The Summer of Knitted Hats

October 12th, 2010

Each year it seems that I have a theme to my knitting and this year was the summer of chemo caps as I shared in our Scraps of Life Giving entry on inexpensive ways to give back to your community. I started the summer out by spending about $25 in supplies and then tried to work my way through some of the yarn in my stash combined with super soft yarn that I thought would help keep cold heads warm and not be itchy.

My intention had been to knit with frantic fury and get as many cranked out as I could.  I managed to knit about fifteen hats this summer, in total, and distributed them to a couple of friends who were in need and the rest will be headed for the Patternworks drive at the end of the month. Although a bit short of the goal that I had hoped, I am still really proud and will continue to try and keep charity projects like this on my knitting needles as much as I can.

I was inspired by my mother-in-law and her mom, who always are doing some type of charity knitting and never cease to amaze me with their capacity to give what is on their knitting needles. If you are not a knitter, a knitted hat takes me about four hours of knitting (including the knitted embellishments) so it is a true labor of love to give something knitted to others.   They are always giving these precious gifts away and my mother-in-law shared the Patternworks charity with me so I could assist with the giving too.

Each hat was uniquely different and accessorized with what I had hoped would be a little bit of fashionable accessories. Emily gladly posed in each hat for me, but as the summer grew to a close, I could tell she was getting a little impatient for her turn. Even poor Ethan was recruited to try on girl hats for mama to get appropriate sizing for older kid’s heads and loudly complained about the itchy hat that he had from last year.

I had only learned to knit hats a year ago and had knitted a cute little Cupcake Hat for Emily and had attempted to knit a patterned hat for Ethan…which was horribly flawed. Even though I messed up a huge spot on it, he wore it all winter, wearing my big old flaw right in the front. Every. Single. Time.  It pained me.

This week, I made it my goal to get the children in newly knitted hats before the cold weather hit. Here are their sweet little hats that I made and some information about those patterns.

Pattern: Basic Roll-Brim Hat (Courtesy of Knitting for Peace book, a favorite in my book collection)

Needle Size: US 5 Needles

Yarn: Caron Simply Soft in Grey Heather (marked down to a mere $2.50 per skein)

Notes: This basic hat pattern was the first pattern that my mother-in-law used to teach us how to knit in the round. The hat originally calls for a US 7 size needle, but I have found that I am a very loose knitter and usually have to go down about two needle sizes for the sizing to fit on my hats.

This pattern is perfect for a beginner because once you have gotten your stitches cast on and made sure that nothing is twisted, all you do is knit around and around and it naturally creates the brim rolling that you see above. This basic hat pattern can be dressed up for a girl with simple embellishments or different styles of yarn or it can be done simply sweet and plain for a little boy.

Ethan pronounces this hat as awesome and we have it tucked in his bag for those cool days of fall and winter. This inexpensive yarn was perfect for a washable and soft hat that he can enjoy all year long.

Pattern: Toddler Republic Hat (free pattern) & Lydia Flowers (free pattern), the medium and small flowers only for a toddler hat

Needle Size: US 5 Needles (three sizes down from what the original pattern called for as I knit very loosely)

Yarn: Caron Simply Soft in Grey Heather (marked down to a mere $2.50 per skein & I was able to make this second one out of the same skein from her brother’s hat) & scrap Cotton Tots yarn in baby pink for the flower.

Notes: The Republic Hat pattern (adult version available in the side bar as a free PDF) is still my favorite pattern of all and I was so excited when I happened upon this Toddler Republic Hat version to make a mini-me version for my daughter. It truly is a dream pattern for anyone just beginning to create hats because the two inch brim is not knit in the round and then, after a small amount of binding off, you begin knitting in the round after the two inch brim. By creating a brim that is not knit in the round, it reduces your chances of getting your hat twisted on the circular needles and makes the whole process so much easier.

The Lydia Flower is my favorite knitted embellishment ever created because it adds that beautiful knitted touch to all of our hats. I noticed in the shops that hats that look handmade are adorned with knitted flowers and I am thrilled that I can actually make my own! Do I even have to mention the savings? Two beautiful hats for my kids made out of $2.50 worth of supplies? That is a huge savings!

Emily is in love with her hat. She is so in love with her hat that she wore it all day at school after I gave it to her and refused to take it off except for her school pictures that day. I fear what her hair looked like for that picture, but was feeling quite proud that I made something that she was so excited to show off.

The hat trend will continue because it is finally my turn! At the beginning of the summer, I visited The Yarn Gourmet in town to buy myself two beautiful skeins of fancy yarn. This is the first time I have ever bought “real” yarn and I treated myself as a reward after I made all the hats for everyone this summer. Just as the kids have felt a little impatient about getting a turn, I couldn’t wait to indulge in a turn for myself.

I am so excited to show you what I do with this yarn and then it will be back to the knitting agenda of creating handmade holiday gifts for family & friends.

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If you are just beginning the world of hats, these are the three things that really helped me have success getting comfortable with double-pointed needles and knitting in the round.

3 Things That Helped Me With Making Hats

1. Bamboo 16″ Circular Needles– These are an off-brand of bamboo needles, but had a wider cord than the kind that you buy in the store. This helped me so my stitches didn’t get twisted. Circular needles are expensive in the store ($8.50 per needle set). These were $24.98 for all of the sizes 0-15! What a steal! I applied my Swagbucks towa
rds Amazon gift cards to score these for free.

2. Bamboo 9″ Double Pointed Needles– Again, these are an off-brand needle and they were extremely rough so they held my stitches really well. As a beginner on these, these rough double pointed needles were key for me to get the hang of it without dropping stitches. It was a lot cheaper to buy these as a set and I did apply my Swagbucks towards the Amazon gift cards so I didn’t have to dip in my pocket to pay for them.

