Showing posts with label Brownies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brownies. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 August 2016

Life, love and little things. July 2016



I've been on an unplanned hiatus from these posts for a while, for absolutely no reason other than those horrible headaches and migraines which are blighting my days. However, that doesn't mean there aren't wonderful things in my life and as always I'm looking forward to sharing them here.

I finished another blanket this month. This one's a baby blanket for a dear, dear friend who's expecting. It was a lovely thing to hook such love into every row, for the Mama and her bubba. It was also incredibly pleasing to stitch something that I finished in a shortish space of time.



I'm still working on my massive neat ripple for our bed. It uses the Last Dance in the Rain colour pack from Scheepjes for their crochet-a-long in memory of Marinke Slump. I've written about it here and am fairly decided I'll tackle the pattern again, some time next year. I've currently got 2 blankets and some cushion covers on my hooks, and I'm also thinking about socks!



We had our annual Brownie holiday in July - which was the first time I've been away from Harry for two nights, and the first time in the new kitchen in the Division's holiday house. It was glorious to cook in, so much space - and made me loathe our kitchen at home a bit more! The holiday theme was Alice in Wonderland, so on Saturday we had a Mad Hatter's Tea Party - with the ubiquitous jam tarts, cheesy caterpillars, White rabbit sausage rolls and some playing card fairy cakes. Drink me potions and Eat me fruit also featured on the menu. The girls had a wonderful time and I really enjoyed my role as QM.



July is M's birthday and this year was a big one - so a special cake was in order. Harry helped me and together we made him a Funfetti cake with blue buttercream - which is what happens when you let your toddler choose the colour! Topped with a fondant road and some lovely wooden cars from Babi Pur, M adored it. And it tasted lovely too.




The end of term for Guides clashed with some lovely sunny days, and despite having had my feet in the paddling pool at home all day we finished our term in the same way - only adding ice creams into the mix!




The glorious summer weather has not just meant long days in the garden, but lighter food as well. M is not a fan of salad, so I've been roasting peppers, courgettes, mushrooms, red onions and garlic and topping them with our favourite dairy free Heck sausages, or stirring them into pasta. I've also had a (very successful bash) at recreating my favourite Carrefour carrot salad that I eat by the bucketful when in France.



Despite not blogging much, July has been full to the brim of fun and family and of course some fab food too. Lots of blessings for me to recount in my Bullet Journal and of course say thank you for.

If you like these sneaky peeks into our month, why not follow Penelope's Pantry on Instagram for regular snapshots into what's going on.


Wednesday, 27 May 2015

MS Awareness day - dairy free brownies



Today is World MS Awareness Day.  

A very dear friend of mine has MS - as did my late Grandad. On their behalf, I'd love you to particpate in a mini bake-off for MS Awareness day. Bake your favourite brownie recipe, and comment below - tweet me @penjy using the hashtag #strongerthanMS and I'll retweet all I see. Today's post is written by that friend... welcome to the Pantry Hayley... I'll hand over to you now.

MS is a degenerative, neurological condition. There is no cure.  It can and does have a devastating effect on an individual and those closest to them, as we have discovered personally. 

 Fatigue, pain, cognitive difficulties, loss of mobility are some of the long list of symptoms that accompany MS, and the heartbreaking reality is, you never know when the next deterioration is coming. Life becomes a constant balancing act to manage relapses and to hold on to those times of remission.  

As is the case with most things, everyone is different and with the correct support; both social and medical, life can be made easier. 

Today is important for lots of reasons but crucially, we need to raise awareness so that a cure could be find, it might not happen in our life-time but for future generations, there has to be an end to MS in sight!

The UK based MS Society have been holding Cake Bakes all month and I have chosen one of my favourites  to make and share, and of course the only place to bake is in the Pantry (with ample supervision and guidance for someone who is culinary challenged to say the least)!.

I have chosen a dairy-free and soya-free recipe for two reasons. One is that lots of people with MS find that removing dairy, soya, wheat or gluten helps their symptoms. The other of course, is that despite Penny telling me otherwise, I’m a bit stubborn and wanted to make something she could eat too.  Not forgetting our connection with Brownies, of the yellow and brown kind.  

