Sunday, March 29, 2020

Music Soothes My Soul

For as long as I can remember, and probably even before, music has been a huge part of my life. It's been the thing that soothed me when nothing else could. Whether I was an angsty teen listening to classic rock under a haze of incense and twinkle lights or driving around in the sunshine listening to Mraz, or crying through loss to a Coldplay album, it has been a constant comfort in my life.

When I got my iPod WAY back when that was a thing, I had an 80GB one that was filled with more music than one soul could listen to, so I made playlists of the favorites. One playlist was called Sunshine and filled my soul with happiness-- it's been tweaked through the years and delivered me safely along multiple road trips. I've listened to it on sunny days and on days where I needed a little warmth and joy in my life. I've sung into my hairbrush more than once to these songs.

I also have a Chill playlist, which is exactly what it sounds like-- the kind of ambient music that lulls you to sleep or calms you down in the midst of anxiety.

Throughout this whole quarantine experience, I've been listening to the Waitress soundtrack or random French cafe music. Shelley has been favoring Dr. Dre's Chronic album. But when I want music to dance to, cook to, get me into the right mindset, I've been leaning on these two playlists.
Chilling in the Sunshine 

I am sharing my top ten picks from each playlist here!

Sunshine:
1) "The Woods" by Hollow Coves
2) "&Run" by Sir Sly
3) "No Going Back" by Yuno
4) "Dreams" by Beck
5) "My Go Away Dream" by Not the King
6) "Superposition" by Young the Giant
7) "Arlandria" by Foo Fighters
8) "The Emotion" by BORNS
9) "True to Myself" by Ziggy Marley
10) "Calico Skies" by Paul McCartney

Chill:
1) "The River" by Groove Armada
2) "Somersault" by Zero 7
3) "Pocket Change" by One Less Reason
4) "Show Me Where I Belong" by Extreme Music
5) "Cherry Blossom Girl" by Air
6) "Cold Hearts" by Club 8
7) "Draw Your Swords" by Angus & Julia Stone
8) "Telescope" by Boom Forest
9) "Woman" by City & Colour
10) "Someone Who Loves Me" by Sara Bareilles

Let me know if you check any of the songs out-- I hope it helps soothe you through these crazy times. If you have any recommendations, feel free to leave them in the comments!

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Pantry Potluck

When I was a child, we were in the "robbing Peter to pay Paul" category as far as finances go. This wasn't something I truly processed until later, partially because we were raised to be appreciative for what we had and not ask for more, and partly because my mum is a wiz in the kitchen. She could take a box of penne, a single chicken breast, and a can of black olives and somehow create a delicious, filling meal with leftovers.

Found a box of poppyseed muffin mix in the pantry!
I come from a long line of comfort cooks, and am fortunate enough to have a partner who creates dishes with plate presentation to rival a five-star restaurant even though we're just sitting in our little living/dining room.

I did not inherit this gene.

I can take any of the sort of one-pot meals-- chili, spaghetti sauce, and I make one hell of a pot roast-- but anything that involves timing evades me. If you, also, find yourself lacking Hello Fresh-level meal prep as you rake the back of your pantry for some random can of garbanzo beans or a lone bag of mixed vegetables, I am sharing some recipes cultivated from a few of my nearest and dearest to give you some inspiration. Remember, if you don't have a certain ingredient, improvise! Cooking is a lot more forgiving than baking.

Mum's Meat Pie "I made it up!"
1) Take 3/4 pound ground meat, finely chopped onion, and sautee until browned.
2) Season with salt, pepper, garlic powder.
3) Pour in some beef broth for flavor.
4) Shred 1/2 cup baby carrots and add that plus baby portobello mushrooms in butter and sautee. Mix with meat.
5) Pour into pie crust and cover with layer of dough. Add ventilation holes.
6) Bake like you'd bake a pie-- 350* for 30 minutes or until golden brown.

Liz's Gnocchi Chowder "real cozy & chowdery"
1) Sautee vegetables (onion, carrot, celery, peas, green beans, corn-- whatever you have on hand) for six minutes; add garlic and sautee 2 minutes longer
2) Add broth, rosemary, thyme, nutmeg, salt, and pepper to taste
3) add chicken (raw, and optional), bring soup to a boil, reduce to medium low, and then simmer for 8-12 minutes.
4) Make a roux-- melt butter in a medium saucepan over medium heat, add flour, stir constantly one minute.
5) Make bechamel sauce-- while whisking vigorously, pour in milk and continue to whisk to smooth any lumps. Salt and pepper to taste. Cook until mixture thickens, add in cream, remove from heat.
6) Once chicken reaches 165*, remove chicken from soup and allow it to rest for five minutes before dicing into pieces.
7) Add gnocchi, cook for about 7 minutes.
8) Reduce soup mixture to low heat, stir in milk mixture.
9) Add in cooked chicken and spinach. Cook until spinach wilts.
10) Serve with warm Romano cheese if desired.

Paige Taylor's Brussels Sprouts "I don't measure shit"
1) Cut Brussels sprouts into quarters.
2) Sautee on stove with olive oil.
3) Add gruyere cheese, salt, pepper, minced garlic, and lemon juice to taste.
4) Cook until dark.

Ben's Crockpot Nachos "A 735 Potluck Favorite" 
1) In a crockpot, combine 2 cans of beans, 1 can of corn, 1 jar of salsa, 1 chicken breast, and Red Hot (to taste) for four hours.
2) Shred the chicken.
3) Toss in a bar of cream cheese and cheddar. Melt for 15-20 minutes.
4) Serve with chips.

