Monday, April 25, 2011
Mukluks!
Happy Late Easter!
We had a lovely Easter holiday weekend together with our entire family minus Luke who had to stay in Rochester to work. My home town is a very small town but is very good about sponsoring city-wide activities for the both the youth of the town and the offspring of former citizens home for the holidays. Local businesses get involved and often times the proceeds go towards the upkeep of the town pool. Not many towns of this size can boast a local grocery store let alone a municipal pool. The city hall was also open for the annual Boy Scout Pancake Feed and the library and meeting rooms were also open for raffles. It was very good to be home and to able to show Dave a little of where I grew up.
Mom and Dad returned last week from a trip to the Czech Republic where they enjoyed the Easter markets. I was so jealous! She brought home over a dozen painted real chicken and goose eggs. These are not Ukrainian style eggs in that they are not dyed with wax in a reverse dye technique and are actually painted. She gave me three eggs for my collection of egg cups and I brought out my most Slavic cups for this picture. I got the cup on the far left in the Czech Republic years ago, the one in the middle last year in Russia and I think it is actually meant to be a khokhloma vodka shot glass. The one on the far right was picked up in Bratislava during my short time in Slovakia.
As far as our own Easter eggs, this was the extent of our homemade eggs. I dyed these eggs raw in the shell at my apartment and brought them home for baking. I am a great fan of Father Dominic Garramone and his bread baking shows and years ago wrote down his sweet bread recipe and idea for egg nests. You take basic sweet bread dough (anything used for cinnamon rolls would be fine) and divide a bun/roll's worth of dough into three pieces. Roll and flatten one piece into a base and then roll the other 2 pieces into 10 inch ropes and twist together. Lay this braid around the edges of the base into a nest shape. Let rise for 30 minutes and place a raw in the shell egg in the center of each nest. You can use plain white eggs but dyed eggs on Easter are much more festive! :) Bake at 350 for 15-20 minutes or until the bread is golden brown. Place egg cups on the table and serve hot from the oven and you have a lovely warm sweet roll that is delicious with butter and jam and a perfectly cooked medium egg. We're snobs in our family but you might need to instruct people how to eat a cooked egg in the shell: lay the egg lengthwise on your plate and use a table knife to quickly chop off the top 1/3 of the egg guillotine-style. Salt both ends to taste and then use a small teaspoon (ideally an egg spoon) to scoop the flesh out of the top and then the remainder of the egg, salting as needed. Ever since my parents went to Norway where they saw real-live Europeans eating eggs in eggcups, we've eaten hot soft-medium-hard cooked eggs in shells like this. On almost every trip to Europe I've ever made where breakfast is served in the hotel, you will find a basket of hot eggs with a stack of egg cups next to them.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
I lied.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Darn. Knit. (Anyway)
I ended up staying 2 extra nights in Minnesota. We dinked around and enjoyed Duluth and got back to North St. Paul in the afternoon and I spent the night and went to school with Dave on Monday morning. I knitted and played on my netbook with the college's wireless internet. I had asked Dave if we could do some antiquing and he suggested we go to Stillwater, MN for that. While he was in class, I did a search and wouldn't you know it, there is a yarn AND fabric shop in Stillwater!?! And not just ANY fabric, but AMY BUTLER! Did I mention that Dave is a good sport?
We drove over there and very easily found the Darn. Knit. (Anyway) shop located on 423 South Main Street. It is a very easy to find shop in a lovely historic brick building.
This shop caters to both knitters and spinners as well as stitchers! They had an awesome selection of Amy Butler fabrics and patterns. This picture shows what appears to be large balls of yarn which are in fact rolled up balls of merino top slivers for spinning!
They stocked all kinds of Malabrigo yarn in worsted singles, worsted plied and bulky. I didn't think their selection of books was the greatest but that is ok. Very good selection of needles and tools. They also offered classes in sewing and knitting and spinning.
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Plenty of Cascade and Brown Sheep in worsted and bulky. Lovely atmosphere!
We walked around the main street of the town and saw the bridge. The bridge had very recently been re-opened due to flooding concerns. This bridge is similar to the bridge in Duluth as the entire thing raises up to accommodate boats.
