Fabulous Frittata

Something new! I’ve never done a blog on food, but here we are. The last few months I’ve been working hard on lowering our food costs and eating at home more so I’ve been trying lots of new recipes and one of the family favorites has been this beauty– the ever versatile frittata. Because we can change it up so easily, its been on weekly rotation for months now.

I’ve included a fantastic recipe below from Dude That Cookz, but the thing I absolutely love about this is how many different ways you can make this and its still fantastic. Once you have the basics- the eggs and heavy cream and a little garlic and onion spices, you can literally clean out your leftovers from your fridge. Ham, bacon, sausage of any kind, half a leftover steak, or some shredded chicken? Yes please! Half a tub of pico de gallo, cherry tomatoes about to go squishy, half an onion leftover from fajitas, red or green peppers, a bag of spinach that needs to be used up? Bring it on!

No matter what I put in it, my kids seem to gobble it up, and it makes wonderful leftovers and packed lunches requiring no heating to eat. I often make mine in a square baking pan, rather than a cast iron pan so it cuts up into neat little squares for lunches. Bon Appetite!

Dude That Cookz Frittata

Monet’s Water Lilies Art Lesson

 This month we are studying Claude Monet and doing our own rendition of his Water Lilies in Chalk Pastel.

Join us in learning about the life of this fascinating artist, and a little bit about how to create a beautiful piece of art similar to his famous work. This lesson is suitable for children age 8 and up!

Learn about Monet’s life and Impressionism

This Wikipedia Article Includes lots of information about Monet’s experiences and a number of paintings to view and become familiar with Impressionism and Monet’s style.

Now, its time to create your own water lilies picture.

First gather your supplies-

Chalk Pastels at least 24 colors

Construction paper in green or blue

Paper towels to clean your hands and pick up any excess chalk dust

Magic Erasers For those little oops

Fixative so your picture doesnt smear and get rubbed off although for our purpoes hair spray works just as well

Now follow along as we make our water lilies 🙂

20180219_151424_Signature Here are our supplies ready to go. :) You can see our chalk pastels are well used. Don’t worry if they become broken… sometimes they are easier to use that way. If they become dirty from the dust of the other colors, just use your paper towel to rub the dust off– same with the erasers.

When you look at a flat circle like a lily pad from an angle it looks like an oval,  so the first step is to choose a medium green and make some small ovals grouped up on 20180219_151849_Signatureone side of your paper.

You can make smaller circles or you can go bigger for a more close up effect. As you can see in     this sample picture I made.

20180219_151954_Signature

 

Lil Dude chose to do larger water lilies. After you color them in a bit, use your finger and blend the color into a nice green. And in the picture below you can see Lil Diva making smaller water lilies. As you blend the colors, make sure to wipe your fingers on your paper towel or you may get finger prints on your paper that are unwanted– or on your nose!

20180219_151904_Signature

The next step is to add a darker color at the bottom of each water lily to show the shadow. On the purple paper I used a dark purple, but a dark blue would like good too.

20180219_152126_Signature Don’t worry about making everything perfect. Impressionism, the style used by Monet, isn’t about making a photo like representation of the scene, but rather about capturing the light, and the feeling of a scene.

 

20180219_152222_signature.jpgContinue to blend the colors making sure to have soft transitions between the colors. The next step is to add a lighter green highlight to the top of each water lily where the sun touches them. Blend your colors well and enjoy how it makes the lilies look round and real. 20180219_152309_Signature

 

 

 

Next using white make a flower next to, or on top of one of your lilies.

20180219_152457_Signature You can use a little pale yellow and pale pink to give a little depth to your flower, just blend it in well with your finger.

 

 

Next add blues to make the water. Straight lines going across the page will create a look of water reflecting the light, then blend the colors well so you don’t seen individual lines standing out. Use darker blues under the lilies to show shadows, and lighter blues to show where the sun is reflecting off the water.

20180219_153016_Signature

And here is my final picture! When I’m satisfied with my picture I spray it lightly with fixative so it doesn’t smear, or I keep it covered with another scratch paper until I get the fixative.

This quick lesson teaches many things– blending, light, and even a little bit of perspective.

If you try it, I would love to see your projects! Please post them in the comments or send me a private message. I would love to hear from you!

 

Makin my list, checkin it twice…

SONY DSCThe other day while talking to someone I found some words coming out of my mouth that I didn’t expect. I’ve been thinking about what I said ever since, and it has helped me pare down my thoughts about schooling the kids and just living our lives. Here is my thought:

It is not about finishing the curriculum or checking off the boxes. It is about developing an atmosphere, constantly moving in the right direction, and spreading the feast of life and learning for my kids. Everything else is just a tool to get there.

No longer do I have to stress and agonize over what I should do, how much “work” we should do, am I doing enough, etc. I just have to ask myself 3 simple questions and the decisions will be easy.

