Showing posts with label BloTaAcMo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BloTaAcMo. Show all posts

Monday, November 14, 2011

Crock Pot Applesauce Printable Children's Recipe Cards

Quite a while back, I saw Cookin Cards: Individualized Cooking Recipes for Classroom Snacks in a Montessori Services catalog and wished I had a set to help guide my children's Practical Life food preparation skills.  However, at nearly $30, I just could not justify the cost-benefit ratio of the cards.  For while the cards look wonderfully designed, with both notes for educators about suggested pre-cooking activities and step-by-step drawings of how to make each recipe, they also looked like something I could almost make myself.

"Could" and "will" are often two very different things though.  Somehow,  making cooking cards for my kids got back-burnered.

Then, recently, I saw Heidi's awesome homemade Banana Blender Cookie cards at Work and Play.  These brought the idea of step-by-step pictorial cooking cards for the kids back to the fore of my mind.  Thus, I began creating some with a simple GFCF, sugar-free recipe that my children and I enjoy making every autumn (and sometimes at other times in the year):  


Crock Pot Applesauce  

I think I have turned my Publisher file for these recipe cards into a PDF correctly and uploaded it to a site for your ease of download.  So, please feel free to give it a try by clicking here.  (Off course, if it doesn't work, let me know.  I am new to this way of sharing files.)

To use the cards with your children, simply print them, cut them and laminate them if you wish.  Then, put them in a flip photo album, on a ring or in a recipe file box, and follow the steps, one card at a time.

I hope you and your children enjoy this simple recipe as much as we do.

Next on my Montessori Recipe Cards printable list will be one our favorite protein-packed GFCF pancake breakfast recipes.  I aim to have it up within a couple weeks.  So, stop by to check for it, and, if you have any tips or requests for improving the format of the cards before I post the next ones, please share your thoughts in a comment.

Happy "I Can Do It" kiddo cooking!

I am linking this post to my BloTaAcMo initiative, as I knocked three more things off my task list in preparing this post:  figuring out how to convert a Publisher document to a PDF, opening an account for sharing files online and linking blog posts to items to share.  Hopefully, I did all this correctly....  If you've managed to publish a post that you've been meaning to for quite some time, or if you have blog tasks and tips to share this month, please feel free to link them up to the linky at my initial BloTaAcMo.



This post is being shared at Montessori Monday hosted by One Hook Wonder and Living Montessori Now, where you'll find many wonderful ideas for exploring Montessori with your own children.  It is also being shared at:



Friday, November 11, 2011

A Homeschool Mother's Journal: October into November

A Break on the Trail
Happy Veteran's Day!   If you'd like some sensory-friendly ideas for celebrating the day with youngsters, please check out Observe Veterans Day with 10 Sensory Ideas, which I wrote over at OJTA.  Then, click back over here, enjoy a pause and tell me: Have you ever meant to record observations of your children’s learning and development, hoped to remember the little things in life or wanted to capture the “now” to reflect upon later, but neglected to do so?  Well, let me assure you that you are not alone!

My last Homeschool Mother’s Journal entry was posted over a month ago and my draft box is littered with incomplete entries I have written since.  Why have none been finished?  Well, among other reasons, I’ve been hoping to get photos in order to go along with them.

You see, last month we had a significant camera mishap (which I plan to blog about once I – hopefully – retrieve the photos from the memory card in the camera that took a bath).  We also had teething, sickness and some computer woes to contend with.  So organizing and uploading photos took a proverbial “back seat”.  Call me silly, but I like visual images to go along with what I am able to capture in writing.  Thus, my lack of journal entries.

Today, I still don’t have all my photos sorted, but I was able to get a bunch together to post at last.  More importantly, I want to capture “now” and “recently” before it becomes too clouded by time slipped by to do so.  So, without further ado:

In my life for the past month or so… 


was a renewed sense of acceptance and an “I-Can” attitude
Anything Can Be Scaled One Step at a Time


I had been feeling increasingly “behind”, discouraged, overtired and incompetent.  Yep, Nasty Negativity was weaseling its way back into my daily demeanor.  Then, God sent me the gift of my 19 year old self.  I’ve been listening to her ideas, especially about praying and, when I remember to, about smiling, and things are turning around.  Peaceful Positiveness is making a return.


