A place to store and share the things I make.
Showing posts with label Gluten-free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gluten-free. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2011

November Rush

Thanksgiving Holiday.

I'm sitting on my parents' couch watching August Rush with my sister-in-law.  We've had a busy day: chasing my nephew, crafting, cooking, listening to hunting stories that didn't go as planned.  It's a holiday.  We played in Billings with my grandparents for a night and I've been enjoying the snow back here in Colstrip, watching deer bounding across the backyard.  We even checked out the local co-op (read: my 3rd grade classroom turned into a store selling socks and jeans, as well as Robeez for Taylen).    It was a good day with my mama and Belinda, ending with Kermit the Frog soup and chocolate chip cookies (half and half GF and regular), as well as a little Kirkland red wine and now some wind down time with a tired mama.  It is a holiday indeed.

cutest little cowlick ever

also quite possibly the cutest kid ever


crafting with his mama and my sister-in-law (yes, that's snot and tears on her shoulders.  She's a trooper.)

Copying Terri's Xmas trees from old sweaters

My GF cookies: I just replaced the flour in the Tollhouse recipe with
1/2 C chickpea, 1/2 C coconut flours and a little cornstarch. 
Kermit the Frog Soup (Mom's recipe)

Boil 2 C stock, add 3 stems of broccoli and one onion, chopped into small chunks.  Cover and boil 10 minutes.  Chop in food processor or with immersion blender.  In another pan, melt 2 Tb butter with 2 Tb flour (I cheated today, but you could probably replace with Arrowroot or cornstarch, or else just brown rice flour), and "cook til smooth 'n bubbly", stir in 2 1/2 C stock to boiling, boil 6 minutes.  Add 1 T boullion (we didn't today since we used stock, but it may add more flavor), some salt & pepper, a dash of nutmeg, and 3/4 cup whipping cream to the broccoli/onion mixture, then add the roux to thicken it.  Serve with crackers or just by itself.  Ty claims that mom had to name it Kermit the Frog because no kid would ever willingly eat soup with broccoli in the title.  I think he's right.

I think I'll be back with more this week.  But for now I'm watching a movie.  Happy holidays!


Saturday, November 12, 2011

cookie fail

I'm a big fan of modifying recipes.  This habit does not always work for the best results.  I remember my first modification--mom and I were trying to make "blonde" lasagna (this was way back in high school), and didn't have all the ingredients so we made some adjustments.  That was a mistake.  I don't remember the details, but it was not pretty.  I remember saying to myself, "from this day forward, I will never try to modify a recipe the first time I make it."  Needless to say, that is not a rule that I've kept.

Megan was bragging about these cookies last week, and I've been jonesing to try them.  I was practicing self-control and stay-in-the-budget strategies at Fred Meyer the other day, and I ended up not buying the coconut oil and coconut flour; so of course, I didn't have all the ingredients.  I actually have been having some success lately at my own modifications, particularly in making things free of gluten (like these!), so I went forth with confidence.  I used almond flour instead of coconut, and we didn't have enough eggs so I did the flax seed equivalent (1 T flax seed, ground and mixed with 4 T water).  Those were the only changes I made...but it didn't turn out well. Kind of a like a pan of crepes that are crispy on the outside and raw in the middle, they look nothing like the gorgeous ones that came out of Megan's oven.  I'll try again soon, and follow the recipe.  I guess some directions really should be followed closely.  But I'm certain I'll test that theory again as well.


Monday, November 7, 2011

Tis the season...almost

Monday nights are date nights.  Tonight kind of ended up being plan-free, so we had leftovers and decided to have a holiday evening.  I went to work to find a GF gingerbread recipe, then Graham walked me through the recipe as I mixed it up, while emceeing the Christmas music.  I'm working on our Christmas cards, so I finished a couple of those to pass approval of the other signee of them come December.  Finally the buzzer went off and this masterpiece came out of the oven.  Delicious.  I don't always get a good cakey texture with GF cakes, but this was pretty good, albeit a little spongy.  It was the perfect amount of sweetness and spice, perfect for the holiday season which is (nearly) upon us. If only we had an open fire and some chestnuts...

