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Archive for January, 2009

Jan 14 2009

Ideas to keep the warmth in winter

Published by ncmom under Uncategorized Edit This

It is so cold outside! I know it was only a few months ago I was wishing for cold weather and now that it’s here…well I’m ready to see it go. Our heat isn’t working so we are using those little electric heaters which are working as hard as they possibly can but it’s just not enough heat at times. At the end of the week the low is supposed to be around 16 degrees. I understand that it’s already below zero in a lot of areas but folks here in North Carolina anything under 50 degrees is cold! I’m trying to find ways to keep warm, keep the kids happy indoors, and keep my sanity all at the same time!

Here is a recipe from a mom on cafemom.com that is bound to keep the little one’s warm and add a little fun for the older ones by letting them help make it.

Homemade Hot Cocoa with Peppermint Whipped Cream

Hot Cocoa Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup baking cocoa
  • Dash salt
  • 1/3 cup hot water
  • 4 cups milk
  • 3/4 teaspoon vanilla extract

Peppermint Whipped Cream Ingredients:

  • 1C Heavy Whipping Cream
  • a dash (around 1/4 tsp) Pure Peppermint Extract
  • 2-3 TBSP Sugar

Directions:

In a saucepan, combine sugar, cocoa and salt. Add water; bring to a boil. Cook and stir for 2 minutes. Stir in milk; heat to serving temperature (do not boil). Remove from the heat; stir in vanilla. Whisk until frothy. If desired, garnish with marshmallows, cream or cinnamon sticks. Yield: 5 cups. For Swiss Mocha Cocoa: Add 2 to 2-1/2 teaspoons instant coffee with vanilla. For Canadian Cocoa: Add 1/2 teaspoon imitation maple flavoring with vanilla. For Slim-Trim Cocoa: Omit sugar. Combine cocoa, salt and water. Substitute fat-free milk. Proceed as above. Stir in vanilla with artificial sweetener equivalent to 1/2 cup sugar.

In a metal bowl add Heavy Whipping cream, sugar and extract. Make sure that Whipping cream is cool (it whips up faster when chilled)- Using your wrist and elbow (not shoulder), whisk ingredients until stiff - around 3 minutes. Voila!

Top Hot Cocoa with Whipped cream and serve!

Cheap ways to keep the house warm

We have very drafty doors and windows so we’ve learned to put towels down at doors and keep the curtains closed at certain parts of the day. My mom has always used plastic at the windows and if I didn’t have children and pets that love to look out the windows or sit in them I would certainly be covering them.

It’s hard to keep little ones under blankets or sitting still so just bundle them up in footed pj’s and let the run around. They will be ten times warmer running and playing then they will sitting down on the sofa under a blanket bored to death and who cares that it’s the middle of the day and they are in pj’s as long as they are warm!

Keep unused rooms closed off. Our kitchen is ajoining to our laundry room and side door so with the drafty doors it seems to be one of the coldest rooms in the house which is why we tend to keep that door closed at all times unless we are cooking then we let the heat from the oven come on out into the living room.

Quick and easy activities to keep the kids happy during those cold days and nights from www.thesavvysource.com

Coffee filter snowflakes

Use a basket-style coffee filter (round shaped) to make a snowflake. Fold the filter in half three times. Cut out shapes along the edges of the folds to reveal a beautiful snowflake when unfolded. Discuss with your child the uniqueness of each snowflake made!

Snowball Fight for the indoors

If it’s too cold to play outside on a wintry day, and you and the kids are feeling cooped up, try this fun activity. Roll up a bunch of white tube socks to create “snowballs.” Tell the kids it’s time for an “indoor snowball fight” and let them burn off all that pent up energy! Be sure to put away the lamps first…


Skiing Cotton Ball Snowman

Supplies

2 cotton balls, 1 wooden stir stick, a small piece of paper, thin ribbon, glue and puffy colored squeeze paint.

Activity Detail

Take two cotton balls and glue them together. Then take two wooden stir sticks, like the kind for coffee, and cut them about 1-2″ long each. Glue the wooden sticks to a piece of paper side by side. Then glue the two glued cotton balls, one on top of the other, to the sticks with the sticks sticking out just a little bit in front to make little skis. This is the base for your skiing snowman. Next use some puffy paint or colored glue to dot eyes, nose, three buttons down the chest and a smile line for a mouth. Last, use some ribbon to tie a scarf around the neck and a little piece of paper to the top of the head to make a hat. Make a bunch of these, and you have a cute and original holiday centerpiece

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Jan 08 2009

What do you do with your dryer lint?

Published by ncmom under Uncategorized Edit This

I was looking around on cafemom.com when I stumbled across a post that even while being disturbingly odd really fits me perfect. The post was about things you could do with dryer lint. That’s right dryer lint. I have to admit I’m one of those people that has lint piled all over my laundry room just because I don’t have a trash can in there and I don’t feel like taking it all the way three steps into the next room to throw it away (smile).

Ok so before you have the Clean House team come to clean my home it’s not really that bad but I do seem to store dryer lint in a storage bin for whatever reason. Of course now instead of having my fiance fuss about the lint that is just taking up room I can tell him to back off that I have plans for it!

Tip 1

Save the dryer lint. Keep a small box or bag near your dryer for storing the lint until it is reused. Tip 2

Reuse lint to start fires. Stuff an empty paper egg cartons with lint. Stuff it full and close the lid. Make a hole in each “egg” at the bottom of the carton. Pour melted candle wax in each hole. Let this dry until the wax is hard (2-3 hours). You can use these for kindling, as you would newspaper, but they work much better.

Tip 3

Reuse lint as mulch. If you wear natural fibers such cotton and linen, dryer lint makes a great mulch. Just make a donut of lint around your tiny plant. Don’t get it right against the plant, as mulch should not touch the stem of the plant. This promotes fungus and root rot. You can use lint alone or in combination with other materials reused for mulch.

Tip 4

Reuse lint as clay. You can actually make clay out of dryer lint. Put 1 1/2 C of dryer lint in a sauce pan. Add 1 C water. Add 1/2 C of flour and stir until smooth. Add 2 drops of vegetable oil or essential oils. Cook over low heat stirring constantly until it forms peak and has a solid consistency. Place on newspaper to cool. You may use it for molding as you would any clay then allow to dry for 3 days. You can even paint it!

Now seriously how cool is that? I don’t know how well these work but I will be trying it out to see.  

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Jan 06 2009

God bless pretend play!

Published by ncmom under Uncategorized Edit This

My girls in their dress up clothes or what they’ve put together from the items anyway.january-2009-004.JPG

The weather has been a little cold and rainy which makes days with the kids quiet unbearable at times. It doesn’t matter that they just got so many new toys for Christmas that they could actually get lost under them all in their room. No it’s not enough to stop them from crying, fighting, yelling, and running around like wild beasts. However Santa was somewhat smart this year. Santa brought right many gifts that could be used on rainy days.

What a wonderful guy that Santa is!

The girls got a play doh set, Diego game cube set which comes with several card games and even bingo, a few video games, and most important pretend play items.

I love pretend play. I was one of those children that would dress up and cook mud pies or grocery shop with my plastic cart and thankfully my kids are the same. I pulled out their dress up clothes, their stove, and their shopping carts and for once I had a few minutes to sit down and take a deep breath… just for a minute.

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