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  • Welcome to the Gigi Blog!

    Mother to six Little Women and Two Little Men. Married to a Happy Mortician. Caretaker to goats, chickens and many, MANY bunnies. Photographer. Homeschooler. Lover of Jesus, coffee & tea and all things pink & vintage.

Canning Cucumbers {Bread & Butter}

It’s canning season!

What have you canned for your pantry already? There are so many fun recipes out there to try – or time-tested ones passed down from mothers and grandmothers.

This year, along with dill pickles, we added bread and butter pickles and a cucumber relish, to our canning to-do list. The girls helped me chop up the cucumbers and helped place them in the jars, along with placing the dill into the jars for the dill pickles. They helped ladle the dill brine into the jars and helped take care of baby Lazarus so he would not find the need to be upset during our canning session. All the girls have been so helpful – it is wonderful. I am truly blessed!

We just finished up and the pot is simmering away with the first batch of bread and butter in the water bath.

 

Canning is one of my favorite homemaking tasks. It does not have to be a chore at all. Allow your children to help if you are willing to have them be a little sticky. Turn on your favorite music and enjoy the smells of beautiful preserves and goods bubbling away in your kitchen. I once read you can get twice as much done if you sit while working in your kitchen. Since I have been pregnant so many times during canning season, my feet and legs are often so tired and sore that I have learned to sit while working. I also think sitting as much as you can, while prepping your work, is a key to not being too exhausted at the end of your canning session (I have the perfect chairs that are more like old fashioned high chairs for the little ones. They are the perfect height to sit on and still reach the counter or table for all that cutting, dicing and slicing.) All the while, I had my favorite music (big band music) playing on the record player, the rain was falling down around us, the children were helping and truly, … it was wonderful. I felt blessed.

 

 

 

 

Shall I share the bread and butter pickle recipe? It turned out lovely and it did not take as much time as I thought it would to prepare, especially with little hands helping mommy out.

This is the basic recipe- we, of course, doubled it. 🙂

Bread & Butter Pickles

4 lbs of cucumbers, sliced thinly
8 small onions, sliced
1/2 cup of canning salt.
Combine the salt, sliced cucumbers and onions together in a bowl. Cover with ice cubes and let it side for a minimum of 3 hours – ideally, overnight. After the time is up, drain, rinse and drain.

In a large pot, combine the following:

5 cups of sugar
4 cups of white vinegar
2 teaspoons of celery seed
2 tablespoons of mustard seed
1 1/2 teaspoons of ground tumeric
1/2 teaspoon of ground cloves

Bring the seasonings to a boil and then add in your cucumber mixture and bring back to a boil. Remove your mixture from the heat and being to ladle into clear mason jars. Fill the jars, leaving a 1/2″ headspace (do not overfill). Wipe the rims of the jars carefully to ensure a proper seal. Place the new canning lids on and process in your water bath canning of boiling water for 15 minutes. Remove from heat.

 

 

 

 

Enjoy!

 

 

{Linked up with Strangers & Pilgrims}

August 20, 2016 - 10:25 pm

grandma Cardinal yum bread and butter pickles, easy to make! x

My favorite!

August 16, 2016 - 8:26 pm

Brenda (Gigi’s Mom) They look delicious!!! What fun … to have the girls helping and to know that you grew these lovely cucumbers!! You will enjoy having all these pickles for the upcoming year. Good job, Gauthier Girls!! xo

“Lazer” Gauthier

There’s a little cutie pie helping out in the garden.

 

Lazarus {nicknamed “Lazer Lightning Gauthier” by our good friends at summer camp} is now crawling quickly, finding new discoveries in the house and yard and has popped his first tooth. He continues to be the delight of our mostly-all-girl family as we watch him grow and change. How much fun he is at this cute age!

 

He slept the whole night for the first time this week. That is always a bittersweet milestone … momma is happy for sleep but it means he is getting bigger and bigger … he loves to be held, cuddled and carried about like a little spider monkey on my hip. I just adore our little man. 

August 12, 2016 - 8:23 pm

admin They were blue for a while … now changing to have green and brown and blue!

August 12, 2016 - 5:57 pm

Grandma Cardinal Blue eyes?

Goldenrod Season …

“…basking in open sunshine between ribbons of golden-rod and smoke-blue asters;
air athrill with the pipings of myriads of crickets, those glad little pensioners of the summer hills; a plump brown pony ambling along the road; and two girls behind him, full to the lips with the simple, priceless joy of youth and life…”

-Anne of Avonlea

 

 

Each season brings such beauty in nature. Right now, as some of the vibrant, summer flowers fade and wilt from the heat, the glorious goldenrod shares its beautiful sunshine-laden leaves throughout the countryside.

