Filtering by Category: Health

Babysitter Board

Sometime during the past year I posted about the "framed glass = whiteboard" concept. A little while after that I decided to work the same feature into our Babysitter Info sheet. Now I've seen this sort of thing popping up all over the web, and thought I'd share the convenience.

Any good mom knows you have to leave information for the babysitter, it's just the content of that important information that usually gets neglected. In case of an emergency, when calling 911 it's much more efficient to know the address and phone number you are calling from. It's also important to know the legal name of the child/children in care. The parents cell phone numbers are obvious, and special instructions for the night are usually written down as well. Here's a simplified way to bring it all together...

Buy any picture frame (large enough for this amount of info), and either print out or write up all the most important things your sitter may need to know on a white paper in the upper half of the frame. Leave the bottom half of the paper blank, and you now have a dry-erase area to leave your babysitter with special instructions, or directions to work the TV/DVD player, password for the computer, where you hid your 7 year olds PSP until after dinner etc..

Any dry-erase markers will work on glass, but go with a smaller/medium point so that it'll be easier to write with in a small space.

Here's to making a busy-mom's life just a bit easier...!

* Had to go back and retouch that photo a bit - it dawned on me that I stupidly had my address and telephone numbers on the www! Sorry about the smudginess...

Sippy Cup: Roundup

Now that Freida has learned how to open and close her Crocodile Creek water bottle (which, by the way, dents annoyingly easily!), I'm chucking/storing some of our old sippy cups. Thought I'd give a little roundup of the best (and worst) of the bunch...

1. Weil Baby Training Cup $9.99 - Featuring Dr. Weils award winning BPA/EA free with AirWave™ technology, the design makes this cup nice to carry, the cap makes it sanitary.

2. Playtex My First Sipster $5.99 - Hands down, the most efficiently leak-free cup on the market, be it rolling around the back seat of the car, or neglected upside down at the bottom of my diaper bag!

3. Thermos Foogo Sippy Cup $16.00 - Vacuum insulation makes this cup perfect for keeping milk cold, and keeping tea warm.

4. mOmma Sippy Cup $13.25 - This little digit is definitely the Maserati on the playground; it's wobbly nature means the spout remains upright even when chucked into the sandbox! Plus, all cups/caps/spouts are interchangeable making bottle to cup transition that much easier.

5. Boon Fluid Sippy Cup $5.99 -  This one is surely more about the cup than the "sippy"; the spout leaks easily. And while it looks like some futuristic ergonomic design...it is actually quite difficult to grasp.

6. Munchkin Mighty Grip Training Cup $4.00 - The most frustrating "leak proof" cup out there!! This cups spout is so soft, than when you bend it slighty, it's contents pours out! Took soaking through a bed sheet, and finding puddles on my floor before I finally caught Freida in the "bending" act.

Feel free to let me know if I missed any other great/awful sippy cups out there... Which cups work best for you and your brood?

For the Love of Winter

Though it feels as if winter is deeply upon us, today is actually the very first day of the season... While the miserable rain and sleet continue to fall (don't mean to offend you snow-out folk - but this is winter to us!), I thought I'd post some wonderful wintery reasons to love the freezing season!

- Cozy winter tea times like this one.

- Treks up the mountain for some flurry family fun with this Zipfy snow sled.

- Living chilly weeks on end in your favorite hoodie.

- Lots of rainy-day warm chocolate cookie batter licking!

- Cozy-up couch time with a new-for-winter cotton cable knit throw.

- Break out the adorably snuggly and charming baby bundles!

- Epic outdoor skating rinks - be it with palm trees or Prometheus.

- Hot doses of wintery bone-warming soups like this one.

- The arrival of good-looking snow boots!

Either way, wishing you a happy winter all around!

(Also, check out last year's winter round up...)

Buckwheat Pancakes + Boysenberry Yogurt

We have a "pancakes on rainy days" tradition in our house, and it's one of my favorites! We recently upgraded our recipe to buckwheat, and it's filled with wholesome fluffy deliciousness!

BUCKWHEAT PANCAKES:

- 1 Cup Whole Wheat Flour

- 1 Cup Buckwheat Flour

- 1/2 teaspoon Baking Soda

- 1 teaspoon Baking Powder

- 1 ½ tablespoons Brown Sugar (you can substitute honey, sucanat, or agave)

- 1 teaspoon Salt

- 2 Eggs

- 2 ½ Cups Milk

- 2 tablespoons Canola Oil

Using a bowl with a spout, start with the dry ingredients, whisk in the eggs, sugar, milk, and oil. Heat up a griddle or skillet with minimal oil and start flipping!