Taking a few minutes to put together Mommy’s Retreat Basket has brought hours of feeling strengthened and guided.  Tackling some small to-do’s has gotten the ball rolling on conquering bigger clutter in our home.  Spending time just being with my kids – especially outside – has renewed my spirits.  Getting almost adequate sleep again has been a big boon, too.  


I am accepting the limitations of my calling and also trusting that God will help me meet it well.  I cannot pursue all I want to, but I can endeavor to do what I need to well – throwing in a good portion of “want to” as life allows.  I recognize that getting my home in order, my kids trained up, my marriage growing and myself improving is enough and everything else is just extra.  Also, doing these things is not a sprint.  It is a marathon journey.  As long as I am taking steps and allowing grace to do its work, a good finish awaits over time.


In our homeschool over the past month or so…


Sketching a Natural Scene
I accepted that the Mommy-side of our learning space/office has become too much of a disaster for me to be comfortable having the kids in there to enjoy Workboxing and Montessori shelves, but also recognized I was becoming equally uncomfortable with the Unschooling approach that I fell into again as a result of clutter, appointments, lack of sleep, teething, colds, etc.  So, I opted to concentrate mainly on our Core Four


Even though I am well aware that preschoolers, and even Kindergarteners, really need nor formal studies to learn and develop, I feel more comfortable getting us in a "study" habit so it doesn't come as too much of a shock when Luke hits first grade age.  So, while we are on our Workbox and Montessori shelf break, I have been phasing in almost daily 15-30 minute “formal” sessions for Reading or Math, integrating writing and pre-writing into daily free time activities and continuing to peg faith formation to many parts of our day (albeit more casually than I used to do.)  Everything else just happens naturally.  Children really do learn almost anything they need to just by living each day richly.


Helpful Homeschooling Tips to Share:


Earning His Way to the Door

If you have an early reader and have not found Don Potter’s site yet, click on over.  I use many of the free materials there as the basis for, or a supplement to, much of the work I do as a tutor with early readers.  I also use Word Mastery as a classic phonics reader for my own children and a resource for words I want to practice with games such as our The CVC Chalk Word Jump Game: A Classic Outdoor Approach to Early Phonics with Sensory Diet Heavy Work Thrown InRead and Run: A Movement-Based Activity for Early Reading and Sensory Diet all in One and Earn Your Way (post forthcoming.)



I am inspired by…



Joyce Meyer’s Starting Your Day Right: Devotions for Each Morning of the Year, a book that cyberspace friend, Tiffani from Our Journey THRU Autism, kindly passed along to me around this time last year.


I had begun the devotional with enthusiasm soon after receiving it.  Then, it got misplaced.  I was thrilled to rediscover it just after making my Mommy Retreat Basket and have since been hearing God with greater clarity I think as I enjoy Joyce’s brief, but powerful messages.


Places we’ve been going and people we’ve been seeing…


run the gambit from doctor visits and therapies,


where Nina was delighted to have Luke work to earn her and Jack time in the ball pit, which she had been coveting


to family days apple picking

going to the beach


to hiking


to asking questions at a local Open Farm day


to playing impromptu games of stick hockey at local conservation lands

 to enjoying the pumpkin patch with Grammy, Grampy and cousins


to learning and playing at homeschool co-ops with friends

 to decorating pumpkins at Grammy and Grampy's

to celebrating All Saints Day with st. Jerome, his lion and St. Gianna 

 (or sleeping through most of the festivities in Jack's case)

 and hosting a Halloween party


to all the rest of life savored instead of sped through.


My favorite thing this past month or so was…


the great outdoors!


We are infinitely blessed with the world God has created for us and my family has been lucky to explore small corners of it over the past weeks.


I cannot emphasize enough how important I think time outdoors is for all people – young or old.  We may not all be living in Eden, but our own yards, local parks, nearby shorelines and tiny trails in the woods can certainly bring a renewing paradise to us for moments here and there.


