Parenting

Swiss Cheese-Potato Bread

RECENT PROJECT

This week, we are celebrating one family member no longer having a dairy allergy!  For those of you who haven’t had to deal with any type of food allergies, this may seem like a shrug and “That’s great.” is about the right response; for those of you who have dealt with food allergies of any type, you know how much of a relief and happy moment this is.

In celebration of this moment, a cheese bread seemed like an appropriate choice of project.  I chose Swiss Cheese-Potato Bread, again from Bernard Clayton’s “New Complete Book of Breads”.  I didn’t quite know what to expect as I’ve only done a couple cheese breads in the past, and none with potatoes in them (well, instant potato flakes).  Turns out that this bread, which you bake in a tube pan, is really not too tough.  The only thing that you’ll see is that, in the image below, the cheese on the outside tended to float to one side.  Fortunately, on the inside, it is evenly distributed.

Swiss Cheese-Potato Bread Top

This bread cooks up really nicely on the bottom as well, as shown below, and you can even see the little pockets of cheese when you view a slice.

Swiss Cheese-Potato Bread Slice Bottom

Swiss Cheese-Potato Bread Side

The most important part is how it tastes.  All members of the family, including the one formerly with a dairy allergy, really enjoyed it–a crispy outside, a nice soft inside, and tasty pockets of Swiss cheese.  With such a positive response from the judges, this is one I plan on making again sometime.

TOPIC FOR TODAY

When I was a kid (a long time ago), like most kids, my Mom would have/let me go over to other kids’ homes to play.  There wasn’t much of a condition, or a communication, that I was aware of before I went over; it was just my asking, “Is it OK if I go over to my friend Johnny’s house?” and, if the answer was yes, I was on my way.  My Mom knew who my friends were and generally what they were like, so it wasn’t a big deal.  It likely made it easier that we lived in a relatively homogeneous community, with a lot of the population being of the same race, roughly the same socioeconomic status, the same religion, and similar perspectives on life.

Now, fast forward to my being married, and having two boys of my own.  We live in a location that is quite diverse, with people from all races, social and economic statuses, religions, and perspectives that we’re around both personally and professionally.  We’re grateful that we and our boys can experience this diversity, while at the same time knowing it means the kids will encounter many different ways of living and different views when they go over to friends’ houses, just as their friends will experience our perspective on life when they come over to our house.  A pastor at one of the churches we used to attend talked about this, and said point blank that there are friends’ houses that he and his wife are OK with their kids going to and friends’ houses that they’re not allowed to spend time at–not because they don’t care about the friends, and not because of a family’s religious beliefs, but because they know which people will care for their kids in a way that aligns with their values, and which ones won’t.  This isn’t an approach that’s tied to that pastor’s faith, either, or a church environment in general–it’s just good parenting.

As our boys begin entering the age when they’ll ask and be asked more to go over to friends’ houses to play, we know that one of the best things we can do before saying “Yes” is meeting the friend’s parents, talking to them, and maybe spend time with them when our kiddo first goes over there to see how they handle watching out for their kid and ours.  Now, the reverse is also going to be true:  The friends of our boys have parents who will also likely want to talk to us before they let their kids come over to play so that they can understand who we are and what we’re like before giving the thumbs up.  That physical and verbal interaction is critical to building confidence, but what if we also had something that was like a statement of values for visiting friends?  Something that told them, “Hey, this is what we’re like and how we’ll treat you in our house”?  These questions are leading the wife and I to building a “What You Can Expect in Our Home” guide.

So what do you put in a “What You Can Expect in Our Home” guide?  That’s what we’re working through right now, and why this post is just Part 1.  We want something that will be short, easily understood, and hit up major points while leaving lots of room for those conversations between us and other parents to take place.  Here’s what this looks like right now:

  1. Short:  The guide can only be 1 page, or 2 if we’re printing it to be read from a few feet away.
  2. Easily understood:  We want people to just be able to look at the guide and go, “Oh, OK, I get what you’re saying here.”
  3. Hit up major points:  We want to hit up only the major points so people don’t get bored before they finish reading through the guide, and so that we can get across the things that are most important to us and our home.

What would be in that major points list for us?  I expect it will change between this post and when we get to Part 2, and it will dramatically change as the boys get older, but some of the big points we already know of are (in no particular order):

  1. Allergies:  We’ve been through our share of food allergies (though one less now!), so we’ll be very upfront of what we have in our house and what we can do to keep our home safe for others with food allergies.  Similarly, we’ll let people know what pets we have for those with animal allergies as well.
  2. Food:  We’ll explain what our mealtimes are and what’s available outside of those mealtimes (since we’re more than happy to share what we have, but we’re not an all-day cafeteria or a candy machine).
  3. Toys and games sharing:  We’ll talk about how we ensure sharing of toys and games will occur, both for their kid and ours.
  4. Discipline:  And following on to sharing, the ways in which we’ll resolve conflicts.  As a preview, there are ways we discipline our own kids that I’d never do to other kids–that is their parents’ job.
  5. Home boundaries:  We’ll share about what areas, and things, the kids will have access to and what they won’t.
  6. Religion:  We’ll share what we believe, but that we don’t talk to kids about it unless they specifically ask.
  7. When we’ll call:  We’ll let the parents know what things we’ll call them for.
  8. Safety to and from our house:  Some may argue that it doesn’t allow kids to demonstrate their freedom, but to me it’s more of a respect thing to let other parents know we’ll walk their kiddo to and from our house to ensure they get home safely.

There are a few of those that might fall off the list, and a couple more we could add, but those really do represent our major points we’d like to communicate to other parents when their kids come over.

