Friday, September 7, 2012

Insta-Friday

Okay, so I think I'll keep this up for a little while longer...

Going in for the taste test. Confirmed. Delicious.
Le Creuset Love. The inaugural use must begin with three positively perfect ingredients: olive oil, garlic, onions.
Spicy Red Lentil Soup = Amazing.
Hope and Love and Beauty.
Enjoying a little bubbly with my bubbly little bebe.
Best dinner in Boston. That's Pho sure.
Babies like fancy hotel rooms. I promise. Try it.
done and done.
Little lovebug being silly. He's basically ready for kindergarten.
Benjamin's brother would be 21 months... 
I'll tell you how exciting story time is, Mom. 
You know what's much cooler than story time, Mom? Food.


life rearranged

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Adventures in Baby Food Making, Take Two

I have a couple posts coming at you this week. I missed Insta-Friday and I'm not sure I'll keep doing that. Unless you guys enjoy it? I just feel so redundant. But the reason I missed it? We were in Boston! Another travel post to come on that in the next couple days. And that would be the reason I run ads on my blog. Because, y'all. We like to travel and travel isn't cheap! Hah.

But for now, I'll discuss baby food. Because I currently live in the land of messy baby is eating real food and pooping something cray-cray. And it's my excuse to cram another food post on this here blog.

Here are the photos I have going on of the little person's food supply:
spinach
cubed up
cherries!
cubed up
sweet potato
I've been really slacking on the photo-taking of the food making, but so far I've blended up the following items for freezer storage in ice cube amounts: carrots, yellow squash, cherries, blueberries, oatmeal, pears, sweet potatoes, bananas, spinach, apples. There are so many other items B will be exposed to, but I just haven't bought those up yet. I've also cheated and purchased the Ella's Organic, HappyBaby, Plum Organics & Gerber Organics squeeze pouches for travel and occasional convenience. They are pretty tasty as we've been known to finish them off when he's had his fill. Hah. He's also eaten some of those HappyBaby banana puffs that, for the record, don't taste anything like banana. We know. We both tried them out. And since I might hear the riot act from someone about the size in his wee baby throat... we literally break them up into about 6 pieces to serve him. And watch him like a hawk when eating. It's pretty much the only way to get through a 2.5 hour flight with this kid without breaking out every shiny object in the world to entertain.

So a few topics of conversation about baby food making in general. I still use my blender and love it to pieces. I've also used a hand baby food maker (like the magic bullet) for smaller amounts like cherries that is currently on lend to a friend for her son's food making. He was actually born 18 hours before B, but is obviously much older gestationally. And... they will be in the same grade at the same elementary school. Crazy.

Back to food talk. I happened to buy too many cherries we couldn't possibly consume fast enough and decided to blend them up. I only had about 20 cherries, however, and that amount is simply too few to place in the Blendtec. You need a smaller processor for that if not mixing with a more substantial amount. So for the cherries, I used the hand bullet blender thing. I don't know the brand. It came in a baby food maker pack, but it doesn't appear to be printed anywhere and it was here way before Andrew, so my mind shut all of that information out. No brand plugging there, sorry.

The oatmeal cooking and freezing turned out to be completely unnecessary. From my last post, I could've just saved the oat flour (which I did some), add water, and microwaved for literally seconds to achieve cooked oatmeal at that fine of a consistency. So no need to boil a huge batch of it again unless I want to eat it myself. I plan to make more oat powder soon because I want to eat some and because B likes it.

On the oatmeal talk. I did break down and buy B some fortified organic oatmeal at the grocery store because his new Ped was explaining the importance of vitamins. He is already receiving Poly-Vi-Sol with Iron a couple times a week and I am still breastfeeding regularly, eating well, and taking prenatals... so I'm not convinced he needs the fortified oatmeal, but it's really not much harm. It's still better than the rice cereal to me. I feed him some of our steel cut oatmeal and some fortified on a mixed basis. No real order for that.

Bananas aren't necessary to blend and freeze. I usually just take a too-ripe banana and cut them in thirds and freeze them for smoothies for myself. Now I serve B bananas that aren't frozen or if we're out, I take a third out of the freezer in my smoothie stash to feed him by adding to his oatmeal usually. And a bonus to serving warm oatmeal and a frozen banana is that I just plop the frozen piece of banana into the just heated (hot!) oatmeal and it cools it down instantly and the banana is smashable in mere seconds. A certain baby isn't so patient, so seconds are way better than sticking hot oatmeal in the freezer to cool off.

