Monday, February 22, 2016

Glass Jar Pantry Overhaul!

I've been going through my house Konmari style the last many months purging anything that doesn't "spark joy". This book is amazing and life changing! If  you've not yet checked it out, well you should of like yesterday. For me the kitchen cupboards, my pantry, kept haunting me and brought me zero "joy". I've been baking a lot this past year and make most things from scratch especially having recently being diagnosed with celiacs. I've come to enjoy my kitchen time a lot. So even more so, I wanted an easy accessible, compact, durable, tight sealing, but yet eye appealing way to store both the spices and the typical pantry items. 

Being green and keeping as many toxics out of my home, especially food, was a must when considering storage containers. Naturally (pun intended haha) I settled on using glass. You'd be surprised at how many glass canisters have horrible reviews on actually being air tight, the whole purpose of pantry storage.  So after about a month of looking at different glass containers from Amazon, Crate And Barrel, World Market, and others, I decided to try the Hobby Lobby glass jars for the majority of my items. 

I went with the square shaped, flipped lid, harness top jars. It's a fantastic design for a good tight seal with the silicone ring. I've had zero problems so far with things going stale. Many other brands with similar designs felt cheaply made and the metal harness clamp felt weak. But these are a solid design. I would suggest when washing the jars you remove the metal harness and clamp to prevent rust. The 650ML (H: 5 1/4") size is perfect for fitting two small cans of baking soda, baking powder, meringue powder and those other baking ingredients of smaller quantities. The 1200ML (H: 8") works great for holding 24oz bag of Bob's Red Mill corn flour, coconut flour, or oatmeal. I used this size for storing my sushi rice as well. The 1500ML (H: 9 1/2") is what I used to store brown sugar. The 2100ML (H: 11 1/2") is tall enough to store spaghetti or an entire 40oz bag of Bob's Red Mill almond flour. For the spaghetti and penne noodles I decided on Hobby Lobby's trendy looking glass jar with brushed metal screw on lid. These canisters add some variety yet still keep a clean look to the pantry. I got the 2100ML one for the tall spaghetti, and the 1600ML for storing the penne. I also used these for my tea and coffee that will be placed on the coffee bar (when that project is finished).  For the bulk items I choose Hobby Lobby's 1 Gallon jars with a screw on lid. The gallon jar size holds comfortably an entire 5lb bag of flour. Win!!! For the little spice jars, I ended up going with the most adorable 4 inch tall glass harness jars, also found at Hobby Lobby. They are my favorite just because of how cute and colorful the spices look being displayed in them! Who doesn't love seeing the fun pop of color when opening the cupboard to cook dinner! 

For the labels, I fell in love with the trendy chalkboard idea but wanted something chic, not too modern. Lord knows I was not about to pretend I had stellar artsy penmanship (forgive me as I lust over the penmanship of the women who have that cutesie style writing. You know, those added dots and swirls...*swoon*). I needed a template that I could edit to add in some of those less popular pantry items like corn flour, coconut sugar ect. I came across these adorable labels designed by Lia Griffith on her site liagriffith.com exact links listed below. I decided to use my own fonts instead of those from the font download she provides, though her fonts are adorable! It's super easy, you download the file and then since these exact ones are an editable download, you type in your so desired pantry items. I printed mine out on Avery White Full-Sheet labels (8165), link listed below. Voila!!!! Cutting them all out is a bit tedious but so very worth it! 


My pantry is well on its way to being complete. Next will be the oils and vinegars to be bottled and labeled. Still deciding on if I want a cork or harness top. I'll post the update on those when I do decide. Happy Konmaring and decorating - Sarah 
 













Saturday, February 1, 2014

Reasons to use cloth diapers

Why cloth diaper you ask? Aren't you grossed out by it?  Doesn't it take tons of extra time? And you can get your husband to change all that nasty? 

Those are a few of the typical questions I get asked by people when they find out I cloth diaper, and when they see my sons cute cloth diaper designs on his bum :) Let me tell you a few of the facts that had an impact on us as a family choosing to cloth diaper our son.

