Canning/Harvest, Recipes

Berry lemonade

Our berry choice was huckleberry, raspberry, and nanking cherry juice. They’re all tart berries so I added 1 cup sugar. My mom probably would have added more but she also said that she can always add more sugar when it was made up but I wouldn’t be able to take any out. Also, I modified the recipe to what I wish I had done as I sat waiting for it to process. This time around we divided the juice evenly between the jars and then added water to get a better headspace; but, I really feel like the berry lemonade could have had more lemon, so the recipe reflects an extra cup of lemon juice I wish I had added in processing. It will probably need more sugar that way, though.

  • 10 cups of lightly masserated berries
  • 6 cups of water (you may need more)
  • Peels from 10 lemons (instructions below)
  • 5 cups lemon juice
  • 6 cups of sugar (plus more to taste)

Simmer berries and water 20 minutes.

While the berries are simmering, peel 10 lemons with a peeler so that they are large chunks. You don’t want to zest them, but you’re after the whole yellow part. Set aside.

Transfer 3 cups of liquid (try to get just liquid!) into a separate saucepan. Add 6 cups of sugar. Stir and simmer until sugar is dissolved. Remove from heat and add lemon peels, and cover to steep for 10 minutes. When it has cooled a little bit, return to the heat until it simmers and then let steep 10 more minutes. Re-heating the liquid helps release the rest of the oils and infuses it in the syrup better.

Strain out the peels and turn them into candied lemon.

Put syrup and lemon juice back in the stockpot. Simmer until desired flavor is achieved (can take a few hours). Add sugar to taste. And remember it’s a concentrate, so it should be strong!

Put 2 tablespoons of the reserved mash of berries into 7 warm sterile jars and then spread the rest evenly throughout. Pour warm liquid over the berries (you need about 1/2″ headspace, but it can vary based on how much liquid you have). You may have to add a little water.

Process for 20 minutes, adjusting for altitude (I live at 5000 feet).

To reconstitute, it’s about one part concentrate to one part water or soda, but adjust it to taste. You can also add sugar to taste if you need to.

Recipes

Homemade “Chicken” Bouillon

I made this recipe because in reducing the amount of corn in our food, it became necessary to eliminate bouillon (that stuff has some scary ingredients). But so many recipes call for Bouillon! Mostly, I use it for my SOS mix.

  • 2 c nutritional yeast flakes
  • 1/3 c salt
  • 1/4 c dried basil
  • 1/4 c garlic powder
  • 2 T rosemary that has been run through my food processor (my family won’t eat it otherwise)
  • 1/4 c onion powder
  • 2 T oregano
  • 1/2 T marjoram
  • 1/4 c parsley
  • 2 T black pepper

I leave mine flakey, but shake the jar I put it in rather vigorously. I know a lot of recipes tell you to blend it, which might be helpful. I still use it as an even trade-off in recipes, even though I know by not blending it I’m getting less flavor in my measurements. Honestly, I don’t notice much difference. It’s a preference thing.

Recipes

Corn “Free” S.O.S mix

I’m gonna start this post with a disclaimer: anyone that is also allergic to corn will know, anything claiming to be corn-free probably isn’t. My family is only considered “corn-lite.” Some things don’t bother us (mostly corn starch, corn syrup, and sometimes citric acid), and we fall in the “bucket” category (as in, if we don’t overfill our bucket, we don’t have to be too careful).

And a lot of it will come down to your individually sourced ingredients. But, this is a lot better than what you find at the store. It’s based on the S.O.S. mix you see all over the web, except I’ve eliminated the cornstarch and used my own version of “chicken” bouillon.

My chicken bouillon (purple) and my S.O.S sauce (before I added the onions and mushrooms that were still in the dehydrator)

I won’t make some long story, I hate blog posts for recipes that do that. Don’t even read them, usually; but I use this sauce for anything that calls for a can of “cream of…” I also sprinkle some in gravies or sauces I just want a little thicker or creamier.

