Meatless Monday a Little Early: Cumin Carrot and Cucumber Mint Raita Wrap

26 June 2010 Filed In: carrot, Fall, lunchbox, Main Dish, Meatless Monday, Soy-free, Spring, Summer, Vegetarian, Winter, yogurt



The park is where it’s at right now. Yesterday, for instance, we spent four and a half hours outside running around our local park, rolling on the grass, digging intricate cakes and castles in the sand, chattering with our friends, dancing through the sprinklers, and soaking up summertime. The thing is, blush, we ended up eating pizza for lunch… pizza from the grocery store, which is good but not best.

For our next park visit, we might be able to swing something a little more healthful and homemade. A little more like yummy picnic food.
What really inspired us to make this nutritious wrap filled with cumin spiced carrots and a cool cucumber raita is that all its components travel well, taste delicious cold, and do not take hours to make. My children refuse to eat raw greens still, but I loaded mine up with spinach, sprinkled in a few flax seeds, and was in heaven. It is very adaptable that way. Add things that your picnickers are going to love.
And just one note on what we wrapped with… because this was very impromptu, we used store-bought multigrain wraps. However, I cannot wait to make up a batch of chapati to wrap everything up in the next time we make these wraps. Take a look at our chapati party here for inspiration and the recipe.
Happy weekend, Yummies and Happy Summer!
Cumin Carrot and Cucumber Raita Wrap

For the carrots:
*1 lb. carrots, peeled and cut into 1 1/2-inch pieces
*1 t. cumin seeds (if you do not have cumin seeds, you can use 1/2 t. ground cumin)
*pinch of salt
*black pepper, to taste
*1/3 c. good olive oil
*2 T. apple cider vinegar
*1 T. fresh mint, chopped
*1T. parsley, chopped

Steam the carrots. With your mini-chef, fill a medium pot with an inch or so of water. Place your carrots in a steamer basket and load it into the pot.

Big Person: Turn on the heat to high and steam the carrots until just slightly tender, 3-5 minutes. They should still have a bit of bite (unless your mini-chef will absolutely, positively not eat them al dente, in which case steam them till they are soft). Remove from the pot and shock in a bath of ice water. A “bath” is just a big bowl filled with ice water to stop the cooking. You can let your mini-chef know that sometimes carrots get to take baths, too.

To prepare the cumin seed for the dressing, toast them in a small pan over medium heat stirring them occasionally till they are toasted. Here, use your nose. Let your mini-chef help you, too. Both of you will be able to smell when they are ready.

Together Again: While the carrots are steaming, make the dressing. In an unplugged blender, have your Yummy measure out the olive oil and vinegar and add the cumin seeds, salt, and pepper.

Help your mini-chef place the lid to the blender on securely. Then turn on the blender and blend everything together till the cumin seeds are completely powdered and integrated into the rest of the dressing. When you are ready to dress the carrots, sprinkle with the parsley and mint, pour the dressing over the carrots, and toss together.

For the raita:
*2 c. organic plain yogurt
*1/2-2 cloves of garlic, minced
*juice of a lemon
*3/4 c. cucumber, finely chopped
*pinch of salt
*ground pepper, to taste

In a small bowl, stir everything together. If you know that you looooove garlic, then go whole hog and add two whole cloves, but it might be best to start with 1/2 clove, taste, and then proceed when you have the exact garlickyness that your family likes.

Using your favorite whole-grain wrap or chapati, pile some of the carrots into the middle in a long tube. Spoon on some of the raita. Fold and eat.

Note: If you are taking these on a picnic with you, keep all the components separate. Toss the carrots in the dressing and sprinkle with the mint just before assembling the wraps.

Noticing

23 June 2010 Filed In: corner view, sewing





Last week five girls arrived at my house to pick out fabric and kick off a TYM first, Sewing 101.

