ReportWire

Tag: gastronomy

  • A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier Tech

    A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier Tech

    [ad_1]

    HAVERHILL — It’s 7:45 a.m., a Tuesday in this the 50th anniversary of Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School.

    Principal Chris Laganas’ booming voice reaches through the intercom to 1,275 students in their homerooms this morning two days before Thanksgiving; and two months before voters would defeat a plan to build a $446 million school.

    The students are from the 11 towns and cities in which 73% of special election voters would reject the new school proposal, deeming it too costly, and almost three months before the Whittier Tech School Committee voted recently to withdraw the proposal.

    The students are enrolled in any of 23 vocational-technical shops. From culinary arts to computer-aided design, HVAC to hospitality and marketing to masonry.

    The principal’s underlying message this morning in late November is the same as it will be in late May. The same as on a Monday or Friday.

    Since Whittier opened in the 1973-74 school year, its students have gone on to be machinists, mechanics, electricians, chefs, carpenters, plumbers, nurses, teachers, researchers and businesspeople and to work in all fields.

    In the coming weeks, freshmen will select the shop program they want to pursue and juniors will become eligible for the Whittier cooperative education program in which students alternate school work with paid employment in their chosen technical field.

    Invariably, Whittier grads become handy people.

    The message Laganas relays this morning, and the words from his predecessors, is this:

    Take the opportunity in hand and work it.

    Make it and shape it in these classrooms and shops, and out in the field on coop placements working for employers, says Laganas, also the assistant superintendent, and a former professional hockey player who skated in hundreds of minor league games.

    The Whittier Way is active, a learning-by-doing approach that has driven the Whittier Tech engine for 50 years.

    Mixing things up

    In a kitchen the size of a basketball court, overhead lighting glints off stainless steel counters, mixers and dishwashing machines.

    Voices roll up against rattling dishes and chiming silverware. Pots tumble into a deep sink, thumping like a kick drum.

    Two dozen culinary arts students in aprons and instructors in chef coats and hats transition from breakfast to lunch.

    A chef calls out a reminder for students to stay on schedule with their tasks. This is crucial when shifting from one meal to the next.

    In the baking section, a youth pours chocolate chips into a mixer filled with cookie dough.

    Behind him, a student pulls a baking sheet of fresh cookies from the oven and slides it on a rack to cool.

    The smell of warm chocolate chip cookies registers bliss.

    The difference at Whittier is students get to make, bake, serve and — yes — eat the cookies.

    Culinary student Jeramiahes Vega, a junior who lives in Haverhill, pushes a cart to the baking station.

    Cooking gives him pleasure, satisfies.

    “I like the people’s reactions after they eat the food I make,” he said. “I like that. I like seeing how they change after having good food.”

    Nearby, Lillian Lefcourt, a Haverhill senior clad in kitchen whites, scrapes her grill clean. She pokes a brush into a small stainless container with melted butter. She works with purpose. No wasted movement.

    She and a classmate have been making grab-and-go breakfast sandwiches — egg and bacon or sausage and cheese — for the teachers.

    Lefcourt came to Whittier to learn a trade, to earn a living.

    “I really like baking cookies and brownies,” she says, brushing butter on the grill.

    Students cut, measure and clean.

    Chefs supervise, calling out orders as needed.

    “Guiding the students,” chef Tjitse Boringa says. “The students are doing all the work.”

    Boringa, originally from the Netherlands, has been teaching here for 23 years.

    He is one of six culinary arts instructors.

    The hallmark here and in the school’s 22 other programs is active learning.

    Beginning with the basics and building skills, not the least of which are being punctual, being attentive and finding the pleasure we humans get from learning.

    More students are continuing their education these days, Boringa says.

    A lot of them go to Johnson & Wales University or the Culinary Institute of America or Northern Essex Community College, he says.

    Mouths and manes

    In the dental shop, Skyy Skinner, a sophomore from Haverhill, practices passing instruments to her partner. Precision in simple tasks are important.

    Skinner holds an explorer, a thin stainless steel object for probing. She is poised above a set of teeth. No face or head. Just teeth on a thin post.

    She is also learning about disease control, making sure she is gloved and surfaces are clean, that the objects are sterilized and the space disinfected.

    Good dental hygiene promotes good health, she says.

    “It is important for a lot of things you wouldn’t expect,” Skinner says.

    She and the seven or eight other dental assistant students in the room all say they want to work in the dentistry field.

    This program was added in 2018. There is a demand for dental hygienists and assistants. The same is true for the budding carpenters, electricians and other tradespeople here.

    Some students arrive to Whittier with a program in mind; others find theirs through the freshmen exploratory. For three-quarters of their first year, they cycle through the different shops learning about the skills and technologies before selecting one to pursue in depth over their remaining time at the school.

    The cosmetology program has 19 students. Once they are licensed, they are placed in a salon outside the school for their co-op assignment, instructor Nancy Calverley says.

    Here in the cosmetology salon, students are coloring and styling hair and applying gel polish to nails.

    Shaylee Twombly, a senior from Amesbury, is first bleaching her client’s hair tips and front pieces so she can apply a red color and give it a halo look.

    “As you can see, it is kind of lifting down here,” she says of the color, as it shifts from a natural brown color to a lighter blond.

    “I was just bored with my hair,” says the client, a fellow student, Julianna Bucknill, of Newbury.

    The students are an energetic group and interested in beauty and fashion.

    “We are all bubbly with each other,” says Twombly, who plans to go to a two-year college and someday open her own salon.

    Shaping and selling

    A majority of Whittier graduates continue their education. Some will start their own businesses.

    A number of the teachers here are former Whittier students.

    In the wood shop is instructor Mike Sandlin, who grew up in Haverhill. He graduated from Whittier in 1997, studying carpentry, and graduated from Westfield State University with a degree in regional planning.

    He then joined the carpenters union and worked in the carpentry field for 18 years before returning to teach at his old school.

    Sometimes it takes students a few years to figure what they want to do, but many of them “are crushing it,” Sandlin says.

    A former student came in the other day and told him how she had started out with a company on the bottom rung.

    She was pushing a broom around a shop.

    “And now has worked her way up and is drawing her own kitchens and coming up with her own cabinet plans,” Sandlin says.

    The wood shop is filled with lumber and tools and machines, including shapers, routers, sanders, planers, joiners, saws and lathes.

    Meanwhile, elsewhere in the building, students decorate the school store, called J. Greenleaf, draping garlands behind the checkout counter.

    Sophomore Lia Landan, a marketing student from Haverhill, adjusts a garland according to directions from fellow marketing student Michael Wells, a junior from Haverhill, who eyes the placement from the entrance.

    Next, they string lights around the greenery and play Christmas music.

    “We have a little tree over there,” Landan says.

    “We have a star up there,” another student says, pointing to a yellow star topping the garland.

    The right fit

    Across the hall from the store is the Poet’s Inn, a cozy eatery open to the public.

    Seated at a table are senior class president Owen Brannelly, from Amesbury, and hospitality program teacher Nikolas Kedian, who graduated from Whittier Tech in 2016.

    “I realized the second I stepped into the culinary shop, it was the place where I best fit in,” Kedian says. “You start eating the food, meeting the people.”

    It felt like home. His family has worked in restaurants, he says.

    Footsteps, lots of them, approach in the hallway.

    More than 250 JG Whittier Middle School students are visiting Whittier Tech this day.

    Every Tuesday in November and a little of December, middle school students from the 11 sending communities visit the vocational school.

