Friday, December 10, 2010

Taco Soup

I’ve tried several different versions of this and we haven’t really been happy with the blandness of them.  So this is our version.  Go blander for the kiddos if you want by leaving out the jalapenos.
Though I didn’t have the forethought to do it this year, this would make a great crockpot recipe for those cold Christmas parade nights.  Or those long cold days shopping.  Imagine walking in to a great smelling house and a warm dinner.
Okay, okay, without further ado here’s our taco soup recipe.
Ingredients
1 – 15 oz. can Light Red Kidney Beans
1 – 15 oz. can Bush’s Best (or whatever brand, we just happened to use this kind last time) Chili Beans
1 – 15 oz. can Petite Diced Tomatoes
1 – 10 oz. can Rotel
1 – 10 oz. can Cream of Chicken Soup
1 packet Ranch Seasoning Mix
1 packet Taco Seasoning Mix
2 teaspoons minced garlic (we use those jars of minced garlic for everything, if you don’t have this just substitute some garlic powder)
1/2 white onion chopped
3 or 4 slices jalapenos with 1 tsp of the juice from them  (again we use a gigantic jar of sliced pickled jalapenos for about everything so there’s less waste – you’re not opening a can and throwing away what you don’t use every time you need some)
1 cup chicken broth (made from granules or cubes or premade and frozen, the point is just to have an extra cup or so broth in your soup, we omitted this and it was not soup-y enough)
3 boiled chicken breasts shredded
Optional Toppings
Shredded Cheese
Sour Cream
Tortilla Chips
Directions
Once again I have to say, if you cook ahead and use freezer cooking, this recipe is super quick.  Cooking ahead eliminates chopping the onion, boiling and shredding the chicken, worrying about the broth, shredding cheese, and keeping the minced garlic jar and sliced jalapenos on hand all makes for a very quick meal.
Are you ready for the complexity of this meal?
Open all those ingredients up there except for the toppings.  Save those for, you know, the topping.
Dump all those ingredients in your crockpot.  You’re not even going to drain the beans or tomatoes or anything.  Just put it all in.  Stir.
Start the crockpot on low.
Leave it alone, except for maybe an occasional stirring of the ingredients, for several hours.  I don’t have an exact number for this partly because very little I do is exact and partly because everything in this recipe is already cooked you’re just waiting for it to all meld and taste good together.
That’s it.
When you serve it, set some shredded cheese, sour cream, and tortilla chips on the table.  I like to crumble the chips in, some like to dip it.
Oh, I should also include that some people put a can of corn in theirs.  But we don’t like the corn addition.  It just seems weird and out of place to me.  But that may just be my sensory issues at work again.  I don’t know.
Enjoy!!

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Making Our Own Christmas Songbook

Okay, so it’s really nothing that special, but I thought you might appreciate this idea if you’re as song ignorant as I am.  How it is possible to be 33 years old and have heard every single one of these songs for this long and NOT know the words to them is beyond me.  But, alas, that is me.  And if it happens to be you too then you might appreciate this.
A couple of years I came up with this idea and made this for us.  Our Christmas Song Book cheat sheet, if you will.
I went searching for Christmas songs.  Fun ones and religious ones, everything I could find.  I did a lyrics search.  I cut and pasted (with the copyrights info still intact and with each song) several songs onto each page in a word document.  Over and over until you have all the songs you want.  I then made a Table of Contents.  Printed, 3 hole punched, and stuck it in a folder.  The year we did this we didn’t even have a 3 prong folder so we used a manila folder with brads.
Now when you’re in the car and wanting to sing Christmas Carols you have an instant go-to.  And you feel a little less like a fool in front of your kids.  You know, if you’re me.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Favorite Christmas Children's Books

