Monday, June 4, 2012

Going write with a box of Bisquick

I've lived in Garden Valley Idaho for the past three and a half weeks. It's the longest I've lived apart from my parents or some other adult figure that would watch over me. The strangest thing about it thus far has been the cooking. I live with eighteen people sometimes, (other times there are only nine of us) yet we all cook for ourselves. So the struggle has become, "What is fast, easy, cheap, and only feeds one person?" Leftovers are great, but they don't stay so great for very long. 
The first week and a half or so, I ate very simple things. Mac and cheese, cereal and oatmeal, almond butter and jelly sandwiches, and so on. But I soon tired of these things, and missed my mother's cooking. So, I decided that the best thing to do, was to compile a book of recipes that my mom uses that I like. I skyped her for a few, and turned to the internet for the rest. 
And what was there to save my boring plain food life? PINTEREST.  I searched for college food boards and new mother boards, and found a few recipes that looked worthy for a try.
The first recipe I tried was "Impossibly Easy Mini Chicken Pot Pies" By Betty Crocker. The name was extremely encouraging to me, and I found that it lived up to it's name. You barely need anything. You can even decide what you want to put in it. I chose chicken and spinach and red bell pepper since that is what I had in my fridge. I half almost every recipe to make sure I don't make too much, but next time I make these, I'll use the whole recipe because they freeze and reheat SO nicely. I even had the perfect sized IKEA tupperware to put them in! 

Encouraged by this experience, I turned back to Betty Crocker and found this "Pizza Biscuit Bake" Once again, I halved the recipe, but this time it was perfect. I also substituted the pepperoni (yuck) with Canadian Bacon and Pineapple. The result was exactly what I wanted, Hawaiian Pizza Biscuit Bake.

 At this point, I was running low on Bisquick, but I HAD to try this last recipe. "Cranberry Bread"


The recipe calls for 2 1/2 cups of Bisquick, and that is exactly what I had! As is becoming my true style, I substituted the cranberries for craisins, and it was great. I even added chocolate chips to one loaf. This bread was AMAZING. 
I offered it to my roommates, and it was gone very quickly! Luckily I have another loaf! The only problem is that it called for 5 egg whites. So, I ended up with 5 yolks and nothing to do with them.
I googled uses for them, but found myself always one or two ingredients short of making something. Oh well. Maybe next time I'll have cream to make gelato!

So, there are some of my cooking adventures! I haven't had any problems so far, only successes, yay! But who knows how long that will last. But that's all, till I get more Bisquick! 

Jamie 
PS. I'm posting all the things I'm trying or keeping on my pinterest! You can Follow me at http://pinterest.com/jamisonurry/

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Write Back to the Beginning

Disney music really says it all doesn't it? And you don't realize the significance of it at the age, but as you grow, it all makes sense. Tonight I'm thinking specifically of The Circle of Life. Finals weeks have been very kind to me so far into my college experience. The only final I've had during finals week (before this semester) I didn't have to take because the lowest test score would be dropped in the end and I did well on all the other tests. But this semester has been very different. Luckily, I'm almost done. I've bit the bullet so far, yet the worst has been saved for last. Math. My last final, and it's not till next Wednesday. So while everyone is celebrating the end of their school year, I'm still worrying about my least favorite subject in the world.
But if there is one thing I've learned this semester, it's that time moves on no matter what you think of it. Whether you are looking forward to a day, or dreading one, they will continue to come at the same pace, and when it's over, it's over. You can't relive that specific day or moment if you want to or not. Time pushes us forward; through the hardest times, and through the happiest days we all move at the same pace.
Still, isn't it maddening and strangely calming, that no matter how far forward we go, we always return to the beginning? Whether it's physically, or symbolically, we move forward and yet go through the same places we've been through many times before. Like a circle.
In a funny sense, it's like this Seinfeld quote,
 "The thing about birthday parties is that the first birthday party you have and the last birthday party you have are actually quite similar. You know, you just kinda sit there...you're the least excited person at the party. You don't even really realize that there is a party. You don't know what's goin' on. Both birthday parties, people have to kinda help you blow out the candles, you can't do it...you don't even know why you're doing it. What is this ritual? What is going on? It's also the only two birthday parties where other people have to gather your friends together for you. Sometimes they're not even your friends. They make the judgement. They bring 'em in, they sit 'em down, and they tell you - 'these are your friends! Tell them thank you for coming to my birthday party.'
On the more serious side, we know that as we circle we have to come upon those least favorite of times again. We'll have to face heartache and loneliness, we have to face anger and disappointment again and again and again. Kinda like finals week, eh? 
I know that as long as I'm enrolled in school, I'll have that time of year come around where I won't feel like I'm enough. That there is so much to do and I'm stretched so thin that everything I do won't be adequate. It's on the circle. 
But the nice thing about circles, is that you know in a sense what to expect. You've been there before. And if what you did last time didn't work, you can try something else. It's like having all the answers to a test, because you've practiced those questions so many times.
It's the Circle of Life, and it moves us all through despair and hope, through faith and love. Till we find our place on the path unwinding in the circle, the Circle of Life.

