Categories
Fitness & Recipes

I’ve Turned My Kids Into Breakfast Monsters

I love breakfast. I always have. Mouth watering waffles, pancakes, hot cereal, oatmeal, overnight blueberry french toast – anything but plain ol’ cereal. Making a yummy, healthy (okay, so sometimes its not so healthy) breakfast in the morning just makes me happy. It takes a bit longer than pulling cereal boxes off the pantry shelves, but most days I feel it is worth the effort.

Lately, however, our mornings usually go something like this:

Child #1 stumbles in from the back bedroom to snuggle.

“Mom?” she mutters sleepily, ” What’s for breakfast?”

“I don’t know,” I respond. “Maybe cereal?”

Suddenly she’s fully awake and responsive. “What? No!! Let’s have German Pancakes! Or Waffles!”

“What about eggs?” I say thinking that’s probably a lot easier and faster since I’ve been up for an hour already and am starting to get hungry.

“Yuck. I hate eggs.”

Fantastic. This is pretty much how it goes with all three kids every morning. It is driving me crazy! Apparently my breakfast creativity has spoiled my children. Not only is a cereal breakfast a rare occurance, but they’ve come to expect amazing culinary prowess every morning. How did I get here? Suddenly my mornings are not ruled by what I want for breakfast, but rather what my children want for breakfast and that’s just not as much fun. I’ve threatened to make them eat cereal for a week just to detox their little bodies (not that I would eat cereal for a week mind you).

In the meantime, I thought I’d share some of our favorite breakfast recipes for those of you looking to branch out of your cereal routine.

1. Pumpkin Pancakes (occasionally with chocolate chips & whipped cream)

You are going to laugh at easy this one is. You take your favorite just-add-water pancake mix, and then add then for every cup of mix used, add ¼ cup canned pumpkin and ¼ tsp pumpkin spice. See? Easy. If you don’t have your own pumpkin spice mix together: ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon ¼ teaspoon ground ginger ⅛ teaspoon allspice ⅛ teaspoon nutmeg.  Pictured below  is with real maple syrup and whipped cream we had leftover in the fridge. Delicious!

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2. Oatmeal with Cocoa-Nut Almond Butter and Fruit

It took me awhile to love Old Fashioned Oats and not just the instant Quaker Maple and Brown Sugar kind. Andrew is now upset that I don’t buy the little packets anymore, but always make it in a pan on the stove. Too bad. I buy dried blueberries from Costco, and instead of brown sugar I whip up some Cocoa Nut Butter in my Blendtec Twister Jar. Chocolate for breakfast? Yes please.

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3. German (or Puff) Pancakes

These are hands-down Andrew’s favorite. I will occasionally even make them in the Airstream although that will probably be a rare occurrence in the summer as the oven heats up the entire house.

Ingredients (feeds our family of 5)

1/4 cup of butter
9 eggs
1 1/2 cups milk
1 1/2 cups flour
1/2 tsp salt

Directions:

Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
While oven is heating, chop up butter and add to 9×13 pan. Put it in the oven while heating to melt the butter.
Mix remaining ingredients in a blender or mixer.
Pour over melted butter in pan.
Bake for 18-22 minutes. Pancakes will puff up over the side of the pan if done right.
Eat with maple syrup and enjoy!

4. The Best Belgian Waffle Recipe EVER (adapted from Food.com)

I’ve always struggled to get waffles just right. One year for Christmas, Sam bought me this AMAZING double-flip Belgian waffle maker and I was ridiculously excited. Only, they didn’t turn out quite right. Still not puffy enough. THEN Sam taught me how to really whip the egg whites. It seriously makes all the difference. Moist, fluffy, deliciously tasting awesomeness. Occasionally when we have family coming for dinner we’ll do a waffle bar complete with whipped cream (are you sensing a trend?), fruit, berry syrup, and sometimes even ice cream.

Although we debated for months, we have decided NOT to bring the waffle maker with us in the Airstream. Its too big and bulky and honestly I could eat them every day and then I’d just gain loads of unwanted weight. So.. we’ll have to rely on friends we visit or the occasional splurge at IHOP for our waffle fix.

