A few good gems

On to the weekend! 

Norman Rockwell, via Smithsonian

Norman Rockwell, via Smithsonian

A round up of a few favorites from around the internet neighborhood:

I've been collecting a few patches lately and I got this one for Christmas this year in my stocking. I love it and I can't help thinking what four values/words of encouragement I would put on a patch tailored just for me--maybe enthusiasm, kindness, excellence and love? (Or, less aspirational but also realistically things to aim for daily: wake up, put on pants, laugh, take naps) These four are pretty perfect already, though:

patch via Best Made Co.

patch via Best Made Co.

via Frankie 

via Frankie 

Anonymous emotion sickness letters for the win

Hamiltines! (I think most of our family will forever think of Hamilton as our 2015 soundtrack. If you haven't yet caught the bug, prepare to fall hard!) 

via Casey Barber, available here

via Casey Barber, available here

"What's the question you're putting to bed and what's the one that's just being born within you?" (Courtney Martin, On Being blog)

An old favorite: make stress your friend (love Kelly McGonigal's work)

The amazing, intricate work of globe making. Wow!

Glennon Melton on the best part of life: Sistering. "Find your sister joists and be a sister joist." (I also loved her recent post on three rules for surviving a creative life)

Finally, a hilarious note of advice to the mid-Atlantic states from the Bangor Maine police department. Stay safe out there, folks! 

Happy weekending! May it be full of things you love.

36 days later

I'm just a girl, standing in front of a screen, asking where the time went (my deepest apologies to Notting Hill). Are you having a similar case of time whiplash? How on earth can it be the end(ish) of January already?! Here's what we've been up to at our house (and I'll just admit up front that a couple of these may show up as posts of their own in the future):

I'm living without a phone (mine got stolen/lost right before Christmas) so I've pretty much jumped off social media and am rather off the grid, in general. It's an adjustment but it's not terrible. Mostly I am just too wallet-reluctant to buy another phone, ugh. My watch, computer, point-and-shoot camera, and landline are filling in pretty well for my smartphone in the meantime. 

I've been pretty immersed in wedding planning and prep (please send reinforcements, I'm in over my head!). More posts to come on this topic. I may not know the first thing about throwing a wedding but I do appreciate a good website project (Minted makes it super easy):

I'm still riding the boost of a terrific family trip to New Zealand over the holidays--forced family fun along with some (slightly uncomfortable but important) learning opportunities with everyone figuring out how to reconfigure as a family every time we get back together. But totally worth it!

Speedboats in Shotover Canyon

Speedboats in Shotover Canyon

Gorgeous Doubtful Sound

Gorgeous Doubtful Sound

Hiking Queenstown Hill

Hiking Queenstown Hill

In an attempt to fit in as much as we could over our last and final summer holiday break in Australia, after we put the girls on the plane back to their universities in the states I joined G and Sam (miiiiiiiiles outside of my comfort zone and fitness level, to be honest) on a 4-day backpacking/hiking trip in Tasmania. It was spectacular, rewarding, and hard going now and then.  (Again, though, totally worth it!)

Top of The Blade at Cape Pillar

Top of The Blade at Cape Pillar

Looking down from Cape Huay

Looking down from Cape Huay

After that excitement we came back to routine+everyday life last week--digging through emails, catching up on various commitments, doing laundry, trying to get ahead of the weeds in the garden, and putting away Christmas. Hey, if a Christmas tree was never decorated, can it just be called a tree and kept up all year? Asking for a friend.

Which brings me to right now: I'm christening this solo weekend, while G and Sam are away on a scout trip, as my "personal retreat weekend"--making 2016 plans and goals and generally embracing my list-making, future-planning inner geek. Also staying in my pajamas far into the day, eating when/what I want, and streaming some Netflix. Because inner lazy geek, too.

What about you, friends? Catch me up on your doings lately.

And I know Sarah has had a very full month as well...she'll catch us up soon, too.

O Christmas Tree

image courtesy of Brae McDougald

image courtesy of Brae McDougald

Merry Christmas everyone! I'm about 95% done with my shopping, and I'm feeling the need to do some Christmas baking. I've been avoiding sugar for a while now, and she's been calling my name something fierce.

