Saturday, September 7, 2024

Kalo & Play Dough

Intro to Kalo    
          


We chatted a bit about how kalo grows, and the importance of this Canoe Crop in Hawaiian culture and cuisine. Poi is a first food for many babies raised on the islands, as it is naturally hypoallergenic, easily digestible and high in calories, calcium, and iron. 
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Tree to cup coconut milk
        

Our farm family worked together to make coconut milk with the families. Tots nibbled on the fresh meat and sampled the milk before it was blended with frozen Ice Cream bananas and chunks of previously cooked Kalo. Many hands and many steps made for a truly delicious smoothie!

Kalo Smoothie
-Steamed and frozen kalo
-Frozen Ice Cream bananas
-Coconut Milk
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"Poi"Play Dough
To deepen the toddlers' concept of Kalo through sensory play, we made and pounded "poi" play dough.

      
Many children were eager to lend their hands in measuring the flour, adding the salt, oil and squeezing the lemons. We added the ingredients to the Instant Pot and whipped up a batch right there on the farm! After letting it cool, we played, pounded, sang, and wrapped up the dough to bring home. This batch was made with dried butterfly pea flowers, yielding a rich purple hue, but if made with fresh flowers, it produces a lighter colored dough as pictured in the recipe below.

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Story Circle
This week we read 'Ohana Means Family by Ilima Loomis, a book sharing the story of a family coming together in the traditional process of making poi for their luau. 





Reads and Resources

https://eatbreadfruit.com/blogs/culture-and-place/kalo-in-hawaiian-culture 

https://www.hipagriculture.org/aina-lessons/kalo-101 

https://kokuahawaiifoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/KHF_HH_EdSheet_Banana-2.pdf 






Butterfly Pea Family Tea

Labor Day provided a chance for siblings and additional family members to experience the Tending to Tots farm magic! 

                           

                           

The children picked, washed, and took turns stuffing bright blue blossoms into a container, which we then filled with warm water and let steep for 15 minutes. A few families went on a side quest for lemon verbena which added a perfect hint of flavor. After the tea cooled, littles scooped out the flowers and squeezed in some honey. 

           
Each tot got a glass of blue tea and a wedge of lemon, and watched in awe as the splash of citrus turned the tea purple. Nature is magic! Simple experiments like this introduces STEAM concepts rooted in reverence, and collaboration...science with heart.
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To accompany our tea, we snacked on millet flour butterfly cookies- a fam favorite and perfect pairing with butterfly tea. These were made with plant butter and milk, and coconut sugar and adapted from the recipe linked below.
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Fresh Sand!

Push, scoop, dump, repeat. For our sandbox enthusiasts, this was pure joy! Sand slipping through closed fingers is a tricky and curious concept for littles to grasp- literally and figuratively. As the adage goes, the tighter you hold, the faster it goes...speaking also to the parenting experience for many. Oh, these sweet sandy toes! 
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Young children are nurtured by familiarity. Knowing what is coming next gives toddlers a healthy sense of security, and our circle times are class constants. For this reason, we repeat many of the same songs and stories- children under the age of five rarely tire of hearing them over and over again! The tunes and tales become woven into memory and children gain confidence in their ability to join their peers in song and movement.

Sunday, September 1, 2024

Splash wild, my child!

Welcome, September!
It was a rainy week on the farm, but what fun we still had splashing in buckets, picking flowers, making pesto, and towel sliding through the sprinkles.

  
No rain, no flowers
Between spurts of rain, we took our baskets to our flower rows, and filled them with brightly colored blossoms. The floral harvests were put into individual trays and later placed between blotting paper and cardboard pieces to dry and flatten for the next step in our craft process.


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Presto, Pesto!

                           
                                
                                         
                                   

From farm to table, the keiki had their hands in each step of the pesto process- from plucking the basil leaves from the bunches growing in the field, to taking turns adding the ingredients to the food processor. A palm full of pumpkin seeds, capful of salt, pinch of garlic powder, and squeeze of a lemon just pulled from the tree... presto, fresh pesto! When young children are involved in the harvesting process and amongst their peers, they are often more apt to try new foods!

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Stay Wild My Child!


This week, we read "Stay Wild, My Child" by Mandy Archer. This story sweetly shares that while there are some spaces and times that there are rules to mind, there is always a place to splash, play, paint, run, yell, and stay wild, my keiki.
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Reads and Resources:

Kalo & Play Dough