Cooking Adventures

One Sabbath we decided to embark on a new cooking adventure as a family: homemade bagels and cream cheese.

Since the store hasn’t carried cream cheese in over a month, I set to scouring the internet for a realistic cream cheese recipe based on our Mozambican ingredients.

The older three girls began making bagels while I researched. They’ve grown accustomed to making batter from scratch and felt confident in their ability to prep the bagels in boiling water like we do when we make homemade soft pretzels.

Then while the bagels baked, Rachael, Abi and I went to the store to buy heavy cream and UHT shelf whole milk (that’s the best shot at milk that we have here).

Upon our return, we brought the milk and heavy cream to a boil and added lemon juice to separate the curds and whey.

We used a handkerchief as a cheese cloth and squeezed out the excess whey, while pouring cold water over the curds.

On the side, we also heated up some frozen strawberries (our “worth it” big buy once a month) and mashed them as a mix-in to part of the cream cheese. We mixed it to taste at the table, leaving it a tiny bit watery (we just had to fit in all the strawberries we cooked), but full of flavor.

To the “hand mixer thing” we went for the final stage of whipping air into the cream cheese with an added dash of salt. I also put in a dash of sugar for the littles’ enjoyment. 😉

We took turns mixing the thick cream cheese, adding back in a bit of the whey (oops, we were too efficient) to make a creamier cheese spread and to give our biceps a bit of a break. Ha!

Breakfast was served some two hours later (with the store trip in there). It was a WONDERFUL little “taste of America” and it was a fun family bonding time too.

Abi even made us a peanut butter banana smoothie to top off our breakfast 🙂

We’ve discussed making bagels again during a bulk cooking day and freezing them for future spoiling opportunities. 🙌🏼 Though I’d be really happy for the store to start carrying easy cream cheese again. 😝

Now on to washing the dishes… 🤦🏽‍♀️😂

With Each Passing Day

With each passing day I am more and more thankful. No, it’s not living some fantasy over here. It’s tough work and real life. In that mix of exhaustion, quarantine-like social distancing until the baby comes (since I am a “high risk” in this COVID world), and long discipleship conversations initiated by you budding and curious young people, I still find myself thankful to drink this cup of investment and not pass it on.

I’m thankful for hearing you play carefree in the yard, catching glimpses of your joy from kitchen sink dishwashing sessions.

I’m thankful to see you investing in a little sister you cannot wait to hold and have prayed over a chance to hold for years.

Slow and steady
Patience and dedication
Hannah was thrilled to pick out fabric and sew a pillow to help her hold her baby sister more comfortably once she arrives.
A portable baby seat project with Rachael.
Practicing cloth diapering.

Thankful to see your willingness to be adventurous and step outside of your previous inflexibilities.

Our semi-pathetic first attempt at reverse California rolls with Moz ingredients 😉
Weekly Salad bar for lunch that you all would have cried through many years ago, but welcome now.
He’s slimy!
And dazed

Thankful to see you love deeply without asking for anything in return.

Chick reading snuggles
Carefully moving them out of full sun and making sure they have enough seed.
Porch school so we can “babysit” the chicks
Serving.
The greatest skill comes in the investment of love.

Yep, it’s been a lot of us just doing normal life lately…

Just another day of piano practice 🙂
Enjoying the fruit of 7 hours of rug repair work for our market find.
Making worm composting bins. And learning how to use power tools. 🙂

And it makes me so thankful

Finding new views.
Sabbath dinner.

That I get to do slower life with you.

Nine

Your ninth birthday spread over a few days of joyful celebrations. This year you counted down until your birthday from Abi’s birthday back in June, you were SO EXCITED and couldn’t help anticipating the fun to be had. Every couple of days you’d alert us for three months of how many weeks until your birthday. Hehe. We were all excited too, girlie, even if there were other exciting things to celebrate between Abi’s birthday and yours (like Eden’s birthday and Mommy/Daddy’s anniversary, etc).

With the early arrival of three chicks for you to mother, a day full of your favorite foods (this year it was cinnamon rolls, burgers and tacos), and a trip to your favorite place, the beach, you sure seemed to be on cloud nine this year.

Who doesn’t love Daddy’s homemade cinnamon rolls?
Great breakfast choice, Hannah!
We had a blast just hanging out at the beach, exploring and relaxing together.
You had so much fun making and decorating chocolate animal cupcakes and homemade Reese’s peanut butter cups (I’m glad you love that American chocolate treat too!).
Eden and I loved giving you a homemade zookeeper hat to add to your zookeeper vest from Christmas.
Our enthusiastic, freckled zookeeper!
(And real-life clean laundry in the background. Woot!)

