The Week Ahead: Sharing What's Ahead

 


Well hello and welcome to a new year.   While the year is brand new, I tend to change things up a wee bit, just to make it feel as new as it seems to me at the moment.   Truth told it's mostly a lot of the same old things but a little refreshing does a great deal towards improving a familiar meal or a comfortable chair, and a blog.

First I thought I'd reintroduce the retro kitchen photos.  I know that many of you enjoyed seeing them and commenting on what you liked or didn't.  I thought it would be fun to go back to sharing those for a while.  And I'll just go ahead and comment on this one: I love the reverse tile color from one side to the other but honestly doesn't that dining area seem a bit too snug for three?  I'm assuming it's a living/dining room opposite that divided wall but personally I'd like a bit more elbow room at the table, even if there were normally just the two of us.


Also I love the  big sunny windows and the  plants but have you noticed that the divided wall is backed by a big blind?  I think it's a rather neat idea for shutting away the messy kitchen if guests should be visiting.  If left open you'd get a bit more light in the kitchen and that is a must in my book.  I've had plenty of dark and drear windowless, or tiny windowed,  kitchens in my life and I am all for more natural light in my workspace.

Looking at the kitchen, I'm thinking it's just a very small home or even small apartment.  It's neat and tidy and you'd be prone to keep it so with the limited counterspace and the few cabinets. 

Well enough retro kitchen talk.  Do you want to know what to expect from my posts this year?

I have had such good feedback on the Gathering Fragments post and I want to continue that feature but it will no longer be a stand alone feature.  I'll now make it part of The Week Ahead planning post.  I'm going to do what I ought to have done if I'd thought it out and start my week off with a list of fragments gathered and menus/use ideas. And at the end of the week, if I've done something extra I'll share that too.  I'll determine a way to designate them as Gathering Fragments so you can distinguish them just in case you were making notes or keeping a list of ideas handy for your own fragments of food.

The end of the week post will now be titled "Diary of a Homemaker's Week" instead of "The Week Behind".

I'll continue doing a Worth Sharing post.  I love writing those.  I don't know the frequency with which they might appear, certainly once a month, but perhaps more often if I can keep finding inspiration.

I'll share a monthly goals post as I've been doing just before the turn of the month but add in an accountability post at the end of the month.  Not sure how that will be titled, but I'll work it out between now and end of the month.

I thought I'd try to get in a coffee chat twice a month if at all possible, even if one is a shorter post now and then.  I like to just stop and chat and perhaps you do, too?  I think coffee chats and Worth Sharing make me a bit more well rounded as a person and balances out my frugal thinking.  I don't know about you but I can be terribly one-track minded at times and then I wonder why I feel so irritable and whiny.  I'm out of balance!  I've forgotten I'm more than a bean counter!  So let's visit this coming year and try to do it often enough to be women and mothers and wives and not just the kitchen help and purse keeper.

I'd dearly love to do something I've thought would be fun for quite some time and that is to go through my old cookbook and make and share a recipe with you, along with pictures of how my dish turns out.  Again I'm not sure how often I'll do this.  You'd think I'd do it weekly since I cook  20 out of 21 meals at home each week, but I think I need to be reasonable and plan to do it once or twice a month...We'll see how that goes.

I want to share a monthly challenge to do certain things in our homes, little jobs we might be missing that would add to the overall cleanliness and comfort.   I'm set on making this a monthly thing because it takes 21 days to form a new habit...and wouldn't it be wonderful to come to the end of the year with 12 new habits under our belt that have improved our home in some way and upped our homemaking game?

I also want to share a weekly insight, something to make you stop and think.  It might be a personal thing or a homemaking thing or a budget thing but just a little tip of sorts, or moment that made me go "Oh!" and might also inspire you.  I will most likely incorporate that into the Diary of a Homemaker's week post.

And of course, I'll continue to share projects, little devotional moments, etc.    But the main body of the newsletter will be pretty much what it's been with a few tweaks to freshen it.  Consider it all dusted off and wiped down and shining for the New Year!

Now let us get on to the meat of this post: Plans and Meals for the week.

Weekly Plans:  


I always feel I'm at a slight disadvantage since I start work on Sunday but too often I don't post this until late Sunday or Monday.  Never mind.  I have certain tasks I attempt to get round to on Sundays, and while it's not a full day's worth of work, I do try to get my basic cleaning out of the way as much as possible.