    Brannelly says it feels like it was only last year that he was an Amesbury Middle School student visiting Whittier. He was excited and nervous, and imagines that is what these middle schoolers are feeling.

    He had not planned on going the vocational route but decided that he wanted to try something new and different.

    He has been the class president for three years.

    He and classmates have organized school dances, including the first homecoming dance in the last 20 years.

    The dances have drawn lots of students, almost 800 of them to the last dance.

    He is interning at ARCH Medical Solutions, a manufacturing company in Seabrook, New Hampshire.

    Last year, he worked for an accounting firm as a receptionist.

    He is also earning college credits, taking classes, including English composition, at Whittier through Northern Essex Community College.

    He wants to study marketing in college and has been accepted by Big Ten schools: the University of Minnesota, Michigan State University and Ohio State University.

    He is bound for a much larger world, and ready for his next new and different adventure, well prepared for it by the Whittier Way.

    Whittier by the numbers

    Opened: 1973

    Address: 115 Amesbury Line Road, Haverhill

    Enrollment: 1,277 students

    Student-teacher ratio: 10-1

    Mascot: Wildcat

    Colors: Maroon and gold

    Sending cities and towns: Haverhill, Amesbury, Newburyport, Georgetown, Groveland, Ipswich, Merrimac, Newbury, Rowley, Salisbury and West Newbury.

    Programs: 23 in six core areas, arts and communication, construction, manufacturing, service, technology, and transportation

    Sports: 10 boys teams and nine girls teams

    2023 grads to college: 56%

    2023 grads to work: 37%

    [ad_2]

    By Terry Date | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • China Blossom reopens buffet

    China Blossom reopens buffet

    [ad_1]

    NORTH ANDOVER — The buffet at China Blossom restaurant is back after an absence of four years.

    General Manager Warren Chu said he was surprised to find a long line of diners waiting at the door when the buffet reopened last month.

    “We completely got overwhelmed, we weren’t expecting it, we weren’t prepared for it, we were all scrambling to make everything happen,” Chu said. “I want to thank everybody for their patience.”

    After shutting down during the pandemic, when China Blossom did a brisk business serving takeout, the restaurant reopened its dining room a year and a half ago. Diners have gradually been coming back, Chu said.

    But running a buffet, which has always been a big part of China Blossom’s business, requires a level of staffing that the restaurant was struggling to reach.

    “I think one thing that people underestimate is, doing something like this has got to go from the back of the house all the way to the front of the house, and that was our issue,” he said.

    Not just cooks and waiters, but also people who prepare ingredients for cooking, runners who keep the buffet filled, hosts who answer phones and seat people, and someone to slice prime rib at dinner are all necessary for a smooth operation.

    “If you’re missing one component, then it makes everything hard,” Chu said.

    Chu, who graduated from Andover High School and Boston University, worked at China Blossom as a bus boy when he was young and took over as manager six years ago.

    He says they are old school at the restaurant and like to do things by hand. But without enough people to roll the egg rolls that are served on the buffet, or to put chicken teriyaki on skewers, he had to cut back on these items for a while.

    “As we start scaling up and getting employees to start covering all this, we can start doing some of these things again,” Chu said.

    There have also been adjustments to make with suppliers, a few of whom went out of business during the pandemic, while others are struggling to source food items.

    These include shrimp of a certain size, with their shells on. When Chu couldn’t find them, and put shrimp of the same size on the buffet but without shells, diners thought they were smaller.

    “So we got larger shrimp with the shell on and cook them ourselves,” Chu said. “Little things like that, I’m working through.”

    One thing that hasn’t changed at China Blossom has been the presence of Chu’s father, Richard Yee, who founded China Blossom in 1960 and still comes in every day.

    “We try to stay true to his roots,” Chu said.

    Yee was born in Canton, and the dishes at China Blossom are based on the lighter, Cantonese style of cooking, although they began to incorporate spicier Szechuan style recipes in the 1980s.

    The buffet features the same popular items that appear on the menu, and the appetizers and main courses are mixed up at the steam table, to keep lines from forming.

    One difference between the dinner and lunch buffets is that seafood is only served at dinner, with hot and cold options that include mussels, crab legs and shrimp. Dinner also features prime rib.

    China Blossom still offers standup comedy on Saturday nights, in a 120-seat room where special functions can also be reserved.

    These range from corporate meetings to baby showers, and the buffet makes it easy for the restaurant to serve food at these events.

    “They can come right in, we put them on the buffet,” Chu said. “Nobody has to guess what their guests want.”

    [ad_2]

    By Will Broaddus | wbroaddus@eagletribune.com

    Source link

  • Quick Fix: Vegetable creole

    Quick Fix: Vegetable creole

    [ad_1]

    I used the vibrant flavors of Creole cooking to create this easy vegetarian dinner. Louisiana creole cooking is a fusion of Spanish, French and African cuisines. Onions, celery, green bell pepper, tomatoes and hot pepper seasoning are the basic ingredients.

    The heat is up to you. The amount of cayenne pepper in the recipe gives a mild zing to the sauce. If you like a spicier kick, add more, or serve hot pepper sauce at the table. Dried thyme and oregano are used in the sauce. A secret to bringing out the flavor of these spices is to cook them in the oil with the onion and other vegetables.

    HELPFUL HINTS:

    Six garlic cloves can be used instead of minced garlic.

    Black Beans can be used instead of red beans.

    Make sure your ground thyme and oregano are less than 6 months old for best flavor.

    COUNTDOWN:

    Microwave rice and set aside.

    Prepare the ingredients.

    Make Creole.

    SHOPPING LIST

    To buy: 1 package microwaveable brown rice, 1 green bell pepper, 1 bunch celery, 1 jar minced garlic, 1 bottle dried thyme, 1 bottle dried oregano,1 bottle cayenne pepper, 1 large can reduced sodium diced tomatoes, 1 bottle Worcestershire sauce and 1 can red kidney beans.

    Staples: Canola oil, onion, salt and black peppercorns.

    Vegetable Creole

    1 package microwaveable brown rice (to make 1 1/2 cups cooked)

    1 tablespoon canola oil

    1 cup sliced onion

    1 cup sliced green bell pepper

    1/2 cup sliced celery

    3 teaspoons minced garlic

    2 teaspoons dried thyme

    2 teaspoons dried oregano

    2 cups canned reduced sodium diced tomatoes

    1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce

    1 cup rinsed and drained red kidney beans

    1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper

    Salt and freshly ground black pepper

    Microwave rice according to package instructions. Measure 1 1/2-cups and reserve the remaining rice for another meal. Divide rice between two dinner plates. Heat oil in a medium-size nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add the onion, green bell pepper, celery, garlic dried thyme and dried oregano to the skillet. Saute 7 to 8 minutes until vegetables soften, stirring occasionally. Stir in the tomatoes, Worcestershire sauce, red kidney beans and cayenne pepper. Add salt and pepper to taste. Cook 3 to 4 minutes. Serve with the rice.

    Yield 2 servings.

    Per serving: 510 calories (19% from fat), 10.6 g fat (1.3 g saturated, 5.0 g monounsaturated), no cholesterol, 18.6 g protein, 90.0 g carbohydrates, 17.6 g fiber, 173 mg sodium.

    Linda Gassenheimer is the author of more than 30 cookbooks, including her newest, “The 12-Week Diabetes Cookbook.”

