Eco-friendly Dog Gear {Birthday Giveaway}

dog gear giveawayAs I was thinking about my life and readers, I considered 'how about something for the four legged beasts?' My dogs keep me company on walks in the alleys, bark at strangers, and eat cooking leavings off the kitchen floor. They also eat my tomatoes, birthday cakes, and everything else passable. They are, in part, evil.

But even evil dogs deserve a nice fresh collar and leash once in awhile. Today's birthday giveaway is a OLovesM leash made from reclaimed Chaco sandal straps, a biodegradable poop bag dispenser, and a collar in your choice of size medium or small.

Comment below with your dog's name to enter.

Giveaway Details

Contest entries close at 12:01 AM EST on Tuesday, October 11, 2011. One winner will be selected with random.org. The winner will have 24 hours to respond to email notification with their mailing address for delivery of the gift card.

Winners must have a US address. Only one entry per person please. Retail value of dog gear gift pack is $30.

Disclosure: I am personally sponsoring this giveaway. Opinions are my own and shipping is also covered by me.

 

Additional Birthday Giveaways:

Kroger Giftcard (ends October 10, 2011)

Birthday Week: Kroger Gift Card {Giveaway}

purple basil flower Last year, when I turned 30, my birthday was all about me. This year, I want to celebrate with you fellow cooks and readers. Let's countdown to my birthday (October 9) with some giveaways!

First up is free shopping at Krogers. Krogers is a supermarket store chain in the Midwest. I shop at our Graceland Marketplace location once a month of so for staples and organic produce.

What I like most about Krogers is that they carry canning jars and supplies year round. This time of year, especially, I keep an eye out for sale and clearance canning equipment.

Up for grabs are five $10 gift cards. I will award one each to five separate commenters on this post.

To enter, simply reply below with why you want to win. Be sure to include a valid email so I can contact you! Contest is now closed. Congratulations winners!

Giveaway Details:

Contest entries close at 12:01 AM EST on Monday, October 10. Five winners will be selected with random.org. Winners will have 24 hours to respond to email notification with their mailing address for delivery of the gift card.

Winners must have a US address. Only one entry per person please. Retail value of each gift card is $10.

Disclosure: I received a gift card to Kroger of my own. Opinions are my own and shipping is covered by me.

October 3, 2011 {Meal Plan}

Ingredients & Inspiration:

  • I harvested a ton (well, several huge bowls) of green tomatoes, peppers, and herbs this weekend when frost threatened.
  • I ended up with four bags of Swainway Urban Farm sprouts after working the booth on Saturday. Yum!
  • Hello birthday week!! I want to go to Athens Farmers Market for my birthday and backpack the night at Wildcat Hollow. This will be our first time to the market ever and first time backpacking since Lil was a baby.

Menu:

Monday - fried green tomatoes, remoulade, dinner salads

Tuesday - salmon cheeks (fish heads, fish heads, rolly polly fish heads), stuffed peppers, sprout salad

Wednesday - dinner with Dad at India Oak?

Thursday - Applicious cooking class at Franklin Park Conservatory (tickets still available, $63 for six (6!) courses including fennel apple slaw, apple braised pork, and rustic apple tart)

Friday - Trail burritos (dried beans/salsa, cheese, tortillas, sprouts), dried fruit

Saturday - Dinner in Athens (Casa Nueva or Jackie O's? Maybe one for early lunch, the other for dinner?)

Sunday - Birthday dinner of fondue and small plates at our house

 

PS. Stay tuned to the blog this week for a series of giveaways celebrating my birthday!

Meal Plan September 19, 2011

Ingredients and Inspiration:

  • We are trying to return to a normal routine after several weeks with lots of events.
  • Our garden is winding down with only a few tomatoes and peppers left.
  • I unearthed some old homemade chorizo in the freezer that needs to be used.
  • Lil's birthday is this weekend!

Monday - chorizo mulitas, curtido

Tuesday - from-the-garden Johnny Marzetti (food blogger roundup on this Columbus classic coming Wednesday), steamed garden green beans

Wednesday - broccoli and purple potato frittata

Thursday - Tuscan kale and bean soup

Friday - pool and pizza birthday party for Lil's friend

Saturday - Lil's birthday dinner at Sushi Ting. I asked what she wanted and predictably she answered "salmon sashimi".

Sunday - Lil's 6th birthday! Party with Taysetee Pastry cake, followed by barbecue dinner at my parents'.

 

DIY Historic Ammunition

home reloaded springfield 1873 rifleAlex and I make all sorts of things ourselves: confit, counter tops, hard cider, chicken coops...stuff most people prefer to buy.  We like getting a little messy and learning exactly how things are created. Even given our penchant for handmade goods, we freely admit that Alex's birthday gift of homemade ammunition for his father this year is bit of do-it-yourself over-achievement.

