From HomeMaking

Maintaining the home: cooking, cleaning, laundry, etc.

Dessert Recipes

Fruit Cobbler Recipe

Adapted from Better Homes & Gardens

Relatively low fat and low sugar for a dessert, it doubles readily, and it doesn’t spend too much time in a hot oven.  Cobblers freeze well.

4 cups fresh fruit: cherries, blueberries, apples, peaches, etc. (use one kind only)

¾ cup sugar

1 Tablespoon corn or potato starch

1/3 cup water

Process the fruit, removing pits, peeling apples, and if appropriate, slice into quarter inch slices. Combine the fruit, sugar, starch and water in a pot.  Cook over a low flame, stirring, until liquid is thickened and bubbly and fruit is a little soft.  Berries usually take 3 – 5 minutes to cook, cherries, 5 -10, and apples and peaches approximately 15 minutes or more, depending on ripeness—make sure to test.  Keep the pot warm, while making the biscuit topping.

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

Prepare the biscuit topping:

1 cup flour

2 Tablespoons sugar

1 ½ teaspoons baking powder

¼ teaspoon salt

¼ cup margarine

1 slightly beaten egg

¼ cup milk: non-dairy creamer, soy, rice or almond work fine

Stir together the dry ingredients.  Cut in the margarine until mixture becomes crumbly.  Combine egg & liquid ingredient; and add all at once to dry ingredients, stirring just until all ingredients are moist.

Put fruit filling into an 8 or 9 inch greased round pan and immediately spoon mounds of batter all over on top. Bake 20 minutes, or until top is slightly browned.  Unless the pan has very high (3 inch+) sides, it’s a good idea to put the baking pan inside a rimmed baking sheet to catch the juices if they overflow during baking.

Rhubarb-Compote

straight from the freezer

Cover the bottom of a stainless steel pot with white grape juice. Add in equal numbers as many bags of frozen strawberries and frozen rhubarb as needed. Bring slowly to a boil, add sweetener (e.g. sugar, honey) to taste, and cook on low heat until tender.

Instant Sorbet

using the food processor

2 frozen ripe bananas cut in small chunks

1 cup frozen strawberries

Juice of 1 lime or lemon

3 Tablespoons (or more, to taste) sweeteners: honey, blue agave nectar or fine sugar.

Place the fruit in the food processor bowl.  Add the citrus juice and sweeteners. Pulse and mix until you get the consistency of a sorbet.

It is ready to eat or can be frozen for later. Other frozen fruit with a strong flavor can be substituted for the strawberries. Serves about five but the quantities can be multiplied as many times as needed.

Strawberry whip

This is a delicious stand-by dessert, as long as you have frozen strawberries, with or without syrup, in your freezer.  The recipe works even if you use a sugar substitute. The result is a really low calorie and low carbohydrate dessert.

2 egg whites

1package frozen strawberries, with or without syrup

1Tablespoon of lime or lemon juice

¾ c sugar or artificial sweetner, omit if using strawberries in syrup.

 

Place all the ingredients in large mixer bowl and beat at the highest speed for 10 minutes.  Cover the mixer with a towel to prevent splashes. The whip should be placed in the freezer until serving. At serving time, you can pass around some sweetened mashed strawberries as topping.

Preparing Yom Tov–Starting Early

In the middle of the summer, Rosh Hashana and Sukkos seem a long way off.  Yet, they will arrive, and this year, the calendar configuration is three day Yomim Tovim for Rosh Hashana, and the first and last days of Sukkos.  We plan to provide tips over a few articles to help families enjoy the upcoming Yomim Tovim.

While summertime is too early for many Yom Tov preparations, it is a good time to start baking or cooking to stocking the freezer. While parents with a spare freezer will benefit the most from tips in this article, those who have only their fridge-top freezer may find that they can make a little extra room for Yom Tov food.  Parents who spend Yom Tov with the grandparents may offer to send food during the summer to their freezer to make it easier to feed their family when they come over.  It may even make sense to split the cost of a freezer with the grandparents if they have space for it and the parents do not.  However, it is probably not worth it to freeze food ahead if the home is subject to blackouts.

What to Freeze Ahead?

Challah, cake, cookies, most kugels and pies freeze well.  On the savory side, chicken soup, meat balls, schnitzel, potato knishes, meat, chicken and kreplach may also be frozen.  Certain foods, such as mushrooms, change texture when frozen; check with friends when in doubt.

Given the constraints of limited time and freezer spaces, parents need to set priorities.

Budget

Can homemade food substitute for expensive prepared foods?  Most prepared Yom Tov treats, including cookies, iced cakes, and cupcakes may be duplicated in the home kitchen for far less than the store bought version.

Another approach is to stock up on meat and chicken when on sale over the summer.  Based on experience, parents may set a “floor price”: when the food hits this price, it’s time to purchase.  Meats may be cooked or roasted before freezing.

Health

During the summer, parents may decide how healthy the family will eat over Yom Tov.  Assuming that family members are willing to consume them, parents may choose to prepare fruit-based desserts, whole grain snacks, granola, and (partially) whole wheat challah. Summer is when blueberries, cherries, and plums are cheapest and available to be baked into crisps, cobblers, kugels, and pies, all healthier than most cake.   Other homemade snacks may be prepared in a more healthy way than the store bought version.