3. A Better Ring Marker- I was using the kind that you just slipped over the needles and was finding that I was losing my starting stitch marker for knitting in the round. My mother-in-law gave me the kind that slip onto the yarn and I put that at the beginning of my round. It was key to not losing my place and helped me stay on track with my pattern!

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Disclosure: The links to books and supplies are affiliate links and are provided so you can locate what you need quickly and easily. Feel free to order a book, but we encourage utilizing the library system and buying me some yarn instead.  Wouldn’t that just be so much more lovely?

What crafts have you been working on? Feel free to share those links to your projects.

An Apron Full of Giveaways: 10 Piece Stainless Steel BHG Cookware (Valued at $159)

October 12th, 2010

flapper girl, $40

I hope everyone is having a great week this week! As we do each week,  here is our round-up of giveaways for our readers! We hope that this is beneficial to you and your family! Please let us know if you guys win anything- I love to hear the success stories! As always on MomAdvice, we love to share giveaways with our readers and we hope that you will enjoy entering our giveaways as well!

The giveaways continue with another brand new giveaway with Better Homes &  Gardens. Yes, that’s right friends, ANOTHER giveaway! Today we are giving away 3 sets of the 10-piece Stainless Steel Tri-Ply Clad Pots & Pans set (each set is valued at $159) to three lucky readers. This is just the beginning of the giveaways we will be offering over the next couple of weeks so please check back each Tuesday for a new giveaway. Better yet, by participating I will have more giveaways to offer you when the cook-off concludes. NO ENTRIES HERE WILL QUALIFY. PLEASE FOLLOW THE LINK BELOW TO ENTER!

Our giveaway is also running for the  3 sets of the 13-piece Non-Stick Hard-Anodized Pots & Pans (each set valued at $159) to three lucky readers as well. This giveaway will close on 10/31 so make sure to get those entries in!  Remember that you can vote daily and get an entry into the contest for our dish.  NO ENTRIES HERE WILL QUALIFY. PLEASE FOLLOW THE LINK BELOW TO ENTER!

Below are the contest links-if you are hosting a contest please link it up below. Sorry, we aren’t giving away the aprons just showcasing them!

Please put your site name and then what type of contest you are hosting. For example, “MomAdvice (Children’s Movies).”

Please let me know if you have any questions and good luck to each of you!

8 Ways to Use Canned or Fresh Pumpkin This Year

October 11th, 2010

If you have read the site for any length of time, you will know that this family is nuts about pumpkin. Today I wanted to showcase eight different ways you can use those cans of pumpkin in your kitchen and none of them happen to be pumpkin pie… at least not this week! There really are so many sweet and savory dishes that can be made from canned pumpkin and these happen to be eight of my delicious ideas for making pumpkin work for you this year!

Want to wow your company? Serve this with a loaf of fancy artisan bread and end the meal with a delicious apple crisp. It will be like you are literally eating the season of fall right off of your plate.

If you are worried about how your family will react to pumpkin pasta, scale the pumpkin back. You can do between 2/3-2 cups of pasta, depending on your personal taste. Start with a little and ease your family into the two cup ratio.

Creamy Pumpkin Pasta

2 garlic cloves
2 tbsp olive oil
1 pound package of Sweet Italian Turkey Sausage (removed from its casing)
2/3 cup to 2 cups pumpkin puree (depending on your personal taste)
1 can chicken broth
¼ cup half & half
½ cup sour cream (low-fat or fat free)
¼ tsp nutmeg
1 tsp salt
¼ tsp white pepper
1 tsp sage
2 tbsp fresh parsley, minced
¼ cup Romano Cheese, shredded
1 pound penne or rotini pasta

In a large skillet sauté the garlic in the olive oil on medium heat. Add the turkey sausage and cook until no longer pink, breaking the meat up with your spoon as you cook it. Remove turkey sausage and garlic from the skillet. Pour the chicken broth into the skillet and deglaze the pan using a wire whisk, to bring up all of the flavors stuck to the pan. Whisk in the half and half, sour cream, pumpkin, and seasonings. Simmer for ten minutes. Meanwhile, boil the pasta in salted water until al dente. Drain pasta and stir into the pumpkin mixture along with the turkey sausage, simmering for another three minutes or until the sauce thickens and hugs the pasta. Stir in parsley and garnish with Romano and more parsley.

Side Note- If the sauce is too thick, thin it with a little addition of chicken broth until you get it to the right consistency.

Pumpkin waffles are a special tradition that are enjoyed after a day of pumpkin picking at the pumpkin patch. These are truly my favorite waffles of all the different variations we make and a fantastic way to use those cans of pumpkin in your pantry!

Deliciously Spiced Pumpkin Waffles

1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 pinch salt
2 eggs
1/4 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1 cup canned pumpkin puree
1 2/3 cups milk
4 tablespoons butter, melted and cooled

Mix together flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, and salt in large bowl. In a second bowl, add eggs, sugar, pumpkin, milk, and butter; beat well. Gently fold in the flour mixture. Spoon in about 3/4 cup of batter into the waffle iron. Cook each waffle for 4-5 minutes. This recipe makes approximately 5 waffles on my waffle iron.

Additional Notes- I double this recipe to make an extra batch to freeze or when entertaining. Make sure to spray your waffle iron well with nonstick spray or these will stick to the waffle iron and make a big mess. Also, be sure to leave these on at least four to five minutes. If you try to take them off sooner than that, they will not taste as good or set up as nicely.

