Thursday, June 30, 2011

Zucchini Pancakes



Seeing as we are still enjoying zucchini season here, I thought I would share another wonderful zucchini recipe with you… Zucchini Pancakes! I discovered this recipe in a church cookbook that a Mennonite relative sent my way.  Our middle school daughter cooked these up last week for our dinner…one batch modified to be gluten free and one batch of the regular version…while her daddy fried up some sausage to go on the side.  An easy, tasty, and filling dinner!  (Not to mention a night off for the regular cook!)  Leftovers can be easily frozen and warmed up as a snack for quick lunch, an added bonus for those of us who need to keep gluten-free food on hand.  Enjoy!

Zucchini Pancakes

2 eggs, beaten
2 c. grated zucchini
1 c. grated Cheddar cheese
½ c. grated onion
2 C. Jiffy baking mix (we used gluten–free                Bisquick for the GF version)
Salt, pepper, and garlic powder to taste
Oil and butter for frying

Melt oil and butter in skillet. Mix all other ingredients and drop by spoonfuls in skillet. Brown on one side, then flip. Press down, and brown on other side. Enjoy!

* There is nothing like a great church cookbook to get you out of your cooking rut. We have thoroughly enjoyed this collection of tried and true Mennonite dishes.  If you would like to order your own copy and support a great ministry at the same time, please contact  Aurora Mennonite Church  at auroramennonite.com.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Raising Musical Children ( a guest post....)


Today  Pleasantburg is featuring a guest post by Mrs. Marcia Russell. Marcia is the wife of Walter Russell and the mother to five musically talented children whose ages range from 13 to 27. In addition, she is a new grandmother! She is a home school mom as well as a math teacher and tutor.  She has been blessed with a musical family, but when she started on her musical journey with her children, that was not her goal. Today she will share about her journey in raising musical children. Enjoy!

It all started at a pre-school soccer game.  I had begun to home school my first child, and I felt strongly that I should look for some kind of group activity for him.  Home schooling was just about unheard of at that time, and I had a lot of people looking skeptically over my shoulder.  So we signed up for soccer.  Before the season was half over, I realized that this was not the success I had hoped for.  Matthew didn’t seem to understand the game much less seem interested in it.  On top of that, he appeared to be hopelessly uncoordinated.  I am not sure he ever touched the ball.  I began to investigate other extra-curricular activities.

I had read an article about the Suzuki Method of musical training.  This method held to the “mother tongue” philosophy that every child can learn to play a musical instrument just as every child learns to speak the language of his mother.  With the motto, “every child can,” I felt we couldn’t fail.  We bought a tiny 1/8 size violin and a L.P. recording and began attending one private lesson and one group lesson each week.

I attended the lessons with Matthew.  I loved being on his side and learning along with him.  My job was to help him practice every day and to play the recording for him.  Step by tiny step, he began to progress, and I began to relax and really enjoy this aspect of parenting.

When the next child, Thomas, turned 4, I began to think about which instrument he would play.  I decided that siblings close in age should not play the same instrument.  I did not want competition to be the hallmark of our family life.  We chose piano for Thomas, and later he chose organ.  Not only was Thomas the favorite accompanist of his brothers and sister, he was a church organist for various churches throughout high school and college, and recently graduated with a Master’s Degree in Organ Performance from Yale University.

You might be thinking, “Wait a minute!  You chose whether your children would play an instrument and which instrument they would play!?”  That is right.  My children at age four or five had little say in the matter.  They also had little say in whether they would learn to read, learn to swim, or learn to ride a bike.  We decided all of these things for them. 

