Romantic Kitchen Inspiration

How would you make your kitchen more inviting, romantic?

Here’s a creative example from Apartment Therapy below. Add romance to a kitchen (does this example even need to be in the kitchen?) by displaying attractive cookware.

Start with a sofa table, dresser or hutch base combined with a colorful rug. Add a print and a plant perhaps. Hang the cookware for convenience and a little bling. Ta da!

Below the owner has even made space for pot lids. This example demonstrates a good use of vertical wall space – no cabinets required. And I love the elegant – even romantic look.

Nice!

Photo Apt Therapy Butler's Pantry After

Do you have other creative ideas to share?

The bathroom re-do with before & after pictures is coming soon – to a blog near you. Boom.

Keeping Earthquake Victims in Our Hearts

Today, as so many try to put their lives back together, may we keep them in prayer, offer any help, hope

and be willing to do the same for all those who struggle from tragedy, poverty and human-caused hunger around the world. There is enough for all.

In peace and love, Roxanne

Simplifying Our Kitchen

Photo PizzaDirect.com.uk

If you’ve been reading this blog then you know that six items or less is the goal – for most things in my life. I have already posted about progress simplifying my wardrobe.

Now what about our kitchen? Think about knives, utensils, glassware, pots and pans, baking dishes, etc. Do I really need more than six of anything????

When I was younger, I lived with a family in Paris. While their home was large, the kitchen was a typical, tiny French kitchen. Christine cooked delectable, many-course meals for family and guests from this tiny kitchen with one cabinet, 2 feet of counter space and a small European refrigerator. She had almost no gadgets, using two good knives and a whisk for just about everything. What did I learn?  I learned French cooking and I learned that great meals are not about having a big kitchen or lots of gadgets.

Consider the components of the “kitchen-in-a-box” in the picture. Before first moving into this townhouse I had purchased a collection similar to this from Target. If I remember correctly it had about 50 pieces in total. It even had things like a paper towel holder, S&P shakers and plastic storage containers. Basically it had just what I needed – and nothing I didn’t. It worked really well.

So where did all this other stuff come from???

Looking around our kitchen we generally use the same three pans for most of our cooking: a small sauce pan, a 2 qt. soup pan, a 3 qt. pan for cooking pasta, a saute pan and a larger fry pan. I also use my blue & white soup pot. That’s it. Other pots and pans are rarely, if ever, used. So why not pass them along to someone who needs them? So we did.

Next we donated the toaster, food processor, mixer and other small electrics that we didn’t use or used rarely. We do have a hand blender, coffee grinder, coffee maker and hand mixer (which may be the next to go).

Knives & utensils are the same story. Too many that are never used. They are simply taking up space — which we don’t have. Others can use them. Three stainless cylinders on the counter by the stove hold utensils we use now. Still too many though. . .

Lastly, it would be nice to display beautiful items that we use everyday. Currently I do keep my white low bowls on my counter in an unused corner. Silverware too.

But what about awkward pots and pans? They suck cabinet space. My wish: store them in a way that is both space saving and attractive. Is it possible to achieve both??? Find out in my next post.

You may also like The Richness of Simplicity and Simplify, Simplify, Simplify.

Super Easy Crock Pot Lasagna

Photo A. Meshar

Think lasagna is time consuming or difficult? Think again. You can make delicious lasagna without boiling the noodles. You can assemble it in minutes this morning and eat it for dinner tonight. Here’s how:

In a large Crock Pot cover the bottom with a thin layer of spaghetti sauce. Place one layer of regular, uncooked, lasagna noodles on the sauce. Usually only 2 – 3 noodles will fit. Two of them may need to be broken to fit. Cover with one third of the remaining jar of spaghetti sauce. Add a layer of chopped broccoli, 1/3 of an 8 oz pkg of shredded mozzarella cheese and small clumps of ricotta cheese (1/4 of an 8 oz. container, or substitute with cottage cheese). Repeat with another layer of lasagna noodles, sauce, broccoli and cheeses. Finish with a top layer of lasagna, the last third of the sauce and mozzarella cheese. Cook for 8 hours on low – 4 hours on high. Yields 4 large pieces.

