Chicken Pesto Pizza–this is ridiculously good. And easy!!

I always laugh when I post recipes on here.  I am not particularly good at cooking.  And I find little or no joy in cooking.  So it’s a little ironic I post recipes.  And I in no way intend for this to be a recipe/food blog.  But it is a huge priority for our family to eat dinner together every night.  So I cook at least something almost every evening.  We don’t eat out much.

It is because of this dislike for cooking that when I find a GREAT and EASY recipe (and moderately healthy), I feel compelled to share it.  For the rest of you out there who love food like me, but don’t necessarily love spending hours in the kitchen only to listen to my kids comment on how disgusting the food is I just cooked.  Maybe that’s just my kids.

I’d rather hire someone to come cook dinner for us than hire someone to clean my house.

Anyway, this is a recipe I adapted from one I originally saw on Becky Higgins (the creator of Project Life) instagram feed.

This is SO fast and easy.  And was seriously REALLY good.  We ate it two nights in a row we liked it so much.

I bought all of the ingredients for this at Costco.

CHICKEN PESTO PIZZA

1 package of Stonefire mini NAAN flatbread (from Costco)
       {The Flatbread is in the refrigerated section by the specialty cheese- close to where the Pesto will        be as well}
Fresh spinach
Mozzarella cheese (get Fresh mozz and grade it yourself–it melts better than already shredded cheese)
    mushrooms
grilled chicken (I just grilled some chicken with a little garlic salt and montreal chicken seasoning on                              my indoor pan that is like a grill.  Or you can grill it on a bbq.  Or cook it however you want)
Basil Pesto sauce (also from Costco)

Put the flatbread on a pizza stone if you have one, or a cookie sheet should work fine too.  Spread some Basil Pesto sauce on top.  Layer with fresh spinach.  Slice up the grilled chicken and put that on top of the spinach.  Then add fresh mushrooms (if you like them).  You could also add olives.  Sprinkle mozzarella cheese on top.

Bake at 450 degrees for 8-10 minutes or until cheese is melted.

We have a few kids who are not adventurous eaters (yet) so I made a pepperoni pizza for them.  Mozzarella cheese with a few pepperoni.  No sauce.  It didn’t even need the sauce.

The NAAN is kind of like a pita, but it has a different flavor.  It’s a little salty (which I LOVED) so I would definitely try it with this specific bread instead of substituting for something else.

All you moms who don’t love cooking (or do love cooking), let me know if you try this and what you think!

GIVING AWAY $25 to MPIX

I’ve been asking, asking, asking.

So it’s time for me to GIVE something.

$25 FOR YOU!!!!

I’m giving away a $25 gift certificate to Mpix.  It’s an online professional printing company.  They do prints as well as tons of cool products to display your photographs.  It’s one of my favorite places to get prints and specialty products online.

You can check them out at www.mpix.com

To enter to win the $25, head over to my instagram account for details.  @tellmystoryclass

It’s easy to enter and FUN!!  You’ve probably never had a giveaway entry like this one!

Real Life Stories–Women of Inspiration. My friend. She has cancer.

I’m starting a series on my blog.  “Real Life Stories–Women of Inspiration”.   I’m inspired by strong women who show up every day and share their stories with the world.  I’ll be interviewing women from all different life situations that I want to learn more about who inspire me to show up and live a better life story.  And then I’ll share their stories with all of you (and my kids).
The first person I wanted to feature is my friend.
You know those e-mails you never want to get?  Those ones that tell you one of your childhood friends has cancer.  Yea, I got one of those.  And though it was obviously devastating news, it’s turning out to be a defining period of my life.
Lisa, who I also affectionately call Nickell (her maiden name), and I met when I was 12.  We played competition soccer together.  So we’re not just friends, we’re teammates.  We played soccer together for nearly 10 years.
She’s had more than her fair share of health problems.  And then got hit with Stage 4 non-hodgkins lymphoma.  A game changer to say the least.
No one wants to hear the word cancer associated with themselves or someone they love.  But along with the hell associated with cancer, there is also an element of hope.  A look into the human spirit at its finest, bravest moments.
She decided to shave her head before chemo started taking her hair.  She wanted to be in control of whatever she could.  So I asked her if I could photograph the “hair funeral”.  Watching her shave her head was one of the bravest things I have ever witnessed.  Those pictures are still too painful and intimate for her to share, but here are a few after she was done.
Here is the interview I did with her.  And stick around until the end cause we’re doing something really cool for her (that can also be used as a template for other people to use for those they love with cancer) and I NEED your help!!!
Real Life Stories
1.  Give me a quick peek at your story:  I was born and raised in Utah.  I played soccer since before I can remember.  I played in high school for Alta.  I’ma  lover of all sports and outdoor activities.  What I lack in size, I made up for in my determination.  I’m very competitive.  I went to nursing school and met my amazing husband at the University of Utah.  I’ve been married for 11 years.  On September 5th our life changed when I was diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer.  I’ve been battling for my life ever since.

