Buffalo Hot Dogs with Celery & Carrots

Buffalo-hot-dogs July is National Hot Dog month and this week on Chewsy Lovers we are celebrating! All week we are sharing simple and delicious ideas to upgrade your hot dog experience. Your family is going to be so impressed at the next cookout. Yesterday we made a hot dog inspired by Bacon Cheeseburgers. Today’s hot dog is inspired by Buffalo Wings. Can you tell we like “bar food”? Buffalo-Dog
Buffalo Hot Dogs with Celery & Carrots
Ingredients:
Hot Dogs & Buns
Your favorite Buffalo Wing Sauce
Matchstick Carrots
Celery Thinly Sliced
Ranch or Blue Cheese Dressing

1. Toast Hot Dog Buns and cook hot dogs to desired doneness.

2. In a sauce pan heat 1/4c. Wing sauce and toss hot dogs in it. Add a tablespoon of butter if you want to mellow the spice out a little. Remove from heat.

3. Place hot dogs on bun and drizzle remaining sauce on them.

4. In a bowl toss carrots and celery in your dressing until evenly coated (not as wet as coleslaw). Top hot dogs with veggies. Enjoy!

See! Hot dogs aren’t boring! We’ve got another great one for you again tomorrow so be sure to come back and check it out.

M.W.A.H.,

Mandi

#IchewsRED – National Heart Month

A little over a year ago Pastor Glenn (P.G.) our pastor, father, and Buckaroo’s best friend died from complications of heart disease. He is why we CHEWS RED. February is recognized as National Heart Month and as the nation wears red and raises awareness for the number one killer of women, we remember and honor “P.G.” Heart disease and associated diseases such as diabetes, high blood pressure, and stroke have had an alarming effect on the African American community, and in our own families. So this is a cause near and dear to Chewsy Lovers.
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White Chip Oatmeal Cookies

My mother makes the best oatmeal cookies! THE BEST. Growing up we wanted them for every holiday, and every occasion. There was only one thing wrong with them…RAISINS. Ugh!!! If you love raisins please keep eating them. They are sooooo good for you!! I just cannot eat them. I always pick the raisins out.

I was in the “cookie-making” mood so I made her cookies. It reminded me so much of the cookies I grew up eating and loving WITHOUT the raisins! Lol! It’s basically the Quaker old-fashioned cookie recipe. I just made some modifications based on what I had at home, like substituting cream cheese in place of some butter. Add 1 cup of dried cranberries to the cookie dough if you really want to party! De-friggin-licious!
Easy Oatmeal Cookies with white chocolate chips via
White Chip Oatmeal Cookies
Yields: 3 Dozen

Ingredients:
1 stick of Unsalted butter, softened
4 tbsp Cream Cheese, softened
3/4c. Brown Sugar
1/2c. Granulated Sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp. Vanilla Extract
1 1/2c. All purpose Flour
1 tsp. Baking soda
1/2 tsp. Salt
1/2 tsp. Ground Cinnamon
2 1/2 c. Uncooked Quaker Oats
1/2 c. Chopped Pecans
1/2 c. White Chocolate Chips
1 c. Dried Cranberries (optional)

1. Preheat the oven to 350.
2. Cream butter, sugars, and cream cheese together in a bowl.
3. Add the eggs and vanilla and mix well.

4. Add flour, baking soda, and salt and mix until combined.

5. Mix in oatmeal until evenly combined. Add chocolate, pecans, and cranberries.

6. Using a small spoon, drop cookies onto an untreated cookie sheet and bake for 10 minutes.

This is a really good base for a cookie. You can add any kind of nuts or dried fruits that you want and it will be yummy. Enjoy!

M.W.A.H.,

The Lady

Do you have a favorite cookie from childhood? What is it?

Chews Acceptance: “Raise the Child You’ve Got” Book Tour

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I received a free copy of “Raise the Child You’ve Got, Not the One You Want” by Nancy Rose as a member of the From Left to Write Virtual .  We had the amazing opportunity to review this book as a part of Nancy ‘ s virtual book .
I was especially interested in reading this book because as the Chewsy Kids get older, let’s just say parenting is getting a little more interesting. :-) I don’t have teenagers yet, so I am certain that the best is yet to come, but this book challenged me to embrace them right where they are. There are things I can change about them and things that I can’t, but I want them to live in an environment where they are free to be “themselves” (whatever that means lol).
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I think the struggle for many parents, including myself is we try to parent based on how we were parented and I think you have to try and find your own way. My children are not my sister and I. While they are similar, and have inherited some of the same gifts, features, tendencies, etc., they are different and my parenting approach is different than the way I was parented.
I will be honest,  this book messed me up a little bit. I had to dig up some things from my own life as a child to assess my approach as a parent and the truth is healing won’t always feel good. In this excerpt from the book Nancy discusses what it means to know your child:

“If you want to really know your child and have him open up to you, you must be emotionally present. By doing so, you give your child permission to show all of himself to you. What does it mean to be emotionally present? It means letting our children communicate all their feelings, not just the pleasant ones. It can be a challenge to be present with children who feel sad, angry, or incompetent, but it is worth the effort (and is the only way you can teach them appropriate ways to express difficult emotions). If your child senses that you want to know her thoughts, feelings, and beliefs, she will let you know in words. Let your child reveal the full picture of who she is by making it clear that you want to know everything about her and can handle whatever she has to tell you, not just the good stuff.

When parents give the impression that they do not want to know the bad stuff, their children will often express their struggles by acting out, rather than talking. Notice what your child is telling you through his behavior. For instance, if he is terrified of giving a report in front of his class, he may not necessarily tell you; what you may see instead is your child bullying his younger sibling. We should be tuning into not just what is said, but what is unsaid, perhaps as you see him having moments of quiet sadness by himself before going to school.”
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I loved this because we have made it a point in our house to really know our kids. I hid so much from my mother growing up for this very reason. I didn’t feel comfortable telling her anything because she would explode from the smallest thing. She is (I feel) just learning me as an adult because now I can say what I want.

While Buckaroo and I don’t tolerate disrespect, we have opened ourselves up to allow the children to tell us how they feel…the good, bad, and the ugly. What has also helped us is creating a comfortable physical environment where the kids feel safe to be themselves. We eat dinner at the table as a family every night and we cook together at least four times a week. This takes some of the pressure off and many times the kids will start talking without even realizing it. If they want to speak to one of us alone they just ask, but it has been a blessing for us that they trust us like that even if it results in being punished or reprimanded.
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We also are learning as Nancy encourages, to accept them where they are for who they are and not let them be confined to our idea of success or anyone else’s. I think that will come in time. They will define what success means to them as I have had to do, as we all at some point will do. The older kids love to cook. We have one that wants to be a chef when he is grown, but we didn’t make them cook and if they decide tomorrow that they don’t want to, we won’t die or cry. We only ask that whatever they put their minds and hearts to do, that they give it 100% and we will support it. It does not have to be something that we are directly interested in.

This book challenged me to dig into my own past and assess how my parenting has been shaped by it. I won’t say it made me feel like a bad parent, but it did give me a more nurturing perspective. At the end of the day you have to love up on the babies that you have and take the time to learn who these babies are, and if you do that you will always love them like you did when they were new and couldn’t back talk. ;-)

Chews Acceptance,

Mandi

For more information on the book visit http://nancyjrose.com/book/

Visit Nancy’s site to receive a free copy of “The Key to Understanding Your Child: The Nine Traits of the CoreSelf.”

Chewsing my kind of happy!!

I received a free copy of the book, by Gretchen Rubin for review purposes as a member of the This book has inspired all kinds of happy in Chewsy Central! It was a perfect read to begin the year with so many goals, resolutions, etc already being established. One main thing she encouraged me to do was find “my own kind of happy.” Even though what makes Gretchen happy isn’t necessarily what makes Mandi happy, I loved the idea of her Happiness Project!!
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The most valuable nugget for me in this book and in deciding to start my own happiness project was accepting permission to be happy. Sometimes as a wife and mother it feels wrong to do what makes me happy. I will go shopping for myself and come home with something for everyone EXCEPT me! If I sneak off and try to treat myself I feel guilty. Why is that? We are all responsible for our happiness.  I’m learning that its alright to do the things that make me happy. I can be the wife and mother my family needs when I am happy.

So this year, “Im doing me!” I’ve started my own project and have already begun making some changes! Some happy ones!! I’ve outlined 12 things that I want to do/work on this year some superficial like my kitchen, others not so much like my marriage.
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(I made Buckaroo some of his favorite cookies “just because”.)
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(I am learning to sew and I made these curtains for my kitchen that’s getting a happy makeover!!)

I also wrote down a few key points ( I followed her lead) as to how I can make my resolution achievable which I think is necessary when setting any goal. They say it takes 30 days to develop a habit so I figure if I focus on that “one thing” for the month, by December I will one happy lady on the inside and out.

Join  on January 6th when we discuss Happier at Home. You can on January 7th on Facebook!

What makes YOU happy? Will you do a happiness project this year?

M.W.A.H. ,

The Lady