Tuesday, 12 November 2013

Blue Pancakes

At the moment, I am pulling my hair out attempting to cater to the health and nutrition needs of 3 children with differing allergies and sensitivities.





 While wandering through the library, I stumbled upon a wonderful cookbook called “Allergy Proof Recipes for Kids”. I fell in love! The recipes in this book are simple, delicious, and relatively cheap to make – a combination that was a big tick in my book!
 
One of the recipes I found was for pancakes that were healthier than your everyday flour, milk and egg pancakes. Nervously, I gave them a go.
 
Brilliant!
They were soft, moist and – most importantly – did not have the consistency of rubber!

Blue Pancakes

½ cup blueberries or blackberries
1 cup white or brown rice flour
2 tsp baking powder
¼ tsp salt
¼ cup flaxmeal (optional)
¾ cup alternative milk beverage
2 Tbsp oil
2 cups applesauce
  1. In a food processor, combine all the ingredients. Process until smooth.
  2. Pour 2 Tbsp batter into a hot non-stick pan, spreading the batter thinly around the bottom to make a hotcake.
  3. When the purple batter begins to turn blue, flip and cook on the other side. Remove the finished pancake and repeat until all the batter is used up.
Pancakes can be frozen by placing waxed baking paper between each pancake and storing in a resealable plastic bag for up to 2 weeks. To reheat, microwave them at 30 second intervals.
 
Yield: approx. 10-15 pancakes.
 
Enjoy! They are delicious!
 

Tuesday, 20 August 2013

Frugal Baby Play

Today I'm feeling tired.

And a tired mummy is not a very creative mummy.

So to keep Mr T busy and stimulated, I came up with an activity that taught lots of skills, cost nothing, and kept him entertained for a VERY long time!

All I needed was a ball and a bowl.

My goal was for him to explore the sound of the ball rolling around in the bowl. Boy was I wrong! Mr T was not particularly impressed with my plan of events. He picked up the balls one at a time and threw them away, then turned the bowl upside down.
 

Mummy fail.

Until I had a brilliant idea. Why not hide the balls UNDERNEATH the bowl???

Bingo!

After showing him where the balls were and how to lift the bowl up, I stepped back and let him create his own learning.

I almost needed popcorn. The entertainment was priceless.

First, Mr T circled the bowl, pushing it around and growling when he was unable to flip it over.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Next he tried banging on it.


He then spent almost 5 minutes pushing the bowl backwards and forwards, enjoying the sound of the ball hitting the bowl.
 
 
And repeat. Many times.

Eventually he just sat back and gave me this look....
 
 
So before you think that you need high tech, expensive toys to keep your little one entertained....look no further than your kitchen!

 
 
What items from around the home does your little one like to play with?

Beetroot Chocolate Tea Cake

In my quest to ensure my allergy kids get their daily doses of fruit and veg, I came across the idea of using vegetables in cakes.

Sounds weird, right???

I was sceptical too.

Until I tried this recipe. It creates a moist, rich tea cake that melts in the mouth. Not that my kids noticed that. Al that they cared about was that it was chocolate, and paint. Full stop.

Beetroot and Chocolate Tea Loaf

1 cup of white flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 cup of unsweetened cocoa powder
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt

1/2 cup of unsealed butter or dairy-free margarine, melted
1/2 cup of white sugar
1/2 cup of brown sugar
2 tsp of egg replacement
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 Tbspn white vinegar

1 drained tin of beetroot, finely chopped in food processor


  1. Turn the oven to 180 degrees Celsius. Grease the loaf tin and lightly dust with flour.
  2. Sift the flour, BP, cocoa powder, BS, and salt into a bowl.
  3. Melt butter or dairy alternative and pour into a separate bowl. Mix sugar, egg replacement and vanilla into the butter, whisking until it forms a creamy mixture.
  4. Add white vinegar to the dry ingredients, followed by the butter mixture and the processed beetroot.
  5. Gently fold together until the batter is fully mixed.
  6. Pour into the prepared loaf tin and bake for 38-40 min.

I hope you enjoy it as much as we did!


Friday, 16 August 2013

Dairy-free Alfredo Sauce

We eat a lot of pasta. Its what the kids will eat so we all eat it. Its cheap, tasty and so versatile that we can adapt it easily to an allergy-friendly dish.
 
The problem isn't pasta. Its the sauce. Cupcake has been allergic to tomatoes since she was young. When I say she's allergic to tomatoes, I mean that she is allergic to the pesticides used ON the tomatoes.
 