 
Gluten-free Gingerbread  (modified from Jules Gluten Free)

1 1/2 cups gluten-free all-purpose flour (I usually use brown rice, sorghum, tapioca mix)
1/2 cup buckwheat flour
1 cup tapioca flour
1 cup brown sugar
1 Tbs. baking powder
2 tsp. ground cinnamon
dash of salt
1 tsp. pumpkin pie spice (really just ginger/nutmeg/allspice/cloves)
1/2 tsp. allspice
1/2 tsp. ground ginger
 
Wet Ingredients:

3/4 cup shortening (I used Coconut Oil)
1 1/4 cup pumpkin purée (you can use apple sauce too)
2 eggs
1/4 cup molasses
1 tsp. vanilla extract

Mix the dry ingredients with the shortening, then mix in the wet ingredients.  Pour into a greased 13x9 inch pan, and bake at 350˚ for 30 minutes.  Done!  

Friday, October 21, 2011

Lucky Me

I have the best husband in the world.  This was waiting for me on the stove when I got home from a rough Friday.  Photos do not do justice to the beauty of these beets.

Lucky me.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Eggplant Parm

I guess sick days = blog days for mandi.  This is my third today.  I give myself a pep talk after every blog I post, saying "I should do this more often" or "I should just blog about one thing" or "I should blog every time I think about it."  But I'm sure I'll continue on with sporadic posts, 3 in one day then none for another 3 weeks.  Again, the artisan in me.  Another recipe:


Sweat beads on the eggplant
Our Misto Mister

Eggplant Parm (I'm sure there are kudos to a multitude of online sources, but tonight this was mostly from my husbands spurts of input while he was writing emails planning an arts event for Imago) (you should really check it out, I'm kind of proud of him, shamelessly so).

Needs:
eggplant (we only had one tonight, I'm sure 2-3 would be more appropriate)
tomato sauce
mozzarella cheese
olive oil
cornmeal or Panko

Slice the eggplant in thin slices.  I peeled it this time, sometimes we don't but the skin tends to be a little tough.  (By the way, eggplant is my favorite vegetable; I think it is sexy.)  Salt it and let it sit for 30 minutes to sweat out some of its' moisture (it really beaded up!  I guess I've never actually done this myself before, but always known about it).  I mopped up some of the moisture with a paper towel, I'm not sure if this is normal or not but I did.  I then spritzed both sides of each slice with my MISTO olive oil mister (thanks mom! my new favorite kitchen tool!), and dredged in cornmeal.  Bake the slices for 15-20 minutes on a cookie sheet at 350˚.

When the eggplant is done, layer it in a baking dish: eggplant, tomato sauce, mozzarella; layer till it's all in there, and make sure to end with cheese.  Bake at 475˚ for another 15 minutes then broil so the cheese is browned at the end.  Voila!  Tasty vegetarian lasagna, essentially.  Enjoy!

By the way, on the theme of finishing things, I also finished another book today, Picket Line, written by our oh-so-talented friend Breena (who also did the artwork for the PUB linked above).  Dad started and finished it over one pot of coffee while he was here.  It's a graphic novel, so it's a quick read.  Buy it!  Read it!  Support independent art!  Check out her webcomic while you're there, and there's a free soundtrack too.  Like I said, shameless.  Dinner time!

The Farm to Table

Part dos of mom and dad's time in Portland.  Time with loved ones always involves food and drink, no?  We are foodies, and I think one of my goals for this blog, apart from sharing with all you faithful readers (whether you are out there reading or not), is to keep a little archive of our recipes, a box full of index cards that doesn't get smeared with butter and oil.  We find a lot of our recipes online anyway, and print them out then fish them out of a too-stuffed file folder on the shelf.  And here I know exactly where to go to find them.

We cooked in a lot with mom and dad here, which I love.  And we went out a little too.  I'll let recipes and pictures tell the story.  We'll start at The Farm Cafe on Burnside...
Best beet salad in town
Mom was daring with the tofu
Snapper & Acorn squash
Fall vegetable galette...obviously being enjoyed

On the home front...

