Meal Planning Monday #1

I've never taken part in this before but have long read the contributions of The Five Fs and GeekMummy with interest and a note to try it the next week. However, this week I'm doing it. There are a number of reasons for this:

  1. I have recently lost my imagination and my desire to cook, therefore beginning to eat a great big pile of stodge and take-aways as a matter of course. This is not healthy for my body, my wallet or my fridge. The food waste bin is happily consuming the good food that I'm buying and can't be bothered to cook. I think this stems from being shattered when I come in from work and not having the brain-power to concoct something. If I plan it then I have no excuse (and neither does my husband! Hint, hint).
  2. As previously mentioned, I'm wasting food and money. I don't like wasting food, it goes against what I was brought up to do, is wasteful of the Earth's resources and, at a time when Mr. TheBoyandMe and I are trying to save money, is incredibly wasteful. On Saturday, I threw away; half a brie, a bag of salad, three carrots, a cucumber, five vitality health drinks, a block of goat's cheese and some leftover baked beans. That's ridiculous!
  3. I need to lose weight, and rather than diet (which never works for me), I'd rather take control of the content of the food we eat and monitor the fats and sugars going in. I need to eat more fruit and vegetables, this will help.
  4. Final point, my mother's complaining that she doesn't know what to give The Boy for lunch (when I work) because she doesn't know what he's had the night before or is going to have. Now she has no excuse, especially as I've written it on the blackboard in the kitchen!

I know that this plan should probably start on a Monday, but for me the week starts on a Sunday so that's when mine does. Work days are italicised. For those who can't read my 'teacher's whiteboard handwriting', it says:

Wish me luck at sticking to it!

I'm linking this up to Meal Planning Monday over at At Home With Mrs. M.

Review: Sandart

The Boy loves craft activities more than anything else; cooking, making, sticking, colouring, etc. As long as it's creating something new from a collection of resources then he's happy, and so am I. It's therapeutic to create items from scratch, and it exercises their little fingers and developes hand-eye co-ordination and fine motor skills, all important for pre-writing skills. It's also fun!

However, I'm a mum who is beginning to run short of ideas that don't involve pompoms or flour, and when I was asked if I'd like to review a different type of craft activity with my son I was more than happy to give it a go.

Sand Art is a really rather clever, yet simple idea involving adhesive pictures and coloured sand. Each A4 picture is printed onto the top layer of the adhesive card and each section peels off allowing for that section only, and the 'glue' underneath, to be revealed for the sand to be poured on.

Sand Art is created by the marvellous Kids Bee Happy and is an easy and fun activity. We used the lid of a plastic box as a tray to catch any sand and reduce the mess factor, but in all fairness it's a relatively clean activity anyway. No icky-sticky glue needs squeezing out, the sand pours out from tiny holed bottles and everything is very controlled, even with an eager two year old boy. And because only one section is revealed at a time, the 'opportunity' to get the wrong colours in the wrong section is minimal.

In the home kits, there are two pictures, each with a colour guide and ten small tubes of sand. There is also a plastic wallet to seal it in afterwards and a plastic sticky hook so that your child can frame their artwork, without it dropping onto the carpet (I have a laminator so will be putting it through there instead). The sand is very fine and brightly coloured, sticks well to the adhesive card and gives a vibant finish to the picture. The guide pictures are good for children who might need some help with their creativity, but we like to use our imagination and so we abandoned that and used the ten colours in the pack to create our picture.

That there is all his own work! I prised the sections off because it's a little fiddly for him at his age, other than that he chose every colour himself. Which is why there are blue leaves and red coconuts on the tree, because he's two and he can!