Please bombard us with photographs, we’d love to see you make our MS Awareness Day Brownies! Together we’re #strongerthanMS

S'more Brownies for MS Awareness

250g Self-raising flour
350g demerera sugar
65g cocoa powder
1/2 tsp salt
200ml water
250ml vegetable oil
1tsp vanilla extract
200g mini marshmallows

Brownie pan - lined with baking parchment

Preheat the oven to 180 degrees
In a mixing bowl - combine the dry ingredients
Add the water, vegetable oil and vanilla extract
Pour the mix into your baking pan - stir in the marshmallows
Bake for 35-40 minutes in the preheated - we wanted our Brownies to be slightly gooey still as they were destined for pudding. If you prefer your Brownies more on the cakey side of things then cook them for about 45 minutes (cover the top with tin foil if you feel like it's starting to catch)


Wednesday, 12 June 2013

Fancy s'more tiffin?



No really, s'more tiffin.

I love S'mores - I could write an ode to them right now, but will save you from any shocking attempts at poetry and merely say that as far as I am concerned they win.

Sadly however I can't always summon up a fire at the opportune moment when s'mores are in demand. I know - it's very remiss of me. As such I put together a tiffin recipe for those moments when nothing else but the pairing of digestives, chocolate and smooshy marshmallow will do. 

At Easter M and I made Jules' Mini egg tiffin for his parents, and this recipe is based around those quantities. 

S'more tiffin
85g butter
2 tbsp golden syrup
100g milk chocolate, melted in a bain marie or the microwave
170g digestives, crushed - I use a sandwich bag, rolling pin and any lingering agression
230g marshmallows - Either get 50g of mini ones, or chop about 50g up small
Melt the butter and syrup in a saucepan and add the digestives and melted chocolate
Pour half of this into a 2lb loaf tin lined with cling film. Press down
Melt 200g or so of marshmallows (I use the same pan because I hate washing up) and pour/ spoon this on top of the first layer of digestives
Pour the other half of the digestive mixture on top
Sprinkle the top with the chopped up marshmallows and gently press them into the top layer - you really don't need too many
Pop in the fridge until it hardens up (overnight is usually plenty of time) 
Those are fairly loose measurements - if you can get 170g bags of marshmallows, buy those - it'll be fine. Don't worry about weighing out the ones to chop up small, just take a couple of handfuls. As always basics chocolate and digestives are perfect. If you have Guides with faith based dietary restrictions or who are veggies you'll probably want veggie marshmallows. I've bought them from eBay in the past, but our local sweetshop now has kosher and vegetarian varieties. 
In terms of doing this in unit cooking - I would make this in fairy cake tins with cake cases for the Guides or Brownies.  When I say I would make it - either group could happily manage this, especially if we used the microwave to melt the chocolate. The smaller size should mean that if we started straightaway they would be take home-able (it's a word) by the end of the meeting.




Thursday, 9 May 2013

Guiding and Social Media part two



Hopefully you've seen part one of this series, extolling the benefits of using Social media for your Rainbow, Brownie, Guide or Senior Section unit. This is the write up of the intermediate session run by Rosie from CHQ - again if you've not had this training locally please do direct your local guiders to this post. 

So, lets work on the basis that you're tweeting. You have your unit facebook page up and running and are using it to keep in touch with friends and family. You might have a closed (or secret) group for your Rangers and it's all working well. 

What now? How can you extend your use of social media and  most importantly make it work for you? 

Ultimately of course that's the main question. We're all volunteers - we don't want to be attached to our laptops and smartphones any more than we have to be. I don't know about you but I didn't volunteer as a leader to add a few extra hours each day sweating over Twitter. We need to make our social media channels work for us, not the other way around.

The power of social media lies in it's speed, and the way it encourages engagement. If we're going to campaign we can make use of those strengths to create and sustain a buzz around our message, reach a larger audience over a longer time and ultimately strengthen our message. All in all this means that we increase our impact. 

The starting point of any campaign is the end point. Identify what result you want and work backwards from there. 


