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The Gold House Chronicles: Five Hills, A Gold House, Our Lives Together

Archive for June, 2009

Menu Plan Monday, June 29th through July 5th

I’m trying to keep it simple for this Menu Plan Monday. I’ve got an editing deadline for the Faithwalkers Journal this week, so I don’t want to get bogged down with any complicated meals.

Fun link for the week: If you’re looking to eat more salads this summer, you might want to check out this article with links to fifty different pasta salad recipes!

Here’s what we’re having:

Monday: Spaghetti, green salad, garlic bread

Tuesday: Whole chicken in the crock pot, sweet potato fries (my double coupon bargain from this past week at Rainbow), frozen veggie du jour

Wednesday: homemade pizza or possibly a casserole from the freezer if I don’t even have time to make pizza.  If we do make pizza, I’m going to try a whole-wheat or partial-whole-wheat crust for the first time!

Thursday: Chicken and Dumplings in the crock pot

Friday: Dilled Salmon Pasta Salad (found this recipe from the list of 50 pasta salad recipes linked to above!)

Saturday: Happy 4th of July! We’ll probably grill out…maybe some steaks that I got on sale this past week at Target!

Sunday: Stir Fry and Egg Rolls

You can find great menu ideas every week in the Menu Plan Monday post at Orgjunkie.com

Bargains: Tales from a Double Coupon Novice

For a long time (at least the few months I’ve been couponing any way), I’ve downplayed the value of doing Double Coupon Wednesdays at Rainbow Foods.  Rainbow is the only store in the Twin Cities that consistently does double coupons.  But it is only on Wednesdays.  And you have to spend at least $25.  And you can only double five coupons.  It sounded like too much work for too little benefit.

But, the more I’ve been reading about using coupons (and the better I’ve been getting about finding higher-value coupons), the more I realized it might be worthwhile.  After all, wouldn’t it be better to save up to an extra $5 without spending any additional money? I also have learned that customers may do more than one $25 transaction in order to double more than five coupons…though I think if I tried this at my regular Rainbow at the times I often find myself shopping when it is really crowded with long check out lines, I might incur the wrath of both the cashier and the annoyed customers behind me!

I’ve wanted to give this a try for several weeks, but this was the first week when it was both practical for me to go to the grocery store on a Wednesday and the sales at Rainbow matched up with some of the items I needed. It worked out especially well because I was able to go in the evening (our Rainbow is really quiet at night, hence less waiting in line and easier shopping in general), and Madeline was at Grandma’s house so I only had to take the boys.  They are pretty easy to shop with…Madeline on the other hand talks incessantly and it makes it difficult to look for the right products to get the good deals. :)

I’d consider my first attempt to be a moderate success. I did find five $1/off coupons to use.  One resulted in a stellar deal — free peanuts.  Three were moderate deals — frozen sweet potato fries for a little over a buck (I’ll use them as a dinner side dish for next week), and two 4-pks of yogurt for $0.60.  The last of my five doubled coupons resulted in a great deal on a “treat” — $0.50 for a box of Oreo Cakesters.  Not something we “need” at all but a treat is nice every now and then, right?

Overall it was a pretty good shopping trip.  I finally managed to “save” more than I “spent” — in other words, the total I paid out-of-pocket was a couple bucks less than what the receipt said I saved when store sale prices, store coupons, and manufacturers coupons (regular and double) were taken into account.

I’d like to try this again on a week when there are some better deals to be had.  I don’t think I can realistically plan to do double coupons every week at Rainbow.  Wednesday shopping doesn’t always work with my schedule.  If this trip would have been during the day with all three kids it would have been a lot more difficult, and that is how I shop most of the time.

I think I might also have to hit more than one store more often in order to both get the double coupon deals at Rainbow and also come out ahead on our groceries overall. On the items I buy regularly, my best “overall deal” is often not at Rainbow.  Being able to double more than one transaction’s worth of coupons might change that, but I’m not sure I am bold enough to try it if the lines are long!

Finally, I think if I do double coupons more often at Rainbow I’ll have to watch out that I don’t add in too many “extras” and treats.  I am usually pretty good about only buying things I need even when things I don’t “need” are a good deal.  But when double coupons can bring the price of junk food to a few cents or a buck, the temptation is much greater!  Even if it’s a good deal, junk food needs to be a tiny part of what I buy at the grocery store each week!

For Further reading:  I’ve really been enjoying the blog “Dollars in the Pocket.”  It’s a local “deal blog,” and the author posts grocery lists for several stores each week including Cub, Rainbow and Target. These lists match up sales with coupons and other deals so you can see where the best grocery deals are each week in the Twin Cities.

Menu Plan Monday — June 22-28, 2009

After a week of vacation (and a crazy, busy short week right before that), it’s time for another Menu Plan Monday.  This is the first week of summer on the calendar, and the first week that’s really going to feel like summer weather-wise all week here too.