Happiest of birthdays, beautiful Hannah. You bring such light and life to our family. It is such a blessing to get to invest in you as you grow and mature into the purpose God has for your life. May you always find an animal to love on, new friends around every corner, and life full of sheer joyful adventure to be had. Love you so, ball of rupturing energy. We just can’t stop smiling around you as you wear your vibrant love for life on display. I cannot wait to see what adventure year nine has in store for you!

How did nine years fly by so quickly?

Deep Questions

*Warning: May not be suitable content for sensitive audiences.*

We sat on the couch together. Much like we usually do. My girls all piled around me. Some on the back of the couch so they could see and others tucked in close. They couldn’t wait to see my findings. To dream with me a bit.

“I just love that cute teether… look at that flower print…” They gawked over the couple of items in an online cart. A hopeful “wish list” waiting for a further time.

“Mommy? What will we do with all this stuff if the baby dies before we get to meet her?” Her innocent nine year old browns pierced my soul. “We’d cry together and then we’d find a family who could use the things,” came my brainstorming. And I realized that I cannot protect her from the answer to the question. I can’t even protect her from knowing about the question. I cannot protect her from what she already has known and felt.

I don’t think I ever imagined parenting would be like this. The older girls and I sat in the living room chatting, per usual, before dinner. No real direction to the conversation. Nowhere we needed to be, but together. The littles ran amuck in their room, playing until the “dinner call” stirred them.

He shared some reflections he’d penned, spurring a flood of memories for us all. He left to stir the macaroni, but still stayed engaged in the reflections from the nearby kitchen. Words poured out uncontrollably from eleven and twelve year old lips. Fear. Loss. Hurt. Deep emotions reminding us all of a time we couldn’t save each other from. A time when we all floundered in a deep ocean, just trying to stay afloat until we were saved. A time of medical emergencies, uncertainty, and desperate heart prayers all falling over Christmas time.

And I was reminded again how much I cannot protect them. I cannot even protect myself. How we live in a fallen world with great and deep hurts. Ones that drive us into the Father’s arms with tear-stained faces and a stunned lack of words on our lips.

But mixed in there are the victories too. The times He has held His hand over us while we were in the cleft of the rock. Those times cannot be forgotten. They’re just as real as the hurts. We recalled those together too. In the big jumble of rambling feelings.

The time the robber came and went through the nursery window back in the states, creeping right by my two sleeping babes. And yet he took nothing, despite meeting him face to face at the foot of Matt and my bed. Matt spoke and he fled. And the girls never even woke up. No, protection did not look anything like I expected. I’d have preferred protection to look like him never entering, let alone WHERE he chose to enter and exit. But protection wasn’t mine to define. And it taught us lessons we never even knew we needed.

She talked about how joyfully they played. How she was jealous of their happiness in the midst of her internal chaos. And then we thanked the Lord for protecting “the littles” innocence despite the long night before we knew joy would come. No, his protection did not look like I thought it would. We didn’t know then what beauty could come from the ashes. All we saw was smoke rising from the ashes. How could He use this? How would He use this? And we lifted our scars, the individual ones and the ones we had received as a family, as a broken offering.

I don’t know how to answer these deep questions. I don’t have the healing words for these deep hurts. I never will. And I’m thankful that today God has gifted me with the arms to reach out and offer hugs when I have no words. Today He has given us each other to walk through the valleys together. Thank You, Father.

I don’t know if we’ll get to keep her. Or for how long. But I am thankful that we’ve had today with her. And I am hopeful that there could even be a tomorrow. Because I’ve seen Him protect in unexpected ways, pulling us from the deepest valleys. I’ve seen Him bring about healing from wounds too deep to identify. I’ve seen Him extend His hand and literally hold our very lives together with every breath and heartbeat He has given. He knows what we need. And He knows the protection, security, and depth lessons that we really need to draw us to Himself and render us better tools in His hand.

Lord, they’re yours. They were never mine. Thank You for another day with them. Thank You for another day period. Thank You for your extended hand of protection. Thank You for Your hand of healing. May we use this “one more day” that You are giving to honor You, no matter what lesson may come on the horizon. You have been and You will be Enough. No matter what is asked of us or taken from us. Thank You, Father, for holding us when the world shakes. Your hands are and will always be our greatest security. Your will be done in these lives that You are sustaining, Father. Amen.

Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Baskerville 2 by Anders Noren.

Up ↑