 

2.  Tell me an “every day moment” you are grateful for:  Right now, I am grateful for waking up alive each day.  Getting to tell my family that I love them, and giving my niece a hug.
3.  What is one ambition you have right now:  I want to start a health clinic on wheels for the homeless.  Similar to the 4th Street Clinic, but mobile.
4.  If you could speak on anything to a large group of women, what would you talk about?  That one single person can make a difference.  You, alone, can make a change in the world.  You don’t need thousands of dollars and thousands of people to help make a difference.  What you, alone choose to do each and every day can change someone’s world.

5.  What does the phrase “create a good life story” mean to you?  To me, it means living every single day to its fullest.  Live each day like it could be your last.

6.  Tell me something someone taught you that made an impact on your life  Right before my grandma died, she told me to never hesitate to tell someone that you love and appreciate them.  Don’t assume that they already know.  It’s okay if you told them yesterday…say it again.  If you’re feeling it in the moment, say it.
7.  Name one event in your life that has made the greatest impact on the course of your life story  Becoming a wish granter for the Make-A-Wish Foundation.  Also, going to Haiti.
8.  What is something you want to accomplish you haven’t yet?  I want to have children
9.  What photographs are you most grateful for from your childhood or teen years?  I’m most grateful for photos of my family and close friends.  I’m relying a lot upon those people right now, and it’s comforting to look back at older photos and see that it’s the same group of people that have continually supported me through whatever life throws my way.
10.  What are you most proud of?  Never quitting.  Never giving up.
11.  Tell me something you are sure of:  I’m sure there is a level of happiness that comes from serving someone else that can’t be reached any other way.
12.  What is your favorite quote or your life motto?  I have two:  “Life’s most persistent and urgent questions is, ‘What are you doing for others?'”  Martin Luther King Jr., and “You must be the change you wish to see in the world”  Gandhi

 

13.  What is your favorite part about yourself (not a physical trait)?  I really care for those less fortunate than me, and try to do whatever I can to help them.
14.  What type of photographs do you wish you had more of?  I wish I had more photographs from my honeymoon and dating my husband.
15.  What is something you do to help drive away fear or anxiety?  I used to exercise to drive away fear and anxiety.  Now, I hand out hamburgers to the homeless.
And for fun:
Favorite Book:  Oh, the Places You’ll Go!  by Dr. Seuss
 
Favorite Family tradition:  Dutch Oven Cook off at the cabin
 
Something you enjoy doing with your spouse:  playing tennis
 
Talent you wish you had:  I wish I could play a musical instrument
 
Favorite meal:  It changes weekly.  Right now I would say it’s cantaloupe.  Yep, just cantaloupe
 
If you never had to do one specific things again, what would it be:  Go through a round of chemo.  Or, on a lighter note, fill the car with gas
 
Favorite show on TV:  Vampire Diaries
 
Something that scares you:  Dying without having told my family I love them first
 
Favorite thing about your husband:  Brian can always make me laugh.  It doesn’t matter what trial we’re facing he helps me face it with humor.  And he is just so kind.  Brian is the kindest man I know.
 
Type of candy you can’t life without:  ALL CANDY.  Anything you would find in the candy isle.  I need it all
 
What’s something you think about often:  I think a lot about hunger in the world.  People going hungry.

 

If you don’t know Lisa, you’re missing out.  For those of us who get to call her a friend, well, we’re pretty lucky.  She’s definitely one-of-a-kind.  She’s nearly killed me (literally) on several different adventures we’ve been on together.  Once in a very sketchy mini-van ride, another where I nearly drowned.  I blame her for my fear of water.

Here’s where I need your help.  For any of you who know and/or love someone with cancer, you know how brutal it is.  Not just physically, but emotionally and mentally.  The days are long.  The weeks even longer.  Because her cancer is so severe, she has to be admitted to the hospital each time she receives chemo.  She stays there for at least 6 or 7 days, often more, at a time.

It gets lonely.  And hard.  And scary.  And there are days where all she can do is draw on the strength of others.  Her walls in the hospital are lined with pictures of people who love her.  To remind her why she’s fighting.

Right now, she needs something more than ever to take her mind off what is still ahead.  She still has a long way to go–more chemo, then a bone marrow transplant.

Lisa is famous for her “peace sign” in pictures.  Always flashing that peace sign.

So.  We (she’s in on this) want to collect as MANY pictures of people flashing the peace sign as we can and put them in a huge collage (I’m talkin’ huge) for her to hang on the wall in the hospital and in her home.   Even if you don’t know her, we’d love for you to participate.  My guess is we ALL know someone affected by cancer (it’s so rampant) so we know how desperate people get for hope.  And when Lisa sees pictures of people doing the peace sign with HER in mind, it brings her hope.  And peace to her soul.

There is strength in numbers.  And strength in knowing people are thinking about you and people CARE.

We’ll be collecting pictures for ONE WEEK.  Deadline is next Thursday, March 27th.  Doesn’t need to be anything fancy.  Just a picture of you, your kids, co-workers, family, strangers, whatever doing the peace sign. Then e-mail it to me.  [email protected]  Please title the e-mail “PEACE PICTURE” so we don’t lose any.  That’s it.  (You can e-mail it directly from your camera phone.  If you don’t know how to do that, ask a kid.  They’ll know how:)  )

You can also send more than one picture with different groups of people.  We’ll take as many as we can get.

