Sunday, December 30, 2007
Christmas Socks
Friday, December 28, 2007
Christmas Spoilers!
I knit this pair of busy Fraggle looking socks out of my skein of Mango Moon yarn edged with a little Lion Brand Fun Fur. I thought they would capture the attention of a 6 year old! These are for my older niece who recently had a birthday and will be given to her as a belated gift.
Here is a picture of her actual birthday gift in this AWESOME cowboy boots gift bag! She is going through a major cowboy/cowgirl/horse phase right now so I think she'll like the bag! I also found some awesome faux leather fabric and made a box bag for her with some western-y trim. I used 2 different shades of the leatherette and it's the exact same embossed design as the gift bag! And since it is for my cowgirl niece, I started calling it a "saddle bag"!
My baby niece was a bit trickier this year as far as gifts. I got her some baby dishes and a sippy cup because she is eating more solids, and I bought her two nice books, but she was kind of tricky as far as making things because she is growing so fast. This baby bonnet was knit from a pattern in Last Minute Knitted Gifts (I absolutely LOVE this book!) from some Lamb's Pride worsted in a Martha green and edged with an I-cord of some remaining hand dyed Lamb's Pride. I love this yarn because it is a mohair blend and it gets fuzzier the more you wear it! It is very soft too and will keep her nice and warm!I couldn't resist making her a pair of elf slippers! This is a pattern I found over at Allsorts and was just a snap to make! I enlarged the pattern though to fit a 5 1/2 inch little foot! I'm tempted to try enlarging it for MY foot! She is just starting to walk so I might need to take along some elastic to hand sew into them to help keep them on her feet!
We have started drawing names for our family gift exchange, but I usually make a little something for the women. These are some felt candle mats with tiny confetti buttons sewn on. Each mat has about 120 buttons sewn onto the top piece which is then blanket stitched onto a bottom piece to hide the button stitching. I was very pleased with they way they turned out. I was going to make a green one for myself but ran out of buttons so I'll have to think of another way to decorate mine. I thought about using the remainder of the buttons on my niece's elf shoes, but I hate to sew too much of anything onto them for fear she'll pull them off and put them in her MOUTH!
We also have the tradition of having Christmas crackers on the table every year for Christmas lunch. We've done this for several years now. I used to order them from Absolutely Crackers every year but it got to be a challenge to find a package large enough (we needed over 12) and frankly, the best part of the cracker is the PRIZE! ;) Then I found Olde English Crackers where you can order the snaps and hats individually and I've made them every year since. I ordered a gross of snaps and hats which will keep us in crackers for some time! I always have my eyes open for a nice foil wrapping paper for them, and not only do you have to save your toilet paper centers for MONTHS, but all year you have to watch out for prizes that will fit INSIDE the rolls!
And here are the finished crackers! I found some appropriate mottos and riddles and typed them up to put inside with the hat, snap and prize, cut out the wrapping paper to 15 x 6" and rolled them up using double sided tape. The secret to crimping them smoothly is to roll up an extra toilet paper roll on either side of the wrapper edge. Then pull the extra roll out to create 2" gap between the cracker roll and your extra roll. Then you gently twist the two while pushing them together. This will crimp off the paper over the edge of the actual cracker roll to keep the contents inside. Then remove the extra roll. This way your wrapper end of the cracker stays nicely shaped and smooth. Do this on either side. The paper was cut 15" wide but after crimped they were about 12" wide because so much is used to twist and crimp over the edges of the cracker roll.
I am so excited to go and spend 2 days with my family! I hope everyone had a good Christmas this year! And I got flexed tonight from work so I'd better take advantage of this extra time that was given me! Happy Late Christmas Everyone!
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
Merry Christmas!
Saturday, December 15, 2007
I'm tired of baking!
Here is the finished product and I was quite pleased with them. Of COURSE, the only suitable chocolate could ONLY be Cadbury's and I had a stash of Dairy Milk bars I had been saving for this express purpose. I thought they turned out quite well and I sent the batch home with my dad when he stopped in on his way through town on Wednesday. I baked these crackers and entered them in the local county fair when I was a young 4-Her! :) I got a "Super Blue" on them as I recall. And I also remember that my judge had actually BEEN to Skogfjorden and was excited about them after reading my little write-up that accompanied them. Ah the days of the 4-H fair...
I just made a triple batch of THESE fussy things at my parents house earlier in the week. They are safely tucked in their chest freezer in the garage. I kind of cheated on MY cookies because I didn't make any star shapes! They are my LEAST favorite to frost! And I'd always frost them blue, and really blue isn't a Christmas color. I am pleased with the assortment I arrived at though. Just think of all the carcinogens in those artificial colors! I will bake some EASY round cookies in January and frost them in different shades of Martha Blues for our Urban Family Winterfest. They will be "Winter Solstice" cookies! And then in February we have hearts. I like easy-to-frost shapes! We are having pot luck at work tonight and I will bring these and a gallon of spiced cider. It is heating/mulling on my stove as I type and smelling up the whole house! Num num!
