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The Best Kids' Chapter Books We Read Last Year

February 8, 2022 Crystal Rowe

As a homeschooling family, we read a lot of really great books, so it was hard to narrow down our favorites from last year. My favorite part of our homeschool day is snuggling under a blanket on the couch, traveling to a new land through the words of well-written books. Most of these are books we chose to read outside of our regular curriculum, but two were part of our Literature selections through A Gentle Feast.

My daughters helped me compile this list, so every book listed below is Elementary-Kid Approved. Here they are, our the best kids chapter books we read in 2021 (in no particular order):

Peacemaker by Joseph Bruchac — In November, my book club chose this to read even though it was Kid Lit because we were short on time. We met for our regular Ladies’ Night, but we also read it to our kids and planned our first ever “Kids’ Edition” of book club. I was blown away by the insights and questions a group of 7-11 year olds had over this story. This book tells the story of the Peacemaker and the Iroquois Nation and is an important read for understanding a little known piece of American history.

The Christmas Pig by J.K. Rowling — Written by the author of the famous Harry Potter, this is a sweet story of a little boy who loses his favorite toy and the adventures he goes on to try to get him back. We listened to this as an audiobook on our very long road trip to Georgia, and it made us feel all the feels. It reminded me a little of The Velveteen Rabbit—one of my favorite books as a kid (and even now). I laughed; I cried; I will add it to my list of favorite Christmas Books to read every year.

Beyond the Bright Sea by Lauren Wolk—I found this book when searching for chapter books about Cape Cod before our summer vacation. It is a fascinating tale of a baby who is set out to sea in 1913, and discovered by a fisherman, who raises her on Elizabeth Island. As the girl gets older, she begins to wonder about her family and she goes off on an adventure to see what she can find. For older elementary readers, this is a lovely book about what it means to love.

The Vanderbeekers Make A Wish by Karina Van Glaser—Truth be told, I haven’t read this latest installment of the Vanderbeekers series, but my daughters assure me it is the best one yet. It’s all about Papa’s 40th birthday, and I really should add it to the top of my TBR pile. I adore The Vanderbeekers, and I’m sure this one is no exception.

Adventures with Waffles by Maria Parr — I will recommend this book over and over again. About a boy and girl in Norway, it’s a book that had our entire family laughing out loud. I will warn you that my favorite part of the book is also the saddest, but it is the most beautiful portrayal of death I’ve ever read in a piece of children’s literature. I don’t want to tell you anymore, because I want you to read it. It was, quite possibly, the best book I read in 2021.

The Shakespeare Stealer by Gary Blackwood—This was a Literature selection for my 4th grader this fall, and we loved every minute of it. We learned about the Plague, about Shakespeare and Hamlet, and about early 17th century London. I love a good historical fiction book that makes you want to learn more. We read this together at the same time that I was reading Hamnet for book club, so that made it a little extra fun.

Snow Treasure by Marie McSwigan—Based on a true story, this is a brilliant adventure story about Norwegian children who sneak past Nazis to hide nine million dollars worth of gold at the beginning of World War II. I highly recommend reading it snuggled up by the fire during these cold months of winter.

Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes by Eleanor Coerr—Another Literature selection for my oldest, this is a heart-wrenching book about a young girl who dies of leukemia caused by radiation poisoning from the bombing of Hiroshima. It’s a story of hope, courage, and resilience; and one that sparked a lot of dialogue about the ethics of war and what it feels like to lose someone we love.

Ban This Book by Alan Gratz—My oldest chose this book off the library shelves, read it in less than 24 hours, and then demanded I read it. We had a great conversation about why books are banned, why I will let them read any book they choose, and which books to add to our reading lists. Any book that makes her love reading is a favorite of mine.

Winnie’s Great War by Lindsay Mattick & Josh Greenhut —We listened to this audiobook on a road trip last summer and I couldn’t hold back the tears at the end. This is the sweetest, most adorable novel based on the true story of Winnie the Bear (inspiration for Winnie the Pooh) and I just want to read it over and over again.

Did you have any favorite kids’ chapter books from 2021?


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In Books, Homeschool
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10 Things Saving My Life Right Now

February 3, 2022 Crystal Rowe

Yesterday marked the midpoint between Winter and Spring. Spring will be here in 45 days, no matter what the Groundhog says. We can feel the days starting to get longer—we know the sun is setting a bit later each day—and yet we can feel our bones longing for the endless days of summer, when we stay up long past our bedtimes making s’mores and catching fireflies.

It’s this time of year that the winter doldrums start to hit. The thick snow that falls one weekend melts away several days later, taking our winter playground away. The sky is grey and cloudy, making us want to cry tears with every raindrop that falls. We start itching for warmer weather and sometimes forget the beauty that exists right before our eyes.

Every time about this year, Modern Mrs Darcy, taking a hint from Barbara Brown Taylor, invites readers to share “What’s Saving Your Life Right Now?” I love the practice of listing ten things giving me life in these dreary late-winter moments, so here we go … ten things saving my life right now.

Homemade Sourdough Bread

Not long after we moved into our house, a neighbor won my heart when she brought me the most delicious loaf of homemade sourdough filled with sweet black walnuts. She walked it up to my door with a jar of fig jam and a hunk of really good blue cheese and we’ve been friends ever since. 

The following winter, I decided I should try again to make sourdough bread. I tried to make sourdough bread several times when we lived in Atlanta, but every time was a flop. My friend gave me books to read, patiently answered all of my questions, encouraged me when my dough failed to rise, and even joined me in eating the flat, dense sourdough I had made. It took me six months, but I finally made a good loaf of sourdough bread (and danced around the kitchen like a loon the first time it happened). Now, five years later, bread-making day is one of my favorite days each week.

Sharing Meals

Last week, we had dinner at our friends’ house. That same friend that brought me homemade sourdough bread loves me so much she makes us shrimp & grits. On Sunday, the yard was filled with neighbor kids, shoveling sidewalks and digging tunnels in seven-feet mounds of snow. Later that day, a different neighbor invited us over for chicken pot pie. This weekend, we’ll have dinner at three different houses, to celebrate the end of the week, a birthday, and the kids’ reading all of Harry Potter. There’s something holy about joining together over a meal. It’s been nearly two years without sharing regular meals with one another, and I’m beyond thankful that it’s possible once again.

Church

I am so grateful to be part of a healthy, thriving church community. At the end of last year, we received a new pastor, and her gentle, yet powerful spirit is filling my heart and mind full of energy and excitement about the future of the church. We found our church just a year before the pandemic and we missed it more than anything else during the pandemic shut down. While worship still doesn’t look like it did in 2019, [maybe it never will?] being able to worship together is giving me so much life right now.

Encouragement

Over time, as David and I began to create community here in Massachusetts, people have begun to see our gifts and are encouraging us to use them. Gifts of hospitality, leadership, music, and writing; gifts that have been sitting unused for far too long. The hardest part of moving some place new is that no one knows you, and it can be hard at times to offer up our gifts to people we don’t know. We’ve both been invited to participate in leadership positions at church, and having someone really see our gifts and invite their usage is a true gift to us.

