Favorite Books of 2014: Non-Fiction (everything else)

I read almost 100 books in 2014.  Here are my favorites (and yes, I realize I’m nearly 3 months late with this list). I track my reading on Goodreads.  So if we’re not friends there, you should join me!

Here are all the rest of my favorite non-fiction books of 2014. (Find my favorite parenting and education reads here and my favorite fiction here.)

(with apologies for the repetitiveness to my Goodreads friends as these are my edited reviews from what I posted there through the year)

The Lost Art of Dress: The Women Who Once Made America Stylish by Linda Przybyszewski: This was perhaps my favorite non-fiction read of the year. First, it was SO liberating to read someone else say that fashion these days is terribly unkind to anyone who is not stick-thin (or to anyone who’s had a baby). I loved this book on two levels:

  1. I found the history of the evolution of fashion in America over the past 100 years to be really interesting and enlightening. I think I would have been much happy had I been dressing myself 60 or more years ago.
  2. I learned a lot about basic color theory, fashion design, and how to actually figure out what is flattering to the female figure. I am also now convinced that I’ll need to sew my own clothes in order to actually get some that fit and flatter me.

Organizing Solutions for People with ADHD, 2nd Edition-Revised and Updated: Tips and Tools to Help You Take Charge of Your Life and Get Organized by Susan C. Pinsky: At the time (Nov. 2014), this was the best organizing/de-cluttering book Id ever read. I don’t have ADHD and it was still super helpful. This will be the one of the two books on the subject I recommend to others.  See my review on Goodreads for all my take-away principles/notes on this helpful book! (My favorite book on the topic, read in Jan. 2015, is The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up – many blogs posts to come on that one!)

Maphead: Charting the Wide, Weird World of Geography Wonks by Ken Jennings: This was a super-fun jaunt through the world of maps. It made me want to take up geocaching and embrace being a geography nerd.

Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity by Katherine Boo: An amazingly difficult book to read, I was none-the-less enthralled. My brother Eric’s review of the book captures my feelings far better than I could have, particularly related to the navel gazing about capitalism that this book brought upon me.

Decisive: How to Make Better Choices in Life and Work by Chip Heath, Dan Heath: Really practical and clear, with persuasive and well-laid out arguments for how we should make decisions. Nik and I have used the decision-making process in this book to good effect.

The Remedy: Robert Koch, Arthur Conan Doyle, and the Quest to Cure Tuberculosis by Thomas Goetz: There’s a long history of TB in my family so I was personally interested in learning more. Even without that though, I would have really enjoyed it for what I learned about the advances in medicine through the discovery of the germ theory and also just learning about the way medicine used to be in the 1800s. Did you know that the women sitting around dying of consumption in just about every Victorian novel you’ve ever read really had tuberculosis? Neither did I! (I’ve had a blog post all about this topic in draft form for months.  Let’s hope it escapes into the real world soon!)

Girl at the End of the World: My Escape from Fundamentalism in Search of Faith with a Future by Elizabeth Esther: This was a really hard book to read and yet I couldn’t put it down. It’s so sad what people are willing to do to their children (particularly in the name of God). I’m even more grateful now that we’ve decided to go the gentle discipline route with our children.

The Better Bag Maker: An Illustrated Handbook of Handbag Design Techniques, Tips, and Tricks by Nicole Mallalieu: If I could choose anything to sew, I’d probably choose bags and this is a great book. I haven’t sewn any of the projects yet but I can tell from the instructions and projects that it’s a well-written book.  I’m looking forward to becoming a better bag maker!

Patchwork City: 75 Innovative Blocks for the Modern Quilter 6 Sampler Quilts by Elizabeth Hartman: I’ve sewn one block out of this already (“Favorite Sweater”) for Mark’s color book cover. The directions were really easy to follow and I ended up with a great block. I have visions of sewing all 75 of these blocks to end up as a quilt for our king size bed. In the mean time, I also have a few chosen which I’m hoping to turn into some table runners for our dining room table.

I also enjoyed:

Do you have any favorites on this list?  Any more to recommend to me?

This post contains  affiliate links, meaning any purchases you make with them support our blog.  See the full disclosure here.
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My No-Shave Experiment – 121 Days and Counting (The REVEAL)

I haven’t shaved my legs or my armpits in 121 days (since November 22, 2014.)