I found that our children will often delight in the things that delight us.  I love classical music, and I used to play recordings of great masterpieces while the children played or worked on math problems.  We listened to music in the car and while falling sleep.
Once while in an old timey five and dime store, my 8-year old son and 5-year old daughter asked if they could go and explore the toy aisle while I collected the things I needed.  They skipped off while I took the baby in the other direction.  A  while later I began to look for them, but they were not on the toy aisle.  I found them instead near a relaxation display of wind chimes and candles.  A CD was playing music that they were very familiar with.  It happened to be one of my favorites, and they remembered not only hearing it, but having to remain in the car just to hear the end of it on more than one occasion.  They stood with rapt attention oblivious to the fact that an amused small crowd had gathered behind them.  Embarrassed, I tapped my son’s shoulder to get him to move along.  He turned to me with a smile and whispered, “Mom, Mendelssohn!”  As I ushered them down the aisle and out of the way, an older gentleman patted me on the back and said, “You’re doing a good job, Mom.”

When it came time to choose an instrument for Seth, our third child, we chose cello.  A friend called to ask if I was interested in a Suzuki cello class for young beginners that was starting up in our town.  Seth, now age 21, has studied cello since age four.  His love for the instrument and his teacher continued to grow throughout his childhood.  After achieving the position of Principal Cellist in his youth orchestra and All State orchestra as well as winning concerto competitions, he has gone on to study cello performance at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, NY.  His teacher, well past retirement age, is still teaching children.  Her love for the cello and for these children is unmistakable.

I can not stress enough the blessing of talented, passionate, and Godly teachers.  I can think of one couple in particular who had a profound influence on my children.  At age five Thomas the pianist started taking lessons from the wife of the music director at our church.  This wonderful young woman loved the Lord, music, and Thomas.    Not only that, her husband taught Thomas voice lessons and developed a Boy Choir in which three of my boys participated.  The motto of the choir was, “Be the best boy you can be.”  My boys watched this man set an standard of excellence in everything he did, and they followed.  My advice to parents seeking music teachers is to look for passionate professionals who do what they do not just to earn a living, but because they love their students and love the Lord.

There have been a few bumps in our musical journey.  Just as not every T-ball player will play Major League Baseball, not every child who takes music lessons will choose it as his vocation.  We knew this to be the case with our daughter, Faith.  After taking eight years of piano lessons, she asked to switch to flute.  We agreed.  She then took it upon herself to try to reach or surpass many of the benchmarks two of her brothers had achieved.  By the end of the ninth grade she had earned a position in the top level youth orchestra, scored high on the A.P. Music Theory exam, and competed nationally at a music competition in Colorado.  But what she was really passionate about was athletics.  When a leader in her musical world told her that she must choose between music and athletics, she chose athletics and didn’t look back.  The truth is that she had burned out, and I should have done more to prevent that.  But I still hear her playing Chopin on the piano or a Mozart flute concerto from time to time.  The skills she learned will never be taken from her.

The youngest, Ethan, plays the cello and studies with the same wonderful teacher Seth had.  When you find a good teacher, stick with that teacher.  His older brother Seth is his mentor.  Ethan loves basketball more than music, perhaps, but he continues to practice and progress and learn. Like his siblings, he has been privileged to use his talents in worship services at our church.  He enjoys playing with his siblings just for fun or on special occasions.  His home school orchestra has played at children’s homes, retirement homes, and at the airport for Honor Flights for WWII veterans.  Ministry to others is a very important benefit of having a musical family.

So whatever happened to that awkward soccer player turned violinist?  Matthew continued to play the violin throughout high school.  He played in a youth orchestra, made the All State orchestra, and wowed his teachers and classmates at Senior Night when he and Thomas played a very flashy piece.  And then he set his violin aside.  Today he is a Captain in the U.S. Army and an Army Ranger who enjoys running marathons and doing 50 mile trail runs in his spare time.  Matthew credits his musical training with teaching him that daunting goals can be reached with steady practice, one small step at a time.

The benefits of musical training are many, but one of my favorites is hard to describe.  Sometimes music is a beautiful way to communicate deeply felt emotions when words just won’t suffice.  Thomas and his violin-playing bride of one year were getting ready to move to New Haven.  Seth would soon be returning to school far away in New York.  Matthew was home on a two week leave from deployment in Iraq.  None of us knew when the next time would be for us all to be together.  Thomas and his wife Julie had worked hard on a hymn arrangement for the Russell family to play as an offertory at church on our last evening together.  Thomas emailed the parts, and everyone practiced.  That night they played from their hearts, communicating in a very beautiful way with each other, with the congregation, and with the Lord.  The hymn:  “It Is Well With My Soul.”