Needless to say, she is afraid to eat tomatoes, tomato sauce or anything resembling a tomato.
 
But dry pasta is soooooo boring.
 
Enter: dairy free alfredo sauce.
 
 
Our local green grocer currently has enormous cauliflower for only 79c each!! When I say enormous, they're bigger than my head!
 
Dairy-free Alfredo Sauce
 
Ingredients:
  • 1 large cauliflower or 2 smaller cauliflowers
  • 1 carton of alpro soy cream or milk alternative
  • 1 tsp minced garlic or 2 garlic cloves
  • salt and pepper to taste
Method:
  1. Roughly chop cauliflower and place in large saucepan along with garlic, salt and pepper.
  2. Fill saucepan with water to 2cm depth and boil cauliflower until soft.
  3. Let cool on the stovetop.
  4. When the cauliflower has cooled, place in a blender or food processer along with soy cream, and blend until silky smooth. This took me approximately 3 minutes.
  5. Store in freezer-safe containers for up to 3 months in the freezer or 3-5 days in the refridgerator.
 
There you have it! Nice and easy, and tastes almost the same as alfredo sauce containing dairy - and much better for you!

Dinosaur Eggs for Dinner

Here is the recipe for dinosaur eggs that I mentioned in the post "Frugal Friday - Family Fun for Cents". I'm sure they have a more adult name, but for the purpose of getting the children to eat them, we called them dinosaur eggs.

Dinosaur Eggs

Ingredients






  • 250g premium beef mince
  • one onion, pureed
  • 2 icecubes pureed carrot
  • 2 icecubes pureed courgette
  • 1/4 c breadcrumbs
  • 2 Tbspn oil
  • 1/2 tsp oregano, dried
  • 2c flour
  • 3 tsp baking powder
  • 25g butter
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • Water, to mix
  • Bought pasta sauce


Method
Using your hands, mix mince, breadcrumbs and puree's together. Form into small balls and put aside.

Melt the butter in a microwave safe dish. Sift flour, salt and baking powder together into a seperate bowl. Add oregano and butter. Using a breadknife, mix until forms a loose crumb.

Add water and knead until forms a scone dough.

Divide the dough into the desired quantities, making sure there will be enough to wrap around a meatball. Roll into balls and flattened until at least 10-15cm diameter.

Place one teaspoon of pasta sauce and one meatball on the centre of each scone disc.


Wrap the dough around the meatball and sauce, sealing on one side of the ball.


Place on baking tray and bake for 15-20 minutes at 180 degrees celcius or until lightly browned.


Serve and enjoy!


Frugal Friday - Family Fun on for Cents!

This week, Opa took Tinkerbell to the Bach for a sleepover. It was special time away from Cupcake, who, often through her natural exuberance, tends to steal the show.

To give Cupcake a little special Mummy and Daddy time, we decided to have a fun dinosaur themed night, based on the recent release "Dino Time".


This was $1 from the local Video Ezy on weekly hire.
 

I then had a look through my time-wasting friend, Pinterest, for dinosaur themed party ideas. Nothing was really sticking out, given we had a budget of....well....nothing. So I decided to get creative!
 
I decided, that since dinosaurs are green, I would make some green jelly and sprinkle some chocolate sprinkles on the top once it had set. Cupcake called it her "Dino Jelly". Then I made some meatballs wrapped in scone (biscuit for you Americans!) mixture and named them "Dino eggs". Add some watered down lime juice, and you have......
 
 
And look at the smile on her face!

 
All these things were made with items from in the pantry and freezer, so the cost of the entire evening was $1, time and lots of love.


Saturday, 3 August 2013

Baby Discovery Bottle

This week, I have been teaching Toto about the concept 'in/out'.
 
To do this, I made a simple toy with items from around the house.
 
All you need is an empty milk bottle, scissors, and items to put in the bottle.
 
 
Firstly, I showed Toto where the toys were. Then I let him explore.
 
 
Following that, I showed him how to put the toys into the hole in the top of the bottle.
He struggled a little bit more with this concept - more with the co-ordination than with putting it into the hole. To help him, I guided his hand to the hole and he would let go of the toy. After a few times, he was able to do this alone.
 
 
After that, I let him play by himself. He enjoyed turning the bottle around and re-finding the holes to take the toys out and put them in another area.
 
Toto was able to extend himself further by taking toys out of the bottle, turning to a nearby basket, and depositing the toy into the basket, then returning to the discovery bottle and repeating the exercise.
 
What an entertaining half hour we had!
 
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