Monday, December 10, 2007
Lefse Tutorial
Now the RICING! If you have carpal tunnel, you probably should recruit someone to do this FOR you! Or if you are a man and you plan on having kids, you probably shouldn't do this either because I swear I could feel veins standing out in my NECK as I did this! This is the fussiest part! But you rice them TWICE so they are SMOOO-T (smooth in Iowegian). The second ricing is my favorite because it is SO much easier! My hands hurt more than they do after a day of Temari stitching or spinning!
Next you add your flour. Lefse is a VERY Norwegian food and it is made differently all over the country depending on the region. One of the fun things Mom and I did was to go through ALL of her cookbooks. You know how EVERY church/community/Ladies' Circle has their own cookbook. Mom dug out at least a dozen and most of them belonged to my late Grandmother. Some recipes call for yeast, some call for whole wheat flour, some are crispy, etc. We had fun looking through all those old cookbooks. My mother truly has a goldmine on her kitchen counter. Almost an oral history of Norwegian cooking (but it can't be oral because it's printed!) But for the most part, I think most midwestern Norwegians are familiar with the generic lefse we make. My mother made a good point, "Lefse should taste like POTATOES, not like flour," and I concur. So the flour part is not always absolute. There has to be enough where you can roll it out, but not so much that flour is all you taste. The mixture should resemble a VERY STIFF mashed potatoes and just be the slightest bit sticky. I swear you use more flour rolling it out than you do in the actual mixture.
A 10 pound potato batch will make 60-72ish pieces of lefse, depending on how how big you want them to be. We made 12-14" pieces. They are rolled PAPER thin. Note all the flour all over the counter. I can't stress enough to be liberal with the flour as you roll them or you will have a MESS. Your pastry board and rolling pin sock should be impeccably clean too. Any little dough booger on your pin sock will tear holes in your
Here is my mother demonstrating her "Swish and Flick" technique! She is using the traditional lefse stick. This stick is also a Bethany brand stick and it has a lovely blunt end so you don't tear your lefse. Bethany grills and accessories can be purchased in the Decorah and Rochester Walmarts--or I suppose anywhere there is a large Scandinavian population (or online of course).
And FINALLY.....we had labored to produce.....a stack of lefse! We made 3-60ish pieces of lefse batches and piled them 20 to a stack (any more than that and they get too heavy and SQUISH and you'll never get them separated) and kept them covered in towels until they were cooled. Then we separated them and folded them up into quarters and packaged them 6 per bag. We had a really good response from the community and my dad was SO GOOD and DELIVERED them to people! I felt like I had been a good Norwegian girl! It was a lot of work and I was falling asleep in my chair at 2200 but I was glad I had done it! I had a lot of people ask if we'd do it again in the spring! We even got a MAIL ORDER! A woman in Williamsburg, IA called and wanted us to send her 4 dozen kringlas! We sent them Priority Mail and I talked to her on the phone and assured her that they'd get there OK because I had mailed kringlas to Iraq in AUGUST and they'd gotten there OK.
Merry Christmas everyone! I know it is still early, but I am just feeling so Christmassy! I love all the preparations! Christmas seems to be the time when all our family traditions come out. We should try to make family traditions all the year through. We can be thankful and remember the reason for the season all year. We must remember and thank Him all year. Christmas is a nice reminder though. So now you know everything you'd ever wanted to know about lefse, so go and BAKE SOME!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY ZAK!
I am the luckiest sister!
I have the best sister in the WHOLE world! :) Because I work as a nurse, and NIGHTS at that, it is a BIG DEAL when I get to celebrate a holiday ON THE DAY. And even then I don't usually get to be with family because I would have to travel to get to them and be awake during the day, etc. So needless to say, I was off on Thanksgiving, but I was here alone. That is Ok though. I don't need to eat a big meal and then take a nap to be Thankful, but I really missed my family that day. Oh well. Every year it seems Thanksgiving is just a chore as far as getting to celebrate with my family. But my sister had a weekend off and so did I and she came down here to stay with me! She hasn't slept here for YEARS so it was nice to have her here! We get miffed with each other and we argue like normal sisters do, but we TRULY are close. She knows me better than anyone on this earth. I was SO excited that she was coming for a visit, but she totally surprised me! She brought a box of stuffing mix, a box of scalloped potato mix, french fried onions, green beans, corn muffin mix and creamed corn for scalloped corn, and a turkey loaf! All so she could cook me a Thanksgiving Dinner! I was SO pleasantly surprised! And she used to live with me in this apartment while we went through nursing school so she knows where EVERYTHING is! We ate like kings and watched Christmas specials! I love my sister!
Thursday, November 22, 2007
They're comin' straight FOR us!!!
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
If you see a sign that says "Peep Show"...
Tuesday, October 02, 2007
WIP - Toni Jacket
Monday, September 24, 2007
Sweat Shop!