What’s working for me…


is pausing!  Pausing to pray.  Pausing to regroup so I act, not react, with my children.  Pausing to take a moment of “me” time.  Pausing the hubaloo of schedules to play hooky from life for an afternoon with the kids.  Pausing to embrace life as it is right now.


Thought I Have:


Enjoying the Sticky Moments
On those days when I am about to pull my hair out over the kids, the house, homeschooling and all, some Spirit-sent person comments to me about how precious my children are and how I should savor this period of life as it will be gone before I know it.   Those folks are right!


As Jack goes from baby to toddler, Nina nears kindergarten-age and Luke starts to read more and more, I cannot help but to see how quickly time is already going.


I want to savor it.


I want to simplify.


I want to slow down.


I want to live more intentionally.


Every day, I am given the gift of 24 more hours to do just that.  Some days, I don’t see the present amongst the clutter, but other days I recognize how truly precious it is and – ahh – relish it.  Here’s hoping such days increase for me – and for you, too!


Things I’ve been working on include…


Math Computations with Rocks
offsetting the groaning “uck”s of life with renewing smiled breaths of “ahhh”.  Refocusing on prayer, positive communication with my husband, time spent outdoors, appreciating my children and counting blessings, instead tests and trials, sure does make an incredible difference in life.  I am not sure why I keep having to re-learn that lesson, but I sure am glad God is a patient teacher!


Also, obviously, I am working on carving out some “me” time, which is largely taken p these days by checking things off my blog task list with BloTaAcMoI’d love some company as I do, so please feel free to link up at the bottom of my initital BloTaAcMo post with your own blog accomplishments this month – whether they be posts you’ve been meaning to write or things you’ve learned about blogging.


Other things I have been delighting in daily are:
  • carving out devotional time for myself (and my children!) with my Mommy Retreat Basket.
  • ensuring my family keeps our commitment to making our Sabbath day a family day with such things as snowy hikes where we got lost and sunny hikes where we scaled rocky trails.
  • decluttering and organizing in small pockets of time with greater daily frequency.
  • ensuring that “schooling” happens everyday, even if it simply happens out in nature – counting, adding and subtracting with rocks at the beach – or on the front walkway, where Luke earns his way back into the house.  (Post to come on that!)


I’ve been reading…


lots as usual, in bits and pieces.  


\
Among the stacks of books piled on so many surfaces of my home, I just finished re-reading parts of Home Learning Year by Year: How to Design a Homeschool Curriculum from Preschool Through High School, a succinct and helpful source for getting and staying on track with what children should be learning from pre-k through high school.




And, on my computer, I’ve been loving the e-book Montessori at Home. I sort of wish I had read it at the start of my homeschooling journey as it is such a practical, encouraging, straightforward and complete resource and, perhaps, with it as a guide I would not have gotten as lost and discouraged as I did at times.  I am certainly looking toward the e-book now to help me better mesh my desire for following Montessori principles with the realities of following my children with where we are at in our homeschool journey.


I’m cooking…


more and more from scratch with increasing amounts of whole foods and GFCF food.  


Making GFCF Muffins
Mike and I have long felt that the typical American diet is not ideal and have wanted to retrain our own palettes, and to develop our children’s, into ones that crave and appreciate whole, healthy, healing foods.  I have made forays into this before, such as when I served no cereal for breakfast for a month.  However, it always seems that the busyness of life interrupts our efforts and convenience supersedes conviction.  We slowly start buying more processed foods, allowing more treats and falling back into habits that we are trying to break.


Now, I am budgeting time and money to avoid that backslide again.  We are spending a bit more on whole, healthy foods each month at the store and I am also allowing more time each day to be in the kitchen.   In order to sustain this effort, though, I know I am going to have to figure out how to feed my family healthy, homemade, relatively whole meals without cooking three or more times a day.  Tips are welcome!


Also, as we increase our commitment to eating better, we are getting closer to becoming a truly GFCF family.  I believe some of my eldest son’s issues might improve with a GFCF diet and that the rest of us have little physical quirks that could also be quelled by such a diet.  So, I have been slowly weaning us from casein and gluten.  We’re pretty much there with casein and gluten, I hope, will be “all gone” soon after the holidays.


