Homemade Play Dough

Homemade Play Dough

Found this recipe online.

The secret to this recipe??
Two things:First,Cream of Tarter… it’s what helps the dough stay together. and Second,not a lot of salt… all that salt dries out your dough!

Ready to make it? Here we go:

Ingredients:
1 C Flour
1 C Water
1/4 C Salt
1 TBSP Vegetable Oil
2 tsp Cream of Tarter
Food Coloring (actual coloring or a kool-aid packet will do)
Sparkles (If you wanna be a fun mom!)
Sauce Pan and Wooden Spoon
Little helping hands.

Pour in all ingredients. (No particular order… each time is different for us.. and it always turns out the same.)
(I used the NEON food coloring… cause everything is better neon… but feel free to use a koolaid packet sitting in your cupboard.)

Stir until everything is mixed well.

Once the mixture is (mostly) clump free. Heat over MEDIUM heat.

Stir. Don’t stop stirring. After a few minutes it will start to clump up.

Stir,Stir Stir.Just keep stirring until the Play Dough is formed. It will  form one big clump

Remove from heat,and knead by hand. (This is my favorite part! It’s so warm and squishy! hah) Note:I forgot to add sparkles in the mix at the beginning,so I just kneaded the sparkles in and it turned out just fine.

Once cooled it’s ready to go. Package it up for some party favors or stocking stuffers. (Baby food containers work GREAT!

Or grab your cookie cutters,plastic scissors,rolling pin,etc.. and let your toddler go to town.

Here’s the source for this recipe with photos of the steps.

Origami Fortune Teller

I loved making these and playing with them when I was small.   I never knew the name for them until about five minutes ago when I came across a photo of one online.

origami fortune tellerI found a link with the instuctions on how to make them.   Check it out.  Great game to teach your grandchildren.   Easy and fun.

Easter Eggs

Sorry I’m late with this but I hope,better late than never.   When I was small,I loved colouring Easter Eggs with my mother and as a mother myself,it was so much fun to colour eggs with my daughter.  Now I’m thinking that next year,I will be colouring eggs with my grandson who will be two and a half.    Recently I came across an article on Mother Earth News about “How to Color Easter Eggs with Natural Dyes”.   I’ll copy and paste the article below.

How to Color Easter Eggs with Natural Dyes

By Rosalind Creasy

When Alex,my 10-year-old grandson,came to stay with me during spring break,he was eager to color Easter eggs. Also,I hadn’t seen Jody Main,my friend and an Easter egg maven,for far too long — what a perfect excuse for a visit!

When we entered Jody’s farmhouse kitchen,there was a table with teacups full of dyes and a big bowl of eggs ready to go. Alex and I had great fun,and we learned a lot that afternoon about colors and which combinations produce which colors. We went home with cartons full of unique eggs.

After years of dyeing eggs using a wide range of botanical sources,Jody had streamlined the dyeing procedure. She had narrowed the necessary ingredients down to three — fresh red beets,yellow onionskins and frozen blueberries. That’s all she needed to produce the primary colors:red,yellow and blue. By combining the resulting dyes in varying amounts,she can create any color of the rainbow. You can do it,too!

Dyeing and Decorating Tips

Follow the recipes below to make the dyes,using individual stainless steel,glass or enamel saucepans for each color. Combine the ingredients and boil each color mixture separately for 15 minutes before dyeing eggs. The vinegar acts as a fixative — without it,the dyes won’t stick to the eggs.

  • Before dyeing,hard boil white eggs and let them cool.
  • For uniform color,strain each dye mixture through cheesecloth or a fine strainer.
  • For a mottled,tie-dyed or spotty effect,leave all the ingredients in the pans.
  • Use crayons to make designs — circles,geometrics,your name — on the egg;the crayoned part will not take up any dye. White crayons work especially well.
  • The longer the eggs remain in the dye,the deeper the color.
  • For special effects,dip half the egg in one color,the other half in another.

Coloring Easter eggs with natural dyes was a fabulous way to teach Alex about colors. When he went home,I sent along the ingredients he’d need so he could share his experience with his friends and parents. Happy Easter!

Recipes for Natural Dyes for Easter Eggs

RED

2 cups beets,grated
1 tbsp white vinegar
2 cups water
Substitute:strong Red Zinger tea,or chopped fresh or frozen cranberries

YELLOW TO GOLD

3 large handfuls of yellow/brown onionskins
1 tbsp white vinegar
3 cups water
Substitute:strong chamomile tea,or 2 to 3 tbsp ground turmeric

BLUE

1 pound frozen blueberries,crushed
1 tbsp white vinegar
2 cups water
Substitute:red cabbage leaves,coarsely chopped,create lavender

OTHER COLORS

Mix combinations of the primary dyes (in separate cups) to make secondary colors:red and yellow for orange,yellow and blue for green,and blue and red for violet. The proportion of one color to the other determines the shade.

Rosalind Creasy
Los Altos,California

The Original Magic Garden

Today my sister read my last post and she found and scanned my mother’s recipe.  Here it is. For those of you who are unable to translate my Mum’s handwriting,  I will type it out.

Magic Garden

6 tbsp salt

6 tbsp liquid blueing

6 tbsp water

1 tbsp ammonica

Pour over broken bricks,coal,stones etc.

Rub sides of shallow dish with vaseline.

(I remember my mother used a glass or pyrex pie plate. )

Crystal Magic Garden

Charcoal Rock Garden When I was a little girl,my mother would make what she called Magic Gardens. I remember being awestruck at how beautiful they were. I don’t know what happened to her recipe but after doing a bit of research online,I found instructions. If you’re a granny,your grandchildren will love this.
Crystal Magic Garden Link

Here’s a slightly different recipe

Grannyhood

Growing up,I never had a grandmother close. One was in Germany and the other was in Scotland. I was in Canada.

So not having a role model,it's all completely new to me and I LOVE IT. It's so much fun having these lovely little babies to play with. Still learning what being a Granny is all about.