I did this deliberately.  That day, I said to myself, “I’m going to shave today and then I’m not going to shave, for a long time.” (I also knew I’d remember when it was because it was the Saturday before Thanksgiving.)

I definitely chose an easy enough time to do it.  It’s been winter, as in long pants and long sleeves time. So although I’ve know that “OH MY, I HAVE ARMPIT HAIR!!!”, no one else has.  Now that it’s spring has sprung, I’m having to do a bit more confronting of why I started this and whether or not I want to continue.

Why did I decide to try this no-shave experiment?  I realized that I didn’t know what my natural body looked like.  I’ve been shaving pretty much since I hit puberty, say around 12-years-old or so.  Other than a summer that I spent in Indian on a missions trip in 1992, I’ve been shaving, particularly my armpits, regularly and consistently.  That is, I’ve been shaving for around 26 years.  I realized that I just didn’t know what my body really and truly looked like.

I also really didn’t know why I was shaving in the first place.  It’s an annoying and time-consuming grooming practice, yet I just kept on doing it.  Nik and I have been questioning and in many cases changing so many aspects of the way we live (see my long-dormant and maybe-soon-to-be-revived KIOS series) and I realized that this was one aspect of my personal life I had let live on unchallenged.  Although I did keep on shaving, I had complained about it to friends or family members but never did anything about it.

I also realized that Ellie was getting older and more observant and I felt the need to hide evidence of my shaving habit from her because I didn’t want to have to explain/justify what I was doing to myself.  I want to be able to look her in the eye and be able to rationally and clearly explain why or why not I feel the need to remove hair from my body.  I want to give her the gift of loving her body the way God made her and also being able to make deliberate decisions about the way she treats her body.

I have four parts of a “No Shave” mini-series planned.  In classic good preaching fashion, they all start with “R”:

IMG_2926 (600x800)

1. The REVEAL (that’s this) – where I overcome my embarrassment at actually discussing my arm pits with the whole wide world.

2. The RANT – where I let out all my frustrations at the different ways that body hair is treated for women vs. men, I tell you why I get so angry about shaving in general, and I expose my true feelings about media and the skin care business.  I’ll probably rant about how I wasn’t even brave enough to use a picture of my own legs in this post.

BONUS: The REFLECTION.

3. The RESEARCH – I still have to do this research but here’s what I want to know: Why exactly do women in America shave our legs?  When did this become the common social norm?  Who benefits from women shaving their legs? Are there any benefits to doing it?  What do women in other countries do?  What does an unshaven vs. shaved leg communicate in American culture vs. in other cultures?

4. The RESOLUTION – Somewhere in this process, I do have to make a decision. Am I going to turn this from an experiment to a way of life?   Do I want to go against popular culture and (perceived or real) scorn from other people as we enter shorts/swimsuit/tank top weather? What exactly will I say to Ellie as she gets older?  I honestly don’t know yet what my answer will be.  But I do have to decide and I’m hoping that by doing my thinking out loud, in front of you all, I’ll be able to come to a decision that is thoughtful, honest, and life-affirming, clean-shaven or not.

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Posted in health and beauty, KIOS, reflecting | Tagged | 14 Comments

Cute Children, Singing

My apologies for overwhelming you with videos this week! Ellie has been teaching Mark her Sunday School songs and here’s one.

And, finally, I prove to you that Ellie has progressed beyond “Chukka, chukka, oh wah die” when it comes to singing Itsy Bitsy Spider, or Itsy Bitsy Mama in this case.

Note that although it seems that we aren’t all that concerned with safe sitting in our household, no child has ever been harmed! 🙂

P.S. Thanks to Yiayia for the super fun matching Christmas pajamas!

Posted in Ellie, Mark, movie | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Why Sourdough? Why Soaked? Why Even Bother?

A few weeks ago, my friend Liz left this comment on my “Seven Essential Tools for Baking” post.

Liz's bread question

I answered her briefly in a comment there but promised her that I’d write a fuller response because I think it’s a great question!

Why Even Bother?

