Showing posts with label Made With Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Made With Love. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

HELP! The Cork's Stuck INSIDE The Bottle!!!!


I've worried and fretted over this since September. I pushed the stopper too hard and it popped down into the carboy - WITH THE CIDER/SUGAR/YEAST IN IT (of course).  I ended up just sticking another rubber stopper and airlock into the neck of the carboy and fermenting my hard cider with the old stopper in it. Calm down, it was sterile! Today was the day to rack the cider. Which I did. And then . . . what to do with the carboy and bung?

Well, Hubby, being the fix-it guy he is, went to the home-brew place in town and asked. Here's the complicated 3-step process:



1.    You take your basic plastic grocery bag, twist up the bottom only enough so it fits into your bottle, and gently fit it almost all the way in.


2.    Turn your bottle (carboy, jug, whatever) upside down and jiggle it a bit until the stopper is trapped between the bag and the side of the bottle (depending upon the size of the bottle, you may need to blow a little air into the bag at this point - just be prepared to do whatever you gotta do to trap the stopper against the side of the bottle).


3.    Pull on the bag.


Et viola.

This works with glass or plastic bottles and carboys: likewise with corks or rubber stoppers.

Thanks, Home-brew Dudes! Thanks Hubby, for asking the question (and knowing who to ask). OK. On to the next crisis. And I take back my earlier rant about the evils of the plastic grocery bag.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

The Absolute No Fail Perfect Every Time Pie Crust

Pie crust is made up of a few simple ingredients probably pretty universally known the world over. Flour, fat, egg, water. Yep, pretty simple.

BUT (finger-in-the-air caveat) . . . there are a few secrets to the perfect pie crust. And a few more to score the The Absolute No-Fail-Perfect-Every-Time Pie Crust.

Secret #1:  Cold. Use cold ingredients, refrigerated egg, coldest water you can come up with, etc. I'm beginning to understand the whole granite pastry station and marble rolling pin thing. Cold is essential to pie crust.

Secret #2: DO NOT OVERMIX!!!!! Maybe this should've been #1, 'cause I can't stress enough that overmixing makes a tough crust. And yes, in the pie crust world, overmixing is a word - a very, very important word. The dough should look shaggy, perhaps even lumpy - though the lumps shouldn't be any bigger than peas. I find that my OCD comes out when I use the pastry cutter and I want to mix the ingredients to a Play Dough consistency, so I use ye olde two knife mixing technique and barely cut it enough to incorporate my ingredients. Maybe you're someone who's strong enough to avert your inner OCDness and can use the pastry cutter. Use your own discretion.

Secret #3:  Do not use your hands! See #1. Your hands are warm. See #2. Your hands naturally want to make something smooth and pretty (like Play Dough), not something shaggy and lumpy (like The Absolute No-Fail-Perfect-Every-Time Pie Crust).

Bonus Secret!:  Lard. If you've just butchered your pig or bagged a bear and have some fat just layin' around, render that stuff down and use it in your pie crust! It's the best. Or, if it's not butchering time, you can buy a little box of lard from the ethnic section of your store. Or, you can just use vegetable shortening like Crisco. Butter flavored Crisco is amazing. Butter doesn't work (I think this is the only equation where butter or bacon isn't the answer), vegetable oil doesn't work. You must use either lard or shortening. It's the The Absolute No-Fail blah,blah,blah,blah rule.

Here's the recipe:

3 Cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups lard or shortening
1 egg
1 Tbsp vinegar (white or cider, doesn't matter)
5 Tbsp COLD water
This recipe calls for 1 tsp salt, but I've made crust both ways and I can't discern a difference so I leave it out. It makes me feel better about the lard.

All our neighbors have at least one apple tree. We have two. And our neighbor down the street brought us two boxes of apples from his tree this week. And I just spent an afternoon pressing cider with Zombie Team Neighbor (so fun!) who I dibs for my zombie apocalypse team 'cause she hunts wild mushrooms, has a cider press, ferments booze, gardens and stuff. So, since it's apple season in the 'hood, I'll show you what I'm typing about.