The Back Story

Tom, Alex's dad, has a Springfield Model 1873 rifle, more commonly known as the Trapdoor Springfield.  He was gifted the firearm, made around 1880, from Alex's mother's mother twenty years ago.

It is likely that the rifle hasn't been shot in about a hundred years, knowing the family history.  Neither Tom nor Alex have fired the gun, and can't but for the birthday present.

You see, modern commercial ammunition is loaded to higher pressure levels than the black-powder era Springfield.  Firing with modern ammunition could be unsafe and would likely cause heavy wear on the rifle. Ammunition can't be easily purchased, so the gun cannot be shot.

Until now.

home cast lead bullet brass casing for home reloading loading smokeless powder Click pictures for biggerness.

Making Ammunition

Starting in November, Alex melted several blocks of 'clean' lead radiation shielding from a Brownfield cleanup project he and his father worked on.  He poured the lead into a historically accurate profile in a modern mold and allowed the bullets to cool.

Next he loaded casings with smokeless powder and crimped the casings to the bullets. He tumbled the cartridges to clean off residual grease. Then, Lil and I wrapped what is certainly the most weight-per-volume gift in our family history.

Now Tom has twenty opportunities to shoot with this historic rifle. Alex invited his dad to an afternoon at an outdoor range once the weather turns warm again so they both have a chance to see how the old gun performs.  More than a useful present, this gift was a labor of love.

Happy Birthday Tom!

Recipe for Black Powder Equivalent 45-70 Load

for any reloaders who found this post through a search engine, as typical Hounds in the Kitchen readers are unlikely to cook up ammunition any time soon

405 grain cast lead bullets

33.5 grains Alliant Reloder 7 powder

Winchester large rifle primers

New Starline brass cases

1. The cases can be sized using any commercially available reloading dies.  In this case, Hornady 45-70 New Dimension Reloading Dieswere used in a Lee Cast Iron 4 Hole Turret Press.

2. After sizing and priming, add the powder charge.  Reloder 7 is a fast-burning powder for use in small varmint calibers, but also in the larger, older 45-70.

3. Seat the bullet and crimp the case.  Overall length of the cartridge is 2.65 inches.

Maybe someday I'll write about my journey from a gun fearing pacifist to a person whose spouse produces ammunition. Would any of you care to read about my views on weapons?

Our Family Doesn't Buy Cakes

kung fu panda birthday cakeSweet Lil turns five today.  I have no words to summarize my complex feelings about being her mother, nor reflections on her growing maturity and beauty.  Where to turn, then, but to food?

The setting: Mother and daughter are walking through an unfamiliar grocery store.

Mother, reading list: spaghetti, Parmesan.  Where's the Parmesan? Daughter: Can I have a...

Mother, interrupting: Oh here it is.  We're going to use already shredded cheese at your spaghetti birthday party because it will be easier.  Ok?

Daughter: Uh huh.

Mother: Now, lunch meat.  Do you really think you would eat lunch meat at school?

Daughter, spying the bakery case of decorated cakes: Hey, we could just buy a cake!

Mother: Our family doesn't buy cakes.

Daughter: Why?

Mother: Um, it's just not something we do.  We like to make them ourselves.

Daughter: But those are painted!  Can we paint mine?

Mother: Not really. Ours will taste better, though.  Do you still want decorations from the cake store?

Characters move on to other shopping.

five year old birthday cake Lil was beaming as we sang happy birthday around her homemade, not-from-a-box-or-a-store cake. Devie tasted not a morsel, unlike last year's thievery. The chocolate on chocolate cake was a sweet end to a lovely party for our new five year old.

Does your family buy cakes? Do I really have a five year old kid already?

30 before 30 Update

It is now twenty days until my 30th birthday.

The day after my 30 before 30 post, my next youngest sister (do you know I'm the oldest of four sisters?) knocked on the door, shoved a handful of pennies at me, and walked away. I later counted them; there were thirty.

Nothing happened the next day.

paperclip spiral

The day after that, the dogs barked wildly at Lil's bedtime.  We stopped reading a story and found two gifts on the porch - a plum figure with thirty toothpicks and a string of thirty paper clips.  Two of my sisters were hiding in the bushes.

Are you getting the theme?

gummy bears lined up on the sidewalk

Every day since, there's been a gift of thirty somethings.  My sisters have left a plethora of pixie sticks, a swarm of plastic spider rings, a secret message comprised of thirty characters, and, my personal favorite, thirty gummy bears glued to the steps of the house.

You can probably imagine the fun Lillian and the neighbor children had at chomping the heads off the stuck gummy bears.

I am excited for the next twenty days.  I am already realizing that a few of my goals (weight loss and escapist vacation) might not happen, but I am OK with that.  There are other trips on the horizon and I'm exercising more regularly so who cares about the number on the scale?