Kairos—“a right, opportune, or supreme moment in which something special and unique happens”
Holistic Living
Fruits of Labor
A while back I wrote about our trip to the Northwoods of Wisconsin and my visit to a fabulous little yarn shop. Well, I have been working hard the past several days and have a few new pieces to share with all of you.
Here is my two-year old sporting the first finished product: a little bitty shawl for those chilly mornings in the spring and summer when you just need a little something to snuggle up with. I am sad to say that I have no idea how to read a pattern, so everything I make I create without a pattern. But I did get my inspiration from this blog post. The shawl is made with a beautiful lamb’s wool/bamboo blend, so you get the warmth of the wool without the scratchiness that sometimes accompanies woolen garments.

Next, I made a little something for Mama! A nice cowl made with toasty 100% lamb’s wool.
More projects are in the works, especially after purchasing that wonderful yarn on our farm visit. I will be sure to share soon.
I hope you have a wonderful, relaxing, and crafty weekend 🙂
Wowie Wow Wow!
These are the words my five year old daughter uttered when she woke up Wednesday morning and realized that the day had finally arrived…the day of the first farmer’s market of 2012!
Even though the weather threatened storms, it held off long enough for us to make an appearance. It was truly wonderful to reconnect with those farming families we hadn’t seen since the end of October. We had a chance to chat, catch up with one another, and discuss this year’s harvest. This is why I love going to the market. There are true relationships formed when you interact directly with the person who grows your food. We grow a large majority of our own food, but we still attend the market each week to interact with others in our community. To feel a part of something real.
We left the market with a tote full of rhubarb (we cannot harvest ours until next year), local honey and some delicious brick oven pizza. Who could ask for a better morning? 🙂
Chocolate Chip Zucchini Muffins
This week I decided to take stock of our basement deep freezer. I wanted to be sure that we had eaten all of our delicious frozen veg, soups, pestos, sauces and jams from last harvest so I could plan out our storage for this year’s goods. I had to laugh out load when I looked in the bottom drawer of the freezer to find it filled with bag upon bag of frozen shredded zucchini! I was immediately reminded of the chapter entitled “Zucchini Larceny” in Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle when she says, “July is the only time of year when country people lock [their] cars in the church parking lot, so people won’t put squash on the front seat.” I was indeed still finding myself in this position of having an extreme over abundance of zucchini, even though we were far, far away from the month of July.
I struggle to throw any kind of food out, so I racked my brain for something that would utilize at least some of our zucchini stock. And the idea came to me…chocolate chip zucchini muffins! I could use a bunch of the zucchini I had stored, and also use my favorite Pampered Chef stoneware muffin pan 🙂
Like I so often do, I grabbed my two year old sous chef, and got to work.

Zucchini Chocolate Chip Muffins
3/4 cup stone ground wheat flour
1 cup all purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup canola oil
juice of 1/2 a lemon
2 eggs
1 1/2 cups shredded zucchini (with excess water drained off)
5 oz chocolate chips
(A side note on my recipes: I use all organic products. And I use local products when available.)
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Combine flour, salt, nutmeg, baking soda, cinnamon and sugar. Combine eggs, oil, lemon juice and zucchini in a separate bowl. Mix wet ingredients into dry. Then add the chocolate chips and pour into muffin pans. Bake for 20-25 minutes. (Note: I did bake these muffins in a stoneware pan, which often requires a longer cooking time than a metal muffin pan.)
Snug House Bug House
My girls have always loved the children’s book Snug House Bug House. Last summer the love of this book became so strong that my then four-year old constructed her own bug house. She worked for weeks on the project, and I must admit that it turned out just fabulous for such a little one’s construction!
This year our backyard is flooded with monarch butterflies. Now when I say flooded, I mean monarchs flying everywhere…getting caught in our hair, covering our patio table, swarming in the girls’ playhouse…everywhere. So my eldest little one decided that all of these butterflies needed a place to rest and sleep so she brought out last year’s bug house, added some new embellishments and tada….a snug house butterfly house!
Farm Visit
Saturday morning greeted me with the sound of rain pounding against the roof of our house. I couldn’t believe that, yet again, the weather was not cooperating with our planned trip. We had been arranging to visit a nearby farmstead for over six months now, but every time the day arrived, the weather was poor, the kids were sick, an unexpected errand popped up, and our trip was put on hold. But this past Saturday, despite the rain that was coming down in sheets outside the window, I decided we were just going to go for it. And I’m so very glad that we did!
This past weekend we had the absolute pleasure of visiting the Nadig family’s farm. Although the weather was a bit chilly, the rain stopped when we arrived, and we were immediately greeted by the warmest of families we could have ever hoped to have met. This family of seven seemed to completely embrace that which is true stewardship of the land in a way that can only help to enrich the earth and everything she has to offer.

