Showing posts with label Daily. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daily. Show all posts
Thursday, August 10, 2017
Favorite Recipes Daily Delicious Whole Wheat Bread

We absolutely devour this delicious recipe from HomeWithPurpose.blogspot.com and after trying a few different bread recipes that I found elsewhere prior to this one, this recipe instantly became a family favorite - we LOVE it! We make this recipe to have with our Green Smoothies in the mornings for breakfast. Oh...my...goodness - YUM. (Have I said that already? *laugh!*) These rolls don't even need butter! And they're so good for us! 100% whole wheat, yet still chewy and yummy!
The author of Home With Purpose, Kara gives great step-by-step directions with photos in her post, Bread Baking with Fresh Ground Flour 101. She does not, however, list the ingredients in a list by themselves (they're listed through out the recipe post), or break the recipe down in to smaller ones, so I've done that for myself and for you here. *smile*
I encourage you to go to her blog to see all of her great photos if you're a newbie bread-maker like me. *wink* I broke down her giant recipe (7 loaves) in to a half recipe, and a quarter recipe which we used when we were initially making the recipe by hand. Then we got to purchase (used, off of Craig's List!) a 6 quart Kitchen Aid stand mixer which can do the entire 7-loaf recipe worth of dough at once. Awesome. So here are all three sizes of Kara's recipe:
Full Recipe (62 rolls or loaves)
- Hot water, 6 c.
- Coconut oil (I use olive), 1-1/3 c.
- Honey, 1-1/2 c.
- Eggs (optional), 2
- Salt, 2-2/3 Tbl.
- Yeast, 4 Tbl.
- Whole wheat flour (finely ground), 16 c.
- Flax seed (optional), 2 c.
Half Recipe (30 rolls or loaves)
- Hot water, 3 c.
- Coconut oil (I use olive), 1/2 c. + 3 Tbl.
- Honey, 3/4 c.
- Eggs (optional), 1
- Salt, 1 Tbl. + 1 tsp.
- Yeast, 2 Tbl.
- Whole wheat flour (finely ground), 8 c.
- Flax seed (optional), 1 c.
Quarter Recipe (15 rolls or 2 loaves)
- Hot water, 1 + 1/2 c.
- Coconut oil (I use olive), 1/3 c.
- Honey, 1/4 + 1/8 c.
- Eggs (optional), 1/2
- Salt, 2 tsp.
- Yeast, 1 Tbl.
- Whole wheat flour (finely ground), 4 c.
- Flax seed (optional), 1/2 c.
Instructions:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
- Combine in the mixer the hot water, oil, honey, eggs, salt, and yeast. (Coconut oil is far better for you, I just haven't purchased any yet, and olive oil tastes great to us *smile*)
- Add about 12-14 c. flour to the mixer and mix on low speed for about 30 seconds. Continue adding the flour slowly in about 1/2 c. increments until the dough begins to ball up and "clean" the sides of the bowl.
- Let mixer knead for about 5 min. (Kara kneads with her mixer 12 min. with a different brand of mixer) while I clean up the kitchen.
- If the dough seems sticky, let it "rest" for 5 min., if not begin shaping the rolls and/or loaves. Place on to a greased pan.
Tip: We have found that our rolls rise the most when the dough is first placed in the refrigerator for 20 minutes. I know, doesn't make sense to put it somewhere cold rather than somewhere warm, but we discovered this works best on accident once. We grease a very large bowl, place the dough inside and then spray some Cling Wrap with non-stick spray as well and cover. We let it rise in the refrigerator 20 min. and then shape the rolls after that. The instructions, however, say to allow to rise for 20 min. until they double in size. You'll have to experiment, I guess, as to which one works best for the climate in which you live.
- Bake at 350 for 20-25 min. Tear open one roll to check for doneness.
- To make sure the crust stays soft, brush butter on the top of each loaf and roll after they're baked.
- We leave some rolls out for the next morning's breakfast, but freeze the rest in gallon-size Ziplock baggies to have through out the week. I set out one baggie each night to thaw for us to enjoy in the morning. This large recipe serves our family of 11 one roll each daily for a week.
Tips from Karen, our daughter who loves to bake these rolls for us every week -
* Don't grease/butter your hands too much when forming the dough in to balls or the rolls then slide and flatten out more while rising/baking. If the dough is stickier, they stay rounder better.
* If you pre-measure all of the flour in to a bowl before adding it gradually to the stand mixer then you don't have to try to keep track of how much you're adding as you go along; you can relax knowing that the flour has been measured accurately, all you have to do is add it gradually.
* Don't grease/butter your hands too much when forming the dough in to balls or the rolls then slide and flatten out more while rising/baking. If the dough is stickier, they stay rounder better.
* If you pre-measure all of the flour in to a bowl before adding it gradually to the stand mixer then you don't have to try to keep track of how much you're adding as you go along; you can relax knowing that the flour has been measured accurately, all you have to do is add it gradually.
Blessings on your family's health,

You may also enjoy:
Favorite Recipes - Green Smoothies for More Energy and Clarity
Favorite Recipes - Irish Brown Bread
Recipe Organization
Large Family Meal Planning & Shopping
Friday, May 12, 2017
DIY Felt Daily Calendar plus some felt butterflies thrown in for fun
I FINALLY finished the daily calendar project that I started almost 2 months ago. Geesh. Remind me never to take on DIY projects that last more than one week, okay?