Once the wife and I have our guide developed, I’ll share it on here so that you can see what we ended up with.  Like I said before, the guide is meant to just hit the major points and allow room for more conversation between families so others can feel comfortable saying to their kid, “Yes, you can go over to their house to play.”

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When we first started this blog, we knew it might be a short-term creative outlet–and that’s exactly what it became.  After some discussion, and learning that it takes a fair amount of effort and planning to keep a blog going, we’re going to start adding more posts, at regular intervals, and with an eye to keeping those going long-term.  So apologies for the fits and starts, and here we go again!

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Top of a baby's foot and their toes

The moment a child is born, the mother is also born.  She never existed before.  The woman existed, but the mother, never.  A mother is something absolutely new.  ~Rajneesh

On October 1, 2014 I was born, the mother, when I held our beautiful son in my arms. I have spent my whole life preparing to be a mother. I have played with a baby doll, babysat, and in some form been a mom to my amazing students at school. Yet, with all this preparation, no one can ever prepare you for what you experience.

There are the beautiful ups where you see their face and smell that wonderful baby smell and all is right with the world as they are snuggled close. Then in the next minute they can be screaming in the middle of the night and nothing you are doing is working. There are all the different cries you have to learn, and then remember what each one means through days or weeks of sleepless nights. It is all beautiful and extremely difficult. My heart is full at times and other times I am so, so empty.

Our little guy did not come with an instruction manual, and my husband and I have had to learn together how to be parents and how best to care for him. So far, that learning has encompassed everything from dealing with acid reflux to an ER visit in the middle of the night to learning how to deal with food allergies.  

This is the hardest job ever! And yet, I would not give it up for a moment. The love I have for our son (and now sons) is unfathomable. Yes, I was born on October 1, 2014. I am not a perfect mom, but I hope to share the struggles and joys of motherhood on this blog. I hope we can laugh together at the funny curve balls that parenthood brings, and I hope we can be honest about the things that are difficult. I am something new and I am learning more and more each day.

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I’ll admit that, on some level, I’ve pretty much always thought, “You know, it would be nice to have kids someday.”  That’s pretty normal, right?  Of course, you can think that for years and years, but after the joy of your wife saying, “I’m pregnant!”, reality tends to slap you upside the head like a five year old cracking open their first pinata.

Wait, though, I wanted to be a parent . . . oh yeah, but my parents were divorced before I can even remember.  Since we just saw my Dad primarily on the weekends and during the summertime, I have no idea what it means to be a dad in a marriage and taking responsibility for a kid.  Other male role models?  I had a few good ones that were just occasionally in my life (teachers, friends’ fathers), but a lot of the men I was around up to and even into high school weren’t what you’d consider stellar examples of their gender, and if married weren’t great husbands or fathers either.

So I can still be a good parent without having viewed a great Dad on a regular basis, right?  Sure!  I can start with going to those required classes for when you’re having your first baby.  OK, breathing techniques for the birth, preparing for the hospital, and–what do you mean that sometimes the baby is taking its sweet time and they have to plunger them out?  Wait, I’m supposed to be there to support my wife when she’s having the baby, but you’re telling me it’s not even necessarily going to be our doctor who delivers the baby?  Now I’m not only an inexperienced Dad, I’m a nervous Dad who’s freaked out that something is going to go wrong or we’re going to miss the birth signals and have the baby in the middle of the interstate.

And now, as our kid grows up, I know that part of being a good Dad is making sure that my wife is happy too.  That makes me a good Dad because I’m taking care of her so she can take care of the kid, and it makes me a good husband, so bonus points.  Oh, except you hear about how much things change when you have a kid, but no matter how much you think things will change you’re way underestimating the reality of it.  Because, you know, all those things that made my wife happy before will be the same things that make her happy now that there’s three of us, right?  If I knew how to type maniacal laughter here, I would do it.

In total, this means I don’t have a good view of how to be a dad from experience, I’m nervous with all the things that can go wrong during and after pregnancy (though we’re into the “after” now), and I get to relearn how to take care of my wife so that I can be a good Dad and a good husband to make a happy family.  Uh-oh.

The truth is, I’m still not sure what makes a good or great dad, or if I’ll ever find a way to be one as our kiddo goes from baby to toddler to teen and into adulthood.  Have my thoughts of, “I want kids someday” translated into, “I am glad we have a kid today”?  Absolutely.  I may be on a never-ending road of trial and error, of joys and sorrows, and be scared to death about being a parent, but through it all I love being called “Dad”.

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Introduction Picture

For this first post, we wanted to provide a brief introduction.  In the long-term, I suppose people will ignore this post and just skip to the About Us page, but you, lucky reader, are about to get something better.  So, here goes.

This blog is titled “An Engineer Met a Teacher” because it’s really postings from two people:  Keith, an engineer, and Mary, a teacher.  They met (ta-da! a blog title) and got married, and lo and behold, the blog was born–many years later and with a heck of a lot more wisdom than the wedding day.  The reality of the situation is that this blog might be nothing more than a short-term creative outlet, or it could be a long-term way to share what we’ve learned as we’ve gone through life (down two sometimes very different paths).

OK, and now what are we going to write about?

Keith is an automation engineer or control systems engineer or whatever you like to call it.  While his postings will reflect these nerd leanings, he’ll actually be writing about learning how to be a father and all the things he continues to try to learn about the world (e.g., baking, taking care of a home, how to take care of your wife after your kids wipe out all your free time :), etc.).

Mary is a teacher, currently a stay at home mom.  As an elementary teacher for the past 7.5 years, she has really seen education change.  She will be shedding a positive light on the subject of education. She will delve into general motherhood topics and strategies she is trying out to keep things going at home as well as share some posts about topics with Keith.

That’s the basics about us.  We hope that you’ll come back and check out our future posts!

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