First let’s start with why even bother at all with baking anything other than a standard, mainstream recipe.  It’s well-known and accepted in the mainstream nutritional world that it’s better for you to eat baked goods made with whole wheat flour rather than white flour.  Whole wheat flour generally has its fiber and nutrients intact and is certainly more nutritious than white flour, which has had the germ and bran stripped from it.  Most white flour is enriched with vitamins and minerals but that doesn’t make up for the fact that it’s a highly processed food. Consequently, we have all been told, “Eat your whole grains!”

The problem with whole wheat flour (and all whole grains) is that it is also full of phytic acid.  Phytic acid is a substance commonly called an “anti-nutrient”.  Most seeds, grains, nuts, and beans have phytic acid in their outer shell.  Its function is to keep the seed/grain/bean from disintegrating until it sprouts after it’s planted.  (White flour doesn’t have this because the bran is removed.)  Phytic acid blocks the absorption of nutrients in your gut, making whole grains difficult to digest for many people. There are two ways to neutralize the phytic acid – either by using sprouted flour (store-bought or homemade) or by soaking the whole grain flour in acidic water for at least 12 hours.  (Generally speaking, you add whey/yogurt or some kind of vinegar to make the water acidic.)  Sourdough starter is acidic and the long rise of sourdough bread serves the same function as soaking your flour. We’ve discovered that in our family, our guts function much better when we are eating soaked or sourdough bread.

Soaking/sourdough not only neutralizes the phytic acid, it also does some predigestion so that the bread is easier for your body to digest.  I’ve read stories of some people’s gluten intolerance going away once they started to eat exclusively sprouted/soaked/sourdough products.

028 (800x533) (2)soaked bagels

I know it seems like a lot of work to either take the extra step of using soaking or sourdough when making bread.  What finally pushed me to make this a regular part of our diet was reading a quote from Sally Fallon (author of Nourishing Traditions and a rock star in the traditional foods world), in which she said something like, “If my choice was between unsoaked/unsprouted whole wheat bread or all-white-flour bread, I’d chose the white bread.”*  I thought, “Wow!  If Sally Fallon is saying that she’d actually eat white flour, then I’d better look into this a little bit further.”  At this point, I don’t use whole wheat flour or any other whole grains without doing an overnight soak or a long sourdough rise.  (And by “don’t use”, what I really mean is “hardly ever ever.”  For example, I do occasionally make our whole wheat pizza crust recipe without soaking it if I forget to start it soaking the night before.)

Why Choose Sourdough?  Why Choose Soaked?

So, if I’ve convinced you (and I hope I have), that its worth the time and effort to neutralize the phytic acid in your whole grains, your next decision is how to do it.

Choose sourdough if you:

  • like the flexibility of a long (if unpredictable) rise time
  • like the complex flavor of a more sour bread
  • want a very traditional way of making bread
  • like more dense, chewy bread
  • want to minimize the number of ingredients you use in your baking
  • want to completely eliminate commercial yeast from your diet (as many do)

Choose soaked if  you:

  • need a shorter, more predictable rising time (because you’ll be using commercial yeast)
  • prefer the flavor of “regular” bread over sourdough bread
  • want to produce a lighter, fluffier bread
  • don’t want the trouble of maintaining a sourdough starter
  • want to improve the nutritional quality of your baked goods without adding sour flavor

So, Liz, to answer your question, choose soaking your grains!  I choose one or the other based on a variety of factors, including what I want to make and how much time I have to make it.

031 (800x534)soaked whole wheat sandwich bread

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Although I started baking the majority of our bread at the beginning of 2011, it wasn’t until later in 2012 that I entered the world of soaking grains.  Over the past couple years, I have been hard at work, adapting many recipes to meet our needs.  I’ve shared a few of them with you already and have more to come.

Here are my recipes for whole wheat sourdough bread, black pepper oregano whole wheat sourdough crackers, soaked [mostly] whole wheat sandwich bread, soaked whole wheat pumpkin muffins, and soaked granola.

Coming up in the next few weeks: recipes for soaked bagels, sourdough rolls, soaked whole wheat pizza crust dough, plus how to soak beans and lentils.

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*Of course, I can’t find the place online where I read that quote so you’ll just have to trust my hazy memory on that one!  It was something like that anyway.

Here’s an example of what you could buy for sprouted wheat flour.  I haven’t bought it before because, as you can see, it’s quite expensive – about four times as much as I pay for my locally-milled regular whole wheat flour.  It’s an easy choice for me to either soak my flour or use sourdough.

