15 August, 2011

Harry Potter Food Week

The conjuction of a couple of things--our visit to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter earlier this spring, and the release of the last part in the movie series--means that HP has been rather on our minds this summer. There was the Butterbeer Project, of course, and that seemed to lead quite naturally into the idea of having a Harry Potter-themed week of dinners.

A quick trip to Amazon for this cookbook by Dinah Bucholz,
and we were ready to go.

There are some cute things about this book--for each recipe that is directly mentioned in one of the Harry Potter books, the author references which book and chapter it comes from, and briefly describes the scene. That makes it easy to look it up if you wish, which we did before sitting down to eat. Fun!

Tonight was the first night of the venture, so I chose a couple of recipes that looked fairly "safe" from an everyone-will-eat-it point of view. This is the Shepherd's Pie:



and this is a batch of Hagrid's Rock Cakes. Of course I didn't overbake them or leave them out for a week, so mine are not as rocklike as Hagrid's. In fact, both recipes yielded great results!

Tomorrow night, the plan is Bangers & Mash, with Petunia's Pudding (Strawberry Trifle) for dessert.




12 August, 2011

The Butterbeer Project


I know I have a lot of catch-up blogging to do, so things are going to be out of chronological order for a while, but hey--that's summer for you.

One of the items on our Big Summer Fun List was "make Butterbeer."  We enjoyed this very tasty treat at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter in Orlando this past spring, and of course at the time tried to figure out what ingredients went into it.  We determined to try to recreate it at home.

A quick Googling of "Harry Potter Butterbeer" turns up many, many recipes purporting to duplicate it.  Glancing over them, I quickly concluded that many of these recipes were NOT going to come close to what we'd sampled.  I also discarded the alcoholic versions.  There were still quite a few to choose from, but for our first attempt I thought this one looked like it might come close. I set out to collect up the necessary ingredients, and promptly ran into a couple of snags.

I couldn't find any toffee-flavoured dessert topping, however I did find this caramel one, which seemed like it might be a decent substitute since it proclaimed itself to be "rich, creamy, buttery."  Next problem: you can't just buy butterscotch-flavoured Dream Whip, nor could I find butterscotch flavouring, even at the Bulk Barn, which carries all manner of such things.  So we were on to experimentation from the outset.

I did buy Coca-Cola, as called for in the recipe, but I also picked up a bottle of root beer, since we'd all thought in Florida that root beer must be on the ingredient list.  Ginger beer was no problem to find at the grocery store.

So first we whipped up the Dream Whip.  I followed the package directions, but reduced the vanilla to 1/4 tsp. and added a teaspoon of the caramel sauce.  It whipped up nicely, but the topping that forms the "head" of the butterbeer was quite runny when we had it in Florida, and this was still fluffy.  I added another teaspoon of the sauce and whipped that in, which helped some, but I think you would have to add a LOT of sauce to really get it to the right consistency.  This turned out to be the most difficult part of the project, and one which we haven't really solved yet.  The taste was very close, but the consistency was not right. Anyway, we were ready to experiment. I still wasn't feeling very certain about the Coke, so we did a small test glass and decided that no, it wasn't right.  So we switched to the root beer.

I did roughly follow the directions in the recipe.  We added a tablespoon of the caramel sauce to the bottom of each tankard, then filled the glass about halfway with root beer.  I used a small whisk to stir in the sauce, which caused quite a head of foam to appear!

We added about half as much ginger beer as we'd had root beer, then a dollop of Dream Whip.  Which of course, since it was fluffy instead of runny, just sort of plopped into the foam and floated.  More research is needed in this department!  I suppose one could skim off the root beer foam and then try to spread the Dream Whip on more smoothly, but the kids thought that the foam was delicious and would strongly oppose removing it. Hmmm...I wonder if we could skim the foam and mix it into the Dream Whip? (scribbles a note for next time)

Anyway, the finished Butterbeers, reposing in the mugs brought from Florida:


They were downed with great gusto and proclaimed a huge success.  Indeed, they did taste remarkably as we remembered them.  My husband opined that they were "fizzier" than the originals, so perhaps letting the root beer go partially flat might improve them.  And the topping consistency still needs work.  However, if you'd like an idea of what Butterbeer tastes like (without the expense of going to Florida), give it a try!  Great on a hot day (although those are harder to find in Cape Breton this summer than the Room of Requirement). 