1) Does this help us develop the right atmosphere for love and learning in our family?

2) Does this move us in the right direction in our relationships or education?

3) Does this spread a feast of great and noble ideas, rich life experiences and loving relationships for my self and my children?

If the answer to any is yes, then I can consider it. If the answer is no to all of them, then the answer is definitely NO!

Yeah! I love clarity!

Thinking (Some More) About Scheduling Our Days

I’ve been working on our schedule some more, and reflecting on Charlotte Mason’s motto- Education is an Atmosphere, a Discipline, a Life. Trying to reconcile the truth in this motto with the rushed, jam packed, crazy thing that seems to be our life can be quite a challenge. How can I allow my kids the time they need to play house, make forts, catch frogs, see the animals in the clouds, make mud pies and just be a kid when we have 8 appointments or classes each week, in addition to taekwondo and church and grocery shopping, SCHOOL, and everything else?

I found the answer to be my educational philosophy. An educational philosophy is the goal, the form, the method, and the process we use to teach our kids. You may not agree with all the educational philosophy of Charlotte Mason, but I think its a great starting point for looking at how we can light that educational fire on our kids. One of Charlotte Mason’s principals is that children need time to be kids and think and experiment and fiddle with things in order for it to make it their own

When planning our days I try to start with the most important things. For my family this would be relationship first as it is the foundation of everything else that will follow. My younger kids are adopted and we are still working on attachment and connection. It is especially important for us that for the relationship piece of the puzzle everything be gentle and pleasant, then habits, Bible, reading instruction, writing instruction, math instruction and exposure to great literature are my priorities.

Once they can read, write and do basic math, they have all the tools they need to learn anything they want, at any time. Great literature will provide the ideas needed to fuel the fire of their minds.

Another quote I try to always keep in mind when planning our days-

Education is not the filling of a bucket, but the lighting of a fire.  ~ William Butler Yeats

How Does Home Education Measure Up?

Homeschooled: How American Homeschoolers Measure Up     Source: TopMastersInEducation.com

Gardening

We started easing into school today, and did Bible, reading instruction, and some copy work. Everyone had fun and wanted to do MORE, so I knew it was time to stop for the day. 🙂

We went outside and worked in the yard for a while before it got too hot, and gave our beautiful, newly planted Mandeville plant some water.I can’t wait til it gets big enough for us to see those lovely red and white blooms from our bedroom window!

This afternoon I am trying to decide if we should take the Laguna Trolley into down to see the Sawdust Festival before it closes Sept. 1. I know the kiddies would love it, but I’m tired. We’ll see what happens!

It’s that time of year again….

School planning is in high gear!
We are starting kindergarten for my daughter and JrK for my son, and while it will be a very gentle year, I will also have to be much more consistent than I have so far so that we can make the kind of progress my daughter has been requesting. She really is eager to be a big kid and learn!

Here is what we are planning for now.

  • 7AM- 9AM  wake up, breakfast, morning chores, take a walk
  • 9AM- 10AM read aloud Bible (10-15 min), Scripture Memory Work (5 min), Copywork (5 min working up to 10 or 15 min by the end of the year), and Reading Instruction (5 min working up to 10 or 15 min by the end of the year).  If we need to do errands, appointments etc they would go here *after* the school lessons
  • 10AM- 12:30PM outdoor play, (yard, park, etc) lunch
  • 12:30PM- 1:30 Math (5 min working up to 10 or 15 min by the end of the year), Nature or literature read aloud 15min.
  • 1:30PM- 2:30 or 3PM Quiet Time- free play or quiet reading/resting in bedrooms
  •  3:00PM- 3:30PM Spanish
  • 3:30PM- Free play indoors or out.

For Bible we are reading through and discussing The Jesus Storybook Bible.
For Scripture Memory we will be doing the verses assigned from  Sunday School- in September this will be the Great Commission

 And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” ~Matt 18:18-20

 For Copywork we will be doing the Delightful Handwriting program which starts with single letters and moves into words and short sentences from the reading program we are using, which will be Delightful Reading. Both these programs are from SimplyCharlotteMason.com.

Math will be MathUSee Primer, moving into MUS Alpha as soon as she finishes Primer. www.mathUsee.com

For Nature reading we will be reading aloud Books by Thornton W Burgess such as The Adventures of Danny Meadow Mouse and The Bee People by Margaret Warner Morley. I got these as part of a downloadable bundle from Yesterdaysclassics.com and they are also available from Amazon.com

For literature we will be reading aloud fairy tales such as the original The Little Mermaid by Hans Christian Anderson or Aunt Jo’s Scrapbag by Louisa May Alcott.

Spanish will be  Salsa Spanish.

Wednesday morning will be Bible study class.

The difference between K and JrK is that if my little guy doesn’t want to participate he  doesn’t have to, and I have other activities like for him during reading and math instruction.

I am so excited to get started, now I just have to decide on a date to start!