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Treasures From the Recipe Box

One of the unforeseen benefits of choosing to homeschool is that it has allowed us to slow down our pace of life.

I’ve come to treasure so many of the “old-fashioned” ideas that have gotten lost in our fast-paced world. Homeschooling has given me more control of our schedule. It has allowed me to take the time to be at home, prepare a meal, and just be together. This surprising gift has become something I know I will look back on and cherish.

I was cooking a meal for my family a few nights ago and it hit me that there weren’t likely many individuals my age still using an old-fashioned recipe box. Honestly, I think I would be lost without it.

Mine stays above my stove and it has been well used. You can tell my family's favorites because the cards are stained and splattered. Many of the recipes are in the handwriting of my mom, grandmothers, mother-in-law, and friends. Some are on napkins, some on cardboard, some on beautiful floral printed cards.

There is a pretty high bar for a recipe to make it into the box.

I absolutely love reading recipes and browsing through Pinterest as much as anyone, but all of those recipes don’t necessarily become favorites or warrant a spot. Before they make the cut they have to pass the test of being both a joy to cook and to eat. It will then become a recipe that will be repeated. Many are also from meals I’ve enjoyed at others homes and knew I wanted to try to recreate.

It’s comforting to know that someone I loved took the time to share these recipes and there is a connection with the individual that wrote it and shared it that I can’t quite explain.

Reading their writing and preparing a familiar meal reminds me of other times we’ve eaten that food or spent time with that person and it’s such a gift.

There is something about holding a physical card that makes me slow down and enjoy the moment I’m in.

Much for the same reason I read physical books, I also enjoy using recipe cards. In a world full of screens and digital content I feel we can easily lose a connection to our past. I may not be able to articulate just why but it does something good for my heart and soul and I hope you will find the beauty in it that I do.

(I also hope that my children will continue this tradition!)

Here are a few of my family’s favorite recipes. I know you will enjoy them.

Old Time Spaghetti Sauce

This first one is for our homemade old-time spaghetti sauce. I know most people just pour out of a store-bought jar, but the little bit of time it takes to get this one simmering on the stove is well worth it in flavor. My grandmother, who just turned 90, has been making this one my whole life and got the recipe from a friend of hers years and years ago. It’s a go-to if I’m making dinner for a crowd or taking dinner to someone and everyone loves it!

Go ahead and print out this handy recipe card and add it to your own recipe box!

(If you don’t have one, keep reading!)


These next two recipes I want you to copy onto your own recipe cards and add them to your recipe box. If you don’t have a recipe box or cards, why not get them now and start this tradition in your own home?

German Chocolate Cookies

If I’m asked to bring a dessert at the last minute, everyone who knows me knows it will be German Chocolate cookies.

They are easy and always devoured, plus they are my kids’ favorites. I came across this recipe in college and have been making it ever since.

(This is also an easy one to make with your own kids - homeschool math for the win!)

Ingredients:

1 box German Chocolate cake mix (any brand)

1 stick butter (½ cup)

½ cup old fashioned oats

2 eggs

1 bag (10.5 oz) milk chocolate chips

Instructions:

Mix butter, eggs, and cake mix with a mixer.  Add in oats.  Then stir in chocolate chips and drop by tablespoon full onto a parchment-lined baking sheet.  Bake for 8-10 minutes at 350 degrees until just set.  You want them to still be sort of soft in the middle!  Enjoy!

Treasures from the Recipe Box

Homemade Vegetable Soup

The last recipe is for another childhood favorite and that’s my Grandma Gerry’s homemade vegetable soup.

That same 90-year-old grandma who taught me most of what I know about cooking has been serving this up with a cake of homemade cornbread my entire life and it always hits the spot on a cold night.

The measurements are a little hard to put into writing since some of it is just an “eyeball” amount as many things are with old recipes!

Ingredients:

2-3 baking potatoes

1 small onion, diced fine

1 (46oz.) can of tomato juice

1 (15oz.) can yellow sweet corn, undrained

1 (15oz.) can small green peas, undrained

1 (15oz.) pinto beans, undrained

1 cup elbow noodle pasta

1 stick (½ cup) butter

1 tbsp. Sugar

Salt and pepper to taste

Directions:

Peel and dice potatoes into small bite-sized pieces. Put potatoes and diced onion into a large stockpot. Cover the potatoes and onions with water and boil until the potatoes are fork-tender. Then add the rest of the ingredients. Simmer on low for about two hours.


Here’s to dinner - and here’s to everyone out there who is a bit old-fashioned like me!

Do you keep a recipe box? What are some of your favorite recipes inside?

Leave me a comment below and let me know!