Our gingerbread waffles incorporate all of the holiday flavors I love- molasses, ginger, cinnamon, brown sugar, pumpkin, and nutmeg. What more can I say? The only downfall to this recipe… you can’t eat just one!

Step out of the box and have a little gingerbread before Christmas and find yet another way to use some of that delicious pumpkin!

Gingerbread Waffles (courtesy of 30 Minute Meals)

3 cups all-purpose flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
2 teaspoons ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg, eyeball it
1/2 teaspoon salt
4 large eggs
2/3 cup packed dark brown sugar
1 cup canned pumpkin puree
1 1/4 cups milk
1/2 cup molasses
1/2 cup (1 stick) melted butter, plus some to butter the iron
Syrup, whipped cream or fresh fruits for topping, to pass at table

Preheat waffles iron. In a large bowl combine flour, baking powder, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and salt. In a medium bowl, beat eggs and brown sugar until fluffy, then beat in pumpkin, milk, molasses and melted butter. Stir the wet into dry until just moist. Do not over stir the waffle batter. Brush the iron with a little melted butter and cook 4 waffles, 4 sections each. Serve with toppings of choice.

These pumpkin pancakes are truly light and fluffy with just the perfect balance of pumpkin and spices. I have never experienced a more perfect pancake and a drizzle of syrup with butter makes these a delicious morning treat on a cool autumn day.

Light & Fluffy Pumpkin Pancakes

1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
2 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ginger
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 pinch clove
1 1/4 cup low-fat milk
1/3 cup canned pumpkin puree
2 tablespoons melted butter
1 egg

Whisk flour, sugar, baking powder, spices and salt in a bowl. In a separate bowl whisk together milk, pumpkin, melted butter, and egg. Fold mixture into dry ingredients. Spray or grease a skillet and heat over medium heat: pour in 1/4 cup batter for each pancake. Cook pancakes about 3 minutes per side. This recipe makes six 6-inch pancakes.

Side Note- This can easily be doubled and frozen or stored in the refrigerator for a great breakfast later in the week.

A first time canning experience led to one of my favorite hostess gifts of all time- a delicious Pumpkin Butter perfect for spreading on dinner rolls! You can triple your batch and let it cook in the slow cooker for six hours to make a larger quantity without a lot of effort. Keep this recipe in mind when creating those holiday gifts!

Pumpkin Butter

1 (29 ounce) can pumpkin puree
3/4 cup apple juice
2 teaspoons ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
1 1/2 cups white sugar
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg

Combine pumpkin, apple juice, spices, and sugar in a large saucepan; stir well. Bring mixture to a boil. Reduce heat, and simmer for 30 minutes or until thickened. Stir frequently. Transfer to sterile containers and chill in the refrigerator until serving.

Pumpkin Cornbread Muffins are my family’s favorite side dish if it fall or the dead of summer. I try to make sure to stockpile pumpkin for just this reason and you might be doing the same after making a batch of these for your family! Best served at room temperature, they are deliciously moist and a fantastic side accompaniment to any meal!

Pumpkin Cornbread Muffins

1 1/4 cups flour
3/4 cup cornmeal
2/3 cup light brown sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
3/4 cup canned pumpkin puree
3/4 cup buttermilk (I substituted with regular milk and a teaspoon of vinegar to sour)
1/4 cup butter, melted
2 eggs, room
2 tablespoons honey
Sugar for sprinkling (I used the raw sugar)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a muffin tin with muffin liners. In a bowl, toss together flour, cornmeal, sugar, baking powder, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon. In another mixing bowl, mix with a wooden spoon, the pumpkin puree, sour cream or buttermilk , butter, eggs and honey, until well combined. Add the pumpkin mixture to the flour mixture just until combined. Transfer to the prepared muffin tin. Sprinkle with a little sugar (I used raw sugar) on top. Bake for about 20-25 minutes, or until edges just begin to color. Cool to room temperature. Makes approximately 12-13 muffins.

(Photo Source:Dalboz17)

Love those fancy pumpkin spice lattes at your favorite coffee shop, but don’t love the price? Put leftover cans of pumpkin to good use and create a coffee house worthy drink right in the comfort of your own home!

Amy’s Version of Starbuck’s Pumpkin Spice Latte

2 cups milk
1 cup very strong coffee
2 teaspoons vanilla
2 teaspoons sugar (or one packet of Splenda)
1 teaspoon cinnamon (plus extra for dusting)
2 heaping spoonfuls of pumpkin

Pour all of the ingredients into a pot and heat over medium-high heat until the coffee is steaming hot. Pour into mugs and top with whipped cream & cinnamon. Enjoy!

If there is any recipe from my recipe collection that I plan to hand down to my children, this would be the recipe that I hope to share with them. This pumpkin bread is a cinch to pull together, is made from entirely pantry ingredients, and is an elegant gift for the holidays. I hope you love it half as much as I do and can share a loaf with your family this fall!

Spiced Pumpkin Bread

3 cups sugar
1 cup canola oil
3 large eggs
1 16-ounce can solid pack pumpkin
3 cups all purpose flour
1 teaspoon ground cloves
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts (optional)

Preheat oven to 350°F. Butter and flour two 9×5×3-inch loaf pans. Beat sugar and oil in large bowl to blend. Mix in eggs and pumpkin. Sift flour, cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg, baking soda, salt and baking powder into another large bowl. Stir into pumpkin mixture in 2 additions. Mix in walnuts, if desired.

Divide batter equally between prepared pans. Bake until tester inserted into center comes out clean, about 1 hour 10 minutes. Transfer to racks and cool 10 minutes. Using sharp knife, cut around edge of loaves. Turn loaves out onto racks and cool completely.

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Fresh Pumpkin Puree? Why not!

