I have been CRAVING meatloaf. So tonight, little One and I hit the kitchen to make the best meatloaf I have ever made. Here's the recipe if you want to give it a shot:
5-sh white mushrooms, sliced (to get little One involved I had her break up the sliced mushrooms into chunks. If you are going solo dice the mushrooms)
1 small diced onion
1 box of stuffing mix (we used cornbread)
2 eggs
about a pound of ground beef.
Combine all of this and form in a pan. Bake for about 25 minutes at 425*. I then topped it with ketchup turned it down to 350* and baked it again for 10 minutes. I made boxed scalloped potatoes topped with broccoli as a side/veggie.
What I love about this is that it's really easy. It's 10-15 minutes prep time depending on your little one's participation. You then toss everything in the oven for about a half an hour and it's done! You don't have to touch it, which means you can have some fun time together instead of standing over the pot while everyone else hangs out in the living room!
From mid-day picnics to full out excursions to the zoo, the weekends are my favorite time to bond with my little family. Join us on our adventures!
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Fingerpainting Update!
Homemade finger paint was a success!
Okay, so my original thought that the texture was a little too thick, was confirmed. Next time I will just boil it for a little less time. That being said it wasn't unsuccessful by any means. She loved it! A bonus to the thickness is that she could pick it up and smear it around in globs. Little one approved! I figure I will give each of these projects a grade:
Easiness: 9 out of 10. It may be tricky to figure out how to get it glob free and to get the right texture. Overall though, it's really straightforward and you'll get better at it in time.
Fun: 10 out of 10! There are so many things you can do with this. We just did paper, but I could see decorating shoe boxes for gifts, canvases for hanging art or boxes for play houses.
Clean up: 9 out 10. Overall this came off very easily from the kitchen table, Little One's hands and clothing. If you over do it on the food coloring, it's not going to be as easy and if you accidentally let it sit on your hands it will stain.
My SO has asked that Little One's face be omitted from the blog since I'll be posting it to Pinterest. I'll do my best. :)
Labels:
craft,
DIY,
easy crafts,
finger painting,
flour,
food coloring,
paint,
salt,
water
Wanderlust
Wanderlust: strong longing for or impulse toward wandering
www.merrium-webster.com
Wanderlust, in its purest form is the desire to travel. But I also think it is the desire to escape. Escape the normalcy of the Monday through Friday schedule. With that in mind, I begin my journey into Wanderlust and will document the weekend journeys, adventures and new experiences. Even if I don't even have to leave my kitchen. The first adventure into the unknown is with a new experience. I am going to make handmade finger paint this afternoon. Little One just went to bed for a nap. She's excited to wake up to a wide world of color. Here's the recipe from fun-stuff-to-do.com:
Basic Heated Fingerpaint
- 1 cup flour
- 2 tablespoons salt
- 1 1/2 cups cold water
- 1 1/2 cups hot water
- 2 tablespoons food colouring
Directions:
Mix 1 cup of flour and 2 tablespoons of salt
Add the cold water and stir until there are no lumps
Add the hot water and bring to a boil while stirring
Remove from heat once thickened
Continue to whisk until all lumps are gone
Add food colouring and stir well
Pour into desired containers
Allow time to cool down or refrigerate
Shake before use and refrigerate after use
Sounds easy, right? It is! I realized about half way through that it's just like making a gravy, a thick gravy, but a gravy nonetheless.
I gathered all of the ingredients on the counter since I wasn't sure how quickly it would all come together. I recommend this because it's a pretty quick process. In the medium pan I whisked the flour and salt together, in the small pan I added the 1 1/2 cups of water and put it on the stove on high to heat it up for the third step. I put the cold water in a cup so that I could add it slowly to the flour mixture. With everything in place, I was ready to start.
If you have never made a roux for gravy, this part might be tricky. Don't go adding all of the water at once. This would make for lumpy paint (and gravy). Add a little at a time, forming a paste. As you go, you can add a little more but be sure to whisk the entire time. Once I had the milky consistency you see above, the other water was hot and ready to add. Again, add the hot water slowly. I think this is called tempering in the cooking world. You do this so that the hot water doesn't "cook" the flour mixture before it is incorporated. Once that was added, I turned the burner on med-high and kept whisking. This is to prevent the bottom layer from cooking and making the mixture all lumpy.
The recipe doesn't give times and I think that is because you can make this paint whatever texture you want. The longer you heat the mixture, the thicker it will be. I may have over done mine, making it very thick.
In any event, now you are ready to add your food coloring. The recipe calls for one BIG batch of one color. Unless you have a kindergarten class you are prepping for, I would suggest splitting it and making a variety of colors. If I had prepped better, I would have gotten small mason jars, Tupperware or something like that. But I didn't so I added about a tablespoon to each of the divots in a container for deviled eggs. A Muffin tin would have also worked.
My daughter's only request was that there be pink and black. So I gave her a rainbow, knowing at some point all of those colors are going to mix and she is going to make her own black paint. I used a four pack of neon food colors that I had bought for a tye-dye cupcake recipe on her birthday. They served very nicely, but any colors will work.
I added one drop of each to the rows of white goop and stirred it in with wooden barbeque skewers. In the last row I added an extra drop and made random color combinations.
And there you have it. I had a lot of the original mixture left over, so I put it in a Tupperware and will probably do this again next weekend. Little One is still napping so I put the mixture in the fridge to cool. Once we have our art projects done, I will post an update. I'm looking forward to it!
Labels:
craft,
DIY,
easy crafts,
finger painting,
flour,
food coloring,
paint,
salt,
water
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