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You are here: Home / 2012 / Archives for April 2012

Archives for April 2012

American Idol Top 7

April 11, 2012 by Amy 1 Comment

Skylar – I think that was my favorite Skylar performance yet. Really, really good.

Colton – I liked that but wasn’t blown away. The chorus with his falsetto is my problem. I think he hit the note but it was too like, not shaky, but not confident enough or something. Just made me uncomfortable.

Elise and Phillip – Wasn’t a fan of their last duet but that was really good. Very cool vibe.

Jessica – I have no idea what song that was but it could be her first single. So beautiful, powerful, controlled. Wow.

Joshua – Wow, I just didn’t see quite as much as the judges did. I love Joshua’s voice I really do and he sang that well. I just felt like it aged him instead of showing something current. I don’t know. Just not my favorite.

Skylar and Colton – The front end of that was shaky but I think they got into it as by the end I was singing along. Nice job.

Hollie – There were some pretty moments but I just don’t think she brought the emotion to it that the song requires.

Phillip – So basically Phillip has this female vote. I’m to the point where he could sing the phone book for me and I’d be happy. Maybe not my favorite song to date but still good.

Joshua, Hollie, and Jessica – eh.

Elise – Wow, I really enjoyed that. I think one of her best to date. I think after Hollie’s night she could have just saved herself.

Bottom – Hollie

Favorite – Skylar, Colton and Jessica

Filed Under: tv

Gluten-free Strawberry Pie

April 11, 2012 by Amy 1 Comment

Gah, two recipe posts in one week, back-to-back, no less?  Promise I’m not going to become a gluten-free recipe site but do you see this? 

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Mmmm.  Gluten-free or not, this must be shared and must be shared immediately.

I had some Bob’s Mill All Purpose gluten-free flour on hand so I went with this pie crust recipe.  Next time, I’ll cover the edges with foil, be sure to poke holes in the bottom and maybe knock off about a minute.  My oven is rather toasty compared to others.  Now to be fair, a gluten-free crust isn’t nearly as yummy as a regular, but it’s definitely good and honestly I’m not sure anyone would know the difference if you didn’t tell them.

The filling I got from this recipe.  You basically cook some strawberries, water and sugar and thicken with corn starch and then fold in whole strawberries to your cooked strawberry mixture.  I don’t like big strawberries to bite into in the pie, so I cut the second batch of strawberries into halves and quarters. But my favorite part about this one?  You can see it a little in this picture but there’s a layer of sugary cream cheese on the bottom of this pie.  I said yum, right?

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Neither of these recipes were hard or time consuming on each step but a little time consuming overall because you have to cool things in between steps and then you have to let it all set in the fridge.  Definitely give yourself time on this one. In any case, make one while the strawberries are good and juicy.  If you’re in my area, be sure to get your strawberries from The Peach Stand.  We’re actually looking forward to going strawberry picking soon and this gives me just the motivation!

Filed Under: Recipes

Gluten-free Cream of Chicken, Crockpot Ranch Pork Chops and Corn Casserole

April 10, 2012 by Amy 5 Comments

OK, I admit.  I’m awfully proud of myself today.  I made cream of chicken soup from scratch.  I don’t know why this is a big deal.  Now that I’ve done it I see that’s it’s about as easy as it gets.  It probably took me less than 15 minutes start to finish.  But still, it makes me proud and happy:

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Look at all that creamy goodness.  I followed this recipe and used brown rice flour as she suggested to make it gluten-free.

The whole reason I made it because I saw this ridiculously easy crock-pot meal on Pinterest to make Crockpot  Ranch Pork Chops and I’m all about the ridiculously easy crock-pot meals.  Not a good fit for us though since the canned cream of chicken is full of regular flour (read: not gluten-free) and I’d either have to go buy something expensive at Earth Fare or go for it on my own.  So glad I went for it on my own because I did 3/4 of this recipe, dictated by the ingredients I had on hand, and came out with about 4 cans of gluten-free, fresh, homemade cream of chicken for about $1.18 a can.  I’m pretty sure you can’t beat that and it would be MUCH cheaper if you don’t need it to be GF.