Hey guys, I’m slowly trying to answer all your questions on that fun “Let’s Play A Game” post.
Today I’ll answer one of Dawn’s questions from My4Sweetums.  She asked me several good questions and I’ll get to all of them, but today’s is her “What are your favorite Christmas books?” question.
Last year I did a weekly Children’s Book Tuesday for awhile before I realized Elise over at A Path Made Straight had my marvelous idea first!  Be sure to go visit her and see all of her wonderful Children’s book picks.
I pack these books up each year after Christmas and it’s so much fun to get them out again each season.  Like old friends visiting.  And new ones for my younger kids.  I love that it’s new all over again for them.
Here are the links to my reviews of each one from last year.  And a few people joined the linky last year, but those linkies are now gone.  I’m sorry to see that happened, but be sure to relink this year.
  1. The Stable Where Jesus Was Born
  2. One Wintry Night
  1. ‘Twas The Night Before Christmas
  2. Silver Spurs
  1. The Crippled Lamb
  2. The Shepherd’s Christmas Story
  1. Christmas (Touch and Feel) (Board Book)
  2. Baby In A Manger
And then bookmark this page, go take some pics of your fav Christmas Children’s Books (or pull them from your archives, if you’re like me) and link up – I always like meeting new friends – of the real life and the written word kind both!

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Attachment Parenting: Nighttime Parenting Sick Children

We’ve been sick again.  You knew that.  But I’ve been meaning to get a picture of our “sick bed” when it’s relatively cleaned up.  And today, at the end of this latest round of sickness I did.
I’ve written before how we handle the stomach virus with lots of little ones – Round 1 and Round 2.  This would be the “how we make it through the night” addendum.
I have a queen size mattress that I keep standing on its side in our walk-in closet.  Yes, I do.  When everybody starts getting sick (even if it’s the middle of the night) I go to the closet, drag out the mattress, sheets, and lots of towels.  I lay it in the middle of the living room floor and set up camp.  This allows me to be close to all the sick ones at once: I now have room for the Baby to sleep on my arm, one child next to me on the other side, one child across the bottom of the mattress, and one child on each couch if need be.  This is the end of the sickness up there, so the sheets that were draped across the couches are washed and put away now.  And I so kindly removed the trash cans from the room as well.  You’re welcome.
With the mattress in the living room I can let my husband sleep through the night (I explain why I do this inRound 2 of the Stomach Virus), I can listen better for children that may be in their beds and newly getting sick in the night, I can turn on lights easily, be closer to the washing machine (yes, even in the middle of the night), fit more children near me and monitor them all more closely.
I leave it out in the middle of the day most of the time.  It allows us to keep the kids in place to get the rest they need while still letting them be apart of our daily goings on, instead off in their room alone.  If I only have one child sick and need the floor space I put the bed away and let the sick child rest on the sheet covered couch.
And yes, sadly I had my best friend sleep on this “harbinger of death” when she came to visit last time!  But I promise I spray it all down with Lysol and I gave her clean sheets!!
So, that’s it.  That’s how we handle sickness with lots of kiddos in our house.  How do you do it?