Enhancing Yom Tov

Are there treats that cannot be found in stores?  Oatmeal chocolate chip cookies are surprisingly hard to find.  Recipes exist for homemade versions of candy bars such as Mars bars and peanut butter cups.  By using parve chocolate chips and margarine, the family may enjoy parve versions of these treats.

Are there fussy eaters in the family who need their food cooked “just so”?  It may be easiest to cook and freeze meatballs ahead for children who do not eat “regular” chicken or beef.

Involving the Children

Baking or cooking with the children may be a wonderful bonding experience.  Children enjoy feeling needed and may take pride in their accomplishments in the kitchen.  Moreover, Yom Tov feels more special when one has invested in the preparation.  However, parents need to think ahead in order for food preparation with the children to be a pleasant experience.

Keep It Simple

It is better to avoid trying out new or complicated recipes with younger children.  When doubling the recipe, work out the arithmetic in advance, perhaps with a budding mathematician, and mark the altered quantities on the recipe itself.

Lower Expectations

When inexperienced cooks are involved, cookies may not be well shaped, and meatballs, not as round.  Or, everything will look perfect, but will take four times as long.  Food preparation with beginners should be viewed as spending time with the children, rather than as “getting things done”.

Get the Right Equipment.

Even children who are too young to use peelers or knives may be able to help if provided with the right gadgets.  These include crank-operated peelers, onion choppers, cherry pitters, and vegetable slicers.  Parents should keep in mind that these utensils all have sharp parts; setup and cleanup may still need to be performed by adults.  Alternatively, children may help with the measuring, pouring, and mixing.

If mother is an incurable perfectionist or finds too many helping hands stressful, it may be better to either prepare food when the children are out or invite the children to “hang out” in the kitchen rather than help.

Keeping the Kitchen Cool

Heating up the kitchen and living areas by running the oven is not a good idea during a heat wave.  The heat effect may be mitigated by putting an exhaust fan in the kitchen window and shutting the kitchen door.  Alternatively, stove top dishes do not heat up the house as much as those cooked in the oven.

Other ways to beat the heat are to reserve baking for early morning, late evening, or for cooler, rainy days.  Some ingredients may be prepared in advance, combined, and heated when the temperature goes down. Some recipes even allow for the freezing of the ingredients raw and cooking later.

Click here for our fruit cobbler recipe.

Cleaning for Pesach with Little Children

Preparing the house for Pesach is a yearly challenge for many housewives.  When there are young children, the task is more complicated, since little children cannot be relied on to follow rules and chometz might be lying anywhere in the house.  In addition, children need care during Pesach preparation time, and they are off from school during the critical week before Pesach.  In this article, compiled from interviewing experienced homemakers and other community members, we provide ideas and tips to make cleaning for Pesach less stressful for the entire family.

Why “Make Pesach”?

Many young couples have the option of spending the entire Pesach with their parents.  Nevertheless, couples should consider the reasons to make Pesach in the early years of their marriage.  Practice makes the process easier and younger parents often have more time, energy and flexibility than they will have later.  When couples keep postponing making their own Pesach, the task builds itself up into something they feel incapable of accomplishing later on.

Moreover, life is unpredictable: due to pregnancy, changes in family dynamics, or other events; the family may not have the option to go to the grandparents the following year.  In addition, some children do not travel well and have trouble sleeping or behaving properly in a different environment. It may be worthwhile to create the capability to spend Pesach in one’s own home this year, by preparing the house for chol hamoed, so that spending the Yom Tov at home is a more feasible option in the future.

Young parents sometimes make Pesach in their own home in order to provide their children with a seder customized to their age, temperament, and interests.  This is something to discuss with a Rav or mentor, since making one’s own seder means giving up the mesora one gains from a multi-generational seder at the grandparents.

 

“Don’t Throw the Kids Out with the Chometz”

This quote from a community Rav neatly sums up the balance parents need to strike between preparing a Pesach that is kosher vs. a Pesach that is sameach (joyful).  It violates the spirit of Pesach when the yom tov acquires bitter associations of anger and tension between the parents and children.  The best way to mitigate this potential is to plan ahead.

Speak with a Rav

Parents need to decide how much of the house they are going to clean and how they are going to clean it.  There are different standards and methods for preparing a place for Pesach.  Typically, parents of young children are under perennial stress due to sleep deprivation and the physical demands of childcare. Therefore, it may be a good idea for them to adopt a less ambitious and less labor intensive Pesach cleaning.  It is helpful to consult a Rav at the outset to strike the correct balance between responsibility to halacha and the need to maintain the physical and emotional health of the family.  The Rav should be able to direct the parents to a Pesach preparation guide that is right for them.

Before speaking with their Rav, parents should think about the specific challenges their family faces.  Listing the number of children and their ages does not give an accurate picture of the family’s situation, since children vary considerably in their obedience, neatness, and need for attention.  Parents, too, vary in energy level, availability, and ability to cope with stress.   Financial resources, i.e. the ability to hire help and buy prepared food, and human resources, i.e. relatives who can take care of the children or feed the family the Shabbos before Pesach, also differ.  A family that finds it difficult to keep up with meals, laundry, and normal Shabbos preparation should make this clear to their Rav.