I have come to appreciate and adore the color and warmth of the goldenrod in the fields around our home. It signals a slow ending to a blithe summer (yes … as August continues and we step ever-so-closely to the return of September and all her glorious structure), the promise of cooler days and crisper temperatures, the suggestion to soak up all the warm sun and carefree happiness of summer while it still lingers … it also reminds me of my happy childhood …

These two lovely sisters collected some goldenrod for me after we finished working in the garden a dusk….

There are many reasons we want to preserve this lovely golden splash of color in our home … have you ever thought of making a pot of Goldenrod tea? It is especially good for clearing the body of bladder infections, but will also soothe colic in babies, ease fevers, colds, sore throats and coughs. Just boil some water, infuse for 30 minutes and add a drop of two of honey, according to your taste preference.  Goldenrod tea will also help fight off seasonal allergies and keep the kidneys healthy!

 

 

We are drying some goldenrod for the winter months ahead. Strangely enough, I look forward to many cups of hot tea in front of a warm fire in the crisp Autumn or chilly winter months. You could also tincture your goldenrod for a lovely medicine for your cabinet.

{Many years ago, I thought I was allergic to goldenrod as my seasonal allergies would get so bad. I do recall an trip to the doctor for severely swollen eyes as a child. Do not be fooled, however – if you are suffering from seasonal allergies, it is more likely that ragweed is your culprit for all your troubles. I have had this goldenrod in my kitchen for a few days and I have not suffered any reactions as my allergies are directed towards wind-swept pollen, mostly from the infamous ragweed.}

August 11, 2016 - 4:11 pm

admin You are welcome! I am learning, too. 🙂 It is such a blessing to know God has given us these wonderful remedies right outside our door …

August 11, 2016 - 3:54 pm

Maike Thank you so much for all these natural remedy posts! I have seen these yellow plants quite often but didn’t know that they were good for anything else but their beauty. I learn so much new just from your posts and really need to start making a folder so I have them ready when I come across any of them. 🙂

Sage {infused} Honey

Pardon my delay in blogging. We went away as a family to a local Christian campground last week. Upon returning, I felt (and still somewhat feel) like I was drowning in laundry, cleaning, getting things back to normal, animal chores, house chores, filling the fridge up again … and suddenly, it is August. And I’m a bit panicky inside my head thinking over the to-do lists for August … canning, homeschool prep, canning, garden work, canning, harvesting, canning … thankfully, it is all things I truly enjoy. And the girls are such helpers to me. I really appreciate them.

 

Anyways, upon our return of camping, one of the first things on my to-do list was harvest some of the herbs from the garden. I have mullein, sage, basil, lavender and catnip drying in the kitchen. I wanted to make some sage-infused honey for the winter months and so that was also on today’s project list.

 

Thinking ahead to cold and flu season is sometimes hard to do in the midst of a sticky, hot dry August summer day – but we, as mothers, all know, those winter days will be upon us in the blink of an eye.

With seven little (and bigger) ones, a cough, sore throat, cold or two is definitely a possibility with the seasonal change. A great remedy for sore throats and the likes is sage-infused honey.

 

We all know (or should know) how fabulous honey (especially local honey) is for you. It constantly amazes me to think of how God did not just create honeybees- but he created them to pollinate and produce such a valuable, healthy resources – honey! It has been proven (if you did not believe it yet) that honey is better for a sore throat and cough than regular “store bought” cough syrup.

Infused with sage, this honey will work wonders this winter.

 

 

 

 

Sage, meaning wisdom, does wonderful things to the body. It reduces inflammation, aids in the relief of asthma, arthritis, has vitamins A, B,C, potassium, zinc, manganese, calcium and iron all packed into those pretty green leaves. It can help with menopausal hot flashes (nursing mothers, beware – it can aid in drying up your nursing supply, so digest with caution). It can be used to treat fevers, promote sleep and is calming internally and externally. It will help clear up mucous so therefore is valuable in the cold season.

 

By infusing it in your local honey, it works as a beautiful natural cough/cold medicine.

To make this lovely medicine, simply pick your sage leaves (wash them, if preferred), pluck them from their stems and push them into your jar. Squish as many sage leaves as you can into your jar. The more sage leaves, the more potent.

 

 

Pour your honey overtop of the leaves…

 

And that is it. Let it sit for a few weeks and it will be infused. You can strain the leaves out if you wish or leave them in the honey. When your little one (or yourself) is feeling sick, simply add the honey to your tea or administer in a cup of warm water. You can also simply spoon a little bit into your little one’s mouth.

