Archive for the ‘Reads’ Category

Amy’s Notebook 09.02.09

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

These apple crisp cups would be a fun fall dessert (@ Chocolate on my Cranium)

This is a great tutorial on hanging plates (@ Casa Sugar)

I like this thrifty wrapping paper (@ ohdeedoh)

I love this game table hack (@ Ikea Hacker)

This unbreakable gazing ball for the garden is so smart (@ My Repurposed Life)

This apple vase would be a sweet teacher gift (@ CRAFT)

This easy flower painting tip would be a fun craft to do with my kids (@ Frugal Family Fun Blog)

I love this cute little jar to preserve vacation memories (@ zakka life)

I have plenty of great totes that I could do a fabric makeover on (@ betz white)

I am going to have to try making some of these back-to-school snacks (@ The Kitchn)

I will have to remember this recipe for making your own fabric softener (@ DIY Maven)

Notebook Experiment: Can I Make My Own Salad Bar?

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009


Experiment: Can I make my own salad bar?

Experiment Taken From: Notebook Entry 08.05.09

Materials Needed: Please see Mighty Girl for the full instructions.

Results: I know we have talked a lot about making school lunches for kids, but I what I find with myself is that my own eating seems to take a backseat when I am busy. I think that is why I loved this fantastic idea for creating your own salad bar.

I stocked up on salad bar ingredients that I really like- romaine hearts, cherry tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, blue cheese crumbles, mushrooms, olives, and dried cranberries. I also prepared my favorite balsamic vinaigrette dressing and roasted chicken breasts for salads.

I had a little helper with me who was intrigued by all of the bright colors. This gave us an opportunity to talk about eating the rainbow of vegetables and, to my delight, she wanted to try every single thing that we were chopping.

Clearing space in our fridge was a challenge, but I managed to clear one of our produce drawers for the ingredients. I washed out and used cottage cheese and sour cream containers to store everything in. Everything looked so yummy and fresh! The best part is that one of my favorite things to eat when I go out is to visit places with a salad bar. Now I can enjoy all of that convenience at home with just an hour of chopping.

Conclusion: Thanks to Mighty Girl for this idea to help me eat healthier! It has been delicious salads all week and has even helped encourage my daughter to eat outside of her comfort zone.


********************

I am so excited to open our Notebook Experiments up to everyone and I hope that you will be able to participate this week or in weeks to come! I will be posting this each Wednesday so please mark your calendars if you plan to participate. You can post your entries at any time throughout the week and then leave your entry in the links below.

We have this handy banner that you are more than welcome to use, but it is not a requirement! It is just something you can add to add a little sparkle to your entry.

Rules for Participation:

1. Choose anything from any of our notebook entries (past or present) to do with your family. We have hundreds of bookmarked links of crafts, ways to save money, and organizing ideas.
2. Complete an experiment from the notebook and share about it on your blog or website. We would love to see pictures of what you accomplished or a detailed description of how your projects turned out. Please include a link to this entry, a link to the original posting of the entry (at the original crafster’s blog), and (to help us relocate the project) the date or link of the notebook entry where you found it. You can use the same formatting as our entries or you can just include that information in your post in your own unique way!
3. Post a link below. Please include your name or blog name & a fast description of your project. Example- MomAdvice (WHO bread)

I can’t wait to see what you create and what you find inspiring!

Amy’s Notebook 08.19.09

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

This homemade tooth fairy pillow is adorable (@ zakka life)

This strawberry pretzel ice cream looks delicious (@ Hello My Name is Heather)

These mini car kits would be so handy on long trips (@ Store & Style)

This pencil bag made from juice pouches is a clever use of recyclables (Skip to My Lou)

I love this superhero cape pattern (@ floating world views)

This shrimp scampi with zucchini and tomatoes would be a great way to use up those veggies in your garden (@ CRAFT)

I love this sweet little letter satchel (@ Soule Mama)