This is what you need:

Though, I should say you don't need some of this stuff. When I was a poor college student, I rolled out dough with the side of a glass. Just make do with what you've got.

                                 And the nesting straw stuck on the egg is definitely optional.

You start with your big bowl and put three level cups of all-purpose flour in there. That's dry measuring cups, not wet. Sifted or unsifted, doesn't matter. Add the 1 1/2 cups of lard or shortening. Cut it together with two knives until the shortening lumps are no bigger than peas.




In a cereal bowl put all your COLD ingredients. 1 egg, 1 Tbsp vinegar, 5 Tbsp water and mix with a fork. Add contents of the cereal bowl to the ingredients in your large bowl and flip it around and stir it up with your fork until there's no more flour on the bottom of your bowl. Roughly divide the dough into four sections - the recipe makes two two-crust pies.

                                            Don't mind the apple bits in the cider vinegar!




Put some flour on the counter, roll out one of your four dough lumps (I love Grandpa's rolling pin), scrape it off the counter with your spatula or pastry knife and roll it onto your rolling pin at the same time, then wheel the dough off the pin and onto your pie pan. This technique allows you to transfer the rolled dough from the counter to the pie pan without rippage or other crust-tastrophes.




This is where I'm gonna interject two layers of apples (usually my rule is about 8 apples per pie, figuring one apple per serving), each layer covered with one Tbsp sugar. You can add cinnamon if you want to, but Neighbor Down the Street's apples are naturally a little spicy so I'm gonna leave it out. You can dot the apples with butter to add some richness. I always figure the richer the better, so my apple pies are dotty.




Roll out the top crusts. Then roll them onto the apples in your pie pan. Crimp the edges. Try out your art-work. I like to cut a picture of whatever the pie is into the top crust. Cherries, berries, in this case, apples. This allows steam to escape. And then I wet my fingers with water and rub them on the top crust and dust it with sugar. 'Cause if you're going to have a piece of pie, you might as well get all the sugar you can, right? Plus, it looks prettier after you bake it.




Then you bake it. 350 degrees (why is there no degree key on my keyboard?) for 40 minutes. And people will rave about your apple pie and your crust and ask for your recipe. And you can airily say, "Oh, a little flour, a little fat, an egg - you know - ingredients are ingredients!". Or, you could save them years of pie-angst and tell them the secrets of The Absolute No-Fail-Perfect-Every-Time Pie Crust!


Oh, and extra-credit bonus - don't bother doubling the batch. It doesn't work. If you have more than two pies to bake, start the crust recipe all over for each pair. The amount of ingredients in this recipe is scientifically engineered and mechanically calibrated to be just right - any more and it'd require more mixing (tough crust) - any less and you'd only have 3 crusts!


Friday, June 14, 2013

Yard Sale Footstool Redo

I've been without wheels these last few days because Hubby is away with the truck. I'm in easy walking distance to a little corner market and I have everything I could possibly need anyway, so I'm enjoying the quiet time. We had such beautiful weather over the weekend I decided to take a peek at Craigslist Yard Sales to see if there were any close by. By happy coincidence there were! My trusty True and I walked to one of the sales in the neighborhood and guess what?! I finally found it! (Not the sale, silly, the thing I've been looking for.)

I've been looking for a small simple footstool to prop my feet on in the evenings. I didn't want a big ottoman or anything that'd take up too much space, but this little guy was just right! And at $2.00 I couldn't walk away without it.


Just right except for the ugly factor.

So I decided to fix it. Make it pretty. Replace the grubby blue crushed velvet with something . . . more.

So I took it apart.

Eek! That's MY mannish, garden ravaged hand? 



Just undid the four corner screws that were holding the top to the stool and pried off aaaalllllll the staples that were holding the different layers of coverings on it. When I got down to the cushion, I was pleased to see it was still in pretty good shape. All I need is a new cover.

I decided to crochet one from a pattern called Retro Circles by Adele at threebeansinapodcrochet.blogspot.com.au .  Just love this variation on ye olde Granny Square!


