Friday, December 26, 2008

Friday, October 31, 2008

Boo!

 

Happy Halloween, everyone!

This year marked Andy's transition from cutesy-wootsy costume to action-hero adventurer. For the last two Halloweens, he was the cute and cuddly Tigger from Winnie the Pooh. This year--scruffy thrill-seeker Indiana Jones! I no longer have a say in my son's choice of costume. I have Uncle Karl to thank for that, for exposing Andy to a few minutes of the Temple of Doom, much to my horror. Oh, and his daycare played the theme song during large-motor play time. Thanks guys.
 

 

It isn't all snow in October...Here Andy and Mike enjoy free Rita's ice in the balmy 60 degree weather.
 

Cats for Obama! We are all in favor of spreading the wealth around, at least with candy. After gorging on his loot tonight, we've told Andy that the Halloween fairy will come tomorrow and take his candy and share it with other less fortunate girls and boys who didn't get any candy. Let's see if that idea flies tomorrow. Cruel socialist parents.
 

 
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First Snow

 

 
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Friday, October 17, 2008

Sam Sat

What an exciting moment for me as a former first grade teacher! Andy brought home his first reader from Montessori preschool.

Here he is reading from the tome Sam Sat!

Fall Fun

 

 



Andy and his friend Elana at Harvest Valley Farms in Valencia, PA.
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Sunday, October 05, 2008

Friday, October 03, 2008

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Labor Day in Erie


The beach at Lake Erie was perfect!



Andy finds a friend



View from up high



Arrrrrrr!



Real live buffalo!



A relaxing lunch

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

While Mom Was Away


Andy really missed his Mom while she was away for a work conference, but we kept ourselves busy.


 

Andy's cousin Rebecca came over to visit and he was sure to be very gentle when he pushed her on the swing.


 


 

We finally got around to trying bobbing for apples. Andy loved it!


 

For National Night Out we had a block party and the local fire department came to speak.
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Monday, July 21, 2008

Beet Harvest

We harvested our first beets from our tiny urban garden! Andy eagerly plucked them from the earth by their ruby-red stems. Ranging from grape-sized to apple-sized, the harvest seemed plentiful to us, since we'd never had this many beets at one time. What to do with them?! I tried making my first batch of Beet Kvass, which is still fermenting. I wanted to pickle some, but unfortunately I kept them in the oven too long. They came out resembling dried prunes, so I scooped out any flesh that was still pink, and we ate it in a green salad. The beet leaves we sauteed in garlic and olive oil with a sprinkling of balsamic vinegar and dried herbs. They were delightful. Even though he gladly participated in the harvest, Andy would have none of the feast.

When we cook for ourselves at home, Mike and I continue to eat locally. We haven't avoided going out to eat, though. And we've had the occasional lapse into that other food group: Ben and Jerry's. Ice cream and I have a long history together in times of turmoil! New York Super Fudge Chunk was especially needed as I considered quitting a part-time job I took at the library, in favor of a full-time position at a cyber charter school. I decided to take it, which means even more changes for Andy and myself in the year ahead.

 

 

 
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Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Local Challenge, Day 1


Mike and I are participating in our Food Co-op's challenge to eat locally for one month, from July 15 until August 15th. We might occasionally bore you by writing here about the foods we eat: both to keep us honest for the challenge, and also to spread the word about a simple movement with the potential to do a lot of good for our health and for the environment.

Barbara Kingsolver wrote about her year of eating locally in an inspiring book called Animal, Vegetable, Mineral. This book had a profound influence on me and many others. At about the same time I read this, I was also introduced to the Weston A Price Foundation, an organization which advocates for local sources of pastured meats, grass fed and hormone free cows milk, and natural, traditionally prepared foods. After meeting Pittsburgh area farmers who raise chicken and beef in a humane and sustainable way, I gave up the vegetarian life style that was so integral to my identity for sixteen years! But how close have Mike and I come to emulating what Barbara Kingsolver and her family managed for a whole year? After one day of trying out the local diet, we have far to go!

Our biggest challenge is snacking. We both took hard boiled eggs and blueberries to snack on at work, but that didn't quite satisfy our hunger. I have to confess to opening up a Larabar on the drive home. Oh, and I couldn't start the day without my coffee--fairly traded and organic--but from Ethiopia.

Our CSA share came today, loaded with veggies. I feel a sense of mild panic each time I unpack the crate: how will I possibly come up with creative ways to cook all of this zucchini? And fennel? I felt so overwhelmed tonight, in fact, that I had a desperate urge to run to the store for some not so local chocolate, washed down with a glass of nonlocal wine. The wine we did have, already opened--it would be a shame to waste it-- so that was my second compromise of the day. Glass in hand, I was emboldened to do what must be done: cook a meal comprised of all local ingredients. (Kingsolver made exceptions for olive oil and balsamic vinegar, so we will too). At 6:30 we sat down for Eberly's pastured chicken, kale sauteed with garlic and scallions, and bread with Amish butter. The bread was from Ohio, which is regional, if not exactly local. We can do better: there is a bakery just down the street!

All in all, Mike and I managed a diet today that was about 80% local. And Andy? He did his part by eating a few local blueberries, and the bread. Since I can count on one hand the foods which he likes to eat, he won't be giving up his peanut butter and Mac and Cheese anytime soon. We would like to expand his food choices, not restrict them. Still, we are always hopeful that we can sneak something new into his diet. Something local perhaps?

Tuesday, June 24, 2008