Without further ado, modified SOS sauce

  • 2 cups powdered milk (non-instant)
  • 1 1/4 cup tapioca flour
  • 1/4 c homemade chicken bouillon substitute
  • 2 T onion flakes
  • 2 T dehydrated mushrooms and/or celery (optional)
  • 1/2 T salt (optional, but the tapioca doesn’t taste as salty as corn starch)

Mix it all together and store in an airtight container. I stick with the same usage as the original instructions and it usually works out okay for me. Start there and you can get a feel for if you feel like anything needs changed.

To use: wisk 1/3 c mix with 1 1/4 c water or chicken stock.

I’m sure this recipe could also use arrowroot starch. It would require about half the starch and then less salt, but tapioca starch is readily available in my small town and arrowroot would require a more intentional purchase. And my bouillon is a little less salty anyway, so the additional salt helps there as well. Anyway, make this recipe your own this is how I make mine.

Canning/Harvest

Harvest 2021

This post is probably boring to everyone but me, so you have my permission to move on. But if you like gardens and knowing totals, you might find one information here:

In thinning the carrots, I picked about 3 gallons when the stems were off. That made 10 jars of pickles carrots. And boy are they pretty with all the different colors in there. Note to self, Cosmo purple aren’t great for canning. I took a risk and left the skins on just to hilight the purple that is only on the outside and they are still orange when canned, but the brine is red-tinted. Not worth it. However the atomic red are pinkish in the jar, and make a nice addition. I haven’t found too many of them, yet. And they don’t really scream red, but in a jar full of real orange, yellows, and whites, they’re different and elegant.

The lunar white carrots taste amazing, but they kept getting rooty and seedy. Not cool. I guess I can’t say for sure if was the lunar whites, it could have been the mystery whites from the Sow Easy packet.

The varieties I planted.

I will have to go thin them again (or at least harvest them) but it was nice to harvest and get the canning ball rolling. And my preschooler that hates carrots will now eat them… In pickled form.

I put all the pretty ones in the same jar.

I really want to find a way to plant carrots so I don’t have as much early thinning. I tried mixing them with sand this year and it didn’t work, I still ended up with bald spots and over-crowded spots that I wasted tiny seedlings. And with the sand, I ended up with carrots all over my garden from seeds not staying in their spot.

I thinned the beets, too. I planted Detroit Dark Red and Ruby Queen. My family has always done Detroit Dark Red… But I might be a traitor because Ruby Queen has grown amazingly and they’re so much easier to peel. It’s already time to harvest the Ruby Queen beets, but the Detroit Dark Red can stay longer. There is definitely a difference in color. One is really purple compared to the other.

I got 6 1/2 pints. I can’t remember how many gallons of just roots from harvesting, though.

And oh the peas! My peas have been crazy this year. I planted 4 rows, 6″, 12″, and 6″ apart like I usually do… And I’m not gonna do that again. Usually they don’t come up so well and then I have some on either side of my string trellis and it works out. Next year, I will plant them with a walkway between them. Or at least use better string/twine! They snapped the string and I had to deal with vining swampy peas. No fun. But I got 6 harvests of 2 gallons each! And I’m still getting about a gallon every few days now.

How many have I managed to get in the freezer? Um… 1/2 a gallon of just peas, and 1/2 a gallon of peas and baby carrots from my first thinning. The rest have gone into just about every meal I’ve made over the summer. Or straight into little mouths. Am I complaining about that? Not in the slightest. But it tells me that 4 rows is my minimum.

However, green beans… I planted those darn things twice and something keeps eating the new sprouts! I even placed forks in the rows to keep things out and they eat around the forks. Which makes me think that field mice really like bean sprouts. So I bought 11 lbs from my friend and it made 27 pints.

