knee-deep in higher learning

Thursday, July 28, 2011

365 TV-Free Activities: Mazzazines

I forget which kid couldn't pronounce "magazine" correctly when he was learning to talk, but ever since, we have called them "mazzazines" in this house. Obviously, we modeled the correct pronunciation of the word, to help the little one along. But, when it is just us, the superior word-pronouncers of the house, talking amongst ourselves, we call them "mazzazines" and cannot stop.

Okay, I'll stop for this one post, but please know, up here (pointing to head), I'm still calling them "mazzazines".
My guide for this year-long project, the book of 365 TV-Free Activities, has more than one activity involving pictures cut out of magazines, mailers; anything with big bright photos, letters, numbers, and scenery. As a matter of fact, it makes a nice project just to go through magazines with the kids and cut stuff out. I set out containers to sort the pictures and symbols we excised. They ended up in the following categories: food, animals, household items, human faces, vehicles, and body parts, numbers.

One of the activities we were shooting for is called Food Face (#112). In it you arrange pictures of food, or any other themed item. Here's one I made, but I like Henry's better.

He went for color as a theme, rather than images.



It looks simple, but coming up with that much solid dark and white in magazines selling everything with sumptuous bright colors can be a challenge.

I'm kind of embarrassed about our take on idea #10, Animal Puppet Stage. This is such an excellent opportunity to tie in information about science, specifically ecosystems, and we just went and made it weird. I give you, Cheetah Mountain:


In this activity a child is given a large piece of posterboard weight paper. We cut up a pizza box. Then, the child is given a variety of colorful art supplies, so that they may color an elaborate little world; perhaps a jungle scene, or underwater. We used photos of scenes from magazines.

Next, the child is given the instructions to glue pictures to cardboard, and then cut them out, leaving a little tab of cardboard sticking off of the bottom. Make corresponding slits in the scenery board and slide the tabs through them, creating a bewitching little theater of animals, wiggling about in their proper environment! Doesn't that sound delightful and educational?

Here's what Henry said after I suggested this activity and read the description to him, "Put a polar bear on an iceberg? Sounds boring." So,

Does it count if the animals have a sense that they are in the wrong place, as evidenced by their shared question mark? Can it be considered educational if it's aware of its inaccuracy?

And,
Run! She's growing her permanent teeth and she means to use them!

Finally,
I'm sure the authors, Steve and Ruth Bennet, would prefer we watch really bad TV instead of mangle their wonderful ideas like this. Where can I stream some Speed Racer?

Monday, July 11, 2011

Berried Alive

None shall go unstained!
All shall be sticky!

For a long time I have wanted to check out a U-Pick establishment. We spend a small fortune on jam, and we have a thing for baking and pancakes. Getting a big haul of fruit seemed right up our alley, and a good way to save some money. Plus, kids with buckets, picking berries... I can't even finish that thought. The sheer summeriness of it makes me want to log off and go outside. It just had to happen. Let's leave it at that.

So, we checked out this site, and found a big cluster of farms in the Tigard area. We went on a Friday, which meant the place we ended up was pretty quiet. There were only a few other people there.

We have 50 lbs of berries. Now what?

Okay, besides that.
mm hmm

Right, right.

Say, now THAT looks pretty good.

What's going on here?
I'm drying them (without the aid of a food dehydrator, I might add). First, they were boiled for 60 sec. and plopped in ice water, to rupture their skins. Afterward, I arranged them on sheets of cheesecloth that had been clothespinned to my oven racks, turned the heat as low as I could get it, propped the oven door open, and let them go all day.

This is what they looked like when they were done. Sort of like raisins, moist but not juicy.

Steady yourself. What you're about to see next has been dipped in chocolate. There's even a dash of almond extract, for added fanciness, an often overlooked requirement of a well-balanced diet.
Thankfully, my local university extension office checks dehydrators out to the local public.
Geza checked it out while I worked on this post. It's been humming away for the last day and a half, and I'm in love.

It's much better, if you want to get serious about drying stuff out. The oven will work in a pinch, but you can't dry much food, it's a bigger waste of heat, air circulation is inferior; plus your oven is in use for a whole day, at least. That can be inconvenient.

Let's see, it feels like I'm forgetting something.

Oh yeah! This!
I spread the berries out on wax paper-lined trays and stuck them in the freezer for a day. After they're frozen, the berries go into freezer bags, where they'll stay until I put them in a batch of ice cream, or oatmeal, or something else that can tolerate soggy berries of a degraded texture.

Now, what else?
This is just going to bug me. Sorry. It's just that I'm pretty tiredberry in the brainberry, what with being in the throes of Berrymageddon. Think. Think. Thinkberry.

Berry!

I mean,

Oh yeah!
Just this.

Just two dozen jars of jam. That's all. Just my first foray into water-bath canning, and I probably saved myself a few hundred dollars this year.

Just that.
Hmmm, that last photo....pan out?


