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Whole Wheat Banana Bread and Muffins

May 19, 2010 by Laura 107 Comments

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

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Did I ever tell you about the time I almost forgot to put the bananas into my banana bread?

I have these finer moments in my kitchen from time to time. They mostly happen while I’m trying to cook and talk simultaneously. If I’m talking on the phone while mixing up a recipe, I tend to leave out key ingredients. Or add the same ingredient twice.  It’s ridiculous.  I think it’s crazy that I can usually multi-task quite well…but I can barely have a conversation with someone while I cook. Duh. Just be glad I type these posts after I’m finished cooking. Otherwise, these recipes would just be plain scary.

And so, because I care too much not to share, here’s a handy baking tip:  When making Banana Bread or Muffins, be sure to add the bananas. The final product tastes much better this way. I’m nothing if not helpful.

Whole Wheat Banana Bread and MuffinsYum

1 3/4 cups whole wheat flour (I use freshly ground flour from hard white wheat)
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1 cup mashed over-ripe bananas (about 2-3 bananas)
1/3 cup honey
1/4 cup melted butter
2 eggs

Stir together flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt. In a separate bowl, mash bananas, or puree them in a blender. Mix mashed bananas, honey, melted butter and eggs into flour mixture.

For Bread:  Spread batter into a well buttered bread pan. Bake in a 350° oven for 50-60 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the middle comes out clean.

For Muffins:  Spoon batter into 12 buttered or paper lined muffin tins. Bake in a 400° oven for 20 minutes.

Speaking of finer moments in my kitchen…did I ever tell you about the time I made a lovely lasagna ahead of time so that I would be all ready for my company that night? Because, you see, it’s great to be prepared when you’re having company. Oh, and it also helps to get the lasagna out of the fridge and BAKE IT at dinner time. Being prepared doesn’t help at all if you don’t actually bake your lasagna. Yeah, dinner was a little late that night.

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Gratituesday: Ah, Lovely Dirt

May 17, 2010 by Laura 21 Comments

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Before Saturday, I STILL had not had a chance to get my hands dirty. I hadn’t had a chance to get into my garden at ALL. (You’re shocked at me, aren’t you?!)  I had longed to get out there, but just not had even one moment to think about the garden yet.

Thankfully, Matt had found a few bits and pieces of time during the past few weeks to get our garden areas tilled up and to plant a few things. Ooh, and he even brought us home a big truck load of horse manure. Crazy how excited I was to see him that day. Saturday, we were finally able to both work in the garden together and get several more things planted.

The day was sunny and beautiful. Just ask Matt…I was completely giddy. I was running my  hands through the soil…just for fun. It felt so good.

Yes, in case you didn’t already know that I am a garden geek…now you know for sure. I can’t help it. The garden gives me so much joy.

Wanna take a look at a few parts of it with me? (There’s more to be planted…these are just a few shots.)

lettuceWe have lettuce ready to eat…it is so beautiful!

cornYou can’t see it…but there’s corn in these rows!!

 

peppersAw, cute little pepper plants.

potato_containerOh yes…I did plant potatoes in my trash can again!!

I’m just so thankful for our garden. I love how we can see God in the entire process of watching food grow from a seed. I can’t wait to share more with you during the coming months!

What are you thankful for this Gratituesday? Write about it on your blog, then come link up with us here. If you don’t have a blog, be sure to leave a comment letting us know what you’re grateful for!

If you are linking up a blog post for Gratituesday,
please copy and paste the following sentence into your post! Thanks!


Join us for Gratituesday at Heavenly Homemakers!

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Simple Steps Toward Healthy Eating, Part 1

May 16, 2010 by Laura 42 Comments

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simplesteps

When I finished telling you about Our Healthy Eating Journey, I told you I wanted to begin a new series to help break down some specific things you can do if you would like to begin your own journey toward healthy eating.

You may already feel great about where you are on your healthy eating journey. You may already be eating a wonderfully healthy diet. If so, great! I hope you’ll still join us during this series, leaving your own helpful comments and ideas on each post!

But, if you are just beginning your journey toward healthy eating and would like some practical tips and attainable advice on how to make this journey simple and do-able…stick around. I don’t promise to write this series very quickly. I may only be able to post a new “simple step” once every few weeks or so. But, that may be just the pace you need to begin making changes in the way you and your family eat and think about food. If you want to move faster, that’s just fine…but making too many healthy changes too quickly may be overwhelming to you and can certainly make a husband or child want to run away to find the nearest Cheeto. 