This is post is from Homegrown Learners contributor, Allison. She is a wife and mother with a passion for reading. With a background in Early Childhood Education as well as experience working in Corporate America, the events of the past year exposed her to the rewards of teaching her own children at home.

She hopes to encourage anyone who has ever been anxious about taking this leap with her own personal successes and failures of her family's first year of homeschooling.

What We've Been Up To Lately: Life Skills & Culture

I think the high school years might just be my favorite of all the homeschooling years.

The lightbulbs that constantly went off when my children were little were certainly gratifying - and often times extremely cute - but watching my kids learn and achieve BIG things is exciting. Additionally, being able to learn WITH them and cultivate interests together is super fun.

The key to this age is understanding how to reach their hearts.

(Let’s just not talk about the fact that my oldest will be going to college in the fall, ok?)

This week found us in the kitchen a lot (a good thing), and also filling our time with CULTURE.

Did I mention how much I like this stage of life with my kids?

What We’ve Been Up To Lately: Life Skills & Culture

Life Skills in Our Homeschool

Laundry

We can all agree that laundry is not glamorous or exciting - or cultural for that matter. It does, however, have to get done, and I’m NOT doing it for my kids anymore.

My oldest has been doing her laundry since middle school, and with the turn of the calendar year I decided to have my son take charge of his laundry, too. So far, so good.

I love that both of my children will leave this house knowing how to do their laundry.

And, my daughter has a great laundry hack: she uses an Expo marker to write on top of the washer what DOESN’T go into the dryer. Clever, huh? No more dress shrinking up to a shirt because it was put in the dryer accidentally!

Cooking

Because Anna’s schedule is lighter this LAST semester of high school we are using the time to hone in on some skills for LIFE.

She has been making a lot of meals for us - healthy meals in particular.

This week our favorite was One Pan Healthy Sausage and Roasted Veggies.

We served it with some quinoa & wild rice. Perfection.

Each week she also picks one recipe from a new cookbook I got for Christmas.

Chicken Fajita Pasta was a hit in our house - and I can’t wait to have her try more!

Part of me wants to have her stop cooking (because what will I do when she goes to college?!?!), but she enjoys this so much and it is such a practical, useful skill for her to have. In an age of fast food and anything EASY I feel like our kids aren’t learning the basics of how to cook a healthy meal.


Culture

Music

Because I write a music appreciation curriculum I try to go to as many performances as I can. This year my husband and I subscribed to a series of concerts with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.

Saturday night we heard an all Bernstein program, which was quite fitting because in SQUILT LIVE! this month I am teaching the students all about musicals.

Something I didn’t quite realize was what a great JAZZ composer Bernstein was. Listening to his Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs got me VERY excited for February in SQUILT LIVE! - Jump into Jazz! (You can join me at any time for live lessons - we have so much fun!)

We also enjoyed dinner out together - Lebanese food (yum!) - before the symphony.

When you have big kids it’s easy to go out for date night. Bonus.

Date Night at the Symphony

Books

I started reading The Lake House by Kate Morton this week. I love everything she writes.

Being in a local in-person book club has been a lot of fun for me. Last week three of us from the book club met to talk about our book goals for the year. I know that I want to read more non fiction this year, and in particular I would like to focus on more religious and education non fiction. (Did you see the most recent post I wrote about C.S. Lewis?)

I put the question to our private Facebook group, Equipping Homegrown Learners, about starting a book club on the page - with the first book being Beauty in the Word by Stratford Caldecott.

Come join our FB group, by the way - I think we have great discussions and encouragement.

I also really enjoyed the latest episode of What Should I Read Next? - and seriously wish I had a little one so we could do a 1,000 books challenge like the mom in this podcast!

Latin

My 14-year-old is odd.

He loves Latin.

I think it is the challenge of solving a big puzzle as you parse a sentence that intrigues him the most. As he is working through Henle Latin in Challenge B this year I am starting to think about adding a second language in high school next year.

The National Latin Exam is taken in March of each year and I coordinate the testing for our Challenge community. This morning I spoke to their class about the test and what we will do to prepare, and then I stayed for the hour of Latin they had afterwards.

They were talking about the quality and quantity of adjectives and the endings that go with them. It was at this point in my daughter’s Latin studies that I remember jumping ship; I think I might try to make it a bit further this year.

What We’ve Been Up To Lately: Latin

I love the discipline and precision the study of Latin brings to our homeschool. I love watching a room full of eighth graders seriously discuss how to approach translating a sentence from English into Latin.

It isn’t hard to learn Latin - it just requires commitment and patience.

That’s what we have been up to.

I’d love to know what YOU have been up to in your homeschool lately.

Leave a comment below!