Devouring Everyday Gluten-Free Pancakes
A big help in our GFCF eating has been Everyday Gluten-Free, an awesome cookbook that I reviewed recently and one that has earned a permanent place on my kitchen shelf!  We’re also in the midst of reviewing Special Diets for Special Kids, Volumes 1 and 2 Combined: Research and Recipes, published by Future Horizons.  As such, we’ve begun testing out recipes from that book and should have that review up within a few weeks.  In the meantime, if you’re interested in this cookbook or any Future Horizon products, you can use the code “HAPPY” when ordering it at Future Horizons to get 15% off your entire order.


I’m grateful for…


Along Our Nature Hike the Other Day
this moment.  This day.  The day before it.  All the days before that and each day yet to come.  


Too often, I fall prey to negative though-habits.  I just want to get through a day.  I wish there were more hours in a day.  Ican’t believe how early another day is beginning after what seems like not enough sleep.  Or, I am a bit too glad (for the wrong reasons) when a day is done.  However, when I take a moment to reframe my brain, life is so much better.


I recognize the grace I am showered with even through the challenges of a day.  I understand that God has allotted the perfect amount of time to each day and that with Him as my guide I can manage that time well enough to give everything the attention it requires.  I see that God is good to offer me a new morning every morning – no matter what time I wake to it.  I benefit from the restoration God grants us through whatever amount of sleep we are able to get after we fall into bed each night.  In short, I know He is in me, with me and all around me and that all I need to do is be aware in order to be overflowing with thanks!


I’m praying for…


Joy-Filled in the Day that the Lord Has Made
Oh so many intentions!  Among them:
  • The repose of the souls of relatives, friends, friends of friends, relatives of friends.
  • The healing of a neighbor who has recently had surgery.
  • Ease of life for a friend who remains amazingly strong through sickness, multiple moves, financial challenges and a plate that is as full of hard things to swallow as it is the rich delights of parenting two wonderful young lads.
  • All the souls awaiting birth in the bellies of friends.
  • Peace and balance for those leading one of the homeschooling groups I am involved with.  They do so much for all of us and I know it is difficult to manage while also excelling in their calls as homeschooling mothers.
  • All those who are calling out to God for help, solace and understanding, plus those seeking to praise Him.
  • All those who have turned away from God or have yet to come to know Him at all.
  • Fellow homeschooling mothers, that we may hear God’s word and act on His will through both the mundane and the marvelous moments of our callings.
  • All folks and their families whoa re serving or have served for our country.  
  • That children (and adults!) everywhere will shine with grace-given joy.


A photo to share:


This is what Jack looked like the other day on the way home from a wonderful impromptu homeschool excursion to the beach after some appointments.  Yep, he is fast asleep in his new-to-him, big boy, front-facing seat now that he’s grown out of his infant car seat.  Looking back at him and knowing how much he has been growing, and how soundly he sleeps when the kids and I have just had a gloriously full afternoon of being together – learning, loving and breathing in the best of life – makes me confident that whatever I am doing “wrong”, there is so much more that is “right”.  I am ever-grateful for this.  Life is blessed and good!


I am linking this post to my BloTaAcMo initiative, as writing this post has been on my task list for weeks.  Please feel free to link any blog tasks you accomplish this month at my initial BloTaAcMo, too.

to find many examples of encouragement, reality and hope.




Also sharing at Hip Homeschool Moms

Thursday, November 10, 2011

November Thanks

I have seen “thank you” to referring site posts at a number of blogs and have been meaning to put one together myself. But, it was when I read Living Montessori Now's comprehensive Thank Yous for September post that I decided to finally get to it, and, now, a month later, as a part of BloTaAcMo, I am.

I just loved how Deb at Living Montessori Now included so much gratitude to blogosphere friends in one succinct, yet complete post. So, first, may I say thank you to Deb for encouraging me to do likewise (even if she didn’t realize I needed encouragement) and now onto the rest...