Take small steps. Take simple steps.

But do take steps. 

It is important for your health and for the health of your loved ones that you start taking some simple steps toward healthy eating. Our bodies need nourishment. Start doing what you can to fill your bodies up with great nourishment! It isn’t as hard as you think! You can do this!

Here is what I am going to suggest as a first small step toward healthier eating:  Focus on eating more fruits and vegetables.

That’s it. All I’m asking you to do is eat a grape.  See? I’m totally reasonable and practical. Nothing weird. Nothing freaky or icky. Just focus on colorful fruits and vegetables.

Here are a few helpful tips and ideas to encourage your fruit and vegetable intake:

  • Fresh or frozen fruits and vegetables are the most nutritious. Canned is better than none at all. Organic is best, but if that isn’t a step you’re ready to take yet, don’t worry. Just eat fruits and vegetables. 
  • Look for fruits and vegetables that are on sale…but try very hard not to focus on how difficult it might be to spend money on produce. I’ve heard people talk about how they just can’t stand to spend $3.50 on a fresh pineapple…but they’ll turn right around and throw a big bag of potato chips into their cart that costs the same amount. Let the fruits and vegetables replace some of the processed snacks that you normally buy and you won’t even feel the financial difference.
  • Stock up on your favorites. I personally can’t stand red delicious apples from the store. They taste grainy and nasty to me, so if all I have in the house are red delicious apples…I will not eat them. BUT put gala apples in the house and I’ll eat three. Each day. I LOVE gala apples. Get your favorite fruits and veggies, get your husband’s favorites, get your kids’ favorites. You are all much more likely to eat them if you love them.
  • Try something new. Have a little fun trying fruits or vegetables you’ve never tried before. Try fixing your old favorites in a new way.
  • Hide them. If you haven’t tried these Strawberry-Peach Slushies (that secretly have raw spinach in them) you are missing out. My whole family devours these slushies and never think twice about the fact that there is something green hiding within. 

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  • Make eating fruits and veggies fun!

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  • Search around my site, specifically (but not limited to) my side dishes recipes page for yummy fruit and vegetable recipes.
  • Take a look at Have Your Fruits…and Veggies Too! ebook for many more ideas and yummy recipes.

Focus on how packed full of vitamins and wonderfulness fruits and vegetables are! Work on eating them as an incredible way to improve your health and the health of your family! What a perfect first step toward healthy eating!

So tell me…what are your favorite fruits and vegetables? Think you can challenge yourself to eat just a few more?  (Nod your head yes.)

Right before publishing this, I asked my husband what HE would recommend as the first, most important step a person should take toward healthy eating. I found his answer so very interesting and insightful…as well as completely different from what I was thinking. Want to know Matt’s advice and idea for a great first step? I’ll write about that next in this series!

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Menu Plan for the Week

May 16, 2010 by Laura 8 Comments

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

We have survived soccer season again this spring. We’re on the home stretch…our last games are Tuesday night. You can’t see me, but I’m doing back flips in celebration. I’ve loved watching my boys play…but it will be nice to have more time at home again. I think they are a tiny bit relieved too. (You should see the back flips they can do.)

Here’s our menu for the week:

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Sunday, May 16
Oatmeal, peaches
Sandwiches on the way to a soccer game
Leftovers

Monday, May 17
Whole wheat waffles, strawberries
Bean and cheese burritos, watermelon
Chicken Fried Steak Strips, mashed potatoes, gravy, peas

Tuesday, May 18
Orange carrot muffins, bananas
Pizza pockets, carrot sticks, applesauce
Italian Stew with green beans

Wednesday, May 19
Mini breakfast pizza, oranges
Homemade corn dogs, strawberry yogurt fruit dip with apple slices
Taco potatoes

Thursday, May 20
French toast
Spanish Rice, corn, pears
Cookout at the park with Justus’ soccer team

Friday, May 21
Mini apple pies, cheese
Chicken tortilla soup, strawberry peach slushies, carrots
Cheesy salsa enchiladas, creamy orange cooler

Saturday, May 22
Whole wheat donuts
Nachos, apples
Cheddar ranch burgers on whole wheat hamburger buns, hashbrowns

Simple Steps Toward Healthy Eating Series begins tonight…stay tuned!
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Find more menu planning inspiration at Organizing Junkie!