Plan Ahead

Once parents have decided what must be done to prepare for Pesach, they need to determine how they will accomplish it.  This includes deciding how much to budget for expenses such as cleaning help, babysitting, or eating out.  It also includes scheduling the different tasks.

Think About Logistics

When should the car be clean enough to buy Pesach groceries?  How will the stroller, the car seat, the van, and the couch stay chometz-free once they are thoroughly cleaned?

Parents should also consider how much of the kitchen should be made Pesach-dik.  Every cabinet and every surface devoted to Pesach use must be emptied, cleaned and/or covered; after Pesach, the process must be reversed.  It pays, therefore, to minimize the area to turn over.   A great labor saver is to close off the cabinets and set up a table in an adjoining room to hold Pesach supplies.

Meals Before Pesach

The family needs to eat during Pesach cleaning, and even when the kitchen is turned over.   Many families buy Pesach-dik snacks and convenience foods.   Some mothers try to make this stressful time more cheerful by purchasing Pesach-dik treats and fast food they would not permit the rest of the year.  The advantage of giving the children kosher l’Pesach snacks is if crumbs are found in a “cleaned” room, they are likely to be non-chometz.  Mother may also cook Pesach-dik food for the family and/or offer non-chometz snacks such as fruit, cheese, or yogurt.

Another approach is to set up a self-contained chometz area, usually in the basement or garage, equipped with table, chairs, toaster oven, and/or a burner and a mini-refrigerator.  Either the area is cleaned after each use or the family must allocate time on Erev Pesach to clean it thoroughly.  If they do not need the area for Yom Tov, they may be able to sell it.

Make Lists

After consulting a calendar, parents may create a count-down of the tasks that need to be accomplished by sun-down Erev Pesach.  Shopping lists, too, may be generated in advance.  The goal is to be able to work when there is free time rather than having to stop and think.  Lists may be reused from year to year; keeping them in a notebook or on the computer makes this easier. It is useful to add “post scripts” after Pesach to note what worked well and what to change the following year.

Reserve Help 

If parents have regular cleaning help, they should try to increase the hours before Pesach.  If they do not have cleaning help, they should begin looking for some well ahead of time.  Cleaning services and carpet cleaners get booked weeks ahead of Pesach.  Note: It is difficult to book a cleaning lady to clean just for Pesach and they sometimes do not show up for a non-regular client.  Cleaning services are more reliable, but much more expensive.  An alternative may be to ask a friend who is not cleaning for Pesach to “lend” her cleaning help.

Parents should also try to find extra babysitting before Pesach.  Younger daughters may be available, since older siblings take care of a large portion of the cleaning.  Reaching out to even an eight year old neighbor may be worthwhile, as s/he may be able to entertain the kids while the parents work.

Shop Ahead

If there is a secure area to store things for Pesach, parents may begin shopping for the equipment they know they will need: pots, peelers, knives, etc.  It may also be worthwhile to begin shopping for non-perishables, especially if they are on sale.  Kosher meat and poultry tend to be kosher for Pesach all year round; if there is free, clean space in the freezer, it may pay to stock up.

“Spring Clean”

Mothers frequently combine spring cleaning with Pesach cleaning, because the tasks often mesh well and it’s nice to have a clean house for Yom Tov.  The problem is that spring cleaning expands the task of chometz removal, tiring the parents, and stressing the family.  A compromise is to begin spring cleaning well before Pesach, perhaps around Tu B’Shvat.  After  Purim is a good time to switch to chometz removal.

Certain types of spring cleaning are useful preparation for Pesach.  Getting rid of clutter in closets and drawers make the task of bedikas chometz much easier and more effective.  Removing and washing drapes and linens sometimes exposes concealed chometz.  Washing the light fixtures and wiping the windows and the moldings is less relevant to Pesach preparation and might be skipped or rescheduled for another time of the year.

 

 

When & Where to Begin

The general approach to Pesach cleaning is to start at the periphery, that is, the areas furthest from the kitchen and work one’s way to the kitchen via the living room and dining room until “turnover” time.  The main concern here is the likelihood that more chometz will enter a cleaned area after it has been declared chometz-free.  Much depends on the age and personality of the children—do they tend to wander with chometz?  How likely are they to stash food?   Some children actively seek out their favorite chometz foods, even climbing to reach high cabinets.

For such families, it is a wasted effort to clean for Pesach (as opposed to spring cleaning) until a week or two before Yom Tov.  At that point, they may need to “blitz” through the house possibly into the early morning hours.  They might find it useful to begin their Pesach cleaning in areas less accessible or less interesting to the children: upper cabinets and upper shelves.

Pesach cleaning may begin with cleaning the less essential kitchen items, such as cookie cutters or specialized equipment, and putting them away in sealed bags.  It is easier to work on the kitchen if parents commit themselves relatively early to stop baking before Pesach.  Mother may spend the week after Purim preparing and freezing casseroles to eat during the hectic week before Pesach.  Pack the meals in microwave safe containers, so they can be reheated even after the oven is Pesach-dik.  This is also a good time to take a thorough inventory of the refrigerator and pantry, discarding chometz that is unlikely to be consumed, and deliberately consuming what is still usable.  This saves much time during the critical turnover process.