Lots of Layers

There was a time when getting outside in the winter was something I would never dream of doing. Then I learned that nature is God’s gift for helping us feel grounded, no matter what the weather. “There’s no such thing as bad weather,” as the Scandinavians say. It may be the midpoint between Winter and Spring, but freezing temperatures will be here for much longer than 45 days. Last year I invested in silk long underwear, and they are my favorite splurge purchase ever. This year I bought hand and feet warmers. With long underwear, good snow pants, and pocket warmers, there’s no excuse to stay indoors. The more we can be outside, the happier everyone is. 

Beaches

We live in close proximity to more beaches than I can count on both hands. Just yesterday we piled on all of our layers and headed to Plum Island, where we saw sand and snow mixed together in such a way that it looked like nature’s pudding parfait. The ocean is more healing than anything I’ve ever experienced, and sitting on the shore never, ever gets old. 

Homeschool

It is an honor and a privilege to be able to stay home and educate my kids. Every single day I learn something new from them. They teach me as much as I teach them, if not more. I know homeschooling is not the right choice for everyone, but leading them and learning alongside them is one of the very best parts of the cold and dreary days of winter.

Health

In a time where health is uncertain, I’m grateful that we have remained healthy through the many pandemic. We’ve fought a cold or two, but we’ve had no major illness. I am not the best mother—or wife—to sick people, so the more healthy days we can have, the better I feel.

Older Kids

The fact that my kids are seven and nine and not two and four is absolutely saving my life right now. I loved my babies, but there’s never a day goes by that I wish my kids were little again. We’ve reached a beautiful moment in parenting and I’d like to keep them this age for a little longer, I think.

My Husband

Our anniversary is in February, and David is always one of my favorite things about the month. He adores me. He thinks I’m gorgeous and can’t stay away from my body. He loves the way my mind never stops challenging him. He challenges me—gently— and he makes me a better me. 

Now it’s your turn. Tell me in the comments below: what’s saving your life right now?


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In Family, Marriage, Homeschool, Winter, Writing
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The Best Books I Read Last Year

January 24, 2022 Crystal Rowe
ten favorite books i read in 2021

It’s been a hot minute since I shared my best books of the year. I shared my book club favorites in my December Newsletter, but it was fun to look back on what I personally read. Goodreads says I read 132 books last year [I think at least a third of those were read with my children] so creating a top ten list was really hard to do!

I worked really hard to diversify my reading last year. While the majority of what I read was fiction [and quite a bit of fluff], I did read some excellent poetry and nonfiction too. Without further ado (with affiliate links) … here are the best books I read in 2021 (in no particular order).

Fiction:

Kindred by Octavia Butler—I read this twice in 2021. I first read it in February and loved it so much I made my book club read it later in the year. About an interracial couple in California in 1976 who time travel to a Southern slave-owning plantation in the 1800s, this is a book that I want to revisit again and again. Butler uses her brilliant storytelling to tackle themes of race, power, gender and class. Jam-packed with tough things to think about, Kindred is a book we should all be talking about.

The Four Winds by Kristin Hannah — This is absolutely THE BEST book I read in 2021. I have been a big fan of Kristin Hannah ever since The Nightingale. I loved every single moment of it. It’s not a happy book, but it is beautifully written, and takes you right smack dab into what it was like living in the Great Depression. It made me start reading (and writing) stories about my own Grandma, who was a child living on a farm during the Great Depression. I will read it again. And again. And again.

The Light Between Oceans by M L Stedman — This book had been on my TBR list since it was first released in 2012. I’m not sure what made me pick it up this year, but I am so glad I did. Warning: the story revolves around miscarriages and infant-loss. It is another tough read, but so worth it. It made me think about ethics and heartbreak and hope and family.

Piranesi by Susanna Clarke — This is the only book in the list that I only gave 4-stars when I first rated it, but after sitting on it for a few months, it’s one I keep going back to. I don’t read a lot of fantasy, but this book is fascinating. Using the characters of Piranesi and The Other, Clarke creatively tackles what isolation can do to a person’s mental health. I especially love the importance of journaling to the main character. Telling you anything else about the book will ruin it, so read it, and come back to talk about it with me, m’kay?

Poetry:

What Kind of Woman by Kate Baer — If any one book changed my life last year, it was this one. The poems in What Kind of Woman made me think about who I am as a woman, as a mother, as a wife. It made me feel. I bought copies of this book for just about every woman in my life last year. I think it’s just one of those books we should have on the shelf at all times, for when we need to remember that we are not alone in this vast world of womaning. [Yes, I did just make up that word. For your dictionary reference, it means “being a woman” in whatever way that means to you.]

Milk and Honey by Rupi Kaur — I devoured this book. Rupi Kaur originally self-published this book of poetry in 2014, and it became a NYTimes Bestseller. Within months, she was contacted by a publisher who wanted to bring the book to the world. This book made me want to write poetry. It’s fun, thoughtful, and empowering all at the same time.

Writing:

Syllable of Water: Twenty Writers of Faith Reflect on Their Art — This was assigned reading for one of my Critique Courses last year and I used an entire pack of BookDarts in it. With essays by many of my favorite authors, it’s chock full of tidbits, helpful hints, and advice on how to make your craft even better. I’m considering re-reading it again this year.

Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott — This is another book that has been on my shelf for at least ten years and I’m so terribly sad that I waited so long to read it. Anne Lamott is hilarious. Reading this book is like listening to a very wise friend tell you to just get off your derriere and do something about the dream you’ve been holding on to for far too long.

Nonfiction:

Shameless: A Case for Not Feeling Bad about Feeling Good (about Sex) by Nadia Bolz-Weber — In May, I wrote [and submitted] an essay about how I lost my virginity at nineteen and the decisions that followed. It did not get accepted. It was a terrible essay. The material is good, but the essay itself needs a lot of work. I put it to the side and made a list of all the books about the effects of purity culture and how to overcome them. Nadia is an ELCA Pastor who’s theology always creeps on the side of more grace than not and I simply adore her for it. I had NO idea she wrote this book and bought a copy as soon as I discovered it in my research. This is another book I will reread this year. Anyone who has ever struggled with wondering if sex is really good [thanks bad theology from our teen years] will find this book to be a breath of fresh air. It may even start you on your path to healing; I know it did me.

Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay — I sat through Roxane Gay’s MasterClass on Writing for Social Change last year and realized I had never read anything she wrote. I started with Hunger and good gracious does she have a way with words. Gay’s words gave me courage to write down the really hard things I have been avoiding writing about for so long. We all hunger for something, and Roxane Gay explores those desires through sharing the story of her own body and self-care.


Now tell me … what were your favorite books from 2021?

In Books
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What Will We Name It?

January 21, 2022 Crystal Rowe

We’re somewhere in rural Pennsylvania, driving home from our holiday road trip, when the phone rings through the van’s speakers. Not recognizing the number, I disconnect Bluetooth before I answer. Speaker phone is one of my least favorite things; call me old-fashioned, but I like holding the phone up to my ear and since I’m in the passenger seat I don’t feel guilty over using my hands.

“Hello?”

A deep voice replies, “Hi, this is Jim from Atlantic Labradoodles.” I can barely hear him through the static, but I recognize the name at once.

“Oh hi!” I reply; “We were just thinking about you a few days ago!”

“Hi, yes, I’m calling to tell you that the puppies have been born and they are all doing just fine. Shirley is taking good care of them and we hope to send some pictures in a couple of weeks.”

