About Tricia

I am Tricia. Momma of nine, homeschooler, artist, foodie and maker of all kinds of things. It's a pleasure to share here our family homesteading adventures, the things we make, and what inspires our days. Read more about my family and work here. Thanks for visiting!

Author Archive | Tricia

Martinmas

Happy Martinmas to everyone!  We did not have time to make any paper mache lanterns with so much going on around here but we did decorate our walking lantern with some leaves cut from water color painted tissue.  We also had some hot cinnamon apple cider and sugared croissants (I left them in the oven two minutes too long and the sugar burned a little).  They tasted amazing though you can’t really tell from the picture.  The kids asked if they were getting a little treat bag this year (usually a little fabric bag with tangerines and nuts or sweets)  so I promised them it would come this weekend.

Have you ever celebrated the Feast of Saint Martin?  In case you do not know the story of Martinmas.

St. Martin of Tours was born in Hungary and grew up the son of a Roman military officer in Pavia, Italy. He joined the Roman army and was sent to Amiens, where, on horseback, he met a starving man begging alms at the city gates. Moved by deep compassion, he tore his red, woolen his cloak in two with his sword and gave half to the beggar. The next night, he had a dream in which he saw Jesus wearing the half of the cloak he’d given away, surrounded by angels. In the dream, Our Lord asked him to look at it and to see if he recognized it. He did, of course, and realized that he must convert and devote his life to Christ.  St. Martin’s remaining piece of cloak became a very revered relic. In fact, the building where his cloak — “cappa” in Latin — was preserved was known as the “cappella,” the root of our words “chapel” and “chaplain.”

the leaves on the lantern where made by the girls.  They painted some white tissue with some water color paints in orange, burnt umber and yellow shades.  Once the tissue was dry, they traced leaves onto it and cut them out.  Then they applied watered down glue to the leaves and smoothed them onto our lantern glass.

A nice warm Saint Martin Sugared Croissant with a hot cup of cinnamon apple cider to warm us up from the inside out on such a chilly night.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider leaving a comment or follow me by email at the top right hand of the screen to have future posts sent to you. Tricia (Crunchy Catholic Momma)
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Handmade Christmas Craft Along Week 3 : Gifts from the kitchen, Perfectly Chewy Granola Bar Recipe

This weeks gift ideas all come from the kitchen which in my home is the heart of our home so these are gifts from  the heart : )

Gifts from the kitchen are so special.  Spanish women love to feed people, it is how we show our love.  Anyone who has ever eaten at my parents house knows this.  They will feed you until you cry uncle.  If you do not eat they take it personally, kind of like you don’t like them.  In my world, food is love.  I love to make food for those I love and even those I just kind of like too.

Do you remember my hunt for the perfect granola bar, well a few weeks and many many batches later I finally came up with a recipe that my family loves.  I took a bunch to park day and everyone there liked it (at least they said they did).  In one day my kids and friends ate 40 bars!

Some of this years goodie bags will have these granola bars in them so I am sharing the recipe with you in case you want to make them too.  I wrapped them in parchment paper with a strip of brown paper bag from Whole Foods which I turned to the blank side then tied it with embroidery floss.

Chewy granola bars

2 c oats
1 c wheat bran (this stuff is really inexpensive in the bulk food section)
1 c sunflower seeds
1 c puffed millet
1 c raisins
3/4 c brown sugar
1/2 c honey
4 tbs butter
2 tsp vanilla bean paste (substitute extract if you don’t have paste)
1/2 tsp sea salt

Preheat oven to 400 F.  Toast the oats and sunflower seeds in the oven for 10 minutes.

In the meanwhile,  in a saucepan, bring to a simmer the sugar, honey, butter, salt and vanilla.  This will be the glue in the recipe.

Put all the dry ingredients in a nice big bowl

pour in your “glue” and mix it all up really well.

Grease a baking pan (or line the pan with parchment paper).  I did not use the parchment paper but it does make it easier to pull out the granola from the pan.  Press it all into the pan really firmly with the spoon then cover it with some wax paper and press down really hard all over.

turn out granola onto a counter and slice into bars

Wrap them in parchment or wax paper and don’t forget to keep some for yourself.

Ok, so onto other peoples ideas:

I love gifts in jars.  Here is a super easy one.

and here

to top off your jars, labels

Now imagine you open a pretty little box and inside you find homemade Twix bars.  Check out the tutorial here.

I had many more ideas but my computer is taking an hour to upload each picture : (

If you enjoyed this post, please consider leaving a comment or follow me by email at the top right hand of the screen to have future posts sent to you. Tricia (Crunchy Catholic Momma)

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