Last year, in the days leading up to Christmas, my good friend Jen dropped off the warmest, most delightful treat. It was a Christmas tree baked from dough and brown sugar, slathered in a gooey icing. My memory is that the night she dropped off the tree my family was away from the house, and as I sat watching a Christmas movie I ate the entire tree. Or at least most of it. I still think fondly on that evening. Don't judge.

Last Saturday Jen put on a baking demonstration for some ladies at church and taught us how to make the much-coveted cinnamon roll tree. She has also agreed to share her recipe here -- one passed down through three generations. Don't be daunted by the long list of instructions. Things start moving quickly once you get your feet under you . . . ummm, flour under you.  Also, if you scroll down, there is a short but handy video clip demonstrating the actual dough handling. Many thanks to Jen for her recipe and her fine showmanship!

Ingredients:

Dough:

  • 1.5 cups milk
  • 1 tablespoon yeast (plus pinch of sugar and appx 3 tablespoons warm water)
  • ½ cup (1 stick) butter
  • ½ cup white sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 5-6 cups flour
  • 1/2 stick butter
  • 1 tablespoon cinnamon
  • 1 cup brown sugar

Icing:

  • 3-4 cups powdered sugar
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • ¼ cup milk

Making the Dough:

  1. Scald milk in a small pan over medium-high heat.  (Scald = heat without stirring until just before the boiling point, then remove from heat.)
  2. In the bowl of a large mixer add butter, sugar and salt.
  3. Pour scalded milk over butter and sugar mixture. Allow to come to luke warm temperature.
  4. “Pop” yeast. (In a small dish combine yeast, pinch of sugar, and enough warm water to dissolve yeast (about 3 tablespoons).  Stir to combine and let sit for a few minutes)
  5. When butter/sugar mixture is almost luke warm, turn mixer to lowest setting to combine and ensure butter is melted.
  6. While mixer is running on low speed, add first cup of flour. Then add the eggs.
  7. Add yeast mixture.
  8. Continue adding flour gradually, allowing it to incorporate. Increase mixer speed as necessary until dough forms and pulls away from bowl.  Dough should be very slightly sticky to the touch (not sticky enough to leave dough on your fingers) and should feel like your earlobe when lightly pinched.
  9. Cover and leave in warm place to rise for approximately 90 minutes, or until doubled.

Rolling out the Trees:

  1. Cut the dough into three equal parts, form each into a ball, and then set those not actively being worked aside and cover with a towel.
  2. On a floured surface, shape the ball into a rough triangular ball-shape.
  3. Flour a rolling pin and your hands and begin to roll the dough, forming a squat triangle with rounded points.  Work the rolling pin directly toward each point in turn, avoiding rolling toward the straight edges generally.  Work the bottom points more than the top so that the base is wider than the triangle is tall.

4. When the dough is a reasonably nice squat triangle, about ¼ - ½ thickness throughout, stop rolling.
5. Melt ½ stick butter in a small dish.
6. Combine 1 cup brown sugar with 1 tablespoon cinnamon in a separate dish.
7.  With a pastry brush, spread butter down the center of the triangle dough from the top point all the way down to the center of the base.  The butter should form a thinner triangle than the dough so that it comes to a point at the top, but at the bottom it only covers the middle third of the dough, leaving the outer thirds of the base unbuttered.
8. Sprinkle enough of the brown sugar mixture over the butter, spreading it out with your hand, to cover the buttered area.  It should cover the area, but not be a very thick coating as excess sugar will ooze out and leave a mess when baking.  (If desired, you can add some raisins or nuts at this step).

brown sugarweb.jpg

9. Using your fingers and a small cup of water, wet the outer side edges of the triangle sufficiently so that the dough will stick to itself.
10. Fold the outer edges into the center, pinching the wet edges to seal.  Be careful not to let the wet edges dip into the sugar/butter in the center.  Once the edges are pinched, carefully spread the pastry back out a bit so that only the very center pinched seam runs down the middle of the now elongated triangle shape.  It should start taking on the shape of a taller tree now. 