HEALTH - Disposable diapers contain chemicals some harsher then others. One of the more harsher ones being  Dioxin, a highly toxic by-product of the paper bleaching process. Dioxin is a carcinogenic chemical. The EPA has it listed as the most toxic of chemicals that is linked to cancer. Surprisingly the US is the only country that allows this chemical to still be used. Super Absorbent Polymer (SAP) is also toxic and found in disposables. SAP can be referred to by many names: sodium polyacrylate, polyacrylate absorbents, or even absorbent gel material as Pampers refers to it. SAP is in the form of tiny crystals that are sprinkled in the core of diapers and when wet change to a gel like substance. If you use disposables you might have seen these before in the morning after they have been in the diaper all night. Some brands of disposable diapers that do not use these chemicals are: Honest Company, Seventh Generation, and gDiaper.

COST - The average cost of disposable diapers per baby for 2 years is roughly around $1,600, thats assuming they are potty trained by age 2, yikes.  The cost for a good stash of cloth diapers is between $300-$500. And a good cloth diaper stash will last you through at least two children.

ENVIRONMENTAL - No one knows how long it takes for a disposable diaper to decompose.  For one baby to have diapers for a year it takes over 300 lbs of wood, 50 lbs of petroleum feedstocks, and 20 lbs of chlorine (Diapers: Environmental Impacts and Lifecycle Analysis, C. J. Mullen and C.V. Jones). The instructions in disposable diaper packages instruct that the poop be dumped out before disposing of the diaper. However no one does that sadly.


Those are just a few of the main reasons we were sold on cloth diapering. Health was the leader and then how cost effective cloth diapering is was a big seller too. We decided to go with two different brands. We use Soft Bums and Piddle Poddles. Soft Bums are a one of a kind diaper. They fit babies from 5lbs-40lbs. You can see the comparison in the photos below.





They adjust using a toggle up at the front of the diaper, allowing them to fit to any shape and size baby. 


 This Softbum diaper is a Multi purpose pocket diaper. The insert snaps in but you can stuff the pocket with an extra insert for night time.























 They insert used above is a bamboo "pod" they call them. It soaks up moisture very well and holds ALOT of pee. We have never had a "blow out" with these amazing diapers :) We have enjoyed our cloth diaper experience. We have about 18 Softbum shells and around 25 pods (inserts). Nice thing is when they just pee you don't have to get a new shell. You can just replace the pod.

As you can see Luke is styling one in the photo below. They become addicting to buy so watch out. But you just can't help it with all the cute monthly designs they come out with. Maybe you will become like me, stalking the website each month for the new design. Watch out.. it might just happen ;) http://www.softbums.com/ is where you can find these amazing diapers.


WASHING CLOTH DIAPERS -How often do I do laundry do you ask? Between my stash of Softbums and Piddle Poddles I do a load every 2-3 days. I put them in the washer at night and in the morning I switch them to the dryer. Simple, its part of my routine now. We wash our diapers using Rockin Green detergent. Amazon sells it.

                             

If your a breast feeding mama like me you don't have to even wash the poop off. Brest fed babies poop is just fat deposits from the breast milk so it totally denigrates in the washer. And no, I don't end up with poop all over my washer. When babies are on solid foods the poop can no longer be thrown in the washer. So there is this handy contraption, a sprayer you can buy that attaches to the back of your toilet that you use (sort of like a sprayer shower head) to just spray the poop into the toilet. MESS FREE!! Hear that! And the husbands will love it and think its cool ;) Bumgenius sells a great sprayer.

Baby's birth story by Gods plan not my own


Here is the birth story of my precious baby. He's now 7 1/2 months old and I'm finally getting around to writing it down :) 

My due date was June 12th. Baby was measuring big at 10 ½ lbs. On the 12th I was 2 cm dilated. Dr stripped my membranes and we waited. My due date had come and gone. I did EVERYTHING to start labor. Walked about a trillion miles, or so it seemed with my painful hips and pubic bone, drank raspberry leaf tea like it was going out of style, rolled back and forth on the yoga ball, got a pedi and foot massage, thought about taking black and blue cohosh herbs, but ended up not, ate pineapples, tried the pressure points on the ear, hand and little toe, I mean I tried just about everything. This is where I realized that all though I’m sure some of those techniques work for some people ultimately baby comes when baby is ready. 
(Me trying to walk that baby out)

