Archive for March, 2010


Myra Lee’s $80.00 Depression Red Velvet Cake-Takes the Cake
March 21st, 2010 | 3 Comments

Jenny Lee is the winner of  Contest #7: The Best Dessert for Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Etc. Days. We loved  her story that her great-aunt bought this recipe for what would have been a zillion depression-era dollars. And, of course, we loved her Red Velvet Cake recipe.  Honorable mention goes to Brandy Bates for her Mile High Chocolate Cake that she said  ”will make your husband forget just how much you spent on those really cute new shoes that just could not live without.”

RED VELVET CAKE

Family legend says my great-aunt Myra Lee bought this recipe during the Depression for $80 in Chicago. It looks deceptively easy. Its not, especially the icing, which requires constant attention. But it is well-worth the time and effort to make this amazing cake. Enjoy.

1/2 cup shortening
1 1/2 cup sugar
2 whole eggs
2 oz. food coloring
1 tsp vanilla
1 tsp cocoa
1 tsp salt
1 cup buttermilk
2 1/4 cup Cake flour
1 tsp vinegar
1 tsp soda

DIRECTIONS FOR THE CAKE

1) CREAM shortening, sugar & eggs (this is your Short Mixture).

2) PASTE food coloring & cocoa.

3) MIX vanilla, salt, buttermilk, cake flour, vinegar, soda.

4) ADD your Short Mixture along w/Paste of food coloring and cocoa. Don’t beat hard, just blend in.

5) BAKE 30 minutes in 2-9 inch pan at 350 degrees.

6) COOL and SPLIT each layer in half.
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B’s Give Back: True Beauty
March 20th, 2010 | 2 Comments

Saturday is the day we share your stories about giving to others.

Please write in and tell us about what you do. How do you use your particular talents/strengths/skills to help others? When money and time are tight, how can you get creative about giving back?

Today we’re featuring the lovely Emma Bains, who lives on the Mississippi Gulf Coast and works her magic at Tanya Tancredi Salon and Spa in Gulfport, Mississippi.

Emma writes:

As an esthetician, I have the God-given talents to help others look and feel better about their appearance. As an esthetician who has lost two immediate family members to cancer, I want to give to others struggling with their illness and hopefully make them feel a little better in the process. Thus, the reason I volunteer my services to conduct the American Cancer Society’s, Look Good Feel Better classes in my community. My services include teaching patients to apply makeup donated by caring companies that conceals the effects of chemotherapy and radiation treatments. It’s amazing what teaching a woman how to correctly draw an eyebrow, where one once grew, can do for her self-confidence! Also, I teach them about proper skincare during their treatment periods and how to help make it look, and feel, normal.

Being a southern girl, my grandmother and my mother, always taught me to never go out in public without my lipstick!  As unnecessary as I perceived this to be then, I came to understand that the reasoning behind their “nagging” was it would make me feel better, and I would be better motivated to take on my day!  The LGFB program reinforces these same beliefs.  My goal is to be their motivator, and remind them how beautiful they are, even with no hair!

As a Bitch on a Budget, and a single mother, I have tightened my (already tight) financial belt, to the point that my contributions to charities were getting smaller. However, volunteering my time to LGFB fills that void. Teaching LGFB actually gives me a spiritual uplift when I see these beautiful, strong women smiling, laughing and leaving the classes with newfound confidence in their appearance, and attitudes toward fighting their cancer. I leave knowing they are going to beat their cancers too! If anything, I am the one who leaves with a new feeling of self-worth, and to these heroic women, I am thankful.

So, while I was looking to give back to my community during tight times, it is giving back to me too!

Thanks for this empowering message, Emma.

Now, readers, tell us how YOU give back. Click “comments” above. Inspire us!






The Mother of Invention
March 19th, 2010 | 2 Comments

Mama B’s of babies and toddlers don’t usually have time for lots of make-up—most women we know apply moisturizer and lip balm and call it a day. We’re always on the lookout for quick, cheap beauty tips, and recently, by sheer serendipity, we discovered a good trick.

