So I had finally had it with the folded piles of fabric sitting on the setee by the foot of the bed, and determined to clean up this clutter one way or another. But then I looked in at my sewing corner, and saw such disarray. Four bags stuffed full and overflowing with leftover fabric, from scraps, to the I'll get on that project and fix it to something useful stages of things no longer worn were hovering in the corner like a looming tower. Crushing my creative nature, and guilting me every time I bought new fabric.
Enough was enough.
I needed organization. Order! A sensible set-up!
I needed....shelves.
However, it is the unfortunate fact that we live in a town without a store selling lumber. That's right. You can buy dowel rods at the hardware store and that's about it. So, after surveying my leftover stash of scrap pieces (now excited by the idea of using up these odds and ends as well), I made a list of what I had and started drawing out a plan.
Well, after much cutting, sanding and fastening, I was rewarded with moderate success.
I now have a shelf.
And thing look so organized!
This inspired me to clean the whole corner of that room, re-organize, etc.
And one thing led to another and before I knew it, I've even got the leftover fabric rolled, banded and in a designated area.
Whew.
Here is the "after shot" of my efforts...the before shot never happened, and it's just as well-take my word for it.
Now I'm all juiced up for my next project. The workspace is just begging to be used!
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Falafel and Tzatziki
Hello reader,
I have been having a blast discovering the joys of pressure cooking dried beans!
It's so much fun, and I love the fact that I don't have to mess around with pre-soaking or anything so time consuming as that. To help me on my merry way, I found this great website:
http://www.hippressurecooking.com/pressure-cooking-times/
Which has been enormously helpful. I've cooked great northern beans to make into a lovely dip, or to enjoy with salsa and sour cream over them (really good!), and then I moved on to garbanzo beans (chick peas). Lately I've been having trouble getting the consistency of hummus that is smooth and rich from using the cheap, pre-cooked canned variety, so this was my next mission...and it worked. Over cooking the chick peas made them delightful for hummus. This was the first factor that led me to a dinner of falafel...
The other happened one night during the week, when I was seeking a creative way to use cauliflower as a side, and found a recipe for cauliflower falafel. Well, the mister wasn't wild about it, so I saw this as a challenge to find a good recipe for the real deal.
For this, I turned to the well known website by The Shiksa In the Kitchen:
http://theshiksa.com/2011/01/05/falafel/
I read the reviews for this recipe, and went ahead with the pressure cooking of one-half bag of garbanzo beans (one half pound).
I followed the recipe as listed on the site, only adding a touch of tumeric, and set the mixture in the fridge for a few hours. Unfortunately, it came out with no stick-together at all.
I added flour and worked it. Not enough. Added more. Maybe. Tried it in the heated canola oil....
And it totally fell apart while frying.
Sadness ensued.
Don't give up! Add more flour and seasoning (because I figured now it was diluted).
And since I threw out the canola oil mess, I went with a skillet and olive oil.
Here is the recipe for the falafel I ended up making:
I made patties out of the mixture by packing a heaping tablespoon against the side of the bowl, and releasing it into the hot oiled skillet with another tablespoon
Browned each side
Set them for 20 seconds on a paper towel to absorb extra oil
Then under a covered plate until they were all done. I was able to work 4-5 at a time, and they didn't take long to brown.
The sauce you see was the Tzatziki I made...
Tzatziki is a wonderfully easy and delightfully cool and crisp addition to this meal (and others too). It emphasizes the falafel in a manner than I doubt anything else can, and so highly recommend making it to go with.
Tzatziki Recipe
Ingredients:
1 1/2 C full fat yogurt
3/4 of a large cucumber
2 t dried mint
1 large garlic clove
1 T lemon juice
1/4 t salt
To make:
Peel and seed the cucumber, then chop finely (save the rest of the cucumber for garnish)
Press the garlic clove
Add the yogurt, lemon juice, dried mint, and salt
Stir and refridgerate until ready for use.
*If you happen to not have dried mint, you can use mint from a tea bag instead, just don't use peppermint.
One small confession...
I took this picture the next day when I was having the leftovers for lunch, so the falafel was not as crispy. But it was still delicious!
