Friday, January 16, 2015

Key Lime Pie Smoothie

We drink a lot of smoothies in our home.  Since we invested in the Vitamix blender, smoothies have been a great way to incorporate a lot of fresh fruits and veggies into our diets.  It is also a perfect snack for a toddler!  I will admit, I don't usually follow recipes to make my smoothies.  I just throw a little bit of this and a little bit of that in the blender and it usually turns out pretty great.  There are some "rules", however with smoothie making that one might wish to follow.

-If you put spinach in your smoothies, as I very often do, adding strawberries to your fruit and spinach combo usually results in a brownish colored smoothie.  The taste could be great, but sometimes I have a hard time swallowing a brown smoothie.  But maybe you have an opaque smoothie cup with a lid...then I suppose there's no issue!

-Think of a flavor profile when making a smoothie.  It's just like cooking.  If you want a citrus flavored smoothie, stick to citrus fruits.  A berry smoothie, maybe don't add too much citrus to it. Etc. My husband likes to literally throw anything and everything in the blender and press go...it doesn't always turn out to be the most appetizing experience!

-Don't blend beets into your smoothies.  I'm sure it works for some and people definitely do it.  But we added a cooked, peeled beet to a smoothie once (granted, it was one of my husband's everything but the kitchen sink smoothie)...the texture was so gross I don't know if I will ever forget it!

Today I made a mid morning smoothie for me and my son and it turned out so delicious I just had to share the "recipe".  I can't wait to make this smoothie in the summer time because it was just so refreshing!

Key Lime pie Smoothie

1 Banana
1 Orange, peeled
1/2 cup Frozen Pineapple
1/4 cup Spinach
2 wedges of Lime (one with the peel on and one I cut the peel off)
1/4 cup Vanilla Yogurt
A splash of milk (probably around 1/3 cup)
Ice

Blend and Enjoy!

Makes 2 smoothies
This smoothie was so yummy I drank most of it before I realized I should take a picture!

My son insisted that I take a picture of his cup too. ;)

Monday, January 5, 2015

Handmade Play Kitchen


Here it is!  The project that I have been working on for SO LONG!  It was my son's Christmas gift and I wanted to get a jump start on it, so I think I began this journey in August.  No joke.  Yes, it took me that long to build this thing.  To be fair, I do most of my projects when my son is in bed and his naps became way to short and not conducive to getting pretty much anything done.  Another reason that it took me so long to build this was because I started on one path and diverged onto another path part way in.  Let me explain...

I started with the idea that I would transform an old cabinet into a play kitchen.  So, I bought this cabinet for $2 at the hardware thrift shop that I like to explore.

I build a base for the cabinet to sit on, to mimic a little kick plate, but also so that the cabinet was raised off the floor a bit, so the doors could open easier, etc.  Then I realized the cabinet is too high, so I figured I would just slice it down a little with my jig saw...what. was. I. thinking?!  Don't do that. Ever.  It didn't work.  It didn't matter how careful I was, I didn't cut it straight and then putting a countertop on the top wouldn't work, etc, etc, etc.  One positive that came out of this disaster, was that I realized the cabinet that I bought was kind of cheap.  It was wobbly and made of some kind of particle board and the back panel was chipping...so, I scrapped that idea altogether and decided to make the entire thing from scratch!  (Cue Superhero music).  I figured it would be a lot more sturdy, last a lot longer and the overall quality would just be better.  Plus, I would learn so much by doing it all myself.  Yep.  So much.

Lesson #1: The hardware that comes in the package with hinges and handles are basically made of plastic.  Don't use them.  Buy your own screws.

Lesson #2: Hinges suck.  They are harder than you think.  Plus, installing hinges by yourself is very difficult...especially with "plastic" screws.

Lesson #3: Don't pre cut all of your wood.  Cut as you go along.  Because you could, for some unexpected reason cut something, like, say the countertop, too small.  And then you will have to work some pretty creative magic to fix that.

Lesson #4: Glossy paint dries rubbery and will knick very easily.  Not a good idea for a play kitchen!

Lesson #5: Consider buying a play kitchen...


I didn't take step-by-step photos and cannot really explain how this bad boy came together. But the important part is that it did.  And I think it is pretty great.  Most importantly though, my son thinks this kitchen is awesome and has been playing with it non-stop since he got it!


Some project notes:
The cabinet door and oven door were old cabinet doors made of cherry hardwood.
The Countertop is also a piece of cherry wood that I scored at my hardware thrift store for $8.
I predominately used my Kreg Jig to drill pocket holes and put the kitchen together.
The faucet I found on ebay for $17.  It was listed as a chrome bar faucet, but worked perfectly for this play kitchen!
I used an LED tap light for the oven...because an oven needs an oven light!
The oven rack is actually a drain rack that fits in the bottom of a sink.  I bought this at Target.
The stove burners are cork coasters that I also found at Target.  I simply painted them and glued them on with wood glue.