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

Healthy Celebrations: Double Lemon Cupcakes (a guest post!)

May 11, 2010 by Laura 13 Comments

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

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Yum

Please join me in welcoming Holly, who is guest posting today to share her awesome Double Lemon Cupcake recipe with us! I can’t wait to give these a try!
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Hello Heavenly Homemakers readers! My name is Holly. I am a Christian, a military wife and momma to an 18 month old son, and I am really excited to be sharing a recipe (or three) with you. The past year I have been learning about traditional foods; I have reinvented how I shop, cook, eat, and feel about food. The most recent milestone in this journey was birthday cake. Remember when Laura asked us to choose between chocolate and vanilla? Well, to celebrate my 24th birthday I chose option C.  

I wanted  a birthday dessert that satisfied my emotional desire for cake, but also fulfilled my sensible need to eat wholesomely. I knew that if I did not satisfy both halves I would be left either feeling like a whole wheat martyr or a big sugar-filled failure. Yuck. Blessedly, I found a happy medium with these  sweet and tangy cupcakes. 

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Let me just say that I am normally very relaxed baker, I never sift. I fudge the temperatures and can be lazy with the mixing. But for this recipe, if I say sift I do mean sift. The same goes for temperatures and times. It may seem fussy for some of you, but the results are rewarding. 

Double Lemon Cupcakes

 

3 c whole wheat flour
1 tbsp baking powder
½  tsp sea salt
1 c butter, room temperature
1 c orange blossom honey
4 large eggs, room temperature
the zest of 3 lemons (I recommend organic because you are consuming the peel), plus 2 tbsp lemon juice
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 c buttermilk 

Preheat oven to 325° F. Butter and flour the inside of two round cake pans or two dozen muffin tins. Zest the lemons (just the yellow part, try to avoid the white pith because it is bitter), you want this to be very fine. Sift the dry ingredients together and set aside. Add the lemon juice to the buttermilk. 

Cream the butter and the honey until they are nice and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time, until well mixed in. Add the zest and vanilla. Add the flour and buttermilk in three parts. Beat until just combined. Pour the batter into the prepped pans and bake until golden brown and they pass the toothpick test, 30-35 minutes for a cake, 25 minutes for cupcakes. 

lemon_cupcakes_2

While the cakes are baking, mix up a nice batch of… 

Lemon Curd   

8 large egg yolks
Finely grated zest of 2 lemons
½  c plus 2 tbsp lemon juice (about 3-4 lemons)
½ c orange blossom honey
teeny pinch of salt, about 1/8 tsp
¾ c unsalted butter (10 tbsp or 1 ¼ sticks) cold, cut in pieces  

Wisk together all ingredients except butter and salt in a medium saucepan. Cook over medium-high heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon. When the mixture registers 160° F on an instant-read thermometer and is thick enough to coat the back of the spoon, remove from heat. This should take about 8-10 minutes. If you don’t have a thermometer, just do what I did and use good quality eggs. 

Remove pan from heat and add salt and butter, one piece at a time, stirring until smooth after each addition. Strain through a sieve. It is normal for small bits of cooked egg to strain out, don’t worry you did it right. :) Cover this with plastic wrap and let it cool in the fridge at least one hour.

lemon_cupcakes_3  

Fill your cupcakes with lemon curd. You can use a pastry bag and large tip, or poke a hole with the wrong end of a wooden spoon and use a plastic baggie with a corner snipped off. Spread extra curd on top of the cupcake. If you’re making a cake, spread the lemon curd between the two layers. Then whip up your frosting. 

Soft and Fluffy Frosting

8 egg whites
¾ c orange blossom honey
1 tsp vanilla extract. 

Combine egg whites and honey in a large heat-proof mixing bowl (or the bowl for your stand mixer if you have one and it’s heat-proof) set over a pan of simmering water. Wisk rapidly for two minutes  Make sure your water does not boil! You will end up with scrambled egg frosting and it will be gross. Cook this until it reaches 160° F on an instant-read thermometer (or if like me you don’t have one, use good eggs and cook for two minutes). Remove from the heat and beat on your mixer’s highest speed for  until soft and fluffy, about 7-9 minutes. Beat in the vanilla. Use this frosting immediately. 

lemon_cupcakes_4

I used (some of the) leftover curd to decorate the tops of some of the cupcakes. Or you could eat it with a spoon and not tell anyone there were leftovers. I won’t look. 

lemon_cupcakes

Thanks Laura for letting me share my recipes with you and your readers!