Roasted Squash Risotto with Chicken Apple Sausage
adapted from Aidells (yeah, the recipe on the package from Costco.  We don't always use Gourmet)

2 cartons low-sodium vegetable broth
2 T butter or olive oil
1 medium onion, chopped
4 links Chicken Apple Sausage (Aidells is pretty good, and we made it again with some from New Seasons that I dare say was a little superior)
3 cloves garlic, chopped
2 cups arborio rice
1/2 cup white wine (I prefer Chardonnay, but we made it with a Reisling too)
2 cups roasted squash (butternut, acorn, summer, winter...)
1 tsp fresh rosemary
salt and pepper
Asiago or parmesan

Roast the squash: cut in half, spritz or brush with olive oil then roast in 350˚ oven 45 min or more until soft when stabbed with a fork.  Let it cool before gutting it out.

Place the stock in a large pot on the stove and bring to a simmer.

In a large heavy skillet or big stock pot, over medium heat, heat the olive oil. Stir in the onion and sauté until fragrant. Add the sausage and garlic and cook, stirring, for 2-3 minutes, until the sausage begins to brown slightly. Add the rice and stir to coat with the olive oil. Stir in the wine and one ladle of the stock. Stir until the liquid is almost absorbed. Add the squash and another 2 ladles of stock. Cook, stirring, until almost absorbed. Continue adding stock and stirring until the rice is plump and tender, about 15-20 minutes. Add the herbs and season to taste with salt and pepper. Remove from the heat. Garnish with Parmesan.

We made some Chebe bread with it too:



Gluten Free Pao de Quejo ~ Cheese Bread
Makes 12 – 1 1/2 inch wide biscuits/rolls
Ingredients:
1 1/4 cups tapioca flour/starch
2 cups shredded cheese
1 teaspoon baking powder
2 eggs
1/4 cup melted butter
2 teaspoons herbs (paprika, dill, chili flakes)
2 teaspoons dried chives
Directions:
  1. Preheat your oven to 450F.
  2. Mix together all ingredients in your mixer well.
  3. Form in to balls (about 1 1/2 inches or 2 inches) and slightly flatten. like what is in the picture… or leave them as puffed balls! You decide!)
  4. Place on parchment paper on a baking sheet.
  5. Bake for 8 – 10 minutes or until golden brown

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

The Kitchen

We just had an amazing dinner.  I take pictures of most of the meals that are prepared in this house, at least the ones that are somewhat aesthetic in nature.  But this one, it was so good it could not even be caught on camera.  Amazing.

It all started with the simple question: What are we having for dinner?  Pasta.  Shoot, the sauce is frozen.  We still have fresh tomatoes, really they need to be used soon.  It grew from there.

We roasted the tomatoes with a few cloves of garlic and onions.  A random radish and sweet pepper.  Tossed it with some olive oil, salt, pepper, basil and oregano, and roasted it at 350˚ for about an hour, then pureed it in the food processor (I left out about a cup of chunks to give it some character.)  Brown rice pasta, again?  How about polenta instead?  Even better, baked polenta.  And then Gourmet piped in and suggested Baked Polenta with Parmesan.  That not so difficult recipe is below.  It was amazing, and now our house smells like baked cheese.  We started it off with a tomato/cucumber salad with vinaigrette, and finished with the leftovers of my friend Kim's gluten free apple crisp.  She swears it's vegan, I swear it's covered in butter (coconut oil, it turns out).  I'm full.  I'm satisfied.  I want more but will leave it for tomorrow.

Most of all, I'm happy to be able to create such delicacies on a simple budget, in a small kitchen, with my husband along side.  There are many things in our marriage that I wish we could do without, ways I wish he was different, or did things my way, etcetera etcetera (I'm sure this is true for all marriages, and anyone who disagrees is lying, right?).  But the kitchen; I'm grateful for the kitchen.  It's one place we share that we both enjoy.  We can switch roles, be the head chef or the sous chef, give input and share expertise.  Yeah, sometimes we don't agree on things, and the kitchen is by no means immune to being a warzone on a given day.  But we always come out with something to show for it.  Usually something good to show for it.  Enjoy.

