Wednesday, May 22, 2019

O is for Oatmeal [A-Z Blog Challenge 2015]


Experiments From Auntie's Test Kitchen

Intro  A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Conclusion

                                                                                                                    

O is for Oatmeal

I grew up eating oatmeal, but it was the flavored kind.  From childhood through early adulthood, I'd prepare several packs of this already sugared-up version with more sugar and margarine (butter was too expensive), and go to town.

Now, with so many options, including the over-hyped, over-priced steel cut oats, I've been trying to find a way to make oatmeal that tastes good, but isn't loaded with sugar.  I've attempted so many variations of oatmeal using milk, nuts, honey, and various fruits--none of them really satisfying.   I got this recipe from my niece and thought I'd give it a try.


Easy and Healthy Banana Oat Pancakes
Recipe by Alida Ryder
Original recipe is here.
Ingredients
  • 2 bananas
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 cup rolled oats
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • pinch of salt
  • maple syrup to serve (optional)
  • fresh fruit of your choice to serve 
Instructions
  1. In a blender, combine the peeled banana, eggs, oats, baking powder and salt.
  2. Allow to blend until the mixture is as smooth as you want it and blended well. Allow the batter to stand for 10-20 minutes until thickened slightly.
  3. Heat a non-stick frying pan over medium heat.
  4. Fry spoonfuls of the batter until golden brown on both sides.
  5. Serve with a drizzle of maple syrup and/or fresh fruit of your choice.
What I learned
  • She doesn't say to, but I'd slice the banana before putting it in the blender.
  • Don't let the batter stand too long, or it will be too thick to pour.  If it takes twenty minutes for the batter to thicken properly, your baking powder is old.  Throw it out and get a new can.
  • Be patient.  When she says to cook them over medium heat, she means it.  Any hotter and they will burn on the outside and be raw in the inside.

All in all, I really liked these pancakes.  Because of the amount of banana, they are really sweet.  Later, I may try using one banana mixed with a fruit that isn't so sweet and see how that turns out. 

I would call this recipe a success.

Friday, May 17, 2019

Five Minute Friday: "Promise"


 



Growing up in a household where my dad never made any promises made it hard to understand that God always promises.  My dad never made promises because he wasn't going to be beholding to anything he couldn't do or provide.  My Holy Father can make all the promises He wants because He can and will provide and do exactly what He promised.

My struggles lately has been the worst of the year, yet His promises keep me going--they get me out of bed, feed me, get me through my day, and put me to sleep at night.

I'm holding tightly to the promises in Isaiah 54:1-5 (NIV):

“Sing, barren woman,
    you who never bore a child;
burst into song, shout for joy,
    you who were never in labor;
because more are the children of the desolate woman
    than of her who has a husband,
says the Lord.
“Enlarge the place of your tent,
    stretch your tent curtains wide,
    do not hold back;
lengthen your cords,
    strengthen your stakes.
For you will spread out to the right and to the left;
    your descendants will dispossess nations
    and settle in their desolate cities.

“Do not be afraid; you will not be put to shame.
    Do not fear disgrace; you will not be humiliated.
You will forget the shame of your youth
    and remember no more the reproach of your widowhood.
For your Maker is your husband
    the Lord Almighty is his name—
the Holy One of Israel is your Redeemer;
    he is called the God of all the earth.

I need Him to keep being the Father, Husband, Brother, and Friend I so desperately need. 

Thursday, May 16, 2019

2019 Book Nook Reading Challenge: 06

Title:  What Falls from the Sky 

Author:  Esther Emery

Info:  Copyright 2016:  Grand Rapids:  Zondervan.

Rating (on a scale of 1-4 stars):  ✮✮✮

Where Acquired:  Library Checkout

CategoryRecommended reads.  My sister-in-blog Annie, read this book a while back and recommended it.


Synopsis:  Emery, a former stage play director in California and social media addict, made the drastic decision to cut ties with her former life, especially the internet, for an entire year.  She chronicles her experience with withdrawal, finding community, and the spiritual changes resulting from this paradigm shift.

Favorite Quotes:

Only someone who has lost the spiritual power to be at leisure can be bored - Josef Pieper, quoted on p. 31.

In December, before the snow came, I thought it was possible to avoid being alone with myself.  Now that seems ridiculous.  Now I  am alone with myself all the time, sometimes for hours at a time.  In all those gaps grows a craving for the sacred, a wind that builds on itself like cataclysmic weather.  The more it is satisfied, the more it grows.  And so I read the Bible, like food for a hungry person like Braille for the blind, starting with the end of the world and working backwards toward creation. - p. 78

We talk about how weird and crazy it is that the loneliness could happen in the heart of our most vibrant cities--Boston and New York--that anybody could feel so abandoned and so alone.  And yes we do.  And we're not the only ones.  So many people speak of this  and feel this in our strange time.  It is the era of hyper-connected isolation.  p. 143

The Positive:

  • Sounds odd coming from me, I know, but I really loved the domesticity of her adventure.  Her descriptions of baking bread, cooking meals, nursing her daughter, playing with her son, and other everyday family activities made me smile.  Once she finally embraced and started to enjoy the domestic life, I was totally enthralled. 
  • Reading this gave me insight into a true social media/internet addiction.  My experience is that I try to use social media to supplement, rather than replace, face-to-face relationships.  I applaud her for being able to give it up completely.  I'm also a little jealous that she had so much built in community that made the transition possible.  Though I don't believe that I'm addicted to the internet or social media, I do feel somewhat overwhelmed by it and have a need to occasionally get completely off the grid. 
The Negative:
  • The author's constant lamenting over the supposed life she lost.  For example, on page 60, she's actually upset that her husband suggested that taking care of him and their children gave her purpose in life.  Also, she actually gets angry at her husband for complementing her on how well she mothers their children.  In a society that values wives and mothers above all women, it seems crazy the someone in that coveted position would regret it.  Quite frankly, it ticked me off; she's in the best societal position possible and she's bitter about it?
  • The book contains some rather confusing passages.  For example, after traveling to Nicaragua and hearing stories of the natives who trying to decide whether to immigrate to the United States, she decides that her best course of action is to stop buying bananas.  OK, how is refusing the buy the fruit that pays the salaries of many of the immigrant workers who pick the bananas helping them?  Yes, they should be paid better wages, but refusing to purchase makes no sense to me.
Conclusion:

Emery does an exceptional job of exposing the perils of using social media as a substitute for face-to-face interaction and projecting and unrealistic portrayal of life outside the internet to make it more appealing to the internet.

When I started the book, I hated it.  The tone at the beginning was like that of a Gretchen Rubin self-help tome: a pretentious dilettante who's attempting to come down to "peasant" level to briefly live "their" lives, write a book about it, make a crap-ton of money, then go back to life as usual.  Yet, I kept reading and was drawn deeper into her story.  Emery was no dilettante; she was chasing love and validation through cyberspace, not realizing she had it all along with her husband, children, and church.

Yes, the book was a little disjointed and confusing in places.  No, I don't agree with everything the author said, but this volume was beautifully written.  Once the story drew me in, I couldn't put the book down.

I'll most likely purchase a copy, or at least check the volume out of the library again in times when I feel that sense of "hyper-connected isolation."