Friday, November 12, 2010

How We Lapbook - Step By Step

I know I’ve talked about lapbooking lots before.  And even have some pics here in the archives.  But I don’t remember if I showed you step by step how we do it from beginning to end.  So, I’m gonna.  If I have before, just click away – my memory’s not so good anymore!
I’m going to take you through our most recent one.  My girl, who is five chose Monkeys.  It’s a little advanced for her age, but I adjusted it, filled in some of the words when she got tired of writing and will read it to her again when we’re finished.  But she likes it, has learned a lot, and it actually helps me to show you how we adapt lapbooks to the appropriate age levels.  I’m all about adapting.
Step One:   Choose
I let the kids pick.  It gets them excited.  Our favorite site for free lapbooks is Homeschool Share.  I read the list to them, we look at some components of the titles they like and then we print them out.  This time we had some already all printed and given to us by my sweet friend Maury.
Step Two:  Gather Supplies and Print
And here is the priciest part of lapbooking.  And the whole process isn’t free.  Even if you find free lapbook templates.  There’s printer ink, paper, manila folders, and glue.  You can go all fancy and buy colored paper and colored folders, but that all adds up in price so we go super plain and just let them decorate.  You’re going to need glue sticks, if you get the liquid glue it will wrinkle up your paper with as much as you’ll need to use.  Also, you’re going to want to NOT buy the off-brand glue.  I’m all about off-brand, but the pages will peel off after they’re dry if you go cheap this time.  Also, grab a gallon ziplock to keep all your papers in until you’re finished.  When you go to Homeschool Share and you’re ready to print I would suggest printing all the components you think you’ll want at once.  Here’s one of the adapting parts – if you look at a component and think “I don’t know if my 5 year old is going to get the scientific names and she’ll probably tire of writing by then”, don’t print that component.  If you think “She probably won’t get this, but won’t mind writing extra stuff and I’d like her to learn it someday when she looks back through this lapbook”, then by all means print it.  Sometimes I even print the components and put them in blank into the lapbook – they can always fill them in later.   Also print the instructions pages.  You’ll want to read through all those answers at the table and not have to refer back to the computer everyday.  Stick all of your printed pages and instructions into your gallon ziplock.
Step Three:  Get Started!
Some people like to cut out all of the components all at once, actually put together the lapbook, and then fill in the info.  We don’t because my kids tire of all that cutting all at once.  And we use the “putting it all together” part as the last exciting hoorah to push us through to the end of the lapbook.  Whatever works for you.  Depending on the age of the child, the fine motor skills of the child, and their interest level you can do one component a day or 5.  We usually do about 2.  Though some components are so full of info and writing that we’ll break up one writing intensive component over a couple of days.  I have them cut them out (if they’re able to, with little bitty ones I cut them for them or cut part of it and have them just cut one line) and then I read the component and the info to them.  I either dictate or have them copy the info.  If they’re very young or if I’m adapting a more advanced lapbook to a younger child I’ll have them copy some and then I’ll finish writing it for them.  Sometimes I write (if the lapbook doesn’t have a cut and paste option) and have them cut it out to glue it into the component.
