Monday, January 26, 2009

happy birthday to sabin

our pooka turned 8 yesterday!  in putting together this post, i realized what a lot she did over the past year, especially for one who was only seven years old. and now she's eight! it sounds trite to say that i can hardly believe it, but i can hardly believe it. i am more amazed at her every day. just as an example, last evening, she played a card game in the whist family (davoserjas in danish) with five adults and she won. fair and square and by playing smart. she's just so cool. 


sabin's year in review:

she climbed down to møn's klint (and back up), twice.
february 2008
and january 2009
she made a snowman at easter:
she went to barcelona together with her parents and big sisters:
she endulged her entrepreneurial spirit and made a little stand to sell her parents handmade rubber stamp erasers, tomatoes and muffins:
she explored nature:
she went to munich and got to meet some of the mad cousins:
she ate meatballs in ikea (several times):
she spent time in an idyllic place with a good friend:
she took a mini-cruise to oslo:
she relaxed in the gold lounge before flying all by herself to chicago. she also joined SAS's frequent flyer program on that trip (because they finally opened it up to kids):
she did jump shots with her cousins at navy pier in chicago:
she ate strange things that turned her tongue black:
and drove halfway across the midwest (and back) with her cousins and aunt monica:
she swung at countless pitches thrown by grandpa:
got extraordinarily dirty on the 4th of july at a fishing derby:
attended a huge family reunion:
swam in the missouri river:
went to the omaha zoo with her grandparents & cousins:
REALLY learned to swim at swimming lessons in iowa:
logged far too many hours playing mario on the DS:
got her first mac:
helped with the building project (at least the lunch part):
hostessed an extremely successful halloween party:
made all kinds of creative projects:
ate sushi every chance she got:
lit sparklers in the house:
leaped off a WWII german bunker:
left 3 candles burning on her birthday cake
but had a great birthday party with her class:
and opened presents at the breakfast table yesterday morning:
we're really looking forward to seeing what her eighth year holds!

Thursday, January 8, 2009

happy memories

i've got a wonderful new program called adobe lightroom 2. it's for people for whom photoshop is way too much, but who still want to be the author of their pictures in these times of digital photography. i've been playing with pictures from mom and dad's visit back in august/september. so enjoy...

there's something of american gothic over this picture
minus the pitchfork
that was fun now, wasn't it?
how about sharing some of your pictures, i'm sure you have some! :-)

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

and now for the recipe

The English version of a muffin is baked on a griddle. It is served warm or cooled, split and toasted for afternoon tea, accompanied with lots of butter and marmalade.

English Muffins

1 pkg. active dry yeast
1/2 C. warm milk
1/2 C. warm water
2 to 2 1/2 C. flour
2 T. sugar
2 T. Farina
1/2 t. salt
1/4 t. t. soda
1 T. oil
Cornmeal

In small bowl, dissolve yeast in warm milk and water (105 to 115 degrees F). Lightly spoon flour into measuring cup, level off. In large bowl, combine 1 C. flour, sugar, farina, salt and soda; blend well. Add yeast mixture and oil; blend at low speed until moistened. Beat 3 minutes at medium speed. Stir in an addition 1 to 1 1/2 C. flour until dough pulls cleanly away from sides of bowl.

On floured surface, knead until smooth, about 1-2 minutes. Place dough in greased bowl; cover loosely with plastic wrap and cloth towel. Let rise in warm place (80 to 85 degrees F) until light and doubled in size, about 35-45 minutes.

Punch down dough several times to remove all air bubbles. On lightly floured surface, roll dough to 1/2-inch thickness. Cut with floured 3-inch cutter (An empty 6 1/2-oz. tuna can with both ends removed, can be substituted for 3-inch round cutter.) Place on cookie sheet sprinkled with corn meal; turn once to coat both sides. Cover, let rise in warm place until doubled in size, about 20-35 minutes.

Heat griddle or electric skillet to 325 degrees F. Bake muffins on griddle about 5-8 minutes on each side or until deep golden brown. 10 muffins.

(I found that my skillet only needed to be at 300 degrees. I kept peeking at the muffins to see how brown they were getting, and never let them cook the 5-8 minutes before turning, but perhaps only 3-4 minutes per side. I also must have gotten half my dough thinner than the other half, as some of the muffins were thinner, and I ended up with 13 muffins. I will know better next time.)

100th post!

although i've done probably 90 out of the 100 posts on this blog, this time, it's really coming from my mom.  it's her story of a little exchange she had with ralphie this morning regarding english muffins. here it is in her own words (and even with capital letters):

* * *
I am commencing to make the English muffins for Dad. I found real fine farina in the “scratch and dent” grocery store, packaged by Quaker and called Creamy Wheat. It is quite fine. I am wearing my new Christmas gift, the apron. According to a conversation with your Dad this morning, he wondered why I hadn’t made these in 40 years. I said I hadn’t run onto a scratch recipe for them before. He said I don’t need recipes for everything. HE could make anything without a recipe. (He had informed me that he would be VERY CRITICAL when trying them.) My uncontrollable laughter ushered him out the door, but not before I assured him that if he didn’t like them, I would frisbee them to the cats out in the barn.

* * *

a couple of explanatory notes:

* yesterday mom and i had a conversation about what exactly "farina" was, since her recipe called for it. we discussed (rather extensively) whether one could just use cream of wheat. (i said yes, she was skeptical as to whether it would be ground finely enough.)

* i sent her an apron from the fabulous anna maria horner for christmas, so that's why she mentions the apron.

* bravo to mom for writing this. if there are others out there who have something to say, but don't want to/know how to post it, please send it to me and we'll do just like we did with this post.

* i'm sure the english muffins will be fabulouso.