Monday, December 18, 2017

Little Baker Jamisen + Little Painter Lily



We were so proud to get this note from Jamien's classroom teacher (Jessica).

Due to our amazing bakers and kitchen helpers, we were able to donate the following items to the Lighthouse Mission:

2 dozen chocolate chip cookies
5 loaves chocolate chip zucchini bread
3 pumpkin custards
5 pumpkin pies with homemade crust and filling
3 apple pies with homemade crust and filling
3 sheets of carrot cake with cream cheese frosting
7 loaves of amadama bread
24 loaves of challah

The children also earned and donated a total of $188 dollars that will go directly to Lydia Place.

Jamisen donated $6 of his own bath fizzy earnings for the project.


The creek at Lily and Jamisen’s school has been more exciting these days. The rain has turned the slow moving trickle into a little babbling creek.  There is a group of kids that work diligently to create a dam most days.  They have figured out that they need to work together to gather rocks, sticks and leaves to slow the water.  It is exciting when they achieve success as the depth of the water increases behind their dam.


Tonight, when we were at Trader Joe's, he saw the Salvation Army bell ringer and fished all of the money he was carrying in his pocket and put half of it into the donation bucket. I told the bell ringer that this was Jamisen's money that he had earned himself. It turns out that Jamisen had held part of his money back for a "tip jar" that he thought might be at checkout. When he learned that the checkers did not take tips, he went back outside and stuffed it into the Salvation Army bucket. The bell ringer was visibly moved by his sweetness and generosity.

The kids have been such a lovely ball of energy lately. They've taken to sleeping out in the living room on weekend nights, which is so very cute and terrible. They barely can get to sleep and when they do, they only sleep for like 4 seconds before one of them is up and waking the other one up. It has not been awesome for the parentals but man oh man, they love it. They're such good friends, those two. Above, see Lily's idea of "fingerpainting."


I did have to do the whole "Kids, if you don't improve, I'm going to turn this car around!" trick where I actually had follow up and turn the dang car around. Since it was during a long Sunday, I had been trying to get the kids out of the house so it was way more of a punishment for me to turn the car around and go home. Also, alllllll the tears; whoah. Lily cried and wailed and whimpered for like an hour. Jamisen quickly wised up and started making deals. He ultimately managed to negotiate his way to 1/3 of the activities out that they were going to get by sacrificing his sister's scalp. Literally. Lily HATES to have her hair brushed or washed. Chris sometimes remarks that she looks like she is being raised by wolves because her hair can get to be quite a tangled knotted up mess. So, he convinced her to wash her hair AND both of them to "be good"  (aka, play quietly and no fighting) in exchange for an hour at an indoor play area. It was pretty effective but the punishment for me was way worse than it was for them!


Jamisen continues to work hard on his reading and math skills. He impresses us with his work ethic and is learning at a rapid rate. It's fun to have him sit down and read books to all of us. 












Sunday, December 10, 2017

Lily has Moxie for Miles


We have had a busy fall - between business travel (NYC, DC, and Hallmark in Cali for me; Saudi for Chris), we also fit in a really lovely event at our home, supporting Washington State Governor Jay Inslee. I was literally home for ONE night in between trips and that was the night we squeezed this fun event in. 


It was Lily's first exposure to a political event. Typically, she has gone to a friend's house when we host because her young energy can be just a tad um ... energetic for a formal political event. All the speechifying doesn't do well with a mischievous though adorable little attention seeker in the midst. But, this summer, we went to a fundraiser at a lovely old home in Fairhaven and they had a nanny present and, lots of little kids running around. It really helped lower the average age of attendees because parents could actually come.  And Chris and I both feel strongly about opening channels of communications for all demographics to our elected officials So, with Jay's blessing, we decided to try it. It totally worked! The fundraiser was filled with young, active, skeptical people who asked great questions and kept the party lively. 


Showing all the moxie one would expect from Lily Leah Renoud, our little whirling dervish of energy zcgreeted the Governor with a high five. 


At this point, the kiddos have met all of our Washington State Federal Delegation (House and Senate). I have vague but positive memories of my parents hosting political events or issue-based salons at our home when I was very young (albeit, I don't think they were hosting them for liberal politicians or causes ... cough cough). I'm hoping that this idea of community responsibility resonates with our kiddos long after they're grown. After all, electing people that reflect our values to office isn't just a one-day thing (aka: election day in November). It's an every-day thing and continuing conversations and education. 




Tuesday, November 14, 2017

Cheesemaking is back!




Does anyone remember when I made cheese right out of college in the little house on I Street? 