My heart swells. We sent a deposit for a labradoodle in early November, but we were number eight on the list and there was no way to tell how many puppies would be born. I’ve held off agreeing to a pet for two years now, mostly out of fear that I don’t have the energy to keep one more thing alive. The girls have lobbied hard, though, and when David joined their team in October and spent hours watching puppy videos, my resolve began to fall. It’s possible that he is the most excited of us all.

I’m sure I’ll have a hundred questions as soon as I hang up, but at this moment my brain is totally empty. I’ve never gotten a dog from a breeder before; my family always had pets growing up, but we usually found them abandoned on the side of the road. We’d bring them home and they’d fast become beloved family members for as long as they lived. None of us care what this puppy looks like—as long as it’s ours. Looking back now, I realize I probably should have asked if we were for sure on the list, but all that came out of my mouth was, “Oh, that’s wonderful!”

The line goes static again and I faintly hear him say, “Okay then, we’ll be in touch.” I say thank you and hang up the phone. My girls are in the backseat watching Mary Poppins, so the moment I end the call, I press pause on the DVD player and turn to share the good news.

“The puppies have been born!”

They squeal with excitement. David’s mouth erupts into the toothiest grin I’ve ever seen. He’s dreamed of having a dog all his life, but his allergies have always gotten in the way. It’s been seven years since we last had a pet, our beloved cat Simba, who was quite a legend around our Atlanta neighborhood. Part of my hesitation in agreeing to a pet is the deep loss I felt when he died. My eyes still well with tears when I think about him.

Fast chatter ensues and the questions I neglected to ask begin to pile up. Maybe I should have left the call on speaker phone after all. 

When were they born? What do they look like? How many are there? Are there enough in the litter? Will we really get a puppy this round? What will we name it?

“I’ll call him back when we get home and ask all of our questions. I don’t know any details, just that they were born.” I tell them my guess is that we’ll pick up our new puppy at the end of February, but don’t know for sure.

I press play on the DVD player. The girls continue their journey with Mary Poppins, and David and I return to Ed Sheeren’s new album. Green hills roll by me through the window and I begin thinking about the new puppy. 

What are we going to name it? 


The first time I shared the news I was pregnant with my oldest; it was to a group of high schoolers. I was Director of Youth Ministry in my church at the time. We were at a summer mission camp in Knoxville, Tennessee. It was very early in my pregnancy, and it felt like from the moment of conception I was permanently nauseous and more exhausted than I imagined possible. 

When I told the leader of the camp, who is a dear friend, what was going on, she gave me a room in the church building, instead of the dorm rooms I usually shared with the kids. Instead of going out to mission sites each morning, I stayed back for on-site tasks. My teenagers quickly picked up on the fact that something was not like previous years and began to worry. My entire ministry with teens and their parents was built on transparency and honesty, so it felt important to let them in on what was going on.

That night at devotions, I pulled my group together in a large half moon. “I have something I need to tell you,” I said tentatively. The faces of twenty-one teenagers and four adults watched me intently, their eyes getting big; they tuned in at once knowing this wasn’t going to be like any other devotion we had ever had. “You’ve probably noticed I haven’t been participating like usual. I am sorry for that. You know I would never ask you to do something I myself won’t do, but this year has to be different.”

I took a deep breath before continuing, my stomach queasy. Rather than morning sickness, however, this nausea came from anxiousness. All the books say don’t share your news until the second trimester, and here I was, just seven weeks pregnant, about to tell a group of teenagers. What if something happened? 

I reminded myself that if something happened, this group of teenagers and adults would be there for me in that moment too, and I bravely opened my mouth and finished what I had to say.

“I’m pregnant.”

The boys gasped. The girls cheered. The adults whooped. A grin appeared on my face, relieved to have let them in on my secret, but I remained quiet, signaling I had more to say. The chatter died down and I let them know it was still very early, but I had been very nauseous and very tired, so that’s why I wasn’t participating fully. 

One girl, who I was particularly close to, spoke up—”You’re going to have a baby!” The cheering began again, and I felt surrounded by love. It was no more than 30 seconds before another girl said, “What are you going to name her? It’s a girl, right?!”

The boys argued, confident it was a boy. When I informed them I wouldn’t know for several months whether or was a boy or a girl, they decided to find a name that could suit either.

Naming the baby became their favorite activity that week. Conversation at every meal centered around possible names for Baby Rowe. The day before we were to leave, I was sitting at a table eating lunch with David and four teenagers when one girl said “I know, Crystal! You should name the baby ‘Zee’ for ‘zygote’! Then we can call it Z. Rowe!”

The table roared with laughter, and the name stuck. David had been called “D. Rowe” by friends for as long as I had known him and when we got married, I affectionately became known as “C. Rowe.” It’s only appropriate that the new baby would have its own similar nickname. When David and I discovered our babe would be a girl and we chose a name that began with A, they agreed to call her “A. Rowe” instead. But every once in a while, “Z. Rowe” slipped out.


We are sitting at the table after dinner one night when the question gets raised again: “What are we going to name our puppy?” Autumn asks, then turns to David before continuing; “Mommy wants a name from a book. But not from Harry Potter.”

David looks at me quizzically and I shake my head. “Harry Potter is too popular right now. I want a more obscure name. A clever name. We should name the puppy a good literary name. From one of our favorite books.”

Choosing names is not one of my strengths. I have high standards when it comes to names. I want to be purposeful in choosing names; every name should have a meaning behind it. I want it to be unique but not trendy. I want it to be beautiful and I don’t want any possibility that it might be made fun of.

When I was pregnant—both times—David and I played the “mean kid game”. With every name idea we had, we’d see if we could find a way to make fun of it. If we were successful, the name was taken off the list. We spent hours talking about names before we settled on any final choice. Funnily enough, the middle name was easiest for both girls. Their middle name held the meaning; the first name just had to sound pretty. And not be something that would be made fun of.

Around the dinner table, we start calling names out, trying to come up with reasons why they won’t work. I throw out “Lena” (from Adventures from Waffles) and “Oliver” (from The Vanderbeekers). “Maybe we should start a list,” I say, and Autumn runs quickly out of the room to find paper and a pen. The moment she returns, she adds “Trill” (also from Adventures from Waffles). We erupt into laughter when David pretends to call a dog named Trill with a high pitched “Trrrriiillllll.” As we are cackling and having a wonderful time, I remember Eden has gone to take a shower. 

“We shouldn’t be doing this without Eden,” I say; “she’ll feel left out if we come up with names without her.” I’m sad to lose the momentum we have going over naming this new puppy that we aren’t even 100% sure we are on the list for, but this exercise in choosing a name should be something we all share. Autumn and David nod their heads and we put the list to the side, promising to pick it up at dinner the next night. 

Since the beginning of time, when God gave Adam & Eve the task of naming plants & animals, humans have had an innate desire to name things. In naming something, we give it a unique identity. It becomes more than a story. A name makes us real.

Through the act of naming, those of us choosing a name are also transformed. Rarely do we name alone. Even if we make a final decision solo, the process of coming up with names usually happens in community with others. Finding the perfect name requires conversation, brainstorming, creativity; collaboration with others close to us. When we list possible names, we are brought closer to the ones we are naming with. We share stories with one another. We laugh together. We are brought closer to each other through naming another.

I want my girls to experience the same joy in naming a puppy that my teenagers did over naming my zygote ten years ago.

