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Monthly Archives: March 2012

Freezing Steel Cut Oatmeal : A Quick and Nutritious Breakfast

This morning I had the chance to try out my version of Trader Joe’s Steel Cut Oats. For those of you not familiar with steel cut oats, let me define them for you with the help of Wikipedia. Steel cut oats are the whole oat which has been cut into pieces with, what I have read, is a steel blade. They are minimally processed and take FOREVER to cook. (Forever, that is, if you have a fussing baby in a high chair and a high energy preschooler singing her way through the morning in the kitchen. Definitely too forever to be an every morning occurrence.) I find them to be a bit nuttier and chewier than regular rolled oats, and definitely more filling. That’s the thing about these oats, they are super good for you and filling. The two most important things you can hope for in a breakfast if you ask me.

I had received a tip at my last Weight Watchers meeting that Trader Joe’s had a frozen “quick” version that gave you the nutrition of the steel oat without taking up your entire morning, so I bought some earlier this week to try them out. They microwaved up perfectly and tasted great. I decided it was time to figure out how to do this cheaper myself. (Trader Joe’s charged $1.99 for two “pucks” in a box, and I knew a pound of oats bulk at our local co-op would run me less than that and feed me for more than two mornings.)

The first thing I did was make sure it was a low-key morning. (If you don’t have kids, you can skip this step.) The baby went down for a nap, and I let Holly play on the computer to play games. Thank you Disney Channel!

Step #2: Cook the oats. The label on the bulk container at my co-op said 1 cup oats:4 cups of water. I used that ratio, but as it was cooking I did google around and found that people have experimented with less water to get a bit of a different result. (Thicker, chewier…etc.) To cook the oats you simply bring your water to a boil, add the oats, and cover and simmer for 40-45 minutes. Again, time varies depending on how you like them. I did what the label said and loved the results. I also doubled it–making 2 cups of oats with 8 cups of water.

Word of caution, these do create a bit of a mess. When I had them covered they spit and sputtered everywhere, so I occasionally lifted the lid to cut down on the oat-y water I would have to clean up, so I could stir it, and because I am nosy like that. (I never can leave a lid alone.)

**This is most likely specific to only me, but I used two different burners (one set on high, one on low) so that I wouldn’t burn the bottom of the pan. Side note: I hate electric stoves. The ability to simmer after boiling is….well…it doesn’t appear there really is a way to simmer after boiling on my stove because the coil takes to long to cool down. After messing up countless recipes, I came up with this trick to assist me with accurate heating.***

When the 45 minutes was up I stirred them a bit, tasted them, and decided they were good. I made myself a bowl of them for breakfast, and poured the rest of the pot of them into a big pyrex glass bowl to cool.

Where this bowl came from I have no idea, but I am a firm believer that everyone has one of these bowls in their kitchen and if asked, no, they wouldn’t know how they got one either. They just seem to appear.

Once the oats cool spend an inappropriate amount of time styling the kitchen table so that when people look at your blog it won’t look like you took a photo of goopy oats on a dirty counter. Oh wait, that’s probably specific only to me. Let me try this again…..

Step #3: Once the oats have had a chance to cool, pour into the muffin pans. The pretty picture at the beginning of this post show you how this will look. From the research I found online, it doesn’t appear you have to grease the pans, but I did spray one and not the others to see which oats would come out easier. (When I do this later, I will re-edit the post and let you know.)***edited***The oats came out perfectly easy either way, so there is no need to spray or grease beforehand.

I ended up with just enough oats to fill one standard muffin pan, and two mini-ones. I didn’t think to measure as I did the larger one (I just poured right from my handy pyrex bowl) but I am pretty sure it’s probably around a cup. The little muffin pans were about 1/4 cup each.

In they went into the freezer. Where they still are. (Is it me, or does my freezer look really ominous?) I am going to freeze them until they are solid, so at the very least I am going to leave them in there until lunch. I have read about a few techniques to get them out and I think I will be going with the “pry then with a knife after soaking the bottom of the pan in some hot water” option. I will, of course, update this post with the results.***edited***Seems like freezing for about three hours did the trick! And the hot water soak? PERFECT. I put the muffin pan in about an inch of hot tap water for only two minutes and they all popped right out!

I plan to store them in freezer bags once this whole experiment is done, and if they are anything like the Trader Joe’s version they will take only 2-3 minutes in the microwave to cook each morning…and…be delicious.

