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What to Do With Overripe Bananas

March 9, 2022 by Laura 1 Comment

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

Need any ideas for ways to use your overripe bananas? Here’s a quick list of our favorite banana recipes!

We love it when our bananas become over-ripe. Otherwise, how could we make these great recipes?

What to Do With Overripe Bananas

Look through these and try them all!

  • Coconut Flour Banana Muffins
  • Easy Banana Cheesecake Muffins
  • Banana Bread and Muffins
  • Flourless Banana Chocolate Blender Muffins
  • Easy Whole Grain Chocolate Chip Banana Bread
  • Easy Chocolate Banana Bread
  • Easy Banana Pudding
  • Simple Banana Pancakes
  • Low Sugar Banana Cake
  • Angela’s Egg Free Banana Chocolate Chip Breakfast Cookies

Yum

 

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The Easiest Way to Make Hamburgers

March 6, 2022 by Laura 5 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

This really is the easiest way to make hamburgers. I’ll grill them in the summertime, otherwise I will forevermore do this!

The Easiest Way to Make HamburgersYum

Short answer: Bake them.

Not because we’re afraid to fry them. But because we don’t want to stand at the stove to fry them. It’s messy. It takes maintenance. We don’t have time to maintain our patties, am I right? The patties must maintain themselves.

I love buying a package of hamburger patties at Costco. I set them out all afternoon and they are semi-thawed by 4ish. I cover two cookie sheets with parchment paper and place the partially thawed patties on the pan.

I bake them at 350 for about an hour. If I remember, I flip them all over halfway through their baking time. But if I don’t, I don’t. Why? Because we don’t have time to maintain our patties. Our patties must maintain themselves.

Now. My pictures are ugly. These patties do not look done, but they are done and you’ll be able to tell that your patties are done with they are sizzly and brown.

Right out of the oven, I put some sliced cheese on the hot patties for those who prefer cheeseburgers. Some in my family like Colby jack. Some like pepper jack. I like mine cheeseless.

Dinner is served with burger fixins, fries in our air fryer, carrot sticks, pickles, and baked beans.

Leftover patties (if there are any) warm up quickly for lunches, and I’ve been known to pull one out of the fridge and eat it cold when I simply need sustenance. Apparently, not only do I have time to maintain my patties, but I barely have time to maintain myself. So a cold leftover burger patty fills my belly. With a glass of this, of course. :)

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Big Family Food: Ways I Can Cut Our Grocery Budget

March 2, 2022 by Laura 10 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

We eat big around here. Are there even ways I can actually cut our grocery budget?

This is what I’ve been exploring lately. What are some ways I can cut our grocery budget without causing more work or frustration?

I was so positively challenged by Reanna’s comment on this post:

If you are considering ways to save on your grocery budget you might consider buying more in “ bulk” and less single serving items. I’ve never bought individual applesauces, or other single serving items. I also only buy simple snacks such as fruit or crackers. We mainly concentrate on eating more during mealtime and not snacking as much. Snacks can be very expensive!

I 100% agree with her idea to avoid single-serve items, and I used to shop and serve food in just the ways she described. But with caring for so many little ones all while trying to keep up with our big kids (we’re planning another wedding, eeee!) – I have resorted to all kinds of convenience food items just to survive. (Our three littlest babies are each about 9-months apart in age, our three-year-old is potty training, and three days every week we enjoy our former foster babe, another three-year-old oy!)

My first thought when I read the comment was, “Yes, but not right now. Maybe after we get through this season.” But then I let her ideas simmer a while and I started to think about ways I could make some money-saving changes.

What I need to consider before I decide to cut our grocery budget:

  • Is the money-saving change worth the time and energy it will take to make up for the convenience?
  • Will it be worth the messes it might make? (We are already drowning in baby-made messes around here.)
  • Is the cost savings enough to make a substantial difference? (As in, will I spend $6.50 instead of $7.00 but create a significant amount of additional work for myself? If so, saving $0.50 will not likely feel worth it.)
  • Will any changes I make mean that we are eating less nourishing foods overall?

A word about snacks:

Well, three words about snacks: We eat them. A lot of them. Not all of us though – here’s how it works at our house!

Our three-year-olds, two-year-old, and one-year-old kids eat several snacks throughout the day. I would have some incredibly grumpy babies if I didn’t give them a mid-morning muffin (or something similar) and some berries. Sometimes I actually feel like all I’m doing is figuring out yet another good snack I can offer to truly hungry little ones.

