Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Boxing Day and Beyond
Saturday, December 25, 2021
Very Merry
We scoured the expansive grounds of Swanson's, looking for the little red sled the kids have had their photo taken in since they were preschoolers. Alas, it was not on site this year. We had to settle for a white bench and a snowman backdrop.
SKY HIGH: We also made a trip to the Space Needle this holiday season. There, you'll find the best Santa in the galaxy, Space Needle Santa.
On the way to the top, we passed the various displays marking notable moments in Space Needle history. In the photo below, Elvis and a date dine at the Needle's rotating restaurant.
We spent an hour or so on the Observation Deck. The weather was pretty awful - not a great day for spectacular shots the Space Needle often affords.
Eventually, we made our way down to the Loupe level, where Santa and the world's first (and only?) glass floor were located.
Here's a photo of Space Needle Santa with a kind of lonely looking, gray Puget Sound in the background.
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
Do You Want to Build a Snowman?
CJ, Annabelle and I used to go make cookies with Rick's students when he was a teacher there. Now, we go and do the same in the classroom of one of his former co-workers.
There is a whole lot of work that comes before the whole lot of fun. We made 25 melting snowman cookie kits. First, we had to make a bunch of sugar cookie dough hand cut each snowman base, and baked those. We also made 25 little round Rice Krispies treats for their heads. We assembled boxes with items they could use for decorations. Those included multiple kinds of chocolate chips, mini M&Ms, different colored nonpareils, gummy bears, little orange carrot noses made from gum paste, Teddy Grahams, sour candies that could be used for scarves or ??? and more.
As usual, we started with a little PowerPoint presentation about how we like to play with our food, and how that has led to entering cake contests and being volunteer cake makers for Birthday Dreams. We gave some safety instructions, and then it was off to the races.
The kids were so enthusiastic, and they really did a great job making their own melting snowmen. They were so proud of their final products.
We didn't get to do the cookie session last year because schools were closed, so it was especially fun to be back this year.
We had so much fun, I asked the teacher if we could come back this spring and do an edible art session with healthy foods with the class. She responded with an enthusiastic, "Yes!"
SO CLOSE: I have lot track of how many times this launch has been postponed, but the latest news is that the James Webb Space Telescope will launch on Christmas Day.
Unfortunately, the timing of lift off, 4:20 a.m., is a wee bit early for West Coasters in the U.S. to watch the launch from Guiana Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana.
However, if you're up and at 'em, you can watch on NASA Live.
Monday, December 13, 2021
Early December Doings
MOVIE TIMES: One of CJ's classes this quarter is about the history of labor unions in the United States. It has been such an interesting class and has really served to remind us all about just how important unions are.
We've watched some movies for his class, including "The Killing Floor," "Norma Rae," and a more recent film, "American Factory."
Rather than me describing it, here's a trailer that can give you the gist of it.
The documentary was an eye opener, for sure. And it was profoundly depressing, in my opinion.
Speaking of depressing things, for CJ's class about Korean history, we watched a documentary that was filmed in North Korea by a Russian director, Vitaly Mansky. "Under the Sun" documents life in Pyongyang, North Korea, primarily via following a young girl and her parents for one year as she prepares to join the Korean Children's Union on the 'Day Of The Shining Star' (Kim Jong-Il's birthday).
Here's the trailer for it. ...
I can't say that it's a feel good film, but it does offer a rare glimpse of life in "The Hermit Kingdom." Watching the film I kept saying aloud, "Those poor people ... and it's all because they happened to be born in North Korea." It's just very sad.
GINGERBREAD: Tis the season of gingerbread baking, at least in our house. A friend of mine posted to Facebook about a week ago asking if anyone was going to a Disney park. She was hoping someone could pick up some Mickey Mouse gingerbread men for her. I told her I wasn't going anywhere near Disney, but that I knew a local baker (that's me) who could replicate one.
So, I studied the photo she posted, and drew an outline of the cookie on paper. I traced around that with various cutting devices into the dough. The Mickeys were carefully baked and then iced. I was pretty happy with how they turned out. :)
Annabelle had her own gingerbread project - a bunch of cookies too take to work with her on Saturday.She made gingerbread people with STAFF shirts on, and some with a WC logo on the front, which stands for White Center, which is the neighborhood the King County Parks office she works at is located.
Wednesday, December 1, 2021
November's End
ASIAN PERSUASION: Last Saturday night was our monthly Teen Feed gig. For this month's menu, we asked the team to contribute Asian-inspired food and drink items.
We had four different choices for diners' main entrée: There was yummy sesame beef from Kennedy, my friend Thy brought some terrific teriyaki chicken, a mother-son team cooked up tangy Thai sweet chili tofu, and the Birds sponsored spicy BBQ Korean pork, which CJ, Annabelle and I prepped. The filling stir fry came with a mound of aromatic rice. I think I made about 100 cups of cooked basmati. There were also tons of super colorful, nutritious veggies thanks to other sponsors.
Spring rolls were cooked up as side offerings. Each diner also received a brown lunch sack packed by CJ and Annabelle.
WAITING ON WEBB: It seems like it has been decades since NASA announced its plans to build the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). It feels that way because it has been decades. JWST originated in 1996, initially called the Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST). According to Wikipedia, the telescope was renamed in 2002, after NASA's second administrator James E. Webb (1906–1992). JWST is a collaborative project between NASA, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency.
The "origami" telescope, with its unfolding arrays, is finally set to launch on December 22 from Arianespace's ELA-3 launch complex at European Spaceport located near Kourou, French Guiana. During its 1,000,000 or so mile journey, Webb will 'unfold' through a number of deployments to reach its operational configuration.
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/james-webb-space-telescope-registration-167215593341?aff=invite
More info about JWST is available on NASA's site: https://jwst.nasa.gov/content/webbLaunch/index.html
ROCK ON: An email from a homeschool group recently contained, of all things, a link to a rock stacking game. It is alternately relaxing and totally vexing.
Wednesday, November 17, 2021
Furry Friends
Friday, November 12, 2021
Fun with Food
We've also been planning this month's Teen Feed. We'll be serving on the fourth Saturday of the month, which puts us a couple of days after Thanksgiving. Rest assured, our menu will be 100 percent turkey free. :) I know the teens will be "turkeyed out," for lack of a better term, by Saturday.