    [ad_2]

    By Linda Gassenheimer | Tribune News Service

    Source link

  • Snow or no, Derry’s Frost Fest will provide winter fun

    Snow or no, Derry’s Frost Fest will provide winter fun

    [ad_1]

    DERRY — While the town might not be covered in a blanket of sparkling white snow, that won’t stop Derry from busting out a seasonal celebration.

    The 25th Annual Frost Fest will have plenty of winter fun indoors and out, even if there isn’t snow.

    Even though the festival goers will be crossing their fingers for a barrage of snow on Thursday, Beverly Donovan, the town’s economic development director, said that the festival is still going to have lots of fun to do.

    “We’re going to make it fun,” Donovan said. “We have outdoor games and we have DerryCam setting up speakers on the lawn with family friendly music.”

    The festival is from noon to 3 p.m. on Feb. 17, with activities across all of the downtown area. There will be face painting and balloon animals and art at Casa Java, 17 Birch St., cookie decorating, crafts, games, wildlife encounters, and a puppet show at the Parks and Recreation center in Veterans Memorial Hall, 31 West Broadway.

    Benson’s Lawn, 1 West Broadway, will have a bonfire going with s’mores, music, and outdoor games for kids and families. Across the street at Sabatino’s North, there will be two ice sculptures using the cold day to their advantage and carving out some crystal clear artwork.

    In addition to all of the activities, Donovan said people should keep an eye out for Frosty the Snowman, who will be happy to take pictures with anyone.

    If there is enough snow, Donovan said there will be sledding at Alexander Carr Park, 28 Pierce Ave. As for ice skating and hockey, she recommended people check in on the day of with the Parks and Recreation department.

    Donovan said the festival has changed over the years, adapting from having things like chili cooking competitions to becoming something more family focused.

    A popular event now is the night before the festival, Donovan said. The Derry Village Rotary Club hosts a free pasta dinner for everyone at Pinkerton Academy’s Senior Cafe, 5 Pinkerton St., with bingo starting at 4 p.m., dinner at 5 p.m.

    The sense of community is the focus for Frost Fest, Donovan said. Even without snow, there will be plenty of fun to be had.

    “There’s definitely enough stuff to do to make an afternoon of it,” Donovan said. “You can pack a lot in there and you won’t go away thinking, ‘I’m sad I didn’t get to go sledding.’”

    [ad_2]

    By Katelyn Sahagian | ksahagian@northofboston.com

    Source link

  • A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier

    A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier

    [ad_1]

    HAVERHILL — It’s 7:45 a.m. A Tuesday in this the 50th anniversary of Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School.

    Principal Chris Laganas’ booming voice reaches through the intercom to 1,275 students in their homerooms this morning two days before Thanksgiving; and two months before voters would defeat a plan to build a new $446 million school.

    The students are from the 11 towns and cities in which 73% of special election voters would reject the new school proposal, deeming it too costly, and almost three months before the Whittier Tech School Committee voted this week to withdraw the proposal.

    The students are enrolled in any of 23 vocational-technical shops. From culinary arts to computer-aided design, HVAC to hospitality and marketing to masonry.

    The principal’s underlying message this morning in late November is the same as it will be in late May. The same as on a Monday or Friday.

    Since Whittier opened in the 1973-74 school year, its students have gone on to be machinists, mechanics, electricians, chefs, carpenters, plumbers, nurses, and teachers and researchers and business people and to work in all fields.

    In the coming weeks, freshmen will select the shop program they want to pursue and juniors will become eligible for the Whittier cooperative education program in which students alternate school work with paid employment in their chosen technical field.

    Invariably, Whittier grads become handy people.

    The message Principal Laganas relays this morning, and the words from his predecessors, is this:

    Take the opportunity in hand and work it.

    Make it and shape it in these classrooms and shops, and out in the field on coop placements working for employers, says Laganas, also the assistant superintendent, and a former professional hockey player who skated in hundreds of minor league games.

    The Whittier Way is active, a learning-by-doing approach that has driven the Whittier Tech engine for 50 years.

    Mixing things up

    In a kitchen the size of a basketball court, overhead lighting glints off stainless steel counters, mixers and dishwashing machines.

    Voices roll up against rattling dishes and chiming silverware. Pots tumble into a deep sink, thumping like a kick drum.

    Two dozen culinary arts students in aprons and instructors in chef coats and hats transition from breakfast to lunch.

    A chef calls out a reminder for students to stay on schedule with their tasks. This is crucial when shifting from one meal to the next.

    In the baking section, a youth pours chocolate chips into a mixer filled with cookie dough.

    Behind him, a student pulls a baking sheet of fresh cookies from the oven and slides it on a rack to cool.

    The smell of warm chocolate chip cookies registers bliss.

    The difference at Whittier is students get to make, bake, serve and — yes — eat the cookies.

    Culinary student Jeramiahes Vega, a junior who lives in Haverhill, pushes a cart to the baking station.

    Cooking gives him pleasure, satisfies.

    “I like the people’s reactions after they eat the food I make,” he says. “I like that. I like seeing how they change after having good food.”

    Nearby, Lillian Lefcourt, a Haverhill senior clad in kitchen whites, scrapes her grill clean. She pokes a brush into a small stainless container with melted butter. She works with purpose. No wasted movement.

    She and a classmate have been making grab-and-go breakfast sandwiches — egg and bacon or sausage and cheese — for the teachers.

    Lefcourt came to Whittier to learn a trade, to earn a living.

    “I really like baking cookies and brownies,” she says, brushing butter on the grill.

    Students cut, measure and clean.

    Chefs supervise, calling out orders as needed.

    “Guiding the students,” chef Tjitse Boringa says. “The students are doing all the work.”

    Boringa, originally from the Netherlands, has been teaching here for 23 years.

    He is one of six culinary arts instructors.

    The hallmark here and in the school’s 22 other programs is active learning.

    Beginning with the basics and building skills, not the least of which are being punctual, being attentive and finding the pleasure we humans get from learning.

    More students are continuing their education these days, Boringa says.

    A lot of them go to Johnson & Wales University or the Culinary Institute of America or Northern Essex Community College, he says.

    Mouths and manes

    In the dental shop, Skyy Skinner, a sophomore from Haverhill, practices passing instruments to her partner. Precision in simple tasks are important.

    Skinner holds an explorer, a thin stainless steel object for probing. She is poised above a set of teeth. No face or head. Just teeth on a thin post.

    She is also learning about disease control, making sure she is gloved and surfaces are clean, that the objects are sterilized and the space disinfected.

    Good dental hygiene promotes good health, she says.

    “It is important for a lot of things you wouldn’t expect,” Skinner says.

    She and the seven or eight other dental assistant students in the room all say they want to work in the dentistry field.

    This program was added in 2018. There is a demand for dental hygienists and assistants. The same is true for the budding carpenters, electricians and other tradespeople here.

    Some students arrive to Whittier with a program in mind; others find theirs through the freshmen exploratory. For three-quarters of their first year, they cycle through the different shops learning about the skills and technologies before selecting one to pursue in depth over their remaining time at the school.

    The cosmetology program has 19 students. Once they are licensed, they are placed in a salon outside the school for their co-op assignment, instructor Nancy Calverley says.

    Here in the cosmetology salon, students are coloring and styling hair and applying gel polish to nails.

    Shaylee Twombly, a senior from Amesbury, is first bleaching her client’s hair tips and front pieces so she can apply a red color and give it a halo look.

    “As you can see, it is kind of lifting down here,” she says of the color, as it shifts from a natural brown color to a lighter blond.