11. Using two hands, carefully flip the pastry over onto a cookie sheet or piece of parchment.  The seam should now be on the bottom.
12. Using kitchen shears, make horizontal cuts from each side towards the center, leaving the center intact (don’t cut further than your seam on the underside).  The cuts on either side should line up directly across from one another.  The first cut at the base should be about 1.5 inches from the bottom.  The remaining cuts should be about ¾ - 1 inch apart, leaving a small attached triangular shape at the top.
13. Once both sides are cut, take the bottom strip on either side and fold downward, crossing the two strips to form a trunk.
14. Next twist each strip one turn downward, pulling out slightly and pressing down after you twist to encourage the dough to stay twisted.Once you’ve twisted all the strips, you have now formed your tree!!  Set aside and cover with a towel for about 15 minutes while the oven preheats to 350-375.
15. Bake each tree uncovered for 12-18 minutes, until lightly browned—careful not to overbake.
16. Remove and let cool for a few minutes.

This video is about Christmas Tree

Icing:

  1. Put approximately 3 cups powdered sugar into a mixing bowl.
  2. dd 2 tablespoons softened butter.
  3. Add 1 teaspoon vanilla.
  4. Add ¼ cup milk.
  5. Beat mixture adding milk or powdered sugar to achieve a soft icing or thick glaze—you should be able to drizzle the icing, but just barely.
  6. When icing is desired consistency, add green food coloring if desired.

Icing the Tree:

  1. When tree has cooled slightly, (it should still be warm, but not hot), use two spatulas to lift it carefully onto a foil tray, or foil lined piece of cardboard.
  2. Drizzle or drop spoonfuls glaze over tree with a spoon.
  3. Lightly spread the glaze so it slides into the cracks.
  4. Shake sprinkles over tree before glaze hardens (optional).

Serve while still warm if possible, or when fully cool, cover with plastic wrap.  Add a bow at the top of the tree like a star and give to a friend!

Hygge for the holidays

Congratulations to Annie's Lauren on her engagement! Young love makes me at once hopeful for the future and nostalgic for my own family's giddy beginnings. The pronouncements I made! My children would never play with toy guns (no encouraging violence)! We would never go to bed angry! I would always be able to fit into my wedding dress! 

Oh, pish posh.

My current pronouncements involve sure-fire ways to stay connected with my young adult children and to build a  welcoming homebase that will be a haven for them and their future spouses and children. So when an article about the Danish concept of hygge as "drama-free family time" crossed my Facebook feed, I sat up and paid attention. I knew a little about hygge from Annie. A long, long time ago (seven years to be precise), Annie posted about hygge on Basic Joy. Hygge, pronounced hooga, is all about cozy, relaxed gatherings that focus on enjoying the moment -- the spaces, food, and company. "The Secret to Danish Happiness" calls hygge a "shelter from the outside world." 

That. I want hygge -- the coziness, the sheltering, the food. I want all of it. 

During the Thanksgiving holiday, I explained the basic principles of hygge to my kids, but mostly I tried to keep the foundational ideas in mind while planning family activities. Also, sometimes I, ahem, gently reminded them when they were acting in an un-hygglig manner. Maybe I'm a bit late to the game to raise my children as Danish prodigies, but I still find the philosophy helpful in formulating a family atmosphere where everyone feels included and accepted. You can read the entire article here, but the basic concepts are as follows:

  1. Come as you are. Be authentic. "Competition, boasting, and pretense are not bonding, but rather subtly dividing." So there.
  2. Don't be controversial. Hyyglig time is not when we should debate politics or philosophy, so in this spirit dispense with any negativity or judgment of other people's ideas.
  3. Act like a team member. THIS is the best one! Hygge includes everyone contributing to the event and to the conversation. Identify what needs to be done and pitch in without being asked. That seals it. I'm moving to Denmark.
  4. Respect the hygge. Jessica Alexander explains, "Hygge time is about providing a temporary shelter from social climbing, networking, competition, and materialism." So don't do that stuff!! Really. Just stop.
  5. Hygge time is special time. And because it is special, it is limited. By demarcating hygge time from other types of interaction, we can stock up on the warmth, love, and appreciation we need to face the outside world. Now that's what family should be about.

