Saturday, May 26, 2012

Shrimp: It's whats for dinner

Here is a nice recipe for shrimp that we all enjoyed.  Well, except for the 6 year old who refuses to eat any seafood.

What you'll need:
  1. lemon
  2. butter
  3. shrimp
  4. seasoning (I used Italian and Mediterranean and salt)
Cover a cookie sheet with tin foil or use a 13 x 9 pan.

Cut up some butter and thinly slice some lemons



Layer the shrimp on top then add seasoning.



Bake in the oven on 350 for about 15 - 20 minutes.  That's it.



I served it with broccoli but if you aren't doing low carb, the sauce would be good with rice or pasta.

This recipe has well over 100K shares.  Please link back to my blog and don't share the recipe as your own.  


End of Year Teacher Gifts

My kids were leaving our school (I may blog about this later) and I wanted to do something special for the teachers.  After being there for 8 years, I wanted their current teachers to know that we appreciated them and also I wanted them to remember my kids.




I figured I'd make a tutorial and so I took photos along the way so it might help others.

One thing I'll mention that this takes a while to dry so make sure you don't wait till the night before to decide to start the project.












What you'll need:


  1. Two packs of pencils or a box or two of crayons
  2. Glue (elmers, hot or tacky)
  3. Cardstock 
  4. Picture frame 1 inch thick or shadow boxes.  (I used 1" thick frames from Hobby Lobby for $10)  Here is a link for them on amazon.  I was sort of doing mine last minute and didn't have time to purchase on amazon.  
  5. Scissors  (to cut your paper to the size of your frame)
My oldest daughter was in 6th grade at the time and I didn't think the crayons would be appropriate so I used pencils.  

First, open word and use the letter that you need.  You can do first or last it doesn't matter.  I used 600 or 650 pt and you do this by highlighting the font size and typing it in and then you have to click "enter" for it to work. 

Highlight your letter then go to FORMAT --> FONT ---> and click OUTLINE.  This will make an outline of your letter.  


Find another font you like and type the name.  It doesn't matter what font you use, whatever you like.  Mess around with it until you get it the way you like.  As you can see, I did one in portrait mode and one in landscape mode.  Play around with your margin sizes as well.  

Print it on cardstock.    Because of the size of the letter, I had to run the page through for the letter and then again for the name.  I printed one on a regular sheet of paper and one on nice cardstock.  I used the regular paper as my working project and the cardstock as the final one.  Between the crayons and the pencils, you don't want to put marks on the nice cardstock.

For the pencils I used outside branch clippers.  You could use a handsaw or whatever you have handy. I didn't use any sandpaper but if you are a perfectionist, you might want to have some on hand to file down some edges.  It is easier to sharpen then cut.  You can use a sharpie to mark a dot where you need to clip the pencil and then just glue the pencil with the dot side down so you don't see it.  

For the crayons, I found that if I poked a slight hole in the crayon with a sharp knife, the crayon broke exactly where I needed it to.  

Make sure you cut them long/wide enough that they cover the outline of the letter that you've printed.  



Lay them out on your working paper because you WILL move them around.  :)  



Once you get everything the way you want them, it is time for glue.  I used good ole Elmers School Glue.  You could use hot glue or tacky glue.  Tacky glue would have probably been a better bet but mine turned out fine with Elmer's. 

Then I laid out my pencils / crayons.  With the elmers I could still move them around a bit and since it dries clear, I didn't have to worry so much about staining.


I placed a heavy text book on top of it while it dried.  Then I put it in the frame (or shadow box if that is what you use) and printed a photo of my daugter(s) and had them write a little note which I glued to the back.  Just so the teacher would remember them.  



That's it.  Hope this helps you guys!


Thursday, May 17, 2012

I Am Mom Enough

So I have to weigh in on the Time Magazine controversy and I'm not going to include the cover photo here in my blog.  Why is breast feeding such a controversial topic?  All aspects of breast feeding seem to start arguments and I just don't get it.

Why is this particular "controversy" with the mother and not with Time for using that photo which was an obvious attempt to sell magazines?  I'm extremely annoyed with Time for using that photo and most especially for the headline "Are you mom enough?".  What the freaking hell does one have to do with the other?   And to pit moms against each other on Mother's Day Weekend was just icing on the cake.  Mommy Wars?   No thanks!

Am I mom enough for what?   To nurse my child?   To nurse my children past 6 months?   To nurse a 3 year old on the cover of Time?   The question is rude and frankly (not to copy from The Honey Badger), but I don't give a shit.