Here is the water level next to the bridge. We went into several antique malls and stores on the main street. As lovely as this town is, it is geared towards tourists and the prices of things reflected that. The restaurants and ice cream shops seemed very reasonable so an overnight stay in a B & B or pension would be a lovely weekend activity. We DID make a stop at the Olde Thyme Candies shop on main and I came away with 4 peanut butter fudge balls, as well as a pound of their pecan turtles and a sack of assorted salt water taffy. Num num! The taffy they sell is made in Salt Lake City but the nut brittles, fudge, and truffles are all made there on site. They also had a huge selection of candies in barrels in the shop. It reminded me of Willy Wonka's! Dave got a bag of his beloved Swedish Fish! I will be bringing home some awesome treats next weekend for our family Easter get-together!
After our afternoon together in Stillwater, I was still dragging my feet to go home and ended up staying Monday night too. Dave drove me around the Twin Cities and I got a glimpse of the famous Mickey's Diner mentioned often on A Prairie Home Companion! He treated me to a lovely yet sinful supper of a Juicy Lucy at The 5-8 Club in Maplewood!
This morning Dave woke me up when he got up for class and I got ready and hit the road by 1015 and none too soon! The snow and rain started flying just as I got outside The Cities and maybe 30 minutes after I arrived in Mason City, they closed Interstate 35! I will take a short nap to recover from white-knuckling the wheel and then I have to get up and bake Easter frosted sugar cookies. I will whine the entire time but I will also take great comfort knowing that this is the last time I will bake them before October! When I said good-bye to Dave's father Don, the weather forecast was then predicting that most of the snow would end up in Iowa and I told him I'd do my best to take it with me. I'm now EATING my words and told Dave to tell Don that he could thank me later! ;)
Plenty of Cascade and Brown Sheep in worsted and bulky. Lovely atmosphere!
This morning Dave woke me up when he got up for class and I got ready and hit the road by 1015 and none too soon! The snow and rain started flying just as I got outside The Cities and maybe 30 minutes after I arrived in Mason City, they closed Interstate 35! I will take a short nap to recover from white-knuckling the wheel and then I have to get up and bake Easter frosted sugar cookies. I will whine the entire time but I will also take great comfort knowing that this is the last time I will bake them before October! When I said good-bye to Dave's father Don, the weather forecast was then predicting that most of the snow would end up in Iowa and I told him I'd do my best to take it with me. I'm now EATING my words and told Dave to tell Don that he could thank me later! ;)
Yarn Harbor
I give Dave all kinds of credit for taxiing me to my yarn dealers but he did sit this one out and read the paper out on a bench in the hallway. He asked me if I liked this shop better than The Yarnery in St. Paul and I told him I loved it but asking me that is similar to asking me which of my children I love the best. ;) He understood the analogy! I promptly called my mother and told her that she and dad need to make plans to come to Duluth for a weekend in such a locale and more importantly...for the YARN! :)
Duluth
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
My Garmin needed a sleeping bag...
I am now the proud owner of a Garmin GPS! Shopko had an awesome sale and I got mine for $89! I didn't shell out for the carrying case so instead I made one. Dave and I are going to Duluth this coming weekend and I wanted to get it done before then and not just let it bump around in my purse.
Mom and Ava and I will no doubt use it in London next summer so what better fabric to use than my London Map and Subway Guide fabric?!? I think I got this at Supperbuzzy.com. It is a fabulous and durable canvas fabric and was 60" wide so a yard goes a long way. I bought a cut for my mother and gave it to her for her birthday a few years ago. To pad this, I sandwiched white fleece interfacing between the canvas and some muslin lining and finished it off with a powder blue 7 inch zipper from my sewing stash. There is enough room to keep the Garmin literature/reference booklets inside as well.
I decided I didn't want the cords and windshield mount scraping around inside the same bag so I will use this rather appropriate fabric drawstring bag for those. I made this a few years ago before another trip to London to contain my sock knitting. I just loved these little "tin soldiers" in the design. I know I got this fabric at Mill End Textiles in Rochester. The little red soldiers are particularly appropriate considering...
...the reverse of the bag shows the location of Buckingham Palace! :)
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