Baked Polenta with Parmesan (adapted from Gourmet)

1 cup polenta or yellow cornmeal
1/2 stick unsalted butter
6 tablespoons Parmesan-Reggiano (I supplemented a little asiago too)

Bring 4 cups water and 1 tsp salt to boil in a 2-3 quart heavy sauce pan.  Add polenta in a thin stream (if you can!), stirring constantly.  Reduce heat to medium-low (or it will spit like lava), stirring constantly till the polenta is thick, about 15 minutes.

Remove polenta from the heat, add the butter and some ground pepper.  Spoon polenta into a shallow 8-inch baking or casserole, not glass and smooth top; sprinkle with cheese, then cool (they say 1 hour in the fridge, we did 10 min in the freezer).

Bake at 400˚ or until heated through, then broil till the cheese is lightly browned.  Serve immediately with the roasted tomato sauce and enjoy!

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Back to Fall


It seems funny to me that I'm feeling so strong of a transition to fall this year.  I remember being surprised the last couple falls, the first 2 falls since I was 5 that I wasn't going "back to school."  But now this year, I feel like I'm going back to...fall?  Our travel is done (for now), but my work schedule is not changing.  There are a few things I'm going back to, things that I've squeezed out of my routine with the busyness of summer.  I'm going back to sewing, back to blogging, back to seeing our friends weekly at home community, back to seeing friends on a regular basis.  Back to routine, it seems.

I have realized something very important this summer, I think.  That this is life, this thing we are living right now.  There is no "someday," and really, life does not slow down at some point down the road.  If anything (I'll leave this to you mamas and papas out there to confirm), it speeds up and gets more and more full.  My theme this summer, and I repeated this over and over, was "Next month, when things slow down."  Then we'll get together.  Then I'll sew.  Then we'll have coffee.  Then we'll...  But you say that for four months and then you realize you still haven't called the friend you had meant to when June rolled around...  So I'm trying to live in the now.  Trying to prioritize, trying to say no to things I really want to do for other things that I equally really want to do.  Train for a marathon or stay with my book club?  Join the Pain team at work or join the Cancer team?  Make one date with a big group of friends or a few dates with a friend or two?  Quality or quantity--isn't that always the question?  I'm choosing quality, and I'm practicing saying No.  I guess this is what I'm going back to this Fall.


By the way, my excuse for not updating my blog is that we got a new computer and have yet to get a new attachment to upload pics.  I have many from this summer to share!  We had weddings, and my dear friend Sara came down from Canada, and Megan had twins and we are going next week to meet Juniper, another new arrival into the world.  We went home to Montana for my 10-year class reunion and through Yellowstone, up to Washington, into Central Oregon to the cabin.  We have hardly been home, and have the photo proof for it.  More to come.  For now, I decided to the webcam to show off some delicious cookies I made last night from Megan's Redemption Cookie recipe. All I adapted was the flours to make it gluten free, and added some xantham gum.  They actually rose!

Redemption Cookies
(Adapted from the Neiman Marcus recipe)
Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup (1 stick) butter, softened
  • 1 cup light brown sugar
  • 3 tablespoons granulated sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1-3/4 cups all purpose flour (I did 1 cup brown rice, 1/4 cup sorghum, 1/4 cup tapioca, 1/4 cup chickpea flours)
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1 teaspoon Xantham gum (for gluten-free version)
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons instant espresso powder or substitute 
  • 1/2 - 3/4 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • 1 bar dark chocolate, shaved and chopped
  • Directions
    I just mixed the wet ingredients, then sifted together the dry ingredients, then added them all together and dropped them with my dropper on 2 sheet pans, baked at 300º for 20 minutes.








                                         
    I'll be back soon...








