Saturday, May 23, 2009

what a kid!


The other day, I bought Julien a new toy - an ATV (non-motorized). I put it together while hubby was at work on Wednesday night. Jules absolutely loves the thing.


Yesterday evening and this afternoon we went on quite a long "ride" with it. All the way to the park, down the street - to the path, and then back to our street and home. Probably a good 35-30 minutes each time.


Friday, May 15, 2009

Making memories

Today was spent creating family memories. We headed to a little fair at Dow's lake, and spent the afternoon enjoying the fresh air!


holding his ducky that daddy won!
riding the carousel

Daddy and Julien whacking moles


Julien and mommy fishing



Daddy and Julien


Thursday, May 14, 2009

skinned knees


Last week, Julien and I went for a walk after dinner. He was running down the path behind our house and he tripped. A mama cuddle made him feel better, but as we were walking home I realized he had skinned his knee. The first time, so of course I had to take a picture!

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

gotta love dandelions


It's official - I received my first gift of "dandelions" last week from Julien. He has so much fun running around and picking these from the fields around our house. He gets so proud as he holds them in his chubby little hands.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Just like his mama


For dessert on mother's day, we had ice cream cake. Julien loved it (although it wasn't his first time having it) and - just like me, I realized he chews his ice cream.....I thought it was neat....J thinks it's weird

Thursday, April 16, 2009

mmmm chicken soup

I made the most delicious chicken soup last night, I got the recipe from the Rachael Ray website, and I was extremely impressed. It's fast and easy to make - and tastes delicious.

Recipe:

1 head garlic
3 tablespoons EVOO – Extra Virgin Olive Oil, divided
2 pounds boneless, skinless chicken breasts
3-4 bay leaves
1 medium onion, quartered
4 carrots, thinly sliced into rounds or matchsticks
2 leeks, thinly sliced
1 quart chicken stock
Zest and juice of 1 lemon
1/4 head savoy or green cabbage, thinly sliced
1/2 pound thin egg noodles
1/4 cup chopped flat leaf parsley
1/4 cup chopped dill
Preparation
Pre-heat oven to 400ºF.Slice the top 1/4-inch off the stem end of the garlic head, exposing the cloves. Place the garlic onto a square of aluminum foil and drizzle with about 1 tablespoon EVOO. Wrap the foil up around the garlic to enclose it and roast it in the oven until golden brown and very tender, about 40 minutes.
While the garlic is roasting, place the chicken into a medium pot with the bay leaves and onion. Fill the pot with water and bring up to a simmer. Place the chicken into the pot and simmer until cooked through, about 10 minutes. Remove the cooked chicken from the broth, dice into bite-sized pieces and reserve. Strain the cooking liquid, reserving 4 cups worth.
Place a large pot over medium-high heat with 2 turns of the pan of EVOO, about 2 tablespoons. Add the carrots and leeks to the pan, and cook until tender, about 5 minutes.
While the veggies are cooking, squeeze the cloves from the head of roasted garlic into a small bowl. Add a splash of stock to the cloves and mash into a paste. To the pot with the carrots and leeks, add the lemon zest, mashed garlic, remaining chicken stock and reserved poaching liquid and bring up to a bubble.
Add the cabbage and egg noodles to the pot, and cook until both are tender, 3-4 minutes. During the last minute of cooking, add the reserved chopped chicken to the pot. Season the soup with salt and pepper and stir in the lemon juice and herbs.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Adventures in feeding a toddler

Sometimes I don't understand how kids manage to stay healthy. There are days that Julien will only eat yogurt....or applesauce.....

I am not of the mind to put it in front of them and if they eat it fine, if they don't then they won't starve. In my mind, I don't eat food I don't like, so I don't expect anyone else to do it either. I won't make a completely seperate meal for him, but I will offer him yogurt and toast once we are finished eating if he has chosen not to eat what was made.

Although, one trick I recently discovered was feeding him from my plate. I cut up his food, put it on my plate and in between my own bites of dinner, I offer him chicken/ham/turkety etc on my fork, and 90% of the time he will actually eat it.....but, if I then put it onto his plate and give him a fork, he stops.......

Just a random pointless post for the day