The next night at dinner, Autumn grabs her list of names from the piano, where she stashed it the previous night. “Can we name our puppy now?,” she asks? She likes to be prepared, this first-born daughter of mine. She likes to take control and be in charge. If this puppy has a name it will be real—no longer just a dream.

“We can list ideas for names, but I don’t think we can pick a name until we meet the puppy.” She begrudgingly nods her head and begins reading the list out loud.

“Hyacinth!” Eden calls out. “For a girl!” “Oooooh,” we all say; “That’s a good one!” “What about Bieder?” I chime in. “You know, like Mr. Biederman?” The Vanderbeekers are like family in our house—it feels appropriate that this puppy’s name might come from those books. We list several more names before I tell them it’s time to get ready for bed.

A week or so later I open my email to find a message with the subject: your new pup. I open it and gasp. “Look! Here’s our puppy!” David and the girls jump off their stools at the counter and come rushing to see. Crowding around my tiny screen, they gush over this three-week old puppy, agreeing it’s the cutest puppy they’ve ever seen.

Three-week old puppies, like human babies, are only slightly cute. Their full cuteness comes in around six weeks, when hair starts to fill in and they begin to look like a tiny adult, but this puppy could have one eye and they would still think it’s perfect. This puppy is their dream come true. 

They look at me, their eyes full of wonder and love, and in unison ask:

What are we going to name him?


This post is part of a blog hop with Exhale—an online community of women pursuing creativity alongside motherhood, led by the writing team behind Coffee + Crumbs. Click here to view the next post in the series "A Name”.

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In Family, Motherhood Tags puppy
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On Running at 41

January 7, 2022 Crystal Rowe

I pull the laces on my shoes, looping one around the other to tie them in a bow. The laces dance as my feet hit the ground. The sun is out and the ground is dry—a rare occurrence for November in New England—so I go for a run outside. I open Spotify, find a playlist called “Run” and hit play. I start my brisk five minute walk to warm-up. My C25K App dings, telling me it’s time to run. I pick up the pace and begin the day’s planned workout—a 25-minute run.

After eight minutes of running it feels like I can do no more. I convince myself to keep running for two more minutes before it feels like my heart will give out. I slow to a brisk walk and challenge myself to walk only one minute before I begin to run again. I run three more minutes, making it just past one mile, before I give up and walk once again. 

I remember this being easier, I think to myself. My mind starts its sabotage of self-doubting thoughts. I started this runner's journey back in August. I thought for sure I’d be ready to run a 5K by now. The plan is only eight weeks! I’ve been running (walking) for ten weeks now and I don’t even feel like I can complete week six. I wonder if I should go back to the beginning and start at week one. Will it feel more rewarding then?


The last time I considered myself a runner was in 2006. I was twenty-five and in my third year of law school in Ohio. My marriage was full of animosity and I was full of self-loathing and doubt. I had gained thirty-five pounds since graduating college two years earlier. January 1 felt like the perfect time to make a change. Several times a week, after my classes were done, I’d put on my running shoes and go for a run. Running became a way to care for myself and avoid the relationship mess waiting for me at home. Running became my escape.

I don’t remember many details about running back then, other than I mostly ran at a park with a circular track. I don’t remember anything about my shoes, or the clothes I wore, or what the park looked like or what the drive was like to get there. But I do remember the feeling of strapping my heart rate monitor across my chest. Sitting just below my breasts, under my sports bra, it became my power pack. With it on, I felt as if I could run for hours. The simple act of securing the buckle against my body made me love myself just a little more. The act of caring for myself—for my body—made me a little more confident.

I ran at least four days a week. Sometimes five or six. I ran outside as much as possible, but occasionally I did a treadmill run at the local gym. In eight weeks, just like planned, I ran 5K. There was no official race; it was an ordinary weekday afternoon. 

I put on my running shoes and headed to the park, where I was the only one on the track. After a brisk five minute walk to warm-up, I started running. Lap after lap I ran, until the timer on my heart rate monitor told me I was done. I ran 35 minutes without stopping. As I walked my cool down, I scrolled through the stats on the watch connected to my monitor. 3.15 miles. I had done it! In eight weeks, I had gone from never running at all to being able to run 5K. I felt like I could take over the world. 

The next week, I did it again. Again and again; my time improving each week. A few weeks later, I graduated law school and moved back to Georgia. I started a new job. My first husband (now ex) and I moved in with my parents while we searched for a place of our own. Animosity and anxiety reached an all time high and it became difficult to carve out time for running. With an 8-5 job, my normal afternoon running time disappeared. With so many changes, I didn’t have the energy to find a new running time. Or place. 

I never ran consistently again.


I walk for a few minutes to catch my breath. Just as I begin to run another stretch, my phone rings. Normally I’d ignore it, but it’s my mom. We don’t talk as often as I’d like so I always answer when she calls. “Whatcha up to?” She asks.

Breathing heavily, I reply—my words choppy—“I’m out for a run.” She tries to tell me to call her later, but I know once I get home there won’t be any quiet time. My heart feeling like it’s going to pound right out of my chest, I say, “No, it’s okay. I don’t think I have it in me to run more today anyway.” I continue walking briskly as we talk about what food we’ll make when we are visiting over the holidays.  Before I know it, I’ve arrived back at my door and we say goodbye. As I walk in the front door I glance at my Fitbit to see I went 3.25 miles. I may have only run ⅓ of it, I think, but at least the distance is there.


I slide my left foot into my navy blue Asic and notice the “shhhh” sound it makes as the heel hits the bottom. I pull the laces, looping one around the other to tie them in a bow that dances when I let go. Standing, I reach for the floor to warm up my muscles, alerting them it’s time to get to work. 

It’s been four weeks since I last ran that sunny November day. The hardest part of getting back into it is showing up. The first day back feels like pulling teeth. Do I really want to do this? My resolve starts to wane. The excuses start to pile up in my mind:

It’s too cold outside.

Covid cases are on the rise and I don’t really want to wear a mask when I run. Is it safe to go to the gym?

I’ve already committed to yoga every day this month—how can I find time to run too?

It’s so cold outside!

I am behind. This plan is supposed to take 8 weeks. I feel like a failure. I want to quit.

Running is hard on your body—maybe I should power walk instead.

It’s hard. 

It’s really really cold outside.

I think about the times over the years I’ve bought new shoes and vowed to run again. I’d run for a week or two and give up. I wasn’t really committed. I had too many other things to do. People to feed. Lessons to plan and oversee. A house to clean. There aren’t enough hours in the day to do all the things I need to do and all the things I want. I have to prioritize, and running never made it to the top of the list. 

It was too hard. And it took too long to see results.

Shaking my head to release the negative thoughts, I grab my earbuds and water bottle. I yell at my family that I'm going to the gym and walk out the door before I can find an excuse to stay home. Taking a deep breath, I put my minivan in reverse and start to roll down the hill. I reach the bottom of the driveway and put the van in gear, driving slowly to the stop sign at the end of the street. As I wait for my chance to turn left onto the busy street, I think to myself: Maybe the plan is the problem. 

Any time I get behind when following a plan, I feel like it’s not worth it to keep going. But what if—instead of using the plan as a schedule—I use it as a tool? Sure, I did it in eight weeks fifteen years ago, but I’m not in my twenties anymore. My life looked different then. My body was different. Now I’m forty-one. I’ve had three pregnancies, two caesarian births and one miscarriage. I’ve carried the weight of a cross-country move (and several moves since we got here), multiple job shifts, and more stress than I ever imagined when I was 25.