The Toys

Less used toys may be cleaned and put away weeks before Pesach and given back to the children when the house is Pesach-dik.  Small pieces, such as lego and clicks, may be put into a tied-up pillow case and washed with the laundry (try this with small quantities first).  Another option is to sell all or most of the toys rather than cleaning them and give the children a special set of Pesach toys.  During the year, parents may save gifts, especially duplicates of toys they already own, for this purpose.  Children are usually excited when the Pesach toys reappear.

Using Cleaning Help

Hired help makes cleaning for Pesach much easier, however, parents must realize that the help knows how to clean, but not how to get rid of chometz.  They are not familiar with all the foods that must be discarded (they’ll wipe the barley jar and put it back into the pantry).  They also may not understand our priorities, spending excessive time scrubbing the moldings rather than vacuuming the crevices in the upholstered chairs.  Cleaning women are usually most effective when cleaning appliances, floors, and kitchen chairs.  It is imperative to give the help detailed instructions, to supervise as they clean, and to inspect carefully as they finish different tasks.  This is more difficult when using a cleaning service that sends a whole crew to “do the house” in a few hours.

Involving the Children

Children are more likely to cooperate and to absorb the Pesach experience if they are involved with preparing for the Yom Tov.  However, it is not healthy when older children feel that their help is utterly essential and that their parents cannot manage without them.  Parents should plan with the children in mind to decide how to use their help productively.

Playing Pesach-themed CD or DVDs spreads a positive mood in the house, whether or not the children are actually helping with the cleaning.  Singing Pesach songs as they work together enhances the experience.  By trading CD/DVDs with the neighbors, families may increase their options.

Little Children

Little children are usually excited to help clean for Pesach.  Even two year olds may be equipped with rags and spray bottles filled with water and told to wash walls and other surfaces.  Preschoolers may be put into the bathtub (with supervision) with soapy water and toys and instructed to scrub them clean for Pesach.  Weather permitting; the kids may hose down large toys and plastic items, such as tables and chairs.  This procedure is more effective when dirtier items are first smeared with soft scrub.  Once they learn to write, children may create “No Chometz” signs to label rooms and areas as they are cleaned for Pesach.  This also enhances awareness and compliance with pre-Pesach rules.

Older Children

As they age, children are often less excited to help for Pesach.  However, they may help clear the accumulation in their rooms and put away toys and books for after Pesach.  Many parents motivate children to clean the car by allowing them to keep any money that they find.  One mother “seeds” an area to be cleaned, such as a book case, with funny items, to make sure that the children actually do go through the whole area.  A treat-filled party is a nice way to reward children for a few hours of hard work.

Note: Make sure to check the children’s’ cleaning work.

Tips and Strategies

Prioritize

The regular cleaning and household chores should be reduced so that the parents and the help focus on Pesach cleaning.  Mother may have to do more of the everyday housework while the help cleans out the fridge.

Reduce the Scope for Chometz Mess

Sometime after Purim, eliminate the tiny chometz items, such as Cheerios, crackers or soup nuts, that get distributed all over the house.  Potato chips and the like might substitute for these few weeks.

Create Blocks of Time for Cleaning

Most mothers cannot work efficiently on the “serious” Pesach cleaning when the children are around.  Either the parents stay up very late the nights before Pesach and/or they have the husband take the children out.  Kid-swaps, where friends or neighbors take turns hosting all the children, are an inexpensive way to find a chunk of time, especially when the children are off from school the week before Pesach.

Check the Chometz Hangouts

 Families with little children typically find much chometz in strollers (and their basket), diaper bags, knapsacks, coats, high chairs, play pens, car seats, and the children’s desks.  Generally, any place in which a young child spends time is likely to have food—the couch, the area that s/he stands while looking out the window, the bed, or the comfy chair.  Toy kitchens, trucks with cargo areas, toy pocket books, heating vents, and behind radiators are other classics.

High chairs are easier to clean by giving them a shower or a bath.  Strollers may be hosed down outdoors, with the pads washed on the gentle cycle and hung to dry.  Some families buy an inexpensive high chair just for Pesach.

Moving furniture and storage boxes may uncover more chometz, but check with a Rav to determine if it’s necessary.  In a process similar to child-proofing, parents should try to examine their rooms from a toddler’s point of view for handy places to put food when they are done.

Avoid Extra Work

Clearing out all the chometz requires physical energy and mental alertness when there are little children around.  Therefore, parents must avoid burning themselves out through unnecessary scrubbing, since this may cause them to skip that crucial last minute check of the swimming bag that unearths the granola bar.