Did you know that you can make your own pumpkin puree? It is very easy and a great way to get your money back on the pumpkins you bought!

The Tightwad Gazette recommends not cutting into your pumpkin until after October 30th. Save the cut out portions in your fridge and the day after Halloween, you can begin to process it. Simply cut the flesh away from the skin and dice it, just as you would do with squash. Fill a pot with your cubes and add two inches of water to the bottom. Simmer the pot until the pumpkin is soft. Then all you have to do is run it through your food processor and you can freeze this into two cup portions (the equivalent size of the canned stuff).

Just as a side note, when thawed, the puree will be more watery than the canned version. Just allow the water to drain out and use the pumpkin as usual. For more great pumpkin tips, be sure to visit our “Oh, Glorious Pumpkin,” article for more ideas from selecting the most perfect pumpkin ever to what to do with those delicious pumpkin seeds.

What is your favorite pumpkin recipe? Feel free to share those links and ideas here!

Freebie Friday: October 8, 2010

October 8th, 2010

Happy Freebie Friday, everyone! We are so lucky to have Freebies 4 Mom share their list of the best freebies of the week with our readers each and every Friday. Please visit her site for fabulous freebies and sweepstakes information every single day!  This week Heather is giving away  two Swelly Belly bands, and a $25 Kroger plus $25 Shell gift cards! Be sure to head over there to get those entries on!

This week on MomAdvice we are sharing our recipe for Presto Pesto Pasta Con Pollo and a little bit about the Better Homes & Gardens cook-off that we are participating in, six great new books to pick up from your local library in our good reads for moms edition for October, and our weekly notebook of inspiration. Don’t forget to enter to win a set of Better Homes & Gardens Hard-Anodized Non-Stick Cookware (we are giving away 3 sets at a retail value of $159 each!) and check out our Apron Full of Giveaways with almost a hundred new giveaways to enter.

Have a great weekend, everyone!
Health & Beauty
Advil free bottle
Ester-C Gummies
P&G Brand Sampler
VIva la Juicy fragrance at Sephora inside JCPenney

Food
Hershey’s Cookie Exchange Party

Entertainment
RiteAid Free 8×10 (thru Sunday)
Redbook magazine (3 issues from ValueMags)
Redbook magazine (3 issues from Mercury Magazines)
Free JCPenney Portraits for Deployed Military Members
Borders Free Romance eBooks
Google Code University

Home
Donate $1.00 “Pink My Profile” Right@Home (Facebook)
Donate $1.00 “Like” Share the Courage (Facebook)
Donate $0.50 “Like” Pepperidge Farm Milano Cookies (Facebook)
Right@Home Touch Up and Go GIft Pack
Tide and Glad
BrewStation Cup of Creativity House Party
Perler Bead-a-Palooza House Party
House Partypalooza

Pets
Wellness Natural Food for Pets

This Week’s Freebie Events:

OCTOBER 8 – 14

thru 14Smucker’s Daily Giveaway

9 – Sierra Mist Natural at Walmart

9 – Free Health Screenings from Sam’s Club

9Lowes Build and Grow Clinic build a FunHouse Mirror for Halloween, 10-11am.

10 – Pottery Barn “The Finishing Touches” decorating class Decorating ideas for kids’ rooms at 10am.

Free Cookies During National 2010 National Book Drive (Great American Cookies)

Free Financial Planning Days in October

Target Free Arts & Cultural Events

Amy’s Notebook 10.06.10

October 6th, 2010

I like this creative use of child’s art work in lieu of curtains (@ Prudent Baby)

I want to try this buttery caramel sauce to dip our apples in (@ How Does She?)

I am in love with this booster seat makeover (@ Tea Rose Home)

I love this idea for scenting your own pine cones (@ 3 Meadow Lake Cottage)

This apple vanilla slab pie looks like a fun fall dessert (@ In Praise of Leftovers)

I have to make this fall rosette wreath to decorate my kitchen for Thanksgiving (@ Blue Cricket Design)

I love these decoupaged Halloween coasters (@ Make it Give It)

This gluten-free pumpkin bread looks delicious (@ Serious Eats)

Sweet balsamic tilapia sounds like a great way to dress up fish for a main dish (@ $5 Dinners)

These ghoulish grown-up beverage labels are so cute (@ Centsational Girl)

This is a great idea for shaping no-knead bread into a baguette (@ the kitchn)

These pumpkin butterscotch cookies look like a fun after-school snack (@ Annie’s Eats)

This creamy pesto fettuccine with mushrooms and tomatoes looks like a great weeknight dinner (@ This Week for Dinner)

This pumpkin topiary tutorial would be a great one use to decorate your porch or front step (@ Our Southern Nest)

I am in love with this television tray makeover– it inspires me to go thrift shopping! (@ Design Sponge)

This mummy munch would be a fun Halloween treat (@ Picky Palate)

These potato stamped fall pumpkins are so cute (@ lemon tree creations)

These ideas for an owl birthday party are adorable (@ Living Locurto)

I want to try this idea for waxing leaves for a frugal fall decoration (@ Clover Lane)

This autumn dinner party is absolutely stunning @ NieNie Dialogues)

I am going to be incorporating some of these ideas for cheap & easy Halloween decor (@ Pink and Polka Dot)

Great Reads for Moms: October ’10 Edition

October 5th, 2010

I can’t believe it, but eight more books were devoured this month. No, I have no idea how that was possible  except that I did some traveling this month and all I did was read.  Does it help to know that my house has been suffering because I have so many great books in my book stack these days?  Or that my husband has been working a lot in the evenings and I have been unwinding with bubble baths and books since I have a little bit of solitude?  Or that the books that I read were just too simply awesome to put down? Or perhaps, that I have no social life at all? Deep thoughts!