Once we have them, we’ll make a killer poster.  And post it so everyone can see.  And hopefully make it into a useable template for anyone else who wants to use it to do a similar project for someone they love with cancer.

Thanks in advance for your help.  My friend needs a boost.  A push to keep fighting.  She’s a fighter.  But no one can fight cancer alone.

Love you Nickell.

We now declare the following week “Peace Sign Picture” week.  I gave myself power to do that.

To read more “Real Life Stories–Women of Inspiration” interviews, CLICK HERE.

Picture Display Movement. Step 3. Organize

{For Step 2 in the Picture Display Movement, click here}

ORGANIZE YOUR PHOTOS:

For me, this step initially felt the most overwhelming.  But once I got started, it turned out to be no big deal and went really fast.

Digitalphotos2

I use iphoto for all my photo organizing.  BUT.  You don’t have to have iphoto to organize photos like this.  You can use the same “folder” system on any computer, Mac or PC.

The problem for me initially was the lack of organization within iPhoto and being able to effectively choose what I wanted to print and keep some sense of order in doing that.

 

All my pictures were in iPhoto, but that’s it.  If you don’t use iPhoto, your pictures are all sitting somewhere on your computer waiting to be organized (probably in a native “Pictures” folder).  I started using iPhoto in 2009 so I had 5 years worth of photos in there and was overwhelmed by the prospect of organizing them.

Until I came up with this system.

 

Keep in mind there are hundreds of different ways you can organize photos.  Which is what overwhelms me. So I had to pick something simple. That I know I would do and that I would maintain.

 

To organize the photos that were already in iPhoto, 5 years worth,  I created folders for each year as well as a “vacations” folder.  See the photo below, under “albums” where it has folders for each year and one for vacations.  If you aren’t using iPhoto, just create these folders right on your desktop or in your “Pictures” folder.

I then created an album for each month in that year as well as an album for Holidays in that year.  Then I moved those albums into the folder for that year.  If you aren’t using iPhoto, just create another folder for EACH month and put those months in the individual years folder (so each year will have 12 folders–one for each month).

Then I clicked on “Events” in my library so all the pictures in my iPhoto library would come up and went month by month and put the pictures in their corresponding folder.  The physical pictures don’t move so they are all still visible in the events part of your library.  But then when you click on one of the months folder, only that month shows (which can make it easier to find certain photos).  If you aren’t using iPhoto, you can sort the photos on your computer according to the “date created” and then drag and drop the pictures into the correct months.
To do this quickly in iPhoto, you can click on the box with pictures from the first of the month, then hold down the shift key and click on the box with pictures from the last of the month.  Then just drag and drop them into the appropriate album.  You can also drag and drop if you aren’t using iPhoto.  Just look at the date on each photo and drag them into the appropriate folder.
{See how the boxes for July are highlighted in yellow.  Then just drag those into the “July” album.}
After each month, I would look through that month for any holidays or vacations, highlight those pictures and drag those into the appropriate albums as well.  You can have the same picture in multiple albums without moving the original file.  It just makes a “copy” of those pictures which takes up very  minimal space on your hard drive.
This entire process of organizing 5 years worth of photos (I have about 30,000 photos in my iPhoto library) took me about one hour.  Quick.  Easy.  And simple.
And I feel So. Much.Better now that it’s done.
When I first tried organizing my photos I was doing it by events and dates and each individual kid and it was taking forever.  I chose the month-by-month system because I have a general idea when we did certain things so when I’m trying to find a photo, any photo, I just search in the month folder it would have taken place and there it is.
Now to maintain.  At the end of each month (on a SET date) I will move those files into their album for the month and put them in the folder for their year.  Should take about 2 minutes.
If you don’t have iPhoto, figure out a photo organizing system that works for your family.  Just keep it simple and schedule regular times to maintain it.  If you have the right system, it really doesn’t take very long.
You can still set up a Folder for each year, then folders for each month and drag the photos into those folders. This works on a PC or a MAC.
Step 3.  Organize those photos
Now don’t stop there!  Step 4 is to PRINT THOSE PICTURES!!!!
If you have questions, please feel free to contact me!  I’m happy to help where I can.
And.  I’d love if you joined the blog community!  Right now, you’ll get my TEN PHONE PHOTOGRAPHY TIPS that will immediately improve the photos you take with your phone.  It’s free!  And you’ll also get periodic blog news, tips and tricks, and exclusive blog members only info.  Just enter your name and e-mail below!  (You’ll get a separate e-mail asking you to confirm your e-mail.  Shortly after you’ll get your ten free tips!)

Always watching

He was laying on the couch watching the iPad like this.  He looked over at me and said “This is how dad sits.”  (with his legs crossed like that, not so much with his hands spread out on his face)

Most of the time it feels like my kids don’t listen to a word we say.  But they’re ALWAYS watching.  And they’ll more often do what we DO.  They watch.  And then they imitate.  Definitely makes me more aware of my actions even more than what I say.  What do they see me DO?  And is that what I want them to do?

Questions I ask myself all the time.

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