So we made the pork chops tonight with the cream of chicken I made and yum.  Yum, yum, yum. 

 

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Lexi had THREE helpings of the pork. 

I paired it with green beans and some leftover corn casserole I had made for Easter.  Follow my favorite corn casserole recipe from Paula Deen and use Bob’s Mill Corn Bread Mix instead of Jiffy to make it gluten-free.  Easy peasy!

Enjoy!

Filed Under: Recipes

Book Review: Empty Promises

April 10, 2012 by Amy 5 Comments

untitledI’m going to be honest from the get-go here: Pete Wilson’s new book Empty Promises was a bit of mystery for me.  I wasn’t sure whether this would be a book for me or not but it turns out yes, everyone needs to read this book. 

Empty Promises is about all the pitfalls we encounter while trying to do this thing called the Christian life. It’s the things that we think if we get more, we’ll be happier.  Some would call them idols.  Pete calls them Empty Promises. 

I’m a little embarrassed to say I was surprised about how much of the book hit home.  Not that I’m embarrassed to have issues but embarrassed that I thought it wouldn’t hit home. The book goes through several Empty Promises: achievement, approval, power, money, religion, beauty and dreams.  While all of them sneak up in one way or another, there are definitely a few that poked and prodded especially hard.  A few of my favorite quotes from the book:

“Maturity comes when we become aware that this is going to be a lifelong battle…and we make up our mind to engage in it on a day-to-day basis.”

“I think we’ve done a disservice in our churches by saying God can provide them with a completely satisfying life and not adding that this won’t happen completely in their lifetimes.”

“The cross Jesus died on—and the empty tomb was God saying it with a megaphone: “I am with you.  Will you choose to be with me?”

I feel like this is one of those books you can keep on your shelf and read over and over as you walk through different stages of your life.  A definite must-read.

Watch the promo here:

Empty Promises Trailer- Full from Pete Wilson on Vimeo.

I received a copy of Empty Promises from NetGalley.com in exchange for this review. All opinions are my own.

Filed Under: book Tagged With: empty promises, pete wilson

The Better Mom

April 9, 2012 by Amy 15 Comments

This anonymous post from a teenager had me all out of sorts after I read it. It’s exactly the type of post I don’t want to read from my kids some day.  I don’t want to hear that they think I don’t spend time with them, leave the house a mess and generally like my job more than them.  In fact, it really made me want to hand in my resignation notice today.  But that’s nothing new and honestly, I don’t think it would fix many problems.

 

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Instead of feeling defeated though, I wanted take that post and really listen to what she’s saying.  What is it she’s missing now that her mom is working?  What is it that I can really concentrate on?  I know she’s not my kid but there has to be some universal truths here.  This paragraph especially stood out to me:

Before she went back to work my mom baked bread, sewed for us, spent time with us and dad, hosted guests, and stuff like this. Now everything needs to be perfect for school, but a clean and orderly house, and time with the family is pushed on the back burner and more than not gets burned. It hurts to see that she cares more for her job and lets life at home and together get sloppy.

I don’t care if you’re working or not, you can fall into the trap of she loved [________] more than me.  Now hear me, I’m not suggesting our entire worlds revolve around our kids.  God and our husbands come first and we are people, not just mothers.  But. What are some things to take away from this to make us all better mothers, working or not?

Cook dinner

In the last few years, I’ve really learned to like cooking but it’s been in the last 8 weeks or so since we went gluten free that I’ve learned just how valuable menu planning is.  I love that I know what the kids are eating, I’m far less stressed in the evenings and we have a ton more time together.   All of that adds up to happier people spending more time together.

However, if you’re not a cook this doesn’t mean you need to cook every meal from scratch.  Buying a cooked rotisserie chicken or even throwing some hot dogs on the grill counts.  It doesn’t have to be gourmet.   If you need help in this area, Money Saving Mom has some great resources.  And of course, eating out has its place.  I love that we all love Moe’s together and it’s a treat when we go. 

In addition to dinner,  I think taking the time to do some baking once a week is a great memory-maker.  I love thinking back to my mom’s no-bake cookies and rice krispy treats. 

And furthermore, cooking is a skill we should be teaching our kids. 

