Saturday, February 05, 2011

Alice in Wonderland

The movie finally showed up in the netflix instant que, so I decided to watch it while writing mid-quarter reports. I'm not one to latch on clothing or costumes, but I love her dress while she is in underland, the blue flowy one.... see here: (from the wikipedia page)

This is when I wish I actually had some sewing talent, but alas, designing such an item is far out of my ability range.

"Lost my muchness, have I?" I like this quote. I've worked hard at having "muchness" and hope to never
lose it!

A very good movie, though I would have called it PG-13, not PG. The Jabberwoky is scary, quite honestly! Though the theme of knowing yourself and making your own decisions, versus letting others decide for you is appropriate for most ages. It fits well with our American Ideals (not that I totally agree with these ideals; I think we sell short the ideal of duty and loyalty. But that is for another post all together).

Bread and Jerky

Its a beautiful day here! It's well into the 50s and the snow is melting off. The sun is shining and warming up the house. I enjoy snow and cold, but not when its in my house.  I know how to stay warm in a chilly house, I have plenty of experience, but its never fun to have to be bundled up just about all the time. Thus the space heater. But more on that later.

Today, I got busy making beef jerky and bread. I found some nice round steak at the grocery store with little fat marbling. That's important because fat goes rancid much faster than the meat, and the meat will dry out, but fat doesn't. I cut the outside fat off the meat and cut the meat into pieces just small enough to fit in the food processor. I put the meat into the freezer for 30 minutes to firm it up, but not enough to freeze it through. Good for slicing the meat thinly. I had thought to use my food processor to quickly cut thin slices, but that didn't pan out. The food processor more chopped the meat into small pieces, even with the "slicer" blade. So, out came my trusty Alaskan Inuit blade -- a gift from my in-laws after their Alaskan cruise. Its great of slicing meat.


With my blade I sliced the meat as thin as I could, ideally between 1/8 and 1/4 inch thick. And now a confession... I used the jerky cure and spices from a box. Its good stuff, but I'm sure I can do it cheaper on my own. But, I had the box of cure and spices, so I used them. Anyhoo, let the meat coat, and layer it in the dehydrator. 


Its still in the dehydrator, blowing the moisture from the meat into the air. Which is nice because its so very dry right now (I've also got the humidifier running). I'll let you know how it turns out.

I also made bread today. I love making bread and tend to use the Basic Tassajara Yeasted Bread from The Tassajara Bread Book*. But every time I've made bread, its good, but crumbly. Too crumbly for sandwiches. I've thought that if I could make sandwich bread, I won't need to buy any. But, gotta get the bread right first.  I started out by googling "how to make bread less crumbly" and found several suggestions that sounded like they would work. So I adjusted the recipe I'd normally make and used less whole wheat and more white flour. Then, when I kneaded the bread, I left it stickier than I normally would, and made sure it never rose too far (those were from the various suggestions I'd read off google). When the loaves came out of the oven, I was so eager to try some, I didn't let it cool all that long... and I wasn't disappointed!


Its so soft, just like sandwich bread should be! I will continue to buy bread until I can make this kind of bread consistently. But this encouraging that I *can* make this kind of bread. I have dreams of someday making all our various bread products, and having a true baking day; though in the summer it might be worth buying bread to save on the cost of air conditioning the house... an oven running all day sure heats everything up -- great in the winter, poopy in the summer. I wonder if one can bake bread in a solar oven -- anyone know?

Now, I turn my attention to school. Mid-quarter reports go out Monday and I should have those finished before then. Blah, I hate highly dislike the paper work involved in teaching. (had to use the mark out, looked like fun!)

Friday, February 04, 2011

Snow Day, *Really*

I guess, so I heard, Waco gets snow about once a year -- so far that has panned out true. It seems that old man winter is a cruel old man who seems to forget about us until the end and sends us his "fierce" storms just before winter is done with. Of course, his storms are lessened as they travel south and its really not too bad overall, but seems bad compared to the 80' weather last weekend.


The rain guage is showing about 3 inches of snow at its lowest drift point.


Foot prints are easily two inches deep under the big oak.






 Its a nice blanket of snow. Tomorrow has a high in the upper 40's, so I don't expect it to last beyond then. But we will see!

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

For the Love of Pictures

Being nerds at Dad's place

 I forget where I made this...some website

 My newly set up workspace in the bedroom. Loving it greatly. This was in the midst of grading on the snow day.

 Books I'm trying to read.

 Brrrrrr.... it was cold and wet Tuesday morning.

My attempt at saving electricity. For lazy mornings, I'm putting the hot coffee in the thermos instead of keeping the coffee pot on.

Gosh, pictures aren't all that hard to do!

Reading Books

I've found in the past few years that I'm reading many fewer books than before. Some of that is that I'm busier than in previous stages of life, and the free time I have is less. This all began with working on a Master's Thesis, and when I had time to read, I was reading for that. Then, I was teaching ESL and had continuing ed style writings to read. Now, if I've got time, I'm knitting (which I can watch TV or listen to something while doing), cooking, cleaning or doing school stuff. Just reading has been all but cut out of my schedule.

This disappoints me. I am a reader and I love to read. As a child, I would devour the library's limit of books each two weeks during the summer and was regularly in the school library. More recently, the last time I had a book out of the library here, I ended up with late fees because I forgot I had the books until they were a few days past due. I'd FORGOTTEN about the books; isn't that sad? As a teenager I'd check out the limit of books at the library if only because I couldn't decide what I was most interested in. More recently, I found myself standing in the non-fiction wondering what I should look at, and browsing the rows not noticing anything that caught my eye. Have I grown more a discerning taste in books, or have I lost the immense curiosity of youth? (not that I'm all that old, yet)

Anyhoo, all this rambling introduction to say I'm thinking I should aim to read more. I have several books started and need only to persevere and make time for them. They are worth it and worth the time to spend reading them. These books range from the science of food, to parenting, to the history of missions, to spiritual disciplines and finally to 'organic' cleaning solutions. I imagine I have much to say about each one, though I should aim to finish reading them before opining on them.

Here's the list... and if you have any thoughts on any of the books I'd love to hear them!

Simplicity Parenting, by Kim John Payne, M.Ed.
Bringing up Boys, by Dobson
The Naturally Clean Home, by Karyn Siegel-Maier
From Jerusalem to Irian Jaya, by Tucker
Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life, by Donald S. Whitney
On Food and Cooking, by Harold McGee

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

Snow Days

Well..... its a "snow day" here for us. True, we are a small, private school and people come from all over town and surround communities, but I was surprised to say the least. A winter storm blew in last night, bringing *cold*, rain and hail/ice. I wasn't looking forward to driving in, least of all over the few bridges we cross to get to school. But the whole day? That's crazy.... but nice.

What does one do with a snow day? A suddenly free, no commitments kind of day doesn't spring up all that often in anyone's life, I'm sure. Here's what I'm thinking for today:

ANTI-PROCRASTINATION DAY ALL THE WAY!

-finish the grading I brought home and didn't finish last night (done as of 850 am :D)
-grocery shopping (I have to take Hubby to school anyways, so might as well)
-make a run to the new yarn store that I haven't visited yet (yeah, yarn store in Waco!)
groceries done, yarn store not found :( and home again by 1230 pm
-declutter the jewelry (finished at 915 am!)
-do the mending of a fav sweater and other items I've procrastinated on. check!
-vacuum done, yea!

That should keep me busy and it makes good use of the day... I hope. We'll see how disciplined I can be, though, I am a major procrastinator.

For those who love pictures, oh sister, I'll see about getting a few during the day. :D