I usually strip the bed and bath (and the guest bed and bath too if we've had company).  I might not do the laundry until Monday but at least the bedding and towels are freshened.  I also try to do a quick home keeping routine: empty trash, wipe down counters really well in kitchen and bath, sweep floors, put away things left out over Friday night and Saturday, and just generally make sure things are nice and neat.  I usually accomplish this in about an hour after church since we get back home about 10:30 most Sundays. 

As I said Sunday's are not full on housekeeping days but there's enough of it in there to carry me through the first part of a week if necessary.

Monday I tend to do a little bit more housework, cleaning bathrooms, making beds, picking up, wiping down appliances.  For the cooler months,  I've agreed to give John two hours of time in the yard on Monday as well.  I left a pile of trimmings from the roses and lantana the other day and I need to remove those.  The rest of my time will be spent blowing off porches, picking up whatever branches he trims and hauling them to the brush piles we have in various spots about the yard.    

While I confess to being reluctant to give John that time, Samuel has asked to use my guest/craft room which has a big comfy office chair and a suitable table, as a Monday office space for himself and if I'm out of doors for the most part, I'll be less likely to disturb his concentration and work.   Anticipating this, I cleaned that room on Friday.  I need to make sure, once my menu is planned, that any foods required for Monday's meal prep are in the kitchen and not in my pantry/guest room closet!  

Inspiration Thought:  I should make it a habit to get foods together the day before a menu is going to be prepared anyway.  Hence, Sunday night, I pull out the items needed for Monday evening's meal... 

I've promised myself that I shall work on my recipe files this winter.  I want to gather all my most used recipes into one central notebook instead of having them spread over various cookbooks.  It just doesn't make sense to have to hunt down a recipe I use often enough but can't remember just where it is.  I thought I'd start work on that this week.

I want  to set up a wardrobe for January.  I don't do well with last minute decisions on pulling an outfit together.  I stall and waste time, try things on and toss them and start over again and then get in a panic.  If I have 6 or 7 outfits together and ready to go then I can choose from that section of my closet and know just which necklace, purse, etc. I want to use as well.  Plus it insures I'm wearing more of my wardrobe by planning things out monthly because I set up different outfits each month.  It's sort of a variation on a capsule wardrobe without being so very limited.

As I work my zone areas this month, I mean to declutter and reorganize those spaces and will save deep cleaning tasks for next month unless something is obviously in need of more than a routine cleaning.  This week is Zone 1/Kitchen, Back Entry/Laundry/Kitchen Sitting Area.  It sounds like a lot but it's really not,  it's all basically one room with an ell shape that is our back entry and laundry area.  I'll be sorting out cupboards and drawers and baskets and removing those things I haven't used in the past year.

I'll check the Target sales sheet and see if the Household Cleaning sale is on.  If so, then I'll make out my list, print out my coupon  and go to that store to do my first week of stock ups in that area.

We have some errands to run, too, so I might add shopping to that day.  Banking, mail to go out, etc.

Check my shed for harps for the bedroom lamps.  I bought the right sort of shades for those lamps and am anxious to get the new shades on.  I had spider shades which work for most lamps but the shades have been leaning drunkenly for the past two years and I've had enough.  I'd actually thought I wanted to replace the lamps but in analyzing why I had come to dislike them I realized it was because the shades don't stay on straight.  Putting the right shade on them with the harps, as they were made to have will make a world of difference.  Much cheaper than a pair of new lamps would be, too.

Except for the Zone work,  these are all extra sorts of things, over and above routine housekeeping and meals but any and all of them will make life easier and more pleasant, so I really want to try and get them done.

In The Kitchen:  


InspirationI don't need to buy convenience foods.  I need to plan better for those days when I'm busy or unexpectedly need something that doesn't need a lot of prep work.  I'm thinking this is the time to thaw, cook and season some ground beef for tacos or spaghetti (quick meals) and refreeze it,  or to make smaller casseroles that can cook in less time in the oven or to have a listing of 15-20 minute meals I can make from scratch without resorting to over priced, frozen, preservative and chemical laden foods.  Hmmmm...Maybe a list of quick recipes in the front of my new recipe book would also be a help.

I need to sort out my big freezer.  I've been squeezing things in where they might fit since it was so full after we got our venison, but it's not quite as full now.  I think I can move things about and sort them in a better way so I can find them.  

