Whole Wheat Shells with Marinara Sauce

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This super-simple marinara recipe has just a touch of sweetness. In other words, perfect for babies eating pasta with tomato-based sauce for the first time!

Ingredients:

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 minced garlic clove
  • 1 (28-ounce) can diced tomatoes
  • 6 tablespoons tomato paste
  • 1 teaspoon agave nectar
  • 1 tablespoon chopped fresh basil
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • Cooked whole wheat pasta shells
  1. Heat the olive oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Add the garlic and cook for 2 minutes.
  2. Add the diced tomatoes, tomato paste, agave, basil, and oregano. Reduce heat and simmer for 1 hour, as the sauce thickens.
  3. Serve over cooked pasta shells of choice! We like the very small cavatelli that are just the right size for little fingers.

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My Gingerbread House Kiwi Crate

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Travis’s kindergarten class is doing a unit on gingerbread houses, featuring everything from social studies (types of houses) to literature (stories featuring gingerbread boys and girls) to math (patterns and shapes). Who knew so much could go into a holiday project! So I purchased Kiwi Co.’s special holiday gingerbread kit to augment the theme. Travis was so proud of his creation.

To start, fold up the cardboard house and secure with a clear plastic sticker. Travis helped glue on the rectangle roof with the provided glue stick.

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Now the decorations are really up to your little creator! Travis and I followed some of the suggestions, including cutting white felt stickers into half circles for a “Snowy Rooftop”.

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Travis wanted to add colorful pom poms and felt shapes on the roof as well.

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You can also make “Gingerbread Candy Canes” by twisting together the provided red and white pipe cleaners. Travis decided ours should be straight, instead of curving into a hook.

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Next we made “Paper Candies” by twisting a sheet of provided tissue paper around a pom pom. We glued one just above the gingerbread house door.

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Finally, our window could be “Stained Glass” by gluing a sheet of tissue paper (Travis chose blue) to the inside.

Glue down white felt on the cardboard base for a snowy scene. Travis also wanted to glue green felt to the cardboard tree, which slots together.

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He loved wrapping the two provided gingerbread people in ribbon as decoration, and was particularly proud of himself for this idea.

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Additional pom poms and crumpled bits of tissue paper finished our gingerbread scene. We love that this creation will last, unlike houses meant to be eaten!

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What is Philanthropy

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Several of Travis’s subscriptions focused on philanthropy this December, and I was glad of it. I’m hoping to instill in him the idea of giving back: all year, but during the holidays in particular.

First up was this month’s Gallant Challenge in Highlights magazine. Two boys built a “Box of Blessings”, a wooden box outside their home that acted as a food pantry. Those who needed items could take them, and neighbors helped replenish it. We loved the idea, but don’t currently have the ability to build and mount a box.

Luckily, it tied in perfectly with a lesson from Raddish Kids to accompany the Corn Muffins we baked around Thanksgiving.

Start off with a read-through of The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle. As we read, I had snacks ready to go: apples and oranges to mimic the foods the caterpillar was nibbling. If you like, have even more of the caterpillar’s food items ready for snacking!

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Once the story ended, I asked Travis how the caterpillar felt at the beginning. Travis pinpointed his hunger, and we discussed times that he has felt hungry (like after school when he’s hangry for snack!). It helped him imagine what it might be like to feel hungry but not have access to food once home.

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With older kids, you can delve deeper into the idea of food security here, and reasons some families might not have it: illness, unemployment, old age. I tread lightly over all that with a kindergartner, but talked instead about how we can help: donating food to those who might need it.

Open Table in particular offers the option for Kids’ Bags. Travis and I went over the list of suggested groceries together and purchased the materials to stuff a few bags for our local drop-off center.

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Have fun decorating these! Travis then proudly filled them, assembly-line style, with items like juice boxes and packaged snacks.

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We finished by reading a few additional books including Beatrice’s Goat by Paige McBrier and One Potato, Two Potato by Cynthia DeFelice.

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Another great philanthropy project for even young kids is toy donation, especially just before the holidays. How do your children participate in charity? Please share in the comments!

Cheery O’s!

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O cereal is the deservedly one of the best first cereals for babies, and for so many reasons. The circles are easy for a little one to pick up with little fingers; they dissolve easily in the mouth, and those cute circles are just begging to be played with, too!

To wit, today at snack time I didn’t just set o cereal on Veronika’s tray; instead, I gave her two cups, one empty and one full, to turn it into a pouring and scooping game.

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She took right to it, and loved learning to pour directly from one cup to another, her best success with pouring yet.

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She also loved the small plinking sound that the cereal made if she dropped it into a cup by hand.

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And of course there is happy nibbling that takes place throughout the game! This is fast, fun, easy entertainment for any young toddler.

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Photo Fun

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School pictures are in this year for big brother Travis, which reminded me that I don’t have an annual photo yet of Veronika to capture time in the same way. So as I picked out frames for Travis’s photos this year, I made sure to include a few fun photo ideas for Veronika!

Find a picture that you love (I chose a shot from her first birthday), and have wallet-sized prints made at your local drugstore. Insert into mini frames, alongside the professional portraits of older sibs.