Getting Ready for Shabbos On Time

Preparing for Shabbos is in an integral part of the Shabbos experience.  Shalom Bayis, among parents and between parents and children, is an essential component of the preparation process.  This article discusses constructive approaches, tips and strategies to smooth the process of getting everything ready in time for candle lighting

Establishing Family Priorities

Should the family find that tensions often rise on Friday, they may need to rethink their Shabbos preparation and look at the broad picture of how they want their Shabbos to look and feel.  It is good to begin the discussion between the parents, and then to seek out the viewpoints of the older children.  Once the family has agreed about what is important to them, they can openly and explicitly discuss how to attain the Shabbos they desire.  It may be necessary for family members to forego something in order to have some of their preferences met.

For example, it often makes sense to reduce the time spent preparing Shabbos food by using simpler recipes, cutting down on variety, or cooking ahead and freezing.  Moreover, there may not be enough time on Friday afternoon to completely tidy or clean the house in time for candle lighting.  If finances allow, one method for “making” more time is to hire help or to purchase prepared foods.

The atmosphere in the home should not be compromised. Shabbos preparation should be joyful, with everyone pitching in the best possible way they can.  If family members are not “on the same page”, it is better to cut down on the preparation than to allow resentment to build.

While mother may enjoy preparing elaborate recipes in honor of the Shabbos, it is a good idea for her to monitor whether this is coming at the expense of spending time with the children during the week. Parents may also want to ask themselves whether they are exhausting themselves in their enthusiasm to prepare Shabbos and falling asleep at the meal.

Rethinking Shabbos Preparation

A family conference or one-on-one meetings with the children may help identify bottlenecks, less necessary tasks, and stress points.  Once parents better understand the dynamics of their family, they are able to create a plan to smooth Shabbos preparation, drawing perhaps on some of the tips and strategies outlined below.  The entire family may be more willing to pitch in if they understand the general strategy and priorities. The plan may need to be updated as conditions change, such as a parent taking on longer hours at work or a more complicated car pool.

Including the Family in Shabbos Preparation

Responsibility for running the household and for “making Shabbos” tends to fall on the mother. A working father may not be able to do more than set up the candles when he arrives home on Friday.  It may be best to discuss this and reach a realistic agreement, rather than expecting more than he can give.  The husband should be realistic, too, and expect less in terms of the Shabbos food or the condition of the house.

On the other hand, it is important for the children’s chinuch to involve them in Shabbos preparation, even if their help is not needed, in order to include them in the Shabbos experience, to teach them life skills, and to inculcate the habit of helping. Tasks that are often appropriate for children include peeling vegetables, picking up toys, stacking books, taking out garbage, folding laundry, vacuuming floors, and wiping surfaces.  It is better for a child’s chinuch if his or her involvement in Shabbos preparation takes place only in a harmonious atmosphere.  Otherwise, it is better that the child(ren) entertain themselves quietly and stay away from the tension.

Working with each family member’s strengths and preferences makes this easier.  Erev Shabbos is probably not the time to “stretch” children by asking them to perform tasks they dislike or to work with siblings with whom they do not get along.  It is important to be realistic about what little children can do by themselves.  They may be willing to clean up their toys, for example, but it might not happen unless mother works with them.  Singing Shabbos songs or playing music sets a nice atmosphere.

Incentives are also useful—if everyone is showered and ready half hour before Shabbos, they get a treat, for example.  The treat need not be food: children appreciate a relaxed mother spending the time after candle lighting reading a story or playing a game.

Food Strategies

Most time saving tips involve cooking the food ahead of time.    Nearly anything that is cooked or baked will keep for most of the week if stored in airtight conditions in the back of the refrigerator away from the opening and closing door, although it is preferable to cook at the latter part of the week to increase the shelf life of leftovers.  Using twist-tie plastic bags works well and makes the food more compact to store in the fridge.  Make sure to label the food “For Shabbos Only” if other family members might consume it.

The Freezer

Some women find it worthwhile to cook or bake large quantities of challah or chicken soup on Sundays to stock the freezer.  Another way to stock the freezer is to double recipes and freeze the extra.  Leftover cake or dessert may be frozen right after Shabbos.  Most baked goods: challah, cake, cookies and kugels freeze very well; however, potato kugel is best defrosted for an hour or more in the oven.

There may be family members who object to eating food from the freezer.  In such cases, it might be worthwhile to determine the cause.  Some possible reasons may be that the wrong foods are being frozen, the food is not defrosted the right way, or the freezer may have taken on a stale odor that transfers to stored food.  Cleaning out the freezer is helpful, as is inserting a package of baking soda and changing it regularly.

Keeping Stocked

It is very useful to keep a few items in the freezer, the pantry, or the fridge, such as gefilte fish, frozen chicken and cholent meat. canned and frozen vegetables, grape juice, challah, etc. These may be pressed into service if there is no time to shop for Shabbos that week.

Emergency Fridays happen, whether it’s a child landing in the emergency room or a parent stuck in traffic.  It is useful to work out in advance which foods to draw on from the freezer, the fridge, or the pantry in such circumstances.  Soup may be defrosted, gefilte fish taken from a jar, potatoes from a can, and salad created from frozen or canned vegetables at the last minute.

Lists and Planning

Permanent Lists

There are tasks that need to be accomplished every Shabbos.  The family may create lists, one for each room or one for each member, which may be stored on the computer and printed regularly.  If a list is shared among the family, everyone must check off their tasks as they finish them. A great advantage of a detailed list is that it allows people to use even very short bits of time productively.  For example, five spare minutes before going to carpool, may be used to open cans or take foods from the freezer.