I give them substantial meals, of course, but their little tummies can only handle so much at a time. We go through grapes, berries, apple slices, granola, cereal, and muffins like crazy – all eaten between meals.

Now, on the other hand, I almost never give our 6-year-old and 8-year-old snacks between meals. They are expected to eat their fill during meal time and I’ve found that if they eat a snack, they don’t eat a good meal later (which makes them need a snack later, which makes me want to cry later, truth). So the snacking is limited to the kids under 3 – and also to the hungry mom who rarely has time to sit and eat a full meal, thank you for understanding.

Ways I Can Cut Our Grocery Budget

I feel a little bit silly that I haven’t actually looked at cutting such obvious grocery spending options for so long. On the other hand, this mama is tired, has a lot of meetings, and hasn’t had quite enough sleep for approximately 1,460 nights in a row. So that’s why I’m so grateful that Reanna suggested that I consider a different way to shop and serve food.

I discovered peach cups and pear cups and applesauce squeezies a couple of years ago, loved how handy they were, and never looked back. And with that, I never really looked again at the price comparison either. Until I was challenged to consider the necessity of extra spending.

Pear cups cost $0.13/ounce. But a can of pears costs $06.7/ounce – half the cost of the convenient cups. Peaches? Same story. Half the price to buy a can instead of the little cups.

When we hit the road or need to pack food to eat at a soccer game or at the park, the cups will be wonderful and helpful with so many kids. But at home? I can easily open a can and dole out the peaches or pears in little bowls.

IT’S SO OBVIOUS. But I’ve been tired. So.

Meanwhile, the applesauce.

For the past three years, I have been buying cases and cases of applesauce squeezies. These gems are so helpful I can’t put it into words. And what happens when I give my littlest kids a bowl of applesauce? You don’t want to know, but I’ll tell you anyway. They paint with it. On their shirts, hair, feet, and under the table. I learned the hard way not to give them a bowl of applesauce, and there are too many of them eating (read: painting) at once to help them all eat it in a clean way.

Squeezies though? I can hand them out, and actually leave the room to go potty by myself. This is a miracle and though shalt not take my applesauce squeezies from mine house.

But do I need them forever and always? As it turns out, my 6 and 8-year olds are quite handy with a spoon. I can easily serve them applesauce in a bowl and save money on an entire case of applesauce squeezies every week. How about that? A jar of applesauce is $0.5/ounce while the squeezies are $0.15/ounce or more. Triple the savings! And if I’d ever get back to canning applesauce again, well, that’ll save even more.

What else can I cut or change?

I already buy almost everything in bulk. At Costco, at Sam’s, and through Azure Standard. And when I consider all the needs of our day, plus my lack of time to make more of our food from scratch, I’ve had a difficult time knowing what else I can cut.

But one thing I’ve committed to, besides buying fewer individually packaged fruit options, is to buy fewer individually wrapped items in general.

The only time I truly need individually wrapped snacks is when we go to tennis matches, soccer games, or other trips and outings. My goal right now is to keep items like this on hand but to save them for outings instead of resorting to handing them out at home during snack time.

Here’s a post filled with easy food ideas to pack and take to games and events.

What I don’t plan to change now (or ever?)

As I’ve shopped lately and done some price comparisons, here are some foods I’ve decided to continue to buy for the sake of convenience, even though they are a little more pricey.

  • Diced Ham – For $0.24/ounce, I can buy a package of ham that’s all cut and ready to dump into an egg casserole or this soup. A whole ham costs about $0.14/ounce. But I have to cook it and cut it (which is fine when I make a whole ham for a meal and use the leftovers in soup and such). Having the diced ham in my freezer ready to help me put a meal together in 5-minutes is worth the extra cost by far!
  • Frozen Shredded Hashbrowns – I buy 4-pound bags of Mr. Dell’s hashbrowns for $0.7/ounce. I can buy a bag of yellow potatoes for $0.4/ounce. Dude, gimme both. :) Those frozen hashbrowns save me so much time and make meal prep so very easy! They are delicious and the Mr. Dell’s brand includes only potatoes. So I feel great about using them for many of our meals. And whole potatoes? We use those too, and they are also an inexpensive convenience food in my book. But only when I make them like this or this.
  • Pre-Made Pizza Crust – I keep these in the freezer at all times. Do I know how to make pizza crust? Yes. Is it hard? No. But right now it’s fantastic to go to the freezer and grab crusts already made for me. I then grab a couple of cans of pizza sauce, shredded cheese, and whatever other toppings I have on hand. We quickly make pizza and it’s super easy. It’s also a lot cheaper than ordering pizza.”
  • Shredded Cheese – Talking about the shredded cheese for pizzas reminded me of the beauty of the gift of bags of pre-shredded cheese. I used to buy huge blocks of cheese and my kids would shred it in our food processor. Gone are the days. My bigs are either gone or don’t have time, and I have decided not to give my babies a cheese grater. Smart, eh?Grating cheese would never happen if I had to wait until I had time for the task. So bagged shredded cheese it is! Are there ingredients added to the bag to keep the cheese from clumping together? La-la-la! I can’t hear you, I don’t know what you’re talking about… :)