This will keep for quite a while (in fact, honey does not go bad), but I’m sure it will be used up within one season or so.

 

Place your jar in your natural medicine cabinent with joy, knowing your family will be healthy and well taken care of this upcoming winter.

 

 Whoever works his farmland will have abundant food, but whoever chases fantasies will become very poor.
The faithful man will prosper with blessings, but whoever is in a hurry to get rich will not escape punishment.

 Proverbs 28:19–20

 

 

August 3, 2016 - 9:01 am

admin We will call today! 😉

August 3, 2016 - 7:25 am

Grandma Cardinal Hi Lucia xxx

Would you please phone Grandma Cardinal!
It is about our eight party, tying to plan something! xxx

August 2, 2016 - 1:44 pm

admin Karen, I tried to send you an email and it was returned. Send me a message at gillianclairgauthier@gmail.com as my gigiphotography is not receiving right now. Thanks!

August 2, 2016 - 1:42 pm

admin Pink lady, it is definitely honey … from our own honey bees … 🙂 I warmed the honey slightly so it could be poured (do not heat honey over 35 degrees C.)

August 2, 2016 - 11:24 am

Pink Lady Love this idea Gillian. I am slightly confused when I saw the jug of liquid being poured into the herb jar. It doesn’t look like honey to me. It looks runny like a mango juice…lol
Could you please clarify this.

August 2, 2016 - 11:02 am

Karen Gallant Love this recipe! Will do it for sure!

Can you please email me, I have a question for you.

When Mommy is {at Home}

{This might be a controversial post but it has been pressing on my heart for quite a while now. I write this with a grace-tipped pen with hopes that it may strike a chord in someone’s heart, as well.}

 “I looked on child rearing not only as a work of love and duty
but as a profession that demanded the best that I could bring to it.”
-Rose Kennedy

Slipping quietly into my truck before the household awoke, I double checked the address where I was a headed. It was early – 6 a.m.- and I was off to pick up a kijiji find in the town near by before my husband headed for work.

My treasure: a $5 bookshelf to hold some of my canning jars in the basement.

After a few wrong turns, I eventually found the address of choice … parking my truck in the small driveway, I greeted the owner of the bookshelf with a “Good morning” and “I hope I’m not too late…”

She was juggling a cute, sweet-faced baby (about one year old) on her hip and her car keys in the other hand. She was obviously going somewhere. I grabbed the bookshelf with her husband and we loaded it into the back of my truck. The little baby boy was already strapped into his carseat, playing with his mother’s car keys while I handed her the $5. The mom was friendly and explained she had all day and that she was no in a rush –  but that she was taking her young son to daycare so she could work around the house on her one day off.

Her words made my heart hurt!

Her one day off?
She was going to work around the home but her sweet, chubby little son was being sent to daycare. He was only a few months older than my youngest child and only son.

It was not even 7 a.m. and her little one was already in the car, ready to be taken away from his home – and from what is sounded like, perhaps this was not an only even as she mentioned it was her “day off”.

I desperately wanted to encourage this young mom, to tell her there options, a better way, a more natural choice … but I had just met her and she was obviously in a bit of a dash to get her day started.

What I am going to say is completely against what society teaches. It is not a popular thought. It may not even be politically correct. But it is Biblical.

Ladies, mothers, your children need you at home.

 

I know some women just do not  know any better … that they honestly do not  know the harm in it, and do not know there is an alternative. They actually do not know they CAN stay with their babies.

My sister runs a small-group Bible study in her home. Most of the ladies, who are Christians, who come to her group are first or second time mothers. My sister has told me that most, if not all, of these mothers are all returning to work after their maternity leave is up. This breaks my heart and I am sure it grieves the Lord! Where are the Titus 2 ladies who will stand up and teach these Christian younger women the value of being at home with your children? Why is the church not teaching women to be keepers of their home? How can these young mothers miss seeing the value in raising their children full time?

 Older women likewise are to be reverent in behavior, not slanderers or slaves to much wine.
They are to teach what is good, and so train the young women to love their husbands and children,
to be self-controlled, pure, working at home, kind, and submissive to their own husbands,
that the word of God may not be reviled.