Will this Time cover ultimately be helpful or harmful?   The general consensus is that this does not do anything good for "the cause".  What cause is that?    I was originally of the mind that it did more harm than good by making extended breast-feeding mothers look like freaks who couldn't cut the apron cords.  But after several conversations with friends, good friends and acquaintances where I piped in and said that my 12 year old was nursed for 23 months and my 6 year old nursed until she self-weaned at around 3, I think I might have changed my mind RE:  is the cover harmful.

By people like me standing up and saying that we did it, I think it takes away the freakishness that the cover photo brings out.  The conversation stops, and people look at me as if trying to find the freakishness that they didn't know existed before.  (at least not on this particular topic...there is the knitting after all)  It was never a secret in my family that we nursed past 6 months but being that my girls are older now, it isn't something that comes up in conversation a whole lot.

Ultimately I'm told that no press is bad press so I hope it is the same for this topic of conversation.  Maybe people who thought Jamie Grumet was a freak after seeing the cover will now talk about "the controversy" and someone like me will pipe up and tell our story.  And just maybe the rest of us will put a personal face (two beautiful little faces in my case) to the controversy.



I was way more militant about breast feeding when my oldest was little and I'm way more relaxed about it now.  If it is right for your family then great and if it isn't, then that's ok too.  I mean, we are all moms and as long as we love our kids and try to do the best for them, the logistics don't really matter so much do they?   If you give your child cow's milk at 10 months and I nurse my daughter until she is 3 is there really going to be any difference when they are in their 40's?

I weaned my 12 year old when she was 23 months because she was not a sleeper and wanted to get up and be nursed back to sleep throughout the night.  By 23 months I had had enough and we weaned her.  Now my 6 year old only ever got up once to nurse in the middle of the night when she was an infant and was generally a much better nurser than her sister.  We decided that we'd see if it worked for us that she self wean and she did around age 3.

Nursing a toddler and nursing a baby are two totally different things and I think the Time cover makes people think that the 3 year old is nursing like an infant would.  I do not know the family but I'm guessing that is not the case.  Nursing a baby (this varies a LOT) but generally is about every 2 hours and their only sustenance.  Nursing a toddler on the other hand is mainly about comfort for the child.  They are eating other foods and from my experience just need a bit of comfort to get through the day and eventually when they self wean each of these nursing sessions drops off one at a time.  They get shorter and shorter and ended up only being morning and night for us.  My little one dropped the morning one and so the bedtime one was last to go.  Since I never offered and it was always driven by her needs the night nursing just sort of got sporadic and eventually one day I realized that she was weaned.  That's how it happens.  That's why I say "around age 3" because I don't know when the exact last time she nursed was.  I weaned my 12 year old and so I know she was 23 months at the time.

My oldest rubbed the inside of my arm while she nursed and did so for years after weaning while I was putting her to sleep.

My little one still to this day (she's 6), does what she calls "belly to belly" with me.  Actually she'll do B2B with any family member that will let her, but mostly me.  She still needs that skin to skin comfort.  She raises her shirt to expose her belly and she raises my shirt to expose my belly and we sit together skin to skin for a minute or so.  She rubs my belly with her hand sometimes.  In the morning before she leaves for school, she raises my shirt and just lays her head on my stomach for a few seconds and then she's off for the day.

If extended nursing isn't for you than it isn't for you but that does not make the rest of us freaks.  Until there are personal faces for these people to put to their idea of what extended breast feeding is, then they will never understand.  Having a "nurse your toddler in public day" won't help either.  I believe it stands to those of us who did it, to speak up and put our faces to the term "extended breast feeding" to the people who know us.

I'll leave you with this photo of a button that I STILL have and used to have pinned to my diaper bag.


Frozen Bourbon and Coke?

One of my all time favorite things is bourbon and coke.  LOVE it.  I don't generally drink it because, well, I don't want to be that girl.  You know the one.  The one who cringes when she puts the trash out because of all the glass clinking.  My trash clinks (they don't do recycling here!) but it is wine bottles which makes me feel only marginally better about myself than a trash can full of bourbon bottles.  Right?

I ran across this restaurant with this photo:



I'll let that sink in a minute until you can wipe up the drool and get back to me.
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So, if you are anything like me, you immediately did this:


Is it worth driving 7 hours?  Ummm....Yes!   However that is a couple tanks of gas, a hotel room and food for an $8 (yes, I'm getting the large...don't judge me!) frozen bourbon and coke.   We are currently in budget mode so this is going to take some convincing (of myself) on my part.

My birthday is this summer!    I could use my birthday as an excuse to go and spend all that money.   OR (light bulb moment) I could make my own!   I immediately go to Craigslist to see how much a frozen coke machine is or a frozen daiquiri machine is.  About $1500 is the answer.  If I could buy one of those I could make them all the time!  

Then I go to amazon because, well, amazon has everything.  (hear the angels singing?)



Needless to say I will report back to let you know how these turn out.