Cake In A Cup

The internet taught me how to make cake in a cup. So I did.

Cake in a cup 1 Cake in a cup 2

Cake in a cup 3 Eating cake in a cup

Tastes pretty good! I think my microwave only needed 2.5min instead of the 3 recommended in the recipe. Also, I added a dash of vanilla to my cake. Mmm.


Pat A Cake

Mark’s mum gave me a great cake-making book back in February, and I’ve been having fun with it ever since. Here are a few pictures of some recent creations, as well as a couple of shots from Alexander’s birthday cake from March.

I made the bride cake for Natalie, to kick start her batchelorette weekend, and the big pink K was for Kem to celebrate her 50th birthday. The way things worked out, it ended up being best to present both Nat and Kem with their cakes at the gym, right after our morning workout. We earned those early morning slices of cake!

Probably my favourite thing about these cakes is that they actually taste good (if I do say so myself). The recipe is simple yet delicious. A definite hit.

Next time an occasion calls for it, I want to try my hand at making a giant cupcake!


17 months

Alexander continues to grow and learn.

This month, he decided that riding in the stroller while we take Rosie for her afternoon walk is completely overrated. The first time he pushed his little truck out the front door while I was getting the stroller ready, and proceeded to walk down the driveway, I thought it was so cute that I just let him keep going. We made it about halfway down the street before turning around and heading for home. The next day, he was adamant that he walk with his truck again, and we made it a little further. And so, day by day, Alexander has walked a little further and further, and now he will walk all the way around the block! He doesn’t always take the truck, and we definitely move faster without it, but no matter how hot he gets or how tired his little legs may be, he won’t let me carry him home. He will sit down on the curb for a little while and have a rest, and then get up and keep on moving again.

Alexander is still obsessed with cars. He greets me when I get home from work with cries of “Car! CAR!”, and does the same to Mark when he arrives home, and to my parents whenever they stop by to visit. He knows that the car needs a key, and will shout “key! car! key!” and point at the keys. He has learned to differentiate cars from trucks (“tuck!”) but sometimes he will call trucks “boats”. When we walk with Rosie in the afternoon, there are often helicopters in the sky nearby (I assume they are headed to Camp Mabry?) and Alexander will point up at them and say “ticka ticka”, which is his word for a ceiling fan – or “car” – his go-to word for all moving objects.

Blue Mr. Tickle

He’s talking more and more. Sometimes I can’t really understand what he is saying, but it always make perfect sense to him, and is often accompanied by little head nods or arm gestures, just like we use when we talk to each other and to him. His retention seems to be increasing too. He points at the clocks and the stars and the cow and the moon and so on when we read “Goodnight Moon” before bed. He will point at the fireplace in the book and say “hot!” and at the kittens and say “doggie”. I keep telling him they are kittens, not doggies, but he just smiles and says doggie again, like, ‘silly Mummy doesn’t recognise the doggies’. It’s funny.

Alexander started voicing his appreciation for Elmo this month. He calls Elmo “MELMO!”. He watches the Elmo segment on Sesame Street most mornings while he drinks his morning milk, and I guess the show has made quite an impression on him. We are taking care of Katie’s red fish while she and Marc are in Japan. The first day we brought Crimson Dynamo home, we put him on the dining room table. Alexander was playing in the front room, and I was sorting through the mail when I heard Alexander shouting “MELMO, MELMO, MELMO” over and over again. I walked through to the dining room to see what was going on and found Alexander shouting at the fish, trying to tap against the side of the bowl. He was very decisive that this fish was Elmo. It took me a while to figure out that Elmo has a goldfish, similar to Crimson, featured on every episode. Elmo’s fish is called Dorothy. I think Alexander thinks we have Melmo’s fish!

More Clark Kent than Bruce Wayne Anti Stroller

This month, Alexander finally decided to start eating pasta. He’s generally a good eater, and it has never made any sense to me that he didn’t like/wouldn’t eat spaghetti or lasagna, but figured he’d probably come around eventually. Eventually happened two Saturdays ago, when Alexander decided he wanted to eat my lunch of leftover spaghetti bolognese rather than his sandwich. Since then, he’s eaten all kinds of pasta creations, which is great because it makes it easier for me to feed all 3 of us from the same dinner and also easier to stuff him full of veggies on the sly. We make our spag bog with onions and carrots and mushrooms and spinach and sometimes we’ll put eggplant (aubergine) or other random veggies inside, and we often use wholewheat pasta. He’s also been chowing down on homemade oven baked sweet potato chips and loves drinkable yoghurt. He’s still mad for peaches and strawberries and melon. He likes to eat oatmeal square cereal for breakfast – sometimes he even eats a few pieces off a spoon before tipping the contents of his bowl onto his tray and eating with his fingers.

Grin Spaghetti face

Alexander loves to play “Piggies”, as in “This little piggy went to market”. He will lift up his feet and wiggle his toes and say “piggy!” to get us to say the rhyme for him, and he starts laughing as soon as we get a couple of words into the final line of “and this little piggy went wee wee wee wee, all the way home!”.

I’m sure there’s more. It seems like there is something new everyday at the moment! But this snapshot will have to do for now.

Here’s a cute video of Alexander stomping around the house in one of his Daddy’s shoes.


Dinner


Dinner
Originally uploaded by krisalis.

Fish fingers, baked sweet potato fries and peas with a side of ketchup. He even ate some of the peas.


Go Dietgirl Go!


Go Dietgirl Go!
Originally uploaded by krisalis.

I cannot say enough good things about this book.

Shauna’s story of her weight loss journey to healthy living strikes a careful balance between raw emotion and comedy gold. I was instantly drawn to the warmth and honesty of Shauna’s writing, and found myself cheering her on from chapter to chapter, wishing I could step into the book and give her a giant hug as she made progress and faced setbacks.

I read the book from cover to cover in a matter of days, and then re-read it again at a more leisurely pace, savoring my favourite bits. My particular favourite parts revolved around Shauna’s arrival into Edinburgh and also her return visit to Canberra, probably because I lived in Edinburgh for 5 years (a fellow graduate of Edinburgh University’s EE department, like Shauna’s husband Dr. G – just an MEng though, not the grand PhD!), and my husband was born and bred in fine Canberra town, which is where Shauna was living and working before she moved to Scotland.

The Amazing Adventures of Dietgirl was a fun, inspirational read with a serious side. Shauna spins a great yarn, and it was such a pleasure to read her story in full. I know Shauna has reached her original Dietgirl goals, and that make me happy, but I’d rather like to see some sort of sequel! Dietgirl Takes Manhattan, or something! Onwards and upwards Dietgirl! You’re a true hero.


Anti Stroller


Anti Stroller
Originally uploaded by krisalis.

Alexander does not want to get in the stroller any more when we take Rosie for her evening walk. He wants to walk too, pushing his truck. He can go pretty far too! After a while he gets tired of pushing the truck, but he’s still happy to walk (or run!) all the way home.


Noodle

Noodle! Boat!


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