  • Be specific - is it more volunteers you want? Or in fact do you want 2 new Rainbow leaders?
  • Will you be able to tell you've achieved your goal? Make it measurable
  • Are you being realistic? Is having every unit in your County fully staffed at all achievable?
  • When do you want this to happen by? By being time bound we give ourselves a framework (Again, be realistic!)




The next thing to think about with your planning is who do you want to target? And which social media is appropriate?  Personally I'm a twitter fan* as I feel that you reach a wider audience. Facebook's new(ish) policy whereby you pay to promote your page means that actually your reach is hugely reduced. I've got 100 'fans' on the Penelope's Pantry facebook page, yet my last status update reached 6 people - especially annoying as that was for a competition I'm running giving away a £50 Sainsburys voucher. 



Twitter has no limits like that and as I mentioned before the national Girlguiding page actively follows units and RTs campaign tweets - be it recruitment, event publicity or just #weekendguiding activities. Also with twitter you can schedule tweets using a programme like Tweetdeck so that your message goes out at different times during the day so catches people as the Twitter audience changes. 

When you're developing your campaign, think about it in three stages:


  1. The build up... you want to raise interest
    • Hook people in by making it interesting. Use a call to action or question in your tweets. Sound enthusiastic - no one is going to be excited if your status update reads "Going to camp on Wednesday. Dreading it. Weather's awful. Guides are stressed" I hate to sound PRish, but spin that fear, why not tweet "Guides and leaders nervous about camping in this terrible weather! Anyone have any suggestions for surviving torrential rain on camp?"
    • Encourage engagement. 
    • Answer people's responses to you
    • Use hashtags # or link people using handles (their twitter name, which starts with the @ symbol - mine is @penjy) to involve others. 
  2. The event itself
    • Encourage attendees to participate. Ask people to post what they're up to, and to share what you're doing - don't limit yourself to words, use pictures, videos - anything that tells the story. Offer a prize - best picture tweeted on the day wins a Middlesex east thermal mug! 
    • Nominate someone to tweet during the event - set up a hashtag and tell people what it is -  it could be something simple like #guidecamp or something really specific like #MEGA2012 
    • When you can, try and make sure there's somewhere accessible with wifi or 3G coverage so that attendees can join in with their media
    • Make use of other media like Instagram and again use hashtags and handles in those feed to involve others
  3. After the event
    • Encourage people who attended to again share their updates, pictures, videos (ensuring that relevant permissions have been obtained)
    • Curate the event - if you've had a lot of coverage and want to capture it all in one place, use something like Storify to draw it all together
    • Keep the conversation going - ask follow up questions
  4. Evaluation
    • Ask for feedback - you can use something like Survey monkey in case people would prefer to be anonymous
    • Did your campaign work? Did you reach that goal?
    • What went well?
    • What would you do differently? 
    • Don't beat yourself up about things that didn't go well - learn from them.
Before this really drags on a few final things to think about

Social media is not just about taking - you need to give as well - so, if you see a unit (even if they're at the other end of the country to you) selling badges for a GOLD trip, RT it. Who knows what badge hungry guiders, or units in search of a challenge badge to fill those few weeks before camp you have following you?

Think about your brand - select your profile picture carefully, and think about what it looks like on screen.

Don't give yourself Guiding fatigue - make sure you've got at least one other person staffing those accounts so it's not all down to you. 

Think about your tone of voice - I tend to keep tweets chatty and friendly. I'm not presenting to the board!

Use apps to help you - I've mentioned Tweetdeck and Hootsuite which will notify you of and help you to keep on top of any mentions you get.

Just be aware of your data allowance - I'm deliberately on Three so that I have unlimited data. Similarly remember your charger! All too often I'm just out of battery when the guides have formed a perfect human pyramid whilst in full uniform on a bouncy castle singing Taps. Ok maybe not exactly that, but you get the picture. 