So as a side note/closer, I'm circling around now and restarting this blog. I left a couple of old posts, but I'm hoping this will be a little way I can stay in touch with family and friends this summer.

Jamie

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Who needs sleep? Oh, write. I do.

Why is it that when ever I want sleep, I can't have it. But when I need it, I don't want it? It just turned 3:00, and I've been trying to sleep since 11:00. My body isn't having any of it. You see, there are these horrible things I get called migraines. Unfortunately, the only way to cure them is to take pain killer, and then get some good sleep. But there's a really big problem with that because the pain killers have to have caffeine in them to help with my migraines. So the choice becomes, do I want to sit in my bed for hours trying to fall asleep because it hurts so bad, or do I take two excedrine and sit in my bed for hours wiggling my toes and singing the cheetah girls song, waiting for the caffeine to wear off so I can sleep? Tonight I chose the latter of the two, and let me tell you, that song doesn't go away...
My first instinct when I can't sleep tells me to read, but my brain has no patience for that right now. My second instinct tells me to get on the internet. So after finding out that Ryan Braun tested positive for performance enhancing drugs, and looking at everything on my Facebook home page, I finally followed my third instinct. Listening to music. This song is my go to song for sleepless nights. It started at Lake Powell when I was really young, but it really became meaningful to me when my brother left for his mission. I took his room, and his iPod was one of the only things he left on his side table. I put it in my iHome and looked at his most played list. This song was number two. I listened to it every night for a month before my little sister claimed my brother's iPod.
If you didn't click the link, or can't, it's the Forrest Gump Theme Song. I'm listening to it on replay, and I'm getting drowsy as we speak (or, as I write). It's just so perfect. It's my favorite movie score, with Up right behind it (Harry Potter is third and Pirates of the Caribbean is fourth.)
So, I guess what I'm saying is that, when you can't sleep, make your own list of your favorite movie theme songs. That way, the next time someone asks you what your favorite song is, you can say, "movie themes, classical, show tunes, or pop in general?" Ok, maybe you won't say that, but at least you'll have a good playlist of songs to put you to sleep! I'll post mine here. (I'm doing it from memory, so don't judge me if I forget one!)


1. Forrest Gump - It has everything, beautiful piano, upbeat parts, and it makes me want to cry.
2. Up - Practically perfect. It makes me so happy every time I hear it.
3. Harry Potter - This music fits the books so perfectly, you'd think it was written first.
4. Pirates of the Caribbean - This song freakin pumps me up, especially in World of Color!
5. Indiana Jones - Classic, you can sing it and everyone knows what you're talking about.
6. Sherlock Holmes - Brilliant. That is all.
7. Inception - I feel like I'm sleeping already. Weird.
8. The Dark Knight - So intense. It doesn't hurt that the first time I heard it was in IMAX.
9. The Lion King - Pretty much my whole childhood in one song.
10. Requiem for a Dream - It would be higher, but I've never seen the movie. I just love this song. I feel like the world is ending when I listen to it.
Notable mentions
Titanic - Enya gives me chills. Most people don't know this is the actual song. It's titled Rose's Theme.
Star Wars - Can you deny it's greatness? That's what I thought.
Hunchback of Notre Dame - The only reason it's not number three or higher is because it's not actually the theme. It's the opening number. If it did have a theme it would be way up there. Just the most incredible music.
Well, I'm going to try to get some sleep now. Goodnight!

Jamie