Showing posts with label christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christmas. Show all posts

My Gratitudes this CHRISTmas


It's Christmas Eve Eve. I have mixed feelings about that. I LOVE Christmas, but the days leading up to it are almost as wonderful. If they go too fast, it'll be over. I'm wondering if this will be the first year my kids will wake up before me. Probably not. I mean, Welly's middle name is Noelle...and she was a June baby.  :)

My Top 5 Gratitudes this Christmas...

1. My Savior, Jesus Christ. He came to the most humble beginnings. He was a man acquainted with grief. He knew what He was getting Himself into, and He did it anyway. He lived and died for me.

2. My completely blissful marriage to my Robby. My heart is full to bursting.

3. My babies. I adore being a mother. I wish my memory was perfect so I could memorize every moment of their growing up and treasure it in my heart...Bubs and his funny jokes and cheerful giggles. Welly-Bell and her snuggles and whispers of "I just love you." Y and his sweet prayers and soft, kissable cheeks.

4. Extended family. Robby and I have the best parents in the world, and our siblings are our dearest friends. They are why we are who we are.

5. The Christmas Spirit of giving. The joy we feel when we give thoughtful gifts to one another, modeling after the greatest gift ever given.

Have a merry, merry CHRISTMAS!

Warmly,
Emily

Gingerbread Houses and Delicious Cookies

My very favorite Christmas tradition is to make Gingerbread Houses. As a young girl, there were a couple years when I went to Grandma and Grandpa's house and helped decorate them. They are truly a work of art. We usually made 2 or 3, and when they were done, we'd take them to a few families who could use a little cheering up that year.


We have continued the tradition, and it is so wonderful to see the faces on the recipients as they admire the details and wonder why we chose to single them out.



This year was my first time making the dough myself, and I didn't have quite enough to make all the pieces of the houses. I had to make a second batch, but I ran out of ginger. Robby assured me that it wouldn't matter, since it was just a spice anyway. I substituted pumpkin spice and made cookies from the remaining dough. Let me tell you. These cookies were amazing! Don't be fooled by the pumpkin spice. They don't taste like pumpkin cookies at all. They taste like gingerbread bursting with flavor.

Ginger Spice Cookies

2 C Butter
2 C Brown Sugar
1 C Light molasses (not blackstrap)
7 C Flour
1 Tbsp Pumpkin Pie Spice (which is cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and allspice)
2 Tbsp Cinnamon
2 tsp Baking Soda

Cream butter and sugar together. Blend in the molasses. Add flour, pumpkin pie spice, cinnamon, and baking soda.

When ingredients are mixed, the dough is kind of crumbly. If it's very crumbly, use your hand to put a little water into it.

Place the dough on the back (yes, the back) of a foil-lined cookie sheet. Roll the dough out to 1/4 inch thick.

Bake dough at 350 for 9-11 minutes.

While the dough is still hot, cut out desired shapes with cookies cutters or a knife. (If using for houses, you bake for 12 minutes. Then you can put crushed jolly ranchers in the windows for stained glass, and bake an additional 4 minutes.)

When the dough cools, frost and decorate. Yum! (You can probably make them the traditional way, too, and cut them before the dough cooks, but I just did them like the houses.)

The Monstrous Monstrosity of a Tree

We're all about the real Christmas trees around here. With the smell of pine and the orange pomander balls, I'm in heaven.

We went to a Christmas tree farm where we picked a fresh tree and cut it down. All the trees were $50, so Robby, being really into getting a good value, chose the largest, fullest tree he could find.


It was the perfect place to go...tons of trees to choose from, and there were even deer!


Robby had quite the adventure trying to get it into the family room. I kept telling him to get some help, but oh no. He's much too manly for that.

The picture doesn't do it justice. It has truly overrun our home.  :) I love it.


Merry, merry Christmas!!!

Orange you glad it's Christmas? Hehe.

Are you still looking for the perfect neighbor gift? We decided to do something special. I mean everyone loves treats this time of year, but we wanted to give something a little more....lasting.


So we are giving a tradition.

Each year, we like to read The Christmas Orange story. So, we are making copies of it for some of our neighbors, and delivering it with a Christmas Orange, also known as a pomander ball.


These balls are truly as easy as they look, and they smell amazing. Just buy a bag of oranges and some whole cloves (They don't take as many cloves as you might think...), and decorate them as desired.

And here's a copy of the story...