Well, I’m quite sure that as I consider ways I can save, I’ll be able to add to this list. Any other ideas you all want to throw out there?!

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Stay tuned for more Big Family Food posts, where I share all about how I make food for our big family! And read here to catch up on other posts in this series you may have missed. :)

 

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The Only Muffin Recipe You’ll Ever Need

February 27, 2022 by Laura 3 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

What if we really only need one muffin recipe to get us through our muffin making needs?

Yum

Will we really never need another muffin recipe (besides this one) for as long as we all shall live?

Ok, fine. Not really. Man shall not live on one muffin recipe alone. I have 40+ more muffin recipes that we can enjoy here. Some of them even have cheesecake baked on top. So yeah. We’ll need those.

But if you were to look through all 40 muffin recipes, you would likely notice a theme. A similar grouping of ingredients in a very similar proportion.

It was while throwing together muffins one day that I realized: When making muffins, I pretty much make the same recipe every time. I just tweak it slightly depending on what kind of muffin I’m making.

AND THEN, that day I decided to just make one big muffin batter (I quadrupled my ingredients) – but create a variety of different muffins all with that same batter.

Eh?

Here’s what I did:

  1. I measured oil, eggs, milk, sour cream, flour, sugar, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt into my mixer.
  2. These are ingredients used in every single muffin that ever lived.
  3. I didn’t actually measure. I don’t measure. I eye-ball. I don’t know where my measuring spoons are and the kids ate my measuring cups.
  4. I mixed my ingredients and since I’m a big believer in making one big mess and turning out a large quantity of food (instead of making a small mess over and over and over every day), I “measured” my ingredients x4.
  5. I scooped the batter into 24 muffins plus one loaf pan.
  6. I finished off a container of shriveling blueberries onto the top of seven muffin batter cups. I sprinkled chocolate chips onto the top of 11 more. I left six muffins plain.
  7. I stirred freeze-dried strawberries into the loaf pan of batter.
  8. I baked the muffins and the bread.
  9. My family at the muffins and the bread and now I need to sweep my floor.

Muffin crumbs, man. Have you ever fed muffins to an 8yo, a 6yo, a 3yo, a 2yo, and a 1yo? Muffin crumbs are everywhere.

And now for the only muffin recipe you’ll ever really need.

I’m going to write the ingredients for us in large batch quantity. That way we can use this recipe to make many muffins of all different varieties. One big mess, lots and lots of crumbs. I mean, muffins.

The Only Muffin Recipe You’ll Ever Need

The Only Muffin Recipe You'll Ever Need
 
Save Print
Author: Laura
Serves: 30
Ingredients
  • 4½ cups whole grain flour
  • 1 cup sugar, brown sugar, or sucanat
  • 1 Tablespoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • 4 eggs
  • ½ cup sour cream (optional, but makes the muffins moist!)
  • ¾ cup melted coconut oil
  • 2 cups milk
Instructions
  1. Mix all ingredients together by hand or with a mixer.
  2. Scoop batter into prepared muffin cups or loaf pans.
  3. Add any fruit, nuts, or chocolate chips you would like.
  4. Bake bread at 350 degrees for 1 hour. Bake muffins at 400 degrees for 20ish minutes.
3.5.3251

This recipe makes approximately 24 muffins and 1 loaf of quick bread. Or 36 muffins. Or three loaves of quick bread. Or 12 muffins and 2 loaves of quick bread.

Plus lots of crumbs when you feed them to babies.

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Big Family Food: The DISHES!!

February 23, 2022 by Laura 5 Comments

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I’m not sure. Can we even talk about our Big Family Food Journey without taking pictures of all the dishes? Eeek.

What you see pictured above is what our kitchen almost always looks like by lunchtime. It looks that way again after dinner and confession: I almost always leave the kitchen looking like this disaster when I go to bed at night. Yowza.