    “I was just bored with my hair,” says the client, a fellow student, Julianna Bucknill, of Newbury.

    The students are an energetic group and interested in beauty and fashion.

    “We are all bubbly with each other,” says Twombly, who plans to go to a two-year college and someday open her own salon.

    Shaping and selling

    A majority of Whittier graduates continue their education. Some will start their own businesses.

    A number of the teachers here are former Whittier students.

    In the wood shop is instructor Mike Sandlin, who grew up in Haverhill. He graduated from Whittier in 1997, studying carpentry, and graduated from Westfield State University with a degree in regional planning.

    He then joined the carpenters union and worked in the carpentry field for 18 years before returning to teach at his old school.

    Sometimes it takes students a few years to figure what they want to do, but many of them “are crushing it,” Sandlin says.

    A former student came in the other day and told him how she had started out with a company on the bottom rung.

    She was pushing a broom around a shop.

    “And now has worked her way up and is drawing her own kitchens and coming up with her own cabinet plans,” Sandlin says.

    The wood shop is filled with lumber and tools and machines, including shapers, routers, sanders, planers, joiners, saws and lathes.

    Meanwhile, elsewhere in the building, students decorate the school store, called J. Greenleaf, draping garlands behind the checkout counter.

    Sophomore Lia Landan, a marketing student from Haverhill, adjusts a garland according to directions from fellow marketing student Michael Wells, a junior from Haverhill, who eyes the placement from the entrance.

    Next, they string lights around the greenery and play Christmas music.

    “We have a little tree over there,” Landan says.

    “We have a star up there,” another student says, pointing to a yellow star topping the garland.

    The right fit

    Across the hall from the store is the Poet’s Inn, a cozy eatery open to the public.

    Seated at a table are senior class president Owen Brannelly, from Amesbury, and hospitality program teacher Nikolas Kedian, who graduated from Whittier Tech in 2016.

    “I realized the second I stepped into the culinary shop, it was the place where I best fit in,” Kedian says. “You start eating the food, meeting the people.”

    It felt like home. His family has worked in restaurants, he says.

    Footsteps, lots of them, approach in the hallway.

    More than 250 JG Whittier Middle School students are visiting Whittier Tech this day.

    Every Tuesday in November and a little of December, middle school students from the 11 sending communities visit the vocational school.

    Brannelly says it feels like it was only last year that he was an Amesbury Middle School student visiting Whittier. He was excited and nervous, and imagines that is what these middle schoolers are feeling.

    He had not planned on going the vocational route but decided that he wanted to try something new and different.

    He has been the class president for three years.

    He and classmates have organized school dances, including the first homecoming dance in the last 20 years.

    The dances have drawn lots of students, almost 800 of them to the last dance.

    He is interning at ARCH Medical Solutions, a manufacturing company in Seabrook, New Hampshire.

    Last year, he worked for an accounting firm as a receptionist.

    He is also earning college credits, taking classes, including English composition, at Whittier through Northern Essex Community College.

    He wants to study marketing in college and has been accepted by Big Ten schools: the University of Minnesota, Michigan State University and Ohio State University.

    He is bound for a much larger world, and ready for his next new and different adventure, well prepared for it by the Whittier Way.

    Whittier by the numbers

    Opened: 1973

    Address: 115 Amesbury Line Road, Haverhill

    Enrollment: 1,277 students

    Student-teacher ratio: 10-1

    Mascot: Wildcat

    Colors: Maroon and gold

    Sending cities and towns: Haverhill, Amesbury, Newburyport, Georgetown, Groveland, Ipswich, Merrimac, Newbury, Rowley, Salisbury and West Newbury.

    Programs: 23 in six core areas, arts and communication, construction, manufacturing, service, technology, and transportation

    Sports: 10 boys teams and nine girls teams

    2023 grads to college: 56%

    2023 grads to work: 37%

    [ad_2]

    By Terry Date | tdate@eagletribune.com

    Source link

  • Supermom In Training: 5 Quick Valentine’s Day surprises you can prep for your kiddo right now!

    Supermom In Training: 5 Quick Valentine’s Day surprises you can prep for your kiddo right now!

    [ad_1]

    So, at 8 years old, the bean isn’t as “into” Valentine’s Day this year (he’s in third grade and refused to hand out those “lame” little paper Valentine’s cards to his classmates… sniffle). However, everyone loves a little somethin’-somethin’ to make the day feel extra special. I’m not taking grand gestures here – just a few quick Valentine’s Day surprises you can prep for your kiddo right now.

    Heart-shaped dinner. It’s as easy as getting a frozen pepperoni pizza, using kitchen scissors to cut the pepperoni into hearts, and voila! Add sparkling apple cider for some fizzy fun.

    Five-minute scavenger hunt. Grab some balloons and on small pieces of paper, write things that they have to find around the house (“find something heart-shaped,” “find something pink,” etc.), and put one set of instructions inside each balloon. At the end they get a reward, whether it’s some Valentine’s Day candy or a small treasure chest with some loonies and toonies.

    Make a paper chain. There’s something so fun about sitting and making paper chains, and it’s a great team-work activity. Plus: You’ll help decorate your home for the occasion. Pop some popcorn and add some pink or red food colouring to the melted butter, than toss around the popper kernels for a festive snack while you work.

    Make some pink, red, or purple Playdoh (it’s super easy: 1 cup cornstarch, 2 cups baking soda, and 1 1/2 cups water ). It air dries so you can make things that are heart-shaped and gift them to people later.

    Create a Valentine’s Day photo booth. Find everything you can that’s pink or red, from scarves and hats to shirts, fake flowers, balloons, stuffies, sunglasses, and more, make some funny signs on sticks, and take some funny and candid photos together as a family.

    A full-time work-from-home mom, Jennifer Cox (our “Supermom in Training”) loves dabbling in healthy cooking, craft projects, family outings, and more, sharing with readers everything she knows about being an (almost) superhero mommy.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • North Shore news in brief

    North Shore news in brief

    [ad_1]

    Music

    Feb. 26, 7:30 pm.,  award-winning a cappella jazz quintet  ‘Vox One’  at the ‘Recital Hall, 71 Loring Ave. Blues, funk, gospel, and folk. Their own brand of vocal music. Lush voicings, complex reharmonizations and inspired improv. Tickets $15/$10 seniors/free for college students and under 18. Free for Salem residents on March 1. Purchase at www.salemstatetickets.com           

    Theatre

    Feb. 23-25 and March 1-3 — ROE, a play by Lisa Loomer, at Sophia Gordon Center for Creative and Performing Arts. 356 Lafayette St/.Cuts through the headlines and rhetoric with clever, shocking, and poignant portrayal of the two women at the center of the landmark 1973 Supreme Court ruling,  Recently updated script through the 2022 Dobbs V. Jackson Women’s Health decision. Mature audiences. Friday/Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Tickets:$15 /$10 seniors/free for college students and under 18. Free for Salem residents on March 1. Purchase at www.salemstatetickets.com 

    Art and abolition with  Charlotte Forten  

    Join Salem’s own abolitionist, writer, and educator, Charlotte Forten, Salem State’s first African American graduate, for a special craft time at the Salem Armory Regional Visitor Center, 2 New Liberty St., Salem, during February School Vacation Week, Thursday, Feb. 22 at 11 a.m. With clay, wood, and colors, kids and their caregivers will contribute to building a 3D miniature city of gratitude for the freedoms and comforts long fought for during Charlotte’s lifetime. Spend the morning with Charlotte making mini foods and other goods, while learning about her life along the way. The event is FREE, but registration is encouraged to ensure availability of craft materials. Space is limited. Visit essexheritage.org/events to register!

