We are former working moms blogging about faith, family, friends and food! In between writing about our hopes, prayers and adventures, we hope to bridge the gap between working moms and stay at home moms by providing recipes and resources everyone can use to make their family healthier.
Not like “Yes I can!” Like can food. Jams and applesauce, mostly. Butters. Once, lemon curd.
It feels weird to admit this. Maybe because Dana and I have realized that with our recipes and our stories, we might be crossing over into crunchy granola SAHM mom-dom. There is nothing wrong with crunchy granola moms, but we don’t fit the mold. We’re more like cancer fighting sparkly Queens of the Castle moms. And we’re taking urban homesteading mainstream, baby!
Anyhow, last Fall, I made a giant batch of organic Granny Smith applesauce with nothing in it but apples, water and cinnamon. It was tasty, but we didn’t eat it fast enough and some went to waste. I could have frozen it, but I have issues with freezing things. So instead I started canning.
I bought the Ball canning kit, which comes with the Ball Recipe Book. There are plenty of websites that have tutorials about canning. I’ll put some at the bottom. Know that canning is science, in terms of recipes and measurements. Turns out, you can’t just make Aunt Sue’s famous pasta sauce and can it. Unless you want to die of botulism. You have to balance things like acids and sugars. Jams are a bit more forgiving, in the sense that if you screw up the ingredients, you only risk getting the consistency wrong, and not death. As long as you have correctly sanitized your jars, lids and tops, that is.
It scared me at first too. But it’s really just a process and once you get the process down, it’s easy. I make sure I use recipes which I know are tried and true.
The first time I canned jam, it took four hours to get three half-pints. I was nervous and kept checking and double-checking the process.
Last week I canned 4 half pints of blueberry jam and 3 pints of apricot jam in 90 minutes total. Six months of jam in an hour and a half. That’s the kind of canning I am talking about!
I got the apricots at the store. But the kids and I picked the blueberries ourselves.
I’ve never picked blueberries before. This farm was amazing—beautiful, green, clean. The kind of place where you let the kids run free and don’t worry about them.
We ended up with three pints for $14. Considering blueberries can run $4/half pint in the store when they’re not on sale, this was a pretty good price.
I make low sugar jam because I cannot bring myself to put 6 cups of sugar in anything. We don’t notice any difference in taste.
In 45 minutes, I took blueberries from this…
To this…
To this…
To this…
I know, it’s not for everyone. But if you are curious about canning, then I’ll tell you it’s not so hard once you get started. And there’s something so fulfilling about the fruits (ha!) of my labor all lined up there on the counter.
Last year on Father’s Day, this was my Facebook status: There are so many different faces that my dad has worn as a parent. Many of you know the strict, almost mean, dad that reared himself when I was in high school. Many of you know the sarcastic joker who is always giving people a hard time. Many of you know the proud father and grandfather that would do anything for his girls. But today, I celebrate the man who is teaching me to be fearless in the face of whatever life throws my way, to not feel sorry for myself when I’m sick or tired, but to get big, get strong, and to meet the challenge. You know, these are the lessons that he taught me in sports, and now I’m seeing him live them in life. I love you, Daddy, and I’m so damn proud of you.
Little did I know that the next Father’s Day would be the one-month anniversary of his funeral. Some of you knew him, some of you knew of him, but most of you didn’t. As he spent more and more time in the hospital, and even when we brought him home for hospice, I found myself telling more than a couple of nurses and doctors, “This isn’t my dad. I mean, he’s not this sick, elderly man that you see. He runs his dog every morning, he wrestles around, he throws the football in the front yard with us on Super Bowl Sunday.”
When we planned his funeral, we decided that there wouldn’t be a sharing time, just the pastor’s message. My dear Aunt Candy, his youngest sister, read his obituary, but other than that, there were no personal touches. So today, I want to share him with you, to give him the eulogy that I wish I had given him then.
At my wedding, 2007
My dad, Allen Lee Builteman, was born in 1938 in rural Oklahoma. He lived for about 12 years in a small town called Yale. Even though he spent the majority of his life living elsewhere, he was always a country boy at heart, and considered Oklahoma is home. I traveled there with him and my mom in 2010 and saw his home, which is still in the family. The garden that his grandmother planted is still growing in the back.
Dad with his parents Mary-Mae and Guy in 1941His Aunt Lena and his Uncle Elsie raised him those years in Oklahoma. He worked in the town drug store that Elsie owned and always credited his knowledge about business to his uncle. And since he was the soda jerk, he could make a mean chocolate malt. That was always a treat, when Daddy made malts on a hot summer evening.
In 1955, he moved with his parents and siblings to Wiesbaden, Germany, where his father was stationed after the war. It was there that he fell in love with Marlene Dietrich and her famous “Lili Marlene,” which I sang to him often in the hospital and at home his last few days.
Wiesbaden, Germany – February 1956As a father, my dad was extremely supportive of my brother and me, especially when it came to our athletic careers. He coached Derek in pony league baseball and in basketball, even into adulthood. And he cheered from the stands at my volleyball games. It became a bit of a joke that I played volleyball because it was a sport that Daddy couldn’t coach!