I want to make this Scrabble clock for our family room (@ Cut Out & Keep)

I love these four daily routines to keep your house clean enough (@ The Inspired Room)

I love this tutorial on how to prepare dried beans (@ Feels Like Home)

This parmesan caper potato salad looks so yummy (@ Coconut & Lime)

I love these tips on how to have a swap meet (@ Nesting Place)

These swaddling blankets look like a great simple sewing project (@ The Purl Bee)

These homemade pickles look like a yummy treat (@ The Toby Show)

I love these free printable lunchbox tags (@ Alpha Mom)

This Dr. Suess baby shower was the most amazing shower I have ever seen (@ kara’s party ideas)

Notebook Experiments: Can I Green My Sink Routine

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009


Experiment: Can I Green My Sink Routine?

Experiment Taken From: Notebook Entry 05.29.08

Materials Needed: Please see ohdeedoh for the full instructions on this task. I used the vinegar and a lavender essential oil to make my homemade disinfectant, but you could also use tea tree oil. For extra credit, grab some baking soda and use this to scour the sink before disinfecting.

Results: I will admit that I really used to love bleaching my sink. I am all about cleaning the sink and have been ever since I read Sink Reflections. There was just something so therapeutic about having a fresh clean sink and there is just something so cleansing about that sparkling white sink after a good bleaching. To this day, if I smell Comet cleanser it makes me think of my mom and her sink cleaning days when I was a little girl.

But the times, they are a changin’ and I am trying to incorporate more green living into my life. I have talked a lot about implementing homemade cleaners into your routine, but I was still dragging my feet on cleaning my sink with the green stuff.

I really wanted to try this homemade disinfectant and thought I would give my sink a good scrubbing with baking soda instead this time.

I just sprinkled my sink liberally with baking soda and ran a tiny bit of water. This made it more of a scouring paste and I scrubbed it with a little brush (or whatever else you have on hand). Once I scrubbed it well, I gave the sink a rinse and then wiped it out with a towel. I finished the routine off by spraying my homemade disinfectant and wiping the sink down again.

If you are a bleach user, I wouldn’t say it was exactly the same type of white, but it came very close. It did require a bit of elbow grease and took longer, but it was oh-so-worth-it!


Oh, and did you notice that sweet little dishcloth hanging over my faucet? I made that! It is a gift to myself after all of the gifts I have made. It isn’t even a reject one (which is what I normally give myself). It is the first item that I have knitted for myself since I have learned how. Oh, and it also happens to be green- just like my new sink routine!

I feel like this is something that I can do regularly and am proud that I have finally given the bleach up for good! Thanks ohdeedoh for this great idea!

What are some of your favorite ways to green up your household routines?
********************

I am so excited to open our Notebook Experiments up to everyone and I hope that you will be able to participate this week or in weeks to come! I will be posting this each Thursday so please mark your calendars if you plan to participate. You can post your entries at any time throughout the week and then leave your entry in the links below.

We have this handy banner that you are more than welcome to use, but it is not a requirement! It is just something you can add to add a little sparkle to your entry.

Rules for Participation:

1. Choose anything from any of our notebook entries (past or present) to do with your family. We have hundreds of bookmarked links of crafts, ways to save money, and organizing ideas.
2. Complete an experiment from the notebook and share about it on your blog or website. We would love to see pictures of what you accomplished or a detailed description of how your projects turned out. Please include a link to this entry, a link to the original posting of the entry (at the original crafster’s blog), and (to help us relocate the project) the date or link of the notebook entry where you found it. You can use the same formatting as our entries or you can just include that information in your post in your own unique way!
3. Post a link below. Please include your name or blog name & a fast description of your project. Example- MomAdvice (WHO bread)

I can’t wait to see what you create and what you find inspiring!