This part of the “working through” can last days or months.  Depends on how much time a week we devote to it.  Go as fast or as slowly as you want.  When lapbooks were our primary learning tools (and they can be, you know?) we went through many more lapbooks than we are now.  Now we’re using them mostly for our supplementary science.
Just keep putting the completed components into your ziplock until you’re through.
Step Four:  Assemble!
My kids LOVE this part!  For some lapbooks we’ve made elaborate oversized lapbooks.  For this one the main cover of the lapbook will be a “book style”.
Lay open one folder (this will be the front and back “cover”).
Lay open a second folder.  I marked where I will cut it so that you can see.  I usually don’t mark it and I certainly don’t measure, our lapbooks are imperfect and we don’t care.
Then cut.
Then smear the glue all down the flap.
Align the flap flush with the inside; fold and glue.
This makes one “page” of your lapbook.
At this point I laid some of the components loosely on the pages.  When I flip a flap or page over the components will slide off, that’s fine.  This isn’t the official place where everything will stay, you’re just seeing if you have enough flaps and pages to hold everything.  If you don’t have enough pages, use your leftover pieces or cut more.  Add more full pages like the first step or just add little flaps.  It’s completely up to you and how much more space you’ll need.  This is not exact.  You can always add more flaps.  You can have the kids draw pictures to fill in the empty space.  We’re not going for perfection, people.
I knew that the four pages this made would not be enough for this lapbook so I went ahead prepared to make little “flaps” for our book.
I used the leftover piece of folder to make the first flap.
I folded over about an inch or two, smeared the glue and then aligned it flush with the bottom of the lapbook.
And then glued it down.
I got another folder and marked where to cut it.  Nearly in half.  I wanted it to kind of match up to the size of the flap we just made.
Cut it.
Marked where to cut for a little flap to attach it to the lapbook.
Folded a little flap.  Hold onto your scraps, you may can use them again as another flap later.
And then I glued it in flush with the top of the lapbook.
Now on the inside front cover of the lapbook we have two flaps.
Again, I stop to see if the components will fit.  Again don’t worry when you flip a page and components fall off.  You’re just seeing if they’ll fit.
Now that your lapbook is ready for the components, call your kids over and get ready for the fun!  (of course, you can do this yourself – I used to when they were smaller and they loved being surprised by a completed lapbook in the morning, now they like to choose where the stuff will go – it’s up to you).  I show them how many pages and I lay out all the components where they can see them.  They start picking where they’ll go.  I glue the backs and they stick them in.  Sometimes they need some “suggesting” of “you might want a few more on this page” or “you have lots of room left do you want to just put 3 on this one”.
Here’s the finished lapbook.
Cover:
Inside with the flaps open:
Inside the book part:
Let me know if you have any questions and happy lapbooking!