But his true love was always basketball. When I was younger he coached church league, but gave that up because it wasn’t competitive enough. It was then that he formed a city league team called The Cherokee. Watching these men, many of whom had played professionally in the United States and Europe, was instrumental in forming my identity as an athlete, which has in turn formed my identity as a person. If there was a game that he was playing, he wanted to win. It didn’t matter if it was a friendly scrimmage. He would say, “If we’re keeping score, I want to win.” Me, too.
After a game at Long Beach State, 1997… which we won, by the way.Whether it was on the court or in the banking world, or even in his personal life, my dad demanded excellence. As a kid and teen, it totally bugged me. It seemed he was always ragging on me. Nothing I did ever seemed good enough. But as an adult, I saw him always give his best. No, not his best, his excellence. You see, with him, saying you did your best wasn’t really good enough. You had to give your excellence. And if you didn’t, he’d let you know about it.
Let me give you an example: late in his banking career, the bank he worked for hired a new president. To say that the two of them didn’t get along would be an understatement. As a passive-aggressive punishment, the new president moved my dad from Senior Vice President/Manager of their corporate office in Ontario to Senior Vice President/Manager of a small office in San Bernardino. Instead of fighting or complaining, my dad pulled a “Dad Move.” He went after two new accounts: The San Manuel Band of Mission Indians and the Diocese of San Bernardino County. The Natives and the Church. Go Dad! Those two accounts, plus the few that he had brought with him from corporate, made his branch, the small, crappy San Bernardino branch, the #1 highest earning branch in the company. But that was my dad. Excellence.
Us in New Orleans – 2004Daddy was the kind of guy that never left the house in just shorts and a t-shirt. Casual meant slacks without a crease pressed in, and a polo shirt. As he became more successful in the business world, he started buying custom sewn suits and dress shirts. I always thought it was unnecessary and a little pretentious. But I brushed it off and knew that it was his “thing.” He had grown up poor, and so now he wanted nice clothes. A couple of weeks before he died, though, he told me the motivation behind it all: when he was in junior high, he moved to a new school and was enrolled in art class. The teacher had him be the model for the other kids to draw on his first day. Cruel, right? So he sat up on a stool, on a platform, in the center of the room for the entire class period, kids drawing and snickering. At the end of the class, he found that most of them had drawn him as a hobo because they could see the holes that were in the bottoms of his shoes. “So if you’ve ever wondered why I dress the way I do, there you go,” he told me.
But one of my favorite things about my dad was the way that he loved my daughters. I can’t really write a whole lot about that right now because it’s just too hard. But trust me, it was awesome. Just look at the pictures. You’ll get the idea. And I also need to say that he comes to visit my 2 1/2 year old. Every now and then, she will tell me that Zha-Zha (her pet name for him) came to her room. Sometimes he tells her, “I looooove Mazie!” Another time she said that he told her she is “getting so big!” I believe it. So I tell her, “Well, next time you see him, tell him that Mama loves him.” “Ok,” she says, and goes about her business.
Daddy and Baby Violet, April 1, 2013Mazie and her Zha-Zha, April 1, 2013We made the decision to bring him home on a Tuesday morning. After meeting with the hospice folk at the hospital, my mom, my brother, and I went up to his room to visit for a while. We had just learned that his cancer spread to his lungs and he had lost his ability to walk. We shed many tears while he slept, then tried to eat, vomited, slept again. But I will never forget the rush, the absolute, overwhelming flood of love that I felt, looking at him there in the hospital. I literally couldn’t stop smiling at him, even through my tears. In a moment that he and I had alone, he took my hand and told me that his lung cancer was going to be horrible. It was almost an apology. “Oh Daddy,” I told him, “Don’t you worry about that.” I stroked his head while he rested again. I kissed his feverish forehead before I left. He didn’t know his body was shutting down.
That Thursday, he came home for good. He had been off of his morphine and dilaudid for a few hours so he was completely awake. As the paramedics rolled him into the living room, he looked up at all of us, his family that surrounded him, Mom, Aunt Candy, my brother, my daughters, and me, and said to each one of us, “I love you. I love you. I love you all.”
Two days later, he was gone.
When I think of my sweet dad, I think of laughter. I think of country music and cowboy boots. I think of basketball. I think about the Oklahoma Sooners and his love for the city of New Orleans. I see him wearing one of his newsboy caps. I remember running for cover with him, laughing, in the New Orleans rain. I remember his puffed up chest at my college graduation. I remember him holding me when I woke up crying, in my adulthood, from a bad break-up. I smell his ChapStick. I see his crystal green eyes. I watch him do his little hop after fielding a ground ball. I can see him shooting free throws: how he held his hands before, during, and after his shot. And finally, I can see the sincerity in his eyes the last time he told me he loved me.
Daddy and me on his 70th birthday – October 18, 2008
I found a pair of shoes at Nordstrom’s Rack that struck me, so I took a picture of them and uploaded to Instagram:
My 20 year old niece responded that they were “SO CUTE!!!! Where are you? Do they have my size???”
