Sunday, May 3, 2020

Making Lots and Lots of Masks

 Well, the coronavirus has required a lot of mask making, so I stepped up my skills and made over 150 masks.  We have been giving them to the Relief Society sisters and their families.





Easter Crafts

 We made the classic string eggs this Easter.  It's a good time for crafts since we can't do anything else. :)




DeeAnne's Virtual Cruise

 DeeAnne and Joyce were on the virtual cruise as well and DeeAnne posted a lot of great adventures.  Joyce, not so many.  But DeeAnne and Soren and Anson had a themed dinner every night!
 Their formal photos turned out really nice. 
 This is a little screenshot of some of our texts about our exciting adventure.
 DeeAnne's cabin view was not quite what she expected.  It was one of those "obstructed view" cabins, much like we had a few years ago. ;)
This was the one towel creation they had in their room.  :)

Our Virtual Cruise

Well, the mighty coronavirus caused our annual Daddy-Daughter cruise to be canceled.  Corona is really messing up everything right now.  I was pretty bummed, to say the least.  But, we made the best of it and had a virtual cruise with Joyce and DeeAnne.  It was all through texts and pictures and it was hilarious, but you really needed to be a part of all of that wonderful stuff to truly appreciate it.  Here are a few pictures of our adventures we shared.

This was the lovely towel creation that my room steward made. The Oreo eyes and carrot nose made it quite authentic.
This is me enjoying a loving ship day on the deck reading my favorite book.
We had some great serenading on the Mexico themed night.
The jogging tract around the ship was much bigger than any we had ever been on.  We did have to watch out for cars, trucks and semis though.
We came across some other cruise ships that were docks for the day.
We saw an assortment of wild animals on our excursions.
The formal night was quite lovely.  We really dressed up and photographer took us all around the ship for pictures.


Once again, the fitness center was great.  We worked out every day and the instructors always seemed to have a lot of positive energy.

Sunday, April 19, 2020

BEST EVER BAGEL BREAD

YIELD: 2 LOAVES
PREP TIME: 35 MINUTES
COOK TIME: 55 MINUTES
ADDITIONAL TIME: 1 HOUR 30 MINUTES
TOTAL TIME: 3 HOURS
Amazing Bagel Bread
4.7 Stars (33 Reviews)

INGREDIENTS

BREAD:

  •  2 1/2 cups warm water
  •  4 tablespoons honey
  •  1 1/2 tablespoons instant or rapid-rise yeast (see note for active dry yeast)
  •  1 1/2 tablespoons coarse, kosher salt (use less for table salt)
  •  5 to 5 1/2 cups (25 to 27.5 ounces) bread flour (see note for substitutions and notes about exact flour amount)

TOPPING:

  •  1 egg, lightly beaten
  •  1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan or Asiago cheese (or other toppings of choice, like sesame seeds, poppy seeds, Trader Joe's everything but the bagel seasoning, etc)

WATER BATH:

  •  4 quarts water
  •  1/4 cup honey
  •  1 tablespoon baking soda
  • INSTRUCTIONS
  1. For the bread, in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook, combine the water, honey, yeast, salt and 2 cups of the flour. Mix until combined. With the mixer on low speed, continue adding flour until the dough comes together and clears the sides of the bowl. The exact amount of flour doesn't matter as much as the texture and feel of the dough. It should form a soft, smooth ball that is still a little tacky to the touch but doesn't leave a lot of dough residue on your fingers. Knead the dough for 5 minutes. 
  2. Cover the mixing bowl and let the dough rest for 10-15 minutes. 
  3. Turn the dough out onto a lightly greased or floured counter and separate into two pieces. 
  4. Shape each piece into a loaf by pressing into a thick rectangle, folding the bottom edge up to the middle and then grabbing the top edge and folding it down over the dough and pinching the seam to seal. Turn the loaf seam side down and pat and roll lightly to form an even 8-inch loaf. 
  5. Grease two 8 1/2-X-4 1/2-inch loaf pans. Place the loaves seam side down in the prepared pans. Cover with a clean kitchen towel or greased plastic wrap and let rise in a warm, draft-free spot until the dough rises just over the edge of the pan, about 45 minutes to an hour.
  6. Toward the end of rising, prepare the water bath by bringing the water to a boil in a pot (that is at least 10-inches wide). Add the honey and baking soda and stir to dissolve. Also, fold a clean kitchen towel (like a thin flour sack towel without any texture or terry cloth fabric) in half and place next to the stove.
  7. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. 
  8. One at a time, carefully turn the loaf of risen dough out into your hand and place the loaf into the boiling water. It's ok if the bread loaf deflates and looks a bit wonky. It will all work out! Promise. Cook for 1 minute and then use a wide flat spatula or other tool/spoon to flip the dough and cook for another 45 seconds to 1 minute. 
  9. Using a couple of wide spatulas, carefully transfer the loaf and place it on the folded towel, using extra towel length to quickly pat any water off the top and sides of the dough. 
  10. Spray the same loaf pan with cooking spray and sprinkle a couple tablespoons of cheese evenly across the bottom of the pan. Transfer the dough (that's been boiled) to the pan (using the towel to help transfer the hot loaf, if needed), tucking the dough down around the edges into the pan in an even shape. 
  11. Repeat the boiling process with the other loaf of dough.
  12. With a sharp paring or serrated knife, cut five or six slashes about 1/4-inch deep crosswise on the top of each loaf of dough. Brush the top of with the beaten egg and sprinkle each loaf with a couple more tablespoons of cheese. 
  13. Bake the bread in the preheated oven for 40-45 minutes until golden on top (an instant-read thermometer should read 200 degrees at the center of the loaf). 
  14. Let the bread cool for 15-20 minutes in the pan before turning onto a cooling rack to cool completely. Slice, toast, slather with cream cheese, devour!

NOTES

Yeast: if using active dry yeast instead of instant yeast, use the same amount of yeast but proof it in 1/4 cup water and a pinch of sugar or drop of honey until bubbly and foaming before adding to the other ingredients in the mixer. You can decrease the water in the recipe by 1/4 cup if doing so.
Flour Substitutions: if you don't have bread flour on hand, all purpose flour + vital wheat gluten makes a great substitute. Use about 4 1/2 cups all-purpose flour and 1/2 cup gluten.
Measuring Flour: because the exact amount of flour will depend on a variety of factors (how one measures flour, elevation, humidity, water temperature, etc), don't rely on the measurements in the recipe as a hard fast rule. Instead focus on the texture and feel of the dough. If you have to add a bit less or a bit more flour, that's ok.

Sunday, March 29, 2020

The Boys Are Back in Town!

 Hunter, Carter and Cooper got to come spend the weekend with us...just because.  Mariah is home because of the quarantine.  We ordered some baby chicks and they came.

 We got the boys a Jeep to drive around and it took all day to put together.  Sometimes the boys were a little TOO helpful for grandpa's taste.
 We made Worries and the boys loved them.

 Cooper was fascinated by every puddle of water he found andhe was always dropping things into the water to see what it would do.
 We got to have a hot dog roast, but the fire was kind of lame so those dogs basically got warmed up.
 Hunter and I made our first video together.  Hunter is a pro at video making.