The Retro Circles were joined using the Simulated Braid Join pattern by Carolyn at Gourmet Crochet. You can see it here: Simulated braid join.


Then I whipstitched the new crocheted piece directly onto the new muslin I'd already stapled on and re-screwed the top piece to the footstool.


And here's my new li'l footstool!




Isn't it cute? Now it matches all the blocky wooden things and funky homemade things I have in my house. And it's just the right height to rest my tootsies on. For $2.00 (and a nice afternoon walk), plus another few bucks for the fabric- and yarn-stash stuff, I think it's a pretty good deal!


Sunday, May 12, 2013

A Sweet Mother's Day Gift

I put this together for Sister's birthday, but it would definitely work for Mother's Day!


All it takes is a nice candy dish with lid, the correct color of jelly beans, Sour Apple Straws, green apple licorice, skewers topped with luscious fresh strawberries wearing semi-sweet chocolate all tied up with ribbon . . . the memory of the chocolate/berry smell of Sister's birthday gift is making me drool.

Hey, I'm a mama! And I have leftover strawberries. And chocola

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Best Homemade Baby Gift

When making gifts for a new mommy, I try to think back 20+ years ago to my early mommy days. What was the most useful, practical, baby-friendly, old-fashioned-but-still-relevant item I received? We cloth diapered and I received a couple dozen homemade pre-folds as gifts - and, boy were they useful! But diapers don't really say "love" to me. Plus, most new moms use disposable.

Then there's the hat and booties.


They're cute, but how many mommies really use these on a regular basis? I didn't. You know that when they're just a few months old the hat is the first thing the little blighters rip off - and the socks or booties are next. Youngest Son preferred hatless and barefoot. I was really lucky if I could get socks on him to leave the house - he wouldn't stand for them inside.

No, the homemade gift items I treasured most were the baby blankets.  Just by looking at them I could see the amount of work and love that went into them. Being tactile little creatures, babies seem to enjoy the silky or soft ones. Of the several I received I had my favorites, of course - and I got two particular blankets I used ALL the time. Both were flannel receiving blankets. SO USEFUL! They were in use just as soon as we were out of the hospital to wrap baby up burrito-style, as a light cover,  for a cover in the carseat, tucked into a closed car window to shade baby on long trips, anywhere as an emergency changing station, as a barrier between baby and floor for tummy time, as a nursing cover, as a burp cloth, as an emergency cloth diaper. I got some real mileage out of those two receiving blankets! And when they were holey and frayed, I cut them up for spill rags and dusting cloths.

So, I've been a real fan of the flannel receiving blanket for a while. But then, when I was way past the young mommy stage, I went to a friends' from church who was whipping up the most amazing things on her sewing machine. Doubled flannel receiving blankets! Who'd've thunk it? She used three yards folded in half. Perfect. They're heavier, but still light enough to do all the things listed above (with the exception of emergency diaper - they're a little bulky for that), plus they last longer. Long enough for toddlers and walkers to love them, grab them for comfort or at nap time or to watch 'toons or for peek-a-boo, or just for snuggling with on mommy or daddy's lap.

We have a new baby coming into the family. A lovely (if her ultra-sound pics are any indication) girl-child. I'm not even the grandma of this one and I immediately went into flannel blanket mode. And I think I've one-upped my church friend. With crocheted lace.



Come home as soon as you're ready, baby girl. We're waiting!

Friday, March 22, 2013

Rock Painting

Sometimes I just get a wild hair and want to paint something. Not like a canvas or something "normal". More like something off-the-wall or unusual or something from nature.

Here are a couple of rocks I painted that were intended to be doorstops, but I don't know what their jobs are since they were gifted.


Sweetie told me they look aboriginal. For some reason that made me feel good. :)  I like the high contrast of black and white. Like black and white photos. Sister shoots hauntingly beautiful black and white photos that make me want to step into them and sit awhile. I don't have that talent. But I like to paint.  I like primitive. I like simple. I like art from nature. I should, like, paint more rocks.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Needle Books

I like to do little handcrafts when sitting watching TV or just resting. It's something tangible I can point to so I don't feel so guilty about sitting on my butt. Sometimes they make good gifts. Sometimes I just enjoy having pretty things around me that are embellished by needlework.

