27 December 2006
26 December 2006
Christmas Eve
The boys got matching fireman pajamas on Christmas Eve. The firemen have axes and firehoses and Dalmations. Sebastian loves wearing these "big boy" pajamas. He says "soft, soft" ("fa, fa") and rubs his face against the cloth.
Abraham, when he opened his pajamas, said, "Ooh, soft pajamas! These are nice! I'll wear these!"
Abraham also said to me today, "Remember that good nutcracker we saw?" I said, "Which nutcracker was that?" He said, "You know, the one that was breaking and cracking up that big building?" It turned out he was remembering the wrecking ball that was helping to demolish one of the dorms at BYU. :)
Elephant and Gingerbread
14 December 2006
Sebastian says "Boo!"
07 December 2006
28 November 2006
Tumbling Gym
On the day after Thanksgiving, we had dinner with Sam's family, and then we all went to the Tumbling Gym. We'd rented it out for a couple hours--normally they teach tumbling and gymnastics there, and Abe and I have been to Open Gym on Fridays a couple times. But you can reserve it for groups, and that's what we did here. There were about 35 of us, and we had a great time. Sebastian loved running along on the bouncy trampoline (see above) and then collapsing into the mat at the end. Actually he liked everything--he ran and climbed and fell down and laughed, for two hours straight.
Abe's favorite part was jumping into the foam pit
or bouncing on the "deflatable thing" (as he called it).
or bouncing on the "deflatable thing" (as he called it).
We also had fun setting up this foam ring and having everyone dive through it into the pit. Here is Sam going through. (I am told that I, too, had exceptionally fine form when performing this stunt.)
21 November 2006
17 November 2006
Sourdough Bread
I don't have any pictures of the boys to post at present, so I guess I'll recount my adventures with learning to bake sourdough bread. I've been working on this for several weeks now, and it's been really fun.
First I got a starter from my mother-in-law, and I made a couple loaves of bread with that, and some waffles. It was pretty good as long I added commercial yeast, but I think either it was too old or I killed it somehow, because it just never got bubbly or foamy when I fed it, and when I didn't add commercial yeast to the bread, it didn't rise at all. Starters can last forever, I think--some bread companies are using 200-year-old starters--but I think you need to feed them periodically to make them last.
Then I learned that supposedly you can just collect wild yeast from the air and make your own starter. Just set out a water and flour mixture and feed, discard part, feed, discard part etc. until it becomes "active" with yeast. I tried this for a week or so, but no luck. I don't know if there just isn't enough yeast in the air or what. I think some parts of the country are better than others (maybe why San Francisco is famous for sourdough).
So, next, I got a starter on eBay. (If you don't live close enough to just divide the starter to share it, you can dry your starter and flake it into a plastic bag--then "reconstitute" it later--this is what the lady did, so she just sent it in an envelope and it was really cheap) and started working with that. You mix the flakes with flour and water, and then let it sit out and get active for 5 days, "feeding" it with new flour and water daily.
Then you can begin to bake! The starter has wild yeast in it, so it makes your bread rise and gives it a nice sour flavor.
Here is the starter before being fed for the day.
You feed it with equal amounts flour and water and let it sit out for a few hours. You can make as much as you want, if you want to share some, for example, or make a big batch of something. (After the first 5 days, the starter gets bubbly and active in just a few hours.)
Here it is when it is ready to use. Look how bubbly it got!
Next you make a "sponge" by adding a cup of the starter, 1 1/2 cups of warm water, and about 3 to 3 1/2 cups flour. It just looks like a lump of dough. (You can add commercial yeast, but you don't need to--the wild yeast in the starter makes it rise! I didn't add any yeast.) You let the sponge rise for 6-24 hours. It gets more sour the longer it sits out. Here is a picture of the sponge when first mixed.
Then, here is the risen sponge. It is big and bubbly and spongy. Amazing!
Then you mix in sugar, salt, and more flour to make the dough. It collapses down and looks like a lump again. Set it out in an oiled bowl to rise.
Here is the risen dough. (takes longer to rise than commercial yeast dough, but not too much longer if it's in a nice warm place)
Then you form it into loaves and let it rise again. And then bake. I also learned that you can get a nice chewy-tender crust by putting steam in the oven during the first few minutes of baking. I just sprayed the loaf and sides of the oven (avoiding the oven light, as I was warned to) with a spray bottle, and also put a pan of water on the bottom rack. This made it nice and steamy in the oven.
And here is the finished product. It's so good! I love the flavor of sourdough bread! I have now also tried whole wheat sourdough with the same process, and it turns out great. I like the "character" that the starter and the wild yeast add to the bread. We also made some delicious sourdough wheat/oat pancakes, and I have several other recipes I want to try too.
I can now divide my starter, if anyone wants to give this a try. It has been really fun for me (of course I love to bake anyway) and I look forward to experimenting further!
First I got a starter from my mother-in-law, and I made a couple loaves of bread with that, and some waffles. It was pretty good as long I added commercial yeast, but I think either it was too old or I killed it somehow, because it just never got bubbly or foamy when I fed it, and when I didn't add commercial yeast to the bread, it didn't rise at all. Starters can last forever, I think--some bread companies are using 200-year-old starters--but I think you need to feed them periodically to make them last.