Our modified recipe:

2 L. root beer
2 small bottles Ginger Beer
1 Pkg. Dream Whip
1 bottle Sensations Creamy Caramel dessert topping (although I expect any caramel or butterscotch-type sauce would yield much the same result)

Mix Dream Whip according to package directions, BUT reduce vanilla to 1/4 tsp. and add 2 tsp. of the caramel sauce (or more, if you'd like to try and make it runnier and increase the butterscotch flavour).

Add 1 tbsp. caramel sauce to the bottom of tankard.  Fill about halfway with root beer.  Whisk or stir gently to mix in the sauce.  Add about half as much ginger beer as you had root beer.  Add a dollop of Dream Whip.  Enjoy!

18 April, 2011

April Stitchery

I really did sew this month.  I finished two projects, although I have pictures of only one of them right now.

For Christmas gifts, I made several of these journal covers . They were fun and easy, and I loved working out the color combinations and scraps to use for each one.  I vowed to make myself one, as well, but of course that didn't get done during the Christmas season.  Nor directly after that, either.

But I did finally get around to it.  Here's mine:

I made a few modifications to the original design, and I also took a shortcut.  I didn't have the time to make the patchwork fabric strip, so I simply found an interesting print scrap and used that instead.

As for modifications, I wanted an inside pocket to hold my planner, as well as a little pocket to hold a pen.  I can also tuck my Kobo e-reader in behind the planner:

To add more decorative detail, I tried out some of the fancy stitches on my sewing machine:

I'm very pleased with the finished product and carry it everywhere. :)

03 April, 2011

March Wrap-up

Forget the whole "in-like-a-lion, out-like-a-lamb" business--this year March dashed by like a furtive, racing bunny.  Suddenly I find myself in the dreaded month of April; the end of my maternity leave is looming, and I'm faced with the nasty prospect of missing my little girl all day when I return to work in two weeks.  Not exactly the kind of thing to motivate a lot of ditching OR stitching, but I've been trying to keep at work on both, nonetheless.

I have to confess, after a great start in March, my ditching slowed down for a bit, partly because I had gotten ahead.  However, I do have some things to add to the list: a book, a shelf we were never going to use, some magazines, and countless papers.  In the coming months, we're really going to focus on sorting out our basement; I'm hoping most of what's left down there is to be gotten rid of!

On the creative side of things, I was involved in the poster creation Sherry mentioned, got some more work done on the murals (hoping to finish them and get the room back in order soon!), and made a little dress and kerchief for baby C.  The pattern is New Look 6578, and I was very pleased with how it went together.  It was easy to work with and made up nicely, although I think it would be good if the pattern included differently-sized appliques for the different sizes of dress--these are maybe a little large on size 1! 

Create -- March

I actually did a number of creative things in March, although they were all outside the more literal "stitch" interpretation.  I did continue to work on my sock-knitting, but it's a slow process and I'm not finding much time to sit and work on it.

During March Break we did our usual "imaginary vacation" day, when we pretend to visit some exotic locale or country.  This year we went to Hollywood for the day, which of course was very glamorous and included rather posh food, a movie premiere, and a fashion show.

On the creative side, I thought it would be fun to make movie posters for imaginary movies.  I printed out a lot of good movie title words, from which we each picked at random or put together something we liked.  We also had a huge pile of pictures which I cut from magazines, and made poster collages to suit our titles by gluing the titles and images on half-sheets of bristol board.  With markers everyone could add taglines, actors, etc.  It was huge fun!

You can see all the posters by following this link: http://on.fb.me/gfWOio

Catalogue Ditch Blitz

In March I ditched more catalogues and old magazines than I could bring myself to count.  However, they were heavy enough that I had to separate them into two recycling bags--one bag was stretching and tearing under the weight.

This is a ditching project that should really be undertaken twice a year, and doesn't take all that long--but makes a big difference in the piles of catalogues stashed wherever you keep such things.  Culling them from time to time also makes it much easier to find appropriate ones when you need them.

I feel lighter!

07 March, 2011

Ditch & Stich Report: Late February, Early March

Sometimes I am amazed by my own ability to create caches of ditchable things--stashes and piles that I get used to and stop even really seeing, until one day I think, "Wait now, what IS that stuff?  Why did I save THAT?"  This is the danger of hanging on to things that you never or almost never use; over time, they just become part of the landscape of your house, only really noticed when they become annoying for some reason (in my case, my sock drawer would no longer close easily, my new cookbook wouldn't fit in the cookbook cupboard, and a pile of old sweaters fell off the closet shelf....).  In the last few weeks, I've gotten much more ruthless about these semi-forgotten clusters of stuff, and have been systematically sorting through them, resulting in the ditching of...

