Thursday, July 28, 2011

Free Downloadable Paper Dolls!

Thanks to http://www.moneysavingmom.com/ I found some awesome free paper dolls to download and print.  They're the old fashioned ones printed in 1976.  I can't wait to get some card stock and print them for my 4 yr. old.  She's going to love them!
Here's a link to the dowload http://tpettit.best.vwh.net/dolls/pd_scans/ginghams/index.html
Happy playing!

Sweet Potato Butter

I had a few too many sweet potatoes from the farmer's market to eat before going bad, so I decided I'd try something new and make some sweet potato butter.  I've had it before and it's really yummy and similar to apple butter.  I figured it would be one less thing to buy later and could potentially make some nice inexpensive homemade Christmas gifts. 
I found my recipe at http://allrecipes.com/recipe/sweet-potato-butter/detail.aspx.  I ended up with over 8 cups of cubed sweet potato and apple with the 5 sweet potatoes and 3 apples I used.  I followed Jeannie's review and cooked it all in my slowcooker for 6 hrs.  It made the house smell wonderful!  Like fall!  This made six 8 oz. jelly jars of butter.  You can refridgerate or even freeze these, but I decided to can them since they were already hot from the sweet potato butter anyway.  I washed my jars and then placed them in some simmering water in a big pot on the stove while I blended up the cooked sweet potato mixture.  I removed the jars and filled them with 1/4 in. headspace.  To keep the jars from the bottom of the pot like a canning rack would, I used a metal steamer that sat on the bottom of the pot.  You couldn't keep the jars perfectly upright, but they mostly stayed that way.   I had just a little bit of water covering the jars, not the 1 in. that I read you should have.  I placed the lid on the pot and let them boil for a good 5 min.  I removed them from the pot carefully with salad tongs and all of them sealed!  It took a few min. but I heard them all pop.  It's best not to touch the lids too much until you are sure they have sealed. 
Can't wait to try it!

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Learning to coupon and save money while eating healthy

Hunter had to go to a bus inservice today in Jackson (about an hour from us) so I decided to make the most of it and plan a day trip of grocery shopping since they have a big farmers market, Kroger, and Target (things that are not found in Union City).  I'm just starting the whole couponing adventure and trying to save more money and have found the website http://www.couponmom.com/ very useful.  You can look up your state and various large grocery and drugstore retailers and see all the sales for the week along with coupons and where to get them so that you save the most money.  It even shows you the percentage you save.  And for people like me who are beginners at this the website has a couponing tutorial!  How helpful!  So glad I found this site.
I ended up spending a couple hours last night planning my trip today including a grocery list  for each store printed from http://www.couponmom.com/ and printing and organizing coupons that I would need at each location.  Oh, and http://www.kroger.com/ lets you add coupons directly to your Kroger Plus card and print a list of them so you don't foget which ones you have.
I was pretty proud to say that I saved almost $70 at Kroger and was able to get lots of good Stonyfield organic yogurt for the girls and us along with chicken and ribs on sale, as well as healthy hormone and antibiotic free beef.  I bought more meat today than I have in a long time, but still got out of there spending around $150.  Maybe I will make a monthly trip to Kroger from now on. 
Target had lots of great Kashi products on sale as well as snack foods like organic tortilla chips. 
The girls and I enjoyed the West Tennessee Farmers Market where we got lots of yummy fresh fruits and veggies for less than at the grocery store and tried figs for the first time!  We also met some nice people and found out that there's a farmer who brings goat milk on Wed.  I left my name and number and am anxious to hear back to see if I could get in on a goat milk share. 
Successful day!

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Today it begins...road to self-sufficiency


Self-sufficiency and sustainability are not new ideas to me.  As a high schooler I loved to roam my great grandparent's farm in rural VA and pick berries, cherries, persimmons for making homemade treats.  I would also pick poke berries and use them to paint with.  I thought their natural fuchsia color was beautiful.  I loved reading about pioneer days and Native American culture and their use of medicinal plants.  I wanted to be a wildcrafter like in the book "Where the Lilys Bloom". 
In college I worked on an organic CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) farm in Floyd, VA living off the land all summer and loving it.  We planted, weeded, harvested, and preserved or cooked the food that we ate.  It was amazing being so closely connected with the food I ate.  I also took a couple Sustainable Agriculture classes along with several other plant courses in my Biology major. 
After college I lived with a family from my church in a little old farm house on their land.  I grew a beautiful garden of heirloom beans, mesclun lettuce, herbs, tomatoes, and squash.  I even sold some of the beans and herbs to a local bed and breakfast.  That same summer I also worked alongside a full-time gardener at another bed and breakfast that grew much of the food that they cooked in their restaurant. 
Then I got married, finished my teaching degree, got a job, moved to a new state, fixed up a house, had babies, and the whole idea of self-sufficiency was put on the back burner.
Until today.  We're in the middle of trying to sell our house so that we can move somewhere out in the country with a few acres of land.  Our house is small and if we have any more children we will have outgrown it completely.  But it's completely remodeled and has a pretty good sized fenced in yard.  So, although we are in town I'm going to make the most of my time here in moving in the direction of my dream.  I'm tired of waiting.  I'm tired of buying food laden with pesticides.  And it looks like it might be some time before our house sells.  So, I'm studying up on permaculture gardening, reading John Jeavons "How To Grow More Vegetables", and researching movable chicken coops for layers.  Today I realized that my garden has been sorely neglected and decided that something had to be done.  I was also frustrated about other things.  So I grabbed my hoe and took it out on the rock hard dirt and weeds that had become my garden spot.  I hacked at the ground, sweat pourng down my face, talking to myself....if someone saw me they probably would have thought I was crazy.  And maybe I am.  But, I have a desire inside me to live simply, grow as much of my own food as possible, and teach my children the value of hard work, consistency, and knowing where your food comes from.  As I work with my hands I want the God who created me and the Earth I live on to mold me into a more useful vessel.
(The pictures are of my garden the spring of 2010, I tried to do the same thing this year but didn't even have that good of results.  My carrots this year did end up being a pretty good size even though I didn't find them until I was destroying the remains of the garden in order to start over.)