How We Lapbook - Step By Step

I know I’ve talked about lapbooking lots before.  And even have some pics here in the archives.  But I don’t remember if I showed you step by step how we do it from beginning to end.  So, I’m gonna.  If I have before, just click away – my memory’s not so good anymore!
I’m going to take you through our most recent one.  My girl, who is five chose Monkeys.  It’s a little advanced for her age, but I adjusted it, filled in some of the words when she got tired of writing and will read it to her again when we’re finished.  But she likes it, has learned a lot, and it actually helps me to show you how we adapt lapbooks to the appropriate age levels.  I’m all about adapting.
Step One:   Choose
I let the kids pick.  It gets them excited.  Our favorite site for free lapbooks is Homeschool Share.  I read the list to them, we look at some components of the titles they like and then we print them out.  This time we had some already all printed and given to us by my sweet friend Maury.
Step Two:  Gather Supplies and Print
And here is the priciest part of lapbooking.  And the whole process isn’t free.  Even if you find free lapbook templates.  There’s printer ink, paper, manila folders, and glue.  You can go all fancy and buy colored paper and colored folders, but that all adds up in price so we go super plain and just let them decorate.  You’re going to need glue sticks, if you get the liquid glue it will wrinkle up your paper with as much as you’ll need to use.  Also, you’re going to want to NOT buy the off-brand glue.  I’m all about off-brand, but the pages will peel off after they’re dry if you go cheap this time.  Also, grab a gallon ziplock to keep all your papers in until you’re finished.  When you go to Homeschool Share and you’re ready to print I would suggest printing all the components you think you’ll want at once.  Here’s one of the adapting parts – if you look at a component and think “I don’t know if my 5 year old is going to get the scientific names and she’ll probably tire of writing by then”, don’t print that component.  If you think “She probably won’t get this, but won’t mind writing extra stuff and I’d like her to learn it someday when she looks back through this lapbook”, then by all means print it.  Sometimes I even print the components and put them in blank into the lapbook – they can always fill them in later.   Also print the instructions pages.  You’ll want to read through all those answers at the table and not have to refer back to the computer everyday.  Stick all of your printed pages and instructions into your gallon ziplock.
Step Three:  Get Started!
Some people like to cut out all of the components all at once, actually put together the lapbook, and then fill in the info.  We don’t because my kids tire of all that cutting all at once.  And we use the “putting it all together” part as the last exciting hoorah to push us through to the end of the lapbook.  Whatever works for you.  Depending on the age of the child, the fine motor skills of the child, and their interest level you can do one component a day or 5.  We usually do about 2.  Though some components are so full of info and writing that we’ll break up one writing intensive component over a couple of days.  I have them cut them out (if they’re able to, with little bitty ones I cut them for them or cut part of it and have them just cut one line) and then I read the component and the info to them.  I either dictate or have them copy the info.  If they’re very young or if I’m adapting a more advanced lapbook to a younger child I’ll have them copy some and then I’ll finish writing it for them.  Sometimes I write (if the lapbook doesn’t have a cut and paste option) and have them cut it out to glue it into the component.
This part of the “working through” can last days or months.  Depends on how much time a week we devote to it.  Go as fast or as slowly as you want.  When lapbooks were our primary learning tools (and they can be, you know?) we went through many more lapbooks than we are now.  Now we’re using them mostly for our supplementary science.
Just keep putting the completed components into your ziplock until you’re through.
Step Four:  Assemble!
My kids LOVE this part!  For some lapbooks we’ve made elaborate oversized lapbooks.  For this one the main cover of the lapbook will be a “book style”.
Lay open one folder (this will be the front and back “cover”).
Lay open a second folder.  I marked where I will cut it so that you can see.  I usually don’t mark it and I certainly don’t measure, our lapbooks are imperfect and we don’t care.
Then cut.
Then smear the glue all down the flap.
Align the flap flush with the inside; fold and glue.
This makes one “page” of your lapbook.
At this point I laid some of the components loosely on the pages.  When I flip a flap or page over the components will slide off, that’s fine.  This isn’t the official place where everything will stay, you’re just seeing if you have enough flaps and pages to hold everything.  If you don’t have enough pages, use your leftover pieces or cut more.  Add more full pages like the first step or just add little flaps.  It’s completely up to you and how much more space you’ll need.  This is not exact.  You can always add more flaps.  You can have the kids draw pictures to fill in the empty space.  We’re not going for perfection, people.
I knew that the four pages this made would not be enough for this lapbook so I went ahead prepared to make little “flaps” for our book.
I used the leftover piece of folder to make the first flap.
I folded over about an inch or two, smeared the glue and then aligned it flush with the bottom of the lapbook.
And then glued it down.
I got another folder and marked where to cut it.  Nearly in half.  I wanted it to kind of match up to the size of the flap we just made.
Cut it.
Marked where to cut for a little flap to attach it to the lapbook.
Folded a little flap.  Hold onto your scraps, you may can use them again as another flap later.
And then I glued it in flush with the top of the lapbook.
Now on the inside front cover of the lapbook we have two flaps.
Again, I stop to see if the components will fit.  Again don’t worry when you flip a page and components fall off.  You’re just seeing if they’ll fit.
Now that your lapbook is ready for the components, call your kids over and get ready for the fun!  (of course, you can do this yourself – I used to when they were smaller and they loved being surprised by a completed lapbook in the morning, now they like to choose where the stuff will go – it’s up to you).  I show them how many pages and I lay out all the components where they can see them.  They start picking where they’ll go.  I glue the backs and they stick them in.  Sometimes they need some “suggesting” of “you might want a few more on this page” or “you have lots of room left do you want to just put 3 on this one”.
Here’s the finished lapbook.
Cover:
Inside with the flaps open:
Inside the book part:
Let me know if you have any questions and happy lapbooking!

