Wondersome StoryTime Store

Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Moose Madness – If You Give a Moose a Muffin


If You Give a Moose a Muffin
By Laura Numeroff
Illustrated by Felicia Bond
Laptime: Toddler – Kindergarten
Story Circle: Preschool – Early Elementary


We have had a very snowy winter, and because the mountains and hills around us are still covered in snow the moose have moved down into the valleys. Occasionally we get moose in our yard. They nonchalantly lope across the grass until they reach the forest behind the house and disappear. Not really much trouble at all. But we have friends who have had a moose haunt their front steps making it impossible to leave the house by the front door. I just hope that they don’t give that moose a muffin!

If You Give a Moose a Muffin is a darling story about an unexpected house guest - a moose. In this story a rather large and hungry moose comes to visit. The young boy wants to be a good host, so he offers the moose a muffin. The problem – “If you give a moose a muffin he’ll want some jam to go with it”, and one thing will lead to another until your house is overrun with moose mayhem including a colorful sock puppet production. But just look at that charming moose......... how could anyone refuse to give him a muffin?

Laptime and Story Circle Activities

Make Muffins – Here is a great Muffin recipe with the jam already baked inside!

Preheat oven to 400 degrees
  • 1 3/4 cups flour
  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 egg
  • 3/4 cup milk
  • 1/4 cup cooking oil

In a mixing bowl combine dry ingredients. In a liquid measuring cup combine the milk and the oil add the egg and beat with a fork until the egg is mixed in. Make a well in the middle of the dry ingredients and pour the liquid into the well. Stir just until moist ( there will be lumps). Spray a muffin pan with non-stick spray or grease each cup well. Fill each cup about 1/3 full with batter. Add 1 tsp of your favorite jam to each cup then cover the jam with more batter so that the cups are about 2/3 full.
Bake for 20 minutes or until golden. Remove muffins from pan and allow to cool so that the jam doesn’t burn any mouths.
This recipe makes a dozen so if you have a larger class double the recipe.
Check out Tips for successful cooking in the classroom.

Make Sock Puppets
This is a great activity to recycle all of those single socks whose mates have been sucked into the black hole of your dryer.
You will need:
  • One sock per child
  • White glue
  • Q tips
  • Small paper plates
  • Scissors
  • Fabric scraps
  • Googly eyes (optional)
  • Yarn
  1. Give each child a sock and a small plate with a little puddle of glue and a Q tip.
  2. Explain that too much glue will make their puppet soggy.
  3. Then have them practice using their Q tip to get a dab of glue and put that dab onto a dry area of the paper plate. That is how much glue they should use.
  4. Next have the children put the sock on their hands so that the toe can be opened and shut like a mouth.
  5. Talk about where the eyes should go, and the hair and the tongue.
  6. Talk about what else they might want on their puppets. Will the puppet be an animal? A person? A monster?
  7. Allow the children to be as creative as they would like with the materials to make their puppets.
  8. To avoid frustration be there to help cut a shape or a hard piece of yarn but always encourage them to do most of it themselves.

When the puppets are complete and dry, put on a puppet show.

Ideas for puppet stages:
  • Cut a hole out of the center of an old sheet and hang it with clothespins on a string strung across a corner of the room
  • A big old box with a rectangle cut out makes a great stage for two people.
  • The frame of an old TV set (the kind of TVs before flatscreens)
I hope that these activities are helpful. Add to the fun and tell us what you would do to help your children enjoy If You Give a Moose a Muffin.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Another McCloskey Favorite - Blueberries For Sal


Blueberries For Sal

By Robert McCloskey
Laptime:preschool - early elementary
Story Circle:preschool - early elementary

We have a few blueberry bushes in our back yard. After you plant the bush you have to wait a whole year before they will bear fruit and then you have to wait another year before there is enough fruit to even put on your cereal. So when I read about Little Sal and her mother picking blueberries on Blueberry Hill, it makes my mouth water. Imagine, a whole hill of blueberry bushes.
This Caldecott Honor book is one of Robert McCloskey's best loved books. It is the story of Little Sal and her mother who go blueberry picking on Blueberry Hill. Little Bear and his mother also go to Blueberry Hill to eat berries. Find out what happens when Little Sal and Little Bear have a mother mix-up.

I hope that you will enjoy these activities and leave your own activity idea in the comments section.

Laptime and Story Circle cooking activities
You're going to be hungry after you read this book and your mouth is going to be watering for blueberries. Of course you can be like Little Sal and gobble blueberries all by themselves or you can make blueberry pancakes or blueberry muffins. It's easy to find blueberries in the freezer section of your grocery store and they are often less expensive then buying them fresh. Here are two good and easy recipes. Be sure and check the sidebar for Tips for Successful Classroom Cooking.
Blueberry Pancakes
1 cup flour
1 Tbl sugar
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1 beaten egg
1 cup milk (plus a little more if needed)
As many blueberries as you can fit in a pancake.
In one mixing bowl stir together dry ingredients. In another bowl stir together wet ingredients. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and stir until just blended and slightly lumpy.
At this point you can stir the blueberries into the batter or add the blueberries to each individual pancake ( I like this way best because I can make sure that there are enough blueberries in every bite.)
Pour about 1/4 cup of batter onto a hot buttery griddle or frying pan. If you are adding the berries to each pancake, add them now. When the pancake turns bubbly and looks solid around the edges turn it over and and cook the other side.

Blueberry muffins
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Grease muffin pan or line with cupcake liners.
1 3/4 cups all purpose flour
1/3 cup sugar
2 tsp baking powder
1 beaten egg
3/4 cup milk
1/4 cup cooking oil
3/4 cup blueberries
In a mixing bowl combine dry ingredients. Make a well in the center. Combine egg, milk and oil and pour into well. Stir just until moist. Gently stir in the blueberries. Fill muffin cups about 2/3 full and sprinkle a little sugar on top of each muffin. Bake for 20 min. or until golden brown.

Of course if cooking is too time consuming make some toast and put blueberry jam on top.

Story Circle Activities
  1. Blueberry Count: On page 8 and 9 there is a wonderful opportunity to do a little math. Give each child real blueberries or pretend blueberries (paper circles, marbles, playdough berries) and count the berries with Sal.
  2. Bears! I live in bear country so I feel that I must tell my children that it's not a good idea to follow a great big mama bear. Follow up this book with a some books about real bears or check out this site to get some great bear info, http://www.bears.org/

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