This summer I’m going to try and have salad for the main course of our dinner once a week, and I hope we can grill at least once a week as well.  What was once a nice gas grilled hooked into the house’s natural gas system is now merely a charcoal grill in a gas grill shell, ever since the grill burner disintegrated.  It makes grilling much more complicated (to me anyway) so I am guessing most of our grilling will take place on the weekends when Tony is home to manage the charcoal.

I also like to use the crock pot a lot during the summer, since it seems to heat up the house a lot less than the oven, and somewhat less than certain stove top methods of cooking.  This summer we do have the opportunity to use the basement kitchen though, so I may try my hand at cooking dinner or baking down there and see how that works out in terms of practicality and temperature!

Here’s what we’re having this week:

Monday: Tonight we had a Pepsi Pot roast with mashed potatoes and California blend mixed veggies.

Tuesday: Tropical Chicken Pasta Salad (recipe to follow)

Wednesday: Pad Thai…maybe with shrimp (I haven’t been to the grocery store yet since returning from vacation, so it may depend on what I find is on sale!)

Thursday: Roast Lamb (a cut of meat given to me by my mom — apparently it is pre-seasoned) and maybe Indian Crock Pot Curry (I’ll make this recipe without the chicken it calls for…or maybe I’ll find a different veggie/rice side dish)

Friday: Pork Tamales (using leftover pork filling and other leftover items from the last time I made tamales).  Or if I am feeling too hot/tired/lazy by the end of the week I’ll make it more casserole style instead of wrapping the tamales individually.

Saturday: Pizza

Sunday: Grill burgers/hot dogs

As always, lots more great menus can be found in the Menu Plan Monday post at orgjunkie.com!

Homeschool Update: May/June 2009

The closer we get to the fall, the more my homeschooling journey begins to feel like we’re really going somewhere. It feels like this isn’t just “preschool for fun, if we feel like it.”   The material we’re covering is more like beginner kindergarten material. We even call it “doing school” now instead of “doing preschool”.

So, I’ve decided to just call these “homeschool” updates from now on.  We’ll pick up the pace a bit in the fall and add in a bit more history and science, but our “three R’s” won’t change very much when the typical “school year” start date rolls around in the fall.  I guess that’s yet another benefit to homeschooling…no need to do school just from September to June just because that’s when traditional schools do it.

It feels great to say we’re still doing the same basic things we were in April, and still enjoying it.  Madeline has now “met” letters “Active A” through “Qualified Q” on Alphabet Island.  Just nine more to go (plus a few review lessons thrown in there).  The letter sounds portion of the Alphabet Island lessons is still pretty much review for her, but the handwriting lessons are new each time as she learns to write the lower case letters.  Penmanship is still not her favorite thing to practice, but her confidence and skill in writing is definitely improving.

My goal with Alphabet Island is to make it through the first section of Book 1 before the end of the summer — a goal we should easily meet.  I think we’ll continue on to section two of the book whenever we finished — that’s where the real reading lessons begin.  Madeline has started to memorize the spelling of some words — she can read and spell a few basic words like man, map and tap…but still can’t easily put letter sounds together to make a word even if she already knows all the sounds of all the letters in a given word.  I’m really hoping that the teaching methods in this curriculum will help her make that big jump into really reading!

Currently, Madeline says she likes math more than her reading and writing lessons.  That’s a huge change from a few months ago when she really disliked anything related to math.  We’re still using Saxon Math K, but I am such an oddball that I took the list of lessons and re-arranged them more to my liking.   Saxon is perhaps the ultimate example of a “Spiral” math curriculum.  This means that many topics are introduced at a very shallow level before any of them are mastered.  Saxon is so “spirally” that, as written, there are rarely more than two days in a row on the same topic.  It was driving me batty to be teaching Madeline something about graphing with teddy bear counters one day and patterns the next day and shapes the day after that.

Tony and I both agree that “Mastery” curriculums seem the better way to go for Math.  In a “Mastery” style curriculum, one topic is (as you might expect from the name) mastered before going on to the next. Some math curriculums take Mastery to the extreme, and go so far as to, for example, spend an entire year teaching addition — going all the way from adding one digit numbers to adding huge four digit numbers — before ever teaching even one bit about subtraction!  I don’t think I want to go that far with the Mastery concept, but I also don’t think I can stick with Saxon in the long run.

However, since Saxon K is working so well for us right now, I am going to keep using it with the lessons re-arranged until either we finish it or I find just the right program to replace it with (one we will keep using for a few years to come, since Math is one of those things where consistency seems to count). I love the scripted lesson plans (though as time goes by I am getting more of the drift of how to teach this stuff to her and I find I am relying less on them) and Madeline loves that writing is not involved and she gets to use fun manipulatives like teddy bears and pattern blocks.

We’ve developed a pretty good rhythm in the past month or so of alternating days between doing the Alphabet Island lessons and the Saxon math lessons, generally doing about two days per week of each.  In the past couple weeks we’ve also been trying out doing a “calendar meeting” in the morning.  This is adapted from the “meeting book” section of the Saxon Math curriculum, and involves filling in our own calendar each day and practicing the date, the days of the week, the time (to the hour) on the clock, and a few other tidbits here and there.  It only takes a few minutes if we keep up with doing it most days, and it is really helping Madeline with some of those basic skills.