Amy’s Notebook 08.12.09

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

These are great tips for cooking while camping (@ CRAFT)

This Anthropologie-inspired handbag is beautiful (@ Happy Together)

This idea for using leftover smoothies for popsicles is so thrifty (@ my happy little life)

I love this ruffle t-shirt tutorial (@ homemade by jill)

This skirt made out of a circular tablecloth is stunning (@ wipster)

I love this list of back-to-school traditions (@ A Purse Full of Cheerios)

This movie-inspired party sounds like a blast for a last minute get together (@ shelterrific)

My children would love these giant bubble wands (@ Monkey Lobster)

These recycling paper products projects are fantastic (@ design sponge)

These pizzas on the grill would be a fun addition to our family night (@ Skip to My Lou)

I adore this 5 good things booklet printable (@ Whisker Graphics)

These sugar topped banana muffins look like a delicious breakfast treat (@ little momma and company)

This homemade cherry pie looks like a sinful treat (@ The Kitchn)

I love this homemade game of Concentration (@ Just Something I Made)

These perfect cosmos look absolutely delicious (@ CRAFT)

This DIY laundry drying rack is beautiful and inspiring (@ Centsational Girl)

I love this piece on a week without plastic (@ ReadyMade Magazine)

Notebook Experiments: Can I Make Oatmeal in the Slow Cooker?

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009


Experiment: Can I make oatmeal in my slow cooker?

Experiment Taken From: Notebook Entry 02.14.07

Materials Needed: Please see Tip Nut for the full instructions. I decided to attempt cooking the oatmeal in my slow cooker and followed the instructions exactly except I substituted the steel cut oats for regular rolled oats because that is what I had in my pantry. I wanted to see if the experiment worked well before heading to the store. My slow cooker is the standard size and I poured the ingredients in there. I was really intrigued by the water to oats ratio because it just seemed like far too much water. I flipped the slow cooker on and let it cook for eight hours.

Results: I programmed my coffeemaker for the same exact time and woke up to a steaming bowl of oatmeal and hot coffee this morning. The oatmeal still seemed a little thin, but I let it set up for a minute or two before I tried it. Within minutes, it thickened up and I had a perfect bowl of oatmeal.

This oatmeal is extremely creamy and tastes delicious! It tastes more on par with restaurant oatmeal because of the great consistency of it. With a lump of brown sugar and some dried fruits, it would make a wonderful way to start the day.

Conclusion: I will definitely be buying the steel cut oatmeal to eat this again. It was a wonderful way to walk up and motivated me to have breakfast which is very hard to do! Thanks Tip Nut for sharing all of your tips with your readers!

********************

I am so excited to open our Notebook Experiments up to everyone and I hope that you will be able to participate this week or in weeks to come! I will be posting this each Thursday so please mark your calendars if you plan to participate. You can post your entries at any time throughout the week and then leave your entry in the links below.

We have this handy banner that you are more than welcome to use, but it is not a requirement! It is just something you can add to add a little sparkle to your entry.

Rules for Participation:

1. Choose anything from any of our notebook entries (past or present) to do with your family. We have hundreds of bookmarked links of crafts, ways to save money, and organizing ideas.
2. Complete an experiment from the notebook and share about it on your blog or website. We would love to see pictures of what you accomplished or a detailed description of how your projects turned out. Please include a link to this entry, a link to the original posting of the entry (at the original crafster’s blog), and (to help us relocate the project) the date or link of the notebook entry where you found it. You can use the same formatting as our entries or you can just include that information in your post in your own unique way!
3. Post a link below. Please include your name or blog name & a fast description of your project. Example- MomAdvice (WHO bread)

I can’t wait to see what you create and what you find inspiring!