A huge thank you to Rosie from GirlGuiding CHQ whose workshop this is all based on. I've just written it up, she did all the hard work *Brownie thank you claps*

And now my call to action - have you got any questions? Any? At all? About anything in either of these posts? Either comment here or send me an email at penelopespantry@googlemail.com and I'll bring them all together in a Social Media superpost and ask Rosie and the Social Media team at HQ to answer them all on here. I may even chip in myself ;-) 

As an aside, if you're reading this and fancy winning a £50 Sainsbury's voucher either for yourself, or to put towards the food bill for this summer's Guide camp or Brownie holiday, why not enter the competition I'm running here - for a recipe using your favourite Kitchen Hero or storecupboard staple from Sainsburys? You don't need to be a blogger, just pop your recipe in the comments section and Sainsbury's will pick their favourite!

*Something which no one was surprised at. Ever.


Sunday, 5 May 2013

Guiding and social media part one


Social Media and Guiding don't always seem the most natural fit - I don't know about you, but although I am a prolific *ahem* fairly seasoned blogger, tweeter, facebooker etc, I've not quite got to grips with doing those things as a representative of my unit, district, division or County. Or so I thought. This weekend I took part in two workshops run by Rosie, one of the Girlguiding CHQ marketing interns and in response to request am writing up the key points here for people who haven't had access to this training locally to them. 

If we start by thinking about Girlguiding themselves, they have huge reach - their followers and likers on Facebook and twitter amount to about 29,000 - stats which are increasing by 3 - 4,000 per quarter. Whether we're using those mediums for local, regional or national communications - that's a huge amount of people reading and responding to what Girlguiding have to say. You might think "but I only have 30 girls in my unit. Who would listen to me?" But, if your follwers retweet or share what you're talking about then your reach extends and extends. And the Girlguiding accounts follow units, districts, divisions and Counties and will retweet/ share your news, thoughts and views. 

There are things we do need to bear in mind - Child safety, especially on facebook. Closed groups for Senior section, with carefully chosen securities and permissions for photos work best. But Guide, Brownie or Rainbow units could have a Unit page. With Twitter your account is open - your feed needs to be brief but relatively frequent and you do need to engage - neither Twitter nor facebook work as social media tools if you're just shouting into an empty room - but if you talk to people, linking them into your conversations, retweeting others' you start to find your place in those communitiies. 

Some final hints and tips for new tweeters/ facebookers

  • Tweet/ Share good news and information
  • Use a strong profile picture
  • When tweeting or updating your status use a call to action - a question for your followers to answer
  • Include links and pictures (bear in mind photo permissions) where relevant
  • Don't be afraid to ask people to share your message - Twitter shorthand for this is 'Please RT'
  • Tweet others as you would like to be tweeted ;-) - share their news, respond positively, link up

Next time a write up of the intermediate session 

Oh and have some cake  









Friday, 3 May 2013

Knife skills with the Brownies


When you're cooking with children and restricted time-wise, there's undoubtedly the tendency to concentrate on bakes or icing. Those low effort high excitement activities. However, one of the things I'm quite keen on is instilling the fact that cooking isn't just baking and involves other things. This week we tried new fruit and practiced our knife skills.

Brownies is an excellent opportunity to do just this - our meetings last for an hour and a half and we go away at least once a year on a Brownie holiday. This week we were doing an Island hopping night - playing games and doing activities from different places around the world. The gorgeous weather leant itself to our planned food activity brilliantly. 

Fruit kebabs is an oft repeated activity with Brownies, but one they love (and chose themselves). We try to vary the fruit on offer to encourage them to try new flavours and textures. The only rule is that if you haven't tried it before you give it a little taste, and you do your own chopping and assembling. As you can see from the photo above we use table knives for the chopping and cocktail sticks for the kebabs (of course you could use kebab sticks, but we find that 4 mini kebabs are more attractive than one huge one)

We assign one adult to each table, and demonstrate the bridging technique to each girl. 

Making sure they're holding their knife correctly and using two fingers of the other hand to hold the fruit stable (to make a bridge), 
If it's a round fruit, often we or an older girl will make a flat end to make it more stable. 
Holding the knife below their 'bridge' they chop each thing into bite sized pieces before threading it on the sticks. 
For kiwi fruit, they make a little incision into the skin first to help make the cut

Fruits we tried this week were: mango, pineapple, kiwi, and oranges. Everyone tried everything and we had 2 coverts to kiwi fruit - apparently they had refused to try it previously because it was green! 