I've been adding cinnamon to almost everything he eats (if it's a fruit/oatmeal blend. I even added to carrots last night!). I'll be working on exposing him to spices. Not spicy, but spice blends so he hopefully develops a more sophisticated flavor palate early on. I happen to love a plethora of spices and cook often with them. It would be oh-so-lovely if B liked my cooking.

As for his feeding schedule... it's changed a bit. I imagine I'll be changing it frequently until he's on solids for each meal. Currently he's being breastfed about every 3-5 hours, depending on his needs. He usually gives me cues when he wants to be fed (whines incessantly, pulls himself toward my chest, starts sucking on his/my/Ray's arm or something). He has only breastmilk until about lunchtime when he is fed some small finger foods usually in his high chair. We're hoping to incorporate some of the baby led weaning techniques and get him used to texture. He has two teeth now, so we're thrilled that he'll be on the train to chomping down or gumming soft foods in small amounts. Lunch foods might include chunks of banana, small bits of pasta, quinoa, steamed veggies, some of whatever I'm having, etc. Dinner for B has been served at the beginning of his bedtime routine (dinner, bath, nurse, bed). It's usually oatmeal + 1 cube of something. It varies, but he obviously loves the sweeter items like oatmeal-banana and especially loves oatmeal-apple with cinnamon.

Our hope is to get him eating at the dinner table with us soon enough. I can't wait for family mealtime where we're all eating. Come on pincer grasp! I've already started blending things a bit chunkier because I know he has a strong ability to gum foods now.

We haven't tried spinach yet. I'm scared. Though I'm not sure why, considering he has liked everything we've served him (including pickles!) to date, except a really sour batch of blueberries which I will now be adding to my own smoothies instead. The joys of serving your kids "baby" food you'll also eat!

Speaking of the spinach... I actually made it (5 cups loose spinach + 1/4 water = 1 ice cube tray) only because we always seem to have an excess around our house and I didn't want it to go bad before consumption. So... I blended, cubed, and froze.

We're having a lot of fun with the feeding stage, but notsomuch fun enjoying the diapers that come along with it or the dirty clothes! It's nearly impossible to get the simplest of food stains (banana? who knew?) out of light clothing. I feel like I need to advocate for a no white clothes on babies act soon or something. Because heavens, people. Mom be doing way too much laundry. Do not fear... I realize my grammar was poor there.

No joke about those diapers, though. While fewer blowouts because of the sheer (somehow that seems like a poor choice of words here) thickness of them and less propulsion abilities, they are indeed something special. So much that we had to literally exit a T train in Boston to change his diaper and hop back on a few trains later to reach our destination. It was that stinky.

He doesn't seem too embarrassed about it, though.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Things I'm Glad I Registered For: Kitchen Edition



Second and final installment of my obsession with kitchen gadgets. First installment here.

KitchenAid Artisan Stand Mixer

While I'll admit (since my husband does read this) that the KitchenAid received very little use our first couple years of marriage, it's been used quite frequently ever since. Am I aware that it's a status symbol that most 20-30 somethings always have on their registry? Yes. Was I willing to be a follower and totally jump on that bandwagon, even if I saw no real need at the time of our marriage? Totally.

Pinterest just gave me a new way to shred chicken (loathed job) using the paddle. Haven't tried it yet, but place warm, cooked chicken in the mixer, attach paddle, turn on to a 2-3 and watch it shred for you. Yessss.

KitchenAid Toaster Oven
We're those people who tossed our regular toaster and replaced it with this bad boy. I always loved the one we had growing up that seemed to make the best peanut butter toast. Now this is all we use for just about everything. It's great to heat/cook things for lunch without heating the whole house. Those cheap frozen pizzas conveniently fit perfectly in there, eggrolls, pulling some cookie dough out of the freezer to make 1 or 2 ice cream sandwiches without having to turn on the big oven... such a lovely thing.

Cuisinart 8-Cup Rice Cooker
I understand rice cookers aren't for everyone, but the Wilsons love ours. I use it at least 1-2 times/week. Without burning, it cooks up brown rice, white rice, basmati, jasmine, Indian rice (turmeric added without staining!), Spanish rice, couscous, quinoa... the possibilities are endless. Being a vegetarian, lots of these grains and seeds are part of my daily consumption and I simply hate monitoring the rice on the stove that will inevitably bubble over and create an awful mess. I've bought this for at least 3 people for their weddings (of course they registered for it) since receiving ours. If you own one or plan to buy, let me know and I have some tricks for making it easier to clean... because that is definitely a flaw of this machine.