See this post for more about phytic acid, including its chemical makeup.

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He Counts In Greek! And Sings in English!

It’s only fair that we show off Mark counting in Greek, right?  Ellie had her moment in the spotlight, so here’s Mark’s.  Unlike Ellie at this age, Mark is regularly and consistently counting to 20, usually perfectly, on his own.

His verbal skills are astonishing us at this point.  Last night, he told me “I thought my pillow there.”  (As in, he was explaining to me why he was crawling to the end of the bed, rather then the head of the bed, in the dark at bedtime.  Look at him using a irregular past tense verb correctly, and with a complicated form of expressing himself, no less!)

He loves to count in Greek, generally when they are playing hide and seek, a current favorite pastime for just before dinner, with Baba.


pretty nice pronunciation of “ten” even!

And, because it’s finally spring, here’s Mark singing in celebration of one of the first signs of spring. (Here are a couple more that we are eagerly anticipating.)

I know a little pussy.
Her fur is silver gray.
She lives down in the meadow
Not very far away.

She’ll always be a kitten.
She’ll never be a cat.
For she’s a pussy willow.
Now what do you think of that!

Meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow,
SKAT! Kitty cat!

 

Posted in linguistics, Mark, weather | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Favorite Books of 2014: Non-Fiction – Parenting and Education

I read almost 100 books in 2014.  Here are my favorites (and yes, I realize I’m over two months late with this list). I track my reading on Goodreads.  So if we’re not friends there, you should join me!

Here are my favorite parenting and education books of 2014.
(with apologies for the repetitiveness to my Goodreads friends as these are my edited reviews from what I posted there through the year)

Baby Catcher: Chronicles of a Modern Midwife by Peggy Vincent: I read this many years ago, well before I had kids or even knew much of anything bout labor and childbirth. The opening story is so terribly sad and enraging. It was really cool to read it again, having birthed two babies naturally.

Home Grown: Adventures in Parenting off the Beaten Path, Unschooling, and Reconnecting with the Natural World by Ben Hewitt: I LOVED this book! Although we will never be able to come close to recreating what they do (because, well, we don’t live on many acres in rural New England), I was particularly grateful for the way he articulated his hopes and dreams for his children, which in many ways are exactly what Nik and I want for our kids.

Real Sex: The Naked Truth about Chastity by Lauren F. Winner: Although aimed at single Christians, I think all Christians (married or single) should read this. Winner’s call to community and to honoring our responsibilities to each other is particularly strong and was especially convicting to me on this reread. I appreciate her definition of chastity as a commitment to having sex in its proper place – the free choice to live one’s sexual life in accord with Christian values. This means that we are all called to live chaste lives – married or single. This book will be guiding our approach to discussing sexual ethics and values with our children. It’s a far more nuanced approach than the “just cross your legs and say no” approach of the True Love Waits campaign and other evangelical approaches.

The Smartest Kids in the World: And How They Got That Way by Amanda Ripley: This is a well-written, fascinating look at what’s been done correctly and incorrectly in K-12 education all over the world. Now, to figure out how to translate her takeaways (particularly relating to rigor and autonomy) to homeschooling/unschooling.

Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids: How to Stop Yelling and Start Connecting by Laura Markham: This is the best book that I’ve read so far on gentle discipline. I particularly appreciated her “assume disconnection before disobedience” emphasis and have found this to be particularly true with Ellie, as I discussed in this post.  She certainly errs on the “children are inherently good” side of the argument and I’m sure many Christians will disagree, countering with the “we are all inherently sinful” argument. I think we need both ideas, a balance, when parenting our children. It’s easier for me to assume the worst about my children and so her emphasis is definitely helpful for me.

Reading in the Wild: The Book Whisperer’s Keys to Cultivating Lifelong Reading Habits by Donalyn Miller: I so wish I could have read this book early on in my career as an ESOL teacher, essentially teaching reading. In Miller’s classroom, I see a powerful vision for helping students find the love of reading, one that will carry them through their lives, so that they will all be “reading in the wild” – that is, reading on their own, because they want to, for the love of reading, and not because any external force is compelling them to read. Anyone who teaches reading or wants to help kids learn to read should read this book and then put it into practice. (I also learned that I am an extremely wild reader. For example, this book was a super lucky find on the new-nonfiction shelf at the library. Finding books like this, by browsing those shelves, is a sign of a wild reader!)

