Cascade Falls! You can't beat a fall hike AND the purchase of a new hat all in the same day. So fun! |
Sunday, September 25, 2011
intentional community
It's easy to feel overwhelmed by the busyness of life, isn't it? And yet, in all of that busyness, feelings of loneliness sneak in. Then the question arises: how can I make time for relationships when I'm already maxed to the extreme? This is an issue that I have been actively praying about for the past three years. God's answer: there is a huge difference between making time for people and making time for relationship. Most of us have no shortage of people in our lives and yet we feel lonely, isolated, unknown and uncared for. What we're not doing is making time or creating space to be in relationship with those people. Relationships take work, and in most cases, sustained relationships require intentionality. So, despite being overwhelmed by the busyness of life, my friend Shannon and I took a step towards relationship by spending Saturday afternoon together. It was incredible outside, so we got in the car and went exploring.
cooking goals
At the beginning of 2011 I sat down with my recipe binder and wrote a list of all of the new food I wanted to make this year. The list served as a running record of the abundance of recipes I had collected but not yet prepared, some of which had been waiting in the wings for over three years. The list seemed long and I was unsure if I would actually cook my way through it or not. After all, as a collection of recipes I have accumulated from the Internet, friends, food magazines and my crock pot Tuesday research, my binder is only one of the many books I cook out of. I wasn't going to ignore all of my other cookbooks just so I could finally figure out which recipes in my binder I should keep and which ones need to be tossed!
The list was a handy and fun way to menu plan when my sister Anna came to visit and has been a wonderful resource all of the times that I have needed to restock my fridge but didn't know what to make. The goals are trivial and yet, out of 51 recipes, I have already prepared 37 of them! For the sake of checking of all 51 recipes in 2011, I am left with three full months to cook the 14 remaining recipes that are bursting with ingredients eager to make it on my grocery list. Up for trial this week week: saucy chicken lo mien.
I figure I better get cooking since my 2012 cooking goals are already in the back of my mind. Next year will be the year I learn how to make my moms shepherds pie, ginger snaps and Salisbury steak!
What's on your list?
The list was a handy and fun way to menu plan when my sister Anna came to visit and has been a wonderful resource all of the times that I have needed to restock my fridge but didn't know what to make. The goals are trivial and yet, out of 51 recipes, I have already prepared 37 of them! For the sake of checking of all 51 recipes in 2011, I am left with three full months to cook the 14 remaining recipes that are bursting with ingredients eager to make it on my grocery list. Up for trial this week week: saucy chicken lo mien.
I figure I better get cooking since my 2012 cooking goals are already in the back of my mind. Next year will be the year I learn how to make my moms shepherds pie, ginger snaps and Salisbury steak!
What's on your list?
Thursday, September 22, 2011
zucchini lovin'
Often the reason you will find dirty knives in my sink or traces of chopped vegetables on my cutting board is because at some point in time during the day I wandered into my kitchen with the simple desire to cook new food. You see, as a single person, the purpose of my kitchen is much different than the purpose of most other peoples kitchens. I have no reason to stock my refrigerator full of basic ingredients that will whip together multiple dinners in multiple ways for multiple people. Therefore, I get to shop and cook a little more creatively than most. Because I like the challenge of expanding my skills and the adventure of eating something new, I almost exclusively cook new recipes. While this is a risky policy in the arena of entertaining others, it is the motivation I need to cook for myself instead of purchasing my food already prepared. Sometimes I turn out less than delicious food, such as the roasted garlic and rosemary chicken I slow-cooked in my crockpot last week. No thanks! Other times, I make food that is good enough to eat once but not spectacular enough to make again. Bracketed by an occasional failure, this unofficial test kitchen of mine has seen some pretty great food come to be. Tonight, I discovered that whisking ribbons of basil, chunks of tomatoes, handfuls of shredded zucchini, day old bread, ricotta cheese and eggs together makes one mean breakfast bake. Seriously, so good!
Zucchini Breakfast Casserole
6-8 eggs
1 cup ricotta cheese
1 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
1/4 teaspoon Tabasco sauce or other hot chili sauce
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
3 cups grated zucchini
1 1/2 cups tomatoes
1/2 cup sliced fresh basil
4 cups day-old bread
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees, In a large bowl beat the eggs. Add the ricotta cheese and beat until smooth. Mix in the grated Parmesan cheese, Tabasco, salt and pepper.
2. Prepare the vegetables and bread. Add the zucchini, tomatoes, and basil to the egg mixture. Mix the bread cubes into the egg mixture.
3. Coat the bottom of a 9x13 pan with olive oil. Pour the egg and vegetable mixture into the baking pan and even it out. Place in the middle rack of the oven. Bake for 30 minutes at 350. The casserole should puff up and brown lightly. If it hasn't after 30 minutes, increase the heat to 425 and cook for 5-10 minutes longer.
My only regret is that I didn't dig this out of my recipe line-up soon enough to feed to my family at my parents cabin. This this not scream Saturday morning breakfast? Oh well, I guess there is always next year!
content
While the the weather speaks to the changing of seasons and my messy kitchen speaks to my end-of-the-day fatigue, the peace in my heart speaks to incomprehensible love and care the Lord has lavished on me. As I sit at my kitchen table, I can't help but smile at how content I feel. Overwhelmed by my job? Absolutely. Exhausted from a week of really early mornings? Without a doubt. Nursing a soar throat from the many germs shared with me by my students? Of course. And yet, my heart is content.
Contentment doesn't mean that I'm able to exert myself socially after a long week of balancing interpersonal dynamics among students and staff. Contentment also doesn't mean that I am happy about the dirty dishes waiting for my attention behind me. Nor does it mean that I don't need to actively pursue ways to relieve and release the stress that compounds throughout my day. I do, however, know that a content heart rejoices when there is time in the evening to pull on slippers and flop around the house. A content heart smiles with the satisfaction of a lunch box unpacked and a hair cut scheduled. A content heart has the ability to see the Lord present and at work despite feeling overwhelmed, exhausted and sick. To me, there is no greater evidence of Gods sovereignty than the peace that comes with contentment.
Contentment doesn't mean that I'm able to exert myself socially after a long week of balancing interpersonal dynamics among students and staff. Contentment also doesn't mean that I am happy about the dirty dishes waiting for my attention behind me. Nor does it mean that I don't need to actively pursue ways to relieve and release the stress that compounds throughout my day. I do, however, know that a content heart rejoices when there is time in the evening to pull on slippers and flop around the house. A content heart smiles with the satisfaction of a lunch box unpacked and a hair cut scheduled. A content heart has the ability to see the Lord present and at work despite feeling overwhelmed, exhausted and sick. To me, there is no greater evidence of Gods sovereignty than the peace that comes with contentment.
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
not alone
One thing I know for certain: God is faithful. He is the One who prospers my steps, makes my voice heard and my work profitable. On nights like tonight, when I feel tired and overwhelmed, I remember that I don't have to be in control, for the One who made me goes with me.
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