Gathered Fragments: 

4 mini sub sandwiches

 1 pc Cherry delight 

breakfast sausages, cooked

variety of bread end pieces and crumbs in freezer

partial package of deer sausage

1/4 cup tomato sauce

1 piece of pizza

1/2 cut up orange

applesauce 

2 small Danish rolls

Frozen Waffles

Planned meals: Waffles and Mixed Sausages for breakfast, a Breakfast casserole (using some venison sausage and the bread pieces),and croutons,  Applesauce coffee cake or muffins, fruit salad using orange.

That leaves me with the pizza and danish breakfast rolls.  I'm pretty sure they will be good snacks for John.   

I checked some croutons I'd made and stored.  They were rancid so they went into the trash.  If I'd left off the oil and just dry toasted them, I wouldn't have had to throw them out.

Saturday:  Sub Sandwich*, Tomato Soup*(added in the tomato sauce), Pie*

Sunday: Gramma's Fried Chicken, Sweet Potatoes, Peas, Salad

Monday:  Red Beans and Rice* (using some of the deer sausage), Salad, Corn bread

Tuesday:   Chicken Pot Pie, Cranberry Sauce, Waldorf Salad

Wednesday:  Pot Roast with Vegetables, Peach Cobbler

Thursday:  Stuffed Peppers, Mashed Potatoes, Green Beans, Rolls

Friday:  Cubed Steak, Potatoes au Gratin, Green Salad

I'll cook extra rice on Monday to have ready for the stuffed peppers later in the week.  On Tuesday I'll do a pour over crust for the pot pie.  It's the same recipe I use for cobbler, minus the sugar, so I'll double the recipe, use half on the pot pie and then add sugar to the other half and make the cobbler.

Leisure/Quiet Time: 



I've started my first book for 2021, Louis Lamour's How the West Was Won, which he wrote based on the script for the movie of the same name.  In this case, the movie came first and the book second.  I am enjoying it far more than I thought I might and at the rate I'm reading, will be done with it before the week is out.  I'll set myself up a stack of books to read for January this week.

I'm going to try and commit myself to walk down the driveway and back once a day on the days I haven't walked elsewhere (i.e. when we're out shopping or doing yardwork).  

I'll try to sit on the porch, in the sun, if not walking or working in the yard.  I need the natural Vitamin D.   I'm going to try to get 30 minutes a day of sunshine.  Vitamin D has so many benefits and our over use of sunscreen and avoidance of all sunlight has really cut deeply into autoimmune defenses and calcium absorption.  Vitamin D deficiencies have been linked to cancer, thyroid dysfunction, diabetes, osteoporosis and depression.  Sunshine is free and one of the most natural sources of Vitamin D, besides Fish, like salmon or tuna and sardines are also good sources.  

And one last thing I want to work on is putting my legs up on a wall for 20 minutes a day.  It sounds absolutely foolish but here's the deal.  Way back in the 40's and 50's housewives were urged to lie on a plank or ironing board with one end higher than the other (propped on the sofa usually) and their feet at the higher end.  This drained the lymphatic system and was believed to benefit one's health in a great number of ways.  Well guess what?  A recent study shows that taking twenty minutes a day to rest with legs either propped up against a wall (or at the least with a pile of pillows under the feet raising them higher than the head) benefits digestion, sleep, heart rate and more.   This is something I keep saying I will do for myself but only do when I've been on my feet for hours.  I can say assuredly that I felt better on those days when I took the time to do this simple thing.

Now if you're like me, part of you is wondering how on earth the extra time can be had in a day to do all these 'extras'.  Personally, I'm going to try and get up a little earlier than I've been doing.  I've gotten pretty accustomed to sleeping until 8:30 or later and it's left me feeling harried and hurried.  I think rising at 7:30 isn't that hard a thing to do really.  That and spending  less time on the computer daily should just about give me all the 'extra'  time I need to walk, and soak in the sun.  While I'm out in the sun, I can read or write in my journal or even do a few outdoor tasks as part of my time, so win win.  All in all, I'm only swapping my time from one thing to another, not really adding anything in.    

During the time with my feet up, I mean to close my eyes.  I'm not trying to sleep but if I do then I must need it and if I don't I'll try to use the time as meditation time.  I think it will greatly benefit the anxiety I find myself prone to feeling to have that space in my day.  Personally I'm thinking about 3pm each afternoon is the time best suited to my doing this.  If I worked outside my home, I might use the first 20 minutes after I got home to do this.   I'd also use my lunch break to get both a walk in and the dose of sunlight.  

16 comments:

Marceline Miller said...