A reader requested that we do a weekly check-in on what everyone is reading each week on our Facebook Fan Page. I hope you will swing by on Fridays and share about the books you are working on or request recommendations with one another. So far it is a huge success and I have gotten a few new ideas for my own stack!

Just as a reminder, I read many more  books than are just featured here, but try to feature the ones that are my absolute best picks of the month here. If you want to read more, please feel free to friend me on GoodReads! My username is momadvice and I am always happy to connect with people there too! There is nothing more motivating than seeing what other people are raving about and my to-be-read pile continues to grow with all of my new friends on there! In fact, many of the books featured are ones that I have found through my friends on GoodReads.

One Day by David Nicholls

The concept for Nicholl’s book is a genius one that I loved from start to finish. It chronicles the lives of two friends, Dex & Em, over the course of twenty years and each chapter begins a new year on the same exact day. It begins with what seems like a romantic relationship in 1988 and then each year jumps into a new place of their friendship and what is happening that year with them.

You began the journey with Dex & Em when they are in college and each of them is dreaming big for what they have in store for their future. You then go along on the journey as Dex lives off of the wealth of his family, as Em is stuck in a dead end job, as Dex finds fame, as Dex loses fame, and as Em finally begins living her dream. To say more than this would give it all away, but know that as a reader of the book, you get to glimpse into the lives and evolution of how we change as people as we grow older.

The relationship with Dex & Em is at times endearing and at times exasperating. Em puts up with a lot as Dex falls down a slippery slope in the world of Hollywood. It is a, “When Harry Met Sally,” love story that I simply could not put down.

The ending was a shocking one, that may disappoint some readers, but it did not take away from the story for me. Because of the ending, try to avoid reading any reviews of the book until you have finished it so you can draw your own conclusion on this book!

(MomAdvice Rating- 5 Stars out of 5 Stars)


Fragile by Lisa Unger

It has been a long time since I have read something so suspenseful that I could not put it down, but Fragile by Lisa Unger is the kind of book that sucks you in and won’t let you go. It is reminiscent of Jodi Picoult’s earlier work with just the right balance of suspense and mystery to keep a reader enchanted until the final page. I must say that I am smitten with Lisa Unger and can’t wait to read some of her older novels now that I have had a taste of her writing style.

In the town of The Hollows, a fictional small town just outside of New York City, a young girl goes missing after a fight with her parents. The disappearance reminds the people in this town of another similar disappearance of a girl named Sarah, who had suddenly disappeared in the eighties, and many of the main characters find themselves flashing back to that first disappearance.

While the main characters are revisiting the disappearance of Sarah, they are also desperately trying to find the current girl who has disappeared. Charlene is a bit of a rebel-child and born to a family from the wrong side of the tracks. She is the girlfriend of Ricky, who is the child of Jones ( a cop) and Maggie (a psychologist) on the other side of the tracks, yet Ricky has no idea where Charlene has gone even though he loves Charlene.
When Charlene posts a status update on her Facebook page that she has left for New York City, Ricky and his friends are suspicious that someone has logged into her account because the status update sounds nothing like something Charlene would write. They began to fear the worst as the clues are uncovered and there are a cast of suspects that could have taken Charlene.

With Charlene gone, the clock is ticking to find her and bring her back to her family. Unfortunately, there are many suspects, but few clues as to where she could have gone. The reader is taken along on the journey as they try to uncover what has happened to Charlene as it is told through the eyes of everyone from the cop on the case, the psychologist whose family is battling their own demons, through the eyes of a troubled child, and even an exterminator who happens to have witnessed a few clues of his own to help the case.

While there are many characters, the plot somehow flows seamlessly as each person shares their innermost secrets and does not create confusion for the reader. Through these characters, the reader can begin to piece together both disappearances for a surprising twist that will bring the two stories colliding together, reminding us how small the world is and how intertwined our stories can be.

(MomAdvice Rating- 5 Stars out of 5 Stars)


Still Missing by Chevy Stevens

Before I begin, I want to warn you that this thriller is not for the faint of heart and to please consider yourself warned before picking this book up! Chelsea Cain fans though will find a new author and psychopath to love-to-hate in this debut novel from Chevy Stevens.

Annie O’Sullivan has been trying to put her life together after a year of captivity as she rehashes what has happened to her through her weekly therapy sessions. As the story of her time in captivity unfolds, the reader is taken on a haunting journey and is able to witness the psychological traumas that face Annie as she tries to break the habits that she had to endure and find a new normalcy to her life.

Before her abduction, Annie is a Realtor who is hosting an open house on a relatively quiet Sunday. When a handsome young man comes to the house, she is thrilled to show him around and hoping for her first big sale. She realizes quickly, when a gun is pushed into her back, that this may be her last open house.

After giving her a drug to knock her out, she awakens to find herself in a cabin in the middle of nowhere, held in captivity by a man that she only refers to as, “The Freak.” The Freak has thought of everything to make her stay in the cabin as comfortable and sterile as possible. He has thought of every simple little detail from the childlike dresses he wants her to wear, to her grooming schedule, to her dinner schedule, and even how she is to meticulously care for the cabin. One misstep in this OCD world, calculates into beatings, the loss of food, and the loss of any human connection for days on end. When she is told that she is to have his baby, she knows that she may never see her friends and family again and that her stay may be a permanent one.

As the pieces are pulled together, it is shocking how The Freak has found Annie and who ultimately caused her captivity. Through the sessions with the therapist, you discover right along with Annie how she was betrayed and the irreversible damage that she has had to suffer, through this surprising ending.

