Monday, May 9, 2016

Recipe for The Best Mother's Day Ever

Ok, it's not a recipe at all. I lied. Just needed a place to write things down and not lose them ...

I had the most awesome Mother's Day this year. 

Earlier in the week James and the kids asked what I wanted for Mother's Day, and while I was tempted to ask for the kitchen floor to get mopped, or for a box of See's candy, I decided I'd really like to go for a drive and have a picnic in the mountains, which I knew would end up in James and the kids going for a hike. I let him know that I wanted to opt out of said hike and lay in the grass and read a book. 
Alone. 
(Well, me and Jack, anyway.)

Saturday we had to take the kids to their Endangered Species Faire in Chico for them to parade around with their endangered species puppets they made at school. It was rainy and dark and since we'd all been sick we slept in so late I assumed we weren't going. By the time everyone voiced their desire to go, we were running late and I was stressed about the probability of my cough getting worse, having the baby get cold and wet and possibly succumbing to our germ fest, and just the task of packing up everything we would need and getting everyone out the door. But we got there at the perfect time, we all had fun, and we didn't stay too long. 
Before we left Chico James took me to See's (as he had told me he was going to but I think I really didn't believe) to get a Mother's Day box of chocolates. 
Which meant we ALL went in. 
The day before Mother's Day. 
Yup, it was slightly ridiculous in there, and each of the kids were quietly hoping (outloud) to get their OWN box of candy, which was adorable, pitiful, and annoying all at the same time.
(It's MOTHER'S DAY not kid's day!) 
James hates going in stores, and he hates spending money, so I knew how incredibly thoughtful this was of him, and I loved him for that even more than I loved getting to have my favorite chocolates. 

When we got home the plan was to clean up the house so we could have a fun day on Sunday. That sorta worked. A bit. It was just a little too much and the kids kinda wanted to do anything BUT that, so they all did a little and then disappeared. 
(Or I had to remind them that they needed to disappear if they weren't cleaning up.) 
James and I got derailed because the kitchen sink, dishwasher, and washing machine got backed up from Sam dumping pine shavings down the sink (only because he's been so responsible in taking care of the chicks' water every day) and the laundry room got flooded. So we spent a LONG time working on that and thought we might even have to call a plumber. 
(Like later in the week, NOT on the Saturday evening before Mother's Day.)
$$$
But in the end my awesome hubby not only fixed it, but also 
MOPPED THE KITCHEN AND LAUNDRY ROOM FLOOR, 
which is ALWAYS an amazing gift for me. And even though the house didn't get completely clean, their effort did make a difference that I appreciated.

Since we planned to go on a picnic after church the next day, I went to Savemart after the kids went to bed to buy way too much picnic food, and in an effort to save my "good" chocolate from my adorably pitiful children, I went to Walgreens to get them each their own Mother's Day box of chocolate that they would be welcome to gorge themselves on. 

The last few days I've gotten lots of "I love you's" and "You're the best Mommy ever's" from the kids whenever they remembered that Mother's Day was coming up. During the week Jonas had asked me if Michael's would have any heart shaped paper, and I noticed him trying to cut out a heart on Saturday which must not have met his high standards because he later abandoned it on the couch. 
And on Saturday when we were walking through the parking lot to See's, Sam had his last $10 out, all ready to pay for my special chocolate.

Sunday was my first day back at church since Jack was born. When we were getting ready Jonas quietly came in from the back yard and wordlessly handed me a red rose. (Literally JUST the rose.) He plucked it right off the top of the stem because he couldn't figure out how to pick it with all those thorns. I tried to figure out a way to put it in my hair or pin it on myself like a corsage, but there wasn't even enough stem to do that so it's perched on top of my old bottle of "Green's Lung Restorer" that I use for a vase. The look on his face when he handed it to me was just the best. One of those you can never capture with a camera. He was very serious and gallant about it with just the tiniest hint of a shy but proud smile in one corner of his mouth. 

Jack was just the cutest little thing in his white shirt, tie, and hat. He was the best behaved little baby ever all through church and I'm still basking in the illusion that he will stay that way forever. 
(lalalalalala ... I don't want to hear any different.) 
Sad I didn't have time to take a picture of him. Next week.

Another picture I NEEDED was the heart-aching cuteness of seeing Daddy and Soraya holding hands and walking to church together. (I elected to drive the van and the boys hopped in with me.) Soraya wore her black and white polka dot dress that she's just barely starting to grow out of so it's gotten short enough that it has that little-girl-from-the-60's look to it. Both of them were carrying their scriptures and you could tell even from behind that Soraya was happily chatting away with Daddy until she saw us and her face lit up as she began running and tugging Daddy along to race us. 