Holly wanted me to be sure to let you know that the curd will keep in the fridge about 3 days, but it is best served in the first 24-36 hours, and the frosting should be used immediately after it’s made, because it will start to deflate after a few hours. It’s still edible for several days, but the quality goes down after 6-8 hours.
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This post is linked to Works for me Wednesday.

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

Menu Plan for the Week

May 10, 2010 by Laura 6 Comments

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

Thank you all so much for your “hugs” and support yesterday. I love all your suggestions about buying a shirt “for my mom” and giving it to someone in need. I’m going to consider starting a new tradition next year. What great ideas you shared! You are all awesome!

I DID have a wonderful Mother’s Day. Matt had to work a big part of the day (Mother’s Day at a restaurant means all employees on board, you know)…so we waited until the big crowd had thinned out and the boys “took me out to Daddy’s restaurant” for lunch. Matt was able to sit and eat with us at that point…AND my three older boys actually pitched in and paid for my meal. Are they so sweet or what? 

I’m finally getting my menu posted for ya!

Monday, May 10
Simple soaked pancakes, blueberries
Grilled cheese sandwiches, tomato soup, carrots
Tacos

Tuesday, May 11
Chocolate chocolate chip muffins, bananas
Turkey sausage, hashbrowns, creamy orange cooler
Popcorn chicken, ranch potato wedges, peas

Wednesday, May 12
Scrambled eggs, fruit-kefir smoothies
Salmon patties, creamy coleslaw, sweet baked beans
Sloppy cornbread, green beans

Thursday, May 13
Cinnamon swirl bread, strawberry peach slushies
Tuna salad on crispy cheese crackers, strawberry milkshakes
Lasagna, tossed salad

Friday, May 14
Peanut butter honey toast, applesauce
Picnic in the park – sandwiches, chips, carrots, fruit leather
Hamburgers on whole wheat hamburger buns, onion rings

Saturday, May 15
Homemade oat crunch cereal with dried fruit
Leftovers
Crunchy ranch chicken, rice and veggie stir fry

If you haven’t signed up for Paula’s Bread Pizza Kit Giveaway….hurry over! I’ll be drawing a random winner tonight!

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You can take advantage of the 25% off sale in Heavenly Homemaker’s Shop until midnight tonight!

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Visit Organizing Junkie for more menu planning inspiration.

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

Our Healthy Eating Journey, Wrapping it Up

May 5, 2010 by Laura 60 Comments

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healthyeatingjourney

If you missed them, please catch up on
Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6 , Part 7, Part 8 and Part 9.

I had finally accepted and realized that our bodies needed nourishment. Eating food wasn’t just about filling a hole. Eating food was about providing our bodies with all of the right nutrients, vitamins, minerals, enzymes and fats.

I re-read Nourishing Traditions. I asked millions of questions of my friends who knew more about healthy eating than I did.  I got completely overwhelmed.  I began throwing processed foods out of my pantry. I pretty much turned into a Nazi about healthy eating. If it wasn’t organic, raw, fermented, grass fed, soaked whole grain or cultured…I was scared to let it pass our lips. We would probably die! We would for sure get cancer! Malachi’s eczema would get worse! My asthma would get worse! We would all get terribly sick!

This way of thinking turned me into a nervous wreck anytime we went anywhere. If I was at home, I could control what we ate. But if we were at a friend’s house or out of town visiting family or if someone offered my children candy…I was scared to death to let us eat! Those foods were poison!! It sounds crazy (because it was) but that’s how I was when I first learned about eating nourishing foods. When you’re first learning about the harmful ways animals are raised for meat and milk and how many pesticides are sprayed on produce, it can make you want to run away screaming. 

It took me a few months to come around. Part of it was that I just needed to wrap my brain around this new lifestyle. I had to figure out how to eat and serve my family a healthy diet. I had to learn where good food sources were. I had to learn to spend money on food (and figure out where that money was going to come from). I had to learn how to grow my garden organically. I had to learn how to cook and bake differently.

But I had to learn to CHILL OUT.

