Thursday, May 19, 2016

May Date Night In: Preparations

It’s been far too long since the last DNI. Glad to have finally found an evening where we have enough time to both prepare and enjoy. We decided that since the trees are bursting with colors, the dandelions have sprung in abundance, and the Claritin is being swallowed on a daily basis it was time to “Feast on Spring.”

This is the first DNI in the book and you can actually flip through it in the provided sample on Amazon. All items have been purchased or located, except for rhubarb. My hunt for rhubarb continues fruitlessly, despite trips to numerous grocery stores (including Mount Wegmans) and the local public market. So I’m not sure what our cocktail will look like, but I’m sure Roy can concoct a worthy substitute.

I’m nervous about the chicken. Peeps, I’ve never done a whole chicken before. I’ve never cooked a turkey before. My idea of roast chicken is grabbing a rotisserie for $4.99. But this…I have to insert and remove and slide and…all kinds of slimy uncomfortable words.

Thankfully it does have one of those little belly button timers that tells me when it’s cooked through—which would be my other insecurity. 8-O

On the other, more comfortable hand, we get to enjoy wonderful strawberry shortcake for dessert and I didn’t wait for this date night to make the shortcakes. We’ve enjoyed them on multiple occasions over the past year—the best scone I’ve ever had. With fresh strawberries doused in brown sugar and lemon zest, whipped cream slightly sweetened and specked with vanilla beans…it’s going to be amazing. And very springy. I only wish we could have had Panek strawberries. Will have to repeat in another month…

Review coming tomorrow! In the meantime, it’s time to dress the chicken! “I wonder if it’s a he chicken or a she chicken?”

Today’s 1%: Book update!

34/50: Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. A young adult book that I had seen a movie preview for and, while the preview looked a little odd, thought perhaps the story would be better in book form. It was OK—a lot of ideas I’ve already read (children with magical powers, normal people who don’t understand them and wish they didn’t exist, time travel, etc etc etc). The hook was all the old-timey photographs that show the children and somehow portray their special powers. The photographs actually exist and provided the basis for Ransom Riggs’ book. They’re mysteriously creepy and lovely.


35/50: The Girl On The Train. OK. This was one of those bestsellers from the past year or so and I’d heard good things about it. I loved it. Fast-paced fiction, which is totally up my alley. A great suspense/murder mystery. Decent plot, although I had it figured out earlier than I suspect the author intended. Fascinating characters and not nearly as profane as the Cormoran Strike novels. Not sure I’d want to see a movie of it, but the book was spellbinding. Was hooked from the first page. 

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

25 To-dos while the husband is away

Roy gave me this list on Sunday night. He's back this afternoon--here's what I managed to get done. (In addition to lots of other givens, like dishes, bathing the boys, cooking meals, etc, etc.)

1. Take pictures of your spare headjoint and send them to me Went into basement to locate headjoint. Within a couple of minutes Owen was chewing on a trumpet mouthpiece, had fallen on the concrete floor, James was stuffing old grody foam into a cart, and both boys had completely dusted themselves with coffee husks.
2. Listen to a performance of a piece of music you don't know, following along with the score from IMSLP Didn’t happen.
3. Find a dessert that uses coffee as an ingredient and make it Was actually thinking about this one even before this list popped into my box. But there are enough sweets in the house already. Shelved for later.
4. Convince James and Owen to both go barefoot long enough to snap a picture of their bare piggies I convinced Owen to walk around barefoot for an evening. It was the cutest ever. James refused and complained about a hole in his right sock.
5. Dig through your inbox and read what you were up to a year, two, three, etc., ago Not unless you count looking for old correspondence regarding upcoming performances.
6. Go to Wegmans and get a cheese that you've never tried before Went to Walmart and bought new socks for James.
7. Pull out three pieces of flute music from the basement that you haven't played in a while and read through them Going into the basement is risky (see 1)
8. Return that shirt that you bought from Amazon and didn't like Printed out return label and brought shirt downstairs. Need large envelope to complete return.
9. Send me a picture of yourself We facetimed lots.

