Weekend Cooking; A little of this, A little of that…

(chickpea mixture)

It’s been a crazy week here what with the book fair which meant two late conference nights at school.  I’ve survived though and did have the gift of Friday off to recover.  For two weeks I’ve worked on one recipe though which is pretty much too long of a turn around time for me.  When I ordered magazines this year for school I ordered two family friendly magazines; Family Fun and Kiwi.  Family Fun is more geared toward crafting and is quite popular with students.  Myself, I LOVE Kiwi magazine though but probably won’t order it again for the library. It is really more of a serious organic parenting magazine; great for me, not so great for students as they don’t need to read articles about best methods for breast feeding!  I had to cut that article out censoring myself.

(moist but no tails)

While browsing through the February/March Kiwi, before I defaced it, I found this article, a better burger by Caroline Shannon-Karasik with detailed directions on sprouting chickpeas to make a delicious veggie burger.  We’ve sprouted other seeds and nuts so I thought chickpeas would be no big deal.  That was two weeks ago.  I started them the night of Groovy Girl’s sleepover when we made the snow ice cream and watched the Oscars.  I laid them out and kept them moist and those little garbanzos still took their sweet time.  At the beginning of this week we noticed tails sprouting out.  Hallelujah!

Here’s the recipe:

Sprouted Chickpea vegetable burgers
adapted from Kiwi Feb/March issue

1 cup sprouted chickpeas
6-10 fresh basil leaves
1 large farm fresh egg
1 medium carrot, peeled and diced finely
1 stalk celery, diced finely
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 T flat leaf parsely, chopped
1/4 whole wheat breadcrumbs
1/2 tsp sea salt
Dash of ground black pepper
1 T olive oil
4 whole grain fresh buns
mayo, ketchup, lettuce, or any other burger toppings.
We had lettuce, tomato, and TJ’s wasabi mayo.

Many of their recipes give hands-on directions for parents and children to do together.  Great idea but I’m going to simplify that for space and time. Just know this is a great recipe to have little hands to help.

Fill a steamer pot with an inch of water and steam sprouted peas for 10 minutes or until tender.  While the chickpeas steam carefully pull basil leaves off the stems and roughly chop the leaves.  Place cooled chickpeas into food processor with egg.  (after processing chickpea mixture I added another medium sized egg-it just seemed like it needed it for moisture).  Use a spatula to scrape the mixture into a medium bowl.  Add the basil, onion, garlic, carrot, celery, and parsley to the chickpea mixture.  Then add breadcrumbs, salt, and pepper.  Stir all ingredients until well-combined.

Take a palm-sized handful in your clean hands and work it into a flat, circular patty.  Place it on a plate and repeat to make 3 more burgers.  Pour olive oil (I used coconut oil) into skillet and place over medium heat.  Add the patties, cooking about 5-6 minutes on each side.  Carefully remove the patties and place on whole grain bun.

Sounds easy, right?  Hmm maybe, except my burgers didn’t not stay together very well in my skillet.  It helped once they started cooking.  While I know there are added health benefits from eating sprouted beans that step made the recipe too difficult. Next time I would cook the chickpeas making them softer to work with and more paste-like.  And I would add sprouts to the table array of toppings.

What did my family think, you ask? Everyone liked them except Groovy Girl.  She thought they tasted sour.  She still wanted to eat the bun (carb girl) though but dad wouldn’t let her; he ate her burger bun and all.  She ended up making herself a grilled cheese with sprouts on it in the toaster oven.  So she still ate something sprouted…win, win!  We don’t usually let them eat something else but this seemed like a reasonable trade-off and she was willing to make it herself.

(Our chili)

I also made a meat-less version of Katie Workman’s chili recipe; I did everything she did but I added soaked kidney beans and a large can of rinsed black beans to the pot.  We had it for dinner on Sunday night with homemade Angel Biscuits and again we had it on Wednesday with homemade cornbread-I just used the recipe on the side of the corn meal container as I was rushed for time.

I am headed down to my fancy basement yoga studio to get my Namaste on but then after that I am making these Smitten Kitchen brownies.  I also made these brownies with this frosting last Sunday to serve at our teacher look-see for the book fair.  I left a few at home for my treat-deprived kids and Teenage Boy had this to say after eating one; “While I was eating that brownie mom; I realized you found it, you really found it, the perfect brownie recipe!”  Why thank you, son!  What a great week.  How about you?

This post is linked to Beth Fish Reads weekend cooking meme.  Click her link to find many other food-related posts with wonderful recipes.

Book Fair Shopping

My book fair is all set up.  I stayed late to do it on Friday after school so it will be all set for Monday.   In between classes and during conferences I’ve done some serious browsing and there are so many books that I want; some for school and some for myself.  Here’s a partial list:

1. The Summer of Moonlight Secrets by Danette Haworth. 

Welcome to The Merriwether, Florida’s once-grand-hotel built on Hope Springs, where nothing is quite as it seems.  Hidden staircases give way to shadowy servants’ quarters, and old-fashioned speakeasies make for the perfect hide and seek spot.  Allie Jo Jackson knows every nook and cranny of The Meriwether-she’s lived there her whole life-and nothing surprises her, until the first time she spots the beautiful Tara emerging from the water of the springs.  Tara’s shimmery skin, long flowing, and fondness for moonlight swims hint-and once Allie Jo and her friend Chase discover Tara’s secret, nothing will ever be the same.
2. The Healing Spell by Kimberly Griffiths Little.

Eleven-year-old Livie is keeping a secret, and it’s crushing her.  She knows she is responsible for her mother’s coma, but she can’t tell anyone.  And it’s up to her to find a way to wake her mamma before anyone uncovers the truth of what really happened. 