Take Care

She loved that her mom sewed for her.  Unfortunately, I’m not a seamstress by any stretch.  I can sew a button or a hem if I’m in a pickle, but I don’t “sew”.  But I can help them take care of their things.  Wash a baby doll’s face to keep it clean, brush out a Barbie’s hair, buy batteries for that special toy, display art they worked hard on, get a stain out of a favorite shirt, help bandage a bruise, respect their belongings.  In other words, they want mothered. 

I find it fascinating she says things have to be perfect for school but not home.  Are we spending more time taking care of people outside our home than inside our home?  Don’t get me wrong, it’s important for them to see you take a meal to someone sick or run an errand for a friend, but what is priority?

Quality Time

I’m going to work harder at this because I’m really good at being around but not really good at  being engaged.  It’s hard for me to really stop what I’m doing and just “play”.   Three things have stood out to me to work on:

  1. Play with them every day.  Yesterday they did a fashion show and just wanted us to watch.  We got them the Just Dance Wii game that I *need* to do for 30 minutes every day.  Jump on the trampoline.  Be a “student” in “school”.  Color.  Read.  Just talk.  Play a board game. The possibilities here are endless.
  2. I’m personally making a pact with myself to not be on the cell phone anymore around them.  I’ve noticed Emma saying a few times “Get off your phone and pay attention!”  Ouch!  Staring at my phone is the last thing I want them to remember and yet, that’s the memory I’ve been building for them.  Please forgive me if I’m not answering calls and texts, particularly in the evenings.
  3. Finally, the last thing that I saw online recently I want to implement is to quit rushing bedtime.  It’s so hard by the end of the day to have any kind of patient energy to slow bedtime down.  Some nights, I feel like throwing them in their bed from the hall and then make a mad dash into my own bed.  But there’s something special that happens at night.  The kids are more apt to talk, more apt to listen and be less distracted.  I’m going to try to be more intentional at bedtime and quit rushing it.

ImpressYourKids.org is a great resource for Christian activities to do with your kids, particularly if you have younger ones.

Be Hospitable

I’m going to be honest and say hospitality can be hard for me.  I *love* having people over but I always feel like my house is not clean or organized enough to have others over and it paralyzes me.  We had my aunt and uncle over for the night over the weekend and it reminded just how much good it is for the whole family.  The kids got to see hospitality at work and we enjoyed sharing our home—together.

Stay Tidy

It’s no secret—we have a house cleaner.  For those of us that are working you cannot do it all.  For our family, the house cleaning went first.  We have someone come in every 2 weeks to do the heavy cleaning.   However, in between I’m vacuuming the living room, doing dishes, laundry, straightening their room, cleaning off my desk, etc.  It’s a never-ending task that I don’t do well all the time but I have to remember it’s important that they see us take care of our home.  I highly recommend getting familiar with FlyLady if there’s some way you aren’t already.  She has some great basic things we can do to stay tidy every day all the way to full-on house cleaning management.

Now What?

All of this begs the question, particularly for working mothers, when will I do all this?  Well, there’s no easy way around being a good mother: it’s going to take a lot of your time.  Since I work full-time, I’ve given a lot of other things up.  I have given up watching almost all TV live.  I either wait until they’re in bed or have a show on while I’m working.  I barely read these days.  Coffee with friends is few and far between.  I don’t get out to the movies as often as I like.  I’m not saying you have to be a hermit and work all the time.  Rest is important.  But our own desires cannot be the MOST important.

Here are some hard questions I’m asking myself:

Have you spent more time reading a book than spending concentrated time with your kids? 

Have you spent more time on Twitter than planning out a bedtime routine? 

Have you spent more time watching TV than cooking? 

Do you know more about the complaints of acquaintances on Facebook than your kids today?

There’s not a magical solution here except to say take a look at where your time goes and see if your kids would say she loves her family more than anything else.  And if not, in what areas do you really need to work?  There’s no way to be perfect in all of them but there are baby steps in at least one of these we could all take.  As I mentioned quality time is my weakest link right now so that’s the direction I’m heading.

I didn’t write this to beat you or me over the head.  I wrote it because that post stirred something inside of me to be a better mom and wanted to bleed my thought-process of it so you might be encouraged and prodded to be a better mom too.  I hope you are.