Why do I do this? Why do I not wash all the dishes after dinner? BECAUSE I AM TIRED. And because my hands are literally always full. Yes, I sometimes “wear” our littlest babe, but usually one of our other babies wants to be held too. So I am almost always working with just one hand.

Therefore, I go to bed and the kitchen is usually a disaster.

Where is the help?

Ah, the help is helping alright. They are holding kids, chasing kids, keeping kids alive, and even changing diapers (awesome daddies in training!).

This is my all-time favorite picture of Elias and baby Keith!

And of course, Matt is surrounded by babes from the minute he walks in the door each evening until we put them all to bed each night.

Sometimes in the evening, if all the kids are being held/watched by Daddy and the big bros (and their fiance/girlfriends or whoever is at the house at the moment) – I can get the dinner dishes done before bed. But usually, the dishes have to wait until morning.

How I take care of the dishes

Besides neglecting them? Ah yes. It’s this:

My typical routine is to get our 6 & 8-year-olds off to the school bus in the morning at 7:10 (which stops a block from our house, praise God!), settle in our 3-year-old with a show, drink my coffee, and read my Bible/journal, then tackle the kitchen before our baby girls are ready to get out of their cribs. (Usually, Matt has fed the littlest baby a bottle in the wee morning hours and she goes back to sleep. I take sippy cups of milk to our one and two-year-old girls at 6:45 when I go in to wake up our 6yo for school. So the baby girls enjoy their milk and sleep again until around 8:00.)

While it would be wonderful to wake up to a clean kitchen to start each new day, that’s just not how it works for us right now. So after my coffee/Bible time, I fill the dishwasher and run it. (We usually run a full dishwasher twice every day.)

Please don’t cringe when you look at my dishwasher loading methods – I know it’s horrendous! But I don’t care, because there are way more important things to care about. :) The top is filled with sippies, bottles, and coffee mugs and then I usually haphazardly throw cooking utensils on top. They all get clean, and they don’t care if they are unorganized so neither do I. (I do also have a third rack above this one, which I use for lids.)

Once the dishwasher is loaded, I hand wash the big bowls and pots from the night before.

After Malachi gets home from his morning classes, he unloads the dishwasher and we start over again with snack and lunch dishes. Eat and repeat. :)

Someday, I’ll have more kitchen help again!

When our older four boys were all still living at home and capable, I almost never had to even wash a dish! We got into a system where they would all take turns loading and unloading the dishwasher, sweeping, and wiping everything down. Now, three out of the four have graduated and moved on, leaving only Malachi (now 17) at our house. (Justus, our college senior, actually lives at home this year too, but he’s almost never here. When he is though, he’s always grabbing a baby so I can get something done!)

Malachi can’t take on all the chores that his brothers left behind, tho he really is a super help to me in many ways and always does what he can. Also? He’s running a videography business, taking college classes, is in a melodrama, is playing tennis and soccer, and for some reason, he also likes to hang out with friends from time to time.

—> We hire a lot of help now – I’ll share about that in another post! <—

I could have taken a lot more pictures of all the dirty dishes at our house. But why? Why would you want to see that? You don’t want to see that. Trust me on this. :)

Stay tuned for more from our Big Family Food series.

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Big Family Food: Meals I’ve Served Recently

February 20, 2022 by Laura 6 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

Want a peek at some of the meals I’ve served to my family and to guests within the past few weeks?

You’ve taken a look at some of my recent grocery shopping trips. Plus, throughout this Big Family Food series, some of what I’ve shared includes:

  • How I serve fruit and veggies at every meal and
  • How I make our meals stretch

This post will show some picture examples of what some of our meals have looked like!

Meals I’ve Served Recently

One Sunday morning, I filled a crockpot with this Hearty Bean Casserole, then served it for lunch with a variety of fresh fruit I had just picked up. It was such a pretty buffet because of the colorful fruit. Also, it is worth noting that everyone who was skeptical of trying this casserole for the first time ended up loving it. :)

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Tuesday nights we usually feed around 12 people (7 adults), or sometimes more if Elias and his roommates come over from his apartment on campus. One Tuesday recently I made two pans of Simple Pizza Chicken Bake. I served it with a variety of fruit and veggie options. Plus I had just made a big batch of Flourless Chocolate Banana Blender Muffins so I set those out too.