Memories of having to make the tackiest wrap skirt for my first sewing endeavor when I was a girl flooded my mind as I planning for this class. Because I never, not even once, was proud of or even considered wearing that horrid skirt, there was no wrap skirt in sight over here.
Instead, we went with Heather Ross’s adorable smocked dress project, which we adapted to become a shirt, the clothing item requested by the girls themselves. When I was fabric shopping, I tried to notice what girls their age loved to wear and buy from the eye of an eight or nine year old New York girl. Because, seriously? A wrap skirt made from fabric remnants was not going to cut it with these girls. Thank goodness.
Didn’t they do an amazing job? The most beautiful thing about teaching this class was that we had fun. I kept looking around noticing two things on their faces: smiles when they were working and smiles when they were done.
Miss D and Miss C, pictured above, wore their newly crafted smocked tops to school this Monday, styled with an amazing eye, I’m sure.
What have you been noticing?

Daily

16 June 2010 Filed In: corner view




When I gave birth to my daughter nearly five years ago, my relationship with time changed. It was as though my entire life was infused with new colors, my consciousness broadened, and each moment that we had with our tiny girl was this insane gift that we had been given. Every moment was alive.
Each moment was not easy, mind you. Mira was awake, both literally and (what is the word?) spiritually. She was so sensitive as to who was holding her that she would kick and scream if she was placed in anyone’s arms besides Sean’s or mine, enraged that we would dare allow another to hold her. In fact, she wanted to be held constantly, on the breast constantly, bounced on the exercise ball for hours to even consider sleeping. She wanted our full attention at all times. She had us rapt. Sometimes the love was so intense and overwhelming that I would just sit there and weep.
And yet, each day that Mira was with us, I could feel that she was moving away from me. That time that she was inside me, the way she kept me attuned with her little kicks and the somersaults that she loved to turn inside, was over. One cord had been cut. Each time she had a first: turning a day, a week, a month, a year, two, I felt another cord release.
My experience with time shifted yet again when my son was born. Liev was pure sunshine. Because of the ease between us, and probably because he let me sleep (at least, a little), each day felt like a complete delight. While I was pregnant with him and for many months afterward, the song that constantly played in my head and that I sang as his lullaby was, “Here Comes the Sun”. We would wake up together and smile at one another, so clearly happy to have another day to snuggle, to enjoy nursing, to love and to play.
It was not until Liev entered this past year that time seemed to really alter with him. He asserted himself and began throwing mega tantrums. Each morning was its own small hell. From the time he got up, each step of the day consisted of a fight with one or all of us. He did not want to get out of bed. He would NOT change his diaper. He WILL NOT get dressed. And so on until the evening when the whole thing would happen in reverse He could NOT get undressed. He WOULD NOT take a bath. He DID NOT, DID NOT wish to brush his teeth, sit on the potty, or really do anything that went into daily life.
With Liev, it was more like he held the scissors in his hands and was suddenly cutting away several cords at once. Through the storm of his ambivalence and his fights, a big boy emerged where there used to be a baby. Most of those wild and wooly tantrums have dissipated now, and the sunshine has seeped back in.
Liev is a loving big boy with a mind of his own. His sister- well, she sleeps now. She even lets other people hold her. Mira is like a fine wine, getting more delicious with each passing year.
All through this time with my children, I have tried to do a simple practice. When I wake up, before I even get out of bed each morning, I say a prayer:
I feel grateful for today. I feel gratitude for this moment.
Daily, this somersault of a prayer turns over in my heart.
To read more about the day to day, take a look at Jane’s sidebar at Spain Daily.

YUMMY Projects: Striped Bolster Pillows

11 June 2010 Filed In: Crafts, sewing, yummy projects


The Ikea fabric and bolsters that have been hanging around on my fabric shelf for over a year began to make themselves known.

“Look at me! Look at me!” they called out.
After all of this time, when I actually sat down to sew these bolsters for the kids’ beds, they came together in about an hour, lickety split. We added a shimmering gold ribbon for a touch of glamour.
Speaking of gold, don’t you think that Goldie, our owl, looks comfy snuggled up on his new pillow?
Happy Friday, Yummies!

Bliss

09 June 2010 Filed In: corner view




Golden light. The roar and the lull of the ocean. A good book. A tall glass of peach iced tea. Two happy, splashing children. One happy, floating husband. And, of course, a mysterious pirate ship sailing toward the setting sun.

Don’t miss the bliss. Check out Jane of Spain Daily to ride the wave.