Filed Under: children

Works for Me Wednesday: The eBook That Works For Me!

April 9, 2012 by Amy

Comments are closed and winner is #2 comment, Dani!

Are you ready for the latest useful, organized, interactive eBook to hit the blogosphere?  Kristen Welch who weekly hosts Works for me Wednesday teamed up with blogger Jennifer De Groot to publish That Works For Me!  The new eBook compiles over 800 categorized tips helping you do life better.

 

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And it appears my iPhone escapades have finally paid off.  I’ve put more than one cell phone down a toilet, cracked more screens than I can count and my latest, lost functionality of my lock button.  That Works for Me! includes my post What to Do When Your iPhone Lock or Home Button Quits Working.

 

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I’ve been able to browse the eBook and this has everything: blogging tips, laundry tips, cooking tips, marriage tips and it goes on and on into 24 different categories.

Not only will you have 800 tips at a very low rate of 1 cent per tip, part of your money will be donated to Mercy House.  Mercy House gets pregnant women off the streets in Kenya, Africa and helps them in “nutrition, housing, prenatal care, Bible study, counseling, and job skills for sustainable living.”  I love it!

Now the very best part is I have a giveaway!  Just leave a comment here telling me in what area you could use a tip?  I’ll close it out Wednesday morning. Also, if you submit a tip during the month of April, you just might win a free house cleaning!  Think up your best tip and be sure to submit it!

In the meantime, feel free to check out my past Works for me Wednesday posts or go ahead and buy the book!  TODAY ONLY the eBook is only $5!!

That works for me!

Filed Under: WFMW

Weekend Recap

April 8, 2012 by Amy 8 Comments

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With my two extra days off work and family in town, I felt like we crammed in a full week of Spring Break into the last four.  We had a great time shopping, bowling, Mellow Mushrooming, Easter egg hunting, racing, eating and generally having a good time together.

We finished out the weekend at home getting back into the swing of regular life.  I baked bread, went grocery shopping and the girls and I had fun playing their new Wii game Just Dance.  Ouch.  That’s all I’m sayin’.

Hope you had a wonderful Easter celebrating with friends and family!

Filed Under: what i did today

It is Finished

April 6, 2012 by Amy 1 Comment

good-friday-austria ©iStockphoto.com/Richard Goerg

It’s late on Good Friday and I’ve been trying to write this post all day, thinking on Christ’s death and sacrifice.  Someone said at the beginning of this Holy Week that not only are we celebrating Christ’s death but also our death made possible by his.  We all as Christians have experienced the death of our old selves.  The old has gone and the new has come. 

I suppose I’ve always celebrated that each Easter but this Easter is different.  Ever since writing my book Entangled and sharing the story of my emotional affair, I have had such wonderful peace and closure on that part of my life.  One aspect that I finally truly understand is death to self.  While my old self was gone when I accepted Christ, I feel like there was an old self of sorts that was slain when I gave up a relationship that I did not want to give up.  I say that without shame and only truth now.  But it was hard.  It took many tears and many slayings of my desires to get out of that.  But then on top of the giving up, there was the public writing about it in Entangled, one of the most nerve-wracking things I’ve ever done. Many ask me if I’m glad I wrote that book and I say with every ounce of me it’s one of the best things I ever did.  In a way, it was the final spear into the side of that time.  I finally could say, “It is finished” and truly live in the resurrection he gave me.

But the key for me has been the very public nature of it.  Christ’s death and resurrection were both very public.  And for a purpose.  He needed everyone to finally know that he was the son of God. And I think that’s exactly why he has us share our own deaths and resurrections.  People need to know he’s still the son of God.  His story was not the end of it. His life still lives on through us, resurrecting those that are dead.

How thankful I am for the new life he breathed into my life and marriage, all made possible by his sacrifice.  What a Good Friday, indeed.

Filed Under: spiritual stuff

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Hey! I'm so glad you're here. I'm Amy, working mom of 3 in the Southern suburbs. I love Jesus, my family, books, chocolate and coffee. I write about faith, parenting, adoption, marriage, fashion, and design. Read more here

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