Our 6-year old does so much better at mealtime if I let her choose from the offered fruits and vegetables instead of just presenting her with a plate. Also, I had our 8, 6, and 3-year-olds help me make the Simple Pizza Chicken Bake and the Flourless Chocolate Banana Blender Muffins. When they feel ownership in the meal, they eat it better. :)

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Elias turned 20 in January so he invited several friends over for a big Waffle night. I got zero pictures of the huge buffet full of waffles, toppings, bacon, and egg casserole. But I did remember to ask Malachi to step back and snap a picture of our full loving room. Nights like these are my favorite. :)

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On Wednesday afternoons, I leave my littles with sitters so I can go hide at the library to work for four quiet hours. I go home refreshed from the fun of writing (in the quiet), and you can be sure that there are three babies ready for mama to hold them when I walk through the door.

Therefore, I try to have dinner ready, or almost ready before I even leave for the library. Otherwise, I go from quiet to chaos very quickly, trying to make dinner while holding three babies and answering “urgent” questions from the 3, 6, and 8yo kiddos. Here’s what I made one Wednesday before I left: Crock Pot Taco Pasta (it cooked all afternoon while I was gone), green beans, pineapple, and grapes.

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The Wednesday after that, before leaving for the library, I put together six pizzas (from crusts that I’d purchased and frozen). I slid them into the oven and simply turned on the oven to bake once I got home at 5:00. Magic. I pulled out fresh spinach and ranch dressing while the pizza was baking and the kids ate “salad” as an appetizer. :)

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Here’s a meal I put together on a day I had meetings and needed something quick to warm up later at mealtime.

The day before, I had made seven pounds of hamburger in my Instant Pot (I love this method!) so I set aside a couple of pounds and turned it into a pan of Sloppy Joes. Just before time to eat that night, I quickly steamed some frozen peas and warmed some white queso for anyone who wanted to drizzle it into their sloppy joe. This particular night I didn’t offer many side dish choices because I knew everyone liked/would eat this simple meal and I didn’t want to work harder than necessary. :)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I mentioned above that Tuesday nights we typically need a bigger meal because we feed more adults. This meal was perfect for that because it allowed people to choose which soup they wanted, but the toppings and sides went with either soup. (Chili and Simple Ham and Potato)

It was also perfect because I was able to dump all the ingredients for both soups into crockpots earlier in the day while the babies were all eating lunch. They cooked all afternoon (the soups, not the babies) and at dinner time I stirred them and served them with strawberries, grapes, and raspberries.

Meanwhile, our two-year-old was melting down (my precious way of saying that she was screaming, stomping on my feet, and grabbing my legs) while I was trying to put all of this together. Why was she mad? Because I wouldn’t let her eat cookies. Raise your hand if you’re a mean mom like me. ;)

This is why I don’t have time to shower.

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Stay tuned for more Big Family Food posts, where I share all about how I make food for our big family! And read here to catch up on other posts in this series you may have missed. :)

 

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

The Easiest Spicy Ham and Potato Soup (Crock Pot Recipe)

February 16, 2022 by Laura 3 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

I wanted to call this easy Spicy Ham and Potato Soup “Dump Soup.” But that didn’t sound appealing. So I took out the “dump” – good call, right? Still, you should know that all we have to do to make this soup is “dump” the ingredients into the crockpot. SO EASY.

Yum

This Spicy Ham and Potato Soup is basically this soup remade. I cut out some steps and made it in the crockpot. You’ll love how much easier the revisions make this recipe!

Also, you should know that I’m obsessed with this soup. I almost never eat seconds of any meal. But when I make this soup, I eat thirds. Aren’t you proud?

The Easiest Spicy Ham and Potato Soup (Crock Pot Recipe)

5.0 from 1 reviews
The Easiest Spicy Ham and Potato Soup (Crock Pot Recipe)
 
Save Print
Author: Laura
Serves: 4-6
Ingredients
  • 8-ounces cream cheese
  • 16-ounces pepper jack cheese
  • ¾ cup sour cream
  • 1 cup half-and-half or whole milk
  • 10-ounce can Rotel (diced tomatoes and green chilies)
  • 1 pound ham, diced or cut into small bites
  • 3-4 cups frozen hashbrown potatoes
  • 32-ounces chicken, beef, or vegetable broth
Instructions
  1. Put all ingredients into a crock pot.
  2. Cook on low for 8 hours or on high for 4 hours.
  3. Occasionally, stir the soup to help distribute the cheeses.
  4. Just before serving, use a whisk to smooth the melted cheese.
3.5.3251

I love eating this soup just as it is. Some in my family love to added shredded cheese and fritos. The pepper jack cheese in this soup gives it a nice, spicy kick that is so amazing!