Just to say "thanks" for your blog, including the fun retro illustrations! Thank you also for the Advent posts - clearly a lot of work.

Cindi Myers said...

I think your new year's plans are very inspiring. I always enjoy the retro housekeeping pictures, and reading your plans for the week make me consider my own. Thank you!

Jill said...

I so look forward to reading your posts, Terri. Creating a warm and inviting sanctuary of a home, especially during these trying times, is so important. I'm a little envious of your "warm" winters in the south, lol. Up here in central WI we've had a bit more of a mild winter than usual, and the past two days we've had dense fog and moisture resulting in the most ethereal and beautiful hoarfrost. I'm sure we'll get smacked down, though, so now's the time to batten down the home front hatches. You've inspired me to set a few goals for 2021, too: I plan to go through collected recipes and plan some new meals, get back to that 30+ year backlog of photos to sort/pitch, identify, and organize, and try to get in more daily exercise. Thanks again for sharing with us, and Happy New Year!

Angela said...

I love your new ideas! They make me excited for the new year. I did all my recipes in one huge binder but it was difficult to turn the pages so it was very aggravating so this fall I changed to the 1 1/2 in better binders from Staples and did 3 at first for different categories. They are very good binders- opening and closing easily. They even have a closed pocket that you could put something in- maybe untried recipes, or coupons or whatever. They were on sale for $7. with free shipping. I will try to send you a picture though I am not very tech savvy. : ) Happy New Year dear Terri!

Angela said...

Couldn’t figure it out...

Peggy S said...

I’m looking forward to reading your posts for this year! Now that I’m retired I’m going to leave the alarm off and see what time I wake up naturally. I’ve had so many years of rising to that early alarm that I have NO idea what my new wakeup time will be, lol! The next few weeks/months will be spent trying to get into an organized “home rhythm” again after working full time for so many years. I’m looking forward to it!

terricheney said...

Cindi, Thank you. I love the vintage pictures, too. These days I find I want them more from the 1920's and '30's. I seem to appreciate the softer color waves. I guess I need to collect more 1930's style homemaking magazines....

Angela, I'll look them up. I bought the three inch binder but can always use it for genealogy notebook if it doesn't work for me.

Jill, I tackled my photos a couple of years ago. Many and many shots of half heads went into the trash...lol. At least the cameras on our phones makes it easier to get the face in a shot! One morning many years ago we'd had fog and then it froze. I'd taken a child to school and coming home went around the back roads where the road crossed a creek. A shot of sunlight lit up a little enclosed area and it sparkled like prisms. It was one of those seldom seen sights for me and so appreciated. I can just imagine how beautiful your landscape has been.

Peggy, Enjoy that opportunity to sleep in. When I left work and came home it was summer, the kids were out of school and I needed only to rise early enough to see John off to work a couple of mornings. It was such a luxury to sleep in a little bit and get really rested and then two weeks later, I said "Vacation over!" and went to work on the house, lol.

Chef Owings said...

My vein doctor told me to put my legs above my heart 3 times a day for 10 minutes each time. Said it helps the veins in legs and your heart among other things

Amy said...

I enjoy all your posts. I especially enjoy the gathering fragments and when you discuss your cleaning zones. Keep writing, please, and happy new year!

terricheney said...

Juls, thank you that confirms more to me that I need to do this. Now to get my legs up!

Amy, thank you. I enjoy writing about these homey sorts of things.

Anonymous said...

Yesterday I took notebook out of a closet to see what was in it, thinking it was probably a Bible Study. Instead it was recipes that I don't even recall using but most had notes so I have some "new" recipes to try. Most are in 9 x 13 pans which probably means they were from our family of 5 instead of 2 old folks. LOL. Today I started a deep clean. I shampooed tbe dining area rug and boy was the water black! Yikes. Have to give it a second go and see what happens. Want to be all done so in April can start preparing for planting in May. Gramma D

Anonymous said...

What a lovely post. I’m looking forward to reading about your adventures over the next twelve months.
The way you spend your time really resonates with me and to a certain extent, we are.very similar..
I am (NOT) just a SAHM and even though my children are now ‘kidults’, I don’t think I’ll be returning to the workplace.

I enjoy the vintage pictures you post and after reading your discussion of them, looked a little closer. The second picture with the drop down buffet has a meat mincer attached to the right side. This made me smile. My mum had a red mincer which she attached to the kitchen table each Monday so she could mince up the Sunday beef to make rissoles....quite my favourite dish .... I was not a fan of the Sunday roast lol.