3. Radiance by Alyson Noel. 

Riley has crossed the bridge into the afterlife-a place called Here, where time is always Now.  She has picked up life where she left off when she was alive, living with her parents and dog in a nice neighborhood.  When she is summoned before The Council, she learns that the afterlife isn’t just an eternity of leisure.  She’s been assigned a job, Soul Catcher, and a teacher, Bodhi, a possibly cute, seemingly nerdy boy who’s definetely hiding something.  They return to earth together for Riley’s first assignment, a Radiant Boy who’s been haunting a castle in England for centuries.  Many soul catchers have tried to get him to cross the bridge and failed.  But all of that was before he met Riley…(I enjoyed reading Everafter and this seems different yet similar)

4. Saving Zasha by Randi Barrow.  (and for my historical fiction craving)

World War II has just ended when 13-year-old Mikhail finds a dying man and his German shepherd, Zasha, in the woods.  It’s dangerous-some say traitorous-to own a German dog after Germany attacked Russia, so Mikhail must keep Zasha a secret to keep her alive. 

5. 100 Cupboards by N.D. Wilson.
Lying in bed at night, twelve-year-old Henry York can’t ignore the thumping and scratching he hears on the other side of the wall.  He scrapes off the plaster and discovers doors-ninety-nine cupboards of all different sizes and shapes.  Through one he hears the sound of falling rain.  Through another he sees a glowing room-with a man strolling back and forth!  Henry and his cousin Henrietta soon understand that these are not just cupboards.  they are, in fact, portals to other worlds.    I noticed on the author’s website their are already books 2, Dandelion Fire, and 3, Chestnut King, ready in this series, which means no waiting around for more.

All synopsis notes are from the back blurb on the book. 

That is just from the fiction section. 

A whole ‘nother post is waiting for the fabulous picture books from the book fair!!

and a Rant for the day:

The word of the day is BOOK-whenyou bring your child to the BOOK fair-buy them a book, then if they still want the pencil with the Pokeman eraser, go for it.  But the BOOK is the most important item.  After all it is a BOOK Fair, not a crazy writing utensil fair.  There I’ve said my piece.

How can I go to bed when my to-do list isn't finished?

1. Call Barb
2. Call brother (text)
3. relook at library budget line items
4. Practicum student arrives today
5.Check out new magazines
6. blog
7.read

 This is a question I ask myself nearly everyday.  I hardly ever get my entire list done and then everything I didn’t get done today gets automatically added to the beginning (or sometimes end) of tomorrow’s list.  I feel this constant surge of never quite measuring up.  I have to have just one or two things on my list that are TOP PRIORITY-those I get done (on a good day) and the rest-ho hum.  But then what happens when late in the day  you realize that one of your low priority items really should have been a TOP.

Like today when it dawned on me that my Scholastic Book Fair begins next week and I have yet to get up any of the posters or ready the flyers for students to carry home.  Am I crazy?  How do I let these things slip through the cracks?  I knew the book fair was during conferences and I knew conferences were coming up but next week?? How is February ending so soon?  I did find a cool list making tool online while freaking about my own to-do list.  Check it out here:  http://tadalist.com/?ref=public

Want to view my to-do list for today (notice book fair publicity isn’t even on the list!!”:

http://peacefulreader.tadalist.com/lists/1862425/public

I did get two baskets of laundry folded (not on the list), I did call Barb for her birthday and talked until my phone died (should have had “charge phone” on the list), and I did spend quality time with Groovy Girl while she did 3 homework projects.  Also I  poked my nose into one of my new magazines (Eating Well) while she was doing her homework.  I found about 10 recipes I wanted to make and several articles worthy of blog posts but I now go to bed without calling Julie and no yoga.  I did text my brother but that doesn’t really count.  All I can hope for is a better finish tomorrow.  My plan is to focus and spend 5 minutes in the morning right when I get to school (or maybe at home as I eat my breakfast) and prioritize my list with my date book next to me.  I’ll add that item to my list!
 
Are you a list maker?

Operation Yes

(2009)

     I picked this gem up from our fall Scholastic Book Fair and let it sit on a pile forever at home.  Spring Break rolled around and I thought to myself…perhaps I should read it before the next book fair is here.  Well, our book fair is here and I’ve finished the book.  I don’t know why it takes me so long sometimes because this book was so much fun and easy to read.  It takes place at a military base school.  This isn’t a topic I’ve given a lot of thought to but it makes you stop and ponder the stress level military kids must go through on a daily basis.  Parents missing for long stretches, moving frequently and constant activitity on the base and this book deals with all these issues in a very normal manner.  Planes fly overhead as kids plan activities around their parents hectic schedules-all part of daily life.

     Add in one incredible teacher though and life goes topsy-turvy. Ms. Loupe is an alumni of this particular base and has come back to teach instead of taking her place in the military as the rest of her entire family has done.  She’s found her passion though as these kids love her and her magical lessons.  I started reading some of it to my sweet husband and his ears perked up “hey, she’s teaching them the important points of improvisation!”  He was pretty excited.  Then later he gave it as a suggestion for teachers to use in teaching drama.  Ms. Loupe is all about the drama and she gets this otherwise bored kids to be exciting about school and learning again.  Suddenly kids don’t want to be transferred out! 

     When Ms. Loupe’s brother disappears in combat the students learn to work together, forming a createve and unique protest, with very positive results! 

Now that I have my book fair set up I’ve already found a few more gems like this one to add to my piles!

4/5 peaceful stars
Recommended for elementary fiction
and all drama teachers