Showing posts with label bat mitzvah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bat mitzvah. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Party Laboratory


What would you make with these ingredients?
                                                      -       Plastic test tubes
                                                      -       Mini-M&Ms and/or Skittles
                                                      -       Mailing labels
                                                      -       ribbon












Here’s what we made – party favors!


With a bat mitzvah party theme of microbiology in her mind, Youngest Daughter’s idea of party favors was that she would make booklets with microbiology facts.  Um, no – I had to make a booklet for the worship service, and did not want to become a printing business.  No more booklets.  Plus, who wants to go to a party and be handed a textbook? (Well, who besides my daughter?) So I began searching the web for ‘science party favors.’

After wording my search twenty different ways, I managed to find these chintzy microscope centerpieces.  Score!  

YD was thrilled with them; my husband was appalled. The only possible cell-related party favors I found were plush brain cells and microbes, at $5 apiece.  Too expensive.

But in the process of searching, I also found plastic test tubes for sale to the general public, at a reasonable price.  Brain cells sparking, I thought, ‘test tube filled with little candies’ equals science party favor.  Not precisely microbial or cellular, but in my view that was for the best.  
It was key to get test tubes made of plastic, not glass.
Do not give teenagers glass objects at a party.


Here is our recipe (see below) for these science party favors.  It’s a long description, but it was pretty darn easy.  Tying the ribbon was the most time-consuming part. 

Serving suggestions:
Order straight-sided plastic beakers and place 8 tubes in each beaker; one beaker per table. 
- or -
Order test-tube racks, but beware it is difficult to find racks that hold 8 tubes, and 8 people at a table is the standard for those round party tables.
- or -
Place test tubes in a bowl for people to take home at the end of the party.  This is what I wanted to do, but I was overruled.
- or -
Place on test tube at each person’s table setting, above the plate.  This was what my husband wanted.  By the end of the evening, there were empty plastic test tubes scattered everywhere, at least on the kids’ side of the party room.



Recipe for Test Tube Party Favors
(makes 80 favors)

Ingredients
80 test tubes with caps; size 16 x 150 mm  (order online, in packs of 10)
2 pounds of Skittles candy
2 pounds of mini-M&M candy (note: regular M&Ms were too big)
White mailing labels (optional, but fun). 1” x 2 5/8” (Avery #8160)
67 feet of ribbon of any color you choose (optional, but pretty)

Caveats:
I am not entirely sure about the amount of candy needed.  We had some left over, after filling 80 test tubes.

To print the (optional) labels you also need a computer and printer, but that’s kind of like a recipe saying that you need an oven.  We used two kinds of candy because some of our guests had gluten or nut allergies, and M&Ms are not certified to be free of those.

Instructions
Wash hands.  Fill large bowl with all the Skittles.  Dip a test tube into the Skittles, pushing the candy into the tube.  Do not worry about making a color pattern with the candy, or you will be doing this task all night.  Once test tube is full, place cap firmly on tube.  Repeat for 40 test tubes.  Place in plastic bag labeled “Skittles.”  Set aside.

Notice that one of the test tubes has 4 of the same color in a row.  Wonder what the probability of that occurring again is.  Stop wondering because you don’t have time.

Wash hands again and get a new bowl.  Fill it with the mini-M&Ms.  Fill the remaining 40 test tubes, using the same technique as you did for the Skittles.  Place in plastic bag labeled “M&Ms”. Set aside.

Go to your computer and set up a document for printing the labels.  We found that Microsoft Word has a template for Avery labels, and that worked mostly fine.  Here’s what we put on our test tubes, to make them look all officially scientificky:

Laboratory of Youngest Daughter
Experiment Title: Mazel Tov!
Test date: 2012-08-25
Contents: Skittles
Purity: gluten-free

For the M&Ms the last two lines said:
Contents: mini-M&Ms
Purity: may contain gluten and/or nuts

Print the labels first on a plain sheet of paper to check that the print will line up with the labels.  Make adjustments if necessary.  Print 40 labels for Skittles, and 40 for mini-M&Ms. 

Get out your test tubes.  Start with the Skittles first. Peel off label, and line up carefully along test tube, then attach to test tube, rolling to make label adhere smoothly.  Use the same process for the mini-M&Ms.