Cuisinart Immersion Blender with Attachments
I rarely use the immersion blender part (though it's so great to blend up soups!), but I really love the mini food processor attachment! I use it often when chopping up lots of ingredients and especially to make my favorite peanut-lime sauce for pastas and chicken. I have a large food processor that my mom bought me at least 10 years ago that still works amazingly, but sometimes it's too large for a small job and has too many parts to clean. This is far easier to whip out and clean up.

Blendtec Total Blender Four Side
This should come as no surprise to anyone who reads since I talk about this a lot. I'm not kidding. If there were a fire, there would be some things I'd retrieve. All things Andrew, some Benjamin things, our external hard drive (with all photos), my new Le Creuset {more on that later!}, and this blender. We originally registered for the Breville blender at $199 and realized quickly that the stainless steel on the top and bottom didn't match (lame!), but that it was super expensive and made with plastic parts! This, my friends, has all steel parts and a lifetime warranty. My mom did just buy the Ninja and says it works great! I've also read wonderful reviews on it... so that's a nice consolation for not wanting to spend 1/4 of your mortgage on a blender. Hah.

Set of Crate & Barrel Glass Bowls
I use these bowls all. the. time., so they deserve a spot on the list. In the $20-$30 range in total, so nothing to break the bank and makes a great gift, I think! I also have a bunch of wood serving trays and bowls and salad bowls and appetizer plates from Crate & Barrel that we love among many other things. Just not the durability of our tableware set. Though we still love the looks and heartiness of it.

Crate & Barrel tongs
Maybe trivial, but these get used daily in our house. We have a small and a large.

There were a few flops that I would not purchase again, but the main one is something so many people have and register for. I don't understand why it was so poorly designed and sells so many! We love tea in our home and the tea kettle is used often. But this design has a huge flaw. The handle has a small rubber strip that is surrounded by metal! When heated, it is very hot and impossible to hold without burning yourself. Here it is... the tea kettle.
KitchenAid 2-Quart Porcelain Tea Kettle (we have the gray metallic... matches our KitchenAid mixer)
Perhaps a new beauty is in my future once our current one bites the dust (probably never).
That may or may not match my new dutch oven. omg.
Alright, so let's hear it. What is your absolute favorite thing in your kitchen?

Friday, August 24, 2012

Insta-Friday



It was a nice week here for us. Autumn is looming and we're grateful for the reprieve from the heat. There's a special boy a-growin' and that's always wonderful. Basement demo is almost completely done and we received a quote for the floors yesterday. We never thought we'd be so excited about flooring. Our basement will be fully refinished by the end of the year... but hopefully sooner. Doubtful, though, because the months of September and October have us traveling almost nonstop. We're not complaining. I've said it a lot lately, but clearly #firstworldproblems.
Last Friday I met 3 of my girlfriends and 3 of their kiddos at the local Arboretum (aka: coolest place in Illinois besides Chicago itself). I brought some sandwiches for our picnic. En route.
Smallest members of our crew. The B-man and his buddy (a much longer NICU babe born at 33 weeks), Aaron. They're 2 months apart and will likely be the best of friends... we're hoping! Because his parents are pretty cool peeps.
Picnic, minus the babies & Liz (photog) & half of Kirstin's head. And my face, apparently.
State of my husband's garage space last Friday. Post anything free on Craigslist or Freecycle at 10:30 p.m. and get 8 responses in 10 minutes. This was for a complete basement bar setup. The Wilsons just aren't bar-in-the-basement kind of people.
Also gone quickly: old recessed can lighting from the basement. We may replace some of these, but with a more eco-friendly option .
Benjamin channeling his inner chef. Watching the best of the best, Julia Child.
The bird-squaker himself.
I nearly fainted. Except, it's the oval and I realized I much prefer a round oven myself. I love me some Crate & Barrel Outlet.
On his half birthday, I broke out the cart cover. Because obviously no celebration is complete without a trip to Target.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

1/2 Birthday



What did that lady say?
I'm SIX months old?
Holy breastmilk!
We're really not those parents who would've been excited for a half birthday. But then you lose a baby who you intended to celebrate many, many birthdays with, you celebrate everything when given that chance again. We're celebrating screams, breaths, poops, head control, smiles... everything in this house. We had full intentions of dinner and dessert out of the house at Red Robin a fancy restaurant, but then Benjamin called the shots once more and decided not to nap all afternoon until 5:30. Poor guy had some more shots today and was feeling a little under the weather and needed extra snuggles. No problem. Frozen pizzas it was. Happy half, little one. You light up our lives more than we could've imagined.

{update: we have a new ped and she is awesome. He's healthy and growing and is now in the 10th percentile for the CDC charts. Steady growth in all three categories and meeting all milestones. No mama drama today. Hooray. Thanks for the ped recommendation, Amy!}