The chapters are short, reminiscent of a James Patterson book, and the writing is not as solid as I would have hoped. I think that the story and the plot really held it together though for me, and ultimately was a book that I managed to read in a day because I just could not put it down.

Editor’s Note- This book contains violence, sexuality, and adult language. Did I mention it is not for the faint of heart? You were warned, friends!

(MomAdvice Rating- 4 Stars out of 5 Stars)


A Vintage Affair by Isabel Wolff

Phoebe Swift surprises her friends when she leaves a coveted position at Sotheby’s auction house to open her own vintage clothing shop in London, but Phoebe knows that she is fulfilling a lifelong dream to have her very own store. The reader is taken on the journey of the opening of Phoebe’s shop, the relationships with her customers, finding love again, and the intricacies of friendship.

Phoebe is fascinated with the clothing from other eras and loves gathering the collections, pieced together by visiting the attics and closets of wealthy families. It is these chance meetings where she develops a very unlikely friendship with an elderly woman named Therese Bell.

Therese has an amazing collection of clothing that she is getting rid of and asks Phoebe to come to her home to sell her the clothes. Phoebe is instructed that she can only take items before a certain point in the closet, but Phoebe notices an unusual item tucked in Therese’s closet…a sky blue child-sized coat in mint condition.

It is through this coat that Phoebe hears a story of friendship and regret that Therese has lived with her entire life. She has never told a single person, but wants to tell Phoebe her story so that she can make peace with her life, as she is dying. What surprises Therese is that she is not alone in her tale of friendship of regret and betrayal because Phoebe has been living with a secret of her own that has caused Phoebe so much pain that her life has taken an entirely different direction than she could ever expect.

This book is a breath of fresh air and highly recommended to my fashionista friends because it feels as though you are transported in the shop and can enjoy all of the detail and thought that Phoebe has put into her shop of vintage frocks. Every piece of clothing has a story and the author carefully interweaves those stories of the customers and how the dresses find them in this charming book!

(MomAdvice Rating- 4 Stars out of 5 Stars)


Chosen by Chandra Hoffman

Chloe Pinter is the director of the Chosen Child’s domestic-adoption program and feels like she has the perfect job of completing and bringing families together through adoption. She is organized and meticulous about the details of the adoptions and does her best to insure that the mothers that are offering their children for adoption are cared for.

Chloe is dealing with three very different couples during the adoption process while she is struggling to hold her own life together with her demanding job. These three couples could not be any more different and the author tries to share their story without judgment of who is right or wrong in these cases, allowing the reader to make their own conclusions.

The Novas are a very well-off couple who have suffered with fertility for years and are finally blessed with their very own pregnancy, the McAdoos are a well-to-do couple whose marriage is on the rocks after years of failed adoptions and are hoping that this adoption will create the family that they have always wanted, and Jason & Penny who have absolutely nothing except a baby that everybody wants. Their stories are told in alternating points of view and the stories weave together when a child goes missing as the reader discovers how people will do just about anything to get that one thing they want.

While a fascinating premise for a book, it did not captivate me the way that I had hoped it would. It was a quick read, but the build-up for the story was a slow one and not one that gripped me the way I had hoped!

(MomAdvice Rating- 3 Stars out of 5 Stars)


Husband and Wife by Leah Stewart

Many books glamorize infidelity, but Leah Stewart does nothing to glamorize the tragedy that happens in a home when a spouse is unfaithful. The reader is taken on a journey through a demise of a relationship and when this happens, how you begin to wonder what-if about other relationships in your life.

Novelist Nathan Bennett seems to have it all and he thinks he finally has a success on his hands with his new novel, “Infidelity.” Just before the novel is set to be released, Nathan sits his wife Sarah down to tell her that the novel isn’t a fictional one and is based on his own infidelity with a woman that he met at a writing conference.

Sarah is now faced with what she should do with their two kids and begins to consider how different her life would have been if she would have acted on a relationship with a man that she always had feelings for before she got married.

When Sarah kicks Nathan out of the house, she decides to see what would happen if she explored that past love opportunity and tries to discover who she is and if she is the person she is because her spouse wanted her to be, or if she is that person because that is who she truly is. She asks the questions and expresses the sentiments of any woman who is in her thirties and looking back on love that has been lost and the new ailments and issues that plague us as we grow older, but I found that was where relating to her really ended.

I found this book to be a very depressing one, although it was well-written. I found both of the characters were acting very selfishly and it made me sad for the children that were involved in this relationship. I did love the sense of humor that Leah Stewart interweaved through the story, but was ready for this book to end so I could move on to something a little more uplifting. I am still a fan, but hope that her next novel will tackle something a little less gloomy!

(MomAdvice Rating- 3 Stars out of 5 Stars)

Not enough great reads for you? Check out our Books section of our site for monthly recommendations and ideas for making reading a priority again in your busy mom life!

Disclosure: All of the links above are affiliate links and are provided so you can locate the books quickly and easily. Feel free to order a book, but we encourage utilizing the library system and buying me a latte instead.  Then we both would be really happy and we could have our own little book club together! Wouldn’t that just be so much more lovely? Happy Reading!

What has been in your book stack this month? Feel free to share your book recommendations or feedback on any of the books that have been mentioned above! I love getting new suggestions for my book pile!

An Apron Full of Giveaways: 3 Sets of BHG Non-Stick Hard-Anodized Cookware ($150 Each)

October 5th, 2010

Flapper Girl, $35

I hope everyone is having a great week this week! As we do each week,  here is our round-up of giveaways for our readers! We hope that this is beneficial to you and your family! Please let us know if you guys win anything- I love to hear the success stories!