Sometimes doing the morning calendar meeting has naturally led into us doing our math or reading/writing lesson for the day, giving us a chance to practice doing school with Erik awake.  I’ve discovered that if I specifically give him a toy or toys to focus on, he will play very intently for at least 15 minutes or so.  He also will start saying “Erik school! Erik School!”, and enjoys “doing school” by scribbling on paper or the dry erase board or playing around with the math manipulatives.

I’m really encouraged with how things are going with homeschooling and I can’t wait for the fall! I know we’ll take a number of days off this summer as we travel to Iowa for weddings and visiting family and friends, and as Madeline does things like swimming lessons, vacation Bible school, and a week-long art day camp at one of the parks.  But once fall hits and we can settle into a rhythm of doing school 4 or 5 days a week, I think we will have some exciting learning experiences together!

Bargains are Hard Work (sometimes)

Sometimes it’s pretty easy to get a good deal.  It’s just a matter of buying the right thing when it’s on sale, spotting a clearance tag at Target or clipping/printing a coupon and actually remembering to use it.  Other times, it feels like I really have to work to earn the savings.  Here are a few of the items I got at rock-bottom prices last week at Cub:

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The chicken and the hot dogs were easy deals. I printed two coupons at the Gold’nPlump website for the two packages of chicken, making them $2.50 each.  I used a coupon from the Sunday coupon insert on the hot dogs.  But the cereal, cookies and waffles were another story all together.

Cub was offering a “buy 8 of these items, get $5 off” store coupon for certain Kellogg’s/Keebler items.  That by itself was not a super great deal (even with sale prices), but paired with the remainder of the multitude of Kellogg’s coupons I had printed at the beginning of May, it was an awesome deal (less than a dollar per item).   My first choice would have been to do the deal with 8 boxes of cereal.  Unfortunately I only had six dollar-off cereal coupons remaining for flavors our family enjoys that also matched with the items on sale.  Instead,  I saw that a dollar-off coupon was available for cookies. While not a necessity, I figured they might come in handy for a summer picnic or road trip.  The waffles I had no coupon for, but Madeline loves them and I was getting such a great deal on the other items I thought we would spring for the waffles too as our 8th item instead of more cookies or cereal without a coupon.

I read all the fine print carefully and thought I had 8 items that matched the sale…but then a dreaded event occurred while I was in the check out line — the cashier couldn’t get the $5 store coupon to work.  She said something must be wrong with what I had purchased.  Maybe the Mini-Wheats because the flavors I had weren’t in the picture?  No, I told her they might not be in the coupon picture, but they were in the ad picture.  Seeing the huge line of annoyed people piling up behind me, she finished ringing my order and sent me to the customer service desk for them to figure it out.  I packed up my groceries and took my kids (whose patience was waning at this point) over to the service counter where I waited patiently in line (and the kids waited slightly less patiently).  The service desk employee pronounced that the problem was my cookies.  Despite the fact that my cookies were within the ounce-range listed on the coupon and were on sale at the ad-listed price, she could not be convinced that my Oatmeal Chips Deluxe would apply to the coupon.  Luckily, she let me return to the cookie aisle to swap it for another package of a different variety at the same price, and then credited me the $5

Now, I felt sort of bad about this because I had used a coupon specifically for the oatmeal flavor of Chips deluxe…but not too badly because I really think it was Cub’s computers that were somehow programmed wrong.  All in all this ordeal probably added 15 minutes to our shopping trip.  I wouldn’t have done it to save a buck, but for $5 I think it was worth it.  :-)

Menu Plan “Monday” for June 1-7, 2009

Time for a new month and a new Menu Plan Monday! :-) Yes, I know it isn’t Monday any longer, but at least I have some good excuses…Sunday night I was exhausted from our weekend of birthday-partying in honor of Madeline’s 5th birthday and yesterday evening when I planned to work on this Tony broke the internet connection and didn’t get it fixed until after I had gone to bed…And now that I have gotten into the habit of doing this I just hate to miss a week.  :-)

So, here’s what we’re having:

Monday: Yesterday we had enchiladas with shredded pork, corn and spinach, inspired by this recipe but done in the oven instead of the crock pot.

Tuesday: French onion soup, bread and a garden salad

Wednesday: Vegetarian Crock Pot Curry and Palak Tofu (I’ve got spinach to use up!)…but unfortunately since one of my crock pots bit the dust, I’ll have to make one of these dishes on the stove…and I might make naan if the day is going really well!

Thursday: Creamy Beef and Noodles with salad or veggies

Friday: Pork Chops, Mashed Potatoes, and salad or veggies

Saturday: Chicken and Black Bean tacos with rice

Sunday: Spaghetti, garlic cheese bread, salad or veggies

As always, there are lots of great menu ideas every week in the Menu Plan Monday post at orgjunkie.com