    Marblehead Museum free program for school vacation

    Marblehead Museum is hosting a free new program — Sugar and Spice: Sweet Treats of the 18th Century.’ — a drop in event on Saturday, Feb. 24, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., in the Jeremiah Lee Mansion.  Guests can visit the mansion kitchen to help Culinary Historian Melissa Vickers as she prepares 18th century gingerbread, lemon drops, march-pane, and pepper cakes. Learn history through food and the availability and accessibility of sugar and spices in Colonial New England, including how and where sugar was produced, the many uses of today’s favorite “sweet” spices, and what types of flavorings were common before vanilla became a pantry staple. Visitors are also  welcome to tour of the mansion’s first floor, free of charge during this program.

    School to sea program 

    On Wednesday, Feb. 21 at 6:45 p.m., Abbot Public Library and Salem Sound Coastwatch present Carly McIver to discuss Salem Sound Coastwatch’s School to Sea program in a hybrid event taking place at the library and online via Zoom. The library is temporarily located at the Eveleth School. 9 Maple St, Marblehead. For information/registration, visit the library newsletter site ay: https://lp.constantcontactpages.com/su/9A5X8Zx/AbbotLibraryNewsletter

    Abbot Public Library movie screenings schedule 

    The Abbot Public Library, temporarily located at the Eveleth School will present these movie showings in February: on Thursday, Feb. 22 at 4 p.m. for teens, and on Saturday, Feb. 24 at 10:30 a.m. for children and 1 p.m. for adults. Check out the schedule, then check the event calendar at: https://abbotlibrary.org/events/ to for the names of the films, The Eveleth School is located at 9 Maple St, Marblehead. This program is sponsored by the Friends of Abbot Public Library.

    Thursday, Feb. 22, 4 p.m. – Teen Movie Screening

    Saturday, Feb. 24, 10:30 a.m. – Children’s Morning Movie

    Saturday, Feb. 24, 1 p.m. – Midday Movie Matinee for Adults, Program Room, Abbot Public Library at Eveleth School

    Thursday, Feb. 22, 4 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Special Teen Movie Screening. In 1965, two 12-year-olds fall in love at a summer camp. They run off together into the wilderness, but an unexpected event leads to various friends and adults forming a search party to find the youths before calamity strikes.

    Saturday, Feb. 24, 10:30 a.m. — Children’s Morning Movie

    NMYO Youth Symphonic Summer Program

    The Northeast Massachusetts Youth Orchestras (NMYO) will hold its fourth annual summer music program the week of July 29 – August 2, at Trinity Episcopal Church, 124 River Rd, in Topsfield. Sessions include small and large ensembles, jazz, pops, fiddling, traditional & concert band, symphonic works, and lots more! Youth musicians, with at least two years of instrument study with a private teacher and the ability to read music, can register. NMYO welcomes its current members and also any student musician in the area looking for an opportunity to play music with others this summer,” Led by NMYO’s outstanding conducting staff and guest teaching artists, young musicians will enjoy a valuable musical experience and a fun opportunity to keep up their skills during the summer break from school. For information/registration, register by June 21 at: nmyo.org. Those who register before April 15 receive a $25 discount. Questions? Email info@nmyo.org or phone Executive Director Terri Murphy at 978-309-9833.



    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Supermom In Training: 6 Ways to make snow play more fun

    Supermom In Training: 6 Ways to make snow play more fun

    [ad_1]

    We’ve got to live with the white stuff, so why not embrace it and make it as fun as possible? After all, it’s our safest play-place this winter. Check out these 6 ways to make snow play more fun.

    Make shapes. Snow is super moldable, especially the wet, sticky stuff. Break out buckets and bowls, sand toys, tupperware, or lightweight metal baking pans. Fashion bricks or unique shapes for giant animals and snowmen. Even the dollar store has rectangular building moulds for snow as well as snowball makers.

    Make it colourful. Spray bottles with coloured water can add whimsy and personality to any snow creation.

    Make it glow. Nighttime snow play can be almost more fun than in the daytime, and since darkness creeps in earlier these days, this is totally doable. Glowsticks look super cool under the snow and make for a fun game of hide-and-go-seek.

    Make a science lab. You can get as messy as you want since you’re outdoors! You could create a snow volcano: fill the top with baking soda and add some vinegar. Coloured water and alka-seltzer tablets are also fun.

    Make something delicious. Outdoor snow cone stand? Frozen lemonade cafe? An iced coffee for the adults? What about your own sugar shack where you pour warm maple syrup on the snow for a gooey sweet treat? Let the snow be your sous chef.

    Make it an ongoing project. Rome wasn’t built in a day and neither was your snow castle, or snow mechanic’s garage, or snow restaurant. Start a larger backyard snow-build that you can work on over the course of a few days.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Supermom In Training: My favourite natural cleaners

    Supermom In Training: My favourite natural cleaners

    [ad_1]

    When I got pregnant 10 years ago, I suddenly found myself reevaluating everything about my lifestyle- what I ate, what I drank, and how I cleaned my house. I love a clean, disinfected house, but I was very leery of all the chemicals, especially now that I was incubating this little human.

    So here are a few of my favourite natural cleaners that work just as well as their chemical-laden counterparts.

    Vinegar. Vinegar is an amazing thing. It’s fantastic for streak-free windows and mirrors, and despite the initial smell, it doesn’t linger. It disinfects too. I clean my bathroom and kitchen counter surfaces with it. I also boil a cup of water and a tablespoon of vinegar in the microwave, then it wipes down super easily.

    Homemade dryer sheets. Mix 1/2 cup vinegar with 2-3 drops of your favourite essential oils in a jar. Throw in 4-5 fabric scraps, then when needed, wring them out and throw them into the dryer with your wet, clean clothes. The vinegar naturally takes away the static cling, and the essential oil will make your laundry smell just as fresh as dryer sheets or fabric softener (without all the man-made crud).

    Baking soda. Toss those abrasive cleaners into the garbage and instead opt for a box of baking soda. Cheaper and just as effective, it will clean soap scum in the tub, remove build-up in the sink, and will get taps super shiny clean. You can also use baking soda as a natural alternative to toothpaste.

    Olive oil. Get rid of those cans of furniture polish, which are filled with unhealthy chemicals, and instead get a beautiful sheen on furniture with a drop of olive oil and a soft rag. Or, mix some olive oil, raw sugar and a few drops of essential oils for a natural body scrub.

    Fruit peels. Don’t throw out those apple and orange peels – put them into a pot with some water and your favourite spices (cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, thyme, etc.), and simmer. You’ll get the aromatic benefits and it will also add some much-needed humidity to the air, especially in winter.

    – Jennifer Cox

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Parenting 101: Sticking to New Year’s resolutions

    Parenting 101: Sticking to New Year’s resolutions

    [ad_1]

    The New Year is the perfect time to set some goals. With a fresh start before us all, we should all take a little time to reflect on the past year and see where we can make improvements in the upcoming months. So here are a few tips on sticking to New Year’s resolutions:

    – Write them down. I like to put them on the corkboard in my office or in the kitchen at our command centre. Writing them down helps us to not only remember our resolutions but to keep them on our minds in the coming weeks when resolutions can get pushed to the wayside or forgotten all together. 

