Posts filed under Weekend

Good ole outdoor winter cooking!

So before we get into the winter cooking I want to go back 6 months to whne a friend stumbled upon a great little outdoor wooden stove online. We both think that we could sruvive for weeks in the forrest with just our wits and a hatchet, so this stove was like candy to us.

Stovetec sells numerous stoves and such but we were fixated on the 2 door recreational stove. We talked big and made palns but our pizazz petered off and we forgot about it. Then one faithful day in November last year he email ed me and said "I am getting myself one for Christmas! Do you want one?". 

"Yes please!!! You are getting the one with two doors right?" I asked. A few shortly weeks later we were in possesion of out new beautiful mean green wood burning stoves. 

NOw fast forward to last weekend when we were lookign at my daughters Brownies book to see what Brownie badge she would like to try for this month. And we fell upon the Outdoor Cookout badge. Now my mind opened up and shot straight to the Stovetec stove that had beenin the garage for a few weeks now and had not been used, and that was it!

Our daughter wrote a list of the materials she would need and proceeded to gather them up and get ready.

we are now ready to cook in the snow!

So the oldest attempting to earn a badge was in chage of the whoel endeavour, and I was the safety officer. Most of my conversations ended with "...and then you will burn the house down."

After she cleared a spot on the deck (don't worry a good 1.5 feet from teh house) and placed a board to hold everything we all got excited to light the stove and get a water-boiling-on!

burn baby burn! and once hte fire was lit and hte bottom door closed the flames dropped and the heat roared.And then we had to wait, which seemed to take forever, for about 10 minutes until the water began to roll and boil. 

Only the hardiest of outdoor winter chefs sit on a purple IKEA chair.

The stove does have an adjustable sleeve, that you can see surrounding hte pot of water, that focuses the heat onto the pot or pan used to cook with, the tiny pot we used had a low handle which would not allow us to tighten the sleeve snuggly to the pot. So I would guess that with a tight fit on the pot it would have reduced te boiling time by a few minutes.

Well with the macaroni in thewater and steam rising all over the palce we were one excited bunch. And htat made me.....beside myself with pleasure!!! I hoped they would enjoy this, and I hoped even more that this would actually work. And I was pretty proud of myself when she had a huge smile stirring the macaroni.

the miners came out hte hills that afternoon. Drawn by the smell of the famous Elbow Noodles a la Torgerson. Their fascination with the stove was first, second was watching the wooden spoon steam after stirring the noodles.

After we successfully cooked a wee pot of noodles we went on to thfe best food eveer...boiled weiners. YUM!

THe middle guy was sooo excited to stir the hot dogs and talk almost not stop in the 5 minutes it took to 'cook' them, about camping, cooking,  fire, pots, wood, fire again, steam, spoons, steaming spoons, and how he could cook all our suppers like this, even tea!

"...the water we would get from a stream that was by the tent. And then I would cook supper with it, and wash dishes in it, and then we would build a bridge over the stream so we could play soccer in the field on the other side...."It was a lot of fun and the weather made it absolutly awesome. The amazing thing about the stove that I haven't mentioned was that all we used was 4 short pieces of wood, maybe an inch around and 10 inces long, to cook the noodles nad the hot dogs. 

So it would even come in handy when the zombies come and you don't want to be out with the hordes gathering armfuls of wood for every meal.

Posted on January 30, 2013 and filed under Activities, At home, Food, Nature, Weekend.

Paint, paint, paint...

This weekend, even though we started on Thursday, we primed and painted the basement. 

That is it! No wacky fun fueled adventures as a family, just a weekend. And really it was good.

Between painting and laundry, and lawn and....other stuff, the kids went to visit Great G & G. When they returned I asked how it went and the response from our oldest was,

"Grandma helped me fix my crocheting! And then I did another row! And then we had a snack."

And the middle guys' response was,

"I got $10 for graduating...that it."

And he skipped away happy as could be and dropped the $10 in our giant vacation piggy bank in the living room. By the way that pig is heavy as hell! it must be made with concrete and plaster. But it will be fun to smash it to bits once it is full.

And on Saturday, just when we were worrying that the kids were geting bored our oldest walks into the kitchen with her friend and says, "We want ot make cookies and deliver them to our friends."

Well that started a process of cookie making, cookie cooking, cookie cooling and cookie bagging, followed by running down the street with arms flaying wildly and smooshing those fresh cookies to crispy cookie dough and melted chocolate.

The friends loved the cookies and the girls spend 2 hours creating their plan, reading a recipe and making cookies, waiting (for what seemed like forever!!!!) for the cookies to cool, and walking a couple blocks to go and make some friends happy.

A pretty good idea that is for sure!

Well Sunday night we finished the painting, till we have to touch it up after carpet installation. The laundry was done and we were looking forward to a tea and a couch.....

Then we heard a thump and our big girl came downstairs complaining about a sore tummy. Sigh! That is the way it goes I guess. 

