Saturday, January 21, 2012

Egg Free Birthday Party Link Up

My little gal turned 7 this week and to celebrate we held a small party with her favourite friends.  One of her friends has an egg allergy, so this called for me to be a bit more thoughtful with the party food.

I loved that I was able to still do a couple of our favourite party staples:

Honey Joys and Fairy Bread:


Finding the right egg free cake recipe was a bit more difficult.  I had read that some egg substitutes still contain egg whites and to be on the look out for ingredients with "ov" at the beginning (as in ovum).  I chose this recipe from Eggless Cooking for it's simple ingredients and good reviews as a crumble free cake, good for cutting up.

The birthday girl asked for a butterfly cake with a rainbow.
I found the cake tasty and pretty easy to cut up.  The cooking time for mine was way over their instructed time.  I think this was due to using 100ml extra of condensed milk and using a square pan instead of a rectangle.  So mine was a little "crisp" on the outside!



These mountain bread pinwheels (minus the ranch dressing and cheese; I added yoghurt and garlic powder) are a great idea, easy to eat and so delicious.

I also made a fruit platter, a bowl of lollies and corn chips for a great selection of goodies for everyone.


Add a craft table;


 A little bit of swimming


 Pass the parcel; and we had a very successful party!


 So there you have it, some ideas for you for your next egg free party! (And mine if I have to do it all again next year).  Do you have more egg free party recipe ideas?  Link them up below for a great "Egg Free" directory!

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Thrifty Fifty: Tip #25 De-stash Your Home

This is part of The Thrifty Fifty series.  Each week I will give a tip on saving money, re-using, re-purposing, frugality, energy efficiency or just plain smart living.  If you have a thrifty tip to offer and would like me to feature it here, please drop me an email.  I'd love to hear from you. 

I know I am not alone in feeling like it's time to de-stash around here.  After Christmas the clutter and extra "things" in my home start to bug me.  Each day they nag at me to sort them out, and while I'm busy trying to have fun and ignore them, they only get worse.
So if I'm going to be able to enjoy the rest of the school holidays, the day has come to do the annual Christmas de-stash, then we can move on, more simplified into the coming year.  So here is my plan:
  • The first step is to work out what toys the children no longer want/play with.  These can be put in a bag to give to charity.  Because I have children varying from ages 2 to 8 years, there will be some toys that are deemed too "young" by the older ones, these can be put away to be re-gifted to the younger ones at a later date.
  • Now to find a home for all the new items.  The best way to do this is to have toys worked into categories and have a place for each category.  Our categories include "cars", "puzzles", "board games", "art/craft", "blocks", "dolls" etc.  We have boxes for each one or specific draws or cupboard space.
Let's see how long it stays this neat
  • If there is not enough room for all the toy boxes to be out at once, store some away for a rainy day (or a really hot day).  My kids love it when I bring out a box of toys they haven't seen for a few months, and will play with them with renewed vigour!  For more tips on organising toys, make sure you pop over and check out Kelly's post over at Be A Fun Mum.
  • Kids toys are not the only items that need sorting.  My kitchen also needs a good going over at this time of year.  It's good to look at what is in the most convenient cupboards and see whether you have used those items in the last 12 months.  If something is in there, unused, taking up vital space, move it to a higher cupboard or even consider getting rid of it altogether (one for the charity box).
  • Christmas decorations can come down, sort through the broken/old ones as you are packing away for next year.  Christmas cards can be put away too.  I store mine in one of those zip up manchester bags and we use them to make Christmas crafts the following year.
  • Now is a good time to sort through the kids clothes wardrobes also.  Hand down the smaller clothes to the younger ones and make a list of what new items are needed.  This helps with overspending as you know exactly what is needed and wont buy too much, it's never good to have too many clothes as this just leads to more washing.  True story.
  • If your children wear uniforms to school, now is a good time to sort these out too, do any running repairs and labelling and make a list of any new items needed.  When I say "new", this can mean second hand of course, just new to you.
 I think that ought to do it, I'm going to leave the paperwork and filing for another day (I've said that before!) and now I'm going to enjoy the rest of the school holidays, guilt free.  Well as guilt free as a mother can!

Back to school holiday fun!

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

This Christmas

Wishing you a Merry Christmas from all of us here at Home Grown.

This Christmas we frolicked in the sprinkler on the warm days


Shared meals at this table and watched storms roll in


Lined up the stockings in preparation for Santa


Admired our very patient children


We've had such a wonderful Christmas surrounded by family, I hope you have too.  Best wishes to you xx

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