Soli Deo Gloria

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Sunday Music


Our region has had a week full of pop-up storms, downed limbs, and power outages.  Add to this a broken down computer and a  busy week of ministry at church and in our home, and you have one mama who was ready for a day of rest! Don't  you love Sunday? How kind God was to give us one day in seven to focus on Him and give our tired minds and bodies a rest from the usual pace of life.

We have found that music is one of the best ways to keep our family focused on the purpose of the Lord's Day.  Starting Saturday evening, we pull out several collections of hymns and keep them on as back ground music.  As we are ironing Sunday clothes, putting a meal in the crock pot, and doing our Saturday evening "whole house tidy" we are reminded what it is that we are preparing for...that wonderful day of worship and rest. And on Sunday the music reminds us that the day is not an ordinary day filled with the normal tasks to be accomplished, but a day of spiritual and physical refreshment. Here is what has been playing here this weekend:

Fernando Ortega: Hymns and Meditations, Hymns of Worship
Chris Rice: Peace Like a River: The Hymn Project
Selah: Greatest Hymns


If you enjoy a more contemporary music style with the wonderful lyrics of older hymns, anything by Indelible Grace is wonderful as well.  I pull out the Indelible Grace music late Sunday afternoon when I need to rouse everyone for evening worship! Have a blessed day of worship and rest and a pleasant week ahead!

*If you have musical children be sure to check back later this week as I feature a guest post by Marcia Russell. Many years ago a woman at my church was telling me about her relative, Marcia, who had five children. I thought, " I would sure like to meet that lady!" In God's providence, several years later, our paths crossed and she has been a blessing to me...one of those women a few steps ahead of me in the journey of motherhood and faith, who has been available and willing to share what she has learned along the way.  I know you will enjoy reading what she has to say about her experiences in raising musical children!*

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Only a Dad, but the Best of Men


Only a Dad
                      
Only a dad with a tired face,
Coming home from the daily race,
Bringing little of gold or fame
To show how well he has played the game;
But glad in his heart that his own rejoice
To see him come and to hear his voice.
Only a dad with a brood of four,
One of ten million men or more
Plodding along in the daily strife,
Bearing the whips and the scorns of life,
With never a whimper of pain or hate,
For the sake of those who at home await.
Only a dad, neither rich nor proud,
Merely one of the surging crowd,
Toiling, striving from day to day,
Facing whatever may come his way,
Silent whenever the harsh condemn,
And bearing it all for the love of them.
Only a dad but he gives his all,
To sooth the way for his children small,
Doing with courage stern and grim
The deeds that his father did for him.
This is the line that for him I pen:
Only a dad, but the best of men.                                            
                                                     ~ Edgar Guest 
A million Happy Father's Day wishes to my wonderful, hardworking, "no scar, no story" husband! To him and all the other unsung dads out there who toil daily, putting aside their personal comfort and faithfully doing what needs to be done in these difficult economic times so their wives can be at home with the next generation,  your sacrifices are not unnoticed. You are truly among the best of men!

Saturday, June 18, 2011

The Summer Bookshelf

summer colds + summer storms + broken computer + end of the year paper work =
behind on the blog, behind on email, behind on the laundry, behind on the baking.
However......  

I am well on my way in the summer reading department!   Yes, I am currently reading each one of these, either alone or aloud with someone in my family.  I am not saying I agree with all of them :) ... at least not yet! But I have only read one of them before, so we will see how they come out! I have a couple more books I hope to add next month, but do you know what I am still missing?   A good book on marriage and/or Christian living. My honey and I like to read a  book together in the summer and we are coming up short on ideas this year. Any suggestions?