The traffic clears. I pull onto the main road and give myself a pep talk. So what if it takes you longer than eight weeks? It doesn’t matter how far you run. It only matters that you don’t give up.

What took eight weeks in 2006 may take sixteen or even twenty-four now. I cruised my way through the plan then and expected to do the same this time around. But nothing is the same now as it was then.

By the time I pull into the gym parking lot, I’ve made a new commitment to myself. I pull the ear loops of my mask around my ears, grab my water bottle, and walk in the front door of the YMCA. The gym is mostly empty, so I have my choice of treadmills. I remove my jacket. Place my keys in one cup holder and my water bottle in the other. I open C25K on my phone to see today’s planned workout—Day 1 of Week 8. My lips turn in a smile as I swipe left in search of the right workout for today. Settling on Week 5: Day 1, I press “Go”. The plan doesn’t control me. The plan is there to help me succeed.

As I begin my warmup, I repeat my commitment to myself:

I will not give up. This will be the year that I become a runner once again.


This post is part of a blog hop with other runner-mother-creatives. Click here to view the next post in this series on running, mothering, and making.

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In Healthy Living, Self Care, Running
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will the grapefruit grow?

December 20, 2021 Crystal Rowe

“We have presents for you!” my friend Kelli squeals as we wrap our arms around each other in a warm hug. It’s Christmas Eve morning and our families haven’t seen each other in four months. We are used to weekly dinners and shared holidays—neither of us have extended family in New England. Covid cases are on the rise again, but an outdoor hike seems relatively risk-free, so we put on our long underwear, snow pants, and boots and meet for a walk in the woods. 

She carefully hands me a vintage glass creamer jar full of dirt. “It’s a grapefruit plant!” she gushes. “It grows really slow.” Promising me there is a seed inside, she assures me if I keep it watered, it will grow. I have no idea if grapefruits can actually grow in New England. We don’t exactly have tropical weather. 

You can find the rest of the essay over at Coffee + Crumbs.

In Friendship, Motherhood, Moving, Winter
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When the Mess is Gone

December 17, 2021 Crystal Rowe

My kitchen counters are covered with books, important papers, Christmas curriculum, and boxes of tea that haven’t been put in the pantry since we filled our cups this morning. Dishes from last night’s dinner sit in the dish drainer, waiting for someone to put them away. Sheet music covers our dining room table, where the girls have been working on their piano theory assignments. Snow pants and boots line the entryway.

There is clutter everywhere.

Lego Advent calendars, plastic animal figurines, and food made out of air dry clay line the floor by the fireplace. The girls take early morning trips to Imagination Village; these items their supplies. Our homeschool room floor is a rainbow collage of pipe cleaners, unrolled balls of yarn, crayons, scraps of paper, and more—evidence of Christmas-present making for the cousins. Books are spread out like a carpet in every room of the house, waiting to be read. 

I’m sitting in the middle of the living room floor sorting through picture books, trying to decide which books to keep and which to put in the Little Free Library at the end of our driveway. Keep. Give away. Keep. Give away. Give away. Keep. Keep. Keep.

Ping. My phone dings from the coffee table and I stand up to see who is messaging me, grateful for the interruption; for an excuse to do anything but clean. 

I think about the boxes of presents hidden in my closet waiting to be wrapped, the few presents still waiting to be finished, the empty suitcases that need to be packed. I look around at the piles of clutter everywhere and feel my eyes start to water. I want to appreciate the creativity of my children—the learning happening right before my eyes—but the clutter drives me bonkers. My heart starts to race. I wonder if I’ll find time to clear the clutter before we leave next week, or if we’ll come home to all the same clutter in the new year.

I remember the last time I stepped into my mom’s house: December 2019. Two years ago. Right before Covid changed the world. It was like walking into a magazine spread. A Christmas tree sat in the corner of the room, perfectly decorated; not an ornament out of place. The large dining room table was clear of everything except an evergreen centerpiece and Christmas-themed placemats. The kitchen counters were spotless, making me wonder if any cooking happens in Mom’s kitchen when we’re not here. There wasn’t a toy in sight—except for my stepdad’s train table—but that’s more decoration than toy. And not a piece of it was out of place. 

Not a thing in the entire house was out of place. It looked nothing like my house does today.

We haven’t seen Mom since last November, so this Christmas feels a little extra special for her. For all of us really, but I’m so caught up in the messes all over my house that I forget for a moment what the mess means.

I am here, in Massachusetts, with a messy home. My mom, in Georgia, with a neat one. I’m looking forward to walking into a house where no toys are strewn about. And she’s looking forward to her house being destroyed.

I think about how quiet my mom’s house must be on any normal day. I relish my own quiet moments alone, but would it feel like the same luxury if it happened all the time? I imagine I would start to feel lonely. It’s possible the silence might even feel deafening after a while.

My racing heart starts to slow down and the tears start to fall. These messes all over my house are proof that my kids are fully in the Christmas spirit of gift-giving and imagination-making. And all I can think about is cleaning up the mess. I am so distracted by the messes they are making that I haven’t even stopped to consider that maybe the mess is a gift. 

The mess is where the memories are made. Messes are where imaginations soar; where stories are created; where life is lived.  

She offers an invitation. A promise. With these seven words, she says so much.

Soon you’ll be here, with me, and the mess won’t matter. Soon we’ll be together. We’ll make messes and memories at the same time. We’ll laugh. We’ll probably cry. We’ll make meals and Christmas cookies and bread. We’ll sew, and use the embroidery machine and wrap presents and do all the things that make huge giant messes. And life will feel so full.

For two weeks. Then we’ll leave to return to Massachusetts and her house will be clean and quiet and empty. And I imagine she’ll long for the mess to return.


This post is part of a blog hop with Exhale—an online community of women pursuing creativity alongside motherhood, led by the writing team behind Coffee + Crumbs. Click here to view the next post in the series "Contrast”.

Like what you see here? Sign up for my Monthly Newsletter. Each month I collect all my favorite things from the month and send them straight to your inbox. This month’s newsletter will hit your inbox between Christmas and the New Year.

In Christmas, Family, Motherhood, Parenting
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100ish Things I Love

December 1, 2021 Crystal Rowe

I love the ocean. I love watching waves move back and forth. I love the sound waves make when they crash along the shore. I love the feeling of warm sand between my toes. Or cold sand. Any sand will do.

I love bathing suits in summer. Cozy sweaters in fall. Silk long underwear and snowsuits in winter. Lightweight scarves in spring.

I love the way snow clings to pine trees. Or to empty branches. I love waking up to freshly fallen snow; looking out the window makes me feel like I’m living inside a snow globe.

I love getting into a bed made with freshly laundered sheets. I love turning down a fluffy comforter and singing I know I’m gonna like it here. I love snuggling under my L.L. Bean heated blanket when it’s so cold I don’t even want to move.

I love the smell of clothes dried in the sun. The way the towels get stiff they almost scratch your skin.

I love pulling a bunch of ingredients out of the fridge and figuring out how to create a delicious meal. I love when everyone is surprised they like something they’ve never had before.

I love picking up food from Springdell Farm. I love the way Farmer Jamie makes me feel like family. I love sitting in the adirondack chairs in the freshly mowed grass, soaking up the sun as I watch the sheep graze in the field.