Weekly Lists

Many women find that planning Shabbos menus on Sunday or Monday increases their efficiency.  Once the menu is determined, recipes may be checked and shopping lists created for each of the that stores the family uses.  It is useful to maintain a small notebook with a page for each day of the week.  This way, the different tasks involved in preparing for the Shabbos may be jotted down days in advance.  Such a list is more realistic if the time needed for different tasks, including recipes, are noted.  It is helpful to work out in advance when various tasks need to be done, rather than having to think this through while harried.

This technique works best if the family knows early in the week whether they are having company.  Guests may be invited over a week in advance and confirmed early in the week to facilitate planning.  Alternatively, mother may use a few items from the freezer or the pantry for the guests.

Time Management

Partner with a Friend

Friends may agree to each making double quantities of foods such as cake, kugels, or challah and trading the extra.  This allows each family to have more variety for Shabbos.  Another technique is to shop for each other, provided that accounts are easily kept separate (using school scrip may help).  One partner may handle Kosher Konnection, for example, while the other takes care of Costco.

Focus

Fridays run smoothest when they are used for Shabbos preparation rather than doctors’ appointments, errands, etc.  (This is not always practical, we realize, if children are only available on Friday afternoon).

Shabbos Clothing

It is a good idea to do laundry earlier in the week so that it is available in time for changing into before Shabbos.  When bringing Shabbos clothes to the dry cleaner, jot down the pickup date on a calendar or to-do list.  Otherwise, someone may find themselves without a suit minutes before Shabbos.

Bath/Shower Strategies

While it’s nicer to get clean on Erev Shabbos, it pays during the winter months to have younger children take their Shabbos bath on Thursday night.    Mother or older children may find it more convenient to rise a little early on Friday mornings to shower.  Those who bathed/showered the night before may give themselves a quick refresh before Shabbos.  This avoids the bathroom bottleneck and running out of hot water on Erev Shabbos.

Tidying

Surfaces can be cleared on Thursday or even Wednesday evening.  If the kitchen tablecloth is changed for Shabbos, it may be changed on Friday morning to avoid a last minute rush.

Polishing silver may be a task to eliminate for families that are often strapped for time.  The silver may be put away for when life gets easier, or it may be coated with a tarnish resistant film (rhodium-ized).

While children are able to sweep, most kids enjoy using a Swiffer to clean floors.  Lysol wipes may be used with gloves to wipe down countertops.  Children may be taught to use a damp mop (skip the bucket) to give the kitchen floor a last minute touchup.

Using Thursday

While many women prepare Shabbos food on other days of the week, Thursday is usually the main time for preparing for Shabbos aside from Friday. For some parents, staying up very late on Thursdays works best, giving them peace of mind by the time they go to bed; for others, it pays to go to bed earlier and wake up early on Friday.

It is best to accomplish some Shabbos preparation on Thursday, even if one is very busy that day, to simplify the logistics of the stove and oven.  Certain food preparation tasks, like soup or gefilte fish or roasts do not require much work but do tie up a flame or the oven for extensive periods of time.  The chicken may be defrosted, cleaned, and processed on Thursday night, spend the night in fridge, and go straight into the oven on Friday afternoon.  Similarly, a raw cholent may sit refrigerated in the crock pot insert overnight.

Thursday’s supper may be coordinated with Shabbos preparation.  For example, mother may prepare a large batch of mashed potatoes, some of which will be used to make knishes for Shabbos.  Fresh soup chicken or vegetables might work as Thursday’s supper if these are not generally served on Shabbos.   Vegetables may be boiled for supper and made into kugel for Shabbos.  While many families serve something simple and milchig on Thursdays, working only with fleishig simplifies kitchen management.

Starting Early on Friday

Start early on Friday morning to get things going: cleaning the chicken, making the challah dough, setting up the soup, or cooking the gefilte fish.  Anything that will not be undone should be done early in the day: e.g. pre-Shabbos phone calls, laying out Shabbos clothing, setting Shabbos clocks, pre-opening food, beverages or paper goods, or setting up the candles.  Setting the table in advance works for some families even if children rearrange things a little.

Setting a Firm Deadline

Mother may decide that no recipes are started two hours before Shabbos.  This may necessitate leaving items off the menu or taking foods from the freezer, but it sets a limit to food preparation and allows the family to wind down the cooking and begin the cleanup.  Sticking to such a policy also conveys a message to the family about priorities.

Simplify Ruthlessly

A family that finds Shabbos preparation demanding should consider stripping down preparation to bare essentials.  Parents may determine a very simple menu: no kugels, leave out a course, strictly one vegetable—and stick to this regime.  This may be the best way to manage when there is a new baby or during the years when there are many small children in the house and no help.  Supplementing the regular menu with a treat each Shabbos allows parents to add a little “wow factor” to the meals.

Conclusion

Preparing Shabbos is a spiritual experience for the entire family.  When a family reshapes their Erev Shabbos by communicating, identifying bottlenecks, creating a plan, and implementing it, they strengthen their observance of Shabbos and their relationships.  The skills and optimism generated by this process are useful when encountering other challenges in the future.