How We Lapbook - Step By Step

I know I’ve talked about lapbooking lots before.  And even have some pics here in the archives.  But I don’t remember if I showed you step by step how we do it from beginning to end.  So, I’m gonna.  If I have before, just click away – my memory’s not so good anymore!
I’m going to take you through our most recent one.  My girl, who is five chose Monkeys.  It’s a little advanced for her age, but I adjusted it, filled in some of the words when she got tired of writing and will read it to her again when we’re finished.  But she likes it, has learned a lot, and it actually helps me to show you how we adapt lapbooks to the appropriate age levels.  I’m all about adapting.
Step One:   Choose
I let the kids pick.  It gets them excited.  Our favorite site for free lapbooks is Homeschool Share.  I read the list to them, we look at some components of the titles they like and then we print them out.  This time we had some already all printed and given to us by my sweet friend Maury.
Step Two:  Gather Supplies and Print
And here is the priciest part of lapbooking.  And the whole process isn’t free.  Even if you find free lapbook templates.  There’s printer ink, paper, manila folders, and glue.  You can go all fancy and buy colored paper and colored folders, but that all adds up in price so we go super plain and just let them decorate.  You’re going to need glue sticks, if you get the liquid glue it will wrinkle up your paper with as much as you’ll need to use.  Also, you’re going to want to NOT buy the off-brand glue.  I’m all about off-brand, but the pages will peel off after they’re dry if you go cheap this time.  Also, grab a gallon ziplock to keep all your papers in until you’re finished.  When you go to Homeschool Share and you’re ready to print I would suggest printing all the components you think you’ll want at once.  Here’s one of the adapting parts – if you look at a component and think “I don’t know if my 5 year old is going to get the scientific names and she’ll probably tire of writing by then”, don’t print that component.  If you think “She probably won’t get this, but won’t mind writing extra stuff and I’d like her to learn it someday when she looks back through this lapbook”, then by all means print it.  Sometimes I even print the components and put them in blank into the lapbook – they can always fill them in later.   Also print the instructions pages.  You’ll want to read through all those answers at the table and not have to refer back to the computer everyday.  Stick all of your printed pages and instructions into your gallon ziplock.
Step Three:  Get Started!
Some people like to cut out all of the components all at once, actually put together the lapbook, and then fill in the info.  We don’t because my kids tire of all that cutting all at once.  And we use the “putting it all together” part as the last exciting hoorah to push us through to the end of the lapbook.  Whatever works for you.  Depending on the age of the child, the fine motor skills of the child, and their interest level you can do one component a day or 5.  We usually do about 2.  Though some components are so full of info and writing that we’ll break up one writing intensive component over a couple of days.  I have them cut them out (if they’re able to, with little bitty ones I cut them for them or cut part of it and have them just cut one line) and then I read the component and the info to them.  I either dictate or have them copy the info.  If they’re very young or if I’m adapting a more advanced lapbook to a younger child I’ll have them copy some and then I’ll finish writing it for them.  Sometimes I write (if the lapbook doesn’t have a cut and paste option) and have them cut it out to glue it into the component.
This part of the “working through” can last days or months.  Depends on how much time a week we devote to it.  Go as fast or as slowly as you want.  When lapbooks were our primary learning tools (and they can be, you know?) we went through many more lapbooks than we are now.  Now we’re using them mostly for our supplementary science.
Just keep putting the completed components into your ziplock until you’re through.
Step Four:  Assemble!
My kids LOVE this part!  For some lapbooks we’ve made elaborate oversized lapbooks.  For this one the main cover of the lapbook will be a “book style”.
Lay open one folder (this will be the front and back “cover”).
Lay open a second folder.  I marked where I will cut it so that you can see.  I usually don’t mark it and I certainly don’t measure, our lapbooks are imperfect and we don’t care.
Then cut.
Then smear the glue all down the flap.
Align the flap flush with the inside; fold and glue.
This makes one “page” of your lapbook.
At this point I laid some of the components loosely on the pages.  When I flip a flap or page over the components will slide off, that’s fine.  This isn’t the official place where everything will stay, you’re just seeing if you have enough flaps and pages to hold everything.  If you don’t have enough pages, use your leftover pieces or cut more.  Add more full pages like the first step or just add little flaps.  It’s completely up to you and how much more space you’ll need.  This is not exact.  You can always add more flaps.  You can have the kids draw pictures to fill in the empty space.  We’re not going for perfection, people.
I knew that the four pages this made would not be enough for this lapbook so I went ahead prepared to make little “flaps” for our book.
I used the leftover piece of folder to make the first flap.
I folded over about an inch or two, smeared the glue and then aligned it flush with the bottom of the lapbook.
And then glued it down.
I got another folder and marked where to cut it.  Nearly in half.  I wanted it to kind of match up to the size of the flap we just made.
Cut it.
Marked where to cut for a little flap to attach it to the lapbook.
Folded a little flap.  Hold onto your scraps, you may can use them again as another flap later.
And then I glued it in flush with the top of the lapbook.
Now on the inside front cover of the lapbook we have two flaps.
Again, I stop to see if the components will fit.  Again don’t worry when you flip a page and components fall off.  You’re just seeing if they’ll fit.
Now that your lapbook is ready for the components, call your kids over and get ready for the fun!  (of course, you can do this yourself – I used to when they were smaller and they loved being surprised by a completed lapbook in the morning, now they like to choose where the stuff will go – it’s up to you).  I show them how many pages and I lay out all the components where they can see them.  They start picking where they’ll go.  I glue the backs and they stick them in.  Sometimes they need some “suggesting” of “you might want a few more on this page” or “you have lots of room left do you want to just put 3 on this one”.
Here’s the finished lapbook.
Cover:
Inside with the flaps open:
Inside the book part:
Let me know if you have any questions and happy lapbooking!