I try to ‘zone, declutter and have a ‘daily’ routine which is a minimum so at least the house looks presentable if we should have company or clam and welcoming to me, if I return after running errands etc. I very often do not feel like picking up the housework reins after I’ve been out.

A quick 15/20 min meal I use is frozen salmon. I buy the frozen fillets at Aldi. I use any veg I may have to hand eg peppers, broccoli mushrooms et. I throw a few handfuls in a big pan, wrap salmon - still frozen- in foil. You may like to season,/butter/ herb it. Place the foiled salmon on top of the veg and add a large cup of water. Place lid on and boil up, once bubbling turn down to simmer for about 15 mins or until veg cooked to requirement and salmon cooked through. I usually eat mine with a freshly done part baked roll - much easier hprhan making my own bread.

Thbak you for taking the time to write you blog Terri, I really appreciate the effort you put in and again I’m looking forward to reading in 2021.
( I do hope this comment reaches you as I can’t find my last one)

terricheney said...

Dora, I love you found the notebook. Maybe you can half the recipes for the two of you? Or freeze a portion for later? I got nothing to say about dirty floors...I need to mop badly but hate to mop when the floors are so cold. Seems to take forever to dry.

Dear Anon SAHM, please let me know your name in future. This was a lovely comment and I appreciate you taking the time to share it. It is possible that past comment was my error in forgetting to approve. I've got all caught up with comments now. Your comment about the second meal off roasts made me smile, remembering my son's request to 'skip the roast and go straight to the hash' which was his favorite meal, lol.
Oh that salmon sounds so lovely! I'd eat it but John would not. He's suspect of all fish except canned tuna as he expects bones, but I think it's really more that he just dislikes the taste. I often get fish when I am out and about on my own.
Thank you so much for your lovely note. I enjoyed reading it very much!

Anonymous said...

From SAHM anon lol .... thank you for your reply.
I’m Karen 👋 and I’m really pleased to chat. I thought I’d signed off with my name but after re reading my comment, I see that I didn’t....along with a few other errors I seem to have made 😳😳. I’m blaming my glasses lol.
I have followed your blogs and writings for quite a time ( PennyAnne Poundwise). I also follow you on Instagram but, at present, I’ve disabled my account for a short break. I’m not really sure I like the way Insta is going with all sponsored posts etc. I only have a very small account so I can genuinely chat/keep up with folk. I’m not interested in a large following at all.
Again thank you for taking the time to reply and no apology needed, if you had missed my previous comment. It’s probably more to do with me being somewhat of a philistine with all things ‘computer’

Looking forward to more adventures and chats from the other side of the pond.

Karen x

terricheney said...

Karen, If you've been around since Penny Ann Poundwise days then you are indeed a long time reader. It's nice to finally 'meet' you!

Anonymous said...

I do't get on the computer often any more. But.... when I do I, for sure, come here. I am catching up on your posts today. It was fun to read you ideas for this years posts. I love looking through my cookbooks too but need an easier way to find the favorites. Your idea of making a recipe notebook is one I hope to follow. What kind of notebook are you going to use? The pages in it will be turned and used often and will need to be sturdy. I was thinking of using a photo album. Perhaps the kind with two plastic 'envelopes' per page to place two recipe cards? They usually hold photos and are about the same size as the recipe cards The plastic will keep each card clean. Some recipes though need lots of space and might not work like that???? . Some people have used the older style photo albums that have the spiral spine and sticky heavy pages with the plastic 'magnetic' to cover each page..but they are thick. I don't know about either idea. What are you going to use ? I hope you do let us know some time what style you used and how it holds up. writing or gathering the recipes once is enough. :)) I don't want to do this again and again. :-)

I have always kept a few pages of menus helps. One with a list of each protein. Under each I list the meals we like that use them. Another for listing side dishes. I am bad about figuring out what to have for sides. :) I tend to only think of the same few and this helps me a lot. And a third with the easy, easy, quick meals we like. For those days my head is blank but the family is hungry. ! :) Like you, we keep a pantry so most of the time any of thee meals or ideas can be made without shopping or can be used to gather menus for later. It was so nice to come here today. Since we have had to be home so much and can't even eat out anymore etc having a place like here, that has always been so welcoming to come to and relax and enjoy is such a pleasure !! Thank you Terri. Sarah

Thanksgiving Week To Do List