From my Google Analytics report for October 2011:

Thank you to all my referrers!
Top 10 Referring Sites
(not counting sites like Facebook, Google, Pinterist and the like)

  1. Organizing Junkie
  2. One Hook Wonder
  3. Living Montessori Now
  4. We Are THAT Family
  5. Heavenly Homemakers
  6. Homeschool Creations
  7. Well Trained Mind
  8. Catholic Mothers Online
  9. SPD Blogger Network
  10. Creative with Kids



Thank you to all my readers!
The top 10 Visited Posts that you enjoyed this past month were:

  1. I Can Calm Myself ABC Cards
  2. Alerting Activity ABC Cards
  3. 5 Ways to Use Montessori 3-Part Bob Books Cards
  4. Routines and Rhthms: Wake-Up Time and Daily Rhythm Chart  
  5. Resource Round Up of Body Part Cards
  6. The CVC Chalk Word Jump Game:  A Classic Outdoor Approach to Early Phonics with Sensory Diet Heavy work Thrown In
  7. Act Like an Elephant Cards
  8. Assumption of Mary:  No Cake Nor Juice Boxes, Just Some Drama
  9. 52 Weeks of Organizing:  Classroom, Shoes and Books
  10. If You Cannot Find It, Make Do: 3-Part Life of Mary Sequencing Cards



And, thank you to all who share through comments and blogs of their own!
I appreciate the community I find online and the way God sometimes uses each of us to be His hearts, hands, lips and mind for others.

I don't know how many times it has seemed that God has planted a seed in me, answered a prayer or otherwise moved me while I have been writing a post of my own or reading what someone else has shared.  Sometimes in the din of everyday life, it seems He shouts or whispers through the relative quiet of online time.  It is no secret that God uses our hands, hearts, lips and minds to do His work in person with others every day when we allow Him to.  Many days, I think He does the same on cyberspace.  Here's to hoping we each open ourselves to letting more of Him show through Our blogs in the weeks, months and years to come.

This post is being shared at Women Taking A Stand's Thankful ThursdayI am also linking it to BloTaAcMo, which you are welcome to join.

How?

It's easy! Simply go to the Linky at the bottom of my initial BloTaAcMo post, where you can link up with:

  • blog posts you take off the back-burner of your brain and put out in blogosphere for others to feast on this month
  • tutorials about blogging skills you'd care to share
  • reflections on personal learning that you accomplish as a result of your BloTaAcMo efforts

Looking forward to seeing what you have to share at the linky.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

In Full Disclosure

Whoops!  You know when you back-burner things in life in order to put out fires on the front burner and then you forget about the things on the back one?  Well, that’s what happened to me when I realized I should have a Disclosure Policy on this blog, but did not.  Computer woes.  Kid needs.  Simple distractions.  Small crises.  They all worked together to keep me neglecting this detail.  No longer!

The Disclosure detail is now done and in place.  Whoo hoo!

In plain-speak:

Links and Affiliates:  Training Happy Hearts contains numerous links to companies, stores and other websites.  Some of these are simply for the sake of sharing and convenience.  However, particularly with stores, there is a good chance that the links are also affiliate links. That means if you click on them and purchase something using the link I will receive a small percentage of the sale. Of course, you don't have to click on any of these links, but you are most welcome to and our family thanks you for doing so.  Every little bit we can earn helps in training up our family!

Reviews:  Obviously, I DO post reviews and seek to abide with a personal sense of integrity with any review I write. This is where I stand on the issue of reviews:

  • I review products for companies, services and such.  At times, I do this simply because a product or service has impressed me and I want to share about it.  At other times, companies contact me independently to share about their product.  Either way, to date (and likely moving forward), I am NOT paid to review products. However, if a company contacts me, I do receive an actual product to review and, occasionally, a company will give me an extra to use as a 'giveaway'.
  • I always identify if I have received a product for review.
  • I post reviews about products and services that my family uses and enjoys.  Such products might include books, toys, music, craft and learning supplies, etc. These reviews are simply my way of sharing opinions about random things we love and find helpful.  In other words, it’s the same type of helpful sharing I might offer if we were sitting down at the playground talking about things while our children played. 
  • I will always offer my honest opinion on things I review. 
  • Most of my reviews are positive only because I tend to  review things that I think my family will actually find useful or enjoyable.  Why waste time on other things?  However, in the case that we don’t care for a product or service, I am not going to lie about it.  I will either tell you what I think about it or offer the company the option of me following “Thumper’s Mommy’s Rule”:  If you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all.  In other words, I may sometimes give companies offering a product for review a chance to say, “Keep or donate the product, but please refrain from posting the review.”  In all cases, if I do post something, it will be my honest opinion.