For dinner I served it with pita pockets, smeared on the inside with hummus, the falafel, cucumber, tomato and onion slices, and of course, the Tzatziki, it was very good. OH, and a pickle on the side (Kosher dill of course).
I have been having a blast discovering the joys of pressure cooking dried beans!
It's so much fun, and I love the fact that I don't have to mess around with pre-soaking or anything so time consuming as that. To help me on my merry way, I found this great website:
http://www.hippressurecooking.com/pressure-cooking-times/
Which has been enormously helpful. I've cooked great northern beans to make into a lovely dip, or to enjoy with salsa and sour cream over them (really good!), and then I moved on to garbanzo beans (chick peas). Lately I've been having trouble getting the consistency of hummus that is smooth and rich from using the cheap, pre-cooked canned variety, so this was my next mission...and it worked. Over cooking the chick peas made them delightful for hummus. This was the first factor that led me to a dinner of falafel...
The other happened one night during the week, when I was seeking a creative way to use cauliflower as a side, and found a recipe for cauliflower falafel. Well, the mister wasn't wild about it, so I saw this as a challenge to find a good recipe for the real deal.
For this, I turned to the well known website by The Shiksa In the Kitchen:
http://theshiksa.com/2011/01/05/falafel/
I read the reviews for this recipe, and went ahead with the pressure cooking of one-half bag of garbanzo beans (one half pound).
I followed the recipe as listed on the site, only adding a touch of tumeric, and set the mixture in the fridge for a few hours. Unfortunately, it came out with no stick-together at all.
I added flour and worked it. Not enough. Added more. Maybe. Tried it in the heated canola oil....
And it totally fell apart while frying.
Sadness ensued.
Don't give up! Add more flour and seasoning (because I figured now it was diluted).
And since I threw out the canola oil mess, I went with a skillet and olive oil.
Here is the recipe for the falafel I ended up making:
Ingredients
- 1/2 pound dry chickpeas/garbanzo beans, pressure cooked
- 1/2 onion, roughly chopped
- 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
- 3 cloves garlic
- 4 T flour
- 3/4 t salt
- 2 t cumin
- 1 t ground coriander
- 1/4 t black pepper
- 1/8 t cayenne pepper
- Pinch tumeric
- Olive oil for sauteing
Method
Process this mixture in a food processor, but quite before it gets too smooth like hummus, use the pulse!I made patties out of the mixture by packing a heaping tablespoon against the side of the bowl, and releasing it into the hot oiled skillet with another tablespoon
Browned each side
Set them for 20 seconds on a paper towel to absorb extra oil
Then under a covered plate until they were all done. I was able to work 4-5 at a time, and they didn't take long to brown.
The sauce you see was the Tzatziki I made...
Tzatziki is a wonderfully easy and delightfully cool and crisp addition to this meal (and others too). It emphasizes the falafel in a manner than I doubt anything else can, and so highly recommend making it to go with.
Tzatziki Recipe
Ingredients:
1 1/2 C full fat yogurt
3/4 of a large cucumber
2 t dried mint
1 large garlic clove
1 T lemon juice
1/4 t salt
To make:
Peel and seed the cucumber, then chop finely (save the rest of the cucumber for garnish)
Press the garlic clove
Add the yogurt, lemon juice, dried mint, and salt
Stir and refridgerate until ready for use.
*If you happen to not have dried mint, you can use mint from a tea bag instead, just don't use peppermint.
One small confession...
I took this picture the next day when I was having the leftovers for lunch, so the falafel was not as crispy. But it was still delicious!
For dinner I served it with pita pockets, smeared on the inside with hummus, the falafel, cucumber, tomato and onion slices, and of course, the Tzatziki, it was very good. OH, and a pickle on the side (Kosher dill of course).
Sunday, March 16, 2014
One Apple = Dessert for Two
Ramekin Apple Crisp (for two)
Do you ever end up with one piece of fruit, that just sits there, because there is only one of them? Have you ever been in a pinch with one apple and a craving for a dessert idea, and wondered, how can I make this stretch for the two of us? Well, I can tell you one idea...