My other purchase for canning so far has been cherries. I thought I’d missed them, and wasn’t willing to pay upwards of $5 per lb, so I didn’t think I’d get to use my new cherry pitter this year. Then I was walking down the produce aisle at the grocery store and saw cherries for $1.99/lb! I snatched up 4 bags (couldn’t bring myself to get more) and filled the jars half full (I want to use the juice just as much as the cherries), boiled the pits (for not nearly long enough) to get more meat/juice off of them (eventually I’ll have a steam juicer) and put about 3/4 a cup of what I had boiled in each jar, filling the rest with simple syrup of 1:4 (sugar:water). I hope they’re not too sweet, I used internet suggestions. It made 13 qts, so 2 lbs per batch. Remember, that’s about half full, though.

And, as a note to myself, I made a video of my garden, but I don’t want to add it here because it has identifying location features.

Canning/Harvest

Tomato Varieties

This is more of a tomato diary than anything. If you don’t care about tomatoes, keep moving, haha.

Firstly, I planted tomatoes on April 15th. Not as early as I wanted to, but last year I planted them too early and they all got root-bound so late is better in this case. In my growing zone I don’t actually put them in the soil until the weekend after memorial day (we always get caught off guard by one last super cold day and too many people lose their tomatoes. I don’t wanna be one of those people), so we still have plenty of time. I planted 3 of each variety.

I bought an heirloom seed packet from David’s Garden (no commission. Just pretty impressed with his seeds. No one is paying me or rewarding me for this post). This included Slicing Black Prince, Striped German Hybrid, Slicing Moskovich Slicing, Beefsteak Brandywine, Beefsteak Cherokee Purple, Beefsteak Cherokee Green, Beefsteak Great White, Beefsteak Valencia, Beefsteak Yellow Brandywine, and Beefsteak Rose. I also had cherry, pear, Roma, and Rutgers tomato seeds from years past, Carbon seeds from Baker Creek Seeds (kind of a seed nerd girl favorite. All their catalogs are so pretty and I feel fancy ordering from them), and Delicious tomato seeds from Gurney’s seeds (I like their seeds but they’re never in a rush on shipping, so order *way* early).

The only ones not claiming “heirloom” status are my Roma, the Delicious and Cherry tomatoes (though I have a packet of Cherry tomaotes that do say heirloom. This packet is older so I grew it this year (I like my other one better, though), and the Striped German (it’s the only one that says hybrid in the title). I want to keep seeds, done all the research on how to do it, but I haven’t managed to do it yet. I’ve also never managed to compare seed packets like I’ve wanted to before, so I’m at least checking that off my bucket list. Fingers crossed I can stick with it.

If you want to see how last year went, I’ve got a gorgeous tomato picture in this post. The same seeds were used.

Today is April 27th and I feel like I need to get this all written down before I forget it all.

First, the Delicious seeds popped out of their pods first. They’re growing amazingly well. Next (a very close second) were the Valencia, White (surprisingly. The packet said they’re hard to grow. And I got a whole 4 white tomatoes last year, so it’s probably not wrongn), and Brandywine. They all have their second set of leaves. I think the Black Prince will catch up, they’re all kind of showing their heads, but just barely. Then I have 1 German, 2 Moskovich, 2 Purple, 2 Roma, 2 Green (plus a sneaky volunteer. I dropped a seed when I planted and it landed right in the hole, I guess), 2 Yellow, 2 Rose, and 2 cherry. My Rutgers, cherry, and pear seeds are losing the race. The Rutgers have sprouts but none of them look healthy, they still have the seed shell on them and they’re tiny. I’ve got some sprouts starting to show in my cherry pods, and not a single pear tomaoto is showing, which surprises me because I always have a *ton* of Pear and Cherry tomaotes by season end. Fingers crossed the rest show up but each day looks less promising. I also have an extra white and a mystery plant. The white seeds were both little and stuck together so I left them (like I said, they’re supposed to be hard to grow). And when everything was planted I found a random seed and didn’t want to put it back in the wrong spot, so I just threw it in some soil. We will see what it turns out to be).