10. Piyo Nope. But I played lots of baseball and tag in the backyard. I also figured out the problem with my wrist and massaged frequently with encouraging results.
11. Make popcorn and watch something (Nemo?) with the boys on our bed? No popcorn, but Nemo happened, and was enjoyed!
12. Drop a Facebook message to someone you haven't been in contact with for awhile …not really…
13. Either FaceTime with your Mom or send her a video of you and the boys saying hello Check
14. Fine the next three books to download to your Kindle Found one. Read three already on the Kindle.
15. Binge watch some Gilmore Girls Yup. Lorelei and Luke are completely frustrating.
16. Find something encouraging to text to someone Yes!
17. Go to the library with the boys  Check.
18. Write me a short note Do long texts count?
19. Read the Kindergarten chapter in the homeschool book  Started numerous times but was interrupted consistently three paragraphs in.
20. Take the kids on a run up to the bakery Nope. But we played lots of tag and baked bread in-house.
21. Write a blog In process.
22. Try to find a worship chorus from your childhood with enough musical/theological merit to do again at Pearce I do this every week.
23. Have a ham and cheese picnic outside We had several inside. Maybe tonight?
24. Find three items of clothing to donate and put them down in the garage Two down, one to go.
25. Get into the bourbon ice cream Almost finished! (As in the entire quart…)

Today's 1%:
29/50: Open. Andre Agassi's memoir. I didn't make it through Pete Sampras' because it was so self-centered. His wasn't a whole lot better, but I felt like he was more honest about things and saw his life a bit more in the grand scheme of the world. Still, I'm thinking that all that time playing singles leads to narcissism.

30/50: Life from Scratch. I thought I was reading a book about a food blogger's journey of cooking meals from around the world. Instead I read a memoir of a tragic childhood and reconciliation through food. It was unexpectedly poignant and lovely.

31/50: GI Brides. The true stories of four British women who journey to America as WWII brides. Tragic, but not because husbands were killed in war, but what the war did to the men afterwards. Gambling, affairs, alcohol...these women gave up their homes and families to start anew for love, and this book makes it appear as if that wasn't always the wisest choice.

32/50: Sous Chef. A quick, frantic read about a night in the life of a sous chef in NYC. Fascinating, and I tracked with it pretty well thanks to a lot of chef-ery reading lately. My vocabulary is much more embracing of terms like mise en place and the pass. Still, this guy made Gordon Ramsey's mouth sound like the voice of an virgin angel. Really coarse stuff. He argues that it's the language of the kitchen, but I think it soils the perfection of the food.

33/50: The Undertaker's Daughter. I thought this was fiction for about 75% of the book. And I thought it wasn't great fiction. But it was a memoir and all of the sudden a lot of the details that seemed off for fiction became important and incredible. Takeaway: I'm really glad I didn't grow up in a funeral home. 

Sunday, May 8, 2016

If you read one thing today, read this

http://momastery.com/blog/2012/01/11/on-weaving-and-repentance-2/

I've been waiting to post this until Mother's Day, but it's been burning a hole in my heart for a month or so now. First off, my mother in law is. this. And I, as the daughter in law, have been. that. The one who wanted to change things and trample all over her beautiful tapestry. And through it all she remained simple and sophisticated. And each year that passes in my marriage is a year where I see a little more clearly how beautiful her tapestry is. How complex and loved and laughed-over and cried-over it is. My respect and awe continually grows.

I've seen my mother act in the same lovely way as Daniel brought his beautiful bride into the family. And Emily has responded with grace. It's a beautiful thing when daughters and mothers live together in sophistication.

So read this, especially if you are a daughter or a mother. May it challenge you. May it encourage you.

Happy Mother's Day.


Tuesday, April 26, 2016

The last two weeks...

Owen, while initially eager for at tractor ride, got the stage fright.

James is a vet.

We eased Owen in slowly. Dad cracked a couple of jokes about the tractor unable to pull us all.

Remove Mom, substitute fingers.

Boys with hats.

Finally building things up!

Intense focus.

OK, so you can't see it very well but I totally risked my life to snap a picture of that car's license plate. It says "WAH PAH." Can I get a Friends witness out there? Please? 

Olivia Grace. Swoon!

Owen meeting Olivia via photo. She is his intended so his fascination was a good sign.

Kid who loves vacuuming is the same kid who is terrified of the hair dryer.

Monday: "Daddy, you forgot your coffee."

Tuesday: "Daddy, you forgot your wallet."

Going on a "race" with Grandpa.

Wood chip excavation.

Nice Owen.

Hiding in the cleft of the tree. Took Grandpa to our favorite by-the-bay trails.

Owen watching Wii Frisbee Dog. 

First ice cream walk of 2016! Check out the fifth flavor down. 

Coookieeeee butterrrrrrrr

Living across the street from a huge playground is such a perk right now.

