Meatless Monday Minestrone and Elsie Marley Children’s Sewing Week Challenge

10 October 2011 Filed In: beans, chickpeas, Course Type, Crafts, Dairy-free, Fall, Gluten-free, Ingredient, lunchbox, Meatless Monday, pasta, Seasonal Dishes, sewing, soup, Soups & Stews, spinach, squash, swiss chard, Type of Dish, Uncategorized, Vegan, Vegetarian, Winter, zucchini

You know how some women would see that their youngest was nearing 6 months of age and sign themselves up to run a marathon.  They will train and run the extra pregnant and nursing weight off, and you’ll see them a few months later high fiving their baby at the finish line?  Yeah, so not my style.

Instead, I have agreed to participate in Elsie Marley‘s Children’s Sewing Week Challenge this week.  That means that I declare here that I will work on sewing something every single day this week for at least an hour.  While that may not seem like a marathon, for me right now, it is akin.   There are so very, very few spare moments in my day.  Here is how my sewing list looks for the week ahead:

  1. Two Oliver + S Class Picnic Blouses (one for G and one for M)
  2. A pillow slip for Liev’s poor battered up but completely beloved quilted pillow.  It took me months to get him to agree to let me swap the old one out.  We received it as a present from an Indian friend when he was a baby, and the cotton is so soft and buttery, that it’s completely understandable that Liev would kick up a fuss when I suggested taking it off.  Still, it passed the ragged phase a few months back and is in the quilting-batting-is-falling-out-onto-the-bed phase now.  We’re afraid he’ll aspirate batting in his sleep.
  3. Two Oliver + S Apple Picking Dresses (one for G and one for M)
  4. If (and I know some part of myself is giggling at this) I finish everything above, I will try delving into the holiday dresses.  Like something for Thanksgiving?  You know.  Which is only a month and a half away?

To fuel up for all this business, we really needed some minestrone.  My friend Avery and I made some last week when the weather was chilly, and it is definitely a recipe that needs to be shared.  My idea was to have a very simple framework of what the soup should be and to have seasonal items to swap out all year long.  We didn’t have any canellini beans, for instance, so we used canned chickpeas in a pinch and added chopped butternut squash and fresh tomatoes where, in another month, we will be using jarred or boxed tomatoes.  My children are obsessed with orrechiette (“little ear”) pasta for some reason, so we used that instead of elbow macaroni, gluten-free, alphabet pasta, or whatever small pasta is currently all the rage around your home.

Minestrone

  • 2 T. olive oil
  • 2 red onions, finely chopped
  • 2 medium tomatoes, chopped
  • 3 large carrots, chopped
  • 3 stalks of celery, chopped
  • 3 medium cloves garlic, minced
  • 4 c. vegetable or chicken stock
  • 2-3 c. water
  • 1-2 t. basil (fresh, when available; dried. when it isn’t)
  • a bay leaf
  • 1/4 c. tomato paste
  • switch these out as available: 2 c. Cannelini beans. chickpeas, or navy beans; 1 c. chopped swiss chard, kale, spinach; 2 c. chopped red potatoes, sweet potatoes, butternut squash, zucchini, yellow squash, pumpkin, etc.
  • 1 c. small pasta or quinoa
  1. Have your mini-chef wash and prepare the veggies with you.  You chop, and they can measure.
  2. Big Person: Heat the olive oil in a big heavy bottomed pan over medium low heat.
  3. Add all the veggies except the leafy greens, the basil, and the bay leaf.  Saute till the onions are soft and translucent.
  4. Add the tomato paste and cook one more minute.
  5. Add the stock, turn up the heat, and cook for about a half hour, stirring occasionally.
  6. When the squash, potatoes, etc. are cooked, add the leafy greens, remove the bay leaf, and puree (We use an immersion blender) about 1/2 of the soup.
  7. Return to the stove, bring to a boil and add the pasta or quinoa and the beans or chickpeas.  Cook the pasta till it’s al dente (time will depend on what type you are using).
  8. To bring your mini-chef back into the game, you can make cheese toasts- or just regular toasts if you are dairy-free- to serve alongside your minestrone.
  9. Serve warm!

This Moment: Playtime!

30 September 2011 Filed In: this moment, Uncategorized

{This Moment: a Friday ritual inspired by Amanda Blake Soule}

Happy Friday and Happy New Year to my Jewish friends!  We have had a bug traveling through the kiddos this week, so we’re all hoping to get some good rest this weekend.  May your weekend be restful and, of course, playful.