It was only halfway through this picture that I twigged about saving the sand: once he'd finished with each colour in turn, I'd empty it into a funnel and pour it back into the pot. This way we have loads more sand for other pictures and craft. We were able to use some of those colours to 'enhance' the appearance of our second Sand Art picture:

He's really enjoyed doing these pictures, and this very morning we've moved onto the more complicated racing car picture which he's really enjoying. We were interrupted by Grandad gate-crashing our fun, but this is the best bit about these pictures, because you only reveal one or two sections at a time, the glue doesn't dry out and it means you can come back to them another time.

Kids Bee Happy also run Sand Art parties which are perfect for birthday parties, or even a wedding or anniversary party (any event where large groups of children need entertaining with a quiet and rewarding activity). With prices starting from £59 and a wide area covered by the franchises, it's a very realistic activity to run alongside a party. I am considering one for The Boy's 3rd birthday in June, and as they are suitable for 3-12 year olds, I'm sure he'd find it rewarding and enjoyable!

We were provided with two packs for the purpose of this review. Our opinions are honest and unbiased.

Sunday 11th March 2012 – 'Slide' (71/366)

As much as I love this shot for the carefree laugh on his face, I'm so cross with myself as this isn't the shot I was going to use. I stood there for half an hour taking shot after shot after shot, waiting to get the one dead-centre of the frame. I was just e-mailing it across from my phone and I accidentally pressed 'delete' not 'send'!

I actually wonder whether this is better because I like the promise of him sliding down all the way to the bottom of the frame. What do you think?

Update: hubby managed to retrieve the deleted image using specialist software, this is a far better shot anyway!

TheBoyandMe's 366 Linky

Going to the Oscars

Until I recently received two super movie packages for our enjoyment, I hadn't realised just how many great films had been made by Warner Brothers. Obviously they are a major player in the film industry and have been since the early days of the great studios, but when the movies are dominated by animated spectaculars, it is reassuring to know that there are still brilliant films being produced by these giants of the silver screen.

Last week after the film extravanganza of the year, I received a themed package from Warner Brothers celebrating some of their successes at the Oscars.

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Inside this glitzy box were four Warner Brothers classics from the past and present, none of which I've seen, all of which I've wanted to:

  • Gone With The Wind: this special five-disc collector's edition celebrates an amazing seventy years since Rhett told Scarlett that 'quite frankly my dear, I don't give a damn' after the most tumultuous period romance in cinematic history. This DVD pack contains the remastered film spread over two discs, a disc about the making and restoring of the legendary film, a disc about the cast and a bonus disc with various documentaries.
  • An American In Paris: A classic from Gene Kelly and directed by Vincente Minelli (Liza's father), this tells the story of an ex-GI's long-standing love affair with the French capital and a new one with a perfume-shop clerk. This is Gene Kelly at his best; swirling, romancing, prancing and singing his heart out. Little wonder it won six Academy Awards!
  • Doctor Zhivago: Omar Sheriff is swoonsome in this film telling the tale of 'Russia divided by war, and hearts torn by love.' With epic stories and even larger scenery, this winner of five Oscars is another must for all fans of classic cinematography.
  • The Blind Side: I wanted to watch this film when it was out in the cinema, but The Boy was just a tiddler and sleep was the only thing on my mind. Sandra Bullock finally won an Oscar for her portrayal of the mum who adopts a homeless teen, helping him to become an American football star. I love Sandra Bullock and she rarely does wrong ith her films, in this film she proved her pulling power as she became the only actress to date to have a film marketed with only her name above the title which then passed the $200 million mark in domestic gross. The only issue I have is that surely she's not old enough to start with the mum roles yet?

Mr. TheBoyandMe and I will be enjoying these over the next week or two, and I may even let him share the chocolate mini-Oscar lollipops.

I was sent this package for the purpose of this post. My opinion is honest and unbiased.

366 #10 (with @Bonusprint)

Welcome to week 10 of 2012's #Project366. We have passed day 70 and day 100 suddenly seems achievable!