Ah, see? I have no recollection of this moment, but I have some idea of what's going on here. Either I fell asleep while taking pictures, and my head space* is bubbling with sweetened dreams, or my face is stuck to the counter.

*Canning joke. You'd have to be over 60 to get it.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Brainstorms: Saddle Bubble

George and his dad made a saddle surface today. That's what you call the soap bubble that folds two ways. They used a bent paper clip, some soapy water, and a little food coloring.

This activity reveals the smallest area within any closed shape, even one that is bent in two directions.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

The Muddy Kitchen: Save Your Screaming

Few things are forbidden at Backyard University. Screaming isn't actually forbidden, but it's strongly discouraged. We have a couple of students here, I'm not naming names, and they scream a lot. It's part of their current state of neurological development, so they get a pass. For now.

Anyone else caught screaming will get A Look. Perhaps a "HEY! Cut that out.". But never, in a million years, can you expect that screaming will get you a bowl of ice cream around here. We don't play like that, so don't even start the little chant. Don't I scream, you scream, etc., because that's only slightly less annoying than screaming, and it's not helping, so why say that? Why give little ones ideas? Why? Do you have extra time and energy? If so, go clean your room.


And now, a moment of reverent silence for the PleasureChug

I just named it that, although I have been thinking the word PleasureChug since we bought this little beauty two years ago. Before that, an ice cream maker was something I would get Someday. I had hazy memories of cranking, and salt, and things taking forever when I recalled homemade ice cream from my childhood. However, I had more vivid memories of the fabulous taste and texture of right-out-of-the-machine ice cream, which helped steel my resolve. I would make it Someday, when I was better at having machines, and buying rock salt, and making stuff without getting a big drippy mess everywhere, and when the kids aren't so young that waiting an hour for ice cream doesn't feel as epic, and ..well, I guess I'd do it Never. Or when nobody would really enjoy it anymore because, who are those people anyway; who aren't restless and messy? They aren't us and more and more, I kind of don't want to become them.

I just want ice cream, and I want it weird. I want it with coconut milk, sweetened with honey, and anything else you can throw in there. Chocolate, for real. Fruit, yes, and lots of it. Nuts, maybe, but toast them first. Candy, oh, yeah., but chop it up a little, because chewing big pieces of frozen candy can feel like attempting to eat gravel.


So, make your mix. There are lots of recipes out there in the world. To make our famousChillberry Chocolate (mad propz to Henry for the name), warm and whisk together four cans of coconut milk, baker's cocoa (to taste) and honey (to taste). Maybe a pinch of salt. Let it cool and add coarsely chopped chocolate chips and frozen or fresh blueberries until it looks right to you. This is You Scream. But don't.

Now we get to it. iLa Maquina!

This is the cheapest simplest model, bought at an end-of-summer sale from my local big box store. It cost $20. It's easy to put together, and it, plus a box of rock salt and two bags of ice can make the sloppy mix recipe above into the stuff of fantasies.

The best way to start is with a cold chamber, and a cold mix, so put the metal can in the freezer, and bring the temperature of your mix down before pouring it in and revving up the PleasureChug. Also, make sure you leave some room at the top. Liquids expand as they freeze, and if the ice cream leaks out of the top, it will also allow the salty water into the mixture.

Of the utmost importance is the delicate layering of ice and salt. There should be a 5:1 ice to salt ratio, which I attain by sprinkling salt heavily on every five (or so) handsful of ice I add. It's very interesting science, how this works. Salt lowers the freezing temperature of water, making the ice melt into ultra-cold slush, also known as a briny solution. The briny solution absorbs warmth from the ice cream mixture, making it freeze quickly, as it's churning.

From there, you just run the machine for about an hour, checking the ice level, and adding salt and ice to keep it topped off. It's true, it makes a mess. I put the machine in a large receptacle to catch the condensation and stray salt and ice that drops during refills. I also make sure I have a large clear surface with a big bowl or tray nearby, to set down the bag of ice while I add salt. Prepping my area makes the work easier, the product better, and just takes a minute. After about an hour it looks like this.

It's too thick to keep running the machine at this point, but it is still very soft, almost like a milkshake. So into the freezer with it, to let it cure into real, scoopable, ice cream.

As soon as we finished our last bite of last night's batch of Chilberry Chocolate, this one started crying.
Not just a little whiney cry either. I said, "Last bite. It's all gone." and Mae unleashed a torrent of grief that made all of us sorry we weren't circling her with ice cream trucks, at her beck and call with whatever frozen treat would pacify her.

There was some list-making, and some grocery shopping, and um, we're having ice cream for dinner.

I don't know what happened. I used to be in charge here. Now, I'm just grateful there was no screaming. I find myself squinting at the top of the ice cream maker, muttering to myself, "I just said no screaming. I didn't say anything about full-bodied wailing. I have only myself to blame."

Tonight we're having strawberries and vanilla.