Over the Top Part II

A follow-up on Over the Top (Part I)… We celebrated Boy’s birthday last week. Boy requested a video game arcade/laser tag party at a place that does everything necessary for the party (except the cake – something I could NEVER delegate). Since we put so much effort into Girl’s party, with trivia quizzes and cooking … Continue reading “Over the Top Part II”

A follow-up on Over the Top (Part I)…

We celebrated Boy’s birthday last week. Boy requested a video game arcade/laser tag party at a place that does everything necessary for the party (except the cake – something I could NEVER delegate). Since we put so much effort into Girl’s party, with trivia quizzes and cooking and such, I was looking for a way to personalize Boy’s party, something to make him feel like we put as much effort into his party as we did for his sister’s, something to give his party that little something “over the top” that we’ve already established I enjoy.

Well, suffice it to say, I found a solution….
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After riding 13 miles in a Humvee limo (from school to the party) with 16 over-excited boys, I was very appreciative that the party destination had a bar.

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Boy’s cake was lemon with raspberry-flavored buttercream frosting, decorated with multi-colored fondant stars. Hubby tinted the different colors of fondant and cut out the little stars for me. I think that his fingers have finally lost their orange hue.

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Later that evening, at Boy’s favorite restaurant:
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Hubby’s birthday is next week and he’s making it very easy on me. To celebrate, he wants to go here to see this. Hubby has a HUGE crush on Milla Jovovich.

Yet ANOTHER reason why I’d like to move to a high-rise condo downtown…

THIS baby rattlesnake was in our garage last night. But, Hubby took care of it with his heroic “attacking the Hydra stance”. BLECH! OK, yeah… it was tiny, but we’ve heard that the smaller ones have stronger venom. That may be an old wives’ tale, but it sure creeped us out. (Be sure to notice … Continue reading “Yet ANOTHER reason why I’d like to move to a high-rise condo downtown…”

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THIS baby rattlesnake was in our garage last night.

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But, Hubby took care of it with his heroic “attacking the Hydra stance”. BLECH!
OK, yeah… it was tiny, but we’ve heard that the smaller ones have stronger venom. That may be an old wives’ tale, but it sure creeped us out.
(Be sure to notice the industrial-sized bucket of tile mastic from our half-failed attempt at tiling our own bathroom).

Rangpur gin review

I tried a martini made with Tanqueray Rangpur gin this week. It was really yummy, but a bit too citrus-y for a martini, in my opinion. I think, however, that it’s lime essences would be OUTSTANDING in a gin and tonic. It had a very limited distribution and isn’t even showing up on Tanqueray’s website … Continue reading “Rangpur gin review”

I tried a martini made with Tanqueray Rangpur gin this week. It was really yummy, but a bit too citrus-y for a martini, in my opinion. I think, however, that it’s lime essences would be OUTSTANDING in a gin and tonic. It had a very limited distribution and isn’t even showing up on Tanqueray’s website anymore (I think it’s meant to be seasonal/summery), but they still had plenty of it at my local liquor store. Give it a try!

I have apparently done something to please the TV programming gods…..

What I’ll be doing tonight: First, some of this: and then, some of this. I’m sure that I will also be doing some of this: (2 oz. of gin, a tiny splash of vermouth and 2 bleu cheese-stuffed olives, in a frosted glass) PS – Has anyone tried “Rangpur” gin yet? If so, let me … Continue reading “I have apparently done something to please the TV programming gods…..”

What I’ll be doing tonight:

First, some of this:

and then, some of this.

I’m sure that I will also be doing some of this:

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(2 oz. of gin, a tiny splash of vermouth and 2 bleu cheese-stuffed olives, in a frosted glass)

PS – Has anyone tried “Rangpur” gin yet?
If so, let me know.

