29 May 2014

Cookie Thursday

Well, today is our last cookie day and I'd have to say Cookie Thursday was a success.

Several months ago I wondered if my kids might be tired of cookies every Thursday, so I took a few weeks off.

Oh no. That was a bad idea.

They came home wondering who the cookie monster was who had pilfered their cookies. Doesn't every kid envision walking in the door after school to homemade cookies, a glass of cold milk, and their mom asking all about their day? Mine at least did/do.

Cookie Thursday was back on.

I made all kinds: some were our regular old favorites, and some were a few new ones*.

*Reese's Peanut Butter Cup Cookies
Favorite Chocolate Chip
Sour Cream Sugar Cookies
Homemade Oreos
Pumpkin Chocolate Chip
Peppermint Chip
*Rolo Cookies
*Andes Mint Cookies
Gingersnaps
*Cookies and Cream Oreo Cookies
*Swig Sugar Cookies
Oatmeal Cookies
Lemon Crinkle Cookies
Rocky Mountain Cookies
Macadamia Nut White Chip Cookies
*Salted Peanut Butter Pretzel Cookies

and the ultimate surprise, which I didn't think I'd like so much, were:

*Root Beer Float Cookies

especially if you let them sit for a day and let the rootbeer flavor enhance.

Cookie Thursday is on hiatus until school resumes and in the meantime we have library days with a trip to the ice cream shop afterwards.

Root Beer Float Cookies
3/4 c. butter, softened
3/4 c. brown sugar
1/4 c. sugar
1 small box instant vanilla pudding mix DRY; do not prepare
2 eggs
1 t. root beer extract
2 1/4 c. flour
1 t. baking soda
1 to 2 c. white chocolate chips

Cream butter and sugars together. Beat in instant vanilla pudding and mix well. Add eggs and root beer extract and beat until well incorporated. Add flour and baking soda. Mix well. Stir in white chocolate chips. Roll into 1-inch balls and place on greased cookie sheet. Bake at 350 degrees for 8 to 10 minutes

24 May 2014

My mechanic dad would be proud

Right before my birthday my trusty Kitchenaid mixer quit spinning. [He, he, ha, ha, ha. I was secretly kind of glad and had been waiting for this day]. This meant I could ask for a new mixer for my birthday and I would be totally justified. I thought I had always wanted a Bosch mixer. Growing up, I would spend time at my friend Jennifer's house and we would use her Bosch mixer to make cookies. At my house we did not have such thing. Beaters were what we used and let me tell you there was a world of difference.

On the downside a new mixer was not going to be cheap . . . Bosch or Kitchenaid. I decided I would try out a Bosch for myself to make sure it was really what I wanted before I shelled out some bucks. I borrowed my sister-in-law's and made several kinds of homemade bread and cookies.

I wasn't that impressed.

1. I found I had to make big quantities of dough for it to really get mixed. I make big quantities now but after our kids have flown the coop? . . .
2. It shook all over the counter just like my Kitchenaid. With my mixer I end up putting it on a rug on the floor when I'm mixing at high speed (like for bread) so it wouldn't walk itself right off my counter. I was pretty sure a Bosch wouldn't do that. I was wrong.
3. I also didn't like cleaning all the little grooves on the paddle.

That's three negatives right there.

In the meantime Reed, my brother, mentioned how easy it was for him to fix his mother-in-law's and that it was just a stripped gear. I watched several Youtube videos and decided I could fix it myself.

I ordered the part.

Then got to work one afternoon.




I had that thing working after a couple of hours.
My mechanic dad would have been proud (only picture I have of him in his mechanic outfit).

And I saved$395.50. New Kitchenaid: $400. Part to fix my old one: $4.50.

21 May 2014

Covenants

I was headed home from the temple yesterday and thinking about covenants and why we make them at baptism and in the holy temple. I've already written a blog post about this very thing, but sometimes you need reminders and need to relearn things. The thought came to me very clearly as I was driving that when designing the entire plan of happiness for us, the Lord knew it very important to have us make promises with him so that he could give us access to his power.

Who wouldn't want to be able to tap into that power of goodness and holiness?

Who wouldn't want the Ultimate Superhero on your team, fighting for you and backing you up?

I know I do.