All Joy and No Fun: The Paradox of Modern Parenthood by Jennifer Senior: This was a fabulous book. I was really skeptical going into it, expecting it to be just another parent-bashing volume. Rather, it’s full of really interesting, freeing, empowering research about parenting and why it’s not so fun all the time but still overflowing with joy. I was also surprisingly emotional by the end (lots of tears).

Do you have any favorites on this list?  Any more on these topics to recommend to me?

This post contains  affiliate links, meaning any purchases you make with them support our blog.  See the full disclosure here.
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Pi Day Celebration! (FAIL)

I have to admit that often I think, “Oooo, we should do this for the blog.  It would be funny.” Sometimes it works, like when I get the kids to sing a cute song.  Other times, it fails miserably and you never see it.  However, this failure is still cracking up Nik and me so I figured you might find it funny too.

As you probably know, Saturday was Pi Day (i.e March 14th) and because it’s 2015, if you celebrated at 9:26 in the morning, you could get the first eight digits of pi (the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter) – 3.1415926.  I told Nik we needed to do some kind of celebration in front of the clock at 9:26 to post to the blog.  He had the fun idea of doing a Greek circle dance (get it?!?!?!) and so we attempted it.  And because those darn children wouldn’t cooperate (Miss Emily, we’re blaming you and the Snow White birthday party mirror – ha!), you get the following example of a Pi Day celebration failure.

Hoe you had a fun Pi day too! 🙂

Posted in Ellie, family, just for fun | Tagged | 2 Comments

Sugar Snow, Ginny Helkenn’s Doughnuts, and No More Magical Childhood, EVER AGAIN

Yesterday, for preschool, we had what one would probably term a “magical childhood” experience.  We were supposed to have had this particular lesson close to a month ago but snow storms combined with illnesses meant lots of cancellations.  So, finally, yesterday was my big day.  I had a bunch of snow in our freezer from the first big storm in February, a Little House in the Big Woods picture book to read (see some relevant quotes here), and had even decided to make doughnuts, having read that doughnuts and sour pickles are traditionally enjoyed with maple syrup poured on snow.

Truthfully, I’ve been looking for an excuse to make doughnuts ever since I realized that Ginny Helkenn’s doughnut recipe was in my hometown church cookbook.  Ginny Helkenn was famous in my church growing up for her amazing glazed yeast doughnuts and everyone wanted them!  As the doughnut man liked to say on Nik’s mom’s hometown beach in Greece, “They won’t make you fat! They’ll make you beautiful!” (It rhymes in Greek.) Anyway, I made doughnuts and finally got a chance to use my circle cutter set to full advantage!

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I fried doughnuts and boiled maple syrup (using these instructions) while Miss Emily read the kids the book.

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Everything ready, we got the snow out, poured the maple syrup (now candy) and dug in!

004 (800x533)a completely inadvertent heart – awww!

009 (800x533)Don’t worry, I gave them more eventually!

015 (534x800) 021 (800x533) 022 (533x800)024 (800x533) 025 (800x533) 026 (800x534) 028 (800x533)midway through the enjoyment

Doughnuts were also enjoyed by all!  (The pickles? No child liked them.  I did though!)

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It took surprising little snow to make the candy so we have some back in our freezer for another day of sugar indulgence.

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After all the fun, one mama had to go to a doctor’s appointment so her two girls stayed and the rest of us went for a walk to work off that sugar.

20150312_110059_resized (800x534)Pretty awesome, right?  I’m great, if I do say so myself!

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So then, last night, at dinner, we have this conversation:

Me: Ellie! You should tell Baba about what we did this morning!” [because I’m such an awesome mom, I want you to brag about me to your father.]

Ellie: Well, first Miss Marshalynne came over with L and I [they were special visitors for the day] and then we played and then we went for a walk and then we ate lunch and then they went home.

Me: [In shock] That’s it?  There’s nothing else we did for preschool?

Ellie: [Puzzled facing, thinking] No? That was it.  We just played.

Me: [Falling over] What about snow?

Ellie: OH YEAH!  (And then she did manage to tell Nik a little bit.)