- 4 cookbooks
- 15 old Fitness magazines
- 13.5 pairs of socks (I cannot really explain this...)
- 5 sweaters

Phew!  That list will almost take me through the rest of the month! 

On the more creative side of things, I finally managed to put together a toy bunny that I had been wanting to make for baby C.  I cut the pieces out about a month ago, but they'd been sitting on an end table ever since, waiting for me to find time in my Mommy-day to sew them up and stuff them!  I at last got a chance to work on the project last week, and managed to finish it in a few hours!  I think he turned out pretty well, and he's received lots of smiles from baby.  The pattern is Funky Friends Factory's Baby-Safe Bunny Rabbit Pattern, available at the wonderful YouCanMakeThis.com.  The pattern was instructive and easy to follow, and I would definitely try other projects from the same seller.

I also spent some time sorting through the fabric in my art/sewing room, figuring out what was needed to complete certain projects, and making a rough plan to get some things finished and so create some more order and productivity in that realm of the house.  Next projects: finishing a dress for myself and making this Nap Mat from Prudent Baby.

06 March, 2011

Ditch Report: Cookbook Blitz

How and why do we accumulate so many cookbooks over time?  It's like we're afraid that one perfect recipe exists somewhere, and unless we're absolutely sure that it's not in this book or that magazine, we can't let it go.

Well, I'm trying.  Over the past week I've ditched from the cookbook cupboard twenty cookbooks, magazines, and recipe flyers.  I saved a few items by tearing out the pages, which I'll either plug into a recipe program on the kitchen computer, or add to an existing recipe binder.

I still have a huge stack of magazines to go through...or I may only make it through part of the stack and then just throw out the rest.  We'll have to see.  If I can just convince myself that the perfect recipe is NOT lurking in the pile somewhere...

20 February, 2011

Mid-February Mural-ing

This month I've been working on cleaning out a lot of the clutter that has taken up residence in the midst of things that are actually useful--specifically, old products that have been hanging around in my bathroom and a bedroom drawer.  In a frenzy of ditching, I got rid of some old moisturizer, a mostly-empty container of Tummy Butter from my pregnancy (excellent stuff, but gone a little dry to be keeping around), and thirteen other assorted toiletry and cosmetic items--and that's just scratching the surface!  If I keep this focus up for another week or two, I'll have a much tidier bathroom and bedroom.  (Sherry and I have chatted and decided that we can "get ahead" on items, as long as we maintain an average of one item per day--which worked well for me this week, as I was away for a few days to visit and to get paint for...

MURALS!

I've been wanting to do some work in the nursery for a while; decorating it kind of got rolled in with decorating the rest of the house, since we were moving in just about a month before the baby was due, so I never really felt like it got finished to a point that satisfied me.  We're planning to move the crib in there soon (I think I can finally stand to let it go out of our room *sigh*), so I would like to have the room looking nice and inviting.  I decided I'd like to paint some jungle animals on the walls to match our crib set and curtains, and so this weekend Sherry, her son and daughter, and our niece came down to work on the project with me.   With the help of an overhead projector borrowed from my husband's school, we managed to get all the animals drawn on the walls pretty quickly and got started on the painting.  We'll need another weekend to finish things up, but so far they look great! 

16 February, 2011

Ditch Report -- Early February

This time I do have a pretty detailed list. I'm actually 'way ahead for the month in terms of numbers of items ditched. Krista and I haven't discussed whether it's actually permissible to "get ahead" or if finding one item per day is de rigeur. We'll have to have a chat about that. This list could mean I can take the rest of the month off!

So anyway, another pass through drawers and closets has netted me the following ditches:

> five pairs of sandals
> one pair of jeans
> one string of beads
> two shirts
> one sweater
> one skirt

I'm using a combination of how-long-since-I've-worn-it and how-much-do-I-like-it, with a smidgen of how-well-does-it-fit thrown in to make my decisions.

AND...I started a job which is somewhat painful but must be done. I began culling some books. They are seriously taking over the house and there are many which I won't read again and don't think I need to keep for lending purposes. So the books-to-go box now has twenty-eight books in it. Eep!
If you see something you want, let me know quickly!