I learned that while we could try our best to eat the best foods we could most of the time…we could never eat perfect foods all of the time. And guess what? That’s okay! The stress of trying to eat perfectly, and the fears I had developed when we couldn’t were probably more harmful than the occasional store bought pizza or non-organic apple we might eat.

And so I discovered a healthy balance. More importantly, so that our children would come along with us on this journey and not be afraid that Mommy would be serving them yet another weird dish that they’d never heard of and that they hated…I learned to re-create all of our favorite foods. Now, we could eat all of our favorites (Pizza, Mac and Cheese, Tacos, Nachos, Spaghetti, etc.), but they were made with healthy and wholesome ingredients! The kids were happy. The parents were happy. Our bodies were happy.

So that’s where we’ve landed. We don’t eat a perfect diet…we just do the best we can. Our journey continues, because that’s what journeys do, don’t they?

Now my goal is to continue to develop more healthy and tasty recipes that my family loves and share them with you!

I’m wrapping up this series about Our Healthy Eating Journey today, with plans to launch into another series of sorts in which I’ll share some simple steps you can take toward healthy eating if this journey is new to you. I’ll share specific information about healthy meats, dairy products, eggs, spices, grains, produce, fats, etc. More importantly, I’ll give you ideas and tools for where to start. You DON’T need to change everything all at once!

My goal is to help you know that eating healthy is a possibility for EVERYONE. No matter what your budget, your cooking ability and experience, your understanding of nutritious food. You can do this!

Healthy eating tastes so good! Learn along with me that changing over to a healthy lifestyle is simple, affordable and delicious!

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

Make Your Own Frozen Hashbrowns

April 27, 2010 by Laura 311 Comments

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

It’s remarkably easy to make your own frozen hashbrowns!

Homemade_Frozen_Hashbrowns

Yum

I’ve always had a hard time making good homemade hashbrowns. When my friend Brenda shared this little trick with me…I gave it a try and it WORKS!

Not only does this make delicious homemade hashbrowns, it is a great way to use up an abundance of potatoes before they start sprouting. Remember how I got 50 pounds for such a good price last week? I plan on putting up several pounds of them into the freezer in hashbrown form. That way, I’ve preserved some of my good organic potatoes, plus I’ve got EASY hashbrowns ready to pull out and cook up for breakfast or dinner anytime I need them!

Oh, and can you say “inexpensive”? Yes, I thought you could. These hashbrowns are so inexpensive, especially when you’ve taken advantage of a good deal on potatoes. So let’s get started, shall we?

How to Make Frozen Hashbrowns

First, scrub your potatoes…as many as you want.

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Bake the potatoes. I avoid using aluminum foil if at all possible in baking, so I always just place my scrubbed potatoes into a covered dish and bake them for about 1 1/2 hours at 350°. Be sure to stab each potato with a knife before baking so you don’t have a massive potato explosion in your oven. Unless you want a massive potato explosion in your oven. Then feel free to leave them unstabbed.

hashbrowns7sm

Allow your baked potatoes to cool. Peel the potatoes.

hashbrowns8sm

Shred your potatoes with a cheese grater. They shred very easily because they are soft after baking.

hashbrowns1sm

See how lovely?

At this point, you can either cook them, or freeze them. To freeze them, lay them flat on a parchment paper lined cookie sheet. Put the cookie sheet into the freezer for a couple of hours or until the potatoes are frozen, then transfer them into freezer bags to cook up when you’re ready. Oh so convenient!

hashbrowns2sm

I usually cook my hashbrowns in my electric skillet or in a cast iron skillet on the stove.
I use a generous amount of butter, because I love the flavor butter gives my taters.
I also use quite a bit of sea salt or onion salt.

If the hashbrowns are frozen, you can cook them the same way as if they were not frozen…it will just take a few more minutes.

Cook them on one side for 4-5 minutes, then turn. Try not to turn them too much so they don’t get mushy. Cook until the potatoes are golden brown and slightly crispy.

hashbrowns3sm

Yum, yum, yum! Ever since I discovered this hashbrown making trick…we have the most delicious hashbrowns. Before, I had simply shredded a raw potato, then tried to fry it. I always ended up with a mushy mess. Blech.  The trick:  Bake the potatoes first. It works so well! PLUS, the baked potato does not turn brown and ugly like a raw potato does once you shred it.

You can use this same trick to make and freeze diced potatoes or potato chunks. Fry those up in butter and you’ve got some wonderful fried potatoes!