Housekeeping Tips

Ideas to help parents juggle the children and the housework

As parents, we are, by necessity, housekeepers and managers, since we need to provide food, shelter, and clothing for the children.  It is a time intensive challenge to keep children supplied with these physical necessities while attending to their emotional, spiritual, and scholastic needs.   This article contains tips and methods to help parents set priorities and allocate less time and effort for less essential tasks.  The underlying principle is that parents often do not have time to do everything the “right” way.  It is more important for parents to keep a feeling of simcha than to exhaust themselves physically and emotionally trying to maintain high housekeeping standards.

Planning Ahead

Pre-planning allows parents to be more efficient with the time that they spend on housekeeping.  There are a variety of ways to plan ahead.

Menu Planning

Either plan the week’s menus at the outset of the week or establish a fixed set of menus for each day of the week.  Create the shopping list at the beginning of each week.  A sample weekly menu schedule:  Sunday – leftovers, Monday – homemade pizza, Tuesday – ground meat, Wednesday – chicken cooked with potatoes or rice, Thursday – fish or lasagna/ziti.  Another approach to meal planning for families that want more variety is to create a long list of meals that a parent is able to cook on a weeknight.  Parents may decide to plan their menus a month ahead, choosing from the menu list to create weekly shopping lists.

Shopping Lists

Maintain a set of shopping lists in the kitchen, one for each of the stores regularly shopped: the kosher store, the big supermarket, the department store, etc.  If one stocks two of every essential item, the item is added to the list when the spare is opened.  The object is to minimize the number of shopping trips by being prepared.   In addition, it is useful to keep a shopping list on the fridge so that if kids need something for school or request specific snacks they may jot them down.

 

To-Do Lists

Keep a small short-term “to-do” notebook with a page allocated for each day and a larger notebook for longer-term planning.  The daily to-do list is more realistic if it includes estimated timings for how long each listed task should take.   It is a good idea to study the children’s school calendar(s) in order not to be surprised by early dismissals, late starts, staff training days, and the like.  Before going on an errand that is likely to involve waiting, one might pack these notebooks, along with the yeshiva calendar, and plan during the wait.

 

Foreseeable Busy Times

Certain events may be predicted in advance: Yom Tov, simchas, vacations, school starting, etc.  Parents may take the time, months in advance, to prepare count downs for crunch time and inject clarity into the chaos.  This includes preparing shopping lists, menus, and to-do lists for two weeks before, one week before, and the day before the big event.  Planning ahead should include determining how to minimize non-essential activities during these predictable extra busy times.  Certain lists, i.e. Yom Tov preparation and menus, may be kept in a notebook for re-use.

Meal Preparation

Keep meals as simple as possible; save the serious cooking for Shabbos/Yom Tov.  For example, whole wheat pitas filled with ketchup, cheese, and raw vegetables (peppers, cucumbers, tomatoes) with grapefruit or oranges for dessert is a healthy, kid-friendly, and easy meal.  Another example: purchase pizza dough (freezer section of Acme, bakery section at Shoprite) or pizza bread (Kosher Konnection), cover with mushrooms, onions, spinach and/or broccoli, pour tomato sauce, and add cheese.  Leftover Shabbos chicken may be sliced and added with vegetables to a wrap for another healthy, simple meal.

Acquire a freezer when financially feasible.  Double recipes when possible.  Meat balls, meat sauce, pureed vegetable soup (split peas, cream of zucchini), noodle casseroles all lend themselves to cooking on a large scale and freezing.   Wrap food, first in heavy duty foil and then in plastic, to maintain freshness.  Label the package with contents and date and keep a list on the freezer door of what has been frozen and when.

Begin Shabbos cooking/baking early in the week, preparing a little each day.  Meats may be kept at least a week in the refrigerator if properly wrapped.  Yom Tov preparation should begin a few weeks ahead: challah and most other baked goods freeze well.

Take advantage of sales of meat or chicken by purchasing in large quantities.  Chicken may be cleaned, cut up or divided into meal-sized portions, and frozen in plastic bags.  Meats may be cut, if necessary, and put into a marinade before freezing.  This saves time later since the meat is ready to be used as soon as it is defrosted.

Train children not to display and share their negative reactions to food served at meals.  This only prejudices others in the family against the food.

Shopping

Ordering-in groceries is a great timesaver for a nominal fee.  For some parents, it is easier to just pick up the groceries rather than have to stay home for delivery.

ShopRite’s online site allows one to create and print a ShopRite list, which is not only item- specific (the 14 oz. bottle of ketchup, not the 48 oz. one), but also organized according to the store aisles.  This makes it easier for teens or husbands to shop effectively, since they know exactly which items to buy and where to find them. The lists may be saved and labeled, e.g. “Pre Purim,” “After Pesach Stock Up,” “Summer Trip,” etc.

Shop at only one store per week, even though this will mean paying more for some items.   It may pay to vary the stores to allow stocking up on sales.

Enter the family’s most important recipes on the computer, including Pesach recipes, so they do not get lost or damaged.  Check ingredients in recipes against pantry supplies before shopping.