SEWN WITH LOVE Classic Baby Dress

26 September 2011 Filed In: Crafts, sewing

When our family was surprised with a new baby girl five months ago and after the initial giggling had died down (we were so sure that it would be a boy), I looked at the clothing that I had gathered for the new baby.  There were gender-neutral things that leaned very heavily to the masculine side of things.  Navy pants.  An orange and white striped romper.  Navy and orange numbers from a Petit Bateau sample sale I had hit up last winter were just sitting there waiting for this tiny person.

One of the very first things Mira requested to do for her sister was to find her some girly things to wear.  She, of course, had to go pick a (comfy but) pink dress and beautiful little dark green and pink rose onesie.  Mira took one look at those clothes we had and asked where her old baby clothing was.

We retrieved Mira’s baby wardrobe from her younger cousins, gave away some of the navy and orange, and I began to think of the special things that we could make for this new, sweet daughter of mine.  I hoped to create an heirloom or two since she is the third child.  Third children don’t often have filled-in baby books or a whole lot of time to themselves with their parents.

One dress that really caught my eye was in the book SEWN WITH LOVE by Fiona Bell.  It is called the”Baby Dress”and is a classic cut with butterfly sleeves and a sweet pocket ruffle detail.  Genevieve’s sleeves are finished with bias binding, something to help it look a little more polished seeing as we don’t have a serger.

It took me a long time to make this dress, what with the lack of sleep and the general lack of time to do anything except the bare bones: laundry, dinner, nursing, cleaning the bathroom.  Still, I stuck to making it, little by little, until it was done.

Just look at our Gigi!  Who knows whether my children will want to pass this on to their own children one day.  All I know is that Genevieve seems to and Mira definitely approves.

This Moment: Five Months

23 September 2011 Filed In: all the rest, this moment

This Moment (via Soule Mama).  A single moment from our week that we would like to keep in our hearts.

Happy Fall, Yummies!  Have a great weekend!

Silly

21 September 2011 Filed In: corner view, Uncategorized

Did I ever tell you about the time that we took Liev to soccer class when he was two?  Since his big sis had been taking classes at the same soccer school for a couple of years already and since he had come along with me to watch her, we figured that Liev would just fall right in, no problems.

Sean took him to his first class one cold Saturday in January.  Mira and I met them afterward, and Sean looked half amused, half forlorn.

“What happened?” I asked.

“Oh, well, Liev wanted to be a dog the whole time.  He didn’t want to do any of the drills.”

Already, I had to laugh.  And so it went for the next couple of classes: Liev, the dog, sniffing around the bleachers and barking at the other children.

Finally, I asked Sean if Mira and I could come and try to help.  He agreed.  The other dads, whose kids were, of course, complying very nicely and doing everything Coach asked, were looking at Sean with a bit of incredulity.  He was getting a complex, I think.

We showed up, and immediately Liev is down on the floor nipping at our feet, ruffing, panting, and doing, if I may say, a most excellent dog impression.

With everyone’s help, we got to work.

“Liev, here, boy!  Doggie, let’s go play some soccer.”

Mira did the entire class with Liev, and Liev did the entire class, drills and all, as a puppy, down on all fours with his hands curled into his now-famous puppy paw.

I couldn’t stop laughing.  Every time I looked at the dads on the bleachers looking at us all like we were out of our tree, another eruption of giggles began.  Sean started laughing, too.  Mira was definitely laughing- while she was serious as can be about her own soccer class, she was having a lot of fun playing dog owner and teaching her puppy how to dribble.

One person who was NOT laughing?  The coach.  He told us in an irritated tone that Mira could not come back to the class and that Liev needed to listen to him.  Clearly, he was not a dog person!

Liev amazed me with his dramatic skills, his attention to detail, his focus, and his wildly creative mind.  Personally?  I thought that coach was rather silly.

Travel around a world of Sillies with Corner View, hosted by Francesca and this week’s theme by Heather:

jane – ian – joyce – francesca – kasia isabelle – janis – kari – jgy – lise – cateotli – dorte – ali– sunnymama– daanibb– kelleyn– ninja– theresa – cherry b – cole – lucylaine – skywriting– anna– rosamaría – tikjewit – junipervalerie – mlle paradis– wander chowdonflowtops – susanna– taniakristin