If you make this soup with frozen hashbrowns (I like Mr. Dells brand as it contains only potatoes) it is extra easy to put together!

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

Big Family Food: What I Feed Our Babies

February 13, 2022 by Laura 3 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

Curious what I feed our babies? While they don’t eat large quantities like our big kids, I still felt like this would be fun to talk about within our Big Family Food series! After all, there are a lot of babies at our house. :)

We currently have six kids ages 8 and under. Four of our kids are 3 and under. (Five kids 3 and under three days each week – I’ll explain below.) We have 3 exclusively in diapers, 1 who still sleeps in diapers, and 1 who comes over three days a week and is still in diapers. Five in diapers, you ask? Yep. We just line-em-up and change diapers (or run to the potty). All day long.

Our little ones’ ages are currently 8, 6, 3, 3, 2, 17 months, and 7 months. Here are five of the kids huddled around Daddy as he reads Brayden’s birthday card out loud.

The fella on the left (below) was our foster son for 18 months. He is reunited with his dad now, praise God! But because he is a relative of our current foster/adopted kids, his dad lets him come for frequent visits each week. THIS IS SUCH A GIFT. For all of us. :) :) :)

The picture below shows two of our little girls. Girlie on the left is 17 months old and not yet walking due to foot and leg issues we’re working on. She gets around though – up and down the stairs, into the cupboards and trashcans, and has the best belly laugh on the planet. :) Girlie on the right just turned 2 and has come so far since she moved in last summer! She is as sweet as she is stubborn and helps me be a “mommy” to all the babies in our house.

Aww, there they are again, busy as ever.

Matt, Malachi (age 17, but remember when he used to be my baby?!), and I took the kids to a Historic Farm for a fun fall festival they were hosting last October. I’m pictured here, holding our littlest girlie who just turned 7 months old. Her smile is as big as her face and she is pretty chill most of the time. I think she knows she has to be since she is the youngest of ten!

Never a dull moment?! That would be correct. Here’s Daddy holding our 2yo and Keith chugging down some juice while Brayden and Bonus Sister act out a play.

What’s more fun to look at? Kids or food?

Kids. Obviously. But let’s move on now to show you what our littlest kids eat. (And big kids too, just in larger quantities.)

Here’s a sample of breakfast plates I fixed for Keith (age 3) and two of our girls (ages 2 and 1). A breakfast cookie (plain, no dried fruit or chocolate chips), rewarmed Breakfast Casserole, and blueberries.

Another day, this was what their breakfast looked like. Bananas, pears, and sourdough toast (a special treat from a friend!)…

I buy applesauce squeezies, pear cups, peach cups, and mandarin orange cups in bulk. I keep a tray stocked with them at all times so I can open them up and hand them to babies and kids as needed for side dishes or snacks between meals.

I try occasionally to take one or two kids to the store with me. It’s a fun outing for them and gives us one-on-one time together, which is rare and precious since we have so many kids now. Here, Keith went with me to get fresh produce. It was fun to talk to him about all the fun fruit and veggies choices we were making, what Daddy loves, what sisters loved, and so on. :)

I recently told you about my favorite way to eat an apple. Turns out, it’s one of the kids’ favorites too! Often, I’ll cut really thin slices of apples onto a plate with this cheese. We go through half a bag of apples this way as the kids just keep reaching in for more. So good!

I use my Blendtec like crazy when feeding my family. This Orange Julius recipe makes a fun snack or “side dish” with our meals.

We go through a lot of eggs at our house! Keith loves to help me crack them as we prep for breakfast.

How sick are you of me talking about these smoothies? Yes, Laura, we know. You like to make these smoothies with greens in them so that your kids can drink salad and be happy about being so nourished. So I guess I’ve mentioned these before then?

Here’s a fun parent hack if you aren’t already doing this! Whenever we make Mac and Cheese for the kids, we dump frozen peas into the bottom of each bowl, like this:

Then, we put the hot mac and cheese on top of the frozen peas. Stir it together, and boom. The peas are cooked, the mac and cheese is instantly cooled, and the combo of mac and cheese with peas tastes really good!

While we most often blend our greens into smoothies like I shared above, our kids will also eat fresh spinach on a plate with a dab of ranch for dipping. They eat the spinach just like they dip carrots in ranch. And on this particular day, Keith also tried dipping his strawberry in ranch. Hmmm… Looks like a silly goose to me.