    – Make resolutions that are attainable. Don’t try to take on too much all at once. For example, you may like to lose 30 pounds in 2018, but start by setting a goal to lose 10 pounds. Setting too high of a goal may frustrate you right off the bat. 

    – Give yourself time to achieve these goals. You’re not going to transform your lifestyle into a healthy one overnight. Break down your resolutions so that you can achieve them in steps. Want to eat healthier? Add one new superfood to your diet each week. By the end of February, you’ll have added eight new healthful foods to your food plan, and that’s great!

    – Get a buddy system going. You’re not the only one who has vowed to join an exercise class or the gym this year, so find a friend who you can workout with. Having someone to work at these resolutions with will make it all the more fun.

    – Reward yourself! It shouldn’t be all work, work, work… plan a few rewards for yourself throughout the process of attaining your resolutions. If you’ve been working at shedding 10 pounds and you do, you should allow yourself an indulgent dessert from your favourite dessert cafe. Allowing yourself to have a few rewards along the way will make it all the more graitfying to reach your goals.

    – Jennifer Cox

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Gift Guide 2023: Books that make beautiful gifts for all ages

    Gift Guide 2023: Books that make beautiful gifts for all ages

    [ad_1]

    Whether an avid reader or not, gift recipients will love getting one of these beautiful books under the tree or menorah this holiday season.

    The Guinness Book of World Records is always a fun and interesting read, and the 2024 book is no exception. Discover a universe of talent, curiosities, and jaw-dropping facts from around the world.

    The Hockey Skates, written by Karl Subban, is a sweet and encouraging read for all ages. Inspired by Karl Subban’s son, NHL star PK Subban, this is a story about maintaining perseverance and optimism through a series of comical misfortunes, all of which are brought to life by Maggie Zeng’s charming illustrations.

    Cake Vs Pie is not only a fun story but it’s full of fun, whimsical illustrations too. Join Cake and Pie in this fun-loving, laugh-out-loud picture book about the ultimate friendship rivalry and overcoming jealousy to realize being together is the Sweetest Thing. There can only be one favorite dessert… Will it be Cake, the friend who rises to every occasion? Or will Pie’s surprisingly sweet center be the most irresistible? There’s only one way to settle this battle, once and for all: FOOD FIGHT!

    Eight Nights of Lights: A Celebration of Hanukkah lets you count down each night with this gorgeous and fun holiday storybook. Celebrate the eight nights of Hanukkah with this interactive, one-of-a-kind menorah and storybook set. Each night, open a candle-shaped book and follow a young Jewish girl and her family as they decorate their home, say blessings, enjoy traditional foods and games, and gather to hear about the brave Maccabees and their victory that brought light to all Jews. Flip the book over to “light” the candle and place it back in the menorah to commemorate each night of the Festival of Lights. It’s the perfect Hanukkah gift for the entire family to enjoy.

    – JC

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Gift Guide 2023: Beautiful gifts for house and home

    Gift Guide 2023: Beautiful gifts for house and home

    [ad_1]

    Winter can be long and there’s no better feeling than being curled up at home all comfy and cozy. Here are some great gift suggestions to combat cabin fever and make home truly where the heart is.

    If you know someone who loves pizza, then they need the Cuisinart Indoor Pizza Oven. It will transform any kitchen into a pizzeria. It allows you to craft artisanal 12-inch pizzas in just five minutes or less. It reaches 700°F, which is the optimal temperature for achieving irresistibly crispy crusts and delicious melted cheese. It’s engineered with active cooling technology, making it ideal for indoor use. 

    For those who love to curl up with a great cup of coffee, consider Reunion Coffee Roasters. Reunion Coffee Roasters, a Canadian brand, is one of the original members of Fair Trade Canada. In addition to strict sustainability and ethical business practices, Reunion is proud to offer a selection of coffee beans that have been fair trade certified. For every bag of Privateer Holiday Giving Coffee sold, Reunion will plant a tree in Sub-Saharan Africa through our partnership with Trees for the Future. This coffee also provides clean drinking water through the Honduras Coffee Growers Clean Water Project. 

    House of TL’s Hand Set Duo is a great luxe gift or great host/hostess gift that smells incredible. The brand, which got its start in luxury hotels and restaurants, is now widely available online. The winter gift set features a gorgeous and fragrant Castile Hand Wash and Hand & Body Cream in Houseblend (a spa-like fragrance that uses nine different essential oils). The brand is Canadian and full of natural, safe ingredients.

    Kilne, a Canadian cookware company, recently announced their newest launch: The Everything Pot + Steamer Bundle (available in Peppercorn, Meringue, and Sage hues) and The Dinnerware Set (a new category for Kilne, with products available in Caviar and Salt).

    The Salton Egg Bite Maker is ideal for busy households. The company partnered with Get Cracking (Egg Farmers of Canada) to create this amazing tool that makes the perfect egg bites. It’s ideal for little chefs to experiment with breakfast or make a fun snack.

    The IKEA 2023 Holiday Gift Guide is specially curated with meaningful gift inspiration that spotlights their affordable must-haves for the season. The products range from new home smart products to design for décor lovers and so much more. A few favourites: BETTORP, which is two products in one and includes both an LED lamp and a wireless charging station; CHILIFRUKT, a sculptural vase which can also be used to water plants; and LINDSVÄRMARE, a cozy throw designed by social entrepreneurs.

    Linen Chest has a wide range of festive items to brighten anyone’s holiday decor or tablescape. From ornaments, throw pillows, and an assortment of mugs, to the Maxwell & Williams Merry Berry Collection of dishes and servingware, there is something for everyone. 

    – JC

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Gift Guide 2023: Cookbooks that make great gifts for foodies

    Gift Guide 2023: Cookbooks that make great gifts for foodies

    [ad_1]

    Cookbooks are not only great reference books to have on hand in the kitchen – they can also be displayed like decorative accents too. And with so many celebrity chefs releasing cookbooks right before the holidays, there are lots of great titles to gift this holiday season.

    Jamie Oliver’s 5 Ingredients Mediterranean has more than 125 delicious, easy-to-follow recipes that are all about making everyday cooking super exciting with minimal fuss – all while transporting you to sunnier climes. You’ll find recipes to empower you to make incredibly delicious food without copious amounts of ingredients, long shopping lists, or loads of washing up. And 65% of the recipes are meat-free or meat-reduced, and all offer big, bold flavor.

    From vegetable-forward dishes to full vegetarian meals, eating plants is more than just good for us. Michael Smith’s Farmhouse Vegetables cookbook was inspired by the bounty of his culinary farm at the Inn at Bay Fortune, and between the covers he shares everything that he has learned about vegetable cookery including ideas, techniques, and recipes. Whether leaning into eating more vegetables or going meat-free a few days a week, this book is full of unique, flavour-packed recipes where vegetables are always the star.

    In Mary’s Kitchen by Mary Berg is a cookbook of 100 all-new recipes guaranteed to become a stress-free sidekick in the kitchen. These uncomplicated but delicious recipes come with tips and tricks to produce flavorful results every time. It’s a must in every kitchen library.

    Poppycooks is a number-one bestseller across the pond for good reason – it puts airfryers to very good use! TikTok superstar and professional chef Poppy O’Toole provides recipes with fantastic flavours and ideas. In these pages are 100 easy, fool-proof, and incredibly delicious air fryer recipes that won’t break the bank. 

