Saturday, April 2, 2011

Carrot Cake Muffins



I know. I know.  I promised this wouldn't be a food blog.  Given my photography/food stylist skills and my limited culinary abilities -- it's the least I can do.  Still, every once in a while I stumble upon a recipe worthy of sharing (e.g., eating) and easy enough that even I could attempt it.  This is just such a recipe -- in time for Easter and all things Easter Bunny, like carrots.

The yummy result! 

I found this recipe in The New York Times online.  There are lots of ingredients, but it's well-worth it and none are too exotic.

You will need:

2.5 c. whole wheat pastry flour (okay, forget what I said about not being exotic.  I Googled "pastry flour" and realized I could combine half cake flour [1 1/4 c.]  and half all purpose flour [1 1/4 c.].  I used unbleached flour and achieved great results)
2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. baking soda
2 tsp. ground cinnamon
1 tsp. ground nutmeg
1/2 tsp. ground allspice
1/2 tsp. ground cloves
1/2 tsp. salt

Sift these ingredients together into a bowl.  I don't have a real sifter and instead substituted this strainer. 


I know.  Resourceful, right?

In a separate bowl, beat together:

2 eggs
1/3 c. raw brown (turbinado) sugar - it's, apparently, all the rage these days, but I did have to make a special trip to the store for this item

I had to settle for the individuals packets.  1/3 c = approx 10 packets

 1/3 c. canola oil
1 1/3 c. buttermilk
1 tsp. vanilla extract
 Also, 

1 1/2 c. grated carrots (hooray for the food processor!) 
Note: The NYT suggests the addition of 2/3 c. golden raisins tossed with 1 tsp. of unbleached all-purpose flour or 2/3 c. chopped pecans.  I didn't add either, preferring pure unadulterated carrot muffins - though the addition of cream cheese frosting or a nut crumble on top did cross my mind. 

Using a spatula, combine the wet and dry ingredients.  Do not beat, even "lumps are fine, but don't leave flour in the bottom of the bowl" (the NYT food writer knows me too well).  Finally, fold in carrots.  (If you include raisins or nuts, you would add them now and stir). 

Coat muffin tin with non-stick cooking spray and fill each cup 2/3 full.  Bake in a 375 degree oven for 25 minutes.  

Not too sweet.  Not too carroty.  Just 12 delicious muffins.  

The finished product minus 1, 2, 3!  
I told you they were good. 

Friday, April 1, 2011

Take Me Out to the Ball Game

Yesterday was Opening Day in Major League Baseball.  This had very little impact on our family.  

It didn't affect  her . . .
At a Braves game in 1996
or him . . .

A sports camp photo from 2001 (and he played a few seasons of t-ball too)
though he looks adorable doesn't he?  

or him, really . . . 
My husband played catcher on his high school baseball team. That's him rounding the bases in the spring of 1978. 

though my husband is an avid and lifelong Braves fan and he'll be watching more than a few games this season.

However, hundreds of miles away in Virginia, this guy may be the happiest member of my family to see today arrive.

I don't have a cute photo of him dressed in baseball apparel, but trust me when I say, he's got it. 
My dad is a huge fan of baseball. He roots for the Red Sox and Orioles, but we forgive him!  

Baseball great Rogers Hornsby said, "People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball.  I'll tell you what I do.  I stare out the window and wait for spring" but it sounds an awful lot like something my dad could've said. 

So hooray for baseball season, the boys of summer and the inventor of the major league baseball network! Right, dad?

Play ball! 

Thursday, March 31, 2011

La Tour Eiffel

Our daughter took these lovely photos - April 2010

One hundred and twenty-two years ago today the Eiffel Tower was opened to the public.  

The most iconic edifice in the world is beautiful, an engineering feat.  


So, it is regrettable to have to admit that although I have had the good fortune of traveling to Paris twice in the past 25 years, I have never actually been in/on the Eiffel Tower.  

My first trip, just after college, I didn't think I could afford the, what I considered, hefty admission price. So, I was satisfied standing on the ground admiring its beauty and grandeur.  Truthfully, I wasn't heartbroken.  I know I must have felt that I most certainly would be back - sooner rather than later and then I could, if I wanted to, take the ride to the top.  

In front of the Eiffel Tower in May 1986.








Imagine my utter disappointment when last year on my second trip to France, an electrical workers strike "short-circuited" (pun intended) our visit. The Tower was closed during our entire 3-day stay in Paris. 


 

I hope to return one day, sooner rather than later, and ascend to the top, taking nothing for granted. 

Friday, March 25, 2011

63 Years Ago Today. . . .

this little dog came to live at our house.  


Okay, it wasn't really 63 years ago (to anyone but her).  It was actually nine years ago today, that Liberty Bell "Libby" Smith arrived at our house via a pet rescue organization.  

"No shedding, less than 20 pounds, free and not a puppy."  Those were the criteria for acquiring a dog that my husband set out once we agreed that we would add a canine companion to our family.  Surprisingly, it only took a few days before our dream dog was found.  And she was free (that is until I ran into the back of a Mercedes as I drove home from the pet rescue). She has been a dream dog, more like a cat than a dog really and worth every insurance- deductible penny. 


I remember thinking at the time how competitive it was to adopt a rescue animal -- 8-page forms and multiple assurances that "the well-being of the dog will be your family's highest priority."  Perhaps the conditions for getting married, having children and lots of other things, should be as exacting? 