Generally speaking, hygge (and my study is admittedly limited), is about appreciating the moment and the simple pleasures of living. It's about the glow of the twinkle lights, the sweetness in a cup of hot cocoa, the warmth of conversation -- all absent of the motivations,  competitions, or worries of typical American modern life. And it's about helping others to enjoy those simple pleasures alongside us. 

So, not such a big order. Just erase 99% of the cultural norms I was raised on, and I'll be good. What about you? Can we start a hygge movement?

A few good gems

Happy (early) weekend! Today is the last day of the school year for us in Australia (at least at Sam's school--some kids have another week or so) so we're getting ready to attend the closing awards/concert tonight. ANNNND this weekend my brother Chris arrives for some Australian adventuring here. Can't wait!

Pierre Bonnard, l'armoire blanche, 1931

Pierre Bonnard, l'armoire blanche, 1931

10 things your kids need to be able to do on their own by middle school. So interesting!

Emily McDowell's new line of empathy cards just hits the mark. I love these.

Sam always anticipates DJ Earworm's cool annual mashup of the year's pop songs. Here's this years (I can't link to just the audio so just be aware that the music video clips are included--not always my fave images). 

What a fantastic, beautiful cheese & fruit tray--perfect for holiday hosting:

I love these cartoons that Korean artist Puuung created that capture what real love looks like--"love comes in ways that we can easily overlook in our daily lives. So I try to find the meaning of love in our daily lives and make it into artwork."

7 things to say after your teen submits a college application. These are great for framing the process and helping everyone move on with the year.

I love these little paper houses--such a great idea for a re-usable advent calendar that is delightful and decorative on its own. (Let's just agree that it's not too late to do these--even though it's the 4th of the month--still time to catch up OR do 12 days of Christmas, right? Right?!)

I posted these next two to our Facebook page this week but just in case you missed them:

Mary Louise Parker's letter to the future man who loves her daughter (an excerpt from her new book, which is in my pile waiting to be read) just nails all those feelings and hopes.

Glennon Melton's letter to her child's teacher is a great example of what to do when your kids get in trouble


Off to the weekend--wishing you some rewarding family time in the middle of the holiday (sometimes) craziness. And happy first day of Hanukkah on Sunday! See you back here next week.

Engagery

Big news at our house! Over Thanksgiving weekend my daughter Lauren got engaged! We had a bit of an inkling in advance and they've been kind of pre-engaged for a little while. (Is "kind of pre-engaged" even possible? Or are you either engaged or not? This question has been a topic of conversation around here for a little while. Please advise.)  Early last week Patrick skyped with us to ask for our blessing and let us know it was happening soon, which was much appreciated--maybe even more than is usually the case in these situations, since we feel so very far away at times like this and we were happy to feel a part of it.  We had a good heart-to-heart and feel delighted to welcome Patrick into the family.

Side note: When we moved to Australia I joked with G that maybe we'd have a little Australian surprise addition to the family while we were here. Turns out he came fully grown, ha! And not Australian. Much easier to grow a family this way.

In case you're curious (and I always am about these things): They've known each other for four+ years--they met their freshman year at university when their apartments were assigned to the same FHE group. They were good friends and never dated but spent a lot of time together--I remember that Lauren thought he was terrific. They kept in touch on and off over the years and then when Lauren moved back to school after her mission in April, they ended up living right across the street from each other and the friendship picked up again. By the time we came to the states in July they had grown close and Lauren invited him to our family reunions on both sides--so he's had the chance to see what he's getting into, mwahaha. The engagement took place in Logan after several days of Thanksgivinging with G's side of the family. It was just the two of them on the grounds of the temple, lovely words, a ring, and a few tears, she said. Hooray for the kind souls who snapped a picture afterwards:

So bring on the wonderful world of wedding planning! From afar! (Insert emoji that combines joy and anxiety and anticipation and homesickness. With a dash of inherent but contained parental-control-freakery and hopefully twice as much go-with-the-flowness.) 

Although this is definitely not all about me (or even a little), it does feel surreal to be at this stage. I'm a mother of the bride! It's a stamp in my grown-up passport, for sure, to return to this land of weddings as a mother when I was last here as a bride over 25 years ago. Do I need to pass a certification of some kind? Have a badge? 