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Abundance... and a Delicious Zucchini Dish

One of my favorite parts of gardening is harvesting an abundance of zucchini each June.  Plenty for our family and some to share with others. An abundance of about anything is such a wonderful thing in this world where folks are often scraping by on the minimum. I am so thankful as I watch those yellow flowers transform into food that will nourish us. Zucchini plants remind me of the abundance that is ours in Christ.... abundant love, abundant joy, abundant hope, abundant life, and lots of good fruit.  Someday I will have to write about last year's "not-so-flourishing-garden" and the spiritual lessons it taught me, but today I am thanking God for blessing our little seeds and the work of our hands, and thanking Him for abundant life in Christ...enough joy,hope, love, and abundant life for ourselves, and plenty to share besides!

On the practical side of things, there is always the issue of what exactly to do with all the June zucchini.  This is one of the easiest dishes to prepare and a favorite of the family. A relative shared it with me years ago from her What Would Jesus Eat cookbook, causing us to jokingly refer to it as "WWJE Zucchini". We laugh about this dish a lot because it calls for " biscuit baking mix"... I mean, can't you just see Mary and Martha quickly snatching the Bisquick off the top shelf as they prepare dinner?! Hmmmm..... Anyway :), this is a delicious dish and I hope you enjoy it!

3 cups thinly sliced unpeeled zucchini
1 cup biscuit baking mix
1/2 cup grated fresh Parmesan cheese
1/2 cup finely chapped onion
4 slightly beaten eggs
1/2 t. Celtic salt
2 T. snipped parsley
1/2 t. dried oregano leaves
dash of pepper
1 finely chopped garlic clove
1 cup extra virgin olive oil

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Mix zucchini, baking mix, cheese, onion, eggs, salt and spices with olive oil.  Spread in greased baking dish ( 9x13x2 inch). Bake 25 minutes or until golden brown.  Cool, cut into squares and serve! Refrigerate leftovers.  (We think they are even better the second day!)

This post is linked to Our Simple Country Life, Raising Homemakers and Far Above Rubies.  Be sure to visit these sites for great posts from other homemakers!






Embracing Chaos

Summer is my very favorite season.  Sunshine, afternoon showers, reading on the swing outside, gardening,  drying clothes on the line, letting the kids sleep a little bit later while I bask in the quiet early morning hours alone....ahhhh.  However, real life still happens, and at this stage of our family's life that equals a fair amont of chaos. Daily chaos. Hourly chaos. Lots and lots of little trials. Missing socks, conflicting schedules, broken cars, piles of wet towles, overdue library books, summer colds with wheezy nights, traffic that makes us late, stretched grocery budget, one mother with many tasks, children with many things to say...chaos is always there with us, keeping things from being easy and smooth. I am slowly learning to just relax into it and rejoice in spite of it all.  Chaos is better than bordome! God is making a good story out of our crazy little life. He is being glorified by putting us into situations where we can't get along without Him. The glory is His and not ours.

Living a Good Story in the Chaos  is my favorite read of the week.  Perhaps my favorite quote in the post is this,

"Part of me wonders if our stories aren’t being stolen by the easy life."  ~ D. Miller

If you face chaos today, rejoice in it! Don't let simplicity and ease be an idol in this earthly life, but  let Him stretch you and use all your trials to write a story that glorifies Him!

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Bulk Food Stores and Natural Evaporated Cane Juice Sugar


One of the many places I enjoyed discovering on our little adventure to Ohio was the Amstutz Pantry in Dalton.  Dalton may sound like a town  to you, but let me assure you that this place is in the middle of nowhere! However, the drive was beautiful and the trip out there was well worth it. I had never experienced bulk food stores quite like the ones we visited in the Amish areas. How I wish I lived closer to one! I think we visited three different bulk stores on our trip, but the Amstutz Pantry was my favorite. The ladies were so kind and helpful, their selection was wonderful, and their prices were a fraction of what I usually pay. Amstutz Pantry has a Facebook fan page and I encourage you to check them out and pay them a visit if you are anywhere in the area!

