Wednesday, July 30, 2014

My Favorite Muffins

A random picture of some flowers in the garden.
They have nothing to do with the muffins whatsoever, I just thought they were pretty.

It's mid-summer and berries are at their peak right now.  For me, that means that I'm spending as much time as possible picking all the berries I can.  We love berries.  Especially the wild ones.  Wild blueberries make the best muffins and pancakes because they're tiny.  That also means there is A LOT of berries in every cup. The kids and I went scouting for berries with my in-laws a few days ago. 

Our usual spots had already been hit pretty hard and the bugs were horrible!  Nevertheless, we came away with a few handfuls of wild blueberries and raspberries.  (As a side note, the wild hazelnuts look fantastic this year.)  Luckily, Grandpa has cultivated blueberries and raspberries available to us, so we still got enough to make a few batches of muffins and some to freeze for later.

Speaking of muffins, I've made these twice this week.  There's a batch cooling on the counter as we speak.  Whether they will ever cool to room temperature is anybody's guess.  The kids eat them as fast as they come out of the oven.

This is a recipe straight out of my trusty old Pillsbury Complete Book of Baking Copyright 1993 that my cousin rescued from the dump for me.  It is a treasured favorite.

Blueberry Raspberry Muffins 
(I added the raspberries because they were mixed together with my blueberries.  It was yummy. Nothing bad happened because I went rogue and added another kind of berries)

2 cups all purpose flour
1/2 cup sugar
3 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon grated lemon or orange peel
1 cup (total) fresh or frozen blueberries & raspberries - do not thaw
1/2 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup milk
1/3 cup oil
1 egg, beaten
1 packet of raw sugar leftover from a trip to Starbucks (optional)

Oven 400 degrees

Mix dry ingredients and add berries, stir to coat berries with flour (so they don't sink to the bottom, in case you were wondering).  Make a well in the center.

Mix liquid ingredients together in a separate bowl.  (If you don't have any fresh lemons or oranges just layin' there, you can add a tablespoon of juice to the milk).  Pour liquid into the dry stuff and stir very gently, just until its all moist.  (Isn't that kind of a gross word? Moist. Its right up there with ointment on my list of words that gross me out).  


The dry ingredients were already mixed together by the time I thought to take a picture.
There are 2 eggs because I made a double batch the first time around.

OK, back to the recipe.  Once the ingredients are all semi-mixed together, put a good size glob in each of 12 greased muffin cups.and pop them in your preheated oven for 18-22 minutes.  Its perfectly acceptable for this batter to have a bit of a rest in the pans before it goes in the oven.  In case you should ever neglect to preheat your oven.  Not that I ever have, but you know, just in case that should ever happen to you.
My muffin batter hanging out on the counter.


Right when they come out of the oven, I sprinkle a bit of raw sugar on top.  One packet is enough for the whole batch.  You could use more, or you could skip it altogether.  Up to you.  Its really just for looks.

This is how many were left after lunch.  The plate was empty by bedtime.
Note: we did give some away ;)
P.S.  I highly recommend making these first thing in the morning, before it gets hot out.  And before your kids get up.  Just in case you'd like to enjoy more than just the smell of them. :)

Monday, July 7, 2014

The Great Spending Freeze


We are twenty-six days into our 31 day spending freeze.  I have been reading about it a lot and wanting to try it.  There is a handy dandy printable guide/worksheet/list (you know how I love a good list) at Living Well Spending Less.

I talked it over with Matt and he agreed to do it.  We went into it knowing that we had to plan for a wedding and a graduation.  We had just been to Sam's Club and stocked up on toilet paper and a few other things and figured we could totally do this. 

We knew that "spending zero" as in no dollars at all outside of bills was not going to happen.  We still have to buy feed for our critters, and a few basics like milk and bread.  I've been keeping every receipt for over 3 weeks to be able to tally up exactly how much we spent in the last month. 

The rules have been pretty straight forward.  No grabbing a pop/snack  at the gas station.  No Starbucks, no rummage sales, no visits to the greenhouse for great end of season deals on annuals.  I did barter for some new perennials this year from a local garden exchange group on Facebook, so that's cool.  We have stuck pretty close with not buying groceries other than perishables.  Funny thing is that we still have several meals worth of meat in our freezer and enough canned peaches to last until the Rapture.  Otherwise, side dishes are requiring more creativity.  I tried a brown rice/quinoa pilaf night before last.  (A friendly tip, brown rice takes far longer to cook than quinoa.  You might want to give the rice a head start.)

We have been pretty careful up until this past weekend. See, what we failed to plan ahead for was the 4th of July.  Independence Day is a pretty big deal in our hometown.  Everybody turns out for the festivities.  We didn't spend a lot (we usually don't anyway) but, we still bought some things.  Like $5 arm bands for the kids to go to the bouncy houses (unlimited jumping for 2 days).  And the kids each got a small item from the flea market.  We also went to a BBQ/birthday party at our friend's house. I don't know why I didn't set aside a little bit for this each week up until now.  It's not like July 4th is this brand new holiday or that I didn't know the kids' birthday party was going to be this weekend.

Some things I have learned from this experience:  I spend way more money than I thought on impulse purchases.  Random crap that I didn't need when I went to the store, but suddenly couldn't leave without.  We actually do make enough to be putting money into savings every month.  I truly didn't realize this before, even though I have always had a basic budget.  It seemed like something always "came up" and we'd just make it through the month.  This challenge comes with budgeting worksheets so you can write everything down and see exactly where your money is going.  Along with seeing that we have money for savings every month, I also regained hope that we'd be able to do some of the things we want to do to our house.  I also learned that I like iced coffee made at home, and it costs way less than buying it anywhere.

One of the other things that is part of this challenge is a full house clean/de-clutter/organize.  I printed the checklists, but did not do all of them.  I did do the bathroom one and threw away a bunch of old stuff out of there.  Otherwise, there isn't a whole lot of homeless stuff floating in our house.  We're both way too particular about keeping things put away and not keeping stuff that has no purpose. 

I did come up with a few things to sell as per the challenge.  Not a lot (see above), but some.  I also came up with some free things to do.  As it happens, our local library has free passes for several area attractions so I picked up some today when we made our weekly visit.

Now that our challenge is almost up, I'm really getting excited to go grocery shopping. I'm also wondering how long until we could feasibly do this again.  How often do people have "no spend" months?  I think I'd like to do this again sometime in the winter.  I wonder if my family would think I had really lost it if we made this a quarterly event.

While we didn't make a month without spending any money, we did do pretty well.  So, I'll call it a success.  Does anybody else out there do a spending freeze from time to time?