I love feeding people. Especially when they have dietary restraints. I love how the extra challenge of not being able to use certain ingredients gives me a way to love them a little harder.

I love homeschooling. I love sitting on the couch reading out loud. I love hearing my daughters’ thoughts about a book we’ve read. I love watching them internalize the world around them. I love the way their brain makes connections between the books we read and the life we live.

I love how David makes me coffee with frothed milk, brings it up the stairs, and sets it on the coaster on the table by my bed. Every single morning. I love how the girls climb into bed with me with their books and consider it a snugglefest.

I love a movie so good it makes me cry. I love books that make me feel as though I’m living in a different time or place.

I love a smooth-writing pen. I love watching ink appear on the page as I move my hand along the paper.

I love the smell of a pine forest. I love the smell of snow clouds.

I love being at home. I love a clean house. I really love being at home alone in a clean house.

I love the sound of childhood giggles.

I love a cup of hot tea. I love chocolate cake. When I have both at the same time, it’s a love explosion.

I love visioning for ministry in the church. I love leading teams, asking questions, hearing people’s dreams, and helping plan to make those dreams a reality.

I love thinking outside the box. I love remembering why the box is there in the first place.

I love my mom. I love the way she always trusts me, always loves me, always hugs and kisses me.

I love my aunts. I love my sisters. I love that I was raised by strong women who really don’t have a clue just how strong they are.

I love the surprise of rainbows. The way they always remind me of God’s endless promises.

I love love LOVE my book club. I love that what started as a spark of an idea has taken off and become the most incredible group of women that sit around and drink wine and tea and talk about books together.

I love getting messages from people I haven’t heard from in a long time, sharing something that reminded them of me. I love when a reader emails me to tell me my words matter.

I love painting my nails. I love a good nail polish—the kind that goes on smoothly and evenly. I love the way my nails shimmer and shine after they’ve been painted.

I love warm and cozy socks. I love soft slippers. I love a good bathrobe. I love buying gifts for people. Or making gifts for people. I love giving gifts.

I love dancing in the kitchen. Especially to music I loved when I was a kid. I love when songs from my teen or young adult years come on and I can still sing every single lyric. I love when the lyrics make tears fall down my face.

I love deep intimate conversations about love, politics and theology.

I love smooth legs and a smooth face. I especially love it when they happen on the same day.

I love David’s blue eyes that gaze at me every day as if I’m the most beautiful person in the world.

I love a bath so hot it makes you sweat, with a glass of ice water in one hand and a waterproof Kindle in the other.

I love the ELCA Lutheran Church. I love how its theology grounds me and how its people challenge me. I love how God continues to speak truth in grey. I love Holy Communion. I love Baptisms. I love big organ processionals and festival services. I love old hymns. I love contemporary Christian music.

I love youth ministry. I love listening to tweens and teens talk about what’s happening in their life. I love walking alongside them as a faithful adult.

I love tacos. Any and all tacos. And enchiladas. And chips and salsa and queso.

I love a good pizza.

I love hiking when the temperature is not too hot. I love the way nature always surprises me. How there’s always something new to discover.

I love baking sourdough bread. I love the way flour and water mix like magic to create yeast. I love the heat of the oven on bread baking day. The way the bread crackles when it comes out of the pan. The smell that permeates the house.

I love learning. I love my writing group. I love my editors—even when what they have to say is painful to hear. I love the way they believe in my stories. How they encourage me and challenge me to keep at it.

I love a good writing prompt. I love an unexpected theme. I love a planned theme. I love making lists. I love that once you start thinking about what you love, you can’t stop at just a hundred.

In Faith, Family, Self Care, Writing Tags love
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Peeing Alone

November 19, 2021 Crystal Rowe
Rocks at Wingaersheek Beach

Gentle waves lap on the smooth sand, composing a soft lullaby on the shore. It’s a few hours after low tide. I’m lounging in my new backpack beach chair reading a book; the sand warm and dry under my toes. Seagulls squawk on nearby rocks, fighting over crumbs of food left behind. I look up from my book to see my daughters deep in imagination land, participating in cooking classes they’ve designed especially for the beach. With rusty pots and pans full of sand carefully imprinted with various shell patterns, I think they are learning how to bake sand cakes—or maybe cookies—I really don’t know for sure.

I am hesitant to interrupt this imaginary world they’ve created, but I really need to pee, and I really don’t want to do it in the ocean. The time on my phone says it’s been an hour or two since lunch, so it’s probably a good time for a bathroom break anyhow. I rise from my beach chair, put my book on the seat, and take a few steps closer to where they are.

“Hey,” I say, and they raise their heads to look at me. “What are ya’ll working on?” 

“We’re making sand cakes,” Eden says, before looking back to the creation in her lap. 

“I need to go to the bathroom. Can you find your shoes so we can walk that way?” Autumn, her hands covered with dark, wet sand, looks up at me with her big hazel eyes and says, “I don’t really need to go. Can we just stay here?” 

“Yeah, can we?” Eden joins in.

I feel my heart speed up. They’ve never asked to stay on the beach alone before, and I’m not really sure how to answer. I dig my toes into the sand, trying to process the gazillion thoughts running through my mind. On the one hand, the beach isn’t crowded today. There are only a handful of other families here; it’s not likely that my kids will be abducted while I walk to the bathroom. Their “cooking school” isn’t situated near the water; they are happily baking sand pastries on the hot rocks and there’s not much risk of drowning in the half-inch tide pool nearby. The bathroom is close—I can go and be back in ten minutes or less. 

On the other hand, these are my babies! Can I really leave them alone on the beach?!

I remind myself they aren’t really babies anymore—they are seven and nine. Is it finally time to give them a little more independence? Could it really be true that after nine years of parenting I can finally go to the bathroom all alone?

“Let me think about it for a minute.” I walk back to my chair and grab my phone out of its side pocket. Starting to feel mixed emotions of fear and exhilaration at the prospect of going to the bathroom alone, I text David to get his opinion. “As long as they don’t go in the water,” he texts back; “it’s probably fine.” 

I take a few moments to pull our chairs and blankets a few feet back from where we’ve been sitting. The tide is coming in slowly, but there’s no real threat that it will come up this far in the time it takes for me to pee. I’m really just doing this to prolong the decision I have to make. The blanket makes a swooshing sound along the sand, leaving a visible trail as I yank it from one spot to another just five feet away. I pick up my flip-flops and call Autumn over to where I’ve moved our gear. “I’m going to let you stay here while I go to the bathroom. Don’t get in the water. I’ll leave my phone with you. If anything weird happens, text Daddy. You know how to unlock the phone, right?”

Nodding her head, she tells me she knows the password and I chuckle. Of course she knows the password, I think, somehow kids always know how to figure them out. There’s a gleam of pride in her eyes; she’s always been wiser than her young years might suggest. I can tell she knows this is a big step for me, and I imagine she feels a little excitement at this new sense of responsibility I’ve just given her.

I walk over to Eden and tell her the same thing, emphasizing the part about not going in the water. She is my water-loving kid and the chilly New England water temperatures don’t keep her from running in. She’s typically respectful of my boundaries and has never given me a reason to believe she would jump in the water without me. I think I can trust her to stay put while I’m gone.

“I’ll be right back,” I tell them, and I walk away.