Muffins!!!! Oh my goodness, the muffins. We eat them and then we eat some more. It is my goal to bake and keep muffins on hand, even if I don’t ever get any other baking done. All the kids love them and they help to stretch our meals or to provide an easy-to-grab snack at all times. (Here are 40 muffin recipes I reference frequently.)

I’ll keep taking pictures of our kids’ plates during the next few weeks so I can share more!

What are your favorite meals for itty-bitties?

Stay tuned for more Big Family Food posts, where I share all about how I make food for our big family!

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Big Family Food: Making the Meal Stretch

February 9, 2022 by Laura 4 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

Today we’ll talk about Making the Meal Stretch as I share our Big Family Food Journey. But this post could also be titled: Feeding Picky Kids. See also: How to Add a Big Variety of Fruits and Vegetables to the Table. Sounds like we have a lot of ground to cover today!

What I am about to share will tell you how we regularly:

  • Feed our big family without making a huge portion of the main dish for every meal
  • Accommodate picky eaters, and…
  • Provide lots of fruits and veggies for our crew.
  • Bonus: This stretches the grocery budget too!

Another Bonus: This method works for families of all sizes, small and large!

Big Family Food: Making the Meal Stretch

Even though we typically feed 8-15 or more at every meal, I don’t always make a double or triple batch of our main dish. That could get really expensive! So instead, I often make one large main dish and then provide a big variety of nourishing sides to fill us up!

Here’s a list of items I might pull out to serve with the main dish we have prepared. Typically I prepare (or simply pull from the fridge or pantry) four or five of these:

  • Kid-Friendly Green Smoothies
  • Grown Up Green Smoothies
  • Peas
  • Green Beans
  • Broccoli
  • Carrots
  • Mixed Veggies
  • Corn
  • Salad
  • Baked Potatoes in the Crock Pot
  • Grape Tomatoes
  • Olives
  • Pickles
  • Bananas
  • Prepared Unsweetened Applesauce Cups (or applesauce scooped out of a jar into small bowls)
  • Applesauce Squeezies – with other fruits and sometimes vegetables included
  • Blueberries
  • Raspberries
  • Blackberries
  • Strawberries
  • 100% Peach Cup
  • 100% Pear Cup
  • 100% Mandarin Orange Cup
  • Canned Pineapple – tidbits or slices
  • Apples
  • Clementines
  • Pears
  • Watermelon
  • Cantaloupe
  • Chips and Salsa
  • Chips and Guacamole
  • Avocado
  • Stick-of-Butter-Rice
  • The Easiest Mashed Potatoes
  • Sweet Potato Fries (I usually buy these premade at Costco now and throw them in our Air Fryer.)
  • Beans
  • Bread and Butter
  • Muffins
  • Cheese

For instance…

Here’s an example of some food I set out to serve with a 9×13 Cheesy Beef and Rice Casserole one night. We had company, so there were 18 of us eating. (Note: Several were little ones who ate very small portions.) With our casserole, I served:

  • a pan of warm homemade rolls
  • a pot of steamed green beans
  • a pot of buttered corn
  • a plate of clementines and kiwi
  • and a plate of sliced cheese.

Not pictured from this meal: corn, rolls, and casserole. Plus the adorable face of our 2yo. :)
Everyone got full and we even had a little bit of corn and casserole leftover.

Stretch the Meal, Accommodate the Picky Eaters

If I set out 4-5 of the above-listed items to go with our meals, I tell the kids to pick 2-3 (or more if they want). This has worked so beautifully because in the case of our foster/adopted kids, letting them choose their sides gives them a sense of control when so much of their life has felt out of control.

But I don’t let them rule the show. As in, I don’t let the kids ask for something that isn’t already an offering on our buffet.

If I’ve set out the main dish, a bowl of grapes, sliced apples, steamed broccoli, and mixed greens with ranch – they don’t get to turn up their nose and ask for a pickle or a PBJ. I know what all of our kids like and don’t like. So I know that the choices I set out WILL accommodate all of the kids’ preferences in some way. I have them choose at least one fruit and one veggie from the choices provided and that’s that.

See how this stretches the meal?

I feel like I’ve talked more about accommodating picky eaters than I have about stretching the meal to feed 10-20 people. So let’s talk a little bit about how my method of serving several side dishes makes our main dish stretch farther!