John and his wife Charlotte have a vision to “provide healthy, chemical free food to [their] children and practice what [they] consider to be godly stewardship over the land and animals under [their] care.” John visited Joel Salatin’s Polyface Farm and has adopted many of the farming practices that Salatin and his family practice in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.

We spent the morning walking the farm and learning a great deal from John…and three of his young children, ages eight, six and five. Let me tell you, these little ones knew more about the life cycle of plants and animals than most adults could ever hope to know in a lifetime. My girls were immediately swept up in their discussions of life on the farm and as I assumed would happen, my five year old asked if she could stay there and live with them 🙂


After what was an amazing morning, we pulled away from the farm with 35 pounds of grass fed ground beef, eggs, beautiful hand-dyed, hand-spun wool yarn, and minds filled with information and wonderful memories. Thank you Nadig family for a wonderful visit!
Kairos
Gratitude
This week I am so very thankful for…
~these gorgeous black tulips my husband planted last fall. So unique!
~time to bake with my girls.
~an opportunity to chaperone a school field trip.
~sprouts finally breaking the surface of our soil.
~tracking two turkeys through our neighborhood with my little ones.
~being able to keep my hands busy with many projects.
~less than one week until the first farmer’s market.
~a date night tonight with my hubby.
Wish you all a lovely weekend!
I Scream, You Scream
The chants of, “Ice cream, ice cream, we want ice cream!” can often be heard ringing through our house. Yes, I’m afraid my girls have a sweet tooth like their momma and ice cream is one of their favs.
We have taken to making most of the ice cream we consume in our house because I can be assured that there are only five ingredients in the ice cream, and I know where those ingredients come from. Perfect.
Below is our basic ice cream recipe for vanilla ice cream. I purchase our eggs locally and buy local heavy cream and half and half from our natural food store.
1 cup heavy cream
8 egg yolks
3/4 cup sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla (I also put in seeds from 1-2 vanilla beans.)
Heat half and half over medium heat. Add cream and bring to a simmer.
Whisk sugar into egg yolks. Temper eggs with milk mixture. Let sit for 30 minutes and then add vanilla.
Refrigerate the mixture until cool and then churn in an ice cream maker, following the manufacturer’s guidelines.
A New Project?
My husband and I seem to have an ongoing list of potential projects sitting on our kitchen counter at all times. Some of these tasks get completed, others just slowly work their way further down the list until they disappear all together.
Well, my husband and father-in-law have come up with a budding thought recently that I am extremely thrilled about! A few years ago my father-in-law obtained a number of beautiful timbers from a century old barn that was being torn down in a nearby town. He used several of these 100-year old beams for a pavilion he constructed and let me tell you, it is a feast for the eyes.
The remainder of the boards sat unused for quite some time, but now they may be given new life. My hubby, father-in-law, and a man from a local mill are hoping to take the remaining timbers and cut them into boards to be used as a floor in our dining room. Now, if you happened to read my piece a few weeks back, you know that I LOVE antiques, so even the prospect of this new project is just thrilling to me.

I will keep all of you updated with any progress that is made. Fingers crossed.









