5 Autumn-Inspired Breakfasts Your Kids Will Love

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

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Warm up with your family on a chilly morning while enjoying the best of the season’s produce with these festive fall breakfasts.

  • Creamy pumpkin pie oats. Prepare plain oats however you normally do, then transfer to a blender or food processor. Add 1/2 cup canned pumpkin for each serving of oats, a few dashes of cinnamon, plus a pinch each of ginger and cloves—then whizz away (blending the oats makes the dish super creamy, sort of like a pudding!). Serve with chopped walnuts and a drizzle of maple syrup.
  • Open-faced apple-almond butter sandwich. My favorite on-the-go breakfast. Toast two slices of your kid’s favorite bread (I love Ezekial sprouted grain bread, but anything except white, please!) Slather each piece of bread with almond butter, then top with crunchy apple slices and sprinkle with cinnamon.
  • Kabocha squash pudding. Roast or steam slices of peeled kabocha or butternut squash (perhaps the night before to save time!). Transfer to a food processor, then blend, adding enough milk (dairy or non-dairy, both work) to make a smooth mixture. Add some ground ginger for warmth, then sweeten to taste with a little agave nectar or maple syrup.
  • Pumpkin smoothie. In a blender, combine 1/4 cup canned pumpkin with 1/2 cup plain or vanilla yogurt, maple syrup to taste, plus a pinch each of cinnamon and nutmeg. Blend to combine and serve.
  • Baked apples. These are best straight out of the oven, so save them for the weekend! Slice off the tops of 4 baking apples (like Granny Smith), then scoop out the centers. Stuff apples with a mixture of chopped walnuts or pecans, raisins, brown sugar, cinnamon, plus a tiny bit of butter and lemon zest for good measure, then bake at 400 degrees for about 30 minutes. To keep the fruit moist, you can baste them with a little bit of apple juice throughout the baking process.

-Marygrace, KIWI Staffer

Edamommy’s Blog: Guardin’ the Garden

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

shutterstock_11598070.jpgI have to admit something. In addition to having a theme song for
every new adventure, I tend to decide on a project, embark on it
zealously and then move on.

I was writing an article on school gardens for Kiwi Magazine (Sept
issue) and decided the best way to get motivated was to finally find a
spot in my yard and create a vegetable garden. I had in mind that I
wanted to spearhead an effort to create a garden at my daughter’s
preschool and decided this was my audition to see if I could really
make it happen.

I had created a compost pile which was being turned into fertilizer
gold by thousands of hard-working worms. Unfortunately, that was on
the opposite side of the property from the perfect garden spot.

I read about lasagna gardening and decided that was the best route for
my garden since the soil was not rich and was also very rocky. I
carefully tapped a series of posts to mark my territory but ended up
making the garden way too big for my first attempt. It’s currently 8′
x 20′. I carefully laid newspapers on the ground and covered them
with about 5 inches of fresh compost which took me at least 10 trips
from the compost pile. Sweating profusely, I filled every inch of my
too-big garden with worm-filled compost.

I decided to plant tomato plants instead of starting with seeds
because I wanted immediate gratification. But, I did plant seeds for
cucumber, beans, watermelon and pumpkin and they’re all doing quite
well. This summer seems to be the perfect conditions for a vegetable
garden and the site I chose seems to be working out well.

I am only telling all of you this because I often just wing it. Iworm.jpg
started throwing table scraps into a pile of leaves in a place where
my dogs couldn’t access and *poof* I have a very productive compost
pile. I toss in shredded newspaper and hay, turn it every so often,
but largely ignore it. The worms do all of the work.

I also largely ignore my garden. I just make sure it’s not too dry
and that the tomato plants are tied to stakes and leave it alone. I
don’t weed, trim, groom or talk to it. And it is growing like mad.

Some plants are faring better than others, but the lesson I learned is
to just give it a go and you’ll be so surprised. And, if it doesn’t
work the first time, step back, rethink it and try again.

The best part of all of this experimentation is that my daughter wants
to be outside most of the day to corral worms, water the garden and
check on her plants. I get great exercise from digging the compost
and then taking it for a ride in the wheel barrow. And, we all can’t
wait to taste the fresh vegetables that we grew without pesticides or
products.