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The perfect thing to brighten up my kitchen window!

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For some additional photo fun, I also had prints made of family members at a recent wedding, and used Mod Podge to adhere these around an 8×10 inch frame (make sure you choose a frame with a flat front, and no raised bumps).

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Fill in any blank spaces with cute prints or pictures from kids’ magazines. Now you have a crazy collage that can frame a recent favorite picture of your baby.

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As time goes by, you can make a collection of these annual portraits. You could even keep them all in the same mini frame, one atop another, so you can flip back through the memories when nostalgia strikes.

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Easy Nature Sensory Bag

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You could do this easy sensory activity with a toddler in any season, but it was particularly nice to fit in a little bit of nature in the winter. An unseasonably warm day meant our snow melted and Veronika and I headed outside briefly to find wintery treasures.

We returned inside with a pine cone, pine branches, a few leaves, and acorns. I filled a gallon-sized zip-top bag with just a bit of water, then added our treasures.

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Veronika was immediately intrigued when I handed it to her at her high chair tray (older toddlers might liked this taped down to a table). We talked about the different textures, especially the hard, round acorns.

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Because the colors were a bit drab this time of year, I ended up slipping inside a few tiny red jingle bells to mimic the look of red berries. Ok, so they were not really from nature, but they added quite the pop! She loved poking these around through the water with one finger.

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We can’t wait to do this activity in the spring, and see how different our nature bag looks!

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Shining-Bright Advent Wreath

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One of my favorite holiday traditions as a girl was lighting the advent wreath, a new candle each week of December leading up until Christmas,. But I had forgotten all about it until I spotted this craft in Travis’s Highlights magazine. So we were eager to continue the tradition and light up our home!

Cut two empty paper towel tubes in half, so that now you have four “candles”. Wrap three of them in purple cardstock, and one in pink cardstock. Secure with tape.

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Wrap a length of similar colored ribbon around the top and secure with tape. (Note: The tape was Highlight’s suggestion, but for more elegance I would secure the ribbon and cardstock with glue next time).

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Cut a wreath shape from green cardstock, and glue down onto cardboard for extra stability. Glue on the pillars, and add decorations.

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We included green leaves cut from more cardstock as well as a few tiny red bells. Originally I planned to use small red pom poms as the “berries”, but the bells turned out to be lovely!

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For the candle flames, wrap tea lights in several layers of white felt (otherwise they will be too small and will slip inside the tubes).

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Place on top of the pillars. Each Sunday, a new candle is lit, and the pink one will join in on Christmas Eve!

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How are you counting down to Christmas? Please share in the comments!

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Look at Photos and Paintings

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There’s no need to go to a fancy art gallery to expose your children to artwork (although you certainly can!). For the easiest art lesson of all, look to your own walls. Chances are you have something hanging up, whether an old poster, a family photo, or a painted work of art. Today, Veronika and I took a “gallery” tour of our walls!

There was so much opportunity here for language development. As we paused before each painting, I talked about the objects she could see, like cars or trees.

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We talked about what shapes we saw in this one…

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…the colors of a dark, brooding piece…

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…and even her cultural heritage!

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The frames themselves might delight your little one, too. Veronika loved feeling the texture.

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One piece of art in our home was even painted by a family member, an opportunity to talk about relatives.

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Even more fun, we sat down together to look through old photo albums. Veronika loved turning the pages.

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And seemed so surprised every time she recognized her brother!

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Again, focus on language development here as you name items in each picture, or the shapes and colors you see. What a lovely “museum” tour this was!

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Blueberry Syrup

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Veronika’s favorite finger-food for breakfast these days is mini waffles. Add a little bit of this homemade blueberry syrup on the side and your toddler will love it!

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups frozen blueberries
  • 1/3 cup apple juice
  • 1 tablespoon cornstarch
  • 2 tablespoons water
  1. Combine the blueberries and apple juice in a saucepan; cook over medium heat for about 10 minutes.
  2. Meanwhile, whisk the cornstarch into the water. Add the cornstarch mixture to the blueberry mixture and cook for a final 1 to 2 minutes, until thickened.

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Fortune Cookie Gifts

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Travis and I hope to prepare several homemade Christmas gifts this year. This easy twist on fortune cookies is sure to bring a smile to the recipient’s face! It’s what Travis will be gifting to his bus driver this year as well as to a few special neighbors.

You can order fortune cookies online through Amazon, although many packages come in huge bulk quantities. I found one retailer with a more moderate quantity of 50, which was the perfect amount.

To decorate the cookies, heat 6 ounces unsweetened baking chocolate in the microwave at 30 second intervals, until melted.

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Working with one cookie at a time, dip half of it in the melted chocolate, then roll in sprinkles for decoration. White ones made a beautiful contrast to the dark chocolate!

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Transfer to a baking sheet lined with parchment paper and let stand until the chocolate is completely set.

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Travis loved cracking open a few extra cookies to read fortunes as we worked!

To package these, I purchased Christmas-themed takeout containers at the craft store.

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As an alternative, look for clear takeout containers and decorate with holiday stickers. Line each container with wax paper and nestle in about 7 to 8 fortune cookies.

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Add gift tags as a finishing touch!