I intend to keep 2 plants from anything that grows, and the 3rd plant I will send to my parents. They live in a different growing zone (I’m in 5B and they’re in 7A), but I wanted an accurate idea of how things grew and didn’t want to have open garden space because something didn’t grow well, and my mom said plant some for my dad, too, so my dad getting the surplus is a win for both of us.

More to come…

May 23 Update

I transplanted tomatoes (and my sunflowers) on the third of May. I decided to re-plant some of the problematic ones. For science. Some were just extra for my mom (I had the space). Instead of writing lots of paragraphs, it seems easier to just start putting everything in chart form. I like charts.

Varietyreplantedtotal notes
Delicious03Still doing crazy well.
Valencia03Doing well. Turned the grow light off because they were getting sunburned (weird) but nothing else has suffered from not having it on.
Purple03Interesting note: I thought only 2 would survive (only transplanted 2) but the other guy was just a late bloomer. He’s currently got his second set of leaves and I’m about to transplant him.
Green02growing well. I had 4 plants (one volunteer seed) but one didn’t grow and my children … loved on the other one. This plant also got sunburned from the growlight. I didn’t replant because my mom doesn’t care for green tomatoes.
Yellow02Growing well. Didnt replant because my Mom doesn’t care for yellow either. She’s more of a classic tomato fan.
White03I have 2 unlabeled plants now (thanks kids) so maybe 1 is the extra white one? They’re looking a little weak. Thin, long stems. The packet that came with advised planting a fish with them, so when I put them in he ground, I most definitely will!
Brandywine03The tallest plants now! They’re getting eager to be transplanted but I never dare plant tomatoes in the ground until after Memorial Day.
Roma25I thought I was only getting 2 Roma plants so I planted another for science and an extra one for my mom. 2 days ago the last little Roma popped his head out of the dirt! The other 2 (planted May 3rd) have their second set of leaves now, but that guy’s pulling through!
Rose13growing as expected
Moskovich131 plant doing really well. One on the short end. replanted one appropriate size for being re-planted.
Cherry23Same as Roma, thought I was only getting 2 cherry plants so I planted 2 more just to make sure I had enough to send to Mom and I have a little seedling growing well! the original 2 are growing well. the second planting have not sprouted yet. But that 3rd little guy is growing!
Pear33One pear plant transplanted with the rest. Replanted 3 to make sure I got enough. 2 have sprouted from the second set.
German24ishI thought I was only getting 1 German so I replanted 2 more. When I was checking on my seedlings today, the 2 I had all but given up on are starting to break through the soil. No leaves out yet, but there are 2 living plants coming up. One of the replants is also up. the original plant is doing well and about 6″ tall.
Carbon23ish1 carbon made it to transplanting and is doing well. one was decapitated when the seed shell didn’t come off right (I need to figure out how to help them with that). It’s still alive, but I’m not counting it a survivor. one of the replants is up with it’s second set of leaves. And as I was evaluating all of the other late-bloomers, I’ve got a carbon sprout working it’s way out.
Black Prince221 plant is growing well. 1 replant is sprouted with a second set of leaves.
Rutgers306 plants and 1 was decapitated when the seed shell didn’t come off, one still has the seed shell on and I don’t wanna repeat the problem (but it’s not growing), and the new ones haven’t even sprouted yet. Don’t think I’ll keep trying these.

