Monthly Archives: November 2012

What’s the most embarrassing thing on your iPod?

I’ll be putting up a real post later, when I’m back from the doctor’s office this afternoon, but in the meantime, I’m curious. What’s the most embarrassing song or album on your iPod?

I ask because I just accidentally hit the spacebar on my MacBook, FILLING the coffee house I’m sitting in with the dulcet sounds of Fernando by ABBA. Don’t get me wrong- Fernando is absolutely the best song about the Mexican revolution written by a 1970s Swedish pop band. I will stand by that.

But it was still a little mortifying.

I will also cop to having an entire Barry Manilow playlist, and a whole lot of 90s music.

How about you? True confession time.

Feeling christmassy already

Early Thanksgiving means that it feels like the Christmas season has descended far earlier than usual, and I keep forgetting that we have a whole week before it’s even December.

Today was the Christmas parade in Quincy, and so it feels properly like Christmas to me now that I’ve seen Santa ride by on his firetruck.   Instead of hanging out on the steps of our church and watching the parade with church folks, this year we spent it with the family of one of H’s classmates.  That was an amazingly huge crowd of folks.  I was completely overwhelmed, but she had a blast hanging out with the cousins.

As I was driving home the other night, I was admiring the lights that some of our neighbors already had up.  I never used to like lights;  my parents were anti-lights when I was a kid, and as with so many other things, I decided I didn’t like them either mostly as a defense mechanism for being bummed that we didn’t put them up.  When I got older, I went through a phase where I thought white lights could be lovely, if they were done “right”, but colored lights were tacky.  Now, I love them all – delicate white lights twinkling like stars, icicle strings hanging from eaves, bright multi-colored lights in their riot of blues and greens and reds.   While the whit lights are beautiful, the colored lights seem like the embodiment of joy in the season, and I love them for that.

We haven’t put up our lights yet, I think that will be a project for next weekend, and I can’t wait to see our house joining our neighborhood in dressing up for the holiday.

How do you decorate for the holidays?

Annual pot pie marathon

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For the pot pie marathon this year I made 3 double batches of pie crust and cooked my filling in two large stockpots with a gallon of liquid each. It’s quite an endeavor but I’ll have a winter of Thursdays off.

Pie Crust- (single batch)
6 ounces all-purpose flour
4 ounces unsalted Eurpoean style butter
1 teaspoon sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
3-4 tablespoons ice water

Combine flour, sugar, salt and cold butter cut into chunks in a bowl. Work the butter into the flour by dragging your thumb in a sideways motion across your fingers forming flat flakes of butter and flour. When it is all worked in, sprinkle the water over the mixture and work it in one tablespoon at a time until the mixture forms a ball. Chill 2-4 hours and roll out.

Pot Pie filling

1 cup unsalted butter, per pot

2 cups canola oil, per pot

2 large leeks, cleaned and chopped

5 carrots, chopped

6 ribs celery, chopped

8 ounces mushrooms, chopped

1 quart Brussels sprouts, cleaned and quartered

4 cups all-purpose flour, per pot

7 pounds cooked turkey, diced

1 bunch parsley, chopped

1 bunch thyme leaves, removed from stems

1 gallon milk,

4 quarts chicken stock

salt and pepper to taste

2 tablespoons herbs de Provence in each pot

Divide all ingredients between two large stock pots.

Melt together butter and canola oil. Stir in flour and cook 3-5 minutes over medium heat. Add vegetables and herbs and cook over medium heat until soft. Add liquid gradually and stir vigorously to prevent lumps . (it helps if you can preheat the milk or broth to a simmer) Cook over medium heat until thickened and bubbly.Taste and adjust seasonings. If it’s cold outside you can cool the mixture right in the pots, if not then dispense into your pie tins and refrigerate until chilled. Cover with pie dough, wrap in foil and freeze.

When you are ready to use the pies, bake at 350 F for an hour or until bubbly.

This year, I got 42 pies and to give you some idea of a more accurate volume of vegetables, a 6 liter container was crammed full to the brim with about 1/2 cup more leeks on the side.