Jen's Amazing Skinny Chicken Fried Cauliflower Rice "It's pretty good and healthy"
1) Combine 1 egg and 2 egg whites in a small bowl. Beat with fork, set aside.
2) Coat a large non-stick pan with coconut oil and heat over medium high heat. Stir in cauliflower rice and 1 teaspoon of minced garlic. Stir fry for 3 minutes, stirring occasionally.
3) Add 1 cooked, diced chicken breast. Stir fry 1 minute. Add in 1/2 cup scallions, 1 cup frozen peas and carrots, 1 cup of chopped celery, and 3 tablespoons coconut aminos.
4) Cook about 3 minutes until heated through.
5) Push mixture to sides of pan, coat pan with oil, and add egg mixture. Cook about 1 minute. Add sesame oil, pepper, and stir fry all ingredients together.

X's Italian Sausage & Orzo Soup "Freeze without the orzo and add that when heating up"
1) Heat olive oil in a pan and add 1/2 chopped onion and garlic. Sautee until onion softens.
2) Roughly break Italian sausages into small chunks; sautee 6 minutes.
3) Deglaze pot by adding stocks. Scrape pan to remove any brown bits and stir in tomatoes.
4) When stock comes to a boil, stir in Orzo pasta, oregano, basil, red chili flakes, salt, and pepper.
5) Cover and let cook for 10-12 minutes over medium heat, until Orzo is almost cooked.
6) Stir in 2 cups of spinach and let it cook for two minutes. Remove from heat.
7) Stir in 1/4 cup of half-and-half and 1 cup of grated Parmesan cheese.

Quarantine PB Cookies  "for your blog"
1) Combine 1 egg, 1 cup of peanut butter, and 1 cup of sugar in a bowl.
2) Bake at 325* for 10-12 minutes.

Mum's Quarantine Banana Bread "Eggs are scarce!"
1) Take one beaten egg, 3 very ripe bananas (mashed), 1 tsp. of vanilla, 5 & 1/3 tablespoons melted butter, 1 & 1/2 cups flour, 1/2 cup sugar, 1 tsp. baking soda, and a pinch of salt. Combine in large bowl.
2) Pour into floured loaf pan.
3) Bake at 375* for 40 minutes or so.

Monday, March 23, 2020

Blanket Forts and a Cardboard Projector

One of my favorite stores to visit when I want to go kick around is the Home Goods store. I rarely buy anything, but I like to go look at the various knickknacks and window shop with Shelley. It's fun to imagine where we would put certain things in the modern A-frame cabin with the glass wall that we don't actually have but categorize as "someday".

On one of our trips there during Christmas time, I found this cardboard movie projector on one of those shelves of impulse stocking stuffer buys, and since it was only $12 I impulsively grabbed it. It's been sitting around waiting for a camping trip or another beach journey to be broken out, but now is the time.

Tonight we are going to have a movie night. We gathered a bunch of our pillows and blankets together and pushed the couch aside so that we could lay on the floor. I am going for a drive-in vibe, and of course added popcorn and a strand of twinkle lights. Our goal is to project it over the railing onto the wall.


Pillows, blankets, popcorn: ✔

If you want to create your own movie projector instead of buying one, it would be a fun way to stay entertained. Obviously, this is not a high-quality image here (Shelley was quick to point out we have a perfectly good television) but it's more for the nostalgic aspect and that it's something different. Plus, if you have kids, it could be a good activity with payoff-- a movie.

Of course we ate the popcorn already!


The first thing you'll need to do is cut a hole in the side of a shoebox, and then fit a lens in the hole (I saw people online using magnifying glass lenses without the handle, although mine came with a lens that I had to fit into this sort of toilet paper roll-looking thing). Then insert your phone, with the brightness and volume all the way up, and start projecting your movie of choice!




 It needs to be DARK in order for this to show up well, so I'm looking forward to something either black & white or spooky-- maybe a classic horror film?

Let me know if you try it out!

Saturday, March 21, 2020

Love in a Time of Quarantine

Hi friends! I am sure that, like me, you are also going a little stir-crazy with the idea of being cooped up. I am blessed to already work from home, but I am used to going out in the evenings and spending time with family and friends.

I haven't left the house in seven days. SEVEN DAYS!

I am going to share some fun things here over the next week or so, because we could all use a bright side in a time like this.

In case you didn't catch the pun in my post title, this is going to be about books. One thing about having a suddenly clear social calendar is a lot of time to read the TBR pile that has been judging me as it grows. I figured I could share some of the ones at the top of the list, and if you'd like to read along with me, we could have a social distance book club. Maybe I'll do a live and we can chat about them, if anyone wants to.

Books on my list:
1) Naturally Tan by Tan France: I am currently reading this. If you've seen Queer Eye, you understand. Bonus points if, like me, you hear his fantastic voice reading it in your head.

2) The Truth About Magic by Atticus: If you don't follow him on Instagram already, do yourself a favor. If you don't have an Instagram, make one just so you can follow his page. He makes poetry cool again.

3) This Lullaby by Sarah Dessen: Sometimes I just want a good YA love story. This has long been one of my favorites, and I am going to re-read it because I want something light and fun. (Recently read Starry Eyes and that is a solid choice too.)

4) Silence: in the Age of Noise by Erling Kagge: This one is a reminder to slow down, practice gratitude, create, and allow ourselves to just be. Self-explanatory.

5) Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman: This was recommended to me by several friends over the years, and has been patiently sitting on my Kindle waiting.

6) Essentials: Essays by The Minimalists: The Minimalists have a pretty inspirational podcast/email they share about ensuring any "stuff" you have only adds value to your life. I got this book excited to begin a great purge but haven't read it yet. I have considerably more time to declutter now, so this makes the list.

If you'd like to follow along, all of the books are linked. I'm going to start with these, but if you have any suggestions, leave a comment-- I could always add more!

Stay calm and happy reading!

Heads Carolina, Tails California

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