Recipes

Slow Cooker Gumbo

  • 1 pound andouille sausage
  • 2/3 cup vegetable oil (I use grapeseed because that’s what I have)
  • 1 cup flour (I use wheat)
  • 2 bell peppers, cored and diced
  • 3 celery stalks
  • 1 small onion
  • 5 cloves garlic
  • 4 cups chicken stock
  • 1 quart jar stewed tomatoes
  • 1 tablespoon Tony Chachere’s Creole seasoning (my kids will eat this but I cut it down if my mom’s coming to visit)
  • 1/2 tsp paprika
  • 1/2 tsp cayenne (I leave it out when serving kids or grandmas)
  • 4 bay leaves
  • 1/2 c small-cut cauliflower (leave out if freezing. Not authentic but I like to pack veggies in and it’s not too far-fetched in a gumbo)
  • 2 cups shredded cooked chicken
  • 1 cup okra (if you have it. We don’t, usually)
  • 1 pound peeled and deveined raw shrimp (mine’s frozen)
  • salt and pepper
  • Prepared rice
  • Optional toppings: green onions, fresh parsley, or avocados (Avocados aren’t authentic but they are delicious).

Slice sausages. In a regular-sized frying pan, brown sausage coins (2-ish minutes). Place in crock pot.

While the sausages are browning, I start slicing my trinity of vegetables (peppers, celery, and onion). It carries over into my roux stage, but I’m pretty fast at dicing and my stove is right next to my cutting board. If you don’t have ideal circumstances, definitely do the mis en place version and slice your veggies first! And do it as fast as you can at the beginning of your roux, because toward the end it goes much faster.

Once the pan is available, add the oil and begin slowly adding flour, mixing in as you go. It will be pastey. This is called a roux. It’s a staple in cajun cuisine. Turn the temperature down to medium. If you’re still slicing veggies, stir your roux about every quarter of each of the vegetables, but adjust based on need. Don’t burn your roux! If you do, start over on it!

Once your roux is about the color of chocolate (20-30 mins. It starts slow but gains momentum), add the trinity. Mix it around and it kind of coats the veggies. Then mash and finely dice the garlic. After the veggies have been in the pot around 5-8 minutes, add the garlic to the mixture. Cook it one more minute, stirring constantly. The veggies should just be turning translucent and soft. Add the whole mixture to the crockpot.

Add in the chicken stock and mix it around to encorporate everything. Then add the stewed tomatoes, creole seasoning, paprika, cayenne, and bay leaves. Set crock pot to low. It will need to simmer 4-6 hours.

At any point, depending on preference (I add about halfway through, but have added it at the beginning before), add chicken, okra, and cauliflower.

Half an hour before serving, defrost the shrimp under hot water and add it to the pot. If your shrimp is defrosted, add it at 20 minutes. This is also when I start my rice (unless I’m using day-old rice. I do, regularly).

The gumbo is ready when the shrimp are pinkish and opaque, not clear. They also kind of curl in on themselves.

Adjust salt and pepper, as needed. Remove bay leaves.

To serve, place rice in a bowl, pour gumbo over the top, and add toppings of choice, if desired.

To freeze: don’t freeze it with the rice or if you added the cauliflower! But you can still freeze it with the proteins. Let cool. Scoop desired amounts into ziploc freezer bags. Freezes for approximately 3 months with shrimp, 6 months without it.

A Day in the Life, Educational, Life Lessons

Today’s Adventure Down a Rabbit Hole

close up of rabbit on field
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

So, there I was, minding my own business (aka cleaning the front room while my children are watching educational television -*cough,* Octonauts, *Cough*), and I overhear that the whale has a sunburn.

So, my curious brain decides to google if whales really can get sunburned.

Turns out they can.

Apparently they can get tanned, too! (Source)

But that’s not all!

black hippopotamus laying on ground during daytime
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Hippos don’t get sunburned because they secrete a red sticky substance that not only refracts the sun, it keeps bugs away. Beauty companies are studying hippos in order to mimic it in makeup. (Side note: when telling all of this fascinating info to my sister, she informed me that The Lion Guard lied! One of their episodes talks about hippos getting burned. Is that not the epitome of mom-to-modern-preschoolers life? Haha, not only are we discussing random facts we learned in one kid show, we are cross-examining it with another kid show. … Here’s where you ask us how much we let our kids watch and we tell you to mind your own kids, thank you very much).