I highly recommend chopping all the veg and meat on one day, and prepping your pie dough the day before you are ready to assemble. For containers I used 12 large ramekins, 12 pot pie tins, and the rest were those small loaf tins. I only use a top crust as these are a marathon as it is.

Last year’s pies were too thin (1 cup flour in each pot) and I predict this years pies will be too thick (4 cups flour per pot) so I suspect I’ll be tweaking further next year. By then we should have votes in on whether we prefer the milk base or the broth base. It’s always an adventure!

Super Fast Fiber Fun Time

I am running late for my spinning group, but I wanted to check in with a bit of fiber and fun.

First, the obligatory photo of the current sock in progress.

Then I show off all the new handspun I just added to the Tiny Dino Studios etsy store

And then I sneak in the part where I kind of officially announce that I am getting married in August.

See, fun, right?

Mirrored Stairway …

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Little furry velociraptors

Too heads-down busy with my deadline knitting to write much tonight, but I have to share this cat story before I forget.

This evening, I was sitting on my couch knitting.  I went and got a snack from the kitchen, just some cheese and crackers, and settled back into my spot.  As soon as I sat down, Mango materialized in front of me, staring intently at the cheese, clearly begging for some.  She edged closer and closer to the plate and I was watching her, because she is entirely untrustworthy when it comes to people food.

Just as she got within striking distance, I heard a rustling behind my head and turned to find Martini sitting right next to my head on the arm of the couch, equally intent on plate.  Realizing I was distracted, Mango lunged for the plate and very nearly succeeded in making off with my snack.  I yelled, which made them both skitter off to glare at me from under the table.  How dare I deny them delicious goat cheese?  Can’t I see that they are STARVING?

All I could think about was the scene in Jurassic Park where Sam Neill’s character describes how the velociraptors hunted in packs, and how I can’t believe I was nearly just outsmarted by a pair of cats.

 

 

Jacob’s ladder progress

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These are not fast squares to sew but they are a lot of fun! There’s a lot of cutting and trimming involved so they start off really slow and then finish up fast. I also had a chance to make some soy candles for Daniel. I added half an ounce of scent per pound of wax and learned to let the wax melt thoroughly before pouring. I used paper plates with holes in the middle to keep my wicks centered as the candles cooled. They turned out pretty nicely!

Shop Local Saturday!







Nearly a pajama day

After yesterday’s travels, all I wanted to do today was hunker don at home, chill out and work on my deadline knitting project.  I did end up going out this evening, but just for a quiet get together with a friend and her daughter.

Unsurprising to anyone who knows me, I wanted absolutely nothing to do with the Black Friday nonsense out there in the world.  I could sit here and tell you who this is some principled moral stand protesting our consumerism society, but if it is, it’s the easiest stand I’ll ever make.  Somehow, the concept of a boycott seems to imply a sacrifice, that you are refusing to do something that you would normally participate in and enjoy – and there is nothing about overcrowded malls or waiting out in the cold to buy a discounted TV that sounds like anything I would ever enjoy.  So, while I do object on principle to stores opening at 4 AM or midnight or even on Thanksgiving itself (Buzzfeed had the best explanation of why you should skip Black Friday I’ve seen on their site today), I’d not be out there even if I thought it was the best idea ever.

But, I’ve seen a lot of things in the past few weeks that have made me re-think how I’ll be doing my Christmas shopping this year.  The past few years, I’ve gotten lazy and done most of my shopping on Amazon; they make it so easy, it’s hard to resist.  This year, I want to spend more of my dollars in and around my own community, but not at the mall (god, I hate the mall, even when it’s deserted).  I’m going to start tomorrow at my LYS and favorite bookstore, and plan to do the rest of my shopping that way too.   It’ll be less convenient than having everything magically appear at my office door with the UPS man, but hopefully worth it, keeping the businesses I love going strong.  Now, if only my actual town where I live could get some businesses I want to support.

Black Friday Crafternoon

"Holiday creep" seems to be a popular thing to complain about these days, and with good reason. I do have to admit that I'm not particularly bothered by stores rushing the seasons -- while I may not act on anything...