The Bottom Line: In short, I began this blog as a way to journal and share.  I continue this blog for these same reasons: I want to record and reflect for myself and my family while sharing and interacting with you, my readers.  I do not write to make money from advertising or to receive products for free.  However, since I apportion a fair amount of time to blogging, if such blogging bonuses come along, I accept them with gratitude.

Phew. There it is for you all. Any questions?  Just ask!

And, if you want to see the more formal-speak disclosure, click on over.

I am linking this post to my BloTaAcMo initiative, as writing this post has been on my task list for weeks.  Please feel free to link any blog tasks you accomplish this month at my initial BloTaAcMo, too.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Every Day Gluten-Free, A Rich Resource Review of A Must-Have Cookbook

A while back, Kim Wilson from Simply Natural Health was kind enough to send me a review copy of Everyday Gluten-Free.  I so appreciated this, as I am seeking to move my family along from being Casein-Free (CF) to Gluten Free-Casein Free (GFCF) in an effort to see if such a diet can help with a few different issues we have noticed in our children. 


When Everyday Gluten-Free first arrived in my mailbox, I was excited to read it and to start trying recipes from it.  But, as life would have it, a bout of super food-pickiness/obstinacy took hold of one particular member of our family, so I thought it best to wait until we had gotten through that.  Praise God, with the help of our fantastic Food Specialist and a huge (often tested) amount of patience, we did.  Double praises, we have been enjoying testing out recipes from Everyday Gluten-Free ever since.


A Review of Everyday Gluten-Free

Our First Everyday Gluten-Free Recipe Test
* * * * *
A * READABILITY

Everyday Gluten-Free is a 5x7 spiral bound cookbook, so not only does it slip handily onto the counter or tabletop among my three young children’s hands, my own and our cooking supplies, but it also lays flat – something I wish all my cookbooks did!

With one to two recipes per page and ample (but not too much!) white space, it is easy to refer to while cooking, and indexes for both recipes and information make finding what you need in the cookbook a breeze.

Also, where many cookbooks can lean to the dry, no-personality side, Kim has sprinkled Everyday Gluten-Free with tidbits that help readers feel like she is a friend trading tried-and-true recipesEveryday Gluten-Free contains:

  • brief commentaries, such as, “This dessert is always a hit with company and at parties and potlucks.
  • tips, such as, “These cookies freeze well, so don’t worry about making too many!”
  • reminders, such as, “every recipe in this book was created through trial-and-error!


and an excellent first chapter that includes helpful information on Gluten-Free Ingredients, Breakfast/Snack/lunch Options and how to deal with traveling and Special Occasions.


A * for RELEVANCE:

Whether, like my family, you are going completely gluten-free, or, like my mother, you seek a resource of recipes for when GF friends and family members are visiting, this volume is fantastic.  It provides 90 simple, family-pleasing recipes for home fare- including pancakes, muffins, pizza, biscuits, breads, cakes, plus snacks and more

Better still, unlike many GF recipe books, Everyday Gluten-Free takes into consideration that many with gluten allergies or intolerances also cannot handle eggs, soy, sugar or dairy.  Thus, recipes do not include these ingredients.  And, there are recipes that either do not include, or provide alternatives for, corn and oat products as well.

Everyday Gluten-Free also rises above other GF cookbooks I have browsed in that it does  not depend upon refined ingredients, gums and starches and other ingredients that are devoid of nutrition, fiber and even flavor.  Instead,  it offers a menu of real foods, made with healthy oils and sweeteners in small amounts and nutritionally superior ingredients.  Plus, it does this while avoiding the pitfall some other popular GF cookbooks fall into:  basing too many recipes on mixes that you have to pre-prepare or keep flipping back to, doing calculations to make the right amount of mix for the recipe you are making.