Make some apple crisp in ramekins! As it turns out, one apple is the perfect size to fill two ramekins, and what better way to use it than to make two perfectly portioned individual desserts? It takes a fraction of the time, and adds a special touch to the end of dinner.
Here are the instructions:
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees
Wash the apple
Grab the cinnamon
Slice it as you would for a pie or crisp, about an eighth of an inch or slightly thicker, taking out the core
Margarine the sides and bottoms of the ramekins
Start placing the apple slices in the ramekin in an even coverage fashion
At halfway up the ramekin, add a dash of cinnamon and continue filling
Add another dash of cinnamon on the top
In a small bowl, combine:
2 T flour
3 T sugar
3/4 T margarine
1/4 t cinnamon
Use a fork or rub the mixture together with your hands until you achieve a coarse crumb consistency and it is even in texture and blended through.
Divide equally and sprinkle over the tops of both ramekins.
Give them a light pat, gently!
And into the oven for about 35 minutes.
The crust should be turning a light golden brown at this point, at which you are done!
Cool for 10 minutes and serve when cool enough to handle.
Vanilla iced cream or frozen yogurt is always a nice addition, but not necessary.
Enjoy!
Do you ever end up with one piece of fruit, that just sits there, because there is only one of them? Have you ever been in a pinch with one apple and a craving for a dessert idea, and wondered, how can I make this stretch for the two of us? Well, I can tell you one idea...
Make some apple crisp in ramekins! As it turns out, one apple is the perfect size to fill two ramekins, and what better way to use it than to make two perfectly portioned individual desserts? It takes a fraction of the time, and adds a special touch to the end of dinner.
Here are the instructions:
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees
Wash the apple
Grab the cinnamon
Slice it as you would for a pie or crisp, about an eighth of an inch or slightly thicker, taking out the core
Margarine the sides and bottoms of the ramekins
Start placing the apple slices in the ramekin in an even coverage fashion
At halfway up the ramekin, add a dash of cinnamon and continue filling
Add another dash of cinnamon on the top
In a small bowl, combine:
2 T flour
3 T sugar
3/4 T margarine
1/4 t cinnamon
Use a fork or rub the mixture together with your hands until you achieve a coarse crumb consistency and it is even in texture and blended through.
Divide equally and sprinkle over the tops of both ramekins.
Give them a light pat, gently!
And into the oven for about 35 minutes.
The crust should be turning a light golden brown at this point, at which you are done!
Cool for 10 minutes and serve when cool enough to handle.
Vanilla iced cream or frozen yogurt is always a nice addition, but not necessary.
Enjoy!
Thursday, March 13, 2014
McCall's 6802-Blah Cardigan
McCalls 6802
Hmmm. A
disappointment.
And this after I waited so long to get the pattern on
sale!
I had wanted to make a warm, snuggly, throw-it-on cardigan
type sweater out of fleece, and had picked view C as the perfect conveyance for
my idea.
The fact that it was labeled an easy sew made it all the
more meant to be. That was all in
theory, however, not in practice as I soon came to find out.
From reading other reviews, I gathered that this view was
noted for excessive ease, so I decided to cut between the 8 and 10 sizes. It also appeared that the sleeves were not full
length, and that would bother me, so I chose to extend the sleeves in cutting
by 5 inches. The most obvious pointer
was to cut the collar on a fold, who needs the extra seam?
So that was the plan.
Then came the directions… and what a mess.
They seemed all over the place, and
nonsensical. Instead I followed this
chain of events because it made more sense:
Shoulder/upper arm seams
Side seams
Fold pocket top, place, pin, stitch along bottom and top
stitch the pocket side near the side seam of the body (stitch fold down on one
side, and all the way down, fold under then top stitch side)
Cut neck band on the fold-eliminate center back seam, stitch
side of neck band, turn inside out, pin neck band seam to inside collar area,
fold neck band over and pin to outside (encasing seam) and stitch
Bottom seam
Sleeve seam
And the result was well-thought out (I thought!) but
hideous. Short in length and
shapeless. Disappointing to say the
least.
I can’t see giving this another go. But the view A does look cute. Guess I’ll check out the reviews for that one
and see some finished products before I write this pattern off completely.
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