I hope this inspires someone out there to do the same thing. In the end it really wasn’t all that much time, probably 90 minutes from start to finish. If you don’t have kids, and are not stopping to take photos, I am sure it’s even less time. With the price and sugar content of cereal nowadays, definitely worth it! I spent just under five dollars for four and a half pounds of oats, and I am sure that that many oats will last at least two months if not more. Enjoy!

Many thanks to Amy at newnostalgia for inspiring this post.

 

 

 

April - I LOOOOOVE this idea!! I can’t wait to try it. Your Project Life pages are gorgeous, as are your photos. Looking forward to seeing more.

Heather Johnson - It works like a charm. The whole family has them every morning, I am now obsessed with making anything and everything ahead! Let me know how it turns out:)

Laurie - Try doing a quick google search of cooking steel cut oatmeal in the crock pot overnight. I always have mine over cook because I start it about 9pm then wake up at 7 which means the sides are a little burned…. but cooking them in the crock for the 4 hours then freezing = awesomeness. I can’t wait to try this idea to freeze. Also the pumpkin pie oatmeal recipe floating around is AMAZING! I have five kids and they all LOVE it.

Natasha - Thank you for the idea! I used it to freeze plain cooked steel cut oats and a recipe I made using steel cut oats and quinoa (from Epicurious). This will be my go to for meal-planning!

admin - Glad it can help! I wouldn’t eat nearly as much oatmeal as I do if I didn’t do it this way…it’s so easy:)

Andy - To make cooking the oats easier and less messy, try a crock-pot slow cooker. I use it when cooking grits and it works great. Heat the water first and put it in the slow cooker with the oats and forget about it for 4 hours.

Susan - Thanks for the idea! I use a rice cooker for steel-cut oats. 3 parts water, 1 part oats, one pinch of salt. 25 minutes or so to oaty goodness.

admin - I will have to try it that way too. Love how doing it ahead makes us that much more likely to eat them everyday!

Stephanie - What if I can’t use a microwave to heat it up in the morning? I made steel-cut oatmeal almost every morning for breakfast and add lots of fruit and walnuts. I am participating in a relay race this coming weekend (12 runners running 200 miles in 24 hours). I am trying to figure out my snacks/meals since my whole routine will be thrown off. If I freeze what I take, will I be able to eat it like a muffin type thing after it has defrosted some? I’m just trying to find a way to still get my steel-cut oatmeal without cooking it (since I will be in a van or running all weekend!).

admin - That’s a great question–I have never tried to thaw a puck out without the microwave. If you end up doing it, I would love to hear how it turned out. I am thinking it actually could work–although it might get a little sticky as it loosens up.

So Much Going On…..

So much going on in my head that is, not so much my day-to-day life…yet! But read on for what I’ve got cookin’……

As a family we are constantly striving to eat better, which in the end (we know after several runs at this) always makes us feel better. That point has hit home with us even more since we have had children, especially since they are both girls. One of the things I struggle with the most in my own mind is how to teach them about food without making it about guilt, shaming, or any of the truckload of emotions I often attach to it. I find myself talking to Holly a lot about protein and fiber, desperately trying to stay away from words such as “good,” “bad,” or the worst one CARBS. (Carbs receive so much abuse in the “diet” world in my opinion, which I think overshadows the fact that you really do need them. Just maybe not a whole loaf of them a day!)

As most of you know, I use Weight Watchers as my guide for portion control, but as far as the actually eating goes I really strive to eat well–not just less. Food has to be flavorful, and well…delicious..for me to want to eat it.  You won’t find rice cakes or melba toast here! Nope, I believe that you can eat well while at the same time eating less. (And funny how when I do eat well, by design, all of the fiber and what not does actually end up in my eating less!)

These thoughts were on my mind today as I drove past Eggplant, an urban farm supply store here in town. I have wanted to stop in and check this store out for close to a year now, but up until today I hadn’t made the time. What I found when I was there was nothing short of amazing! I expected to find seeds and planters, but I didn’t expect to find a canning section (canning is on my forty before forty list so you know I was all over that), a cheesemaking section (wasn’t on my list before but might be now), a children’s gardening section, and loads of loads of beautiful books. Honestly if I had had my wallet with me we would have been in some serious trouble! Here is a photo of the shop:

 

Holly and I are so excited for gardening season to begin, she is slightly obsessed with Okra for some unknown reason, and I was excited to learn that Eggplant offers a class on how to incorporate vegetables into your landscape. (When you have a city lot, and a smaller than average city lot at that, you have to get creative.) I find myself now hunting for graph paper so that I can lay out the yard and get planning. Veggie beds, flower beds, new patio, a trellis, window boxes…oh the projects/posts that are going to fill up this blog this summer!