A visit with my grandparents and Good-Night waffles

You can see more info about these photos on my flickr site: http://www.flickr.com/photos/8624504@N02/sets/72157601900166186/detail/ Recipe for my grandfather’s “Good-Night” waffles: (from the book that came with his fancy-dancy Waring Pro Belgian wafflemaker, which he LOVES) for six waffles: 1/2 cup lukewarm water 105°F 1 Tablespoon granulated sugar 2-1/4 tsp. active dry yeast (one packet) 2 cups … Continue reading “A visit with my grandparents and Good-Night waffles”

You can see more info about these photos on my flickr site:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/8624504@N02/sets/72157601900166186/detail/

Recipe for my grandfather’s “Good-Night” waffles:
(from the book that came with his fancy-dancy Waring Pro Belgian wafflemaker, which he LOVES)

for six waffles:
1/2 cup lukewarm water 105°F
1 Tablespoon granulated sugar
2-1/4 tsp. active dry yeast (one packet)
2 cups whole milk, warmed to 105°F
1/2 cup unsalted butter, melted and cooled
1 tsp. salt
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 large eggs, beaten lightly
2 tsp. vanilla extract
1/4 tsp. baking soda

The Night Before or at least 8 hours before baking, combine the warm water, sugar and yeast. Let stand 10 minutes, until foamy. Stir in warm milk, melted butter and salt. Beat in flour until smooth; use a hand mixer on low speed. Cover bowl tightly with plastic wrap and let sit on the counter overnight. DO NOT REFRIGERATE.

In the am, mix in eggs, vanilla, and a pinch of baking soda while the waffle maker preheats.

In the morning, preheat your Waring Pro Belgian Waffle Maker on setting #4. While it is heating, stir eggs, vanilla and baking soda into the batter. Pour onto waffle grids. Close cover, rotate 180° to right; bake until it beeps, rotate 180° to the left. Remove when indicated, repeat with remaining batter. Waffles may be kept warm in a slow oven 200°F on a rack on a cookie sheet. Serve with fresh fruit, jam, powdered sugar, a warm fruit syrup or whipped cream.

Dear Ketel One Drinker

Has anybody else seen the magazine ad (in The Economist and Bon Appetit, and probably others, as well) for Ketel One vodka that says: Dear Ketel One Drinker Can you make one hundred words, of four letters or more, from the letters in Ketel One Vodka? Cool ad, since I’m enough of a geek to … Continue reading “Dear Ketel One Drinker”

Has anybody else seen the magazine ad (in The Economist and Bon Appetit, and probably others, as well) for Ketel One vodka that says:
Dear Ketel One Drinker
Can you make one hundred words,
of four letters or more,
from the letters in Ketel One Vodka?

Cool ad, since I’m enough of a geek to actually try it, although anyone language-geeky enough to actually do the puzzle is language-geeky enough to be seriously skeeved out by the lack of appropriate punctuation in the ad.

Anyway, here’s what I came up with (I was DETERMINED to finish it, once I started):
kook
look
vote
lode
lone
loon
done
tone
took
keel
need
keen
node
lake
leek
dent
vent
navel
leaven
leave
delve
load
toad
talk
told
atone
knead
dean
dole
dote
deal
kale
tale
tole
note
knot
eked
leak
teak
neat
take
klan
knave
vane
oven
eaten
kneel
knelt
dealt
dove
vole
loan
even
event
lent
eleven
teen
dolt
love
loved
late
date
talon
taken
tonal
oval
noted
leaked
loaned
leant
lean
leaned
looked
voted
toned
atoned
vented
leavened
talked
teal
veal
veto
vetoed
lead
dale
veldt (was REALLY proud of myself when I came up with than one!)
denote
vale
devote
vented
venal
aeon
devotee
valent (really proud of this one, too – had to look it up to make sure that it really was a word)
evade
delta
delete
dental
aloe
alone

I must confess that Hubby actually gave me “delete”. Hubby is even more of a geek than I am: after watching me work on the puzzle for a couple of days, he decided to write a program (linking to a small dictionary database) than would create words. Version 1.0 came up with a total of 119 words, but then he linked it to a more comprehensive dictionary (Version 2.0) and was able to come up with 300+ words.