Titus 2:3-5

Sacrifices must often be made in order for a mother to be home full time with her family. It is possible. It may not be comfortable, but it is likely possible.  Giving up a cell phone is a start.  What about cutting back on eating out? Bake more, cook more wholesome foods at home. You will save money in the long run. You will save on daycare costs – in Toronto, this article states the cost of daycare for an infant is $1,736.  You will save on the cost of gas for your vehicle, the costs of clothing as, when working, you must keep your wardrobe at a certain styleish level. Fancy vacations also can be omitted – a simple camping trip on the weekend or summer week would certainly bring just as much joy to your children as an international trip if money is tight.

No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and DESPISE the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon. Matt. 6:24

Mothering is a full time God-given job.

There also is a bond between a mother and her children that needs nurturing, not ignoring.

Dropping your children off at daycare, leaving them all day or even half day, is contrary to what your children actually need from you.   Your children need a mother who is home with them, a mother who is available, around, caring for them, teaching them, training them, even from a young age up until an older age.  This is not to say you dote on them and spend your entire motherhood years slicing apples and cheese, dishing our crackers and snacks to your hungry crew upon demand.

However, your daily life needs to includes your children.  Instead of using a paid daycare provider so you can get work done, try including your children, allowing them to help you, or at least stay near you while you work on your projects. I have painted many a bedroom while my children played in the same room. It is not impossible to get work done when children are in your care. Involve them, keep them near to you, watch over them – but you can still get your work done.

When your project is done, stop and take time to be with your children. Read them stories, play games, go on walks, lay in the hammock, bake cookies, teach them nursery rhymes. Everything in moderation, as they say. Older children need just as much from their mother, if not more. They need the comfort of time, a listening ear, an available shoulder to cry on, a teacher and a friend, an instructor and a guide. A mother’s job is endless! How can we think daycare can offer the same valuable training and love to our own children?

Children need to know their parents are near. They need to feel a security in their homes, not dragged to an institution for 8 or more hours a day. It does not matter how loving and kind your daycare worker is – nothing can replace the love from a mother or father. God has entrusted these precious children to you to raise – make time in your life to BE a parent, not just on weekends or when it is convenient for you. Childhood is also fleeting and before you know it, your child will be grown.

And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up.

That sounds like a full time job to me.

Mothers, do not let a stranger raise your child. Come back home to your family. Trust God to take care of you financially and you will see Him provide.

Your role as a mother is invaluable. If you are concerned  about your career of choice, just remember you are most definitely replaceable in the work force. There is always someone better, more current, faster, more talented, more able than yourself.

But in the home, in the eyes of your child and God, you are irreplaceable.

Linked up with Strangers & Pilgrims

August 2, 2016 - 8:34 pm

admin Thank you, Sheila. It is always so wonderful to hear from a Titus 2 woman. Blessings!

August 2, 2016 - 8:33 pm

admin So sad! Heart breaking!

August 2, 2016 - 8:33 pm

admin Thank you for your comment – I agree, we never know where someone is coming from.

August 2, 2016 - 8:33 pm

admin Thank you for your sweet words, Jen. I, too, feel like we would be good friends. 🙂 Thank you for always dropping by with an encouraging word!

July 31, 2016 - 12:49 pm

Sheila Young ladies, I am a Titus mother and grandma who had my girls with me even during college. They love and honor their parents with their own families. Also it is the mandate for men to provide in the Bible despite their level of earnings. God made them better able to tolerate and and assert themselves in the stresses of the working world. Moms and wives, follow Biblical commands and Proverbs 3:2 sets out the blessings that will follow. Trust in the Lord and you will enjoy peace of mind.
I had no teachers in the 70s and 80s either but followed my mother’s example. I regret that I did not live near her at the time. The TV prophets were promoting an entirely godless monetary and egotistical agenda. With His help I was able to endure. Dear ladies, I will pray for you. Grandma, S

July 31, 2016 - 2:34 am

Bethany The fact that some of us even have a choice to stay at home marks us as children of rare socio-economic privilege, even if our choice is financially costly.

The most recent census data shows almost 8 million families living below poverty level in the U.S., a number that is on the rise. This means that for at least ten percent of the population, asking mothers to opt out of the workforce is out of the question.