    Monday, June 6, 2011

    Grahamola

    At my husband's suggestion, we had a lovely breakfast picnic this morning.  We had 2 beautiful sunny days this weekend and were hoping for a third; it was a bit on the cool side but decidedly picnic-worthy.  Today was the first day I have really had to rest/recover from last weekend's busy trip to Washington.  We shared a house full of love and fun and hugs and laughs as we celebrated Seth & Molly's wedding, and left exhausted and joyful.  Family is a good thing.  So is breakfast.



    Regular on the left, GF on the right
     Aunt Shannon's  Granola Recipe (Adapted from Body + Soul)

    3 cups oats (Bob's Red Mill Gluten Free oats for me)
    1/8 cup flax meal (I added wheat germ to Graham's)
    1 tsp cinnamon
    a dash of cardamom, nutmeg, ginger, cloves
    dash salt

    Mix together

    1/2 cup apple juice
    1/4 cup maple syrup
    1/4 cup honey

    Mix it all together.  Spread on parchment paper on cookie sheet, and bake at 325 for 15 minutes.  Stir it up, then add dried fruit (we added coconut and dried cherries).  Bake 8 minutes more.  It keeps soft if you store it in the fridge.  Yum!

    We added chopped almonds and sesame seeds, and at the end added some candied ginger.




    Sunday, May 15, 2011

    Vegans and Artichokes

    I am exhausted.  It has been a crazy week at work, and I'm just plum worn out.  After a pretty go-go-go day yesterday, I was driving home at 11pm from a co-ed soccer game, and the windshield wipers decided to stop working.  Which is not really an ok thing when you live in Oregon.  As I climbed into bed around midnight I whispered to Graham, who had been in bed since 9, that there might not be wipers for his drive to work at 4 am.  Then I spent the next hour worrying about how he would get to work if it was pouring rain and he couldn't see.  So I got up, checked my email and facebook, then read blog after blog (oh yeah, I did a quick search for what to do when your wipers don't work too).  I climbed into bed after 1, woke when Graham left, then woke an hour later when Gilda puked, then at 7 when Graham called.  I slept in till 9:45.  That's so unheard of for me.  But you know what, I feel pretty darn good now.  And I've got a long week ahead...

    I realized a couple weeks ago, and admitted to myself, that I don't really like eggs.  I don't like them scrambled, and only sometimes fried.  So I decided I'm going to stop eating them.  (Ok I'll still bake with them, and hard boiled is ok too).  This morning I decided to find a good tofu scramble.  Graham brought home Veganomicon, "the ultimate vegan cookbook", from the library a couple months ago, and I was a little skeptical.  I like the concept of veganism, but I like cheese more.  After a few weeks of making some really solid recipes, I was a fan.  I looked for it this morning to find a good tofu scramble, and alas, the book is gone.  That's what happens I guess when you get cookbooks from the library.  I did find this recipe online from Kitchenist.  It made a long morning of finding blown fuses and digging under the hood of the car a little easier on Graham (and a late morning seem a little less wasted for me). Enjoy!
     
    Pressing the tofu
     



    Tasty Tofu Scramble  
    (my modifications are italicized)
    250g tofu (whatever type you like, I used firm)
    1 Tbs. olive oil
    1/2 a small yellow onion, coarsly chopped
    artichoke hearts (I got them canned from Trader Joes.  Who has this on hand in the pantry?!?)
     1/2 cup frozen peas
    1/4 tsp. turmeric
    1/4 tsp. paprika
    1/4 tsp. chili powder
    1 Tbs. soy sauce (I skipped this)
    1 Tbs. finely chopped parsley
    sea salt and black pepper, to taste

    Drain the tofu and wrap it in a tea towel for 10 minutes or so, while you get on with chopping the vegetables. Crumble roughly into a bowl and set aside.

    Heat the olive oil in a nonstick pan over medium heat, and add the onion. After a minute or two, add the frozen peas, and continue cooking for another 3-5 minutes, until the veg are cooked but still have bite. Stir in the spices. Add the tofu and turn the heat up a little; scramble gently until everything is coated well in the spices. If you’re using it, add the soy sauce at this point. After 2-3 minutes, remove from the heat and add the parsley, salt and pepper. Serve immediately.