Ingredients (this usually feeds our family of 5 with a few leftover)
4 cups flour
8 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup sugar
4 eggs, separated
1 cup oil
4 cups milk

Directions:
1. Separate the eggs.
3. Using a power mixer, beat egg whites until stiff.
4. In a separate bowl, mix together the egg yolks, milk and oil and mix well.
5. Add dry ingredients and mix well.
6. Gently fold in beaten egg whites with a spatula.

And my most recent favorite:

5. Strawberry Oatmeal Pancakes

Its like  healthy dessert. These things have body and they taste soooooo goood! We made extra and snacked on them all morning. Adapted from This Silly Girl’s Life.

Ingredients

  1. 2 cups old fashioned oats
  2. 2 cups buttermilk (or 2 cups milk + 2 Tbsp Lemon Juice)
  3. 4 eggs
  4. 8 Tbsp. canola oil
  5. 3 tsp. vanilla extract
  6. 1 cup all purpose flour
  7. 1 cup whole wheat flour
  8. 5 Tbsp. sugar
  9. 1 tsp. baking powder
  10. 1 tsp. baking soda
  11. 1 tsp. salt
  12. 1 tsp. cinnamon
  13. 2 cups finely chopped strawberries (Mine were frozen – I just let them thaw a bit and then chopped them up like normal.)

Instructions

  1. In a large mixing bowl, combine the oatmeal and the buttermilk and let sit for 20 minutes.
  2. After the 20 minutes, add the eggs, vanilla and oil and mix well.
  3. Add the flours, sugar, powder, soda, salt and cinnamon and mix until incorporated.
  4. Gently mix in the fresh strawberries.
  5. Heat your griddle to 350 degrees.
  6. Drop the thick batter (about 3/4 cup size) onto the griddle, kind of spread into a circle shape and cook for 3 minutes, flip and then cook for 2 or 3 more minutes or until batter is not raw.
  7. Serve warm with fresh whipped cream, maple syrup or both.
  8. *To freeze: prepare as usual, let cool completely on a cooling rack, place in freezer friendly plastic gallon sized bags, with parchment paper in between each pancake. To reheat: remove from the freezer and warm in the microwave or oven.
  9. Enjoy!

 

 

Categories
WanderLog

We Rent a Storage Unit, Hike a Mountain and Celebrate with Family

Travel Dates: May 31 – June 6, 2014

Last Saturday we had the opportunity to attend the sealing of my brother and his wife in the Salt Lake Temple. They were married a year ago in Monticello, Utah and were able to enter and be sealed together for time and all eternity! We are so excited for the decision they made.

Lots of work projects this week, fixing computers, and continuing to slim down our belongings. We also found a storage unit and have started hauling the items we are keeping over there! Its so great to watch our house empty out.

Friday afternoon we hiked up to the Timpanogos Cave National Monument in nearby American Fork Canyon. The kids did amazing for how steep the hike was!

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Categories
WanderLog

Memorial Day, Zion National Park, and Signing Away the House

Travel Dates: May 24 – 30, 2014

We spent Memorial Day weekend exploring the beautiful Snow Canyon State Park with Jess’ family, visiting a cemetery where she has ancestor’s buried, hiking, exploring, and flying kites! It was perfect.

Sunday the heat kicked in and after a quick stop to meet up with some friends and do a little four wheeling we headed to Zion National Park on Monday evening. We melted. Even plugged in with the A/C running, it was just hot. Sam was comfortable enough working, and Jess took the kids out to explore and work on their Jr. Ranger Badges.

The most perfect evening was spent hiking a small ways up the Virgin River Narrows. The kids absolutely loved it!

We dashed home Thursday afternoon in time to sign the paperwork and officially sell the house! We still can’t believe we did it! Jess also picked up the quilts from the shop and we got them on the beds in the Airstream. So excited! We still have lots to do in the next three weeks before we set out full time and we couldn’t be more excited!

This Week on Instagram May 24-30 2014

Categories
California National Parks

We Get Soaked at Muir Woods National Monument, California

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The skies looked threatening. My sister-in-law and I kept looking at each thinking “Should we go?” “Should we stay home?” I’m not one to call it until its raining cats and dogs, so with just a possibility of rain, we packed our kids into two cars (would have been so much more fun had we fit in one!) and drove the hour from Green Valley, CA to Muir Woods National Monument near San Francisco, CA.