 

 

Laundry

Keep three hampers accessible to the entire family and teach children to put their laundry each night into the correct hamper: coloreds, whites, permanent press.

Teach children to keep track of their clothing from an early age: put into hamper, put away clean laundry, lay out clothing for the next day.

If there is no time to fold or sort laundry, have the children go through the basket one at a time to remove their own clothing.  However, this may cause problems if a child covets another’s clothes.  When children are allowed to pick through the basket day by day, the clean clothing may end up on the floor.

An alternative is to wash laundry per bedroom, including the linens.  When the laundry is dry, return it to the room for each occupant to fold, sort, and put away.  Making the bed with the same set of linens saves folding the linen.  For those who are willing to wash small laundry loads, another alternative is to give each child his/her own hamper, and wash each child’s laundry separately, so that there is no need to sort.

Sock-locks are plastic circles that hold socks together in the wash.  Children may be taught to put their dirty socks into a sock-lock so that the socks are together from feet through washing machine, dryer, and back into the sock drawer.

Write a big number (in an inconspicuous spot) in a specific color to identify siblings’ socks, underwear, shirts and pants.  A silver marker is visible on dark colors.  Girls might select a specific pattern for their socks at the beginning of the school year.  This speeds up clothing sorting immensely when there are a few siblings close in age.  If the family plans to hand down the clothes, put one dot for the oldest child and keep adding one dot each time the clothing is handed down.

Cleaning House

Keeping the entire house clean is not an option for many parents, given the multiple constraints on their time.  It is important, however, to maintain a sense of order and to keep clutter in check.  This means putting things away on a regular basis rather than letting the clutter build to overwhelming levels.  It also means accepting that cleanup will not be perfect.

Tidy with the Kids – Children should be taught to put away their belonging before they go to bed.  For younger children, it helps to make cleanup time a family activity, singing the cleanup songs while putting away the toys.

Set Food Boundaries – When eating is restricted to one or two places in the house it keeps the rest of the house much neater and reduces the likelihood of pests.

Set Playing Boundaries – Restrict playing to specific rooms so as to keep other areas tidy.

Set Priorities – If the family cannot afford cleaning help, parents should decide where to put their efforts.  Rooms that are seldom used do not need to be cleaned regularly.  If a child suffers from dust allergies, consider removing drapes rather than constantly cleaning and rehanging.

Involving the Entire Family

It is important than neither parent feel that s/he bears the entire burden of running the household. It is easier to maintain shalom bayis when expectations about chores are made explicit, rather than waiting for an emotional outburst from a parent who feels exploited.  Communication is very important; both parents need to know who is going to do what and when it will be done

Children benefit when they are given their own chores. It may require investing time and patience to train the child, and parents may have to be satisfied with less than perfection. Nonetheless, it is worth it so long as the task is child-appropriate.  The allocation of chores need not be gender-specific: boys or girls are capable of setting the table, cooking, baking, taking out the garbage, holding the baby, or cleaning the bathroom.  It is more convenient to simply follow the child’s nature and interests when deciding which job s/he should take.

Another method for allocating chores is to assign each child his/her own day to be “on call” or available for any task the parent needs. On school nights, this might include setting and cleaning up dinner.

Erev Shabbos/Yom Tov should be seen as everyone’s day to help.  Even young children may clear tables, fold towels, put away their belongings, and set the table; older children might help in the kitchen.

Miscellaneous

A daily bath is not always necessary.  If the child is clean, the bath may be skipped.  A timesaver is to install a handheld shower and allow children to give themselves a quick shower instead.

Making the beds is not a necessity, especially if family members spend little waking time in the bedroom.  A compromise is to teach children to pull sheets up to the pillow when they get up in the morning and not expect a properly made bed.

Consider using disposable dishes to save time.  Snacks, for example, might be served on the least expensive plates and using small cups.  For families on a tight budget, cups may be labeled and reused by a child.   Drawing a smiley face, the sun, or some other symbol allows pre-literate children to find their cup.   Alternatively, children might be given their own personal cup to use all day rather than constantly rewashing cups.

Sometimes, it pays to use the local eateries. The pizza stores, for example, have specials on Mondays.   In addition, Valpack coupons, which are mailed, have additional offers.

Getting Help

When interviewing for this article, we found that many mothers attributed their success to using hired help.  Even mothers who do not work outside the home found that having help eased their workload considerably and allowed them to function better as parents.

Many working women prefer to bring a babysitter in their home.  In fact, the decision to bring someone into the home for anything more than supervised cleaning is a halachic decision, to be reached only after consulting with one’s Rav.   Aside from concerns about leaving children alone with someone the parents do not know well, there are halachic challenges in areas including basic kashrus, yichud, bishul akum, basar shenisaleim, and stam yainum (non-mevushal wine).

When a family hires help, one option is to use the help to allow the parents to spend more time with the children, rather than having the help supervise the children while the mother does housework.  Parents should not leave children alone with the cleaning help even for short errands unless they have observed that the help is aware and concerned about the children’s needs, rather than focused exclusively on the housework.  The parents also need some confidence in the cleaning woman’s willingness to remain in the house even if the parent returns after their cleaning job is over.