The Christmas Orange
Author Unknown

Sometime around 1850 or so, in one of the larger cities of Massachusetts or New York there lived a boy named Jack. He didn't have a last name, or a middle name. Just the one single name, "Jack" scrawled on a wrinkled scrap of newspaper pinned to his clean but worn baby dress. No one knew whom his parents
were, where they came from or where they went. Jack just showed up one day, a tiny baby wrapped in an old torn blanket and lying in a cheap wicker laundry basket on the steps of the orphanage. 
Jack was a quiet baby, not given to much crying. He tried hard to listen to the grown ups who told him what to do, and he always followed the rules as much as he could. When he was nine he had chocolate brown wavy hair and eyes to match. He didn't grow very big because there wasn't much food to be had in the orphanage. All the bills were paid and food bought with donations from kind and generous townspeople, who weren't as kind and generous as they could have been. It didn't help much that the orphanage was surrounded by six-foot gray stone walls and none of the townspeople's consciences could be pricked by the sight of the boys' ragged clothes and shoes tied together with twine. 
So the boys in the orphanage went without more often than not, and grew resigned  to the constant gnawing in their empty bellies. In the winter, when the snow was thick upon the ground, the stone walls of the orphanage felt like ice to the touch. The boys shivered throughout the day as they did their chores, sat in their classes, played in the dirt in the walled-in yard, or waited in line for their meager portions of porridge at breakfast and thin soup and black bread at dinner, and each one shivered through the night under his single scratchy wool blanket in the unheated dorm room. There just wasn't enough money to pay for extra fuel. 
When December rolled around their stomach growls and shivering grew less as the townspeople began to feel the Christmas spirit and remember the poor, parentless boys behind those tall gray walls. And on every Christmas morning, a very special, very exciting treat appeared at breakfast. An orange! Jack and the other boys waited eagerly all year for this day, for this most rare of all gifts. In fact, it was the only gift any of them had ever received. It was prized above all things, cherished, caressed and gazed upon with wide and sparkling eyes. Each boy saved his single orange as long as possible, lovingly running a hand over the smooth outer skin, feasting on its beautiful glowing color, the one sun-bright spot in their gray lives. They each anticipated its sweet, tangy, juicy taste for days, until the skin began to wrinkle and dry out. Then, and only then, was the orange peeled and each delicious bite savored to its fullest. 
Jack's quiet and gentle personality had won him many friends in the orphanage by the time he was nine years old. They played their own form of baseball every chance they could using a fallen tree limb and a rock with a rag tied around it. They drew bases in the dirt with a stick, and Jack and his buddies played even after the snow fell. They just pushed as much of it as they could against the walls and played anyway. 
The teams, the Pirates and the Cowboys, each had ten boys, and Jack was captain of the Cowboys. He had picked the name because he planned when he got old enough to travel out west and become a cowboy, with his own horse and saddle, and no one else had any better ideas for a team name. It was Christmas Eve on this fateful day, and the championship game was at the bottom of its last inning. Jack and his Cowboys were down one run. The Pirates had already made two outs on them. It was Jack's turn up at bat. 
He grabbed the tree limb where it was leaning against the wall and sauntered up to the plate. He tested the swing of the "bat" a few times as he let his eyes scan the bases, trying his best to ignore the Pirate's catcalls and derisive comments. Every boy in the orphanage was standing on the sidelines, their eyes riveted to Jack. The orphanage windows winked in the sunlight above their heads. He swallowed one last time and stepped into the batter's box, and nodded to the pitcher. The boy on the pitcher's mound looked to one side, then the other, and started his wind up. 
Jack kept his eye on the pitcher's right hand as it came around, and felt a shiver rush through his body that had nothing whatsoever to do with the icy wind slipping through the holes of his sweater. His eye followed the rock-ball as it came hurtling toward him, and he swung that bat as hard and as evenly as he could, his face grimacing with effort. Crack! The ball soared high above the third baseman's head, up and up until it flew past the left fielder. Jack pumped his legs as fast as he could. He rounded first and headed for second at top speed, his eye trying to follow the course of the ball. 
His steps slowed as he projected the ball's trajectory, and his heart stopped beating as he realized what was about to happen. The ball sailed right through a second story window. The precious, expensive glass shattered, and shards cascaded to the snow on the ground, like drops of fire from the sun overhead. Not a sound was heard except the tiny tinkle of glass. Every boy stood like a statue, immobile and incredulous. 
Jack stood stock still between second and third, and beads of sweat and fear popped out on his forehead. One by one the boys turned and looked at him, their mouths hanging open. Jack looked from one to the other, hardly believing what had just happened. He was afraid to think. Every head turned as the orphanage's front door opened and the austere headmaster charged through and came barreling toward them. It didn't take him long to figure out who was responsible for the broken window, and he hauled Jack off by the ear, dragging him up the steps and inside. Just then the bell was rung and all the boys silently filed into the gray stone building. 
The next day was Christmas morning. All the boys woke even before the bell summoned them, thrilled to their toes to find the coveted orange at the foot of their beds. All the boys, except Jack. There was no bright shiny orange on Jack's bed. Just an empty gray hollow. He looked around the cavernous room and saw the sunny round fruit cradled in each boy's hands. The other boys, even his best friends, his fellow Cowboys, avoided his gaze, and talked only amongst themselves. Jack tried to ignore their silence, tried to keep his eyes off their oranges, but it was very hard. It seemed so unfair that this was to be his punishment for yesterday's broken window. It had been an accident after all. But nothing he could say yesterday had softened the headmaster's heart. 
And so, orange-less, he dragged through the day. He did his chores in silence, for no one would speak to him. He walked to chapel alone, for no one would walk by his side. He stood by himself in the yard, for no one would play with him. Jack had never felt so miserable in his entire life. He could endure the scant food, the thin clothing, and the snow that got in through the holes in his shoes. But he could not bear to be without his friends. It was the greatest punishment of all. And oh! How he wanted his orange! He could just imagine the sweet, cold nectar slipping down his throat. But it was not to be. Not this year. 
Finally the endless, empty Christmas was over, and Jack went alone to his bed.  He hoped in his heart that he could die before morning, so he would never have to endure such a day as this had been. He just couldn't face seeing all the other boys with their precious oranges, laughing among themselves and ignoring him even one more day. With his head buried beneath his pillow, Jacks' little body shook with sobs. A soft hand on his shoulder startled Jack and he sat up. 
A strange, moist object was shoved into his hands, the giver quickly running down the aisle between the beds into the dark. Jack felt the odd roundness of the object. It took him a moment to figure out what it was. Not a regular, run-of-the-mill orange was now cradled in his palms. Rather, a very special one, pieced together from segments of nine other oranges, highly prized by his Cowboys teammates that would now, of necessity, be eaten this night instead of several days hence.