A certain inquisitive two-year-old got into our make-up bag. Eager to explore the magic of twisting lip balm containers, this toddler broke off our favorite, practically unused Weleda EVERON lip balm. Arg. We were about to toss it in the trash when it occurred to us that we’d be better off saving the broken balm. We found a tiny plastic container, smashed the balm inside, then added a small bit of our favorite intense red lipstick (a splurge, which we feel guilty for not using more). The result? Best made-to-order lip tint we’ve ever used.  Hands down. Totally wearable and sheer, need no mirror to apply. If you’ve got lipsticks in shades you love but you aren’t in a lipstick-wearing frame of mind, mix a dab with good clear balm and color yourself gorgeous.






A Welcome Madness
March 18th, 2010 | 1 Comment

Sunshine! March Madness! Baseball! Fiddlehead Ferns! Asparagus! Evening walks! Yes, we’re entering the heady, glorious season of springtime. After the slog of winter comes fresh air, sandals, kites in the sky, little kids tucked in bed while it’s still light out. Happens every year, yet somehow this transformation never ceases to amaze us. Daylight Savings arrives and it’s like we’ve been bonked on the head with a hammer for three months and then, just like that, the hammering suddenly stops. Ahh. Mid-March rolls around with new light and earthy air, but we have no patience to finish the warm-up. Meaning we want to have fun. NOW.

And yet we’re B’s on a Budget, aren’t we? No willy-nilly  trotting off to Italy, no open-air meals at the finest restaurants, no spontaneous shopping sprees for Miu-Miu sundresses and floppy hats. We want to celebrate this luminous season, but can’t spend too much.

In this spirit, we’ve composed a list of free/cheap spring activities that’ll make your blood pump, your soul wake up, your heart feel a little freer:

March Madness. OK, watching basketball is an indoor activity. But nothing captures the nutty, passionate, youthful antics of spring better than college basketball. Study the brackets. Throw a potluck party. Admire those lean, sweating, gorgeous players (men and women). Then go outside and shoot some hoops yourself. Yes, you: PLAY.

Buy a hula hoop. Five bucks. Amazing exercise. Do it in the front yard with the kiddos. Entertain the neighbors.

Forced blossoms. A branch of barely budding forsythia will spring into bloom on your kitchen table, reminding you what’s to come.

Creepy Crawlies. Buy (or make!) the little ones in your life a bug box, and hand them a good old-fashioned magnifying glass. They’ll spend hours collecting worms and caterpillars and who-knows-what. Time to turn their attention away from Nature Programming and into NATURE.

Finally, and best of all, school plays. Spring is the high season of middle/high school drama departments. Support local talent by attending shows in your area. OK, some of it might be funny (we recall having some, uh, bladder control problems during a recent off-key rendition of OKLAHOMA), but the charm-to-price ration has never been higher. Applaud for the awkward high school boy who sings like an angel…. gasp at the strangely sublime beauty of a hundred souls belting “Tomorrow, Tomorrow, I’ll Love Ya, Tomorrow”. Remember when that was you? Give them a standing ovation.

Get up. Get out. It’s time.






Mama B’s Mission Statement (a work in progress)
March 17th, 2010 | 16 Comments

Call it a mission statement, a manifesto, a set of rules, reminders, a way to keep ourselves sane on this crazy journey called motherhood.

Some tenets we’re trying to live by:

*We will call what we’re doing work. Even if the world doesn’t acknowledge it, we will: motherhood is the hardest work in the world. It’s physically demanding, psychologically strenuous, spiritually complex, and unpaying.  We refuse to accept the whole “I-don’t-work-I-stay-home-with-the-kid” thing. We’ve held lots of jobs, and not one has been more intense.  We know how challenging it is to work outside the home and raise kids, we will never be too proud or silent to ask for help.

*We will complain when we want to. We are allowed to bitch. We’ll never forget the healing power of a good old-fashioned rant.

*We will boast when we want to. Yes, our child is the cutest, smartest, most hilarious, most cuddly on the block.

*We will cry when we need to.

*We will laugh maniacally when we need to.

*We will not forget to play. With our kids and by ourselves.

*We will not forget the power of an occasional martini.

*We will not spend money haphazardly, or on useless status objects, or on stuff we think we “should” have.

*We will not be snobs about thrift stores.

*We will ask for help when we need it.