Amy’s Notebook 08.05.09

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

I love this sweet little restaurant kit (@ Whimsy Love)

This hair clip organizer is really cute (@ the idea room)

This passport wall art is so beautiful (@ A Brooklyn Limestone in Progress)

I love this menu board for a creative way to share the menu plan (@ The Farm Chicks)

This hallway hopscotch would be a great way to keep the kids entertained on a rainy day (@ The Artful Parent)

These grilled portabello mushrooms look like a delicious summer dinner (@ Make & Takes)

These fruit & yogurt popsicles look like a fun summer treat (@ No Time for Flash Cards)

This blueberry gingerbread humble cake looks like a delicious way to use those blueberries (@ two straight lines)

I love this idea for creating an at-home salad bar (@ Mighty Girl)

I love this thrifty craft station (@ Crafty Nest)

I really like this post on what was learned from a No Spend Month (@ Small Notebook)

This grocery ad playtime menu idea is so cute (@ Money Saving Mom)

I want to try making some indoor sand castles with the kids (@ Scribbit)

Simple Writings Bring Simple Pleasures

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

One of my dearest friends and I built our relationship up through daily email exchanges about our lives. We started emailing when my husband and I were just newlyweds and she was in a committed relationship. Our emails continued as we journeyed to Massachusetts and settled down in our first home, through my pregnancy, her engagement, her marriage, and her first baby, my second baby, her second baby… each email carefully documented our daily joys and struggles. When I became a mother my emails were full of joy, but a lot of whining about sleep, difficulty transitioning into motherhood, problems nursing, and general woes. Her emails were filled with encouragement and hope of a light at the end of the tunnel. When she wrote about motherhood though, she rarely complained but just reveled in the joy of being a mother. She was like that, she just enjoyed life.

Whatever she wrote about though, I seemed to want. It wasn’t belongings, but a sense of peace and of tranquility that she seemed to capture, that I had never had. I was always running, always going, always busy…I now realize that I didn’t take the time to enjoy the simple things, the simple life, and the simple goodness that could be created by being still for a moment.

I am trying to transition out of the busy bee world and into a more quiet time with my children. Perhaps it is melancholy because my firstborn will be attending first grade next year or perhaps it is just the realization that I don’t need to be running or constantly entertained to enjoy a quiet spell in my life.

Today was just one example of what a quiet day for us is like. The windows were cracked and I could feel the fresh air blowing into our house and the smell of freshly cut grass. I look down at my daughter as I feel her deliberate and persistent tapping on my leg. As I look down at her, I smile because she is wearing a pair of my shoes on her chubby little feet. Of all her toys, it is these shoes she loves and she calls them her “tap shoes” as she scoots the sandals across the floor. I look over at my son who is curled at one end of our sofa with a book. I can hear him as he sounds out each word very carefully and slowly, just as he has been taught in school. I revel in his growing vocabulary and how much he has learned this year- he has grown so much.

The smell of fresh muffins travels through the room as I wrap up my baking for the week ahead. This batch of muffins is stuffed to the brim with oatmeal and a little bit of chocolate, to balance out the heartiness and make them more appealing to my children. The muffins smell like freshly baked cookies and the kids begin to count down the minutes until they will be cool enough to handle.

I hum a little bit as I tidy up the kitchen, from the day spent baking, and fill the sink with the dirty dishes. The suds and warm water fill the sink and I dip my hands into the bubbles to finish the day’s dishes. As I scrub, I look out the window at our sweet little garden that we planted together. I recall the tender way my son wanted to help plant each and every plant, asking each time, “What can I do, mommy?” He was there for each step of the process and helped to water our finished product. He was just as proud and dirty as me that day.

I then sit at the other end of the sofa with my son and the sound of my knitting needles, Emily’s tap shoes, and my son’s quiet readings are all you hear. We enjoy the quiet of this day and look forward to our idyllic summer together. This stillness is what I need and I see our children growing from it. Not from the organized activities, the well-thought and well-executed organized crafts, the busy running. No, they thrive in the quiet and stillness…and so do I.

