Wednesday 29 June 2016

An ode to flour...

On Saturday I had the great joy of attending Abingdon Food Festival. I love me a food festival.

Sadly I didn't get to do a very thorough going over of the stands as HB had a rather trying week in the lead-up to it and the rain was comically awful, but I did get to talk to the wonderful people of Matthews Cotswold Flour, who sheltered me from the rain and talked to me about flour. Which made me feel like me again. Thanks guys :-)

Hats off to their merch person. This is darned pretty.

The exciting thing about their flour is that it's stone ground. Now, this isn't just a marketing term, it's an actual whole different way of milling. Most milling these days is done using machinery which uses metal plates to separate the endosperm (the main bit of the wheat), the germ (the growing tip of the seed), and the bran (the outer casing of the grain). Once separated the endosperm is ground into wheat flour, and the wheat germ and wheat bran are sold to you separately as items you can add to your breakfast cereal. #cynical.

If you want to watch a video, I found this one on YouTube from the Discovery Channel. It's very facty. I particularly enjoyed how they managed to spend a full 20 seconds filming a bowl of flour at the start.


 https://youtu.be/0gITBy-N6X0

Anyways.

In stone ground flour either the whole lot are ground together to make whole wheat flour (literally, whole wheat), or the outer bran is removed before the endosperm and germ are ground together to make white flour.

The difference is that the wheat germ is included, and that's where all the goodies are - all the lovely protein and oils that don't generally make it into your standard British loaf of bread.

But, you can see why I'm excited. I have many and varied issues about the quality of day-to-day* food in this country, and top of my gripe list is the Chorleywood Process for making bread. "What's that?" you ask. Well, it's the reason your daily bread looks like a pale squashy building brick with a list of ingredients as long as your arm rather than a crunchy, crusty, doughy work of art which contains four ingredients: flour, water, salt and yeast. *salivates*

More (ranting) on this another time.

But I just wanted to spread the love. I am so excited when I see businesses like this as they are perpetuating older methods of food production. Small really is beautiful.

And it certainly gave me a kick in the pants to get making my own bread again. Granted it's in a bread maker rather than done properly, but at least this way I know what's going into me and my baby - and it doesn't include Calcium Proprionate.

I'm off to buy me some stoneground flour :D

TTFN,
Bee x


* sure, you can buy from small independent sellers to get the good stuff, but that's not how the majority of people buy their food.

Tuesday 31 May 2016

My high-needs baby

Of all the questions I get asked, my least favourite is:

“Is he your first?”

Because what I’m really being asked is:

“Are you a neurotic new mother, or are you an experienced parent?”

Consequently whenever I've said things like “I can’t put him down”, “he’s a really light sleeper” or “he’s either ecstatic or miserable” I've received slightly condescending looks followed by advice that begins “have you tried…” (“have you tried taking him for a walk in the pram?” No. No, I am such an inexperienced parent I did not think of that.)

I often got raised eyebrows when I would race to hobbitbaby when he woke up with a cry (clearly as I was a neurotic first-time mum). When he was about 4 months old the health visitor asked me, head tilted slightly, “what would happen if you left him?” my response was “He would cry louder and louder and louder” as I raced up the stairs to get him. I don’t think she believed me. But I didn’t really care - I knew leaving him in the hope he’s settle down again would mean peeling him off the ceiling later, which would take 40 minutes as opposed to 40 seconds.

People are happy to say “Mum knows best”, but it doesn’t seem to apply the first time around. (In which case it’s “mum knows best, but I know better”).

I’m clearly bitter about this.

However, HB has been having some bedtime ants-in-his-nappy issues which have lasted about 2 months (I reckon a slightly delayed 8 month sleep regression), so while he was taking a nap this week I braced myself and googled bedtime sleep issues. After reading that I should have him in his own room, and that he should be self-soothing to sleep more times than I could stomach, I gave up and confronted his other sleep issue - that he is an insanely light sleeper.

As a light sleeper, daytime naps are a hassle. I gave up trying to get him to sleep in his cot when he was about 3.5 months old and his vision came in - suddenly everything was fascinating and he just could not switch off. And the tireder he got, the less he was able to fall asleep. And when he did eventually fall asleep it would only be for 20 minutes. Visiting friends became impossible. Just what I needed.

But put him in the buggy and go for a walk, and he’d be asleep in 20 minutes. And the buggy could come with me to a friends’ house. I could get out!! So, buggy naps it became. But it quickly became evident that bringing him inside was not an option. If getting him over the threshold didn’t wake him, quietly closing a door or creeping, bare-footed, past the pram would be enough to wake him. If a friend had kids, it was a no-go. He had to stay outside. It was risky, as a group of kids going past, a lawnmower starting up or a gust of wind would also wake him - but it was my best option.

But now it’s May and lawnmower season proper has begun. Getting him to stay asleep is a nightmare. What do I do??

Finally, I get to the crux of this rant: that Dr. Sears is my hero.