Practicing knife skills may seem like a small thing, but when we go away on Brownie holiday we get the girls to help chop carrots, potatoes, and even fruit for their elevenses so being able to do so safely is indispensable. 

You can see on the tables we use plastic mats for hygiene (these are dishwashed afterwards), and table mats. Hands are washed before and after the activity. Hair is tied back, and when made we put the kebabs onto paper plates (to reduce washing up as much as anything else!) 



Thursday, 25 April 2013

Hello, is it me you're looking for?



Apologies for the break in service - I'd like to say normality will resume presently but I'm going to be taking things slowly for a while. Whilst I love blogging, and adore the friends I've made through my little space on the internet, I've recently found life a little challenging. There's a lot going on here in the Pantry; big and little things and to say I've  felt overwhelmed by life would have been an understatement. I am trying to get things a bit more back on track and need to be a bit easier on myself - aren't we all our own worst critics? 

The plan is that for a while I'll just be blogging recipes and activity plans for my Guide and Brownie units - the things I love most. And taking that a bit more slowly. One of the things I've realised is that I can't do everything or at least not well. And that the person that's affected most by trying to be all things to all people is me. 

If you've found your way here from Guiding magazine - hello and welcome to my pantry - hopefully you'll have a poke around the recipes and activity plans and find something that interests you. If there's something you've wanted to try with your unit but am not sure how, or some inspiration for food activities for a particular theme or festival, drop me a line - either in the comments, or at penelopespantry@googlemail.com 

Next up - chocolatey chocolate and pretzel cookies... 


Saturday, 9 March 2013

Comic Relief cookies: Activity plan

We've got a new guide starting on Tuesday, and I always like to make sure that there's something interesting happening when we know we have a new girl joining us. Especially if she's not been a Brownie. If you're not used to Guiding coming face-to-face with 20 noisy and slightly hyperactive girls that you've not met before can feel a bit overwhelming, so it's good to know I've got something in hand. 

Of course it's Comic Relief next week, so my thoughts have naturally hopped to red nose based baking (come back tomorrow for fairy cakes) In order to get all the Guides done with a batch whatever we made had to be a quick bake  - these take 15 minutes in the oven tops. As always they're cheap to make - 1 batch should make enough for 2 patrols of 6-8 girls, so you should only need 2 sets of ingredients. If you've got more than 24 girls I'd do another lot. 


For reference, Guides are aged 10 – 14

Break the girls up into Patrols/ groups of 6-8
Red nose cookies
Equipment:

Round cookie cutter/ or a clean cup or mug
Baking trays
Greaseproof paper
rolling pin
Mixing bowl
Electric beaters or strong arms
Clean hands


Ingredients:

750g plain flour
250g butter (Basics/ Economy butter is perfect – but make sure it’s well softened)
250g caster sugar
1 egg
1/2 tsp vanilla essence/extract

This makes about 30 cookies (depending on your cutter size) so should split between 2 patrols of 6-8 girls. I've done costings for 2 batches, working on the basis of 4 patrols. 


If doing this with Guides it is an ideal Patrol cooking activity – they could do challenges to earn or win the ingredients. Or you could challenge them to do the most creative Comic relief themed icing

Instructions:

Preheat the oven to 200 degrees C

Wash your hands
Beat the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy
Beat the egg and add in
Add the vanilla and beat again
Add the flour in thirds beating well to combine
Tip the dough onto a floured worktop/ a table
Roll out until about 1cm thick and cut out as many circles as you can (with the cup, mug or scone cutter) before re-rolling the trimmings and repeating until you have used up all your dough
Line your baking sheets with greaseproof
Put the cookies on the tray and put them in the preheated oven for 13 minutes. If they’re not golden, then give them a couple more minutes.  






Safety notes:

Make sure that the girls are supervised in the kitchen.  And that they don’t leave you the washing up!

For Brownies/ younger Guides – or if you have shorter meetings:

You could make these in advance, and get the girls to ice and decorate them.

You could even get rich tea biscuits and get the girls to decorate those if you don't have much in the way of space, time or kitchen equipment.