So…we’ve got canning and planning going on in my head. What else? Well….I am thinking of signing up for Jessica Sprague’s Digital Design class (another thing on my 40-B4-40 list is to learn how to make my own digital scrapbooking kits) and on the organizational front I am working on a functional and workable (for me) way to menu plan.

On top of all of this I am in the midst of getting Marie’s sleep schedule going again now that the pox has finally vacated the building. Today she would only take one nap…but, to her credit, she really is still quite happy even when she is tired. Both Holly and Marie are out cold for the night already (it’s nearly 7pm) and I fear I am not far behind. I have been staying up way too long lately playing around on pinterest. That site is just too addicting!

And with that I am signing off. Look for a post later this week, or perhaps the weekend, regarding steel cut oats. I have found that I love them, I just don’t love how long they take to make each morning. Do you know there is a way to make them ahead of time and freeze them in muffin tins? I had a “frozen puck” for breakfast this morning that took only 3 min to microwave!  LOVE. I didn’t get the least bit hungry for hours…now that’s my kind of breakfast!

***Incidentally, I realize I have been referencing the 40-B4-40 list a bit the past few weeks. I am working on the list–it’s still not quite ready for the blog so don’t worry if you think you missed it. Turns out thinking of 40 things is rather time consuming. Hmmm…wonder if this is some kind of harbinger of how hard completing the whole project is actually going to be……

 

 

Digital Project Life : Week Twelve

A few weeks ago when I ventured off of the strictly Clementine path I had been using for my Project Life album I was a bit scared it would cause me too much angst each week when I actually sat down to put the pages together. But exactly the opposite has happened!! In fact, I have started to treat each week as a challenge and have slowly been going through my digital scrapbooking folder trying to use kits I have never used before.  (I use charm parks of entire fabric collections for the quilts I make, so why not do the same with a scrapbooking kit right!?)

Some of the kits (like the one I used this week) are not even my style anymore, but I figure if I use them only once it will justify the expense. This week’s kit is Loopty-Loop from TaylorMade Designs, a kit I bought in 2008 when I first started. Definitely much darker than I scrap with currently–but I still like how this week’s pages came out.  (Even then I had to have me some polka-dots!) Somehow I had these pages done by Saturday morning this past weekend, which I completely don’t understand given the week I had….perhaps I was so worried about falling behind that I squeezed in every little moment I could!

Here is the Left Side:

This page had a lot of journaling about Marie’s bout with the Chicken Pox, our trip to the park last Sunday with the neighborhood girls, and a snippet about Holly’s tiara. I don’t know where that tiara even came from, but she wears it all of the time. The funniest part about the whole thing is that the tag is still on it–and she refuses to let me cut it off. She claims it’s an earring.

I took some photos of Marie on Monday before the spots came on strong, which was fortunate or the poor baby probably wouldn’t be seen in this week too much. (While she is healing and feeling so much better, visually it does still look a bit scary.)

Here is the Right Side:

This side tells the story about Holly’s love of birdwatching, Marie’s love of her lie-down fisher price toy, and pictures of two of Holly’s favorite games right now. She loves to play doctor with her animals (thanks to Disney’s new show Doc McStuffins) and she loves to paint rocks outside and have them be “cupcakes.” Such an imagination my girl has!

I am linking up at one-happy-mama and the mom creative again this week. Be sure to check out their websites for more Project Life inspiration!

kelli - love the journaling and bright photos. your pages make me love the digital pl just as much :)

Jules - So beautiful! I especially love the tonal colours you are using. You’re totally making digi PL work for you!

EK - These are the cutest digital pages!! I just love the little bird on the arm of the chair. So sweet!!

Julie - Love your pages! Especially love the exersaucer picture & the picture reading the book about birds.

Andrea - Great pages as usual. I love all the added overlay details and the little bird with journaling on the outdoors calling photo–very creative and fun but not too cutesy.