My heart feels like it might jump out of my chest as I walk towards the boardwalk. Every few steps, I turn to look back at them playing in the sand. They look so tiny on the beach, I think to myself, and I begin to pick up my pace.

I think about life just a few years ago; when they were two and four. The scene was similar; we were in our backyard instead of at the beach, and it was mud pies they were making instead of sand cakes. I told them I was going inside for a glass of water and you would have thought I told them I was leaving forever. “Wait Mama!” they would say; “I want to go! I don’t want to be out here alone!” 

Now here they are, five years later, asking to be left on the beach while I walk to the bathroom out of their sight. 

Hastily continuing towards the boardwalk, my feet swish through the crystalline sand; I pass two older women reading books in their chairs and my heart races. Will they notice I left my kids alone on the beach? Will they call the cops and report two children have been abandoned? Will they judge me? Or did they do the same thing once upon a time?

I know these are crazy thoughts. No one on this beach cares about me. They are enjoying their own solitude and peace. My racing heart is invisible to them. I’m not neglecting my children; I’m just going to the bathroom. Right?

I make it there in record time and say a brief prayer of gratitude that there’s no line. This feels silly because the beach is practically empty; the bathroom isn’t getting a lot of use today. I squat over the compost toilet; hear my pee trickle into the dark abyss. I wonder if my kids are okay. Has anyone noticed them alone on the beach? Will there be a lifeguard waiting for me when I get back?

After my bladder is relieved, I pull up my bikini bottoms and leave the stall. I contemplate leaving without washing my hands but we are still living in a pandemic. Besides, Ewww that’s gross. So I make bubbles vigorously and quickly—there’s no counting to twenty or singing the ABCs—shake my hands dry as I walk out the door. 

I swing my empty arms, wishing I had my phone so I knew how long I’ve been gone. Or maybe I would document this moment in time with a selfie to show up in my memories later—The first time I went to the bathroom all alone. I briefly consider having a conversation with David about getting the girls their own phone for times such as this—and then I shake that thought away. It’s only been a few minutes. I’m sure they are fine.

I trot over the sand-strewn boardwalk, slowing my pace when I get back on the sand. The last thing I want to do is draw attention to myself. I nonchalantly walk past the women sitting in their chairs; I’m relieved to see they are still heavily engrossed in their books. I scan the horizon for my girls, but can’t quite make out whether or not they are in the same place. Nervous nausea begins to creep into the pit of my stomach, but after a few more steps, I see they are right where I left them. Still making sand cakes. Safe and sound.

I breathe a sigh of relief and plop myself down in my chair. My feet slide through the sand as I stretch out my legs and glance over to where my daughters play. I think we have just crossed over into big kid land, and I’m not really sure how I feel about that. 

Is this what it will feel like to pee alone for the rest of my life?


This post is part of a blog hop with Exhale—an online community of women pursuing creativity alongside motherhood, led by the writing team behind Coffee + Crumbs. Click here to view the next post in the series "Novel".

Like what you see here? Sign up for my Monthly Newsletter. Each month I collect all my favorite things from the month and send them straight to your inbox. This month’s newsletter will hit your inbox next week!


In Family, Parenting, Homeschool, Summer
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The Mayonnaise Cake

November 4, 2021 Crystal Rowe

I rarely go to the grocery store but I have a hankering for Deb Perelman’s Pork Tenderloin Agroldoce. It uses acorn squash, which I have an abundance of, and is the perfect Fall Dinner. I walk through the meat aisle to pick out a pork tenderloin and take a detour down the baking aisle to grab a Duncan Hines cake mix. My birthday is in a week and I want to save my family the hassle of finding the perfect cake recipe. (That’s a lie. I’m a cake snob. There are so many bad recipes on the internet. I fear what they might choose.)

I return home from my errand and shake the brown paper bag in my hand. It crinkles with excitement as I pull out the box and proudly hold it up for David to see. “What’s that for?” he asks. “My birthday!” I reply. “Now you don’t have to find a recipe!” He looks at me with a sinister smile on his face. “Eden has something she wants to show you.” 

I walk through the house. “Eeeeeeden,” I yell. “Do you have something to show me?” 

“Yes!” She says, scampering through the sunroom. I follow her to the homeschool room where she’s made a picture using tangrams and wants me to rate it using a checkmark system. Gazing at me with her huge blue eyes, she points to her paper. “Do you like it?” I tell her I do; she points to a line of empty squares is drawn on a piece of paper next to her art. “How much? You can mark it three times.” I give her three checkmarks. Satisfied (and clueless I’m thinking about my birthday cake), she prances out of the room.  

“I bought a cake mix,” I call after her, “so you can make my cake.” David overhears and looks at me questioningly. It’s obvious her math assignment is not what he had in mind when he said she had something to show me. Eden picks up her cookbook. ”We don’t need it! We found a recipe!” She opens the page to show me a Chocolate Sheet Cake sprinkled with powdered sugar and my heart sinks. I want a layer cake, but they don’t know that. When they asked what kind of cake I wanted, I told them chocolate. With chocolate icing.

I stand silent for a moment, thinking about how to tell her this cake isn’t what I want when she interrupts my thoughts: “But we are going to make icing instead of powdered sugar!” I give her a huge smile. She has clearly thought about her recipe selection and cake baking, so a sheet cake I will eat.

I scan the ingredients and see “mayonnaise” in the list. “You know this has mayonnaise in it?” I ask, with an incredulous voice. David looks at me from the sink where he’s cleaning dishes from lunch. “What?!” He throws a spatula down in disgust. Soapy water splashes from the sink. “Ewww, really?” Eden points to the quotes on the page from kid testers and reads them out loud. I really liked the cake! I hate mayonnaise, but I loved this mayonnaise cake! and I thought it was the best cake I’ve ever had in my life. My finger moves down the page and lands on a large heading at the bottom of the page. 

Mayonnaise in a Cake?

We read about the science behind mayonnaise in a cake. Most cake recipes have oil and eggs in them. That’s really all mayonnaise is, with a little lemon juice and a few seasonings. “Mayonnaise is the trick to making this cake super moist and delicious,” I read out loud. I guess we should trust America’s Test Kitchen—they know more about kitchen science than I. 

I’m still not certain this mayonnaise cake will be any good. It’s taken me more than ten years to find the perfect cake recipe and it’s not a recipe I want them to try; but, I take pride in empowering them, so I’ll consider this a lesson in experimentation. “Let’s try it!” I muster excitement in my voice, taking comfort in knowing if it isn’t any good, Duncan Hines will come to the rescue. “Science in the kitchen,” I say, “but you’ll have to buy mayonnaise because we don’t have any.”

The day before my birthday, David and Eden head to the grocery store with a small list. Red wine vinegar (for the pork agrodolce I still haven’t made), hummus (for my birthday dinner), heavy whipping cream (for the frosting), and mayonnaise (for the cake). They come back with the smallest jar of mayonnaise I’ve ever seen. “We picked the best one!” Eden proudly says, when she pulls it out of the paper bag. “It’s organic!” “I’m sure it will be delicious!” I nod my head, keeping my real thoughts to myself: they probably should have bought Hellmann’s for something like this. 