09 February, 2011

Getting Focused

I had thought I would choose a de-cluttering focus area to concentrate on each month. Maybe a room in the house, maybe a particular type of clutter. For February I was looking at either the kitchen or my office.

However, I'm rethinking that plan and considering a more free-form decluttering process. So far this month I've been all over the place. Some old papers from my office, a shirt I'm tired of, a half-finished knitting project that's beyond salvaging, etc. I see it, I know it has to go, so it goes. I think this is going to work better for me. Also, I don't know if I'm going to be as particular as Krista in detailing every item here. :) (But I will be ditching something every day.)

However, my most notable ditch this week was an unfinished sewing project that has been taking up space in my sewing room for--are you ready for this?--over seventeen years!

It was a skirt, jacket, and blouse that date back to my law practice days. It would have been awesome (although we wouldn't have said "awesome" then LOL)--really pretty dark teal wool and a coordinating silky blouse. The blouse was partially finished, but the skirt and jacket were only cut out. The pattern pieces were still pinned on to the fabric and many of the pins were rusty.

Many times over the years I've looked at this huge bag of fabric (usually when moving it out of my way to get to something else) and thought that someday I'd finish it, but yesterday I considered it with a critical eye. Let's face it, we're talking almost twenty years ago and styles have changed, even if I were still working as a lawyer. And those shoulder pads just don't work anymore, anywhere. :) So I finally let it go. What a relief!

On the stitching side, I did a quick project yesterday. I had found this great machine embroidery pattern at Urban Threads a while back, and thought it would look great on a t-shirt. I picked up one for $5.99. Yesterday I headed to Mom's and used her machine to stitch out the design, just in time to wear to writing group tonight. If you can't read it in the picture, it's the beginning of Poe's The Raven in--you guessed it--a raven. :)

08 February, 2011

This week's ditchings

Whew!  The first week of February has been busy, and Baby and I spent about half of it at Mom's.  We went so that Sherry and I could work on a project together...but more about that in another post.  Despite being away and spending time cleaning for a playgroup meeting at my house (scheduled for today, postponed due to weather...of course, since I baked in preparation!), I managed to ditch the requisite number of things.  Here goes:
* four partly-used tubes of lanolin from the early days of nursing (I haven't needed it in months, and I realized that by the time I have another baby, I'll definitely want to buy a new supply!)
* two pajama shirts that were really too old and ratty to even sleep in anymore
* a large plastic hamper (replaced with a smaller, more suitable cloth one--the plastic one will be used this summer to hold bags for vegetables at my in-laws' farm)
* some old fitness magazines and assorted papers
* some diaper creams that we found ineffective and so didn't use
* a mostly-used container of Tummy Butter from my pregnancy (this stuff was amazing!)
* some old photo albums that had lost their stickiness, so photos were falling out
* a box of nursing pads that I had found too bulky for comfort
* some outdated medications

Hurrah!  Clutter: 0  Krista: 9
(Also, I finished reading All Clear by Connie Willis--an exhausting but excellent read!)

02 February, 2011

The Beginning

Krista and I often find ourselves inadvertently on the same mental wavelength. This project was not really collaboratively planned--I was at my house, tackling clutter and getting back to some creative projects, and ninety-odd kilometers away, she was at her house, resolving to--you guessed it--clear out some clutter and get back to some creative projects.

Meanwhile, on a different mind track, I was thinking about taking on a year-long blogging project. Why? I have no idea. I have plenty of other projects on the go right now. However, I seem to do a lot of things because "it seemed like a good idea at the time." ** I did not, however, have a good idea of *what* I should blog about for a year.

Then it hits me, when we're talking one day--we should do the blog thing together. Half the work and twice the fun! Fast-forward through a few conversations and we arrive at this blog.

Although January was well underway by the time we'd finalized the plan, I knew I had already met the monthly goal. My clutter-clearing focus in January was clothing: mine, and my kids'. In tackling my own overstuffed closet I considered whether the item fit the way I liked, how long it was (adjusting for seasons) since I'd worn it, how much I liked the item, whether the thought of wearing it was a pleasant one, and whether I had more than one similar item that perhaps I liked better. Although I didn't count them, I know I culled at least one thing for each day of the month.

In addition, I did some de-cluttering in the kitchen as we were installing a new cupboard and the timing was right. It seems there are always too many things--that don't get used--in the kitchen cupboards.