Anyway, you should also know that domesticated pigs can get sunburned and heat stroke, but wild pigs don’t. The fur on a wild pig has been bred out of our domesticated breeds.

But wait, there’s more.

Elephants and rhinos can get burned. That’s why they hang out in the mud.

agriculture cows curious pasture
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

So, hippos nope, but elephants and rhinos, yes. (source)

And cows and newly-shorn-sheep can get burned, too! I asked my mom (dairyman’s daughter) if that was true and she said yes, and she has seen it personally. Lighter-colored cows turn pink when they’re sunburned! I know you were just dying to learn that.

Apparently, researchers are discovering the more plants with chlorophyll an animal eats, the more likely they are to burn (no good source but enough you can see a connection. my best one has since been taken down. Google it, though). But also some research in humans who take chlorophyll supplements have started to emerge). I guess I can see it… chlorophyll collects sun rays. Who knew the plants were getting revenge, amiright?

But that’s not all! Did you know that darker skinned people have a harder time converting sunlight into vitamin D (source)!?! This one kinda blows my mind because this pale-skinned northerner is not so great at having enough vitamin D whenever they take my labs. In fact, I have Seasonal Affective Disorder, so it’s kind of a big deal for me to get enough sunlight. But I checked other sources, and they all agree. The lighter the skin, the better the ability to convert sunlight into vitamin D. So, the ancestors that used to live near the equator had darker skin so they would not burn as easily, but they also get more sunlight, making that the necessity. And the ancestors that lived to the north were paler because they needed to absorb and convert the sun rays into vitamin D because the sun wasn’t as available to them. Bodies are awesome.

I don’t know if I really needed to learn all of that, but it’s fascinating, isn’t it? And now you know all that useless information, too! You are so much better informed, now! You’re welcome.

And, see? Octonauts are educational!

And my floor was clean for a whole 2 seconds while they were distracted, so… totally worth it.

Keira at searchforseven.com
Brag, Educational, Kids Need Play

Read Across America Day: Complete a Reading Challenge

Dear Reader,

Happy Read Across America Day! Or, happy birthday to Dr Seuss, if you’d rather. In honor of Dr Seuss’ birthday, I wanted to share a great accomplishment we just reached at our house! My preschooler has reached her goal of reading 1000 books! And my toddlers are at 500.

Okay, they can’t read. But they can listen. And they do!

I kinda just said, yeah, sure when the library offered the program, thinking it was a good way to dedicate snuggle time to my then-toddler while her twin sisters were still tiny (read: super time-consuming and attention-needing). They helped me download the Beanstack app and signed me up for the challenge linked to their library (I know a lot of libraries all over the US use the app, check with your library!), and that allowed us to start earning prizes. So far we have earned games, book bags, shirts, simple crafts, and a handprint on the library wall!

My toddlers don’t really care about the prizes, but they love the trips to the library. And they love books! I guess that’s the real benefit to the challenge. To have such a love of books at a young age is amazing. And my preschooler is already listening to chapter books at night. The kid that never.sits.still will curl up in my lap and sit for a solid 20-30 minutes and listen to intermediate-level chapters! It’s her favorite part of the night. Story time has slowly gotten longer and longer, and honestly, even though it takes more of my time, I love it, too.

I hope, in honor of Dr Seuss, you pick up a book today. And I hope you enjoy it as much as we do. And if you don’t… You’re reading the wrong books!

Keira at searchforseven.com

Kids Need Play

Coffee Filter Crinkle

Dear Reader,

Coffee filters are pretty useful. They make great snack holders, because they don’t dump the contents all over the room when bumped or pushed. They’re good for getting streak-free windows. And they’re great for crafts. While my preschooler and I were working on a big craft project today, I needed something to count as a toddler activity, and something that entertained the toddlers enough to get our craft done! So, I handed them some coffee filters. I figured they’d wrinkle them and crumble them, but they were definitely more interested in separating the filters than anything else.