    Saturday, April 30, 2011

    B-A-N-A-N-A-S

     I got to baking my gluten-free banana loaves and finished off the browning nanners.  Here's a play by play.
    The competitors: #1 v #2
    The playing field
    The Judges
    I started with an extensive google search and used very scientific means to choose the recipes to try.  By that I mean I used ones with the simplest ingredients and fewest steps.  I also tend to favor recipes from blogs.  Something about "knowing" the person who posted the recipe, even in the slightest sense of the word, makes me trust it a little more.  Here are the recipes and the results.  Enjoy!


    #1: Gluten Free Banana Bread from Gluten-free Girl
    I left out potato starch and used brown rice flour instead, and since I spent so much grocery money on stocking up on the pricier GF flours, I skipped the extravagant ginger; I also subbed maple syrup for sugar.  Still was pretty tasty.  

    6 tablespoons unsalted butter
    1/2 cup sorghum flour
    1/2 cup tapioca flour
    1/2 cup brown rice flour
    1/2 cup teff flour
    1 teaspoon xanthan gum
    1 teaspoon baking soda
    1 teaspoon salt
    1/2 cup maple syrup
     2 large eggs
    1 1/2 cups mashed banana (about 3 large bananas)
    1/4 cup full-fat yogurt (or sour cream)
    1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    3/4 cup semisweet chocolate chips
    1/3 cup crystallized ginger
    Preparing to bake. Preheat the oven to 350°. Grease a loaf pan (the usual size). Melt the butter on low heat. Set it aside to cool. Sift the four gluten-free flours into a large bowl. Stir in the xanthan gum, sugar, baking soda, and salt. Stir them all up together. In a large bowl, combine the mashed bananas, eggs, yogurt, melted butter, and vanilla extract. Stir until they are just combined. (If you are using a stand mixer for this, be sure to mix until the liquids are just combined. You don’t want to over-cream the liquids.) Slowly, sift the dry ingredients into the wet batter, until everything is just combined. Fold in the chocolate chips and crystallized ginger. Pour the batter into the greased loaf pan. Smooth the top.
    Baking the bread. Slide the loaf pan onto the middle rack in the oven. Bake about 45 to 50 minutes, or until the loaf is golden brown and a knife slides out of the bread clean.  Cool the bread for 10 minutes in the loaf pan, and then tip it out, slowly. Allow it to cool before you slice your first piece. (well, good luck.)

    #2:  Gluten-free Banana Bread from A Gluten Free Day
    (I made a couple changes to the recipe, so what is below is slightly different from what she has on her page)
    Dry ingredients
    - 1/2 cup quinoa flour
    - 1/2 cup sorghum flour
    -1 cup or 2,5 dl ground almonds
    -2 tsp (gluten-free) baking powder
    -1 tsp cinnamon
    -1 tsp ground cardamom
    - a pinch of nutmeg
    -a pinch of salt
    Wet ingredients
    -3 eggs
    - half a cup of maple syrup
    -3 very ripe bananas
    -1 tsp vanilla exctract
    -1/2 cup melted butter
    Heat an oven to 340F.
    Grease a bread pan and sprinkle some almond meal on it, or just line it with baking paper.
    Mix the wet ingredients together and mix the dry ingredients together.
    Combine these two without over mixing them.
    Bake for approximately 1 hour or until a toothpick comes out clean.
    I think they both win

    Sunday, April 24, 2011

    Indeed.

    Yesterday we had a deliciously sunny day. It hit 73, and felt like it--I even got a little tan eating lunch in the sun at Jam on Hawthorne. Then we woke up today, Easter morning, to the drizzle we're so accustomed to. Barefeet on concrete was just a tease.

     I made myself a busy little Sunday. I got up early and sewed, then walked to the store with the camera to document my morning. I like having pictures of my life, and I'm trying to just bring the camera along more often. Life needs documentation sometimes.