Then I learned that supposedly you can just collect wild yeast from the air and make your own starter. Just set out a water and flour mixture and feed, discard part, feed, discard part etc. until it becomes "active" with yeast. I tried this for a week or so, but no luck. I don't know if there just isn't enough yeast in the air or what. I think some parts of the country are better than others (maybe why San Francisco is famous for sourdough).
So, next, I got a starter on eBay. (If you don't live close enough to just divide the starter to share it, you can dry your starter and flake it into a plastic bag--then "reconstitute" it later--this is what the lady did, so she just sent it in an envelope and it was really cheap) and started working with that. You mix the flakes with flour and water, and then let it sit out and get active for 5 days, "feeding" it with new flour and water daily.
Then you can begin to bake! The starter has wild yeast in it, so it makes your bread rise and gives it a nice sour flavor.
Here is the starter before being fed for the day.
You feed it with equal amounts flour and water and let it sit out for a few hours. You can make as much as you want, if you want to share some, for example, or make a big batch of something. (After the first 5 days, the starter gets bubbly and active in just a few hours.)
Here it is when it is ready to use. Look how bubbly it got!
Next you make a "sponge" by adding a cup of the starter, 1 1/2 cups of warm water, and about 3 to 3 1/2 cups flour. It just looks like a lump of dough. (You can add commercial yeast, but you don't need to--the wild yeast in the starter makes it rise! I didn't add any yeast.) You let the sponge rise for 6-24 hours. It gets more sour the longer it sits out. Here is a picture of the sponge when first mixed.
Then, here is the risen sponge. It is big and bubbly and spongy. Amazing!
Then you mix in sugar, salt, and more flour to make the dough. It collapses down and looks like a lump again. Set it out in an oiled bowl to rise.
Here is the risen dough. (takes longer to rise than commercial yeast dough, but not too much longer if it's in a nice warm place)
Then you form it into loaves and let it rise again. And then bake. I also learned that you can get a nice chewy-tender crust by putting steam in the oven during the first few minutes of baking. I just sprayed the loaf and sides of the oven (avoiding the oven light, as I was warned to) with a spray bottle, and also put a pan of water on the bottom rack. This made it nice and steamy in the oven.
And here is the finished product. It's so good! I love the flavor of sourdough bread! I have now also tried whole wheat sourdough with the same process, and it turns out great. I like the "character" that the starter and the wild yeast add to the bread. We also made some delicious sourdough wheat/oat pancakes, and I have several other recipes I want to try too.
I can now divide my starter, if anyone wants to give this a try. It has been really fun for me (of course I love to bake anyway) and I look forward to experimenting further!
02 November 2006
2 more
More tricks and treats
Halloween!
My little monkey and bear dressed up like their respective favorite stuffed animals. Sebastian wasn't thrilled about the monkey hat (head? hood?) he had to wear, but he did like playing with his tail. And Abraham liked his Bear suit (made by Grandma) so much, he's been wearing it for the past two days as well as on Halloween.
31 October 2006
Gollum's cookies (recipe)
I've had some requests for our "Gollum's Cookies" recipe, so here it is. We entered these cookies in a contest once (thus the "Gollum's Cookies" title; we were trying to set our cookies apart from the rest) but we didn't win. :( I don't think the judges even saw the recipe, as it turned out. Nevertheless, we think they deserved to win, because they're our favorite cookies, and they always seem to turn out great. Enjoy!
Gollum’s Precioussss Golden Chocolate Chip Cookies
(Do not feed to nasty hobbitses!)
2 C. sssugar
2 C. brown sugar
1 ⅓ C. sweeet cream butter, softened
1 ⅓ C. butter-flavored shortening, sssoftened
4 medium eggses
1 T. + 1 tsp. vanilla
2 T. sssour cream, yess
2 tsp. salt
2 tsp. baking ssoda
7 ¼ C. flour
1 C. tasty semi-ssweet chocolate morselsss
1 C. milk chocolate toffee bitsses
We creams shortening and sugar until light and fluffy. Then we adds eggs, vanilla, and sour cream; we mixess well, we does. In small bowl, we sifts together salt, baking soda, and flour, then combines it with rest of dough. Is it tasty? Stir in chocolate chips and toffee bits, my preciousss. Form dough into juicy 1 ½-inch balls; place on ungreased cookie sheetses. That’s what we wants now; yes, we wants it! Cooks at 350° for 10 minutes, it does. Is it nice, my precious? Is it juicy? Is it scrumptiously crunchable? Then we takes it out of oven and letss it sit on pan for a few minutes. Then we eats it, my precious, we eats it, yesss.
***
(Note: I've found that the best way to tell the amount of flour needed is just to add it little by little until the dough kind of pulls away and falls off the beaters or spoon. You pick up the beaters, and the dough sort of peels off in a hunk, with maybe a few moist crumbs left on. It shouldn't be sticky enough to stick to your fingers, but it should easily stick together into balls without having to be squeezed together.)
(And another note: This makes a VERY LARGE batch. We usually half the recipe unless we're taking them to neighbors or something.)
24 October 2006
Abraham's talk
I think I finally figured out a way to post audio files here. Here's Abe's talk, which he gave in sacrament meeting for the primary program several weeks ago. Enjoy!
obedience talk.mp3
obedience talk.mp3
20 October 2006
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