 

 

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Menu Plan for the Week

April 25, 2010 by Laura 14 Comments

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

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We survived our nine soccer games last week. We survived the musical. In fact, games and musical were better than great! You’ve heard enough about our soccer week, but I’ll share more about the musical later…because you do want to see my boys in their costumes, right? 

Now, we are enjoying some out of town guests for a couple of days! I’ll share more on Gratituesday!

Here’s our menu for this week! Oh, and I’m happy to report that we have way less than nine soccer games this week…plus NO musical practices! Whatever shall I do with all my extra time?!

Sunday, April 25
Oatmeal, peaches
Potluck – take chocolate chip cookies, turkey sandwiches
Pizza, fruit

Monday, April 26
Chocolate chip pancakes, milk
Picnic in the park – Quesadillas, carrot sticks, apples, juice
Southside Grille with out of town guests

Tuesday, April 27
Creamy Orange Cooler, fried eggs on toast,
Popcorn chicken, ranch potato wedges, peas
Lasagna casserole, tossed salad

Wednesday, April 28
Orange Muffins, bananas
Sloppy cornbread, green beans
Lamb roast, potatoes, gravy, carrots

Thursday, April 29
Honey whole wheat bagels, applesauce
Taco salad, fruit kabobs
BBQ brisket, cream scalloped potatoes, steamed broccoli and cauliflower

Friday, April 30
Breakfast cake, pears
Sweet beans and franks, bread and butter, apples
Hamburgers on whole wheat hamburger buns, onion rings

Saturday, May 1
Turkey sausage and egg scramble, clementines
Leftovers
Three cheese garlic chicken pasta, tossed salad

And now, a few random items of interest…

Hallee the Homemaker is beginning an online Bible study on May 1. She’ll be taking you through a study of Stomie Omartian’s book, The Power of a Praying Wife. Join in if you can!

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There is one day left to sign up for the following giveaways:  Tropical Traditions Organic Palm Shortening; Malachi’s Harvest Gourmet Granola; Green, American Style Book. Don’t miss out!

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Visit Organizing Junkie for more menu planning inspiration!

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You have to check out The Junk Drawer! Kathy is one of our sponsors here and she is a hoot!

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

Menu Plan for the Week

April 18, 2010 by Laura 11 Comments

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

Our boys’ musical is this coming Saturday. Their costumes are coming along…I’ll be sure to get some pictures to show you what I came up with. Again, making costumes? Not my gift. Nodding yes when someone offers to help me. Oh yeah, I can do that.

Somewhere in between about nine soccer games, three soccer practices, and one musical dress rehearsal…here’s what we’ll be eating this week:

Sunday, April 18
Oatmeal, pears
Potluck after church – angeled eggs, easy butterscotch bars, pea salad
Sloppy joes, mashed potato pancakes, fruit salad

Monday, April 19
Simple soaked pancakes, blueberries
Salmon patties, creamy mac and cheese, peas
Hamburgers on whole wheat hamburger buns, onion rings

Tuesday, April 20
Scrambled egg sandwiches, creamy orange cooler
Pizza casserole, tossed salad
Chicken and noodles, carrot sticks

Wednesday, April 21
Chocolate chocolate chip muffins, apples with strawberry yogurt fruit dip
Lamb chops, cream scalloped potatoes, green beans
Turkey sausage and egg casserole, honey wheat muffins, fresh pineapple

Thursday, April 22
Homemade whole wheat funnel cake, bananas
Grilled cheese sandwiches, tomato soup
Shepherds pie, tossed salad

Friday, April 23
Fruit and kefir smoothies, homemade honey oat crunch cereal (recipe in Think Breakfast…Outside the Box eb-ook)
Beef and Cheese Burritos, oranges
Homemade pizza, strawberry peach slushie

Saturday, April 24
Giant breakfast cookies, applesauce
Tacos, cantaloupe
Carnival food after the musical

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This week is going to be LOADED with giveaways here on the blog! 
Be ready to sign up to win all kinds of wonderful gifts!

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Visit Organizing Junkie for more menu planning inspiration.

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Be sure not to miss the special Mother’s Day sale at Paula’s Bread!

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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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  • Big Family Food and Fun: May 10-16, 2026
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  • Big Family Food and Fun: April 26-May 2, 2026
  • Big Family Food and Fun: April 19-25, 2026
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