To celebrate my participation in the BHG cook-off, I am giving away  3 sets of the 13-piece Non-Stick Hard-Anodized Pots & Pans (each set valued at $159) to three lucky readers. This will be just the beginning of the giveaways we will be offering over the next few weeks so please check back each Tuesday for a new giveaway. Better yet, by participating I will have more giveaways to offer you when the cook-off concludes. As you know, there is nothing better that I love than giving stuff away to you so I am thrilled to get this first giveaway started. Priced at $159, this 13-piece set includes: 1.5 QT Covered Sauce pan, 2.5 QT Covered Sauce Pan with Steamer Insert, 4 QT Covered Dutch Oven, 8.5″ Skillet, 10″ Skillet, 8 QT Covered Stock Pot & 4 QT Covered Deep Skillet. Imagine the possibilities of what you could do with a set like this in your kitchen! NO ENTRIES HERE WILL QUALIFY. PLEASE FOLLOW THE LINK BELOW TO ENTER!

Below are the contest links-if you are hosting a contest please link it up below. Sorry, we aren’t giving away the aprons just showcasing them!

Please put your site name and then what type of contest you are hosting. For example, “MomAdvice (Children’s Movies).”

Please let me know if you have any questions and good luck to each of you!

Presto Pesto Pasta Con Pollo & the BHG Cook-Off

October 4th, 2010

One cooking competition just wasn’t enough for this girl and since I had such a fun success with our Trees in Your Ears Pasta dish for the Kenmore cooking competition, I thought I would give another cooking competition a try, but this time with Better Homes & Gardens Magazine. Each participant was asked to select a recipe from the Better Homes & Garden Cookbook and create a dish with your own unique spin on it. It sounded like a fun challenge, but more importantly, an exciting opportunity to see the beautiful BHG Test Kitchen!

The cooking competition is built to surround the launch of the new Better Homes & Gardens Kitchen Collection line that will be available at Walmart.  The company is offering an extensive product line that includes three lines of pots & pans that come in Tri-Ply Clad 18/10 Stainless Steel, Non-Stick Hard-Anodized, & Non-Stick Porcelain Enamel and will retail for $159 in the stores. Lucky for me, I was given a set to practice my cooking with for the competition and I will have ten sets to giveaway over the next few weeks leading up to the competition.

My new set hit my doorstep while I was in Wilmington, NC and I was very excited to share the set with someone else. As a blogger, I get so many great things that come my way, but the real joy is in the sharing of those items with others. When I saw this set of cookware, I immediately thought of someone very special in my life that I wanted to give it to…my friend Ed. I might be at a disadvantage by not using my set to practice with, but when I share with you the story of Ed, you will know why I was so thrilled to share them. Ed told me I could share his story with my readers today so I wanted to share that with you.

A couple of years ago, I met Ed while shopping at Aldi Supermarket. We were standing in the frozen foods section and he came over to me and asked me what the difference between chicken tenderloins and chicken breasts were. I launched into an explanation of what the chicken tenderloin was and asked him what he was using it for. When I found out it was being mixed into a manicotti, I told him to go with the chicken breast to keep his dish economical. It was then that he looked up and told me, with eyes filled with tears, that he was now the cook in his family.  In his eighties, he had never cooked before in his life and now, due to the health of his wife and  grown son, he was now the one who had to cook for his entire family and he had no idea how to do it. I grabbed a scrap piece of paper out of my purse and wrote down my cell phone number for Ed and told him he could call me anytime and I would help him with whatever he needed. I told him he stopped the right girl, that the livelihood of my business is built around helping people save money and get dinner on the table.

Over these past years, Ed has called me to ask for recipes or to just talk about the different challenges of cooking. He told me he hates to bother me because he knows how busy I am with my kids, but I always tell him that I am here for him whenever he needs me. Emails are exchanged and every once in awhile, his number will pop up on my phone before his trip to the grocery store. I have become friends with the cashier at Aldi and each time I am in, we chat about our updates on Ed and how he is doing.

This last week Emily and I gathered the makings of a few meals at the grocery store, a big container of donuts, and our Better Homes and Gardens Pots and Pans and loaded them in the car for Ed. I was armed with slow cooker recipes, menu planning sheets, and we came to spend the morning with Ed to help him with his cooking.

Emily sat at their kitchen table eating hundreds of donuts covered in chocolate,  while I got Ed’s dinner in the slow cooker and we worked through some of the ideas I had for ways he could get dinner on the table and begin planning his trips to the store. I don’t know if we really helped or not, but we were both really proud we tried. Over and over I told Emily how special she was on the way home and what her visit did for Ed & his family. I have never been a more proud mama.

Ed told me I am his angel which makes me cry. That day he stopped me I was exhausted with a strong-willed three year-old. I had that feeling that every mother has where I felt  I just couldn’t keep up with anything in my life. When Ed stopped me that day,  Ed gave me a renewed purpose to my step and made me feel like I was useful again. I am just as grateful to him as he is to me.

I never win popularity vote contests so I have no anticipation of winning this one at all. I feel like I already won the day I sat at Ed’s kitchen table and could share with him something that I hope will make cooking easier for him and his family.

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

Without further adieu, here is my submitted dish for the cooking competition adapted from the Better Homes & Gardens Cookbook! I wanted to build upon those flavors of this dish and replicate my favorite dinner from a local Italian restaurant that we love to eat at. With the simple addition of sautéed mushrooms, spinach, and sun dried tomatoes, it takes this easy dish to an elegant level with minimal effort. Of course, no dish is complete without my signature addition of lemon zest and a squirt of lemon juice to freshen and lighten the flavors. It is an inexpensive way to add a  hint of freshness to every bite and brings the sauce all together beautifully!