While I was thrilled to stock up on several staples for gluten-free baking, I was especially excited to acquire some affordable Natural Evaporated Cane Juice Sugar. The Southerners in my world have this thing for sweet tea.  I am talking about really, really sweet tea! It sincerely pains me to stir in all that  over-processed white stuff, knowing I am probably hastening adult-onset diabetes or some other undesirable and dangerous condition.  Natural evaporated Cane Juice Sugar is less refined and thus retains the natural B vitamins found in sugar cane. Used in moderation, it has not been associated with any of the health issues and problems that occur with refined white sugar.  Best of all, it can be used exactly as you use regular sugar in your baking...and in your tea!  Taste? Delicious!

On other little note about the Amstutz Pantry....if you have a Lego lover in you household you will be interested to know that they sell candy that tastes like Smarties and looks just like pastel Lego bricks. You can even build with them! I couldn't help but remember all the birthdays when we topped cupcakes with Lego mini-figures and decorated out table with Lego creations.  What fun we would have had with Lego bricks that you can really eat :). And, yes, I couldn't resist bring home a bag for the big kids...and their parents... to play with !

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Creative Kitchen Organization

 You have probably seen peg boards used to keep tools in the garage tidy and organized, but did you ever think of using a peg board in your kitchen?  My mom has done just this in her kitchen pantry and I love it!
 On one side of the pantry, the peg-board lined wall is filled with utensils of all kinds.
 The other side of the pantry is where she hangs her pots for cooking.  No more digging in drawers for the spatula, or searching in a utensil can for the correct size of ladle.  Best of all, no having to bend down to the stove drawer to retrieve your sauce pan or skillet.

And what about cutting boards and pans for baking?  I love this idea, too.  She had a local woodworker craft this:
It sits on the top shelf of her pantry. Pans (and cutting boards) slide neatly in between the plywood dividers, so it is very easy to see and obtain the item you need. The spacing of the dividers are adjustable so that pans can be nested and the space can be customized appropriately. Reaching all of these things can be a challenge if you are short like me, so she keeps a small step stool in the kitchen.

I think both of these organizing techniques would be very effective if you are operating in a kitchen with limited space. You could paint a peg board a cheery color and hang it on a visible kitchen wall, or slide a pan rack into a regular kitchen cupboard.  And how about using peg-boards in other parts of the house?  Perhaps one for storing curling irons, hair brushes and bows? Or maybe one in a sewing room or closet for craft/sewing supplies? The next time you are dealing with limited space, take a few moments to think creatively about the situation and, perhaps, wander out of the room (and out to the garage?!) for some out-of-the-box ideas!

This post is linked to Far Above Rubies and Our Simple Country Life.  Enjoy reading what other homemakers are writing about this week!

Monday, June 6, 2011

Green Beans!

 
Growing in the garden at 7 a.m....


and on our plates at 7 p.m. !

 It is always a happy day when the green beans are ready!

Saturday, June 4, 2011

We're Back!


                                 “Not all those who wander are lost.” 
                                          – J. R. R. Tolkien

Well, we have returned from our adventure! On Memorial Day I headed out with these two lovely ladies for a "4-day get-a-way" and visit with my birth mother.  It was almost heartbreaking to leave the others behind, but what a precious time we had!   In an attempt to comfort us all, we took a little bird from home with us and had him participate is a mini-photographic documentation of our journey!

And, of course, lots of phone and text chats along the way! ( The others fared quite well in our absence, by the way, thanks to their wonderful father and energetic grandparents! I think I should have left something with them so they could create their own photo documentary!)

 The Lord was in our whole trip...the "adventure time" with my young ladies, the time and memories shared with my birth family, the weather, the travel (and fellow airplane travelers...a post in itself!), seeing houses from the Underground Railroad, Memorial Day exploring graves of Revolutionary War soldiers, inspiration from a wealthy family's home and focus on hospitality, getting lost way back in beautiful Amish country, discovering magnificent Amish bulk food stores and hardware stores, learning about an amazing woman who changed the lives of many special needs children ( book review to come!), being served by some of those who benefit from her legacy today, seeing the Mennonite church in action..... AMAZING, as my girls would say :).