*While we will boast our kids are the smartest, cutest, most delightful creatures ever planted on this earth   we will not turn them into our status symbols of success.

*We will yell when we need to and feel guilty later.

*We will do our best to educate ourselves, to read valuable books, to attend parenting classes and lectures, to listen to those “experts” we admire—but we will also trust our instincts.

*We will avoid the rancorous, black-and-white thinking that pervades the media. We know people raise children in different ways.

*We will forgive ourselves when we make mistakes.

*We will not forget the power of an occasional martini (when they are sleeping and we’re not driving).

*We will share our triumphs, fears, and hopes with other parents. That’s right: parents. We will not forget the important role that fathers play, or deny fathers their own wisdom, their own experience (even if we complain about  or bemoan their incessant need to toss the kid over their heads).

*We will be at our best when we remember to take care of ourselves.

*We will be strong, smart role models. In our successes and in our failures.

*We will keep adding to this list.

*We will keep laughing.

*We will sometimes use salty language—around adults. Of course we can’t stand when people use dirty language around their children. But, on the other hand, isn’t there something  unsettling about mothers who talk baby talk and, even worse, can’t keep it out of adult conversation?

*We will find places of sanity and sanctuary in our own backyard. The library, the nature preserve, the mall.

*We won’t forget who we are.

Tell us: what “rules” do you follow as a mother? Leave a comment! Add to the manifesto!

This is just the beginning.






A Simple Salad
March 16th, 2010 | Comments


At the end of a long day our favorite dinner is a piece of grilled  fish, chicken or steak along with a salad and  a glass of wine. The art of  a delicious meal is as much in selecting great ingredients as it is in the preparation. Fresh and local is our first choice. We buy organic when we can and the price is reasonable.

For us the salad is the best part of the dinner.  We love a simple salad composed of crisp, cold greens tossed with our favorite basic dressing. In the warm months we keep an herb garden and pluck copious amounts of fresh tarragon and chives and add it to our basic green.

We’ve experimented with many kinds of vinegars and our hands down favorite for acidity, sweetness and flavor is aged sherry vinegar. We recommend splurging on the best your pocketbook can afford. It makes a difference.

As for olive oils, make a day of it and do a tasting. So many yummy ones are on the market. Our one sage tip: look for bottles that that tell you when the oil was pressed, buy the ‘freshest’ first press you can. Once grilled we love to drizzle a little EVOO and lemon juice on the fish, chicken or meat and serve with a big helping of salad.

A Simple Salad

1 Head Bibb or Boston Lettuce washed and broken into small pieces


-3 tbslp extra virgin olive oil

-1  tbslp aged sherry vinegar

-1 tsp minced shallots

-1/2 tsp Dijon Mustard

-salt (to taste–we like lots!)

-pepper

Mix dressing ingredients until emulsified.






From Sea to Shining Sea
March 15th, 2010 | Comments


With the clocks skipping ahead and more daylight on the horizon our thoughts are turning to summer. We yearn for the return of warm weather, running out the door without a jacket and the smell of freshly cut grass. Flip-flops, cotton candy, Fourth of July parades and  fireworks.

We also can’t wait to get in the car and go on a road trip.

This summer we’re going on a waterfall hunt and we’ve planned our journey with the help of the National Park Service.  Wallace Stegner called the National Park Service “”the best idea we ever had. Absolutely American, absolutely democratic, they reflect us at our best rather than our worst.”

Check out their website and you’ll be amazed by the scope of their stewardship and the resources available to you — all for free.

After all, we are B’s on a Budget.






B’s Give Back: It Adds Up
March 13th, 2010 | 2 Comments

A modern B knows what she needs and knows how to get it. She also knows that other people need things, too–that we’ve got to look out for one another. Every weekend we bring you examples of women who find creative, meaningful ways to give to others, even when money and time are tight. To tell us how you help, click “Comments” above– you might be featured here next week.

Since it’s tax season, today we’re featuring one generous accountant, a woman with compassion for those on society’s margins—a woman who looks past the bottom line.

Tracey A Hennessey writes:

Accountants tend to be pricey. I try my hardest to keep my prices to a minimum. In addition to tax preparation, I also do a plethora of other things, including immigration assistance.