“I’m going outside,” I say, grabbing my book. It’s sunny out—a beautiful 68 degrees—and I don’t want to be in the kitchen when they are. The truth is, I wanted to make my cake. The kitchen is my happy place. It’s where I can create something beautiful (most of the time) and delicious (also most of the time). The kitchen is where I go when I need to stop my brain from spinning in circles over the many things I need to do. In the kitchen, I pull out a list of ingredients, follow instructions, and end up with something to show for my time and energy. Sure, there are times when I have kitchen fails, but the act of creating in the kitchen brings peace to my soul. But my family is unwavering. They want to pamper me. So here I am, outside, while they take over my kitchen and bake.

Fifteen minutes pass. I start to sweat in my long sleeves and scarf. I walk inside to change my clothes and see Autumn sitting at the counter. It’s clear Eden is doing all the work. I can’t help but sneak a peek at what’s happening inside my sacred space. Two round pans lie on the counter, with parchment paper circles nestled perfectly inside. I look at the recipe to see if there’s going to be enough batter to fill two pans. “So…” I say, trying to figure out how to break the news gently; “this recipe is for an 8-inch square pan. Those are 8-inch round pans. Did you double the recipe?” 

Eden looks at David. David looks at me. “Um, no?” My brain quickly turns to problem-solving mode—how can I help them make this work without insulting them? “Okay,” I finally say gently, “Divide your batter evenly. And set a timer. They’ll be thinner than the recipe so they won’t take as long to bake.”

Eden, grinning from ear to ear, nods her head and continues to whisk the chocolate mixture in her large metal bowl. The whisk hits the sides like a triangle in elementary school music class. “We’re going to put icing in the middle!” Her excitement is contagious; I feel my annoyance start to slip away. She loves the kitchen as much as I do, and watching her in action makes my heart leap with joy. “I’m so excited about it,” I reply. “It’s going to be yummy! I’m sure!”

“It’s time for the mayonnaise!” Eden announces, grabbing the measuring cup sitting next to her. “How much, Autumn?” Autumn looks at the recipe, then looks at Eden. “⅔ of a cup.” Eden scoops the mayonnaise out of the jar and into the measuring cup. “Ewwwww—this stinks!” she says, wrinkling her nose. We remind ourselves the reviews say it’s the best cake ever, and I take comfort in knowing there’s a box mix for backup.

They finish the batter and take a taste. That is, after all, the best part of being the chef. Autumn is the first to speak. “Um, this tastes weird.” Eden, so proud of all she’s done to get to this point, says otherwise. “I think it’s delicious! But I don’t want any more.” Usually, they fight over licking the bowl. The taste test doesn’t bode well. I taste it myself and have to agree with Autumn. I move my lips up and down, making a smacking sound. I try to identify the funny after-taste on my tongue. “It tastes herby,” I say, picking up the mayonnaise to look at the ingredient list. Sure enough, this fancy organic mayonnaise is seasoned with mustard seed and rosemary. 

David, wide-eyed, starts to apologize, certain he’s ruined the cake: “I’m so sorry! We tried to get the best!” I tell him there’s no need to apologize and remind him magic happens in the oven. “The flavors may even out when it bakes.” He opens the oven door and helps Eden place the pans in the oven. She pulls a stool over to the microwave over the stove and sets a timer. “Twenty-three minutes,” she says, “that’s ten minutes less than the recipe says. Is that good Mommy?” 

My intention to let them do this without me has totally failed. So much for staying out of my own birthday cake.

Twenty-three minutes later, the timer beeps. Eden runs to the oven. Opens the door to take a look. “Is it done, Daddy?” David delicately pulls a pan out of the oven and helps her check with a toothpick. She looks at him with a big grin, “It’s clean!”

“Now it has to cool for two hours,” Autumn pipes up. Engrossed in a book on the couch, I hear the clang of metal as they wrestle with the cooling racks sandwiched between sheet pans in the tiny cabinet. When they finally get the cooling rack on the counter, and the pans on the rack, I walk back into the kitchen and try to sneak a taste. There’s no extra batter anywhere. I slowly slide a knife into the side of the pan and dig out the tiniest piece.

“Hey Eden,” I call, as she’s running down the stairs to go outside. “Come here!” I split the crumb into two pieces, giving us each but a morsel of a cake. We taste it. Look at each other. “Well, it tastes like chocolate cake!” I say, relieved. “Yummy!” she says and trots down the stairs, pretending to be a puppy. To be honest, the bite was so small I couldn’t tell if it tasted like chocolate or not, but I am determined to like this cake. They’ve put their heart into making it. I won’t allow myself to be disappointed.

“It tastes like chocolate cake. Very dark chocolate cake.” I tell David, once the cakes have cooled completely and I’ve flipped them out of their pans. We taste the tiny crumbs stuck to the parchment paper left behind. “I think once it has icing on it, it will be scrumptious,” I say, trying to resurrect his confidence in this cake they worked so hard on. “But, I think you should use milk chocolate in the icing. Don’t use chocolate chips.”

I can’t help but offer advice in the kitchen. What I want, more than anything, is for them to be successful in their endeavor to make my birthday cake. I want to empower them. But I don’t want them to fail. Figuring out how to achieve both is like walking on a tightrope. It requires just the right amount of balance between being completely hands-off and offering advice.

A few days later, after we eat my birthday dinner and clear the plates away, the girls put candles on the cake. “Don’t put 41 on there,” I tell them; “I don’t think I can blow that many out!” They settle on six, confident I’ll get whatever wish I make. Autumn lights the candles and carefully picks up the plate. My heart jumps as she starts to walk with it in her tiny hands. They start to sing. I’m the starring role in a suspenseful movie. Waiting for the cake to drop. 

She gently places the cake in front of me. All six candles remain lit. I take a huge breath and blow, watching the flames flicker before they go out. Autumn hands me the knife. I cut pieces and pass them around, wondering who will be the first to take a bite. I give in; after all, it is my birthday cake.

One bite of this cake makes me feel like I’ve died and gone to heaven. It is moist like the ground after a fresh rain. The crumbs stick together like pudding, forming a perfect bite on my fork. The taste is deep. Dark chocolate. The frosting is light and fluffy, like freshly whipped chocolate cream. 

However, there is a very faint taste of rosemary. Or maybe that’s just my imagination.

“Next time, let’s try Hellmann’s,” I say. 


Mayonnaise Chocolate Cake

Adapted ever so slightly from The Complete Baking Book for Young Chefs by America’s Test Kitchen

Ingredients:

1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
1 cup sugar
½ tsp baking soda
¼ tsp salt
½ cup cocoa powder
⅓ cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 cup almost boiling water
⅔ cup mayonnaise (we recommend Hellmans)
1 large egg
2 tsp vanilla

Instructions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350°. Spray inside bottom and sides of 8-inch round pans with vegetable oil spray and line bottoms of pans with a piece of parchment paper.

  2. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking soda, and salt.

  3. In a large bowl, combine chocolate chips and cocoa. Pour hot water over chocolate mixture and whisk until smooth. Let cool for 10 minutes.

  4. Once your chocolate is almost room temperature, add mayonnaise, egg, and vanilla and whisk until combined. Add dry ingredients and mix until just combined.

  5. Scrape batter evenly into two pans and smooth top.

  6. Bake until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. It will take 20-25 minutes, depending on your oven.

  7. When done, put pans on a cooling rack and let cool completely—about two hours.

  8. When cakes are completely cool, turn them out onto a plate. Frost using your favorite frosting recipe. We like this one best.

In Motherhood, Editor's Picks, Family, Parenting, Recipes
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