Thanks to all those who made it possible...from suitcases to child care, to hospitality to prayer ...and many things beyond. And a special thanks to Michelle for her lovely guest post.  I am looking forward to getting back into the normal swing of things around here, but feel quite refreshed and thankful for our adventure!

 Travel and change of place impart new vigor to the mind.  ~Seneca


Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Choosing Beauty (a guest post by Michelle Zoppa)


   As a mother to two boys, making things beautiful does not always come to mind.  I once read where someone defined a boy as noise with dirt on him.  I had to chuckle because my two boys fit this description quite well.  In their everyday business, dirtiness, and loudness, beauty would seem to play no role.  However, choosing beauty in the midst of the mess is exactly where I am trying to be intentional.  

    Those mothers living with all males can easily say that taking time to create beauty will be wasted and unappreciated on our sons.  I am learning they need to be surrounded by beauty just as much as the females in our lives.  When I am defining beauty, I am not talking about creating a dainty, china doll like living area where boys have to be perfectly still and pastel colors rule the color pallet.  I am talking about surrounding boys with the beauty in which God created in our world and taking the time to point out the creativeness and originality of our Creator.  

    As a mother who wants to create life long memories for her sons, I have to be intentional about what I choose for them in all areas of their lives.  Which one will my sons remember more:  an afternoon of watching half hour segments of children's television shows or an afternoon spent in the mountains discovering a brown snake and splashing in the cold mountain streams of water?  Will another video game be on their lists of favorite childhood memories or the walks we took at the park playing "Pooh sticks" at every bridge we passed?  Will a snack out of a cardboard box dished out on a paper towel make their list or will Friday night pizza night with hot, buttered popcorn sprinkled with M&Ms all snuggled on the couch together more than likely come to mind?  

    Just because they are boys are we content to let them read any book from the library just to get them to read, or do we take the time to dig for classics and then take more time to read them aloud to share in the wonder of adventure stories together?  Do we settle for less for our sons just because they are often "noise with dirt on them?"  I love the quote from Gladys Hunt in Honey for a Child's Heart that says, "A young child, a fresh uncluttered mind, a world before him - to what treasures will you lead him?  With what will you furnish his spirit?"  

    As mothers, we must be intentional about our mothering.  The memories we create with our sons will last a lifetime.  Watching the sun fade into the night sky, listening to the sounds of birds outside our windows and trying to identify them in our bird book, chasing butterflies, remembering the day we tagged monarchs together, planting a garden, using the best pens, markers and paper to color and draw, singing and dancing together, decorating the house for Christmas, coloring Easter eggs - all these things add up to a lifetime of beauty.  They add up to a lifetime of sharing God's world and His creation with our sons who can then share them with his children.  

    Yes, it is often easier to let them sit in front of the television, play another video game or just ignore the mess, but the rewards of intentionally choosing beauty and participating in God's world far outweigh the inconvenience and extra work.  Choosing to point out the wonder our God has created for us allows our sons to get used to seeing, hearing, and tasting the best.  Not the best that money can buy but the best in terms of what God has freely given to us to enjoy.  Red juicy watermelon dripping from chins, soft vanilla ice cream melting down a cone, stars sparkling in the night sky, watching the first snowflakes of the year falling, listening to a mother sing a bedtime hymn or song just like she did when they were little - oh, those are the beautiful moments we must choose to invest in for our sons. 

 **** Michelle Zoppa is a wife, home schooling mother of two boys, and  author. Her Bible studies for boys and girls include An Honorable Boy, A Virtuous Girl, Increasing in Wisdom, and God's Armor: Suited for Life.  She has also written The Principal Thing Journals, Bringing the World to Life Geography series, and several history study guides. You may purchase her books at Queen Homeschool. I have know Michelle for 23 years (!) and am honored to call her my friend! ****