When the pet rescue folks called during that year's broadcast of the Academy Awards (remember A Beautiful Mind?) to say we'd been selected as her new owners, we were elated - like we'd won our own little award that evening.    

Libby was housebroken from the minute we brought her home and  incredibly low-maintenance.  Our veterinarian estimated her age to be older than the 2 years the pet rescue folks said, so we have no idea of Libby's real age.  Suffice it to say, even in those first couple of years, our daughter would often say, "We didn't get a dog, we got a grandma" because Libby was so quiet and easygoing.



It is sad for me to think that sweet Libby is in the twilight of her life.  She has brought us lots of joy, put up with a lot over the years (see above) and has been almost no trouble at all.  I have been known to say, "We feel like we won the dog lottery"  when referring to Libby.  On second thought, perhaps we should have named her "Lucky."

###

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Birthday Party Idea - Edition 3


Like most little boys, our son LOVED superheros.  He particularly liked Spider-Man, but also Batman and Superman (and Power Rangers, too), and any character with fantastic, extraordinary talents for fighting (and defeating) the bad guys.  Here's just some of the evidence:


Spider-Man for Halloween
Who needs Robin when you have a bear? 

A secret identity and a sippy cup. 
What?  Superheros don't nap?

So it didn't take too much pondering (or creativity) to decide that a Superhero Birthday Party was in order for our then almost 4 year old.

The invitation was a simple white postcard that I printed and decorated with superhero stickers and then color copied. I know this seems ridiculous in this age of clip art, cut and paste, etc. but, honestly, that didn't exist then (either that or I was too busy raising children to notice). Nowadays, you can find lots of superhero invites at party stores -- the problem was, I was looking for a non-specific superhero invite (not just Batman, for example) and that was difficult to find. 

Children were encouraged to wear a costume or just a cape. 

The over-sized sign on our front door said, "Welcome to the Superhero Training Center."


Once inside we engaged the kids with activities designed to instruct them in, test and refine their superhero abilities.  Our games involved utilizing and assessing extrasensory skills (for example, discerning certain sounds -- a kazoo, scissors clipping, deck of cards shuffling, and smells - pizza, flowers, etc.,  all while blindfolded).  

We also tested their running and jumping abilities.  I know that seems sort of ridiculous, but when it's December and the weather outside is not cooperating you'll do anything to entertain a rowdy group of boys (plus never underestimate what a 4 year old will do in the name of becoming a Superhero).

Another game involved two volunteer dads (one of them my husband) for the "Bad Guy Wrap."  We divided the kids into two teams and gave each  a roll of toilet paper.  Their goal was to secure (e.g., wrap)  the Bad Guy to a chair,  since preventing a crime in progress and detaining  evil doers until the legal authorities arrive is one of the chief aims of a Superhero.  The first team to run out of paper - won.


That's the look of a confident Superhero on the right, in case you couldn't tell.


Here's a photo of the Kroger made cake:

Heavy on the Spider-Man but with Batman and Robin along for the ride.





 That's my guy on the right. 

After two hours of 4 year old mayhem (how's that for a good superhero word?), we presented our "graduates" with their "diplomas" which I had created using stickers and ceremonial type font.  The words were taken from my own college diploma as well as some Google sources and adapted for the occasion and printed on watermark paper:
In recognition of the successful completion of the course of study prescribed by the Superhero Training Center and by virtue of the authority granted by the Unofficial Crime Fighter's Organization (aka, Tate Smith's mom and dad) hereby confers upon [insert name] the title of Superhero, Jr. In testimony whereof we have hereunto affixed the signatures of the officers hereof on this sixteenth day of December 2000.
I then printed, with a signature line above, the names of Peter Parker (Spider-Man), Clark Kent (Superman), Bruce Wayne (Batman) and Tim Drake (Robin) and signed them all.

Here's the finished product:

I loved it so much, I had it framed.  Ten years later, it still hangs in my son's room.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Birthday Recap Pictorial

The sign as you exit our neighborhood
Running shoes from her aunt.  She wore these to run the Shamrock & Roll with her dad.

McKenzie's 18th Birthday gift
A special unicorn gift from her brother

Flowers from Nan and Pop
A ring from friend and pen pal in England, Alice (with apologies for the gross fingernail and broken finger - the victim of a car door, two weeks ago!)
A birthday dinner with friends from school

The placecards
With JuliaKate


With Morgan
With Naomi

Good times had by all!

Friday, March 18, 2011

March Madness

The NCAA basketball tournament is underway (3 weeks and 68 teams, but who's counting?) and though we’re not huge college basketball fans at our house, this year, for the first time in a long while, the University of Georgia men’s team is a contender.  

UGA forward Jeremy Price (#50)
The phrase “March Madness” was coined by a man named H.V. Porter in 1939 to describe an Illinois high school basketball tournament. American sportscaster Brent Musburger first used it during National Collegiate Athletic Assocation coverage in 1982.

The tournament is also sometimes referred to as "The Big Dance."

The 6 schools who have the winningest history in NCAA Division I Men's basketball are:

UCLA with 11 championships;
Kentucky -  7 times;
Indiana with 5 Big Dance victories;
North Carolina with 4, including in 2005
Duke with 4 titles, including last year's nail biter over Indianapolis' Butler University

I saw Charles Barkley the other night on David Letterman talking about the tournament.  He was funny.



And if you’re the competitive type, here’s a link to a printable copy of the brackets on the way to the Final Four.  

Go Dawgs!