Usual kitchen safety rules/ washing up apply.
Decorating ideas

·         Why not make glace icing, and use red food colouring to dye it red?
·         Or find the girls a selection of icing and coloured sweets and see what they come up with?

Notes:

You could always sell these as a fundraiser, I reckon you could sell them for 50p each – unless you’ve got some potential candidates for The Apprentice, in which case the sky’s the limit!

 Costings - I've checked out on mysupermarket.co.uk and Asda is the cheapest, coming in at £6.02 for 2 batches which works out at 25p per head in a unit of 24 girls





Monday, 12 November 2012

Meal Planning Monday: Betwixt and between



I'm sure I've used that title before, so apologies. I'm seriously lacking in inspiration and motivation this week, having just returned from a Guide sleepover and now having two day trips; to Birmingham and Swindon before I can give into the fluey bug thing and rest. However this week will be ended by pack holiday with the Brownies so there really is no rest for the wicked. 

With such a busy week ahead I hope you can spare my blushes with this meal plan as I am sat here, pyjama-ed up at 5pm, waiting to order takeaway, and fall into bed. Contrary to expectations the 17 girls were asleep by half 10ish, us leaders on the other hand were shivering into the wee small hours as there was no heating in our room. Apparently M says I was still shivering in church this morning. Yes, that cold. 

Breakfasts: Porridge, I should stew some fruit to go with, but I can't move, much less deal with fruit. 

Lunches: Soup, the kind from tins most probably. If I can build up some getupandgo I will make Nigella's Split pea and frankfurter soup, but at the moment that's not looking entirely likely.

Dinners

Monday - M is at Welsh, so Pantry pasta I think. I always have the makings of this in the cupboard. Always.

Tuesday - I'm out at an Asda wine event, so am going to get M out some extra bolognaise I made on Friday. 

Wednesday - our night in together. Sausage hotpot. A student staple of mine, it was actually the first thing I 'taught' someone else to cook. I have some good quality pork sausages that I think will do well. I'm going to try doing it in the slow cooker and will report back. 

Thursday - with any luck, leftover hotpot. If we have no luck then freezer surprise. 

Friday - I suspect I'll be tucking into fish fingers, oven chips and baked beans with 20 very excited 7 year olds. Wish me luck. 

A non thrilling week in the Pantry for which I apologise profusely. Hopefully next week will be better - not least as I'm doing something special for Stir up Sunday *squee* Be sure to hop over to At Home with Mrs M and see what everyone else is up to. Happy meal planning all. 




Friday, 13 July 2012

Olympic foodiness for little fingers: part two

Just so you don't think we're always angelic, fruit eating, tidy peoples at my Brownies, here are tonight's creations. Olympic flag cakes


Excuse the iPhone photos, I forgot to take my fancy camera to Brownies


 
For reference, Brownies are aged 7-10

Break the girls up into their Sixes, with one leader per Six
Flag cakes

Equipment:

Clean hands
Antibacterial spray for tables or placemats that can be washed
One traybake sponge cake
Glace icing
Coloured fondant icing: red, yellow, blue, green and black



Cake ingredients – one batch for a unit of 12

4oz butter (Sainsbury’s economy butter is the best and cheap)
4 oz caster sugar
2 large eggs (beaten)
4oz self raising flour

Glace icing

100g sieved icing sugar
2 tbsps water

Preheat oven to 170 degrees

Beat the butter and sugar until light and fluffy
Add the egg, and beat to incorporate, using a spoonful of flour with each egg.
If it’s not quite a dropping consistency, add some boiled water (just a spoonful or two)

Baked in a greased and lined roasting tin, for about 20-30 minutes this makes a flattish sponge (hence no additional raising agent) which, when cut into squares is a perfect base for flags.

Top the cake with the icing, make by beating the water, little by little into the icing sugar until you get a white paste. Smooth over so you can portion up the cake into 12 flag shaped pieces

If doing this with Guides it is an ideal Patrol cooking activity. Because Brownies is a shorter session and you need the cakes to cook to ice them, we made the cake and did the glace icing.

Allergy notes:

We use a dairy substitute (normally Pure or sunflower spread) if we have any dairy allergies.