If I were to make a Simple Ham and Hashbrown Casserole and serve it with a salad – we would run out of casserole after everyone had only one small or medium-sized helping. But if I make a Simple Ham and Hashbrown Casserole and set it out with:

  • Green Beans
  • Salad
  • Cantaloupe
  • Blueberries
  • Muffins (whatever kind I have on hand)

…then everyone can help themselves to the casserole, and fill up on all/some of the sides that are available. (Just like the example I shared above when we served one casserole to 18 people.)

Yes, sometimes I make a double batch of the main dish – 2 big casseroles, an extra huge pot of soup, or several pounds of meat. But this can really eat away at our grocery budget and typically it means I fight more food battles with the littles. Making one biggish portion of our main dish and serving a big variety of sides works much better for us!

Samples of Making Our Meals Stretch

Here are some examples of what I might serve with main dishes to stretch our meals.

Roast with:

  • The Easiest Mashed Potatoes
  • Carrots
  • Green Beans
  • Pineapple
  • Strawberries

Taco Meat with:

  • Tortillas and Chips
  • Black Beans or Refried Beans
  • Stick-of-Butter-Rice
  • Corn
  • Salsa
  • Avocados
  • Lettuce
  • Tomatoes
  • Olives
  • Cheese
  • Pineapple
  • Grapes

Hearty Bean Casserole with:

  • Biscuits or Muffins
  • Apple slices
  • Clementines
  • Salad
  • Grape tomatoes

Hamburgers with:

  • Sweet Potato Fries
  • Tomatoes
  • Pickles
  • Watermelon
  • Blackberries

Pizza with:

  • Kid-Friendly Green Smoothies
  • Grown Up Green Smoothies

If I make these smoothies, I don’t typically set out anything else. They include greens and fruit, so that covers everything!

Spaghetti with:

  • Steamed broccoli
  • Fresh greens with ranch
  • Corn
  • Sweet peppers
  • Cantaloupe
  • Pears

Grilled Chicken with:

  • Peas
  • Fresh greens with ranch
  • Raspberries
  • Pickles
  • Bread and butter or muffins

In some ways, it might seem easier to some to make a main dish with just a couple of sides and call it good. But that doesn’t work for my family. There are too many of us and many of my little ones and teens are picky. I’ve found that I fight fewer food battles by setting out several sides. Plus most of these sides don’t take any effort to put on our counter for our kids to pick from!

It’s really very easy.

Fruit mostly just has to be washed and served. Or if I need to cut or slice it, I try to do it ahead of time and just pull out a bowl of cantaloupe or watermelon, etc. at mealtime. Veggies just have to be steamed and served. Pickles come in a jar. Muffins have already been baked – I just take the lid off the container. Easy, easy, easy!

Stay tuned for more Big Family Food posts, where I share all about how I make food for our big family!

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!

16 Taco Recipe Ideas You’ll Love

February 6, 2022 by Laura 2 Comments

This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see our disclosure policy.

Do you do Taco Tuesday at your house? Try any of these 16 taco recipe ideas for variety!

As I was searching my website for taco recipes, I came across this gem: That One Time I Had to Chase My Taco

I’d forgotten about it but it is worth remembering. It’s all about the time I had to chase my ridiculous (but precious) taco pinata across the Walmart parking lot as it flew away toward the cornfield. And I lived to write about it:
And now we’re all hungry for tacos!

16 Taco Recipe Ideas You’ll Love

  1. Taco Seasoning Mix
  2. Simple Ranch Taco Chip Dip
  3. Instant Pot Taco Pasta
  4. Skillet Taco Pasta
  5. Crock Pot Taco Pasta
  6. Simple Popcorn Chicken Tacos
  7. Easy Taco Salad
  8. Shredded Chicken for Tacos
  9. Taco Rice Dinner
  10. 20-Minute Taco Soup
  11. Chicken Taco Soup
  12. Taco Quesadillas
  13. Taco Corn Fritters
  14. Taco Potatoes
  15. Taco Potato Skillet
  16. Easy Taco Cheesy Bean Dip

As you can see, tacos aren’t just tacos. There’s taco soup, taco salad, taco potatoes, and so much more. My family loves these recipes and they are so easy!

Also? I don’t see much difference in burritos and tacos, so it is worth mentioning the fantastic Burrito Bar! When I do this (frequently!) for our family and guests, it’s like Chipotle, only so much less expensive! Check out this great idea!

Heavenly Homemaker's Club Members: Access your homepage and all your fantastic resources here! Not a member yet? Please join us!
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