Finally, cut ribbon into 10-inch segments.  Tie around test tube, making a bow.  Curse that your fingers are too fat to really tie a bow that small.  Decide that next time you would skip the bow, but admit that they make these look quite festive.

Cost
80 test tubes with caps ($2.15/pack of 10)                        17.00
Candy                                                                                 50.00? approx.
White mailing labels                                                            13.00
Ribbon                                                                                  8.00
Total                                                                                   83.00 or about $1.00 each favor
Large bowl filled with many mini M&Ms

Test tube with Skittles and ribbon, before the label.

With the Skittles label.


This is what the M&M tubes look like without the labels.


The finished product.





Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Last week


In retrospect, the week before the bat mitzvah was busy, but not frantically so. I had time to read a few blogs.  There are three writers who reported events that were mirrored here in the Common Household.

Green Girl in Wisconsin told of how her husband made a miraculous banana discovery.  Here at our house, the Common Household husband was equally observant.  Last Tuesday, I spent hours shopping for a dress for the party, and in the end couldn’t decide, so brought three dresses home to consult the family on this earth-shattering decision.  I took the dresses up to the bedroom, pulled the blanket up over the sheet, so that I could spread the dresses out on the bed, like this:
Yes, two of the dresses are the same, but different sizes.
That's how indecisive I was.

When my husband came home, I said, “There’s something on the bed upstairs that I want you to look at.”  He went up, came in the bedroom, with me following, and said, “Oh!  Did we get a new blanket?  That’s a great blanket!”    I guess he spent all day making scientific observations, so he had used up all his observatory powers. 

Over at Beads: Rolling Downhill, Cassi Renee has entered the world of beading, creating some really beautiful beads, earrings, and bracelets.  While I myself wasn’t being that creative (except for writing my speech), Oldest Daughter was – she made these centerpieces for our lunch at the synagogue.



These cost under $10 each to make.


Minnesota Matron wrote about taking the path of least resistance at her son’s birthday party.  I, too, took the path of least resistance regarding entertainment at my house, and allowed TWO simultaneous games of Settlers of Catan to be played in my living room.  At least I did not have to play.



These folks, my two nephews, took the path of very least resistance of all.



And then the next day we went and did Jewish stuff in the morning and partied all evening.

Monday, August 27, 2012

For enabling us to reach this day



Barukh atah Adonai, Eloheinu, melekh ha-olam
Blessed are you, Lord, our God, ruler of the universe,

shehecheyanu v'kiyimanu v'higi'anu laz'man hazeh.
who has kept us alive, sustained us, and enabled us to reach this occasion.

After Saturday’s worship service, in which my youngest daughter celebrated becoming a bat mitzvah, I really felt the Shehecheyanu prayer in my bones.

This is the Jewish prayer recited on special occasions.  As I stood on the bima looking out at our friends and family, all there to celebrate my last child’s bat mitzvah, it seemed that really could only be a miracle that we had reached that moment.

To be sure, my daughter worked very hard with her teachers to learn the required Hebrew, the prayers, the chanting system (trope), the Torah portion, the Haftarah.  But making it happen also required the enormous good will and generosity of many, many people over many years.  There could have been any number of obstacles to prevent it from happening.  We are privileged and blessed to live in a place and time where we could provide her with the people and the time and the things she needed to accomplish it.

Here are just a few of the things that help with bat mitzvah preparation:


Torah portion book and prayer book


Time to grow



A reminder, such as this Bread of Affliction, of how difficult some things are,
and that torah study is really not one of them, so get on with it.


Heavenly light



A study partner, especially one who teaches you
 to memorize your portion by making a dance out of it,
and teaches this to you outside on a nice day.


A little bit of luck


Music to keep you sane


This is for the parents' sanity.


Gefilte fish?  No, forget it.  Gefilte fish does NOT
help with torah study.  It is useful, though,
for squeezing the tofu.


And plenty of love from all around.


Monday, August 20, 2012

How I Spend 100% of My Time: Aug 2012



I hope I don't lose my job.  But if I did, I would have more time to think about washing the sheets.

And actually, I didn't make the table centerpieces - Oldest Daughter did.  But my husband and I did go to the craft store several times for supplies.  So maybe that counts.