"MY ball."

James playing Wii golf outside with a roof slat.

My parents' beautiful home. First visit of 2016. Glorious colors everywhere!

Spent a week co-leading worship for a pastors' conference in Baltimore. This team was incredibly gifted and focused on the task at hand. Especially Roland. :D

While I was in Baltimore the boys soaked in every moment of spring at Grandma's house.

I think they look a little bit alike. Grandma and Owen.

Our grass was a mile high upon our return. My men were up to the task!

Owen semi-awake after a scary incident yesterday with a stolen table knife from the dishwasher that had remnants of peanut butter on it. A swollen face covered in hives, Benadryl, and a thorough bath yielded a baby who was extremely mellow, but hive-and-misery-free. Praise God!

James modeling his new cap for Lucas and Melissa's wedding. What a handsome dude! Swoon again!

Today's 1%: Book update!
26/50: Raising the Barre: Big Dreams, False Starts, & My Midlife Quest to Dance The Nutcracker. The title caught my attention, but I almost put the book down permanently on several occasions. The author spent far too long rambling about her own midlife crisis and its surrounding neurotic behaviors. I'm all for empathizing and often relate strongly with what I read, but this gal was just weird, and her soliloquies were difficult to connect with. So she came off as selfish to me. But the ballet stuff was interesting.

27/50: Confessions of a Prairie Bitch. Hah! I read this one half so I could write that naughty word in my blog. Alison Arngrin played Nellie Oleson in Little House on the Prairie and I hated her guts growing up. So do a lot of other people in the world apparently. Her memoir was largely funny, reflective, and a little bit sad. Glad I read it. Learned some things about LHOTP and to feel a little sorry for Nellie.

28/50: Upstairs at the White House: My Life with the First Ladies. J.B. West was chief usher at the White House for twenty years, serving as an employee from FDR through Nixon. His memoir was a fascinating inside look at the lives of the first ladies. As a lover of American history, this may be my favorite book of the year so far. West's loyalty to the office of the presidency renders his hundreds of details matter-of-factly, without passing judgement or ranking favorites among the first ladies. It was wonderfully written, extremely classy, and delightful to read.

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

At the beach

James and Mommy at the dinner table:

Oh Mommy, I cannot WAIT for the beach! It will be after Houghton.

Yep buddy, it’s going to be so much fun there!

How long do you think we will be at the beach?

How about a whole week?

… … A whole WEEK?!? Oh sure! Hey, what kind of things should we bring to the beach?

Well, I think maybe we should bring our swimsuits.

Oh yes. And a blanket Mommy. And an umbrella! And Mommy, do you think we could take an inner tube for me when I’m out in the sea?

That sounds like a great idea!

Oh yes. And we will build sand castles in the sand and bury somebody in the sand and look for crabs!

And James, if we’re really lucky, maybe we’ll see some dolphins out in the ocean.

<look of concern> … … Well, maybe they won’t come too close…don’t dolphins eat people?

Oh no, dolphins are very friendly. They’re kind of like puppies.

Owen, “Dah-hee!!!!!!”

Yes Owen, doggie… Another thing we should take to the beach are some snacks and drinks for when we get hungry and thirsty. Maybe we should take along your little chair with the drink holder James.

Great idea Mommy! But…we will have to watch out to make sure a crab doesn’t steal my snack! Hey Mommy, what are your favorite things to do in the sea?

Well, I love best of all to go out a bit into the water and jump the waves when they come in towards the shore.

Oh wow Mommy. If there was a big wave you would have to jump SO HIGH.

Yes, and it’s lots of fun. You will have to come out with me and we can jump together. I can either hold your hand or hold you. Hey, I thought of another thing we should take to the beach. A Frisbee! It’s lots of fun to throw a Frisbee in the sand.

<look of concern> But Mommy, what if a crab comes along and steals our Frisbee? I don’t think we should take a Frisbee. That is not a good idea.