Anyone taking part is welcome to join the Project 366 Facebook group. The fabulous community building up there offer support to those taking part in this photography project, and give much blog love. We've made it a closed group so that not every Tom, Dick or Harry can see the content but if you'd like to join just click the 'ask to join group' button in the top right hand corner of the page.

  1. Choose your favourite photo from the past week and link it up below.
  2. Please add the badge to your linked-up post so that other people know how to find all the other fabulous entries.
  3. If you can spare five minutes to comment on just a few other entries I know they'd appreciate it!

Today, I've got the second round of the fabulous competition from Bonusprint. The very lovely folk over at Bonusprint are going to be choosing three of the blogs linking up today (and registering in the competition) to win a personalised iPhone4 cover (voucher for £20 if you don't own one) based on the favourite photos that you link up.

In order to be considered for the competition, either fill in the Rafflecopter form below the linky, or if it's playing silly beggars (it doesn't like Google Chrome), please do the following three things:

  • like Bonusprint's Facebook page
  • tweet the link to this post
  • comment below the linky to tell me you've done these.

Please note that Bonusprint will be choosing the winners & will contact you through the e-mails collated and given to them. They may contact you about future Bonusprint offers.

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Review: YooMoo Frozen Yoghurt

I remember trying frozen yoghurt for the first time about ten years ago. I was completely and utterly unimpressed with it, thinking it sour and bitter, not at all like my beloved ice-cream at all. When I was recently asked if I'd like to review YooMoo I was unsure, remembering the experiences of the past, but decided to give it a go hoping that it would have become more palatable during the past decade.

YooMoo really surprised me, and in an altogether pleasant way!

There are set menu YooMoos that you can order (like the angelmoo or the devilmoo), or you can personalise your own, choosing the yoghurt flavours with a variety of toppings. The menu provides four basic flavours of the fozen yoghurt: natural, strawberry, Belgian chocolate or Madagascan vanilla. There are two other flavours or yootwists: natural and strawberry, or Belgian chocolate and Madagascan vanilla.

And then there's the toppings. Wow! There's a huge array of naughty and nice toppings, including: fudge chunks, chocolate chips, oreo cookies, chocolate-coated raisins; or good and healthy embellishments: banana, granola, blueberries, raspberries, mixed seeds, strawberries, pineapple, etc. I asked the supervisor about their fruit and was told that they had it delivered fresh each day and that they prepared it themselves, nice to know not all food products are sent processed from a warehouse.

We each had a regular YooMoo with two toppings and we chose the following:

Mr. TheBoyandMe had Madagascan vanilla with pineapple and chocolate-coated raisins, The Boy had BerryTwistMoo (the Moo of the month) which had strawberry and natural yoghurt with strawberries and white chocolate drops, and I had Madagascan vanilla with fudge chunks and Oreo cookies.

The Boy was convinced it was ice-cream and I wasn't going to tell him any different because for all intents and purposes it tasted so similar. Smooth and creamy, the addition of the vanilla flavouring really helps to nullify the sourness that I have always associated with frozen yoghurt. The portions were huge, and the next time we have one (because there will be a next time), we will go for a small portion with probably just one topping because the toppings are very generous, the presentation of which is almost artistic they are so neatly arranged!

Or they were before The Boy started devouring them!

The YooMoo frozen yoghurts are virtually fat free, 0.2g typically, and obviously the toppings that you choose determine whether they are healthy or not. Clearly fudge and Oreo cookies is not the healthiest of toppings, but I hope you understand it was purely for market research purposes.

The YooMoos that we had would have cost £4.10 each (regular with two toppings) with prices ranging from £2.30 for a small one with no toppings, to £5.30 with three toppings. Now I'm not a defeatist, especially when it comes to food (particularly fudge!) but I couldn't manage it all. We will have them again but we'll have a small with one topping in future. And better still, they've started stocking them in supermarkets which means I can buy them in the monthly shop as a far healthier alternative to ice-cream.

I was provided with three vouchers in order to review this product. My opinions are honest and unbiased.