mess was so big swiffering alone wasn’t enough.” I don’t mind sweeping, but I hated everything that came with mopping. That said spell check does not consider Swiffer to be a word. Yes, I know Swiffers have been around forever, but I still love mine as much now as when they first appeared on the market. Now what I’m not always crazy about is buying refills and replacement pads. When we switched to a paperless household figuring out what to do with the Swiffer involved some back and forth. I found myself on my hands and knees spot cleaning more and more often because I wanted to save my pads for truly needed times. Oh sure my little boxes lasted longer, but the lazy part of me wasn’t so convinced I was doing the right thing.

 It was then brought to my attention that you can get reusable pads for your swiffer. (Insert V8 moment here) Duh!? It makes perfect sense, but the thought hadn’t crossed my mind. You can easily sew some up using microfiber. But this week I knit some using left over cotton yarn from previous projects. Nothing like a little stash busting to make mama smile. I used this pattern here. Next time I’ll use smaller needles than the 8’s I cast on with. I had to cut my repeats short, but for cleaning gunk off the floor who’s going to say anything? And if they do then they can swiffer themselves.

So proud of my little Swiffer pad I remembered that not everyone knows that you can “jail break” your Swiffer Wet Jet and save yourself more money by not having to purchase the spray refills. Genius?! you say? Well, I also did not come up with the idea, but I think more people need to know about this. It makes me happy because I only clean with baking soda and vinegar and it’s nice to be able to use my own solution and not the chemicals. Eldest child had a freak out recently because toddler child sprayed him with the Windex bottle. “It tastes soooo gross!!! blech blech ack!!” Reminding him it was merely vinegar and water only slightly relieved his duress, “it still tastes yucky.” This may be true, but you’ll live.

But I digress. Hacking your Swiffer takes a little brute force and a pair of pliers. The little cap is very well secured, so you need pliers with teeth for gripping and a wide mouth. Locking pliers or tongue and grove pliers work well. But once unscrewed you can fill that puppy up with your homemade solution and repeat as necessary. It’s worth noting that the little holes made from your last usage should be realigned to the location they were before. The smooshy plastic sort of reseals on itself, but using the same holes over and over extends the amount of time you can reuse the bottle. Should you need a new one I’m sure you can find a friend or two willing to pass their empty ones on to you, until you tell them why you want them and then they too are hacking their Swiffers.

You may be asking yourself what I put in my Swiffer. I could share my top secret formula, but then I’d have to kill ya. I don’t have a true recipe. I fill it about 3/4 of the way with warm water add a couple glugs of vinegar and some citrus or tea tree oil and maybe a little essential oils if I want some fragrance and just call it good. Floors look clean, house smells good, and I’m not complaining.

Posted in cleaning, green living, household | 1 Comment

Co-op Info

It’s been a busy few weeks and I’ve neglected the blog. Shame on me! And honestly this is hardly an actual post. But I wanted a place to organize co-op info and putting it all in one post seemed like the easiest option.

For screenprinting-

Minimum: $200
No Maximum though larger orders take more time
Discount: 20%
At least 6 shirts per design

Bella L/S tee retail $15
Sizes: see above
Colors: Pink, White, Black

American Apparel L/S Lap tee Retail $15
sizes: 0-3mth (limited colors), 3-6, 6-12, 12-18, 18-24
Colors: Asphalt, Baby Blue, Black, Brown, Heather Grey, Lavender, Lemon, Light Blue, Light Pink, Navy, Olive, Pink, Powder Blue, Red, White
American Apparel S/S Lap tee Retail $14
sizes: 3-6, 6-12, 12-18, 18-24
Colors: Asphalt, Baby Blue, Black, Brown, Grass, Heather Grey, Lavender, Lemon, Light Blue, Light Pink, Navy, Olive, Pink, Powder Blue, Red, White
Adult:
 
Availability subject to change. Dark shirts will be printed in white, lighter shirts in black, colored inks only available on white and heather for co-ops.
 (images have been reduced in size and resolution, actual printings are clear and crisp)
Einstein wore cloth

Doncha wish your diaper was cloth like mine

Live long and cloth diaper
Team Cloth
I breastfeed to save water
The little one said “roll over”
Keep calm and use cloth

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