This also works with gluten free flour, but may need some extra liquid – milk or water. Just add an extra tablespoon and see how you go.



Usual kitchen safety rules/ washing up apply



Olympic rings

Give each girl a small peice (about 2cm square) of coloured fondant icing, one red, green, blue, yellow and black.

Sprinkle some icing sugar in front of each girl for her to dust her hands and placemat/ clean portion of the table with

Get each Brownie to roll out her icing into a sausage shape and then make that into a ring

Lay the rings on the iced cake in the same order that they do on the Olympic flag. The girls can overlap their rings if they want to be authentic, but don’t worry if they don’t want to – it’s just about doing their best.

Put each ‘flag’ onto a slightly bigger square of greaseproof paper and ask each girl to write her name on hers. Put to one side, and make sure they remember to take them home!






.

Thursday, 12 July 2012

Wednesday, 11 July 2012

Olympics food and no-cook cooking activities for little ones



This summer a lot of our Brownie activities have been Olympics led - my unit are so excited about the Olympics badge (as am I, I can't wait to get it on my blanket, badge nerd that I am - isn't it pretty?)

Girlguiding UK's On Your Marks resource isn't just about sport, but also culture so some of the activities the girls chose to do in our pow wow were about food. I wasn't surprised! The activities they chose are ones that we know they love, but as the summer holidays are nearly upon us, I thought I'd add here in case anyone wants a healthy foodie afternoon that's an alternative to cake decorating and biscuit baking - which I admit would be my preferences but with our focus on healthy activity (as well as sport) introducing some more fruit can be a good thing.

One of the things our Brownies love to make is fruit kebabs. Now as with aforementioned new Guide and nuts, we have a Brownie who's allergic to kiwi and strawberries. Please be sure if you're a Leader to check your Join us forms or Go! to check before doing with your unit. If you're doing this at home, well I guess you know.



We choose lots of brightly coloured fruit - including different ones that the girls haven't seen before - typical choices are:

  • Kiwi
  • Strawberries
  • Raspberries
  • Pineapple
  • Apple
  • Pear
  • Orange/ satsuma (our girls prefer smaller fruit as it's more manageable for little fingers)
  • Starfruit
  • Grapes
  • Mango
Now having said that the girls won't have seen these before, it seems that few or even none of these are particularly different to your average 7 year old in North London - I think I would have fainted on sight of a mango at 7 in East London (but that was 26 years ago). Lots of units make fruit kebabs but we try and tie it in not just to healthy eating, but also to learning knife skills. When we go on Brownie holiday the girls take on the role of 'Cooks' with their six - in this role they help to peel and chop up potatoes, carrots (we whizz the onions in the food processor to prevent random breakouts of swimming goggles) fruit for puddings and elevenses and anything else that the girls have chosen as part of their menu.

In our weekly meetings we don't have time for all of that, but we do have a stash of coloured plastic chopping boards (which can be dishwashed) and what I would call paring knives. They're neither dangerously sharp nor dangerously blunt, and the boards have enough friction(?) that things aren't slipping around. We also put the boards on old teatowels that we routinely collect from time to time. We work with what I would call the 'bridge' technique of cutting. The girls hold the knife in their right hand (if right handed) and make a bridge with their left, holding the fruit in place, we then encourage them to chop the fruit into bite size peices. There's no expectation that the fruit will be chopped up evenly, there's no sense of their being a standard to meet. As in our promise each girl does "her best". Each type of fruit goes into it's own plastic (or disposable) bowl, and each girl has a kebab or cocktail stick.

For our Olympics challenge, the Brownies had to try and get a peice of fruit of each colour of the rings on their stick, with a second challenge that if there was a type of fruit you hadn't tried before then to add that one (even if it meant you had an extra ring). This all linked in to the Olympic value of Excellence.

excellence – how to give the best of oneself, on the field of play or in life; taking part; and progressing according to one’s own objectives


Now I'm no Mummy blogger but it's worth noting how rarely we have leftovers on Brownie holiday as the girls are proud to eat what they've made. This activity was the same, everyone tried everything - and the chatter on leaving was about their newly learned abilities to chop fruit. And I really do mean made - there's no sense of token 'helping' in the kitchen. It's also always a surprise that if we haven't started our holiday prep with a session on knife skills, the amount of girls who 'aren't allowed' to help out in the kitchen.