Well, I've got a new office and studio space with way more room and I've rekindled my love of cheese and all things cheesemaking. 


I had forgotten exactly how time intensive cheesemaking was or all my failures in cheesemaking at the I Street house. But, in hindsight, I failed more than actually was successful. 


Cheesemaking requires its own cheese cave or cheese fridge. We have two at the studio just for cheese; one for blue cheese (since it contaminates everything it comes into contact with and the mold spores go airborne) and all the other cheeses. 




All the cheese require different kinds of molds and need between 1 and 3 days of draining/turning before they can either be put to rest and curing or, pressed for another day. 


The Bramble Berry team has been SO much loving all the cheese experiments since I certainly can't eat all this cheese on my own.


They especially enjoyed the soft cheese, Robbiola. It's an Italian style creamy cheese made out of cowmilk. 

It was paired with a spiced raspberry jelly and devoured almost instantly. 

The salted beer cheese curds went about the same way. They had both beer and salt as the flavoring. Fun fact: when you're dry salting cheese, you rub the salt all over the cheese, put it back in the fridge (covered) and by morning? All the salt is absorbed into the cheese. Salt is a key component for cheese. 



This is a big wheel of Brie cheese. It needs to age for a few more weeks before I can determine it's a success.



The mozzarella (one of the easiest of the cheese to make) was a success. 

The blue cheese tasted great on day 1 but then, I didn't baby the wheels for a couple days and by the time I got to them again, the mold had overtaken them ... and not the good kind of cheese mold. But, it was delicious on Day 1 and we all enjoyed it.

Monday, November 13, 2017

Pumpkin Patch Forays of Fun


Oh we were SO happy to go to the pumpkin patch with the kiddos and family this year. Aunty Cheriss found a new farm that was (dare I say it?) (whispers) better than the one we normally go to.


There were multiple +1 reasons that we loved this farm: 1) an entire fenced in tactile area for kids that had rubber ducky water experiment/races, a bouncing area and some other sensory experiences. 



2) Um, rain barrel cars? Yes. The kids were just delighted to go on this farm contraption and loved every second of being in the driver's seat (and how clever are these little cars that each kid gets to be in the driver's seat?!)


Lily and I had the most adorable exchange this morning at breakfast. I made her two egg banana pancakes and rolled them up like little crepes.  I put them on a plate, and when I gave them to her, said: "I'm giving you two egg banana pancakes but if you don't want to eat both of them, your brother might want one." As she took the plate, she said, "Thank you Mama. You're so generous." Then she spun on her little sassy Lily heel and flounced off. She has so much verve, that little one.


We just did parent teacher conferences. Lily's went well. She's got a best-best friend named 'Thomas' and she and Thomas are so close that they often have to be separated at circle time. Apparently, they sit so close that you couldn't fit a paper between them but that's not the issue. The issue is that they talk to each other but then the other one shushes the talker, extremely loudly. "Shhhhh! You're talking too loud!" "I know! Be quiet! I'll talk more quiet!" "You're not talking more quiet!" "I know, because you haven't stopped talking yet!" and so on. 


Jamisen's parent teacher conference was good beyond expectations. This is his first year in the 6 to 9 year old classroom and he's in first grade. He's being introduced to a whole host of new things (including scheduling his day, Spanish, yoga, math and reading). It was wonderful to hear the teacher talk about how self-aware Jamisen is for his age, how diligent he is in the classroom, how hard he works and how impressed she is with his natural industrious and self-driven nature.


Chris continues to be the hilarious goofball of the family and our children seem to have picked up that wry, dry sense of humor. They've definitely got the Funny Face skill down!


Jamisen is an incredible helper lately. He's always had a genuine desire to be helpful but it's been amped to the next level. The other night, we hosted friends over for dinner and he insisted on setting the entire table himself, right down to the thoughtful napkin choices for adults vs kids and name tags on the place settings. 


The kids play so nicely together and Lily and Jamisen have both started caring for each other (as opposed to just Jamisen taking care of Lily). So when one is in a bad mood - so long as the other one didn't cause it - they try to cheer each other up. It's kind, thoughtful and compassionate. 


The entire family very much enjoyed the pumpkin patch and it was so nice that Grandma and Grandpa Faiola could be with us for the excursion. 


There was a cool horse drawn old fashioned carriage that the kids liked riding in. 


Baby Alise is so easy going and fun. Her language skills are coming along rapidly and it's fun to hear her interact with the kids. It's also super nice from an adult standpoint to know what she wants or needs when she asks for things. She and Lily especially loved playing with the rabbits at the farm and got right in the cage with them (alas, no great photos of that).