We were late enough that we took the sacrament in the foyer and it wasn't until we sat down and got settled in the chapel that we looked up and realized all the primary kids were on the stand ready to sing their Mother's Day songs. I told the kids, "That's ok, you can just sing to me here." That's when Sam humbly apologized for not paying attention when they were teaching them that song. But I did hear him singing softly to me the other two songs that he must have been paying attention for. 

Another image I wanted to burn into my brain was Sam holding Jack in Sacrament meeting, and seeing Jack so comfortable with his gentle big brother that he fell asleep on his shoulder. 
After Sacrament meeting James and the rest of the elders quorum passed out chocolate bars to all the mothers and my renegade bearded husband slipped me an extra one. 
The kids drew pictures of me in primary which they excitedly ran up to show me. Sam apologized that he was being silly with his friend and drew me with pink hair. Then he scolded Jonas for throwing away the picture that he had drawn of me. Jonas insisted it wasn't good. 
"She doesn't care, Jonas. She likes it anyway!" 
When Sam learned that Jonas didn't rip it up but merely crumpled it and threw it away, he and Jonas took off to dig it out of the garbage for me. They returned to announce that the young men had already dumped the trash cans and when they went out to the dumpster to see if they could find it there was dog poop in it. 
(And I was thankful for the gift of children NOT covered in dog poop.)

Throughout the day I got so many of those sweet "I love you's" from Soraya - those really good ones where something just stops her and out of the blue she looks into my eyes for a good second or two and puts her hand on my cheek or grabs my hand to snuggle and says with so much feeling, "I really love you, Mommy." 

After we got home James hurriedly replaced the exhaust hangers on the truck that we broke on our last 4-wheeling adventure, gassed up, and packed not only my comfy lounge chair, but also the pop-up pavilion for a super princessy picnic (and also because it was so cloudy it looked like it might rain!) We drove out past Butte Meadows and Jonesville through an amazing amount of fog. James had planned to take me to the top of the summit where there was a sunny open area and a gorgeous view. As we got close to the top we did our best to 4 wheel through patches of snow until we got high enough that the snow completely covered the road and we decided to turn back. But we didn't have to go far. We had passed a nice little flat spot near a creek that we doubled back to for our picnic. We were starving by then and just ate in the back of the pickup since we realized we didn't bring anything waterproof to put under our blanket and the ground was very wet from the rain we'd gotten the last few days. The kids were thrilled with their miniature sparkling cider bottles and giant boxes of chocolates (as was I!) ;) After everyone had full bellies James took the kids around to explore, and Jack and I lounged on my favorite chair (still in the bed of the pickup) and I absorbed myself in the tail end of "East of Eden." Jonas picked me a Dandelion to put in my hair. Sam found an old bottle of Red Stripe Beer that made James and I laugh remembering the commercials for it. Sam didn't know why it made me so happy, but he was thrilled to be the one to have found it for me and bring it home so I could have a new vase. The kids fell asleep on the way home and James and I enjoyed the very foggy (and quiet) drive together in the dark.

Just so I don't gloss over things and remember them too rosy, the kids were still their normal selves. 
We were asked several times about the exact length of the drive to get to this mystical picnic. (Obviously so they knew exactly how much they should plan to whine on the way.) 
Sam was peeved that Soraya got to sit in the front. 
He and Jonas couldn't keep their hands to themselves in the back and had to be reminded to not be annoying every 7 1/2 minutes. 
The drive was "too long" and everyone complained about being hungry, but Jonas literally thought he was going to DIE and was practically hyperventilating back there until we'd gotten so far away from civilization that we let him sit in the pickup bed and he forgot all about the fact that he was so close to death by starvation. 
Then Soraya was heartbroken because SHE wanted to sit in the back, TOO. 
"I won't fall out, Daddy! Jonas can hold on to me! He's strong enough. PLEEEEAASE!" 
After our picnic, when Daddy was leaving on the first hike Soraya decided at the last minute that she wanted to stay with me. After a couple minutes she realized she actually DID want to go with Daddy, but they were already gone, so she whined and screamed and cried during most of that time I was looking forward to as being peaceful alone-time bliss. I, like the good mother I am, did my best to ignore her and just enjoy my book and chocolates, while making sure she didn't wander off so far looking for Daddy that she became bear bait. 
Jonas had stinky gas, which caused the inevitable speculation of ... "Who did that?" ... "Do you need to go to the bathroom?" ... "That's stinky!" ... "Don't do that any more!" ... "Jonas, not again!" 
Somehow Sam decided that the clouds gave him a headache and also made him car-sick, as did the smell of the chips we gave to Jonas to keep him from dying at the hands of his cruel parents who starved him. 
Soraya jabbered and peppered us with questions constantly to the point that it was obvious she simply couldn't cope with not hearing the sound of her own voice.