 The wedding will be fun to plan and I am eager to get any and all hints and recommendations for planning a lovely, hyggelig celebration--I'll pass along as much as I can here, too. Ultimately, though, it's about that marriage relationship and their future. It's about my daughter being happier than I've seen her. And it's about adding Patrick to our family with open arms, expanding even as we are shrinking, gaining even as we lose. I love what my good friend told her son as he was dating and getting close to getting engaged: "all I ask is that you choose someone who will let me love her." I can definitely get behind that sentiment: more people to love.

Book Rx

photo via Remodelista (print available here, too)

photo via Remodelista (print available here, too)

Sometimes I wish there were a book doctor, someone you could go to and say "I'm feeling _____ and I really need a book that will ______." Of course, in many neighborhoods and corners of the universe, librarians and booksellers serve this purpose really well. But it's not a given that I've found that person in every place I've lived (like right now, for instance) and sometimes I'm left kind of floundering trying to find that next book that suits my mood/energy level/location/calendar. I'm guess I'm longing for a Lucy-in-Peanuts kind of situation where there's a little booth and "the book doctor is in" and she writes up just the perfect literary medicine for what ails me.

So, in case you feel the same way, consider these a few book prescriptions tailored to your mood and inclination, from me to you (and heading into this long weekend, you might want to have a book at the ready just in case):

If you want a fun, romcom (or drama/comedy) kind of read perfect for a holiday trip:
The Red Notebook by Antoine Laurain
Happiness for Beginners by Katherine Center (and her other books)
The Precious One by Marisa de los Santos (and her other books)
Landline by Rainbow Rowell
A Window Opens by Elisabeth Egan
The Solace of Leaving Early by Haven Kimmel
Where'd You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple

If you want an atmospheric, wintery read (on the heavier/more dramatic side):
Burial Rites by Hannah Kent
The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah
The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandrew Dumas
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
Atonement by Ian McEwan
Possession by AS Byatt

If you want to travel in a literary story to another land or time:
State of Wonder by Ann Patchett
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet by David Mitchell
Life after Life by Kate Atkinson
Transatlantic by Colum McCann
People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks
All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver
Easter Island by Jennifer Vanderbes

If you want a pep talk to be brave, be yourself, be creative:
Rising Strong (& Daring Greatly, too) by Brene Brown
Year of Yes by Shonda Rimes
Big Magic by Elizabeth Gilbert

If you want a satisfying (and sometimes heartbreaking) family-style saga:
History of the Rain by Niall Williams
Martin Marten by Brian Doyle
Hannah Coulter by Wendell Berry
Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner
Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner
Peace like a River by Leif Enger
Rain of Gold, Victor E Villasenor
Leeway Cottage by Beth Gutcheon
East of Eden by John Steinbeck
Kate Morton's books
The Prince of Tides by Pat Conroy (and others of his, too)

If you want a fun, chatty read--like a lunch out with friends:
Yes Please by Amy Poehler
Glitter and Glue by Kelly Corrigan
Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake by Anna Quindlen
I Feel Bad About My Neck by Nora Ephron (& also I Remember Nothing, too)
Stories I Only Tell My Friends by Rob Lowe
Bossypants by Tina Fey
Real Moms: Making It Up As We Go by Lisa Valentine Clark

If you want a page-turning series--binge reading :
The Inspector Armand Gamache series by Louise Penny (#11 came out this year)
Tana French's Dublin Murder Squad series (#5 came out last year)
The Cazalet Chronicles by Elizabeth Jane Howard (WWII Britain family saga series)

If you want to dive into some ideas:
Creativity, Inc. by Ed Catmull
Sacred Fire by Ronald Rolheiser
This is the Story of a Happy Marriage by Ann Patchett
Living a Life that Matters by Harold Kushner
Making Toast by Roger Rosenblatt
Global Mom: Eight Countries, Sixteen Addresses, Five Languages, One Family by Melissa Dalton-Bradford
Disrupt Yourself by Whitney Johnson


Now it's your turn ! What book suggestions/prescriptions would you give for various moods and circumstances? I'm definitely on the prowl for my next favorite.

For more reading/book gifting suggestions, check out these other books we've loved. And we always share what we're currently reading on the side column over there-->