After I crinkled up a few, it kinda became more fun to crinkle them, but really, they just liked playing in the paper more than anything. It doesn’t crinkle the same way as doctors-office paper, so I guess they would have had more fun with that? But a) I had coffee filters, and b) they still were exploring and working on hand-eye coordination by separating the layers, so it was still a fun activity for them, even if it wasn’t what I anticipated. Just goes to show you, when you’re planning an activity for toddlers, a but of flexibility is required.

Keira at searchforseven.com
Kids Need Play

Coffee Filter Suncatchers

Dear Reader,

I had so much fun with this activity! Really, I broke it into 2 activities for my short-attentioned daughter, but I’m posting it as one. If you feel like it’s too large for your kid to do all at once, it is definitely okay to do little bits and come back to it.

To get started I found a good leaf shaped template online (I used 2 different shapes of the bigger size found here) and drew the heart shaped one myself because the heart leaves at the link I got the others from were in between the size I wanted. Flatten the stack of however many filters you want (just use your hands, they will definitely still be bowl-shaped, just not as defined), pull off the top filter and set it on the template. You’ll easily see the template through the filter, so trace it. Then put it back on the stack (the closer to the same direction the better. I noticed that if you’re close to the same direction, it slips less when you cut it out), and cut the whole stack at once, watching to make sure the top filter doesn’t slip too much.

Then I pulled out my markers. Normally, I stand behind the Crayola-is-best mentality (seriously, I’ve purchased enough art supplies to know the difference. And no, I’m not being endorsed by any companies), but for this activity I felt like cheaper was better. And newer was better. And washable was crucial. And, in the bigger pack (20 markers) of cra-z-art, there were so many good fall colors! So, I got new, cheap marketers. And they worked great.

The next step is easy: let your preschooler color the leaves! You’re going to want a regular piece of paper under the coffee filter if you value your table, the filters are too thin on their own, and the markers bleed through. You need the whole leaf colored! This stack is *not* colored enough! For some kids, I’m sure they color every square inch. If your kid is one of those, great. You don’t quite need that much, but good for them. If your kid has no patience for coloring (like mine), send them to go play and then scribble on the leaves some more. Really, you can definitely have white space, but I have found that the ideal coloring is about 1/4″ between squiggle lines and no more than 1/2″ between colors. If you look at the green peeking through on the bottom, that was me adding more color, just to give you the idea. I personally would err on the side of too little coloring until you get the hang of it.

Next, get a pan or some kind of flat surface with a lip. We used an 8×8 glass cake pan. It worked really well. You’ll also need medicine droppers and a cup of water. Place a leaf in the pan, and hand the dropper to your kiddo. Try to convince them to go slow (yeah right) and only drip 1 drop of water at a time. This is a great activity to work on pincer control (not just pincer grasp), as they will be focusing more on grading the strength needed to drip only the right amount of water. It also requires concentration skills, which my preschooler struggles with, so it was a great guided exercise for that, as well.

Once the leaf has enough water, let it sit for a few seconds so that the colors can blend. Then carefully remove it and set it on a rolked-out sheet if plastic wrap. I was afraid to use tweezers because I didn’t want to rip it (it is paper, after all), but honestly, the filters are pretty durable when wet, and my fingers were covered in ink after the first leaf. If you don’t trust tweezers, a latex gloves would have been great.

*Don’t wipe off the pan/bowl/flat dish!* Save the colored water already in the pan and add the next leaf. When the leaves start looking a little muddy (about the 4th leaf, for us) then wipe it out with a paper towel and start fresh.

They don’t take long to dry! Relatively, I mean. It was still an hour, I would guess, but regular paper would have taken much longer.

When they’re all dry, take your leaves and a school glue stick to the window you want to decorate. Put the school glue stick on the leaves and stick them on! I was actually surprised to learn how easy that is! When I tested it on my windows, the leaves peel off just fine and don’t even rip the filter! I am definitely going to remember that in the future.

Keira at searchforseven.com