Not that I'm complaining about ANY of those things. It was literally one of the BEST days ever - definitely my best Mother's Day ever. I just wanted to remind myself that my children weren't body-snatched and replaced with perfect little stepford alien children for the day. They were themselves. The same amazingly wonderful kids they are every day. All those good things they did that I wanted to somehow pin down and capture forever - they weren't unusual in any way. That is them. All the time. Every day. All that thoughtfulness my husband oozed - that's him. All the time, actually. Just having a day to label that it was all for me helps to see it as a gift, I guess, when really he would do that and more on any given day (and has many times.)

Anyway, just wanted to save a little of it in some way, even though there were no pictures to put on facebook and brag about the perfect life I somehow got to have. 

Hashtag: "blessed" (or something equally obnoxious.) ;)

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

My First Shepherd's Pie

I made it through my entire childhood without ever eating a Shepherd's Pie. I don't even think I'd ever heard of such a thing until my 20's. It didn't look like I was missing much. I'm not a fan of canned peas, and those mushy little green things seem to pop up a lot in that dish. And, I'm sorry, but spreading mashed potatoes on top of hamburger does not a pie make. But now I've got a husband and two little boys that are the epitome of meat and potatoes kind of men. Making mashed potatoes ALWAYS wins me Mom-points.

So a few days ago when I had a package of ground beef in the fridge waiting to be used and my finicky pregnant belly decided it was no longer craving the spaghetti it wanted when I bought the ingredients, I thought I might give this Shepherd's Pie thing a go. Maybe it's those prego taste-buds in full force, but I LOVED it, and wanted to make sure I saved my made-up recipe so I can make several casserole dishes to freeze before bun #4 makes its appearance, so here it is ...

MASHED POTATO LAYER
6 potatoes
6 ounces cream cheese
1/2 stick butter
splash of milk
salt

BEEF LAYER
1 pound organic lean ground beef
1 big package of mushrooms
1 purple onion
1 Tbsp crushed garlic
A little salt and pepper
1 can of corn (drained)
A TINY ribbon of ketchup
A few sprinkles of flour

Since I was making it up as I went along, I started by peeling and cutting the 6 potatoes I had left in the cupboard to get them boiling. Then I started sauteing the mushrooms in olive oil but realized I should have some onions in there, too! So I turned the heat down on the mushrooms, quickly chopped a purple onion, and then moved all the mushrooms to the edges of my cast iron skillet to put the onions in the middle where it would hopefully be hotter. I turned the heat back up, plopped some minced garlic in the middle and sprinkled salt and pepper all around.

Had I thought this through a little more, I SHOULD have chopped the carrots I was thinking of throwing in FIRST so they could be boiling, too. But I didn't, so our pie was carrot-free. I also thought about chopping up some of the zucchini I had bought for the spaghetti, but that never actually made it in, either. Next time we can try a version more heavy on the veggies. This time I just threw in a can of corn and called it a vegetable.

Once it was all cooked, I squirted in a VERY stingy ribbon of ketchup. I didn't want it to taste ketchup-ey, and there's a fine line there. Don't screw it up. I also sprinkled in some flour a few times, stirring in between, to make sure I soaked up any liquid (there wasn't much) but I think this helped to sort of hold everything together well.

Once the potatoes were ready, I got the idea to use up some of the giant tube of organic cream cheese we had gotten at Costco too long ago. I used half a tube (should have been about 6 ounces) This made a HUGE difference in the taste. It made it tangy and thick and perfect for a topping asking for pie cred. (If I ever find myself in the middle of making this and DON'T have cream cheese, try sour cream instead.) I also added butter because, butter. Maybe a half a stick? And just enough milk to stir it up, but I wanted it thick. Oh! And salt! Don't forget the salt.

I decided to just leave the meat in my giant cast iron skillet and spread the potatoes on top. Then I started looking up exactly how long and what temperature you're supposed to cook a Shepherd's Pie. 375 for an hour just seemed ridiculous to me. Why? Everything's already cooked! I was WAY too hungry for that. So I ended up pulling it out of the oven after about 10 minutes and putting it under the broiler for 5. It could have even been less than that. It gave the mashed potato top an impressive brown ribbon crust and I called it done.


For some reason Jonas was not a fan because of the mushrooms. Not sure when he decided he didn't like mushrooms, but he better get over that quick or he's gonna be a hungry boy. Soraya didn't turn her nose up at it, so we'll call that a win. Everyone else loved it, and to me it felt like it needed to be a dinner in heavy rotation. Pretty sure I could eat it for any meal of the day.

Maybe this baby will be a lumberjack.