Really?  You don’t remember how I labored over hot oil making you GINNY HELKENN’S doughnuts and thought ahead and froze you snow and let you eat candy in the middle of the day?  That’s it! No more magical childhood events for you!

From now on, you’ re just going to clean the kitchen walls!

031 (800x533) 030 (800x534)(Don’t worry.  It was Ellie’s idea and they thought it was fun.)

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P.S. If you want the doughnut recipe, here you go! It’s not really written for non-bakers and I had to fill in a few blanks.  So they weren’t amazing as I remembered.  I just need to practice more, right? (Click on the picture to enlarge it.)

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This post contains  affiliate links, meaning any purchases you make with them support our blog.  See the full disclosure here.
Posted in baking, Ellie, Mark, parenting, school | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Recipe: Ultra-Easy 100% Whole Wheat Sourdough Bread

I must admit to more than a little bit of trepidation in sharing this sourdough bread recipe with you. In fact, I’ve been putting it off for a year.  I’m a relative amateur when it comes to sourdough baking and I’m sure (I know!) this recipe has flaws on many levels.  As you’ll see in the pictures, it’s not even that pretty.  BUT…it is really tasty and is so easy to make.  It probably only requires around 10 minutes or less of hands-on-time and has made it possible for me to make all of our bread without that much fuss.   This bread is at its best either just cooled out of the oven or when toasted.  We slice it, freeze it and toast it for breakfast almost every morning.

It’s a very sour sourdough, which I love.  I also love that my kids eat it with relish.  It tells me that we haven’t totally ruined their taste buds with sweet things yet.  We’re aiming for sophisticated taste buds and although we certainly haven’t gotten there yet, at least with this bread, the kids are doing well! It’s a very hearty, dense bread (being 100% whole wheat and sourdough) but, especially when toasted, it’s surprisingly easy to eat.

So, if I haven’t scared you off already, here’s an amazingly easy recipe for making 100% whole wheat sourdough bread.  The amounts are easy enough to remember that you’ll memorize it soon enough and won’t even need this recipe to make it!

100% Whole Wheat Sourdough Bread
recipe developed by Laura through much trial and error, initially inspired by this one

Step 1 – Refresh/make enough starter.  See this post for directions. 

Step 2 – Once you have enough starter, make bread!

Put your mixer bowl (or large bowl if you don’t have a stand mixer) on the scale to do this and zero after each addition:

550 g sourdough starter

250 g water

525-600 g whole wheat flour (see this post for clarification on the amount of flour)

1 T salt (I use fine grain sea salt.)

004 (800x533) (3)note that I don’t even bother to clean my bowl between batches!

Mix with a spoon until roughly combined.

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Put your bowl in your stand mixer with the dough hook and let it knead for 10-15 minutes until it is well combined and smooth.  The dough should be clearing the sides of the bowl but still slightly sticky.  A moist dough is better than a too stiff dough.  Alternately, you can knead it by hand.

010 (800x533)This is bagel dough (recipe to come in a few weeks), not this bread dough.  However, the stickiness of this dough, when finally kneaded is about what your sourdough bread should be like.  The dough is uniformly smooth and still sticky to the touch. 

Step 3: Bake It.

Option 1: If you are feeling particularly lazy (or short of time), put the dough directly into a generously-greased Dutch oven. (Mine is a six-quart – a bit more on that at the bottom of the post.).  Press it out until it relatively evenly covers the bottom of the pan.

006 (800x533) (2)how it looks when doing the ultra-low-effort option 1 (and don’t judge me for my well-used but not so pretty any more Dutch oven)

Option 2: If you feel like you can take an extra 5 minutes (and sometimes I can’t), pretend the dough ball is one huge roll and shape into a cohesive ball.  I pull the sides of the dough underneath to form a tight ball on top. This helps the final loaf look a bit more pretty but doesn’t affect the final flavor.  Put the dough ball into the pan and press it out until it relatively evenly covers the bottom of the pan.

012 (800x533)how it looks when doing the slightly-more-effort option 2

Option 3: Divide the dough in half and put it into two well-greased bread/loaf pans.  Full disclosure – I’ve never done it this way so you’ll have to do your own experimenting to perfect this.  I’m just including it as an option if you don’t have a Dutch oven. 

