I cannot live without my calendar. I admit it. I'm talking old-school sits on the desk and you write on it calendar.
Watching news of all the devastating wildfires this past summer, I’ve actually thought about what I would grab if I had to rush out of my house. Obviously I would be sure all the people made it out. Belongings that make the list are jewelry, make-up, pictures, laptop, cell phone, anything that has bits and pieces of my life stored in there. But here’s my list in order: pictures, calendar, then jewelry and that other stuff (I might have put make-up higher on that list, but I learned my lesson. When moving here I brought a year’s worth of Maybelline in case you can’t buy make-up in the Midwest but it turns out you can). So yes, the calendar even goes before my recipes. I truly cannot function without that thing.
I know most people don’t write on calendars any more. I too have a cell phone and a Kindle and a laptop. I do have a calendar app on my Kindle and I have used it. But here’s the thing. I don’t have my kindle on every minute of the day. I walk by the desk in my kitchen all day long. I can glance down at that calendar and know everything I need to know about that day and even that month in just a minute’s time. My schedule, everyone’s schedule is there. I use different colors for the boys and for Husband to keep track of their schedules. My “to do” list for the day is on there, but mine’s written in pencil so I can erase an item and put it on the next day, and then the next, and then the next. So if I ever have to leave in a hurry, that old-fashioned calendar goes with me or this family would end up sitting on the curb paralyzed.
My kids can be trying, h*ll (heck) everyone’s kids can be trying. I’ve given them advice, I’ve given them tools, but it is beyond me how it is possible that they are so disorganized. Clearly they need a calendar…and a bulldozer for the mess they call their rooms. Half the time they can’t find what they’re looking for and I certainly get why. And no matter what they think, I categorically deny that I sneak into their rooms and hide their belongings (although I do admit to the overwhelming temptation). If it’s something I want them to find, the stock answer is “I don’t know where it is, we need to buy another one”. Shoes from 3rd grade, pencil nubs, random pieces of paper with notes long forgotten, trash from the food they’re not supposed to be eating in their rooms, all that we can find.
It’s not just at home either. I buy them file folders and accordion folders and whatever they need to keep school work organized. More times than not everything is just shoved into their backpack, or folded 10 times into a little square and put into a pocket of the backpack along with gum wrappers and tech decks. Yes, I’ve seen it with my own eyes. I buy them flash drives to keep their school work on and they come home with school issued loaner flash drives because they can’t find theirs. I have a kid who isn’t organized enough to … say … take his book to school for an open-book test. And you ask why I’m stressed.
I do love my kids, I tell them and they know it (well, I think ONE of them knows it). But sometimes the conversation goes like this:
I do love my kids, I tell them and they know it (well, I think ONE of them knows it). But sometimes the conversation goes like this:
Hidden Peppermint Patty Cookies
©www.BakingInATornado.com
©www.BakingInATornado.com
Ingredients:
1 1/2 sticks unsalted butter, softenend
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 egg
1 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup unsweetened baking cocoa
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
24 mini peppermint patties, unwrapped and cold (keep in fridge) Opt: use a regular sized patty and cut into quarters
1 - 2 squares of vanilla bark
green food coloring
1 1/2 sticks unsalted butter, softenend
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 egg
1 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup unsweetened baking cocoa
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
24 mini peppermint patties, unwrapped and cold (keep in fridge) Opt: use a regular sized patty and cut into quarters
1 - 2 squares of vanilla bark
green food coloring
Directions:
*Beat softened butter, sugar and brown sugar until smooth. Beat in egg.
*Mix in flour, cocoa, salt and baking soda.
*Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate about an hour.
*Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cover 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.
*Break dough into 24 approximately equal size pieces.
*Give each piece a quick roll between 2 pieces of wax paper. Don't worry about it being even, just get it flattened.
*Put a peppermint patty in the center of each dough piece.
*Manipulate the dough around the patty with your hand. Make sure all of the patty is covered.
*Bake, 1 dozen per baking sheet, for about 13 minutes until they are set. Leave on the baking sheet for 1 - 2 minutes, then remove and cool completely.
*Melt vanilla bark in the microwave for 30 seconds. Stir. Keep microwaving at 15 second intervals until completely smooth. Add food coloring.
*Drizzle the melted bark over the cookies. Let them set before touching them.
This recipe was adapted from Double Chocolate Cookies with a Peppermint Patty Surprise by pipandebby.com (which was itself adapted from Rachael Ray's Everyday magazine).