     My early morning walk to the grocery store was to prepare me for the challenge that lay ahead: bananas gone bad. Someone at the Healing Place (the building my clinic is in) apparently has the hookup at New Seasons, and will randomly drop off boxes or bags of produce that's too good to throw away, but too far gone to sell. You know I hate to waste food...or anything else for that matter. So I brought home a few bunches, and looked up some banana bread recipes. By the time I made a double batch of Martha's banana bread with coconut, which barely fit in the mixer (oops), then made the salad for Easter potluck, then made banana waffles, I ran out of time to try the three different gluten-free recipes I found. I'll let you know how they turn out, when I get around to them. As for the original four loaves, I hear they were quite good.
    The challenge

    My go-to apron: a yardsale skirt transformed into a flour-catching cape
    Graham's birthday was this week, on Earth Day/Good Friday. Two Christmases ago, we decided to start a change jar to save up for some ink (he wanted to register for tattoos for our wedding, I thought a food processor was more practical). We started with a little jar and grew into a Costco sized Adam's Peanut Butter jar, and when he cashed that baby in, it pretty much paid for the art. I'm impressed. He's very proud. Happy birthday Graham.
    I have finished four different pieces this week! I'm so good at starting things, and sometimes it takes a ton of energy to just do that last little finish. Deadlines. That's what I need. We're seeing family tomorrow night so I had a deadline to get these done. I have a baby shower in a couple weeks too, which will be good to get me moving. I've also been commissioned to make a neoprene laptop case for a friend...which should be interesting, and he's setting me a deadline.
    Burpie

    A little shirt for Luciana



    I am so obsessed with wasting as little thread/fabric/food, that it sometimes is a little nutty. I'm terrible at doing math for sewing, which does mean that I sometimes cut extra scraps that I could have avoided (though you know I'll use the scraps again...somehow). But, when I stitch in the ditch on a quilt (or on these burpies), I cannot for the life of me figure out the best way to cover all the lines only once, but also not have to pick up the needle. Any tips?

    Mo's runner

    Happy Easter.  It was a blessed day, with beautiful weather that couldn't decide if it wanted to be rainy or sunny. When the sun shone, the dark sky receded and great white clouds hung low on the horizon. It was a beautiful day.

    Thursday, January 13, 2011

    Sick Day Part II

    The thing with working a healthcare job is that some days you can be well enough to do your job, but still sick enough to give everyone else what you've got.  That was today.  I woke up feeling cruddy but not cruddy enough to stay in bed all day and watch reruns of Grey's Anatomy.  So I baked a cake, built it, really.  It was my first attempt at a triple layer cake, and first attempt at a Gluten-free cake as well.  I probably should have stopped at 2 layers; I didn't have enough chocolate to make the whole genache recipe, and I'm so darn instant-gratification driven that I just had to power on.  So I did all 3 layers.  It isn't pretty, but it's tasty.  The biggest problem I've found with gluten-free baking is that it's typically pretty crumbly; this was no different, yet at the same time was very moist.  The recipe (I'll post it if anyone wants it) is from Flying Apron in Seattle, their Mexican Chocolate Cake and Chocolate Genache frosting.  A little cinnamon, a little cayenne in the cake.  It will be coming with me to work tomorrow since there's no way the two of us will eat it.  Although, I'm not sure anyone else will eat it since I made it while I was out sick.  I washed my hands and didn't lick the spoon, I swear.

    Kinda reminds me of a McDonalds hamburger...
    I also got to work on my nephew's other quilt, the one I started in October when Mom & Dad were out here.  And haven't touched since Halloween.  I took a dozen or so pictures of the layout of the squares, changing them around and taking pictures from different angles to make sure I had the exact right pattern of squares.  I wonder if all my sewing will be this obsessive-compulsive.  It's a work in progress.



    All in all, it was a good sick day.  A cake was built.  I sewed.  I talked for a while with my mom and my dear friend Julia.   I slept in a little.  I wrote two blog posts.  I'm exhausted.  And I better get some rest so I can go to work tomorrow.