When We Visited: March 2014

Ages of Kids: 8, 6, 3

Tips: This monument is tucked into a valley outside of San Francisco. The drive is steep and windy but worth it!

We got lost on the way there – turns out this one is pretty hard to find if you don’t trust Google Nav. After a false turn or two, we got back on track and finally made it only to discover pouring rain and a parking lot full of cars! In addition to being a premier tourist destination due to its proximity to SF it was also Spring Break for the local schools. The perfect combination to make the Monument a popular spot despite the weather. Once we got there, we piled into the back of Jaime’s mini-van to eat lunch before setting out to explore.

The ranger at the front desk wasn’t the most…. helpful. She wasn’t going to give our 3 year olds their own Junior Ranger books (something about “We try to conserve paper here at this park”) and that didn’t go over well, especially for Cara who is used to doing her own. Somehow Jaime managed to talk her into it though. Maybe the ranger became tired of dealing with us? Who knows. In addition to the Jr. Ranger program, Muir Woods has a shorter fill-in-the-blank-from-different-signs scavenger hunt that we also did. Both were great.

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My kids loved hanging out with their cousins, and although we got pretty wet, the towering Redwood Trees were a beautiful sight. There is basically a paved walkway throughout the trees with information about the forest, when it became a National Monument, and details about the Redwoods themselves. We also learned how to tell the age of a redwood branch (or spray) by the number of nodes on it.Very cool. There also seemed to be a few trails leading elsewhere, but we weren’t exactly in the extreme exploring mood.

The best part about this particular Jr. Ranger program is the badge! Carved out of redwood, each badge is individual and unique. We love them!

IMG_20140325_133115_1Muir Woods is definitely a beautiful place. I can’t wait until we can go back and spend a bit more time exploring!

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Categories
Airstream Accessories Solar & Power

With Power Comes Great Freedom – We Have a Generator!

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It is now easy to see how stressful it was to always make sure we stayed at campgrounds with electric hook-ups.

“Big Sur? Ummm… maybe we could make it one night?”

“That boondocking spot looks awesome, but I don’t think we’d last very long.”

Some of the best campgrounds we’ve seen or heard about are tucked away with no utility hookups. Or the best campsites within a campground are the non-hookup/tent sites.  As a self-contained trailer that should be no problem, but our power consumption is such that we drain our batteries easily after only 1 or 2 nights. Powering laptops (the big one), the furnace fan (also huge), and other miscellaneous devices and lights really takes a toll. We also don’t have an inverter in the Airstream, so none of the regular, three pronged outlets will work while we are on battery power (hairdryer & blender probably being my top two appliances). We do, however, have DC USB plugs for our phones and tablets, and one DC power cord that we share between our two laptops. So, we can get power to those, just not for very long until we are drained.

We contemplated the solar vs. generator question long and hard and decided that while solar might be a cleaner, more environment conscious way of getting power, it is also more of a financial commitment and more logistically complicated, and we weren’t ready for that. So, we bought a generator. After talking with multiple other full time families, we settled on the popular Honda EU2000i and we absolutely love it. Quiet, efficient, small (comparatively), starts easily and runs great.

The best thing about having this guy is that we no longer worry about what utilities the campground will have. Coupled with a few water jugs to schlep water from a spigot, we can now go 4 or 5 days easily before we run out of gray water tank space. We immediately put it to use and stayed in Samuel P. Taylor State Park near Point Reyes National Seashore back in March of 2014. As a reward for our portability, our site was beautiful, covered with shade from the tall redwood trees and it drizzled rain on and off with some serious cloud cover. We loved being in a beautiful place where solar power would not have met our needs.

Is solar out of the question? Not at all. Pulling the generator out of the truck and plugging it in is a bit of a chore, but so is constantly tilting solar panels to match the angle of the sun (not to mention climbing up on top to clean them!). We imagine a future with both. We’d love at least one solar panel on top of the Airstream to keep our batteries topped off. However, we don’t want to have to leave the Redwood Forest because our shady spot isn’t pulling in enough power. We will likely end up with both, to give us the best possible options as we travel.