Here are a couple of felt needle books I've made:





That last one is mine. I made it so I'd have something to do while waiting for Sweetie to come out of surgery. I like bright. I like primitive. I like that I got all my needles from bits of paper or fabric, pincushions, tops of thread spools - you wouldn't believe all the places I stuck these suckers - into one place. I also like that it's one of the first things I see when I open my Mama's old sewing box (now mine).


:) Good stuff.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

These Hands, Small But Mighty

Bobby Bland knew what he was talking about. There's something about the hands of children. And their feet. But their hands get me on a visceral level. I just want to kiss 'em! My grandkids (a couple with their mamas help) allowed me to capture their hands when we were together last Christmas.

I made my favorite salt dough. It's really easy and fast. You put one cup of hot-as-you-can-stand-it water in a large bowl. Add one cup of salt. Swish it around until the salt is as dissolved as you can get it, then add two cups of flour. Mix it all up, roll it out, and press itty bitty hands into it. You can also let the kids play with it. It'll keep for about a week if covered, just about forever if dried.

I usually like to let the prints air dry, but I was in a hurry and baked them at 200 degrees and they bubbled a little bit. Dang. But I'm OK with messy and imperfect. That's life, right?


Then I painted them up.


And slapped on a coat of Elmer's glue. Hey, don't judge, I'm out of clear sealer, ok?


And tack them up with a bit of knotted ribbon.


How sweet is that? You can't really see it in these pictures, but the youngest one's came with the imprint of his sleeve cuff.  I love that. I wrote their names, their ages, the month and year on the back of each one to keep track of the sweetness.

See you soon, little ones.

Friday, March 1, 2013

Stop A Cough

Hubby has a cough. The dry, hacking, trying-to-get-my-wife-sick-too cough. There's only one sure-fire way I know of to stop a cough. No, not that! That's too final! I like to put Vicks VapoRub on the bottom of the feet, put socks on over them, and send the sicko to bed. Sounds dumb, but it really works.

But we're out of Vicks VapoRub. Time to make my version. Yeah. Debi's Shut-it Rub.

Get out the 10# block of beeswax Sister gave me about 10+ years ago. I've been shaving away at it for almost that long and I think I still have about 10 pounds. This stuff goes a long way. And some olive oil, the checkbook box of essential oils, and the double boiler (measuring cup in a pan of water) and here we go!


I'm not a measurer, I'm a dumper so bear with me. I put about a shot-glass of olive oil to about a tablespoon of beeswax in the double-boiler and melted it all together, then added about 25 drops of eucalyptus essential oil and about 20 drops of lavender essential oil. That filled my old blue Vicks VapoRub bottle to within 1/2 inch of the top.

Slather that on the bottom of Hubby's feet, add some socks, and 20 minutes later (ya gotta give it some time to work) - silence. Blessed silence. Shut-it Rub indeed.  :)

Monday, February 4, 2013

Yarn Bowl

For the last several months I've been on a crocheting thing. I do leave it for other projects at times, for a short time, but always seem to come right back. Almost all my good crafting ideas have been for crocheted stuff. Right now I'm working on a crochet-embellished gift I'd love to show off, but can't until after it's gifted.  So, instead, I'll show you a gift I got last Christmas.


This bowl is awesome. Not only did it come with bottles of homemade kahlua (long gone) and limoncello (still working on it) inside, but it has REALLY high sides and keeps my balls and skeins of yarn from falling off my lap and rolling across the floor and collecting dog hair. I've yet to figure out how a ball of yarn unerringly goes to THE place to pick up a dog-hair gerbil. Must be some sort of irresistible attraction . . . whatever, I don't have to worry about it any more . . . I have my Christmas yarn bowl. And that makes me one happy hooker.