On the 16th, fathers day, I started having some contractions around 6pm. I was the happiest soon to be mama on the planet! They were 8-11 minutes apart, all where I could walk through them. I was pretty
sure I was going into labor (can you tell I’m a 1st time mama haha). Contacted my doula and we waited for them to get stronger, however they did not. I went to bed that night. Woke up the next morning on the 17th and the contractions were about 5-8 minutes apart. Some took my breath away but still were not strong enough to go to the hospital. This continued all day long and night. Next morning was the 18th and I had an appointment. I was positive I was going to be dilated more I mean after all I had been in early stages of labor for almost 2 days now. No such luck. Instead my blood pressure was high and so they said they were going to have to admit me. Before they did the Dr. stripped my membranes a 2nd time. 
(41 weeks pregnant arriving at the hospital)

We arrived to the hospital, my mom, Kevin and I. My amazing doula also joined us. Contractions were about 5 minutes apart. They checked me in, this seemed to take forever even though I was pre registered, I remember hating having to sit or stand still while I filled out some papers. I got all settled in a room and they hooked me up to monitor baby and my blood pressure. At this point my blood pressure was normal. I asked to go home to continue laboring and of course they said no. Now as many of you know, my birth plan was to do an all-natural birth. To me this meant no medicine, no epidural, no IV’s.  As I sat rolling back and forth on my birthing ball the doctor came in and approached me with the idea of C-section for the purpose of how big my baby was measuring. I think the look on my face said everything. I was NOT going to have a C-section unless it was medically needed for my baby’s safety. I told the Dr “God gave me this baby so I’m going to birth this baby”. The Dr explained to me their concern of my baby “turtle-ing”, where the head comes through but the shoulders get stuck and then the baby slides back in. She expressed how this is a very serious thing they try to avoid because with in a minute baby’s oxygen is cut off when this happens so it results in breaking baby’s shoulders to get baby out. Still hesitant on this C-section mumbojumbo, I said I would like to talk to Kevin and my doula alone and then make my decision. The time was about 11:30am. We decided at this time to thank God for modern medicine and go with the scheduled C-section for later that night at 6pm. Genetics were working against me, there is a history with my mother and grandma both having C-sections because their labor stopped progressing,  I came to terms with maybe God’s plan for my baby was not what I had in mind. We waited and waited and my contractions seemed to stay around 5 minutes apart slowly getting more intense. I still kept praying I would just go into hard-core labor before the C-section time. I was pretty stuck on that natural birth still… part of that lead by so much fear I think. I was terrified of a big freaking long needle being stuck into my back. Worried about not having the skin on skin time with my baby during that “golden hour” after birth since I would be in the OR. Worried about the effect it would have on breast-feeding if I didn’t deliver vaginally. Then the peace came, the peace that passes all understanding. I worked with the nursery nurse to still plan to do skin to skin in the OR…. I was shocked they supported me in that, but so grateful they pulled strings to still help the birth plan I wanted to happy even though it was going to be a C-section.