    – JC

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Supermom In Training: Halloween traditions we love

    Supermom In Training: Halloween traditions we love

    [ad_1]

    I don’t know who is more excited about Halloween arriving – me or the bean? I love holidays. I love holidays so much more since becoming a mom. I thought nothing was better than being a kid on Christmas morning, until I got to watch my kid on Christmas morning.

    I’m always on a quest to find ways to really make things like Halloween stand out. So we’ve started a number of Halloween traditions we love to do year after year.

    Halloween parties. I love to invite all our little friends over, in full costume, for an evening of fun and mischief. We order pizza or do a potluck dinner, and I tend to organize some sort of activity. Last year we had tattoo and nail polish stations set up with theme-appropriate accessories, and this year, we decorated our own Halloween cookies and cupcakes.

    We bag up treats together. We not only do small candy bags and get the whole family involved in an assembly line, but we also make up special treat bags for friends who come trick-or-treating, as well as our class treats (which are usually something non-edible). This year we added the teal pumpkin project to our list of to-dos, painting a pumpkin teal to indicate to kids with allergies that we have non-edible options. We made up a bowl of Halloween stickers, tattoos, notepads, pencils, plastic spider rings and fangs.

    The healthiest breakfast possible. We know how many candies and sweets our kids indulge in on Halloween, so we make a game out of finding the very healthiest possible options for breakfast to start our day off with an influx of vitamins. The promise of treats later on is usually all the incentive my kid needs to eat those extra berries and scrambled eggs.

    Themed dinner. We have supper early, usually right after school, and I always try and do something festive. In years past I cut pumpkin faces into the cheese of our cheeseburgers, made pumpkin faces in tortillas for quesadillas, and carved faces into orange stuffed peppers. This year we’re having soup served in an actual pumpkin as well as spooky black pasta.

    Hot chocolate for the parents. I keep a crockpot and styrofoam cups next to my front door and offer moms and dads a cup of hot chocolate while en route. Something sweet for the parents can make trekking around the neighbourhood a bit more tolerable (I’ve even heard of neighbour who dole out adult libations if anyone wants, or needs, one).

    Halloween specials. Have you seen all the fun shows and movies playing on kids’ channels as well as primetime cable? We’ve recorded a bunch to watch while we sort candy after trick-or-treating Halloween night.

    Avoiding candy overload. The days, even weeks, after Halloween are filled with deploring whining, “Pleeeeease can I have one more candy?!” The solution: the bowl of candy is next to the fruit bowl. Pick one from each (then mommy will sneak a few after bedtime! I already called dibs on the bubble gum).

    – JC

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Supermom In Training: Parenting is SO MUCH more than when we were kids

    Supermom In Training: Parenting is SO MUCH more than when we were kids

    [ad_1]

    When I was a kid, birthday parties were as simple as some cupcakes and a game of Pin The Tail On The Donkey. There were no family calendars to keep track of all the school stuff, sports, appointments, and social gatherings. There weren’t umpteen “special days” in school for crazy hair, anti-bullying, etc. I really believe that parenting is a lot more work and organization than when I was a kid. I think our parents wouldn’t have put up with everything that it takes to be a parent today.

    Plus, many of our moms were stay-at-home moms. They used their days to keep up with the childcare, cleaning, cooking, and errands. It’s funny because with today’s crazy schedules, it seems like we need stay-at-home moms more today than ever before. But we have to work. Most households need two working parents. And that just adds to the to-dos and stress big time.

    Every few weeks I hit a wall and I’m just exhausted. My brain is mush. We take a day where we have cereal for dinner and I let the clean clothes sit in the dryer for two days. Because I need to recuperate.

    I have one kid and being his mom is most defintiely a full-time job. I don’t know how parents of multiple kids do it.

    I do what I can to stay on top of it all: I’m old-school so I have a paper agenda on my desk in my home office that’s filled with reminders, bills, and so on. We also have a big chalkboard calendar in our kitchen. My son’s hockey schedule is managed by an app. My son’s school communication is managed by another app. 

    We are all doing our best, even though it might not feel like it all the time (when things get forgotten or fall through the cracks… or when we have cereal for dinner). And doing our best is all we can do to stay on top of things. So be kind to yourself, give yourself a pass when things “mess up,” and here’s another friendly reminder: you have clothes in the dryer. 

    A full-time work-from-home mom, Jennifer Cox (our “Supermom in Training”) loves dabbling in healthy cooking, craft projects, family outings, and more, sharing with readers everything she knows about being an (almost) superhero mommy. 

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Supermom In Training: My back to school tricks

    Supermom In Training: My back to school tricks

    [ad_1]

    I can’t believe school is here (cue: happy dance!). It can never hurt to have some tricks from a mom who not only scours parenting boards for hacks but Pinterest too, so here are a few of my back to school tricks.

    Start early. If you haven’t started your school supply shopping, now is the time. You’ll need the extra days to track down that illusive “fish notebook,” and you don’t want to be turning Walmart upside-down the day before school starts. Plus you’ll give yourself time to take advantage of all the sales that will inevitably happen from now until school time.

    Shop online and in-person. Get what you can online now (you can still receive everything on time if you place your order today) and then fill in the holes with in-person shopping.

    Buy ready-made labels. Yes, they cost a bit of money, but it’s a worthwhile investment when every single individual school supply down to pencils and markers have to be labeled (and even more so if you have multiple children).

    Cook ahead. I already have a list of things I want to prepare now and then freeze for quick dinners and easy lunches and snacks. For example, I always make a huge pot of meat sauce that I freeze in ziplock bags, as well as chilli or soups and stews. My bean has also requested banana bread, bacon and cheddar muffins, and chocolate chip muffins. Lunch meat and cooked breakfast meats (bacon, ham, sauasage) also freezes beautifully.

    Meal plan. I promise: if you take the time to do a bit of weekly meal planning every Sunday, your week will be much more streamlined. You can buy a simple dry-erase board and hang it in your kitchen for weekly meal menus so there’s no guesswork once the busy week is underway. Heck- you can even use your fridge door as a makeshift dry-erase board and write right on it!

    Get organized now. Where will backpacks and lunch bags get stored after school? Get those designated hooks up now. Is the Tupperware cupboard a mess? Now is the time to get that in tiptop shape and take an inventory of what you have and what you need.

    A full-time work-from-home mom, Jennifer Cox (our “Supermom in Training”) loves dabbling in healthy cooking, craft projects, family outings, and more, sharing with readers everything she knows about being an (almost) superhero mommy.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Supermom In Training: I think summer is more exhausting than the school year

    Supermom In Training: I think summer is more exhausting than the school year

    [ad_1]

    You know what’s exhausting?

    Summer.

    Summer with kids.

    The constant snacks. The wet towels and umpteen wardrobe changes. The little toys everywhere – a Hot Wheels car behind the bathroom door, a Hungry Hippos’ marble in the corner on the floor, a cardboard puzzle piece peeking out from under the ottoman.

    Applying sunscreen every morning is exhausting. They complain, they whine, it’s in their eyes, it stings, it’s cold, why do I have to wear sunscreen, siiiiiiiggghhhh. 

    Can I have a drink? I hear that about 42 times a day. Now the cups are in a lower cupboard and he fills it in the bathroom.

    I’m bored. How can a kid be bored when he literally has something from every.single.shelf in Toys R Us, not to mention a house that has a craft room in it?!!

    I don’t know what happened, but our calendars this summer have been more packed than ever before. I mean, I thought keeping up with the school to-do’s was tough, but summer stuff is just as time consuming if not more. And you have to do it all in the suffocating heat. It’s exhausting.

