Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Bringing Home Nothing

Still on my simplicity binge and it's been 3 weeks now that I have vowed not to bring things home aside from food and basics like toilet paper. I did break down twice. I bought a toy and a shirt. I won't use excuses like it was on sale, or it was used or made by a local designer. Although I did break down a bit, I am getting used to leaving the house and coming home with nothing. Not a twig, or a newspaper or an empty coffee cup.

One trick I found useful to avoid stores is to ride your bike. It's super annoying to lock your bike up, untie the kid, and deal with the helmets plus, without the stroller, corralling the kid in a store takes up way too much physical agility and negotiation power. Bike window shopping is the way to go!

Another realization I've had that really puts a stick in my simplicity wheel, is that I grocery shop too often. It seems I go to the store 4-5 times a week. This is partly due because I can't seem to find one store which carries both wonderful produce and decently priced staples without breaking the bank. The sensible part of me wants to responsibly plan menus for the week and make a detailed list of what we need, but the other part of me wants to eat pasta all week if it means I can veg on the couch for an hour before I have to head to bed. The problem with this is that I have very random stuff in my fridge and I'm just not a good enough cook to make something delicious with a can of black olives, oranges, bread, tomato paste, and kale. So back to the store I go. Gotta figure out a way off this grocery hamster wheel.

When I still lived at home, my mom would shop only on Saturday mornings. If we were pigs and ate all the cheese in one day, then too bad, no more cheese until the next Saturday. Often Friday would roll around, the fridge was practically empty and my mom would make something super yummy with with a can of black olives, oranges, bread, tomato paste, and kale...

I wonder where I got this idea that the fridge has to be well stocked at all times. It's okay to run out of bread or cheese for a day or two, isn't it? Once my mom told me that she always keep a big basket of toilet paper rolls in the bathroom because when she was little, and having too many siblings to count, they often ran out, and now she just can't relax unless there's a full basket in plain view. Maybe that's the same thing with me and the fridge?

Anyways, I will figure something out. Stay tuned.


Thursday, March 29, 2012

Dinner Madness!

Get the bib, sit the kid down in the highchair with a plate of kiwi bits. Sit. Get up, get the sippy cup. Sit. Get up, get a washcloth, wash the kid's hands. Sit. Get up. Kid doesn't want kiwis, wants grapes. Get up, cut grapes. Sit and have a sip of coffee. It's cold. Get up get more coffee. Kid wants more grapes. Cut more grapes. Sit. Husband can't find the cheese. Get up, find the cheese. Sit. One more sip of lukewarm coffee.

How did I get here? The other day I was so distracted trying to cook a meal and entertain my two year old that I practically ate a plastic wrapper. No more insanity meals! Here's are some habits I lost along the way while making purees and multitasking:

1. First of all, make all meals with love. Love choosing it, washing and preparing it, combining colors and textures, experimenting with it, and tasting it. Serve it as if it was art.

2. Involve anyone else who wants to love making this meal, especially the kid.

3. Set the table. Place EVERY thing you might need; including a pitcher of water and glasses, serving utensils, condiments, napkins, bibs and washcloths. Bring lots of food to the table so that you don't have to get up for seconds.

4. Make it look nice. I've been using candles, tulips, and bowls I made in pottery class.

5. Invite other hungry people. We invited the toy rabbit today for tea and toast.

6. Give the kid a snack before dinner and that's it. No more until we sit down even if the kid screams. I prepare one easy back up meal option like fruit, yogurt or leftover noodles, but I no longer cook a whole other meal just for the kid.

5. Like the expression says: Bring something to the table. A smile, a funny story, something you are grateful for, a found treasure from nature like a nice rock or a leaf, a joke, a compliment, or a blessing.
 
6. Everyone helps to clean up. Even the kid.

For more wonderful suggestions to make meals more enjoyable for everyone, read "The Family Dinner-Great ways to connect with your kids, one meal at a time." by Laurie David.


Daddy's Fish Stew in Grandma's dutch oven. Yum!