Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Potato recipes

Potato Candy

Stir together in a bowl...
1/2 cup mashed potatoes
1 Tbsp margarine
1 tsp vanilla

Then add...
3 cups icing sugar
2 1/2 cups medium unsweetened coconut
Mix well.

Press into a 9 x 13 inch pan.
Melt 1 cup chocolate chips and 2 Tbsp margarine.
Spread over potato mixture.
Cool and cut into squares.

Potato Pancakes

1 cup mashed potato
1 egg, fork beaten
2 tsp sugar
1 cup milk
1 Tbsp margarine, melted
1 cup flour
1 Tbsp baking powder

Stir together potato and egg in a bowl.
Add sugar, milk and margarine. Mix.
Stir in flour and baking powder.
Slowly add milk to make spoonable but barely pourable.
Grease and heat frying pan.
Drop batter by teaspoonfuls into pan.
Brown both sides.
Makes 34 small pancakes.

Spuds celebration


Let the celebration begin.
We got together with the grade 3 class to taste test a few recipes.
It was a big hit.
We read them our story about the Enormous Potato.

potato pancakes, cheesy hashbrowns,



potato wedges, and potato candy.








Saturday, June 12, 2010

More on Spuds




Yesterday we harvested our potatoes and here are a few more photos of our yield.


A few of the potatoes came out attached to the roots but the others we had to dig for.


We finally dumped the tub and rooted around in the soil for the final potatoes.







Friday, June 11, 2010

Spuds in Tubs Harvest

Time to harvest our potatoes.

It was a beautiful sunny day so decided to have story time outside.
I told the story about the Enormous Potato (based on the old folktale of the Great Big Enormous Turnip). Then we acted out the story with our potato plants.
This is how it went...

There once was a class that planted some potatoes in a tub. They waited and watched as the potatoes grew big and bigger till they were ready to pull up.






The teacher took hold of the potato and
she pulled and pulled and pulled some
more but the potato wouldn't come up.





So she called for a little girl to come and help.
The little girl held on to the teacher and the
teacher held on to the potato and they pulled
and pulled and pulled some more but the
potato wouldn't come up.



So the little girl called for her grandma to come
and help. The grandma held on to the little girl,
the little girl held on to the teacher and the
teacher held on to the potato and they
pulled and pulled and pulled some more but
the potato wouldn't come up.


So the grandma called for a little boy to come
and help. The little boy held on to the grandma,
the grandma held on to the little girl, the little
girl held on to the teacher and the teacher held
on to the potato and they pulled and pulled
and pulled some more but the potato wouldn't
come up.

So the little boy called for his Baba to come and help. Baba held on to the little boy, the little boy held on to the grandma, the grandma held on to the little girl, the little girl held on to the teacher, the teacher held on to the potato and they pulled and they pulled and they pulled some more but the potato wouldn't come up.


So Baba called another little boy to come and help. That little boy held on to Baba, Baba held on to her little boy, her little boy held on to the grandma, the grandma held on to the little girl, the little girl held on to the teacher, the teacher held on to the potato and they pulled and pulled and pulled some more but the potato wouldn't come up.

So the little boy called for his mom to come and help. The mom held on to the little boy, the little boy held on to Baba, Baba held on to her little boy, her little boy held on to grandma, grandma held on to the little girl, the little girl held on to the teacher, the teacher held on to the potato and they pulled and pulled and pulled some more but the potato wouldn't come up.


So the mom called for a another little girl to help. That little girl held on to the mom, the mom held on to her little boy, the little boy held on to Baba, Baba held on to her little boy, the little boy held on to grandma, grandma held on to the little girl, the little girl held on to the teacher, the teacher held on to the potato and they pulled and pulled and pulled some more but the potato
wouldn't come up.

So the little girl called for her sister and mother to come and help. Her mother held her sister and the sister held the other little girl, that little girl held the mom, the mom held the little boy, the little boy held Baba, Baba held her little boy, the little boy held the grandma, the grandma held her little girl, the little girl held the
teacher, the teacher held the potato and they pulled and pulled and
pulled some more and ...

... the potato came up!

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Snails for snack

We didn't eat real snails but made some look-a-likes to eat.


First roll your bread out thin.

Next spread on jam, peanut butter, cheez whiz or whatever you prefer to fill your sandwich.












Then carefully roll it up to look like a snail. Add carrot antennas and raisin eyes.








Then eat it, of course!

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Visiting Chicks



A while back we tried to hatch chicks. Unfortunately the water bottle didn't quite work well and the humidity level in the incubator dropped and the eggs dried.

But today we were able to walk to a neighbouring home that did successfully hatch chicks (the regular way - with a hen).

It was beautiful sunny weather that made it perfect to walk the 20 minutes to Natasha's.

We had opportunities to hold and pet the chicks. They were all different colours and some had stripes around their eyes.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Continuing bug garden


The snails were very active this morning in our bug garden.
Not sure who was more curious the child or the snail trying to get out of the container?

Last Friday our craft was based on Denise Fleming's book "In the Tall, Tall Grass"


I made a mural of ripped green and brown paper to represent soil and grass blades.


Then the children used Q-tips and paint to make
bugs to add to the mural.



Sunday, June 6, 2010

Bug Garden

Wow over a month since my last post - sorry but life has been full.

We've been having a lot of fun exploring bugs. We decided to grow our own bug garden this year instead of bringing in sod.

We planted grass, lettuce, wild flowers and wheat grass seeds. After about a week it was ready for bugs to move in. Families brought in slugs, caterpillars, centipedes and millipedes, worms, wood bugs, an earwig, and snails.



We included rocks, sticks and flowers for a more natural environment.






The children used a spray bottle to imitate the rain and when the grass gets too long they use scissors to cut it.