Search

Popular Posts

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Dad's Clam Chowder recipe

This is amazing stuff! I usually add extra bacon and mushrooms and never use the clam juice.

clamchowder

Dad's Clam Chowder
5 strips bacon
1 1/4 sticks butter
8 oz. mushrooms, sliced
med. onion, chopped
1/2 c. celery, chopped
garlic powder
8 oz. clam juice (or water)
6-6 oz. cans of chopped or minced clams
6 med. potatoes, peeled and cut in 1/2 inch cubes
1 1/2 qts. heavy cream
hot sauce
dried thyme
1 T. lemon juice
1 T. Worcestershire
1 t. salt
pepper
dried parsley
2 T. flour
2 T. cornstarch
1 c. milk
seasoned salt
chicken boullion powder

In a large pot cook bacon until done, but not crisp; set aside and chop when cool. To bacon drippings, add 1 stick butter, mushrooms, onion, celerey and garlic powder; saute until soft. Add clam juice (or water), the juice from the cans of clams (but not the clams themselves), lemon juice and a dash of hot sauce. Add potatoes, bring to a boil and let simmer 6 minutes. In a separate pan, melt 1/4 stick butter, then add flour and cook 2 minutes. Shake cornstarch and milk together in a jar and add to flour mixture. Cook and stir until thickened, then add to pot. Add clams, bacon, cream, a sprinkle of thyme, Worcestershire, salt, a dash of pepper, and some parsley. Simmer for 15 minutes (do not boil), then if needed add seasoned salt, boullion and extra hot sauce to taste.

Monday, October 25, 2010

This is one beautiful homage to cakes that truly suck. Please to enjoy:

Not already!!!

When I went to use the computer this evening, I found the following document, yet to be printed (and surely not meant for my eyes ;)

Faith's Spencer Letter

On the plus side, I love her spelling, formatting and use of fonts!

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Halloween kid crafts

I was going through my favorites folder of Halloween stuff to give some ideas for a class party craft, so I decided to share what I found! Pictures are linked, so just click on the ones you're interested in and you'll be whisked away to the blog I stole the image from ;)  [tip for my less computer savvy friends and mother--if you right-click on the picture and select "open in a new tab" then it won't take you away from this page]





















Ariel's Sea Spiders

Ghostwriter Halloween Craft



Furry Bat Halloween Deocration


Flapping Bat Halloween Decoration



Awesome Arachnids


Halloween Kids Crafts Finger Puppets


Goofy Frankenstein Puppet Craft







Halloween treat bags

Haunted House Luminary




Sweet As Candy

Pumpkin Candle
(with clear plastic disposable cup inside instead of glass jar)
(and battery operated candle instead of real)


Finished bat craft

Tie thread to a plastic object.

Floating Ghost Halloween Craft

Monday, October 18, 2010

"The revolution, if it is to come . . .

must come from parents." This is a quote from Teacher Tom, an educator at an amazing preschool in Seattle and someone whose blog I absolutely love. He had a clip of this TED talk where Ken Robinson quotes Abraham Lincoln:

The dogmas of the quiet past, are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country.



Here is some more of what he wrote about reforming our current school system:

"...our current school system is based upon the ideas people had about the future during the Industrial Revolution, when it seemed likely that most people would spend their lives working in factories. They therefore set about creating schools that emphasized conformity, rote learning, following instructions, and long hours of sitting in one place doing the same thing over and over. Things like individuality and creativity would only be burdens in a future that belonged to sufficiently numb minds. This is essentially the same model of schooling we use today, while Newsweek bemoans our "Creativty Crisis" and business executives identify "creativity" as the number one "leadership competency" of the future.


Everyone from teachers, to business leaders, to politicians, to the media agree that we are failing to teach creativity, that creativity is essential, that our very survival is at stake. And yet we're trying to solve it within the context of a factory model of education, one that will ultimately fail no matter how much we "reform" it, especially if that reform is in the direction of yet more more testing, more standardization, more time spent in classrooms listening to lectures. And I will repeat this until I'm blue in the face, those advocating for this kind of "reform" cannot produce a single scrap of data, research or evidence that their ideas will result in more creative citizens. There has never been a study done that proves their assertions. Never. Never. Never. Yet they push forward. I don't know why, but I suspect it has a lot to do with the attitude Roman expressed when he said, "I had to do it, we all had to do it. It was good enough for me, why not for our kids?""


I'm ready to revolt, who's with me?

Sunday, October 10, 2010

A few months ago I came across this lolcat poster (a picture of a cat or other animal with funny text written in terrible, babyish spelling and grammar--click the link for more info) on a blog entry with tips on teaching preschoolers about money. 


I showed it to Christian and he loved it so much that he started quoting it all the time. I looked up some others and got even more of a kick out of them than he did! Anyway, I had these saved in a file with my pictures and thought I'd post them for your viewing pleasure before deleting to free up space on my hard drive:
















Friday, October 8, 2010

Fifth day of Tony's vacation

Friday was our third and last day with the Connect Pass and we, again, fit in as much as possible. We started the day at This Is the Place Park. We saw some neat Native American dancing, but Buddy was whiny so we moved on to pioneer games.

Next, we attended the "candy cannon" event where actors did a funny little bit and shot salt water taffy out of a cannon. They also threw a bunch in the street so all the kids could get some, but we ended up with at least one of the "shot" pieces that was fairly singed :)

We rode a sight seeing train around the village (way to pay attention, Tony),

then met up with Joy's family for lunch. We got some root beer and cream soda in cute, old fashioned bottles and had some great hamburgers.

The kids loved the pony ride!


We visited the blacksmith shop where a man was making nails the way they did in the eighteen hundreds. I was surprised how interested the kids were, and the adults were enthralled as well. Check out the eagle! That blacksmith was an amazing artist. 

We didn't have enough time to tour many of the houses, but we checked out this cabin and wondered how people lived with so many kids in such little space.

The petting zoo was very popular with the kids, but the adults found it hot and smelly.

Probably Christian's favorite activity--panning for gold.

You then turn in your gold at the bank for a piece of candy.

Somehow the kids talked their dad into buying them expensive, forest animal gummy suckers {{sigh}}.

We spent a few hours at the zoo, but it was insanely hot and the kids had been several times recently.

So we went to dinner at the Lion House Pantry where we each had $10 for dinner from our Connect Passes. Let me tell you, that bought a lot of yummy food! After we stuffed ourselves, we toured the Beehive House. The kids loved seeing all the antiques and we thought it was fun that most of the day was spent learning about pioneers on the day before Pioneer Day.

Faith thought it was crazy that this wedding dress was so small and the shoes were her size!

We had such a fun time doing all the Salt Lake area activities and outings and felt so lucky to be able to do them with Joy, Jordan, Sierra and Lily!