 Kevin and I got all suited up. I said good buy to my mom and Kevin as I was rolled back to get that massive needle put in my back. They took me back to that freezing cold operating room and I sat on the table as they prepped the area for the needle to go in. All the sudden my water breaks. I say to the nurse and anesthesiologist “I did not just pee on your table. That was my water that broke” totally wanted to reassure them it wasn’t pee. They continued the cleaning of the area and I turned my head to look at the needle and the nurse grabs my head “honey your not going to want to look back there” wow, that’s sure calming I thought. The needle went in perfectly and I’m now lying down on the table. Kevin walks in and stands up by my head. It’s around 6:15pm now. They had my baby praise and worship music playing softly just like I had wanted in my birth plan. The feeling of the surgeon tugging was so strange. I started to have a reaction to the medicine and got very itchy on my face, a fairly normal reaction. However since I’m highly allergic to antihistamines they couldn’t give me medicine in the IV to counter act the reaction. I heard the one of the Doctors say “We have meconium in here. We need to get this baby out now!” my heart just about jumped out of my chest, I knew exactly what that meant and the impact that could have on my precious baby. I knew at that moment one of the reasons WHY God’s plan was for this baby to be born via C-section instead of waiting hours longer for my labor to progress and possibly loosing him to the toxic maconium. The doctor then said to Kevin “Mr Steinberg your baby’s about to be born stand up” as Kevin processed to try to walk around to the other side of the curtain. Oh he was so ready to see his baby all right! Nurse stops him and says he can’t come on that side and to just stand up. In seconds I hear the sweetest most pure cry my ears have ever heard. I start crying. “Here is your baby boy” the Doctor says, “6:25 is the time” as they held him up for Kevin to see. They checked him out real quick because of the meconium. With in minutes they brought him to me and placed that perfect baby boy, our Luke Evan, on my chest. I continue crying tears of joy, overwhelmed, as my whole world feels so complete now! He was so perfect. He just lay there; he instantly stopped crying the moment he was on my chest. He was the most gorgeous thing I had ever seen. That moment will forever be in my mind. Perfection!! Luke’s nurse said “He is one of the most chill babies” I just beamed! After about 10 minutes they had to take Luke away while they finished stitching me up. He weighed in at 8lbs 13oz. and 22 ½ inches long. No 10lb baby. But 8lbs 13oz of pure cuteness! His name we chose for a few reasons; Luke because we loved it, and the meaning “bringer of light” and oh is he such a light of joy. Evan we chose because my maiden name is Evans. I loved the meaning of it too "God is Good”.  I praise the Lord for the life of Luke, for how He really protected him. I learned that no matter what our plan in life is, even with a birthing plan, God sometimes has a better plan, for reasons at the time we can’t even understand. As far as my fear about breast-feeding after a C-section, my little Luke had such a wonderful latch and latched on right away. Recovery was the normal length for a C-section about 8 weeks, and went very smoothly. So there it is, the birth story. Here are some photos! Enjoy





Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Its been a full year since I posted on here. Life has changed so much for us. 1st big change is that we are pregnant with our first child :) I feel so blessed and honored to be this baby's mommy. Im due just under a month from now. Here is some photos from early stages of pregnancy. And one of me at 34 weeks. There for sure is a baby in there! 




We have decided to go granola on a lot of things with this baby. One area is cloth diapers! They are the cutest :) We will be using Piddle Poddles and SoftBums. 


The very first outfit we got for our baby. He will be a sailor just like his daddy.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Gorgeous time in between the storms

Yesterday was a very rainy stormy day. Thunder lightning, flooding, an just dark. And a little sun shine in the middle of the day. As some of you know it's actually been a very rough year. Yesterday seemed like the last year summed up! Thunderstorms, flooding, lighting striking down all around me with no break until a little bit of sun breaks through. God reminded me yesterday that amongst the storms and darkness He never leaves! He is always there and uses little things, people to brighten my day. This year has been the toughest year in my life! But I praise God for my amazing supportive husband and for the light an bit of sun He gives us to continue on through life admits the ways the lightning strikes us down. We have a loving comforting God that admits the dark days in life He lifts us up above the storms of life. He brings peace when the winds swirl dangerously around us. He might not take the winds away but He will bring us that peace in knowing He is our rock that can not be moved. Not even by the biggest floods life brings us. Here are a few photos I took yesterday during that opening between the dark skies, winds, and rains. Just a reminder to praise Him in the storm!

Monday, May 7, 2012

God brings people into our lives

Yesterday the Lord reminded me how there is a time for everything under heaven. We said good bye to some friends of ours that moved here for a short period of time. The Lord has called them elsewhere now but we will forever treasure them. There are people the Lord brings into our lives that impact us in such an amazing un forgetful way. The Lord has a reason for everything that happens on this earth, in the time we live here. May we not take time for granite. May we not forget everyday we impact others in ways we may never even know. Everyday we have the opportunity to touch someone for the glory of the great God we serve. God brings people in our lives for a time and the memories will last forever and I'll forever be great full for this amazing couple!

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Graduation!

Congratulations to my gorgeous accomplished sister! Last Friday she graduated college as an honor grad! Crazy how fast time flies. Crazy how before you know it your 6 years out of high school and have your baby sister graduating college. That's where I'm at and it's hard to believe! Her and I have grown so close in the last 3 years? I'm so very blessed! She an inspiration in many ways! I look up to my baby sister for who she is even. God has brought us through tons and to be close friends with your sister is an incredible
feeling! -Rachel i love you so much an am so proud of who you are and who you have become. May Gods peace go out to you as you start this new chapter of your life! I love you!