Well maybe not really. I did finish off three fallish/earth tone scrubs tonight though. I have had these cut out and draped over my couch for WEEKS now and I was frankly sick of looking at them. The green ones were finished 2 or so weeks ago but I just hadn't bothered to take a picture of them. My sewing machine had been naughty back in the spring so I never finished the shamrock one in time for St. Patrick's Day and the rest of these are random seasonal ones. The green floral one on the bottom of the pile is for my friend Brenda, but the rest are for me. I also have SEVEN more on deck/in the works including a couple for my friend Melissa. I made pretty good time on them tonight though. I do so enjoy wearing seasonal scrubs to work though because somehow they put me in a good mood :) Two of the scrubs that are in my fabric lineup are Halloween and/or Fall themed, so they will have number one priority on my next night off!
Friday, September 21, 2007
i like socks
Sunday, September 16, 2007
Brrrrrrrrrrrrr!
We've had a bit of fall weather here! Yippeeeeee! :) The last two nights have seen actual FROST! I am overjoyed of course because this is the time of year that I get to start wearing all the cold weather accessories I knit! I finished a Calorimetry headband a few months back but only last night finally wove the ends in and sewed on a button. This was knit from some of my own hand spun soy silk yarn that I bought as a roving off of eBay. I have a lot left over and eventually would like to knit a pair of gloves out of it. That will be a challenge as I've never yet knit GLOVES. This headband/scarf is ideal for me because I walk to work and wear my hair in a similar rat nest arrangement, so I hate to wear a hat for my commute. I usually wear a scarf as well, but it doesn't quite cover my ears. I am terrible during the summer because I DRIVE (with our heat I am disgusting and sweaty by the time I arrive) whereas in the winter I LOVE the walk. An added plus in winter? By the time everyone has their cars warmed UP, I am usually IN BED! :)
This week I also finished a second pair of socks for my friend in Iraq. These are no frills hunting socks knit from a worsted weight machine-washable 100% wool (Cascade 220). I must say they are quite cozy. I have mixed feelings about the Cascade 220 though. It IS an affordable 100% wool yarn, lots of colors available, machine washable, all those good things, etc. I don't know how it will pill down the line, but I just think it could be a bit softer. However, I DO know these will be worn with hunting boots so maybe the toughness will be a plus in the long run. In any case, it was nice to knit up a pair of these again.
Tuesday, September 04, 2007
Happy Labor Day!
This is the closest I have gotten to replicating them. They are puff pastry squares with a bacon/cream cheese/sour cream/Parmesan cheese filling. You are literally holding a small stroke in your hand when you eat them! They are SO scrummy though! Flaky and rich! Num num! I'm getting a warm fuzzy feeling just thinking about them!
And if this doesn't make you want to try your hand at home made puff pastry, I don't know what will!
Thursday, August 30, 2007
Museum Rat
This one is called "The Watcher" by Marvin C0ne. He was an Iowa painter who studied with Grant Wood. I just love how the perspective is off and makes the painting look a little creepy. And the room pictured is painted in one of my favorite shades of blue.
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Toni Jacket Revisited
Gold Rush Days!
These are 2 FABULOUS Pyrex bowls I also picked up! I absolutely LOVE them! The smaller lidded one was $9.50 and the larger one without a lid was $8.50. I also snapped up a very Martha-esque painted wooden handled slotted spoon for $12.50. My mother has a similar spatula at home and I can't believe how STURDY they are even after all these years. These are shown on my newly acquired French dreaming fabric from SupperBuzzy! Now what to do with THAT?!
I also picked up a new collection of fairy tales called "The Tenggren Tell-It-Again Book" illustrated by Gustaf Tenggren. I absolutely love fairy tales and nursery rhymes and the illustrations seemed familiar, particularly Hansel and Gretel. I wonder if we didn't have one of his books growing up. These were my two favorite pictures from the book. Can you guess why?
And finally what I could not afford: these glorious heddles! I should have taken a business card from these dealers because I've seen them every year that I've been to Nordicfest too. They specialize in Scandinavian pieces. You'd think they'd just held up a museum when in fact they actually sell items to museums. I don't know WHERE they find these pieces, but they are simply devine. None of these heddles were under $500. My other favorites of theirs were some woven pieces, bunad jewelery, boat shuttles, and bridal crowns. Absolutely beautiful!
Thursday, August 16, 2007
Just in case...
My friend DeeDee and her mother are big into the local farmers' markets and travel all over selling their produce. They have both been very encouraging when it comes to promoting things I make. I am never organized enough to have any sort of project inventory ready when local craft fairs and the like are in full swing, but I had the idea to whip up a few Avoskas to sell in their stall. An Avoska is a Russian string bag so named because a Soviet comedian once called it such in his routine and the name stuck. Avoska literally means "just in case" in Russian and they're commonly carried in case an opportunity to buy consumer goods arises and you have something to carry it home in. These were knit on US size 15 circular needles with a worsted weight 100% cotton (think dishcloths) yarn in a simple eyelet pattern. They stretch out nicely and will hold a lot. I remember we had a navy blue one growing up and we'd carry our towels and swimming suits to the babysitter's house in it. So far there has been interest in them but no takers. The yarn costs $3 for each bag and they take 2-3 hours to knit. I'm asking $15 for each one which still doesn't make it worth the time and materials, but we'll see. If they don't sell, my girlfriends and sisters and mother will get a new Avoska!