Winter Break starts out so
exciting, with finishing up shopping, anticipating the holidays, baking treats,
delivering gifts, visiting friends and family and eating until guts burst. It can be a whirlwind of activity up through
New Year's. Then shortly after the New
Year, normally, people return to work and the kids head back to school. Oh, but not us. Our kids have an entire extra week off
school, which having moved from the North two years ago, I'm still not used to
all the school year time off they get versus a long summer vacation, which I'm
properly prepared to handle.
It's really chicken, noodle, vegetable soup
Once the Christmas
decorations get stored away and that (I already got crap and no longer have to
behave) magic is gone, I start feeling (in my best Madea voice) like the
'chirren are tearin up my nerves.'
Admittedly, I have my
parents' voices in my head with the memory of their, "I can't WAIT for you
to have children!" Oh the paybacks
hath cometh. I don't understand how my
parents made it through my brother's and my fighting. We drove them crazy and now I know the
feeling. My mother usually handled it by
yelling at us to go to our rooms. If she
didn't feel like yelling, she would take off into the kitchen and violently
rattle the drawer where she kept the wooden spoons and we would run in all
directions out of her sight.
Each generation seems to
say, "Kids today are so different."
I don’t know if they are or not.
I haven't read a parenting book since my first born was born, so about a
decade. Most days I still don’t know
what the F I'm doing. I used to lie in
bed at night and rehash all the parenting that I could have done differently
that day, but now I'm even over that. It's
not at all that I don't care-- I love my kids, would do anything for them,
blah, blah, okay. We are in a stage with
our little family where there is an endangered supply of fucks given. And this is how I'm going to push through this
trying phase.
Sending the kids to their
rooms or kicking them out of the house is only a temporary solution for their
personal safety. It's not really a
punishment and it's not behavior changing.
In fact, I don't have any ideas for changing behavior since I'm still
saying, "Eat over your plate, please" 500-600 times a day.
You know where you are? You're in the jungle baby!
My parental goal is to
hopefully raise kind individuals. It's a
simple, yet thoughtful goal and I'm hoping to get back to that goal in the next
stage because we've temporarily detoured to, "I hope you have a plan by
the time you're 18."
So getting back to the
kids fighting. This is about their
fighting. If they have time to fight,
then they have time to work. I've
decided that whatever items are not yet checked off of my to-do list, will
immediately become their next redirection.
I'm totally using their fighting to my benefit, AND I LIKE IT. We hit the jackpot today. Just as poor choices were being made, I had just
started dinner.
Children should learn
cooking, cleaning and organizing anyway. Mine don't have a strict schedule of
chores. The projects they don't
volunteer for become distractions, gets them some one-on-one time with a
parent and almost always leaves them
with a feeling of accomplishment and pride.
No, they are rarely happy about it, but that's why I do it. Hopefully they learn something from it.
This dough is easy to roll out and cut with a pizza cutter if you don't have a noodle maker, but I feel like how Princess Vespa feels about her industrial strength hair dryer and I CAN'T LIVE WITHOUT IT!
Recipe for Punishment Soup
Ingredients:
1 cup flour
1 egg
1 Tablespoon butter
1 medium onion, diced
2 stalks of celery, diced
1 large carrot, diced
3 medium gold potatoes, diced
1 cup white wine
6 cups chicken stock
Bay leaf
1 tsp dried thyme
1 tsp dried rosemary
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper
1 whole roasted chicken, picked and chopped
homemade noodles
Hand Cut Noodles (make these first)
In a food processor, using the dough blade, pulse the flour and egg. Slowly add a very small amount of water just until the dough comes together to form a ball. Wrap the dough in plastic and chill for 30 minutes.
On a floured surface, cut the dough into fourths. Roll each section very thin then cut into desired length strips. Allow noodles to dry on floured parchment paper while preparing the rest of the soup.
Rest of the Soup:
Melt butter in a large Dutch Oven. Add the onion, celery, carrots and potatoes. Sautee until the vegetables soften. Add the wine stir often while it cooks out. Add Bay leaf, thyme, rosemary, salt and pepper. Add chicken stock and bring to boil. Reduce to simmer and cover for about 20 minutes. Check that potatoes are soft then add the chicken and noodles. Cook for about 10 more minutes, stirring occasionally.