She thought they were grown up shoes.
They aren’t. I found them in the toddler section. Size 12.
This Spring, as the catalogs arrived with new summer clothes and suits, I noticed that everything seems more and more like mini-versions of adult clothing. And not in a good way. Like this:
This one is available for three year olds
And this:
This was initially available starting at 6-12months
And maybe most disturbingly, this:
String bikini available in size 0-6 months
It’s probably not new. But this is the first year I am shopping for Kate in the Big Girl sizes, and the lack of material available is a problem.
The anxiety sister in me looks at those bathing suits and thinks immediately of the creepy guy on the beach with his phone, taking pictures of little girls dressed like mini Hawaiian Tropics models and posting them on some sick website.
But it’s not just that. Part of my job as a Christian mom is to teach my children to be modest in their dress and their behavior. The Bible tells us “Know you not, that you are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?” (1 Corinthians 3:16,17). As a Christian Feminist, I am not getting on board with the folks who see women as the source of temptation and use Eve as proof. I have never understood the concept of modesty in only women and because men are some kind of animal who cannot be trusted to control their emotions or actions. Thankfully, my church teaches that the Adam and Eve story is allegorical, so for us, Eve is a cautionary tale of sinful disobedience, and not the founding example of the Whore archetype.
(Plus, think what we are saying if woman is the source of sinful lust and temptation AND a temple of God? Yikes)
More to my point is that if God is in there, we better be careful about the message that we send through our clothes, words and actions. My kids are little, so I am in charge of that message right now. What am I telling the world if I dress my little girl up in a swimsuit that makes her look like she has a waist and some boobs? Or let her teeter around on shoes with a two inch heel. To make her look…what? Taller? Older? Sexier?
Blech.
I can’t live vicariously through my daughter’s figure, or revisit glory days. I shouldn’t look at her five year old self and imagine the bombshell she might be at twenty. Just the thought gives me the heebie-jeebies.
If God is in there, then Self-respect equals God-respect. That is one of my major goals as a mom, to teach my kids that how they dress, act and speak is a reflection of who they are. Who they are is a temple of God, a sacred space, proof of love. I want them to understand that they are precious and deserving of respect and honor. I hope it will help them make good choices in action and people as they grow older.
Our secular society teaches that it is the light coming off a person that makes them valuable. The more we glitter, the “better” we are. But people of all faiths should know that is not true. It is the light coming out of a person that makes them Love in this world.
Because God is in there. So dress Him appropriately.
2 Tbsp Zinc Oxide (this is a non-nano version that won’t be absorbed into the skin. Be very careful not to inhale the powder. Wear a mask if necessary. 2 Tbsp will make the sunscreen 20 SPF. More can be added.)
Optional: 1 tsp Vitamin E oil
Optional: 2 Tbsp Shea Butter or Cocoa Butter
Optional: Essential Oils or Vanilla Extract
Directions:
Combine all ingredients except essential oils in a pint sized glass jar. I decided to use a canning jar that I have designated just for making lotions. You could also re-use tomato sauce jars, pickle jars, olive jars… be creative!
Fill a medium saucepan with a couple inches of water and place over medium flame.
Place glass jar in pan.
As the water heats up, the ingredients in the jar will begin to melt. Stir or swirl occasionally to incorporate. Be careful, the jar will get hot, too!
When all ingredients are completely melted, add essential oils a few drops at a time until you are satisfied with the scent.
Add Zinc Oxide and stir well. Then, simply pour the liquid into whatever glass jar you will use to store it. Small, wide-mouthed mason jars are great for this. Stir a few times as the lotion cools to ensure the Zinc Oxide is mixed throughout. As it solidifies, it will not pump in a lotion pump.
Use as you would regular lotion. It has a shelf life of about 6 months. This lotion is wonderfully luxurious and a little goes a long way. Enjoy!
Note: This sunscreen is somewhat, but not completely, waterproof. Reapply after swimming or excessive sweating.
Combine all ingredients except essential oils in a pint sized glass jar. I decided to use a canning jar that I have designated just for making lotions. You could also re-use tomato sauce jars, pickle jars, olive jars… be creative!
Fill a medium saucepan with a couple inches of water and place over medium flame.
Place glass jar in pan.
As the water heats up, the ingredients in the jar will begin to melt. Stir or swirl occasionally to incorporate. Be careful, the jar will get hot, too!
When all ingredients are completely melted, add essential oils a few drops at a time until you are satisfied with the scent. Then, simply pour the liquid into whatever glass jar you will use to store it. Small, wide-mouthed mason jars are great for this. As it solidifies, it will not pump in a lotion pump.
Use as you would regular lotion. It has a shelf life of about 6 months. This lotion is wonderfully luxurious and a little goes a long way. Enjoy!
Note: This is more the consistency of a thick body butter. I have read that if you take out some of the beeswax, it will soften up a bit. I think I’ll try that next time and see how the consistency comes out.