Do you see how the mundane can be made to sound lovely? Just as advertisers would have us believe that a new car will give us this amazing life we have always dreamed of, simple writing about simple pleasures may invoke that same enthusiasm. Suddenly baking muffins, knitting, quiet moments, a tiny garden, and doing dishes sound lovely…and you begin to want that. Imagine if the whole world returned to these simple pleasures- joy in the laundry hanging on the line, kids playing in sprinklers instead of with electronic gadgets, freshly baked goodies straight from your own oven, an appreciation for the beauty in nature instead of the beauty of our exterior selves…I would imagine that it would put a lot of companies out of business.

Today I challenge you to a day of simplicity and I look forward to hearing what special and simple things bring you the most joy in your life.

Is it your children’s laughter? Is it a freshly cracked library book? Is it the quiet time you spend with your spouse after your children have went to bed? Is it that first cup of morning coffee with a dash of cream? What are some simple pleasures that bring you happiness? Revel in those things, bring those things into your life, focus on those simple and amazing pleasures and see if it doesn’t bring into perspective the beautiful life you are already leading.

What simple pleasures in life do you enjoy the most?

Amy’s Notebook 07.29.09

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

This anti-boredom kit is a great idea for the kids (@ Instructables)

This strawberry bread pudding would be a wonderful brunch dish (@ Baking Bites)

I love this tip on keeping sports bottles in the car (@ Parent Hacks)

This knitted cupcake hat is amazingly beautiful (@ A Purse Full of Cheerios)

I love these eight helpful tips for food photography (@ Pioneer Woman)

I like this ideas for throwing a circus birthday party (@ Let’s Explore)

I need to learn how to knit on double pointed needles so I can make these knitted coasters (@ do stuff!)

Setting a tantrum timer is a great idea for parents (@ The Toby Show)

This homemade wheat waffle mix looks so yummy (@ giver’s log)

I am going to have to remember these tips for freezing summer fruit (@ Cooks Illustrated)

These alphabet block magnets are so inventive and adorable (@ plum pudding)

This knitted guest hand towel is beautiful (@ 3 Sleeves to the Wind)

These knitted leg warmies would make a wonderful baby gift (@ Sew Liberated)

I am going to make some of these little homemade make-up kits for my daughter (@ Parent Hacks)

I love this thrifty & pretty solution for earring storage (@ Teresa Franco)

My children would love this homemade moon sand (@ ohdeedoh)

Amy’s Notebook 07.22.09

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

My kids would love this glow-in-the-dark slime (@ the idea room)

I will have to remember these great tips for getting rid of wasps (@ Tip Nut)

These chocolate wands would be great for a Harry Potter screening night or Harry Potter themed birthday party (@ Hello My Name is Heather)

These sweet and salty peanut chocolate chip cookies look delicious (@ plum pudding)

I love these summer sweaters that are really t-shirts because there is no sewing required (@ angry chicken)

I like this tutorial for making a simple reversible tote bag (@ Skip to My Lou)

I love this thrifty tip for what to do with those cut-off bread crusts from your child’s sandwiches (@ Parent Hacks)

These are cute ideas for what you can do with those recycled baby food jars (@ homemade by jill)

I love this ideas for traveling with kids (@ Craft)

I can’t wait to try this recipe for macaroni salad (@ Simply Recipes)

These little homemade stamps would be a fun and easy craft to do with the kids (@ Mel’s Own Place)

These broccoli, cheddar, & sausage muffin pull-a-parts would be a fun breakfast with my family (@ Picky Palate)

This playroom organization is so brilliant and beautiful (@ stephmodo)

This cranberry pecan chicken salad looks like a delicious lunch (@ Annie’s Eats)

I want to knit some of these sock slippers (@ Polar Knit)

This craft car caddy would change a crafter’s life (@ Craft)

This DIY lighted paper pennant garland is incredibly cool (@ Once Wed)

This sweet little centerpiece would be an adorable addition to our house (@ Living With Lindsay)

My kids would love these homemade yo yo balloons (@ zakka life)

These are 5 peanut butter recipes that I would like to try (@ The Kitchn)

I bet my family would love these Rice Krispies Cookies (@ Amber’s Delectable Delights)