Books and Reading

Snowbound Knitting

We are snuggled up in the house for yet another day.  Three cars have gotten stuck in the deep snow on our street, the weatherman says the driving is very dangerous, and another 2-5 inches of snow are expected tomorrow.  Right now, my husband is shovelling the walkway to ease his cabin fever.  We are grateful to not have to leave the house and drive anywhere.   

The girls are in their room playing Susan and Lucy at Cair Paravel (we all finished reading the entire Chronicles of Narnia two nights ago, and the girls are caught up in it with their make-believe.) 

I am, at the moment, curled up on the sofa, holding a sleeping baby.  I spent the afternoon working on a little pixie hat for Tum Tum, listening to these talented ladies sing Christmas music.  (The yarn, by the way, is from Sacred Lily Farm’s Jacob sheep.  It is beautifully handspun fingering-weight 2-ply - wonderful to knit with.  My friend, Sana, raises and cares for her sheep with so much love and diligence, and she spins beautiful yarn.  I wish she had a website, so I could share it with you!)

I hope you’re keeping warm and safe in this weather, enjoying the peace of a hibernation day.

Firecracker’s Snow Day

Pictures from earlier in the week, when it was a little warmer and less blustery, and Firecracker thought she might like to go play out in the snow.  She quickly thought better of it, and came in to warm up on the sofa, looking at some Dr. Seuss books with her sister and enjoying the snow from the window. 

We are currently pretty much snowed-in and the latest news is that our flight out to my folks’ tomorrow may be canceled as the snowstorm turns into an icestorm.  So, since I have some time on my hands, I think may have a second post up later today. 

Hope you are keeping warm and safe in the Iowa winter that has settled over Oregon!

Creamy Polenta Dinner

We finished this book, but the girls’ interest in all things relating to “life on the prairie” has yet to wane.  Firecracker had been asking all through the book, “What does salt pork taste like?”, so when we were in the area, we decided to visit the butcher at our local New Seasons to find some.

He didn’t exactly have salt pork, but recommended some locally made bacon that was very salty, not sweet, and contained no nitrites or dyes.  He said it tasted very different from packaged bacon – much more like salt pork.  We ended up buying the bacon ends, because they were $2/lb less expensive, and for our needs, they would work perfectly.  So, $2 later, we left the store with our “salt pork” and headed home.

Now, the Ingalls family also ate a LOT of cornmeal, so we did a little recipe search to find a cornmeal dish we would all want to eat.  We settled on creamy polenta.  I know it isn’t exactly what they would have eaten, because it had cheese, and was served with a tomato and bell pepper sauce, but it looked good to the three of us.  I wasn’t about to spend an hour and a half making a dish of which the girls wouldn’t eat more than one or two bites!

To make this dinner you will need:

1 lb organic, no nitrite local bacon ends or salt pork, finely chopped

5 large shallots, minced

1 clove garlic, minced (I actually used elephant garlic, because it’s what I had on hand)

3 cups whole milk

7 cups cold water

1 bay leaf

1 cup shredded, hard, aged cheese (I used asiago, because it was on sale cheap!)

one large handful of kale or spinach

1 jar homemade spaghetti sauce

1 roma tomato, chopped

1 roasted red bell pepper, skin removed, and finely chopped

1 avocado sliced right before serving (because I had one on hand, you could add parsley or shredded cheese as a garnish instead, if that’s what you have on hand.)

Directions – First, very finely cube and then fry the bacon ends in the dutch oven.  Drain off and save the fat in the fridge (so good for cooking omelettes or hash browns) .  Set fried bacon off to the side. Add the shallots and garlic to the dish and cook on med. until caramelized.  Remove them, and set next to the bacon.

I used this basic creamy polenta recipe, but substituted 3 cups whole milk for half of the 6 cups of water.  I added the water/milk combo straight to the pot that had cooked the bacon, and therefore omitted the salt, because the bacon was quite salty. 

After the polenta finishes cooking, stir in 1 cup shredded cheese and one big handful of kale (from our garden) cut in a fine chiffonade.  Leave covered, on low heat until ready to serve.

While the polenta is cooking, in a separate pot, heat the sauce, plus tomato, red pepper, cooked shallots/garlic, and half of the bacon.

Serve the polenta with sauce on top, and garnish with more bacon and the sliced avocado.  

We ate half of the polenta for dinner, and the other half was poured into a 9×9 greased baking dish, and tomorrow, when it is set up after a night in the fridge, we will cut it up and panfry it for dinner.

Obviously, if you wanted a vegetarian dinner, simply omit the bacon/salt pork, and increase the salt.  You could serve it with cannelini beans for sufficient protein.