On the "Stitch" side of the equation, I really was stitching. I knitted up a pair of armwarmers for myself from various leftover yarns. I am not an expert knitter, and this project presented a bit of a challenge for me, since the yarns were various weights and I had to do a lot of (gulp) math to try and figure out when I should increase, decrease, and make adjustments. In the end, though, they turned out to be very satisfactory, and I'm almost through a similar pair that my daughter requested when she saw mine.

I haven't decided on a February focus yet, although I've tossed some things from my office just to keep up. I think it will be either office or kitchen.


** Exhibit A: my law career.

31 January, 2011

January Wrap-Up

The last year has been an eventful one for me and my husband; last March we finished building and moved into our new house, and in April we celebrated the arrival of our daughter, who is now a busy nine-month-old with a penchant for chewing the coffee table.  It was, on the whole, the most exciting and happiest year of our lives. 

However...
* moving house makes you realize just how much stuff you've accumulated (particularly when your new, much larger house can't really accommodate everything neatly.)
* babies are stuff-magnets.  In addition to the things we've bought, we have also received many lovely gifts and generous loads of hand-me-downs.  This is great, and we appreciate it--but the result is that we have far more of some things than we can ever use.
* because the construction of our house was a family affair, we have some end-of-the-road jobs we're still working on, in addition to trying to finish our decorating, sorting, organizing, furnishing, etc.

And so, I am determined to get rid of some of the clutter and excess stuff before it becomes an even bigger task.  And I'm hoping that bringing some more order to my life and home will enable me to finish some of the many, MANY creative projects that I've been putting off...which, conveniently, would also clear up a lot of accumulated materials, particularly in my art and sewing room.

This month, I certainly cleared out more than 31 things, although I don't have an itemized list.  Here are some of the highlights:
* I sorted through a lot of my daughter's outgrown clothes, packing up her tiny newborn and 3-6 month things (*cry cry*) in separate containers.  In the process, I ditched a lot of hand-me-downs that we were unlikely to use due to staining or just differences in taste.  Seeing just how much clothing we had to pack away for a possible future baby made me realize that we really didn't need to be keeping extras.  Also, I passed on a lot of baby boy and unisex things to my brother and sister-in-law; my new nephew is due in February, and I realized it didn't make sense for me to hang onto these things in case we ever have a boy when they could use them now.  Bonus: I tossed/recycled a LOT of department store clothing hangers that were cluttering up the nursery closet.
* I cleaned out a crate of old CDs, getting rid of most of them--including a lot of embarrassing remnants of my teenage years that I can't believe I was still carting around.
* I got rid of some clothing of mine that I hadn't worn in a while.
* When reshelving books after having to move them due to some flooding in our basement (!), I culled four.
* I passed along some kitchen wares that we had never used.
* I sorted out a box of professional resources and teaching materials that I would be more likely to use if they were in my classroom; I'll take them with me when I return to work in April.
* I recycled pounds of paper.
* I sorted a huge bag of photos and tossed at least half of them.

Wow!  My life has gotten much more productive as the baby has gotten more mobile and independent.  In addition to chucking all that stuff, I also managed to complete a few projects this month, and made some progress on some others.  I made aprons for two of my nieces to go with a kids' cookbook that I had given them at Christmas; they went together pretty quickly, and I was very pleased with them--especially when I found some iron-on cupcake appliques to dress up the pockets! 

I also knitted a pair of handwarmers for another niece, although I do still have to stitch up the sides of them.  In addition, I started work on an afghan I am crocheting for friends, and made some progress on a short story I am writing to submit to Third Person Press's upcoming anthology, UnearthedBonus: I read four books this month: The Habitation of the Blessed, Cake Boss: Stories and Recipes from Mia Famiglia, Blackout, and Adventures in Solitude: What Not to Wear to A Nude Potluck and Other Stories from Desolation Sound

Now, let's hope this can continue into February...

30 January, 2011

A New Project

Sherry and Krista are two sisters who have a lot in common. We love books, reading, writing, crafting and creating. However, we also share a couple of common problems: we have too much STUFF in our houses, and we don't make enough time for creative projects. This year we're hoping to change that.

Our goal is to discard (give away, throw away, or repurpose) one item every day (that's the "ditch" part), and complete one new creative project every month (that's the "stitch," being broadly interpreted to encompass any new creation).

We're hoping that keeping a shared blog account of our endeavours will keep us on track and motivated for the year.