Substitute the broccoli with spinach. Or add browned Italian sausage or ground beef. If you’re out of spagetti sauce use a 14 oz can of diced tomatoes with a 14 oz can of tomato sauce.

How about Alfredo lasagna? You can do the same recipe substituting a creamy white Alfredo sauce and add shredded carrots along with the chopped broccoli – skip the ricotta cheese. Again cook for 8 hours on low or 4 hours on high.

Serve with toasted garlic bread.

Buon Appetito!

You may also like “Stinkin” Cheeses and Spaetzle – German Mac & Cheese.

Lent – Into the Desert

How Will You Spend Your 40 Days in the Desert?

We are entering into our time in the desert. We don’t go to an actual desert.  We create a desert in the midst of our lives. The forty days of Lent is an ancient practice (older than Christianity) of fasting and preparing to go deeper within ourselves. It is a time of reorientation and transformation.

Traditional practices include service, almsgiving and fasting. Why fasting? Fasting is a way of practicing detachment, letting go and opening oneself to the transcendant or the sacred.

Fasting is also a way to be in solidarity with those who are hungry (two thirds of the world). Ideally, we take the money we would have spent on richer fare and donate it to those who are hungry.

Once a year it is good to stop, reflect and resist meeting every desire. Going deeper helps me to see new patterns, make changes and listen to God or my deepest interior voice. There are many ways to go deeper. Here are some suggestions I wrote with a colleague a few years ago.

1. Turn off the radio or car radio. Get used to silence.

2. Commit to praying or meditating for peace each day.

3. Keep a daily gratitude journal.

4. Fast from overwork and busyness during Lent.

5. Fast from consumerism. Check out the true income disparity between the top fifth and bottom fifth in the U.S. Scroll to the graph at the bottom.

6. Use less water. Recycle more.

7. Carpool, take a bus, ride a bike, or walk at least once a week.

8. Shop at more socially responsible stores. Find out which ones.

9. Fast from TV and video games – read, meditate or walk instead.

10. Fast from impatience – at home, while driving, at school, at work, in political discussions.

11. Fast from interrupting – commit to really listening in order to understand others.

12. Fast from a favorite luxury (e.g., drink water instead of coffee or soda). Donate what you save to a cause of your choice.

13. Fast from judgments about people who don’t always have enough.

14. Go to: www.nccbuscc.org/cchd/povertyusa/tour2.htm to learn what our government considers poverty level and how hard it is for some families to make ends meet.

15. Read Nickeled and Dimed, the true story of a woman who tried to live on a minimum wage job at Wal-Mart in the Twin Cities.

16. Learn more about why many people can’t afford market-rate housing.  Go to: www.micah.org (click on fact sheets) or www.dakotacda.org (click on market survey).

17. Watch the movie Chocolat and reflect on ways we exclude people.

18. Take a concrete step to fight racism or another form of discrimination. Check these links to learn how.

19. Shovel snow or fix a meal for someone who could use extra help.

20. Perform random acts of kindness in your family, at work or school.

21. Cheerfully share something of value (time, possessions) or give to someone in need, anonymously.

22. Over 800 million people in the world go hungry each day. Nearly 6 million children a year die from hunger. Take part in Bread for the World’s Offering of Letters or go to: www.bread.org for ways to help.

23. Of course, you could read my book Living a Luxury Life and learn about many ways to add depth to your life.

24. Finally, fast from any habit or activity that keeps you from being your most authentic self – the person you want to be.

25. Add your own item in the comments here.

Peace to you as you journey this Lent.

Roxanne

You may also like The Great Liturgy Begins, Walk Out of the Tomb, and Visio Divina Reflection.