Some other good ones that his program came up with:
vend
vendee
valet
tool
taken
tend
onto
tank
loot
donate
advent
alto
ankle
anklet
anode
ante
dank
naked
land
needle
noel
noodle
need
nook
nova
novel
laden
knee
evoke
elevate
elate
lane
lank
late
olden
oleo
leaden
have
volt

After seeing “anode”, I remembered “anole” (cute little green lizards), too. They have them in East Texas (where my grandparents, as well as Hubby’s, live), but we just saw some at the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago, so they were fresh in my mind. I wish there were some “prize” for this puzzle; it seems like I should AT LEAST get a bottle of the stuff. It’s been a while since I had a nice cocktail.

Over the Top

I just talked to a friend whose daughter was one of the guests at Girl’s birthday party last week and she said “I think you really went over the top with that party.” Guilty as charged (although, truthfully, this one of our more “low-key” parties). I LIKE “over the top” – that’s where I LIVE. … Continue reading “Over the Top”

I just talked to a friend whose daughter was one of the guests at Girl’s birthday party last week and she said “I think you really went over the top with that party.” Guilty as charged (although, truthfully, this one of our more “low-key” parties). I LIKE “over the top” – that’s where I LIVE.

For Boy’s 2nd birthday, I made a donation to the volunteer fire department so that they would stop by during his “firetruck” themed party.

For Girl’s 3rd birthday, we had just moved to Virginia from Texas and didn’t know anyone there yet, so we went back to Texas for a visiIt and had the party with her friends (and our families) there. We no longer had a home (a.k.a. “party venue”) in Texas, so we rented out the Austin Children’s Museum for a couple of hours. That was a BIG hit. Girl wanted a “Lion King” themed party, but Lion King 2 had just come out. I scoured party stores all over town to find the Simba/Nala (Lion King) plates/napkins/cups/decoration and NOT the Kiala/Kovu (Lion King 2) ones.

For Girl’s 8th, we had a “Nancy Drew” themed party with a custom-created “mystery/scavenger hunt” for guests to solve. I even bought a tiny little trenchcoat, fedora and magnifying glass and dressed each girl up for a souvenir photo.

Ditto for Boy’s 7th: a pirate theme, with dress-up souvenir photos (complete with shoulder-riding parrot). Hubby has artistic tendencies and hand-drew a beautiful treasure map on parchment to lead the kids to the goody bags. Look at the invites in the photo below: hand-drawn treasure map invites, rolled and tied with raffia, stuffed into empty water bottles (labels removed) with a little sprinkle of sand and mini seashells, topped with a cork. The kids had to remove the maps from the bottle to be able to read the invitation (hand-delivered, of course).

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For Girl’s 9th, we had an “American Girl” party with one craft from each of the 8 (at that time) American Girls, including churning butter, making thumbprint cookies, fabric dolls, and so on. There were about 20 girls, so I had an elaborate rotation schedule, with adult “helpers” at each station, to ensure that each girl got an opportunity to make each craft.

For her 6th, we had a “bug” party and released live butterflies and ladybugs (that we had been incubating at home for weeks) in the backyard.

For Boy’s 8th, we had a Harry Potter party. We sorted the kids (with a Sorting Hat!) as they entered and set up a Quidditch game (hula hoops mounted on tall PVC pipes) in the backyard.

For his 7th, we had a “Ninja Turtle” party and I decorated the entire 1st floor of our house to look like a sewer and made “slime” (or is it “ooze” – I can’t remember – whatever the stuff was that turned them into mutants in the first place) and let 18 boys build their own pizzas in the kitchen. I think I drank a whole bottle of wine myself after THAT party.

For his 5th (or maybe 4th?), his gift was a ride-on, multi-car train. We built the party around it, giving each kid a ticket to ride at an assigned time. There were kids assigned to be safety monitors, with orange vests. Each kid went home with a small “Thomas the Tank Engine” car, a small train whistle and a little striped conductor’s cap. One dad left us a message the next morning, thanking us (sarcastically) for the train whistle and blowing it into our machine for 5 minutes, explaining that was all that he had been hearing since his son brought the whistle home.