This conversation repeated daily all week. 115 days to the beach. Oh boy Mommy. Oh boy.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

April Date Night In: My Birthday

 “We, and I’m talking about all of us now, have created this romantic notion of ‘soul mates.’ We date people and search for ‘the one.’ If we are lucky to find that one, we marry and expect things to be perfect because we think we were made for each other. Yet when our ‘soul mate’ unintentionally hurts us and dissatisfies us in some way-which will happen because we are all imperfect people-we are crushed and confused, and we question whether ‘the one’ was really the soul mate.” –Ashley Rodriguez, DNI p. 37

OK, so let’s be honest here. I didn’t think Roy was my soul mate when we got married. Maybe it’s the realist or pessimist or whatever-ist in me, but I view marriage very much as a choice from the get-go. I choose to be with you through the good and bad. I choose to love you in spite of the coffee breath (which now goes both ways) and wrinkled shirts and your dilapidated pick-up truck. And you in turn put up with my anxieties and insecurities and lack of knowledge about anything dealing with ancient culture.

I think of Roy much more as my soul mate now, almost 9 years into our marriage. We are happiest and healthiest when we have the chance to spend significant time together. Our boys are calmer, our house is cleaner, and everybody finds it easier to laugh. The past two weeks we’ve had precious little time as a couple. He is working an additional full-time job this month in a distant city and I have a week-long conference and big woodwind quintet recital coming up. Nobody has been fortunate enough to escape Drippy Noses and Major Congestion. We had a hard time finding-the-time-to-find-a-time for Date Night In. But last night was it, and I looked forward to it harder than ever.

·         Hot Dates with Olive Oil and Sea Salt
·         Fresh Herb Risotto
·         Fennel-Crusted Lamb Chops
·         Crème Fraiche Panna Cotta with Ginger-Roasted Rhubarb

Our first night together in eleven, we shuttled the lads to their beds as soon as feasible and escaped to our quiet kitchen. I spent $17 on two lamb chops and was terrified to even look at them lest they char in front of my face. Roy gamely agreed to tackle the lamb while I claimed the lazy, warm job of stirring risotto for a half-hour. I had spent much of the afternoon and the previous evening seasoning the chops, making panna cotta (including my own homemade crème fraiche), and prepping fennel rub and herb puree. It was a sensual feast, with the bright green of the herbs, the pop of vanilla bean and toasted fennel seeds, and the irresistible sneak-taste of the panna cotta. The hope of spring!

It wasn’t until the risotto was almost finished that I remembered about the date appetizer. Thankfully they take all of five minutes to make. Warm, blistered dates with olive oil and a dusting of sea salt. Really, really good folks. This cookbook forces me to try things I couldn’t even fathom and then blows my mind.
 
Picture stolen from the internet...it would be hard to mess this dish up visually anyway.
The dates were consumed and we moved onto the main course, risotto and lamb. I’ve just started making risotto this winter, so the technique wasn’t foreign. This risotto had two cups of fresh herbs mixed in, which definitely gave it brightness. I personally think I’m coming to a place where I declare that more than a tiny sprig of parsley is just too much. I measured the parsley to the gram and I still felt that it was all I could taste. This dish yielded substantial leftovers though, so it’s possible that a night in the fridge helped take the edge off. More cilantro, less parsley. That’s my motto in life.
In process. There was a lot more broth to be absorbed and herbs to add.
Roy did a stupendous job on the lamb. He used our meat thermometer and nailed it on the cook. I’m giving him meat from now on. The fennel rub was pretty good—I personally wouldn’t use any more, but it did clear the “I can taste something other than licorice” line, if by a nose. The lamb tasted wonderful. I tried not to think about the cute fluffy animal I was eating…
 
Such a great job!
We made room for dessert. A month into spring we are, but rhubarb is nowhere to be found. Multiple Wegmans were consulted to no avail. So we had panna cotta with fresh strawberries instead. I was afraid my crème fraiche was too runny, but with the gelatin powder it thickened nicely. Since the purchase of this book vanilla bean has shot to the top of my favorite ingredients to use. It makes anything taste fancy. We enjoyed it with simple strawberries, but as soon as rhubarb comes in we’ll make it again with the proper roasted rhubarb and ginger.
 
We used our precious time to focus more on each other and less on taking artsy photos...
It was a great date. The food was wonderful and deeply enhanced by our desperate need to reconnect this month. I am so thankful for this project and that it’s, in a sense, forced us to make space. We worked hard all day yesterday getting all of the other to-dos out of the way so we could truly take the whole evening. And we needed every second of it.

“I’ve found that it’s through the course of marriage that you become soul mates. It’s through deep sadness that we learn to grieve together, through great joy we learn to celebrate together, and simply through the day-to-day that we learn how to use who we are to create a stronger unit that works for both. Somehow, in the midst of being married to Gabe, he’s managed to make me more ‘me.’ He has encouraged me to embrace who I am while gently inspiring me to see things differently: he refines who it is that makes me me. … Gabe and I are soul mates, but we worked damn hard to get here.” DNI, p. 37.