Here's a recap of my last covenant blog post: 
  • COVENANTS let us declare whose "camp" we are in.
  • COVENANTS allow us access to a power in our fight against all that is unholy.
  • COVENANTS are the means to prove to the Lord that we can be trusted. He wants to bless us with all that he has, but we need to know that we can be trusted with all powers and principalities.

11 May 2014

Mother's Day

Nate compared me to a weed eater. That's right the weed eater reminds him of his mother. He likes to say it reminds him of our weeding parties and working in the yard. I hope that it reminds him that we worked TOGETHER in the yard, that I just didn't send him out to tackle those pesky nuisances by himself.

He did also give me a sweet card and helped make breakfast of scrambled eggs and blueberry muffins with orange juice.

For two days Ashlyn has not allowed me in her room as she created a present for me.

She apparently helped Alex also come up with something. 
I wasn't allowed in the kitchen all day. The children sang superbly in sacrament meeting. I got to take home a Utah Truffle bar to indulge in later. I took a nap with Ash and Alex after watching Pioneer Woman make us some yummy food. Alex likes to ask "can we watch the yummy food." Then we ate yummy food with the rest of the Leary clan which THE MEN prepared . . . chicken burritoes/enchiladas, salad, guacamole, seven-layer dip, fruit, dessert, homemade ice cream. I was impressed. I got to chat with my momma, one of the best mothers I know. And the clouds eventually parted and the sun came out after a most drenching rain storm this morning.

I love being a mother. Especially a weed eater weilding mother.

04 May 2014

The Exterminators: Don't Mouse with Us

Several months ago one of my Facebook friends posted about their run in with mice while living in their first marital apartment. Oh the memories that conjured up. Below is a nice little write up I put in a scrapbook (way back when that was the in thing) about Tyler and my first apartment in Logan for the first year of our marriage.
Our minute apartment was one of two in the basement of an older home. In addition to the two in the basement, there was one on the main floor and one in the rafters.
The rent was $225 a month which allowed us to save a lot of money and graduate debt free. The walls were paper thin; we quickly learned to talk very quietly if we didn’t want anyone to hear us. The ceiling peaked a few inches higher than Tyler, hence there was no stretching your arms above your head. Our kitchen, living room, and bathroom were all one room with a meager accordion door to close off the bathroom.
The shower was separate from the bathroom and located in one corner of the back room. The living room was so constricted we weren’t able to even fit a couch. It was a very weird setup.
Not to mention our apartment housed the water heaters for all four apartments. Our full-size bed barely fit into our bedroom leaving no room for a dresser.
We had no closet but luckily several shelves lined part of one wall. In addition to the smallness, we had no control of our heat. You could always tell who was home upstairs by whether it was freezing or very hot. Our one life saver was the storage room we had outside our front door. If it weren’t for that I don’t where we would have put things.


With our apartment came enormous spiders free of charge. Before we realized we even had a problem with spiders, we had slept on the living room/kitchen floor to watch a movie. Had we known we were supposedly hibernating with spiders, I think we would have slept in our own bed. I captured one and took it to the USU County Extension Office only to learn they were called hobo spiders or aggressive house spiders. If they bit you, your skin would eventually start to rot away. Great! We became very careful about not leaving our clothes on the floor. One night within five hours we killed ten spiders. On more than one occasion I’d awaken to find a spider perched on the wall right by my head. It was a little nerve racking.
Furthermore, we also had a family of mice move into our storage room for a month. They ate plenty of our food and ruined a lot of items by climbing in and out of boxes. I became so paranoid that I wouldn’t go into the storage room. It was Tyler’s job to kill and haul them out. On several nights we would lie in bed and hear the trap go off and wonder how many we were going to end up killing. In all we ended up exterminating thirteen. Then in the spring, within a week’s time, three bumblebees succeeded in finding their way in to our apartment (all at different times). They seemed attracted to a glass container sitting in our window which is where all three perished. Living there absolutely made us more grateful for the luxuries in life.

As I read back on this little narrative, I wish I had taken more pictures. The few I have just don't do it justice. And again this was before the advent of digital cameras when society became very snap happy. The sign above was something we made to put in the window to the door that led to all three apartments. Our neighbors, the Grigsbys, taped The Exterminators sign after our little mouse escapade. I'm sure they heard those pesky rodents too and were quite thrilled to have us deal with their demise.