When we left Virginia and moved back to Texas, we had an “I’m so Blue” party for Girl and her friends – get it? “I’m so Blue” that we’re moving? We had blue EVERYTHING: Kool-Aid, blue-iced cupcakes, a nail-painting station with 10 different colors (all blue), blue crafts, blue decorations, blue T-shirts….the works.

Boy had a going-away swimming party at our neighborhood pool. We organized all kinds of water games, including water balloons and water musical chairs (Buy wide, shallow buckets just the right size for kids’ backsides to fit in and fill them with water. Start the music. When the music stops, each kid has to “sit” in a water-filled bucket. Proceed just like musical chairs. When this party is over, you will be unable to get rid of the buckets – “We might have a pool party again someday.” You won’t ever have another pool party, but when you decide to re-tile your master bathroom YOURSELF, the buckets will come in very handy for mixing grout.)

We don’t just do kid’s parties, either. I had a Sopranos season premiere party once, too: Carmela’s Baked Ziti, Janice’s Biscuits Regina (sesame marzipan cookies), Arnie’s Arancini rice balls, Tiramisu, Cannoli, lots of really good Barolo.

I come by all of this honestly. My parents have a joint birthday party every year for my dad and his best friend. They do all of the cooking and bartending themselves. They used to require the guests to come prepared with skits (until the guests revolted). Once they bought food-grade clay for a dinner party and baked fish in it (kinda like this). You prepare the fish with seasoning, wrap it (grape leaves? banana leaves? I can’t remember) and then fold the clay around it and sculpt it into a fish shape (complete with little scale-looking indentations, eyes…the whole bag of tricks) and then you bake it. When the fish is ready, you pull the (now-baked hard) clay fish out of the oven and break it to eat your fish. So, you see, this is in my BLOOD. My nickname amongst my nearest-and-dearest girlfriends in Virginia? Shouldn’t be too hard to figure out….although I’ve never been to prison and I don’t wear shawls.

So, I hope that I’ve now cemented my reputation as a permanent dweller of “Over-the-Top-ville”. I hope that you’ll come visit me sometime. We’ll have a great time…..that’s an order.

Our trip to Europe

Check out our vacation photos: Or you can check them out on my flickr account – here’s the link: http://www.flickr.com/photos/8624504@N02/sets/72157601101400859/detail/

Check out our vacation photos:

Or you can check them out on my flickr account – here’s the link:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/8624504@N02/sets/72157601101400859/detail/

Why it’s probably NOT a great idea to give 9-year olds their own email account…..

HELLO I AM ______ (Boy). WHAT IS YOUR NAME? SO I CAN GET TO KNOW YOU PLEASE ANWSER THESE QUESTIONS DO YOU HAVE ANY KIDS? DO YOU HAVE ANY PETS HOW OLD ARE YOU? WHAT IS YOUR NAME? DO YOU HAVE A SON WHO SENDS YOU ANNOYING E MAILS PRETENDING HE DOESN’T KNOW YOU? FROM … Continue reading “Why it’s probably NOT a great idea to give 9-year olds their own email account…..”

HELLO I AM ______ (Boy).
WHAT IS YOUR NAME?
SO I CAN GET TO KNOW YOU PLEASE ANWSER THESE QUESTIONS

DO YOU HAVE ANY KIDS?
DO YOU HAVE ANY PETS
HOW OLD ARE YOU?
WHAT IS YOUR NAME?

DO YOU HAVE A SON WHO SENDS YOU ANNOYING E MAILS PRETENDING HE DOESN’T KNOW YOU?

FROM THE BOY WHO IS CALLED

______ ______
(Boy)

P.S. I HAVE A MOM!

For those of you that might want to email Boy, his email address is: Boys’ First Name (nickname version) @ Our Family’s Domain Name.com (same domain name as MY email address).