Helen - Oh, these pages are so fantastic! LOVE the insert of your daughter reading, with the journaling and the little digital bird perched on the arm of the chair – fantastic! Very Bedknobs and Broomsticks. Love it. Will be a regular on your blog!

Katie - Enjoyed reading that you’ve found ways to use older kits and supplies for your PL. I think they look lovely and you’ve found good ways to brighten things up with your photos and elements. While they may be darker than what you usually do, I like the earth mellow feel. Not that you were mellow last week, chicken pox – oh dear I hope Marie is better soon. And as far as the tiara goes, my now five year old went through a two year phase where she wore on almost everyday. Now that she’s growing out of it, I find myself waxing nostalgic for those days of shiny things and tutu skirts.

dawn - I love these colors and polka-dots are my favorite. Such cute girls you have, love the photos. How awesome that she loves birds, such a cute photo of her and the writing on it.

This makes me want to learn digital, it looks great!!

Sarah - I love that you’re using up your digi stash hehe. That is a really good idea. Love your pages!

Fiona - Great pages! I LOVE the feet photo :)

kristina - Beautiful pages (and photos!), Heather! Love them!! :)

Heather Johnson - Thanks Katie for stopping by! I spent a fair amount of time at your blog yesterday–LOVE it! I will be sure to stop by often from now on:)

Nirupama - I like how you used your older kits, I always feel so proud of myself when I go through my old stash. I love that big, colorful picture of your little one. I perused your archives, I love your pages!

kate Adderley - Wow Heather , your pages are Amazing, love all the digi work you’ve done, love the journaling with the bird, its all awesome, thanks for leaving a lovely comment on my blog, l just love PL and lm so excited to do every week, these everyday moments are just great

Weekend Recap

Here is what this weekend was all about–

the park! We were there three or perhaps four times…I sort of lost count:) It’s so amazing to see how much Holly has grown; she was doing things (like scaling the poles above) that she couldn’t do a year ago when we moved here. Love love love how close the park is too. So much easier to fit all of this in when it only takes about a minute and half to get there.

In addition to the park we had a walk to Trader Joe’s, complete with a banana snack.

And of course we made sure we had time for a photoshoot along the way

When we got home Marie showed off her newest move–spinning her high chair wheel! When did my baby get so big? (And so intent…check out that stare!)

All in all a perfectly normal weekend in the life of a family with young ones. Marie is recovering nicely–although it seems like her teeth are really bothering her now. I can see two white buds on the bottom. Poor girl is probably thinking enough is enough!

My Project Life pages are done already for tomorrow, so I think I am going to finish the night off watching The Voice and working on next week’s pages.

Have a great night!

 

 

 

How My iphone Makes Me a Better Mother

As I mentioned in a previous post, I have spent the last few weeks or so working with Marie on establishing a sleep schedule and routine. This equates to a lot of time rocking back and forth in a dark room as I try to soothe her to sleep, which leads to a lot of time for me to think and play around with my iphone. Sometime yesterday it struck me just how powerful that little piece of equipment is, and how it helps me be a better mom. Because a lot of you out there are mothers too, I thought this post might be helpful. Here is just some of what it helps me do:

-Track how long I nurse, how many diapers I change, how much medicine I give (really just about anything child related) with the ibabylog app. This would have been particularly helpful at the newborn stage, wish I had discovered it then!

-Log naps and graph sleep patterns with the Weissbluth Nap App. Again, so helpful!

-Food Journal with my Weight Watchers Mobile App. The better I eat, the better I feel, the more energy I have. Any mom knows that the more energy you have the better!

-Create grocery lists with the notepad. If I am being really energetic, Weight Watchers has a Kitchen Companion app that creates grocery lists instantly for me based on my menu planning for the week with the click of a button. Like I said, this works only if I am energetic enough to meal plan. (It should come as now surprise that this has not been the case lately.)

-Entertain a preschooler when she is past her limit out on errands. We love the Monkey Lunchbox App, Preschool Memory, and the Jumpstart Preschool App. I am ready for some new, more challenging ones though. If you know of any appropriate for a 4 1/2 year old leave me a comment:)

-Capture lasting memories of my life and kids, I LOVE the instagram app.

Couple these apps with the whole facetime capability of an iphone (my family is all 1000+ miles away)…and well I am sold on the iphone…FOREVER. Love my technology!

 

 

 

Helen - LOL – as an iPhone-owning mother of a 5.5 and 2 year old, I can relate ;)