The best part about the dish, in my opinion, is that it incorporates items that I already have in the pantry and can easily be pulled together with leftovers in the fridge. Leftover chicken, vegetables, and any type of pasta can be pulled together for a dinner that is worthy of an evening gathered with friends and family around the dinner table.

It’s up to you if you want to give away your convenience food secrets though. I promise to never tell!

Presto Pesto Pasta Con Pollo (modified from Presto Penne with Roasted Chicken)

2 Tbsp olive oil

8 ounces button mushrooms, sliced

8 ounces bow tie pasta

1 jar of pesto sauce (8.1 ounce)

2 ½ cups rotisserie chicken, diced

½ cup sundried tomatoes, cut into thin strips

2 cups fresh baby spinach

1 lemon (zest and juice)

Salt & Pepper to taste

Finely shredded Parmesan cheese (optional) for topping

In a 4-quart Dutch oven cook pasta according to package directions. In a large sauté pan, cook mushrooms in olive oil (approximately five minutes) and season them to taste.  Drain the cooked pasta, reserving ½ cup of the pasta water. In a small bowl, mix together the pesto and the ½ cup of pasta water to make a sauce.  Sprinkle spinach on top of the mushrooms in the sauté pan and pour the hot pasta on top to help wilt the spinach. Add to the pasta mixture, the sundried tomatoes, rotisserie chicken, zest & juice from a lemon and pesto sauce over the pasta. Give the mixture a gentle toss to combine. Season the pasta to taste. If desired serve with a sprinkle of Parmesan cheese.

Serve with a simple side of crusty bread or dress the dish up with a side of Roasted Green Beans and Pumpkin Cornbread Muffins for a meal to entertain with!

If you would like to give this dish your vote, you can vote for me daily here! A one-time registration is required to vote, but after that you just click vote once to cast a vote!

MomAdvice Monthly Recaps: September ’10

October 4th, 2010

I just want to say a special thank you to each of you for visiting my website and sharing it with your friends, family, and your own readers.  We are very blessed to have each of you here and without you, doing this site just wouldn’t be possible for my family. If there is anything you would like to see on here, please contact me (amy@momadvice.com) and let me know what you would like to see in the upcoming year.

Are you on Facebook? Please be sure to Fan our MomAdvice.com Page. We would love to continue to share and interact with you! If you are on Twitter, you can find me there too sharing about our daily life and what is happening on our site. There are so many ways to connect regularly with the site and I would love to interact with you daily!

Don’t forget, you can subscribe to my feeds and never miss another thing on our site again! We have a landing page where it makes it easy to subscribe to our blogs and you can even subscribe to my article feed. Everything is right at your fingertips and we want the site to be a daily destination for you and your family!

This month’s top referrers were:

1. Facebook

2. Freebies 4 Mom

3. Tip Nut

4. Wisebread

5. Swagbucks

6. A Soft Place to Land

7. I’m An Organizing Junkie

8. Hoosier Homemade

9. Twitter

10. Frugal Dad

This month’s top articles & entries were:

1. I Did it My Way: Long-Term Blogging Success Tips

2. Apple Pie Muffins

3. Picky Eater Dinner Ideas

4. Chicken, Broccoli, & Fusilli in Garlic Cream Sauce

5. Make Your Own Mixes & Convenience Foods

6. Ask the Frugal Momma: Planning a Baby Shower on a Budget?

7. Aldi Menu Planner

8. Pesto Chicken Tortellini Soup

9. Great Reads for Moms: September ’10 Edition

10. Black Bean & Roasted Red Pepper Soup with Pumpkin Cornbread Muffins

Please take some time this month to check out each of their sites. They are amazing at what they do and we are thankful that we have such great supporters!

Freebie Friday: October 1, 2010

October 1st, 2010

Happy Freebie Friday, everyone! We are so lucky to have Freebies 4 Mom share their list of the best freebies of the week with our readers each and every Friday. Please visit her site for fabulous freebies and sweepstakes information every single day!  This week Heather is giving away a $75 gift card from Nakano and a Philadelphia Cream Cheese Cookbook gift set. I hope you can swing by there and get an entry in today! Thank you, Heather!

This week on MomAdvice we are sharing a delicious pesto chicken tortellini soup to add to your menu plan, inspiration for a family vacation in Wilmington (or just a girlfriend trip), a notebook of inspiration, and our round-up of great giveaways on the internet this week!  I hope you will have fun browsing the site and much more to come next week!

Health & Beauty

Estee Lauder Liquid Foundation (in-store offer on Facebook)
John Frieda Root Awakening (at ULTA Beauty stores)
Garnier Fructis Anti-Dandruff
Savvy Sampler program
Pampers Cruisers
Children’s Claritin (Sam’s Club members)

Food

White Castle Garlic Cheese Slider (on Facebook)
Land ‘O Lakes Holiday Recipe brochure

Entertainment

Free 8×10 Photo Collage (pick-up at Walgreens)
100 Free Prints from Olympus (you pay shipping of $6.49)

Home

Kleenex
15 Free CFLs (Duke Energy customers)
Izze T-shirt (on Facebook)
Elmer’s Craft It Club
Folger’s & Land ‘O Lakes Everyday House Party
The Ultimate SingStar Dance Party

Pets

Purina Pro Plan (PetSmart members)

This Week’s Freebie Events:

OCTOBER 1 – 7

2 – Home Depot Kids Workshops build a Fireboat 9am – 12pm

2 & 3Museums on Us (Bank of America)

thru 14Smucker’s Daily Giveaway

4 Redbox Free Movie Monday when you subscribe to text alert

6 – Home Depot Kids Workshops build a Spice Rack 9am-12pm