    I think it’s because, as parents, we feel this immense pressure to give our kids the best… all the time… no matter what the cost (we’ll sleep when we’re dead, right?). We go above and beyond for everything. We want to make great summer memories for our kids, even if we completely deplete ourselves in the process. We plan elaborate day trips and shell out loads of money and take pictures and videos and share them on social media, and then someone else sees that you went to that beach two hours away so now you feel like you should bring your kids to the same beach… and the cycle never ends.

    It’s exhausting. Summer is so, so draining. Am I alone here, or do you feel the same way?

    Let me know. I have to go make a bunch of popsicles from organic raspberries that we picked at a nature reserve on a mountain overlooking a lake. 

    A full-time work-from-home mom, Jennifer Cox (our “Supermom in Training”) loves dabbling in healthy cooking, craft projects, family outings, and more, sharing with readers everything she knows about being an (almost) superhero mommy.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Supermom In Training: Fun with food

    Supermom In Training: Fun with food

    [ad_1]

    Yep, at my house, we like to have fun with food. Playing with food can be a great way to introduce new things (like our snacks on a stick), and it can also be a way to indulge a little too (hence the cookies).

    Here are some of our favourite ways we’ve played with food this summer:

    Snack necklaces. Find as many foods that you can that have holes in them, provide each child with a string, and let them make their own snack necklaces. It will keep them busy while they create them, and keep them quiet afterwards while they munch!

    Oreo-stuffed chocolate chip cookies. Yep, they are as decadent as they sound, and at a party, they’re a real crowd-pleaser. Warning: May induce a sugar coma.

    Snacks or lunch on a stick. I made these for my son for a picnic lunch in the park, and now he practically wants everything on a stick. I also like layering snacks in differently-sized clear bags.

    Butterfly feeding. We have lots of those pretty little white butterflies (which could very well be moths) in our gardens in the front and backyards, and when we put something sweet out on a plate, like slices of orange and banana, they loved stopping by for a treat. (Warning: Don’t leave it out too long or you’ll start to attract wasps and ants.)

    A full-time work-from-home mom, Jennifer Cox (our “Supermom in Training”) loves dabbling in healthy cooking, craft projects, family outings, and more, sharing with Suburban readers everything she knows about being an (almost) superhero mommy.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Supermom In Training: 10 Fun things to do this summer that you haven’t thought of

    Supermom In Training: 10 Fun things to do this summer that you haven’t thought of

    [ad_1]

    Summer… it’s startin’ to drag a bit, no? Don’t get me wrong: I love having my bean home with me. But by the end of a week, where I’m not only trying to work from home but give him a great summer, saying “I’m pooped” is the understatement of the year!

    I’ve stumbled upon a few good ideas of fun things to do this summer that you haven’t thought of… they’ll keep your kids busy, active, and away from screens (and out of your hair). If you’re starting to loathe summer, these ideas should help…

    The reading caterpillar. I wanted to ensure my son kept up on his book and reading time this summer. So, in addition to getting him his very own library card at the start of summer and scheduling weekly trips there, we created a caterpillar on his bedroom door. I cut out a little paper head and taped it to the top of his door, as well as a whole bunch of coloured circles for his body – each time he reads a book he gets to add a circle. He’s loving the challenge of seeing how long he can make the caterpillar (and getting in tons of book time too!).

    STEM building activities. STEM learning is a curriculum based on the idea of educating students in four specific disciplines — science, technology, engineering and mathematics — in an interdisciplinary and applied approach. In other words, finding new, creative ways to teach our children to learn. My most recent fave STEM activity: a container of toothpicks and either Playdoh or mini marshmallows. By using the little marshmallows or small blobs of rolled up Playdoh, and affixing them to the toothpick ends, you can build and make all sorts of cool structures. 

    Dinosaur egg excavation. Why is it that kids are obsessed with eggs? Toys that come in eggs, chocolate eggs, etc. So I put a few dinosaurs into some regular-sized balloons, filled them with water and froze them. Then, I cut away the balloon and TA DA: dinosaur eggs. Now arm your kid with a mallet or hammer and protective eye gear, and see if they can get the dinosaurs out!

    LEGO challenge. Make a list of some inspiring LEGO ideas (build a catapult, build a zipline, build your initials/name, build a robot) and gave em a bin of LEGOS. You’re welcome.

    Water droplet races. Roll out some wax paper and give your kids some eye droppers, a straw and a small bowl of coloured water each. Have them put a droplet of water on the wax paper and then “move it” by blowing at it through the straw. You can give each child a different colour of water and they can race.

    Make bubble wands using pipe cleaners. Configure all kinds of shapes. Decorate the handles with beads.

    Make magic wands. Buy short wooden dowels at the dollar store and decorate with Washi tape, coloured electrical tape, stickers, paint, markers, glitter and more. Affix long strands of ribbon from the end to make it “magical.”

    Create your own comic books. Gather up those spare comic books, old reading books, magazines, newspapers, stickers, etc. and have your kid turn them into his/her own comic book. Have the siblings work on one together.

    Make your own dream-catchers. Take a paper plate and use a hole puncher to punch a circular pattern around the interior of the plate. Have your child thread yarn through in his/her own pattern. Use feathers, beads and other decorations to personalize it.

    Water pistol painting. Fill a few dollar store water guns with coloured water, and have them blast away at paper or a canvas.

    A full-time work-from-home mom, Jennifer Cox (our “Supermom in Training”) loves dabbling in healthy cooking, craft projects, family outings, and more, sharing with readers everything she knows about being an (almost) superhero mommy.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Parenting 101: 6 Ways to beat the heat

    Parenting 101: 6 Ways to beat the heat

    [ad_1]

    I think it’s finally safe to say: summer is here and it’s HOT BABY!

    We all know what can happen to overtired, overheated kids (and parents): we get cranky, frustrated and downright nasty. So, if you’re looking for a few ways to beat the heat this summer, we hope these suggestions will keep you cool, calm and collected.

    Go to a movie. During the summer many theatres provide cheaper matinees, or they play older movies for reduced ticket prices. Theatres are always air conditioned and offer a great reprieve from the summer sun.

    Visit a pet store. Again, these are air conditioned, and it can be lots of fun to see all the different animals and explore a pet store. Create a scavenger hunt in the store where the kids have to find certain critters or pet items (brown mouse, blue dog ball, etc.).

    Make icy treats. Did you know that all you need to make ice cream right in your backyard is some ice, baggies, cream, sugar, vanilla, and rock salt? Or make up your own popsicle flavours (the dollar store has lots of fun moulds to make it in). 

    Find some water play. Neighbourhoods across the island of Montreal and beyond always offer public pools or splash pads for kids. These can be great places to bring a lunch or snack, and cool off with some fun water play. In fact, you can find lots of fun ways to use your hose in the backyard to cool down as well: drape your hose over a tree branch and create a shower effect, connect the oscillating sprinkler, fill up some water balloons, or use your hose to fashion your own water feature out of a pool noodle or a PVC pipe with holes drilled in it. You can also put holes into a two-litre soda bottle and connect the hose to that.

    Put on a show. Why not challenge the family to a talent show? All of the rehearsals and performing can be done within the comfort of the (cooler) indoors. Make puppets and have everyone put on an entertaining show. 

    Go out early or stay out later. It’s always cooler in the morning hours and as it starts to get dark, so these are the optimal times to venture out on a bike ride or to head to the park.

    [ad_2]

    Source link