I love that Everyday Gluten-Free helps my children and me prepare straight-forward, nutritious and palette-pleasing foods that we can happily dig into daily!


A * for PRACTICALITY

"I want my GFCF donut!"
As I already mentioned, Everyday Gluten-Free is replete with helpful information and healthy recipes and is organized in a way that makes both information about going GF and also recipes for staying GF easy.

In the first pages of the cookbook, there is an explanation of the main "specialty" ingredients one needs to make the recipes in the book.  I copied this onto my grocery list, made a jaunt to lour local natural foods store and have been good to go since.  No opening to a recipe to find I need a particular item that is not in my cupboards. In limiting necessary ingredients for recipes, but providing a wide variety of ways to prepare those ingredients, Everyday Gluten-Free has made daily cooking easy and economical.

My family now turns to Everyday Gluten-Free recipes regularly for breakfast, making many varieties of GFCF pancakes, muffins and waffles, which I can feel good about serving my family and which my family wolves down!  I also recently used the Chocolate Cake recipe in it to make donuts for a Halloween celebration.  These were a hit with my husband, my children and even my niece, who eats a very typical diet.  And, we are making our way through other recipes, which include:

  • Breakfast and Snack Options
  • Baking Mixes, Biscuits and Scones
  • Breads and Crackers
  • Dressings, Sauces, Dips and Gravy,
  • Salads and Entrees
  • Cakes
  • Cookies, Bars and Brownies
  • Puddings, Pies and Other Desserts


So far, everything we have tried has been a success.

Oh, and before you ask:  I know chapter titles above do not make the book sound chock-full of healthy, whole-food recipes, but, trust me, it is!  Beans (that don’t hinder taste) in the brownies.  Whole brown rice and millet in coconut Blender Cookies.  Milk made from bananas.  So far, the recipes we have tried are all kid-pleasers in my house!
 
A  * for LONGEVITY

Our family is still phasing in GFCF foods, so I know I will use Everyday Gluten-Free for quite some time.  And, should our GFCF experiment not work out, will I pass the book along to someone else?  No way!

A few minutes after the photo at the top of this post was taken,
this is what out table looked like.
Pancakes?  Happily Devoured!
Everyday Gluten-Free is a cookbook that offers more than juts GF recipes.  It is one that contains many simple, satisfying recipes, packed with fiber and nutrition and made with relatively inexpensive, whole ingredients.  In my opinion, that is what makes this cookbook such a keeper.  GF or not, Everyday Gluten-Free offers my family and me a way to focus on nutrition while enjoying what we eat.  My kids have asked for seconds of a number of recipes we have made from the cookbook already.  That makes this mama smile!

A * for VALUE

In my initial Rich Resource Review post, where I explain my rating criteria, I stated that if a book is one that I would find myself taking out of the library for more weeks in a year than I leave it on the shelves, the book gets another star.  Although my local library does not carry this cookbook, I can definitely say it is a cookbook that has not found its way from my kitchen shelf to my cookbook cupboard.  True to its title, we’ve been using the book every day.  Thus, I think that it is a good value at $13.95.

One caution I will make for those cookbook aficionados that like pretty pictures of foods:  There are none in Everyday Gluten-Free except those on the cover.  This does not bother me in the least, since the book gives me what I want and need – well-written, healthy, family-pleasing recipes without gluten and other common allergens – but I know some others may want the glossy photos.

If you want to test out Everyday Gluten-Free yourself, you can purchase it and other cookbooks by Kim at Simply Natural Health, where you will also find links for recipes and a newsletter.  If my family’s experience is any indication, you won’t be disappointed!

If you prefer e-books, her new one Good and Easy Eats,  is fantastic!


I am linking this post to my BloTaAcMo initiative, as writing this post has been on my task list for weeks.  Please feel free to link any blog tasks you accomplish this month at my initial BloTaAcMo, too.

This post is also being linked Heavenly Homemakers Gratituesday,
since Kim Wilson’s awesome cookbook is a cookbook we are very thankful to have found.  It is certainly helping our family eat healthier, tasty GFCF food.

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