High-needs babies

Having Googled “baby is a light sleeper” I found a page titled “12 features of a high-needs baby”. “Hmmm” I thought “high-needs sounds a bit extreme… not sure this applies to me.” But as I read, I teared up. And as tears rolled silently down my face I realised that all twelve of these features applied to hobbitbaby. I was not a neurotic first time mum, I was not making it up - he was harder work than your average baby.

What I read, in short is that Dr Sears, a paediatrician, and his wife had 3 ‘normal’ babies, before having a fourth ‘high-needs’ baby. Suddenly he realised that the desperate parents in his surgery were not being dramatic. Baby #4 would not be put down, she did not sleep through the night, she CRIED.

In retrospect, we realized that the babies who came before [baby #4] had high needs, too, in some areas. We had met those needs as best we could, knowing what we knew then. The difference between those babies and [baby #4] was not only a difference in need levels; she also had the forceful personality to let us know just what she needed.

From the very start I’d said that HB had a forceful personality. In the hospital, on the day he was born, he would not be put down in the little wheely crib. There’s a photo, 4 days later of me lying in bed with him nestled next to me - the first time he wasn’t ‘on’ a person since he was born, and the result of a bunch of advice about not holding your baby too much, and about 2 hours spent trying to peel him off me. It was also the last time I attempted it for a while. I think it was the only time he got put down in his first 2 months of life as I just couldn’t handle the battle.

And of course I got plenty of questioning looks at this time about not putting him down. First-time mum, eh? Well.

But he is also a complete live spark, and the most engaging baby in most rooms. He is a complete charmer. He makes everyone laugh with his complete zest for life and commitment to his excursions (I WILL get to that sofa and put this ball under it *determined face* crawlcrawlcrawl). Live is never dull, and I never thought a 10 month old baby would be able to make me roll around laughing, but he does.

What to do?

The reason I bring this up at all, apart from wanting to share the info for other people with similarly-temperamented babies, is that the advice for dealing with this typeof baby is to practice attachment parenting. Wear your baby, feed it when it needs it, co-sleep so that you get enough sleep to handle the daytimes.

I also feel that into this fits Montessori. With such a driven and emotional child I feel his need for boundaries. He also needs deep understanding, and order to his environment. I need to ‘follow the child’ as Montessori purports. Everything is easier if I intuit what he’s interested in, and what he needs.

So, on I go with my journey. I cannot seem to learn enough quick enough to satisfy either my curiosity or my son’s needs. Are there Montessori courses near Oxford? If there are, I want to know!


Wednesday 18 May 2016

Aha! Welcome back, me!


Well it has certainly been a while since I wrote on here. What’s happened in that time? Not much. I’ve only moved, had a baby, hobbithusband got ordained, I graduated and now we’ve moved again. It’s all been pretty quiet really. Ha.

Hobbitbaby is now 10 months old and while looking up some fun things to do I got intrigued, then enticed, then ensnared by Montessori. It reminded me that I went to a Montessori nursery when I was wee, and through doing lots (and lots) of reading, I couldn’t agree with its principles more.

Every once in a while I find something like this that completely fits my existing worldview and I get super excited. (And sometimes it’s just something that blows my existing worldview out of the water. See: Paleo, and especially this article about how saturated fat might in fact be good for you. Also, this about communicable cancer - say whaaaat?) The last similar excitement was probably upon discovery of Shane Claiborne’s Simple Way project in the States. In the words of Liz Lemon: “I want to go to there”.

And so in a fit of excitement I packed up most of his toys and books to put into rotation, and found myself seriously questioning a lot of kiddie things I hadn’t previously e.g. Beatrix Potter (re. confusing talking animals), Lego kits (re. restriction of creativity) and high chairs (re. restriction of freedom). Restriction of TV / iPads did not require any shift in my worldview to get on board.

But in all fairness I know jack about Montessori and how to implement it in my home. I bought “Montessori from the start” and read it cover to cover, and have been scouring the interwebs for information and inspiration. The more I see, the more I love it. I intend to share my journey here.

So, this will be a Montessori-at-home blog as well as an I’m-obsessed-with-food blog for a while. Because I have so much time on my hands at the moment…

As a final aside, I wonder if my recent obsession with Montessori is an answer to hobbithusband’s prayers. He has a diagnosis of ADD and needs things clear and ordered to function effectively. I, on the other hand take a rather, well… disordered approach to things. I start things then move onto something else when I realise said thing also needs doing. When I tidy I often lose things. (“I can’t find it. I know I put it somewhere sensible.”) I fly by the seat of my pants a lot. I have enough intrinsic order to not have to keep my surroundings ordered. So trying to keep things consistent and ordered for hobbitbaby is a) a blessing for hobbithusband and b) immensely hard for me. But it’s got to be good, and it’s giving me the inspiration to make my home a beautiful, functional and ordered environment. Win-win-win :)