Tuesday, March 6, 2012

School for Momma

As the last post hinted at, while teaching my children their ABCs and 123s I am also teaching them the love of cooking while exploring and experimenting. The other night i attempted for the 3rd time to make yogurt in a crock pot and was finally rewarded with success.

Thank you to Chickens in the Road for the wonderful recipe:
http://chickensintheroad.com/cooking/homemade-yogurt-in-a-crock-pot-and-yogurt-cheese/


Today I am experimenting with said yogurt by adding
And then placing it not into the fridge but into the freezer. Fingers crossed we will have Homemade Butterscotch Frozen Yogurt for dessert tonight.


As for experimenting with things that swim, my Little Emma has decided that fish is not all that bad after all. Especially after devouring
Baked Tilipia and Homemade Potato Chips.

Recipe is sooo easy and soo simple and sooo easy adaptable to your tastes:
Purchase enough tilipia for your family, then sprinkle some lemon juice over it, followed by melted butter, and topped with a sprinkling of fresh chopped garlic. Place in the oven at 350 and bake for roughly 20 minutes or until white and flaking off with a fork.

Potato chips I have never been able to master but a good friend suggested to use less oil. So we sliced the potatoes very thin, then placed 10 at a time into our frying pan with about 2" of  hot oil in the bottom. Allow then to turn nice and brown. Remove from fryer and allow to dry on a paper towel. While on the paper towel sprinkle with some salt and vinegar.

That's it. Easy Peasy Lemon Squeezey.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

You never know where or how you will learn

I love teaching my kids in part because I love to learn new and interesting things. My favorite things to learn is about things that affect my kitchen, from the food we grow to the food we eat there is always a new study, recipe, ingredient to try. As such I have taken on the challenge both to my kids and to my family to dedicate once a month to try something new. Well February was the month of chocolate in all forms to attempt to bake with and really challenge our taste buds. What an adventure this month has been.

We have made:
Chocolate gravy


And thanks to Hershey Chocolates we tried
Chocolate Sloppy Joes


Of  course everything had to be fun as well




The absolute best thing was



Ok so it was not just those few dishes we actually tried cocoa chili, spicy cocoa pork chops, cocoa and black bean soup, chocolate chip muffins, and all sorts of dishes. February is not yet over and I still have a few surprises left.


But we are already planning for March where our theme will be Things that Swim

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

I am truly horrible with blogging

Autumn though has been working very hard on writing a report on Thomas Edison. I have always stresses to my children to dig to find the truth not the thruth they are taught to believe in.




So here is her report although it did not copy and paste over in perfect format:
Thomas Edison- Inventor

Thomas Edison is the person I chose to do a report on. As an inventor and innovator, his life and legacy has changed the lives of all generations, despite an uncooperative start.

Thomas Edison was born February 11, 1847 to Nancy Elliot and Sam Edison JR., a school teacher and a lumberman. Thomas Edison started his education in a grammar school in Milan, Ohio, although he only spent 12 weeks there due to a teacher that
thought of him as confused and self centered. His mother decided to home school him; which lead her to discover that his hearing was very poor due to an accident with a train conductor, and he had Attentive Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. These discoveries convinced his mom to continue to home school him as best as she could periodically for five years, until he was twelve years of age.

After removing him from his initial school and the periodically home schooling, Tom Edison was never enrolled in a formal school environment. Instead, he got his first job as a salesman selling his own newspaper: The Grand Trunk Herald, as well as fruits, vegetables, and candy on a railroad platform and proudly, and as the Civil War started he signed up to become a powder monkey, serving his role model.

Thomas Edison’s role model was Abraham Lincoln, the sixteenth president of the United States of America, who helped put an end to slavery and believed in improving America, which fit with Thomas Edison’s own belief in striving for something better.

After the Civil War, Thomas Edison decided to find a safe and inexpensive light to replace the current gas lamps. Despite previous misconceptions, Thomas Edison was not the first to invent the light bulb, but he was the first to invent a light bulb using a carbon filament. It took Edison three years to invent a light bulb that would be a “safe, mild, and inexpensive light to replace the gaslight”. To do so he experimented with different threads of bamboo, string, and other materials until deciding that a carbon filament, placed inside a vacuum bulb not only lasted the longest but produced light without being a fire hazard. This allowed him to beat out his biggest competitors in inventing the carbon filament, Willis Whitnew, Joseph Swan, and William David Coolidge. In 1877, Edison also invented the phonograph “that would record and reproduce sound” accidentally while trying to figure out how to improve two other inventions, the telegraph and the telephone.

The phonograph took his mechanic only thirty hours to build but was the beginning of bringing music into peoples homes via recordings on a wax or tin foil cylinder. His two major inventions, one created from failure was only a small example of the brilliance of his mind. As a forward thinking man he met with failure often such as an attempt to design, manufacture, and sell concrete items such as cabinets and doors, and wanting to improve the status quote of mining iron ore he spent many years trying to find the illusive, quicker, and more practical way. This forward thinking, creative successes and failures created one of the largest corporations know today.

In Thomas Edison’s adult life he was offered the opportunity to join forces with British physicist Joseph Swan, an early competitor, to create General Electric in 1919. This company at the time allowed for both of their inventions to grow beyond their personal limitations. Today it is hard to find an appliance in a home that has not be influenced or made by General Electric.

Looking at the vast skylines of New York City lit up at night you are gazing at the illumination of general electric wiring. As more people take to the air and fewer homes out of the way of aircraft flight patterns General Electric is entering a new frontier of trying to find a way to make planes fly quieter, and emit fewer emissions. As his company and his personal belief that things can always be improved upon lead him to be an exceptionally caring person, wanting not only better things, but a better life for others.

Between his caring nature and financial success, he helped his family financially. His mother owed the hospital money from bills and his father was worrying that their house would be foreclosed because they couldn’t pay the mortgage. Tomas Edison who had earned $40,000 from an invention of a device that would find faults in the stock market ticker, and with the profits, he immediately rode home and paid off the mortgage and hospital bills.

Thomas Edison was one of the most famous inventors of all times. As an inventor and innovator, his life and legacy has changed the lives of all generations.