A Fun Craft for Boys: Melted Crayon Snakes

Welly made a melted crayon snake for Bubs for Christmas. I've seen many, many, many tutorials online for making chunky crayon pieces from broken crayons. I was planning to use some cookie cutters on a cookie sheet, but Welly was determined to make Bubs a snake.

Here's what we did...



Step 1: Have an adult make a slit in the crayon wrapper. You don't have to do this, but it makes peeling your crayons much faster.

Step 2: Peel the crayons.

Step 3: Form your desired shape out of aluminum foil. We folded the foil a few times before shaping it to make it sturdier.



Step 4: Fill with broken crayon pieces.



Step 5: Place the foil on a cookie sheet and bake in the oven at 250 for about 15 minutes. Check it around 10 minutes.

Step 6: When all the pieces look melted, remove from oven and let cool for an hour.

Step 7: Remove from foil carefully.


PS. When we do this again, I think we'll try to add a tongue made from felt. And maybe we'll make it all out of browns and greens...

Anyway, have fun!

Christmas Traditions and How to Make a Coloring Book

Well hello. I took an unexpected-yet-not-surprising blog break for Christmas...obviously. Now Christmas is past, but I am not quite ready to let go.

One of our favorite Christmas traditions is Late Night. We put all the kids to bed at their usual hour, and then one of the kids gets to sneak out of bed and make presents for his/her siblings. I love the one-on-one time, the joy of gift-giving, and the creativity of crafting.

Bubs made Welly-Bells a coloring book this year. He drew some outlines with a Sharpie for some of the pages and printed some from the computer. (Just google 'coloring pages' and you'll find more than you ever wanted!)

He made a cover out of construction paper and tied the edge with yarn.


Meanwhile, we giggled, drank hot chocolate, and enjoyed being together.

One of the best parts of the tradition doesn't show up until Christmas morning when the kids are bursting with excitement.

This year, when they came out to start opening, the first thing they did was dig out their presents for each other under the tree.

The old adage is true. Tis better to give than to receive.
Merry Christmas.

Yes. Still.

A Crinkly Owl for Christmas


I can't share many of the things I've been making because I might accidentally spoil Christmas surprises. However, this one is for Y-Y, and he won't know the difference.
I combined a couple tutorials along with fabric I had around the house and this is the little guy I came up with. I used these two tutorials. My favorite part is that he has empty diaper wipe packages inside so he makes a crinkly sound when you play with him.

I love making Christmas presents!

An Easy Christmas Craft for Kids


Bubs made his first Christmas Craft of the year. It turned out cute, didn't it? It was all his doing. I love how kids will just find whatever items they are allowed to use and turn them into something beautiful. Don't you?
Happy December! Oh, how I love December!