Today’s 1%: I bought metal tongs this week. I had the cheapest pair of plastic ones imaginable and “accidentally” melted them. (It really was an accident, but I wasn’t sorry at all.) This is going to be one of those investments that we look back on and know we did the right thing. 

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Quick Hitters

Saintly Sister:

We couldn’t have survived the past few weekends without Aunt Martha. My dear sister-in-law, who studies at our alma mater, is an absolute saint. For the two years she’s been attending we’ve shamelessly taken advantage of her superb babysitting. The boys love her and she is, at the very least, great at acting like she enjoys them. I spent perhaps too long feeling guilty each time I dragged her away from all the cra-zay college parties and night life. ;) She told me a few weeks ago that she was waiting to get her hair cut until after the semester ended so that nobody would bring it up on campus and she wouldn’t have to needlessly talk to them. It was at that point that I decided to get over my guilt. Aunt Martha: we LOVE you and are SO thankful for you. All of the public (but on a blog so as not to start unwanted conversations) shout outs!
That's right...think of all this quality time with the boys away from college as a "promotion."

Baby Oh-livia:
I have a new goddaughter! I was surprised, honored, and sooooo very excited to be asked to serve as godmother to the newest Hamlet. Baby Olivia Grace was born last Tuesday and I have already done my godmotherly duties in buying baby girl clothes (Oh the joy! I have been telling myself that baby boy clothes are just as cute for so long, but all it took was one little excuse to buy girl clothes and my stance was shot to bits.) and snuggling her on several occasions. She is absolutely precious and we are grateful to our dear friends for supplying Owen with his very own Hamway bride.
 
Squeal!!
Gymnastics 101:
People. The Olympics are less than four months away. FOUR MONTHS. (This also means less than four months until I am at the beach…you can see why all of this is so very exciting.) The USA has a big problem. They could send two teams to the Olympics and win gold and silver. They could send three teams and sweep. But they can only send one team, and the size of team has shrunk over the past twenty years from 7 to 5. Five gymnasts. Four years ago I correctly predicted the Fierce Five several months out. This time around I have crunched names and events and specialties and I’m not 100% settled. But I am sure of this: somebody that is TOTALLY deserving is going to be left out. And I’m afraid it’s going to be Maggie Nichols, which completely sucks because she’s Simone Biles’ best friend, she loves Jesus, and she is an incredible gymnast. Maggie’s best shot is if she gets her Amanar back and something happens consistency-wise to Laurie Hernandez. (I personally think Maggie would be better off replacing Gabby Douglas, but I think somebody might shoot me if I said that too loudly.)

Current team prediction and the events they’ll perform in the team final:
Simone Biles (Vault, Beam, Floor)
Gabby Douglas (Vault, Bars, Beam)
Aly Raisman (Vault, Beam, Floor)
Laurie Hernandez (Bars, Beam, Floor)
Madison Kocian/Ashton Locklear: Bars (this is a total tossup, but both are UB specialists and both have struggled with injuries. Whomever is healthy in July gets to go. The other is probably an alternate.)

Alternates:
Madison Kocian/Ashton Locklear
Maggie Nichols (kills me to write that)
MaKayla Skinner (she gets named alternate as an honorary “thank you for your service to USA Gymnastics” but Martha will never let her take the floor)

(If I had MY way:
Simone, Aly, Laurie, Maggie, Madison, with Gabby, Ashton, and Ragan Smith as alternates)

PS. Simone just debuted her Cheng vault and it was off-the-charts great. She is now the runaway favorite to win every single gold medal in Rio except bars. I cannot…I just canNOT tell you how incredible she is.
That's from only three world championships. Needless to say, she's not real big on sharing.
MINE:

One week until the MINE conference! One week until sunny (pleeeeeaaaase) Baltimore! One week until making great music with great people and not having to pay for great food and great accommodations. We had our first rehearsal last night and it was so stinking fun. It’s a not-so-secret dream of mine to sing tight harmonies with super capable singers and this is my chaaaannnnnnce.

Reading update:
Book 25/50: A Thousand Miles to Freedom: My Escape from North Korea. Title says it all. Roy has an upcoming audition in San Francisco and I'm not thrilled about even entertaining the idea of halving the distance between myself and Kim Jong II...

Halfway to 50 books!