I didn't really think it would take me this long, and it probably wouldn't have----but I kept getting distracted, doing other projects instead of this one. Nate is really really happy I finished this beast so that we can have the top of our built-in buffet back now;)
Ta Da!
So I was just going to buy a felt calendar that I saw on Pinterest, but then I realized that it had features I didn't really want or need (ie 'feelings', activities, etc). And I wanted this to be mostly focused on the idea of a time concept: something to help Truman with figuring out which days he will go to Lori's, and what day of the week it is. Hoping this helps him understand when mommy and daddy are working and when we get to be home together as a family, but we will see.
So I figured I would use felt for something fun and different, since I've never worked with it before. I found a big poster board at Michaels, a bunch of felt, a fabric pen, and some ribbon with a dowel rod. I already had pipe cleaners, so I chose to use those instead of popsicle sticks (but maybe someday I will have to upgrade). I do not sew but if I did I'm sure this would look a lot more professional. But my hot glue gun worked just fine for what I wanted to accomplish.
The hardest part was covering my poster board with felt. I wanted it to be two colors and not just plain white, so I did it in blue and gray, with a ribbon dividing the two. Then I added the dowel rod on the top using ribbon, so I could hang it up.
I made my days of the week into little pockets, wrote the names with my fabric pen, and then created my 'sticks' for Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow....plus three 'Lori days' in there, too. It's been fun having T move the days around and he already kind of understood that 'today isn't a Lori day' but was able to point to Monday as the day we go back to work. It's hard to figure out sometimes, buddy--my days blend together, too.
Then after my days of the week, I didn't really care which topics we covered. I found some really cute cheap wooden shapes at Michaels and decided to do weather, seasons, and the date. Truman has been into telling me if it's nice outside, or cold, or sunny so I figured he would like the weather and seasons.
For the date I wrote on a wooden shape and hot glued that to a pocket I created, where I will keep all of the months, dates, and years. I wanted to just stick those felt pieces directly onto the yellow felt square but they didn't stick as well as I'd hoped. So I just used a little bit of velcro on the square to hold the tiny guys on there. Did NOT go through the trouble of adding the velcro backing to each of the dates. No way, man.
For the weather pocket, I found cute shapes at Michaels again--a snowflake for when it's (always) snowing that I had to paint, then an umbrella that was painted already for rainy days, a painted cloud for overcast days, and a painted sun for sunshiny days. Come on sun, let's see you again!
I added velcro to the square and also to the backs of each wooden piece for this one.
Then came the seasons---just four wooden circles that I painted and wrote the names on with my fabric pen. These are also velcro'd on to the felt square.
Seems simple enough, I suppose. All of the cutting of the felt was tedious, as was the enormous amount of hot glueing. I didn't mind the painting and using the fabric pen but when you put it all together, it was a lot of work! I hope it holds up for us and I hope Truman enjoys using it each morning with me. I made years '2014' and '2015' for our dates---hope we need to use them someday! ;)
Since I couldn't get enough of that awesome feeling felt gives when it sticks to my horribly dry hands (gag), I decided to do another felt project. This one is for a blogger busy bag swap, which maybe will get it's own blog post in the future.
If you haven't heard of a 'busy bag' project, the basic concept is that you have a ziplock bag that contains an activity for your child to do on their own. You will have to show them how to do the project the first time but then after that, they should be able to play independently with the activity to keep them busy. Genius. Pinterest has about a billion ideas for busy bags and I feel like it's almost overwhelming to even look at all of the busy bag boards!
After pinning tons of ideas for this project, I settled for this Butterfly Symmetry busy bag activity because I knew I wanted to use up the rest of my felt and it seemed pretty fun.
There are a few ways to do this project with your preschooler, and I wrote out instructions in each ziplock bag that contains the butterfly activity. The original link says to build the right half of the felt butterfly to mirror the left half 'template' on a sheet of paper. But that seemed pretty advanced to me, so I just made the whole butterfly with a whole template. I thought that the first 'level' could be the child creating the butterfly right on top of the printout template, like a puzzle. The second level, once the first gets too easy, would be to move the template off to the side and build the butterfly on top of the large piece of felt by glancing at the template but not putting the pieces directly on top of it. Still kind of like a puzzle but maybe a little bit harder? Then once that is too easy, the third level would be cutting the butterfly in half, and cutting the template in half. Then the child can build a symmetrical butterfly using that half of a template. The link said a 4 years old could do the half of a butterfly, and a 2 year old can just build the whole thing without worrying about symmetry.
Here is how I made these babies:
1. I made my own butterfly template out of paper, after looking around online for inspiration.
2. Then I cut out each piece using different colors of felt.
3. I added a little face on the body with my fabric paint after Truman requested that the butterfly have a smile;)
4. Then I scanned each completed butterfly on our scanner and printed out that image onto photo paper. I know this part isn't really necessary and I think the original link even has a template to use and print. But for some reason I thought this would be easier in the long run.
And ta da! 8 little butterflies ready to go to their homes.
I'm excited to get different busy bag projects back in the mail, too---and Truman already enjoyed playing with the butterfly in his own way (ie creating his own butterfly that was anything but symmetrical).
And that is how I spent the last 2 months working with felt. Whew.
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