A couple of other thoughts I wanted to include about children and fruit that I've noticed over the years - should I qualify this by explaining that I've been Guiding in a leader role since the age of 14? I'm sometimes hyper aware that I'm not a Mum and I don't want anyone thinking I'm trying to teach them to suck eggs, or that I'm speaking out of turn.
  • Children (and by that I mean those between 7 and 14) who won't eat a whole piece of fruit, will do so if it's chopped up. I frequently core and quarter apples and love that girls who nibble a whole apple for a long time and ask if they can leave it, will eat 6 peices of chopped up apple.
  • I've already mentioned satsumas, easier to peel for little fingers, sweet to eat, less pips and again as they're little - lots of our girls will eat 2
  • If we can't get smaller ones, half a banana is sometimes enough
  • Now I can't take credit for this one, but our Division Commissioner has been known to scoot around the local Greek supermarkets and get a watermelon cheaply that we can then hack into peices for elevenses - the girls devour this in the same way they do marshmallows!
  • If seedless grapes are on special I chop them up into small bunches
  • Chopped up fruit is dressed(?) sprinkled(?) with lemon juice. This was a Hugh F-W tip that I shamelessly adopted a year or two back. In the same way my two units go crackers for Tanfasticks, they love fruit with lemon juice on it.
On holiday we always always have bowls of fruit and jugs of squash and water that the girls are encouraged to help them to at any point. They don't have to ask, all they have to do is wash their mug up themselves. We use a cleverly titled 'mug bin' on camp - yes literally, but it's never been used for rubbish, full of beakers, mugs with handles that the girls can help themselves to so there's no having to find your plate bag if you're gasping thirsty.

To keep the fruit and squash cool, another tip - old, clean net curtains. Yes, really. Dampen it down in cold water, and cover the fruit bowls and juice jugs, then dip one end in a washing up bowl of cold water. Voila! Camp fridge

And also we're not perfect - threesies (yes, it's a word) are always a biscuit or little cake. On Guide camp the girls bring their own, home-made ones - extra snaps this year to Mia and Anoushka who made stunning cupcakes and chocolate cake respectively - and we all have that with our drink and break in the afternoon.

Just a quick note: I'm away from home this week and without pictures, but wanted to get this up before the end of term.  All pictures used are from Google images.

Sunday, 24 June 2012

Memories, like the corners of my mind...



Misty water-coloured memories
Of the way we were

This is a request, a plea really. Last month, 749 Guides, Brownies, Rangers and their leaders took over PGL Liddington. An amazing weekend was had by all and many many happy memories were formed. Memories that will hopefully stay with the girls long into adulthood.

We would like to preserve those memories, and the plan is to send each unit a memory stick with the photos taken at the weekend on it, so that each girl has the opportunity to keep them. However, we have no money in our budget to pay for them. Being an unfunded, voluntary organisation our coffers are somewhat limited and this is one of those times.

I've been tweeting mercilesslly since our return, begging for unwanted memory sticks any other bloggers, twitter followers or organisations might have. Last week, thanks to some retweets from much bigger bloggers (Helen of Fuss Free Flavours and Jules of Butcher, Baker to name but two) one PR company said that they knew someone who could help, unfortunately they couldn't find the budget to fulfill their intial promise.

So, I'm putting out a call to arms (well, not quite) if ANY bloggers/ readers/ PRs out there can help with memory sticks I would, and 749 girls and young women would be eternally grateful. We only want 56 memory sticks - one per unit that attended. As a County of 3,000 we regularly need promotional materials, and a donation of this sort would definitely put you in our minds for future events and activities.

If you can't help yourself - please could you share this post, on facebook/ Twitter/ Stumbleupon or Pinterest - even to your email address list in case someone out there can and will help us. If you can help us, if you would contact me either here in the comments, or at penelopespantry@googlemail.com that would be amazing.

As a Guide, I believe in thinking of others before myself and would me incredibly thankful if you would help us.

Yours in Guiding

Penelope



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