After being married for a few years, and making stacks and stacks of Sunday-morning-basketball pancakes for the guys, I figured out that the absolute key to fluffy pancakes is baking soda! You must, must use baking soda. The milk reacts to the soda, bubbles, and that's what yields all the perfect pancake fluffiness.

In order to make it a complete meal for Freida (and ourselves!) I often serve pancakes with yogurt in addition to the obvious maple syrup. I always buy low-fat plain yogurt and sweeten/flavor it on demand. You wouldn't believe the amount of extra sugar and additives that can be found in flavored yogurt... In one company's swiss strawberry singles you can even spot red food coloring in the ingredients!!

These buckwheat flapjacks are really delicious paired with boysenberry yogurt. I drizzled in some maple syrup, and added a teaspoon of natural boysenberry fruit preserves to about 1 cup of yogurt.

Kids love dipping options, and we should be able to feel good about what they are dunking!

P.S. Wouldn't this "pancake pen" be fun??

Cleaning Help: A Call for Courage!

I'm such a sucker when it comes to people working for me. I'm no good at getting favors, and I really am a guilt-laden Jewish mother. Generally speaking, I enjoy cleaning my home myself... I love the feeling of scrubbing and scouring the tile and then standing back to see the sparkly finish. That said, I am not particularly fond of scrubbing out the toilet, heaving the fridge and oven out of place to clean behind them, or tediously dusting and wiping down each and every wooden blind in these rooms. I've made an attempt at getting cleaning help many times, especially after I had a baby and had less time on my hands for cleaning and only time for upkeep, but I never managed to stick to it (apparently there are many reasons women shy away from getting cleaning help, I remember getting a good laugh out of a friend's blog post, "The Malady of a Maid"). I'd have a girl come in and work for a few hours, then I'd walk into the bathroom and feel like it was so far from clean. My control-freak nature kicked in, and I just wanted to nix the whole thing and do it myself. I wanted to use my natural products (as I wrote in this postMrs. Meyer's Clean Day line rocks!!), and I wanted to clean without spreading bacteria from room to room, surface to surface. I'd watch them clean, and cringe at how they used the same dirty rag from the kitchen to the bathroom to the living room etc... It wasn't fun, and it never lasted.

Every year when I buy a new planner and get ready to transfer information, dinner menus, shopping lists etc. to the new year's notebook, I take a pen to an index card and jot a few things I'd like to accomplish/have/institute by this time next year. I stick it into the last week in December, and hope that I can keep to some of those resolutions. Throughout the year, I take a glance at the card and wonder about how/if I'm managing to keep up with myself and my expectations. On this years card, along with a few other things was "cleaning help - once a week". I decided to jump on it and give it another round. I hired a girl who works for my mother-in-law (and other people here in the community), knows milk/meat, good with kids (just in case!), and kind. She's cleaning as I write this... and she's fabulous! She came right in and got to work, was happy to use my (a lot less harsh= a bit more elbow grease) natural products, and she's using separate mop heads and rags for the bathroom and kitchen - without me even asking!

Now comes the hard part: how do I get rid of my guilt? I can't stop feeling like I should be cleaning with her! I just feel bad that she's so hard at work while I sit here "working" peacefully on my laptop sipping a latté and watching Freida play in her room! I can't relax! I know in a moment I will jump up and start cleaning out my closet, or put in a load of laundry... I will, no doubt, start organizing my "Costco pantry" and wiping down the shelfs. I can't just sit here!

I have already offered her three drinks, set a plate out for her to eat breakfast (since we were), and told her she can feel free to take anything from the fridge... For me, there seems to be such a fine-line between getting too friendly with them, and not being nice enough to them. I don't want my daughter to feel like we have a "maid", and I don't want my "maid" to feel like I forgot she's a person. I've heard too many stories, and seen too many women cry to one employer about how horribly they have been treated by another employer (I'm talking frum families here, ladies!) I know I'm being overtly sensitive... just can't seem to get passed it.

I need desperate help from you other homemakers out there - how do you relax while the cleaning help is going full force?? Do you, in fact, take it easy and sit complacently playing with your children? Or do you find it easier to leave the house and spare yourself the awkwardness?  Is it truly awkward to begin with, or am I simply a delusional cleaning-help rookie?

P.S. Is this the hottest toilet brush or what?? Normann Copenhagen just released the latest in high-design toilet scrubbing: the Ballo Toilet Brush. Contrary to other toilet brushes on the market, this Danish design is begging to be on display! Named after the Italian word for "dance", this sleek cleaning tool wobbles on its curved base and comes in four playful (yet muted and blend-able) color options. This is one toilet brush you will not yearn to flush down the drain...!

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