During tax season, I have three low-income senior housing residences that I visit, and I do the tax returns for any of the residents there for free.  I also prepare taxes for anyone in residence at our local homeless shelter, regardless of the time of year.

With regards to immigration, there is a petition that can be processed for the battered spouse of a US Citizen, called a VAWA petition.  (Violence Against Women Act)  Having been a battered spouse, I know

Tracey & daughter. "She's a B that can field-strip a firearm," says proud mom.

the heartache, the frustration and the living in fear that these women go thru. I can’t imagine adding fear of deportation and losing your children on top of that.  In these cases, I process their applications for about 25% of the normal rate, so that they will be able to stand up in court and fight for their rights – without fear of ICE showing up.

Alas, we can’t all be Tracy. (We have a hard time telling a W-2 from R2D2, and when we hear “withholding” we think of our men in sour moods.) But we can take Tracey’s lead and look out for each other. So tell us: What do you give? How do you use your particular skills to help those who need a boost?






Contest #7: Eat Dessert First
March 12th, 2010 | 30 Comments

Remember that classic kids’ book by Judith Viorst, Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day? About a little boy who wakes up on the wrong side of the bed, whose day goes wrong, and then wrong-er ? We love this book—we’re totally charmed by Alexander’s pitiful pout and soulful eyes, and we find its candid message really refreshing. After all, some days just suck.

As children, we cried and pouted and stomped our feet. Now that we’re grown ups, we have a better way to deal with rough days. That’s right, B’s—dessert. Some days simply require decadence.

Which brings us to Contest #7: The Best Dessert for Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Etc. Days.

What do you whip up when you’ve got the blues?

No, we are NOT recommending using food to correct all bad moods, or eating your way into depression, or loading on the pounds because, hey, life sucks. We’re simply saying that in every life there are occasional sucky days, and a slice of pie is often what the doctor orders.

The B with the best recipe gets our adoration forever. (Plus a copy of our book, on the off chance our everlasting adoration isn’t enough.)

*Winner to be announced March 21






Frozen Pleasure: A Frosty Splurge
March 11th, 2010 | 2 Comments

Maybe it’s because spring is in the air, but we’ve been jonesing for popsicles. A friend acquainted us with this baby, and now we’re in ice novelty heaven.

ZOKU. According to Williams Sonoma, “Now you can create your own customized frozen pops, including cream-filled varieties, in as little as seven minutes.” Cost: $50.

We know what you’re thinking: 50 bucks? And you call yourself budgeting bitches? Just hear us out.

A box of those rocking Edy’s Fruit bars are between $4-5. The Whole Foods variety—all organic—go even higher. Say you invest in a box once a week for the summer, and you’re spending $75 minimum.

This contraption lets you make popsicles INSTANTLY (well, in a few minutes anyway). It’s got some space-age mojo happening, so that anything you pour in freezes solid by the time you can say “thank you, bitches, for yet another amazing recommendation.”

Clamoring, sweaty, whiny kids? Stick a fresh apple juice pop in their beaks. No extra sugar, corn syrup, preservatives. No need to run into the store. Soothes tempers instantly. Got pretentious and/or health-nutty friends coming over? Green-tea-and-raw-honey on a stick, anyone? Use yogurt, juice, tea, milk, cream, anything (so long as it’s not carbonated). Our friend just runs chucks of watermelon through a food processor and pours it in. Bingo.

Yes, you can absolutely use those plastic popsicle makers from the dark ages (and should use them if they’re your only option—you’ll save $$!), but they require planning and forethought and patience. Sadly, we don’t have a lot of those things to spare at present.

We’re all in favor of giving gifts that are things that aren’t ‘necessities’. If you’re a grandma wanting to delight your four-year-old grandson or college student gearing up for a hot spring on the quad, the Zoku will win you lots of admirers. Definitely a splurge, but a delicious and healthy one.

We’ve got to say it: aren’t we being so well-behaved? Aren’t you impressed by how wholesome we are? How clean our mind is? If you’ve read our book, you know too well how much we like our dirty puns. And yet we’ve made it though a whole post about popsicles (of all things!) without once making a single suggestive mention of other activities that require lots of licking and—

Never mind.