For all three options: Allow to rise for several hours until it’s almost to the top of the Dutch oven. This rising time will vary widely depending on the temperature of your dough and the air temperature in your house.  Generally speaking, I make the dough around 8 in the morning and am usually baking it by 4:00 or 5:00 in the evening.  In the winter, it may take up to 12 hours or so.  And no, as you may have noticed, there is not a second rise/shaping/proofing.  This is the beauty of this recipe.  You knead it, put it into pans, let it rise until it’s tall enough, and bake it.  You can certainly leave your house for hours while it’s baking so the timing is flexible as well.  As I said, it’s ultra-easy!

007 (800x533)After probably 3-4 hours of rising, it finally starts to look like it will turn into bread.

Mine generally rises until it’s close to 2-3 inches from the top of the pan.  When it looks tall enough (this is the experimentation part), very carefully, without jarring, put it into your oven.

Bake in a preheated 400 degree oven for 40-45 minutes until it’s nicely browned.  If you have a thermometer, I think it’s supposed to bake until the internal temperature reaches 190-210 degrees F but I never bother checking.  Dump it out (usually it falls right out but sometimes it sticks and then I have to pry it out with a wooden spoon.  I haven’t figured out why this happens.)

008 (800x533) (3)what it looks like when baked the lazy way (option 1), ugly but still delicious (and this particularly loaf = a bit over-baked)

113 (800x534)what it looks like when baked the lazy way (option 2) and also baked closer to the right shade of brown.  I let this one over-rise a bit so you can see that it fell a smidge on the right side, probably because I bumped it as I was putting it in the oven. Oh well!  It’s still delicious with butter! 🙂

Step 4: Cut It. (It’s a bit trickier than it seems.)

This is probably a flaw of this method of baking (in a circular Dutch oven) but the slices end up being many different sizes.  I like it because I give the smaller pieces to the kids and the larger pieces to the adults.  If this will annoy you, you may want to choose the loaf pan route.

Let the bread cool completely before cutting.  Cut the round loaf in half.

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Then, working with one half circle at a time, slice the bread.  I prefer thin slices because I like my butter to bread ratio to be higher on the butter side! For this bread, I don’t use my bread knife.  Instead, I use our meat carver.  The angled tip on the end makes it easier to cut through the bottom crust.  So try a couple different knives if you’re finding that your bread knife isn’t working well enough.

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Let me know if you try baking this!

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Our Dutch oven is a Calphalon, which is fine, but they don’t appear to make it any more.  Cooks’ Illustrated recommends this Lodge Cast Iron Dutch Oven.  Make sure to look through the colors.  Some of them are much cheaper than others.  If you don’t mind emerald green, you can save yourself a few bucks!

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March Sewing: What Do You Sew When Your Child Is Sick and Miserable?

More wipes for his nose of course!

Mark has been pretty miserable the past few days with a bad cold.  The past two days were particularly bad.  We’ve been using cloth wipes at an alarming rate, particularly so because now he wants to wipe his own nose and so stacks of them get wasted.  I’ve made over 150 wipes at this point (I’ve lost track) but clearly, that wasn’t enough any more.  Yesterday, I made 63 more. (Don’t put any stock in that number.  I just kept on cutting out wipes until I felt like it was a tall enough stack and it ended up being 63.)

001 (800x533) (2)midway through the cutting process.  The near stack is the actual wipes.  The crazy pile behind that is all my flannel scraps.  I have so many, I can’t even use them up!

Ellie was in heaven, having so many scraps to cut up.  She was making “salad” while Mark was, somehow, miraculously, occupying himself.

003 (800x533) 005 (800x534)sad, snotty nose and all

After lunch, Mark sat in my lap, I sewed wipes, and Ellie cut off the threads for me.  Mark actually almost fell asleep on my lap while we were sewing so that ended the midday sewing session.  Last night, I finished up the rest and left them for Ellie to trim.  This morning, she came out, saw the stack, said, “WHAT?!?!?!” (as in, how did those all get sewed?) and then immediately sat down to trim threads.  I DESPISE trimming threads (although I do it compulsively) so I’m thrilled that she thinks this is a fun job!

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Today, thankfully, was a much better day for Mark and therefore, for all of us.

Posted in Ellie, Mark, travel | Tagged | 6 Comments