The girls enjoyed the dinner, but we talked about how Laura and Mary would have eaten something similar (sans tomato sauce) for breakfast, lunch and dinner most days while they lived on the prairie.   Little Hen said she sure was grateful for the variety in our diet.  She’s so right – we as Americans in the 21st century really are blessed to have such a huge selection of foods to enjoy.

Next on our Little House menu?  A good friend sent us this book for St. Nicholas’ day, so I’m sure there will be many more dishes to try!  The girls would like to make rabbit stew.  Hmm…where to get a rabbit in the middle of Portland without paying an arm and a leg?

Christmas Book Table

Our nature table takes a little respite during the Christmas season.  First, it is our book table, and then, our Christmas tree’s home (the books transition to a basket on the floor underneath).  The nature table will reappear in late winter. 

Many of the girls’ Christmas books are at Grandma and Grandpa’s house in Florida, where we will spend Christmas.  At our home, along with some library books, the December issues of their favorite magazines, and our books of Advent readings, are a few books that I believe are many families’ Christmas favorites.

I loved these books so much as a child that Firecracker was almost named Astrid.  I love how they convey a sense of quiet hibernation that we experience in the winter.

I think most people can’t help but love Tasha Tudor’s illustrations.   When I was a little girl, I would really look forward to my mom reading A Doll’s Christmas, also by Tasha Tudor, and now she reads it to my girls.  The last few years, we have also kicked off the Christmas season by checking out the video, Take Peace: A Tasha Tudor  Christmas, from the library.   

What books do you enjoy at Christmastime?

Fairy-Opoly

Some dear friends from college recently surprised the girls with Fairy-Opoly.  Could they have picked a more perfect gift for little girls who are a wee bit fairy-obsessed and love to play board games with their Daddy?  Super gift!!!

The girls played all morning, only pausing occaisonally to ask me to clarify the rules.  They nicely took turns, rolling to see who goes first, and playing calmly and orderly (I could hardly believe it – no fussing over who gets the “daisy” game piece, or who goes first, or who gets to shuffle the deck.  Yay, girls!)

 Little Hen got an hour’s worth of reading practice – she read all of the cards by herself, only asking a few times for help pronouncing large words (like Dreamweaver).  I just sat behind them, knitting, and listening to her read and read and read with such confidence.  It was great to see her so capable and so independent and to see both her and Firecracker playing, learning, cooperating all at the same time.

Apple Sauce Cranberry Cake

This is my favorite baking book. My mother gave it to my husband for Christmas one year when we were still dating. I bake from it at least once a week. After Martha, it’s my old standby for great recipes (A Little Warning: I have found several recipes that did not work out well the first time and needed quite a bit of tweaking, so my book is full of notes and corrections. If you’re not an experienced baker, this book may disappoint because your recipe may not rise or set or fit in the pan, or might be too spicy or runny! That being said, the concepts are great, even if many of the proportions are wonky, and there may be an updated and revised edition – my copy is 10 years old.)
We attend a book study on Tuesday nights, and I always try to bake dessert. There are lots of little children, so I try to bake something I can rationalize as “nutritious” (pumpkin bread, banana cookies, etc).

This week, I made a seriously tweaked recipe, inspired by the Hot Apple Sauce Cake in Fannie Farmer. My rationale for calling it a healthy dessert? My version contains applesauce, cranberries, whole wheat flour, and walnuts (optional -I left them out this time due to nut allergies in some folks at the study). Also, the frosting (not from Fannie Farmer) contains no refined sugar – only honey (I’ll post that next time).

  • Parkrose Permaculture’s Cranberry Applesauce Cake (inspired by a recipe in the Fannie Farmer Baking Book)

Meadowlarks on the Prairie

 

We are continuing to work our way through the life of Laura Ingalls, and today we reached the following passage in Little House on the Prairie:

“The rising sun was shortening all the shadows.  Hundreds of meadow larks were rising from the prairie, singing higher and higher in the air.  Their songs came down from the great, clear sky like a rain of music.  And all over the land, where the grasses waved and murmured under the wind, thousands of little dickie-birds clung with their tiny claws to the blossoming weeds and sang their thousands of little songs.”

 

(This photo in the public domain)

I would have loved to see an event like this!  Can you imagine that this was a daily occurence for the Ingalls family?  When we lived in Iowa, I felt priviledged to see just a handful of meadowlarks singing in a field. 

Now, it’s no secret that the Western Meadowlark is my favorite North American bird, so I was really glad when Firecracker asked what a lark’s song sounds like.  This is one of those times when I really like having internet at home, because we looked up this website and spent quite a bit of time looking at pictures and listening to the songs of birds that Laura might have seen while she lived on the prairie. 

 Maybe I have two more little ornithologists in the making?

Reading

Little Hen reading to her siblings
Little Hen reading to her siblings

Wishing you a snuggly afternoon, full of stories and children’s sweet voices.