 

 

Our Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe

(Nestle Toll House Cookies ~ with some changes)

Ingredients

  • 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour (this batch was from the mixed whole wheat and white flour bin...no one noticed)
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup (2 sticks) butter, softened
  • 3/4 cup cooking splenda
  • 3/4 cup packed brown sugar splenda
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 large eggs (egg substitute) 
  • 1 1/4 cups chocolate chips

Directions

Turn on oven to 375° F.

Mix flour, baking soda and salt in a bowl. Beat butter, granulated sugar, brown sugar and vanilla extract in large mixer bowl until creamy. Add eggs, one glug at a time, beating well after each addition. Gradually beat in flour mixture. Add chocolate chips to batter and be prepared to give same amount of chips to kids helping as reward. Cook them. 

Cook for 9 to 12 minutes or until edges are golden brown. Don't let cool on baking sheets for 2 minutes, instead just consume scalding hot melty soft cookies; place any left overs in a bag to be shaken vigerously for 2 minutes. 
All done

 

Posted on June 11, 2012 and filed under At home, Weekend, recipe.

Where are all the carrots?

On Sunday we ventured out ot the farm again to check up on how the little seeds have been doing these past 2 weeks since we planted them.

To the kids dismay there were no towering rows of corn, or rows thick with carrots.

give it 6 weeks and it will look delicious!But the kids were happy enough once Grandpa got the riding mower and the Gator out of the quonset. If the battery hadn't have run out, and Grandpa changed it, and then the other battery didn't run out the kids would have been on it all morning. 

Bringing some snacks to the hungry gardeners.

Grandpa showing the boys how to switch out the Gators' battery.

 

Posted on June 4, 2012 and filed under Farm, Garden, Nature, Weekend.

May Long Weekend, why are you so long?

Now don't get me wrong I love a good old long weekend. But this one was different for us, we were busy!

1. We rebuilt a deck in our backyard (with some necessary assistance from a neighbour),

***pictures coming***

2. Helped build the neighbours deck (he helped us what was I supposed to do!),

***pictures coming, maybe. His deck is nicer than mine***

3. Went out to grandpa's farm and planted a massive garden (the kids planted their pumpkins),

Mom enjoying an old fashioned garden planting!We have been working to ensure or kids know where food comes from. We are by no means as ethical a maybe we should be when it comes to what we consume, but we try to show our kids the importance of food, the environment, and taking care of our planet.

We have been helping with the large garden at the farm for a few years, and last year we stepped up our gardening game.

We built a garden box and grew some carrots, chives, cucumbers, and onions. And we also spent more time at the farm. We planted,weeded (occasionally), watered, and then harvested.

Digging for potatoes in 2011This year we are going to try and get the kids even more involved and engaged (we will see how that goes!). 

Posing by his pumpkin plant

4. Spent a morning in Moose Jaw (see post below),  

5. Had a great walk at Wascana park and fed geese and ducks at Water Fowl Park,

and then

6. Ended the long weekend with a wiener roast in the backyard. 

the blank looking at fire stare......fire......

It was a great way to end the weekend. Grandma and Grandpa came over and sat around the fire with us. An we all got to relax out doors and reflect on the past 4 days. The kids were happy to be eating macaroni and hotdogs outside!

It did get a bit hairy once the hose came out and the kids plastic slide was covered in grass and water and the little guy was sitting on top of the slide screaming "Cock-a-doodle Do!!!!!" over and over again, but overall it was a good evening.

 

 

Wait!

I forgot the s'mores. We ate s'mores. Lots of s'mores. It looked like our middle one got into a fight with a s'more and the s'more won! Followed by mores s'mores!

Not your ordinary s'mores. These beauties though began like all other s'mores. 3-5 marshmallows burnt to hell then the one perfectly toasted brown one. But the s'more upgrade comes when you smash your roasted mallow between two chocolate coated biscuit cookies.

It is amazing!

No fumbling with chocolate bars and scalding marshmallow between graham crackers. This is the whole package just waiting for your expertly cooked marshmallow. mmmm!

And while we are talking about food making this weekend great. I would like to pass on a drink recipe that we heard about from our awesomest friends ever (I have likened it to our family dating our friend'sfamily, we are together so much. It is the best!).

I will make up a name for the drink right now and call it....Summer Orange Juice or Daddy's Orange Drink For Hot Days, or even a Summer Screwdriver

If you look close you can see an empty glass that once had the yummy cocktail

RECIPE

1 ounce Pinnacle Whipped Vodka - it tastes like Cool Whip!!!

1/2 orange - all the juice squeezed into glass with ice - make sure to get some pulpy bits, they make the drink work.

top your glass with Ginger Ale - we used diet Ginger Ale. 

ENJOY - next weekend we want to try this blended....

 

So that was our looong weekend. Deck built, clean laundry piled in our bedroom waiting to be put away, kids exhausted, and we are both tired, slightly sunburnt (just Dad), and happy. Except Ang - she started getting sick yesterday. 

Posted on May 22, 2012 and filed under At home, Weekend, recipe.