When Christian subculture exalts a family model that is inaccessible to the underprivileged, we add to their burdens.
-http://jenwilkin.blogspot.ca/2013/02/christian-subculture-and-stay-at-home.html

July 27, 2016 - 3:45 pm

Jaclyn from NYC I am happy to read your post. It broke my heart to read the story of that mother dropping her little child at a daycare. I am a stay-at-home mother here in NYC. I never even considered going back to work after my first baby arrived! I now have two children and ten years have passed and I never ever regretted staying home with my children. It’s not easy, but it is so important! The only thing they need is a loving mother to always be there. (And daddy too, when he’s not at work)

July 27, 2016 - 12:43 pm

Liz bronsveld Oh how true these words are Gillian! I have a lot of friends who do the same…or they are on mat leave for their second and still send their 1st to daycare:(

July 24, 2016 - 4:54 pm

Jennifer Heemskerk I simple love this post!! I often come here, and wish I “knew” you in person, face to face to glean from you more as a friend and fellow mother. It is beautifully written, and it’s message so important. I have prayed for a mentor for years- someone who like a Titus 2 woman to come into my life and speak truth into my heart. For some of us, we were never taught or had it modelled to us how be mothers. It doesn’t come naturally and it’s a real fight sometimes. It isn’t that we don’t love our children and want to raise them well.
As Sarah Mae states: “We were never given what it takes to set the table, and so here you are trying to serve, but you’re still figuring out what linens to get and where to find them.”
So we often feel like we are failing at motherhood. Thank you for this post and being a great example of a mother who serves and has sacrificed in these ways. It is so nice to see this working well as society tells us that this is an impossible choice.

July 24, 2016 - 4:34 am

Sarah @ The Life of This Mother Yes and yes and yes. I love your heart and share your desire to encourage mothers to stay home {and have their kids home too}. Pinning so others can kind this!

July 23, 2016 - 6:33 pm

Danessa Stride I could not have said it better myself!!

July 23, 2016 - 12:23 pm

Liz Great post! This is something I often think about and feel as if I’m caught between two worlds. We do something similar in our house however my hubby is staying at home while I work. It works for us due to my income versus his income and medical benefits. We save on money by only having one vehicle, our phone is an ‘old’ flip phone its only purpose for roadside emergencies and we haven’t been on an airplane in 10 years often going camping instead. I leave for work each day knowing my kids are going to have one on one attention and lots of love. Besides being a Mom, I’m also a Kindergarten teacher. At the end of the day, I sit at my desk and wonder if I’ve talked to every child that day, if I’ve spent enough time with every child and hope that during the busy day I’ve done them justice. I wonder “how am I better than their own Mother?”. In some cases I’m not however a child coming from a neglectful, abusive home, I am. I see the importance of being a good Mom however I also see the importance of education. It’s a struggle in my mind. I often think of the statement, “it takes a village” and I wonder if this is how God intended us to live. Are we this way because we need to move away from our families for job opportunities and therefore are losing out on grandparent/aunt/uncle support? I don’t have all the answers but I’m thankful you posted about this…how can we encourage society to go back to the ‘way it was’? Does our government need to provide longer mat leaves, more income for families, more supports? I don’t know. I’m certainly grateful we are the United States with only a 6 week mat leave.

July 23, 2016 - 9:23 am

Sandra Hi Gigi,

I am an avid blog reader of yours for some time now and enjoy reading about your daily life with your kiddos. I also subscribe to many of your values in raising children. I too have stayed home with my kiddos, knowing it was what God wanted of me and that early learning and bonding is top priority. It is with this in mind that I would like to gently make a suggestion to you. Your post about staying at home is most definitely needed and on point. What I would like to suggest though, is that to do it in an even more grace filled sentiment, perhaps discuss it without directly pointing out a specific Mom’s moment of missing the mark. I can’t help but feel that a judgement call has been made upon this girl without truly knowing her circumstances. Perhaps she is struggling with postpartum depression and this one “day off” per week or otherwise (and we all know it’s not really a day off) is what it takes to keep her going right now. I know that over the last several weeks, I’ve needed to be with my Dad as he has had surgery and he needs a significant amount of my help. I am blessed in that my boys are now teens which means they are a bit more self-sufficient, however if it had happened when my boys were little, I too would have needed extra help. We just don’t know her situation. I know that personally, if I had come across this blog post during this time of care needed for my Dad and realized that you used me as an example in a post, I would be heartbroken and feel greatly misunderstood. I fear that she might see this post and feel the same. Again, I completely agree that encouragement for life at home is hugely needed and something that isn’t a popular sentiment anymore. We DO need to make ‘staying at home’ a viable and hugely important message for women. My only suggestion is that it’s done without directly bringing to light each other’s faults…Perhaps befriend this girl, and encourage her and definitely write this much needed post without including her in it. I hope I too have passed along this message gracefully and that you read it with an open heart. Let’s build up each woman in Christ. Sincerely, Sandra

July 22, 2016 - 8:16 pm

Reena I agree with you 100%. You wrote this in a kind loving earnest way and I pray it touches many mothers whether at home, as encouragement to continue on, or whether at a crossroads or time of questioning to take that step in faith. He will always provide.