Wednesday, March 13, 2013

I never wanted to homeschool!

I never wanted to home school. I didn't want to be one of those people. I had been hurt by them. They made me feel that I wasn't doing my best or the best for my kids if I didn't choose home schooling. That the perfect christian mother would be a home schooling mother. The last thing I wanted to do was be one of them. Besides, that would mean I would be home with all of the kids all day AND be responsible for their education. I would lose my mind! I am going to be more frustrated and yell more! We are going to get on each others nerves and grow to hate each other! Yeah. Not gonna happen! So when our current schooling situation required a change, we decided to look at our options. Since I was sure homeschooling wouldn't work for us, we decided to first go to a local meeting about a home school co op starting up in our area so we could make a fair, educated decision to remove it from our list of options.

HA!

Funny how God works, isn't it? Well the exact opposite of everything I thought would happen happened. The co op was amazing and it was clear after checking into the other schooling options in our area that we would be home schooling in the fall. I knew that this change was mainly for my character building. If I was to survive a full school year at home with three kids, I had some purging to do. God is so gracious and so gentle. I am now seeing that home schooling is exactly what I needed. He taught me to see joy in mothering instead of unending, thankless work which led to gentler words coming from me. He taught me contentment in mothering with what He has given me specifically for my kids and not in comparing to others which led to a peaceful attitude. He taught me to see the good in my kids and not just the bad, which led to loving them more like He loves us.  He taught me to identify what situations would trigger frustration in my heart so I could take steps to fight that and not yell. Instead of growing to hate each other, we have grown to love each other.

So here I am. One of them. But it is my story and the path God had for me. Your story may be different. With God's help, I hope I'm not one of 'those people' to you. Home schooling isn't the best option that everyone will someday eventually come around to. Homeschooling does not get you into heaven. Obeying God's path for you is the best option that someday everyone will eventually come around to! Believing that God is infinitely glorious and created us in His image, and that we have sinned against Him and payment for those sins is eternal death, and that He loves us so much that he sent His Son to pay that debt for us by dying on the cross and received God's wrath, and that after he died He rose again and conquered death forever! Believing that is what gets you into heaven. Praise God! And not how well I do or do not home school.

Traditional Crust Pizza


So we have found a thin crust pizza that we love. 
We have made deep dish pizza that we love. 
But sometimes, you want a really good traditional crust pizza. 
Well, we found it! 
And it is fantastic
You must plan ahead though, because the dough is a-ma-zing if you let it set a full day.
So make this dough tomorrow so you can have pizza on Friday.


Traditional Pizza Crust
adapted from VIA 313  

5¼ c bread flour
2 t yeast
2 c lukewarm water (90-100 degrees F)
1 T salt
2 T olive oil
1 t sugar
Extra flour and olive oil for kneading and storing

In the bowl of stand mixer with a bread hook or just a large bowl, combine the yeast and flour.
Dissolve the salt and sugar in the water, then add the oil.
Add the water mixture to the machine and turn it to low speed for kneading.
Knead on low speed for about 5 minutes, or by hand, adding a tablespoon of flour or so if necessary to make a soft, smooth, non-sticky dough.
Coat mixing bowl and dough lightly in oil, cover, and store in the fridge overnight.
1 hour before you plan to bake pizza, divide into 5 equal balls, place on a tray, and cover.
When ready to shape, sprinkle a countertop with flour and put a dough ball down. Form a crust around the edge, then gently press out the center. Use your knuckles and a gently stretching movement to form the pizza crust.
Lay on a well-floured pizza peel or cardboard square and dress the pizza.
Brush crust with a little olive oil.
Transfer it into a preheated oven (500-600 degrees F) onto a preheated stone or cast iron skillet and bake 5-10 minutes until brown and bubbly.
Remove and cool on a cutting board for 5 minutes before cutting and serving.


Here is a video VIA-313 made showing how to make the pizza crust.  It is helpful to watch to get the technique down on shaping the dough. 
(FYI, there is a bit of crass language.)






We use the same sauce from our thin crust recipe.
Pizza Sauce
6oz tomato paste
1 c water
3 T olive oil
2 cloves garlic, minced
salt
pepper
1/2 T oregano
1/2 T basil
1/2 t rosemary

Combine well.