Cheese and Chocolate
There are well-known guidelines for pairing food, including cheese, with wine. Professional recommendations make it easier to decide what to try when one is not an expert.
I’m not a fan of alcohol in any form. The last time I had any more than a sip was in college, and even those times I could count on one hand. What is a lady like me to do who wishes to combine different flavors with cheese?
Enter chocolate.
December Homeschooling Help
December can be a rough month to remain on task for homeschooling children and their teacher. Twinkling outdoor lights, indoor decorations, Christmas music, baking smells, extra sweets, along with holiday events and a longer list of things to do, makes this a distracted time of year.
When January rolls around, sometimes it can feel like December raced by in a blink. Schoolwork was left undone or not absorbed by your students. Perhaps in other years, the work was completed, but everyone believed they missed out on the joys of the season.
Chhurpi: Hardest Cheese in the World
Chhurpi (also known as “durkha”) is the hardest cheese in the world. Yes, you spell it with a double “h.” Chhurpi has two varieties, soft and hard, and the ingredients are the same. Eating it fresh or pressing and drying the product, determines its firmness and shelf life.
This cheese is made from the milk of a yak or chauri (a cross between a cow and a yak) in the high, remote mountain regions of the Himalayas. Farmers have been . . .
Color-coded Kids
For homeschooling parents, sometimes your teaching area can look like a storm ripped through an office supply store. There are many ideas for organization. One that has worked for us is color-coding our kids for their school supplies. We are going into our eighteenth year homeschooling, and we have been using this from the very beginning.
Kid of the Day
“No fair. You always pick!”
“Nu uh. You do.”
“That’s not true. You get your way every time!”
“Your choices are terrible.”
“Yours are the worst.”
“Mooooooooooooom!”
If you’re the parent of two or more children, you might hear a similar dialogue from your darlings. Do interactions like this take place monthly in your home? Maybe weekly? Hourly? Every other minute?
“Kid of the Day” (KOTD) is a system to have in your parenting toolkit to help with sibling squabbles.
Dontwanna Day
The other morning, I woke to my alarm and sat up. In an instant, the things I needed to do flooded my brain in-box. The dreary list made me want to dive back under the warm covers for another few hours. Instead of giving in to the toasty impulse, I got my grumpy self out of bed and dressed.
As I did my regular morning routine as a late-forties woman (yes, I’ll be fifty in a few months. Not claiming that decade just yet), I muttered the same thing over and over. To every item and thought from the overwhelming “To Do List,” my internal response was “I don’t wanna.”
Duct Tape: A Mother’s Helper
Duct tape. That gray, sticky, loyal friend has been a favorite product of many since its invention during World War II. Created as an easy, waterproof way of sealing ammunition boxes, it quickly gained popularity after the war as a new product that could fix anything. There are countless stories of how this amazing tape has helped over the years, from duct work repair to saving the astronauts on the problem-ridden Apollo 13 flight.
Crates for Containing Chaos
When we started homeschooling years ago, each student was assigned a part of a bookshelf and a small bin for their supplies. No matter what I did, that way of organizing did not work. Things would get messy very quickly, workbooks were routinely lost, and piles of papers in our schoolroom/dining room were a regular fixture. We needed a different way of operating.
Always Watching
I was sitting outside on our porch, reviewing a few more things for my book and working on my laptop.
My 7 year-old MC comes outside with notebook and her kit of markers."I'm going to join you,okay?" she said.
"Sure. There's room."
15-Minute House Help
Lately, has your home resembled a college frat house on a Monday morning, after a weekend of hard partying? Maybe it looks like a park littered with debris after an outdoor concert. Perhaps your place has been in fine condition, but all you do is clean up after everyone, and they’re tap-dancing on your last nerve with their sloppy behavior.
You’re not alone.
Spinning Plates
Sometimes a circus has an act called “Plate spinners.” The performers take a thin stick, balance a glass bowl or plate on top, and spin the dinnerware to keep it aloft. The trick works by gyroscopic force, and it’s the same principle that keeps a toy top in motion. If the movement slows down too much, the plate comes off, and crashes to the ground.