Saturday, November 27, 2010
Sneak Peak
For Chanukah, I'm giving a gift to my niece and nephew that is comprised of 69 pieces. Mind you, I've purchased this same item for my own child, so I do believe the pieces are worth it. But, even though the pieces are not small enough for an infant to choke on, I can't, in good faith, give my sister's kids a gift with no storage option. A sister who, by the way, gave my daughter a set of Little House books in a lovely canvas box from, I believe, the aforementioned Container Store.
Enter the drawstring bag.
I decided to make a drawstring bag to accompany the gift. This bag is great for two reasons, at least.
1. It can house all or some of the pieces when not in use.
2. It is made of leftover fabric that's been lying around since I shortened some IKEA curtains. I love the fabric, and the weight is nice and durable. Perfect for an easy, toy-storage solution.
While I cannot disclose what these bags are for, I can certainly tell you that I think they're really cute. And, I'm psyched that I was able to finally find a good use for some of that curtain fabric. Now I can give my multi-pieced gift in peace.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Pureed Goodness Despite a Bay Leaf's Best Efforts
You've just got to love an immersion blender. I've been using mine so much my husband started teasing me about it. Anyone else get teased about their blender use?
I made butternut squash soup this weekend, as you might have read. It's a pureed soup, and a yummy one, at that. However, even though it's written explicitly in the recipe, I skipped the step where you remove the bay leaf before blending. Oops. Having used white pepper instead of black so the soup would look just perfect, I was surprised to see a dark bit floating around when I began blending the soup. I realized pretty quickly what it was.
Can you see all the pieces of bay leaf I picked out of the soup? As soon as I saw a piece floating in the soup I stopped blending and began picking. After a while, the picking got old. That's when I turned to my trusty friend, the internet. What? You know Internet, too? Does yours also have the uncanny ability to tell you all sorts of information, like what happens if you accidentally eat a bay leaf?
Well, here's what I learned:
Clearly, the bay leaf isn't poisonous, or you wouldn't cook with it at all. And it's ground up fine in Old Bay, so consuming it is ok. HOWEVER, it doesn't even wilt when cooked for a long time, and the edges of the pieces of leaf, when broken, can be very sharp. According to a number of online sources, the sharp leaf can cut the throat and stomach lining. Yeah, not something you'd want to do.
So I quit picking out the pieces, and pureed the hell out of my soup. If I saw a big piece of leaf I removed it, but otherwise I just made sure to chop the pieces up so tiny that they wouldn't perforate my esophagus. Good plan, right? Anyway, if you make this soup, which I highly recommend, save yourself some time and trouble by remembering to remove the bay leaf.
We had the soup last night with fresh multi-grain bread (from the store. I don't make EVERYthing.) and a favorite salad. Here are the recipes...
Butternut Squash Soup
(Serves 10-12. Use 2 med sized squash, and 4 cups broth for 6-8)
8 ½ pounds whole butternut squash
2 chopped medium white onions
Tbsp chopped ginger
Zest of one orange
3 large carrots
1 bay leaf
olive oil
7 cups vegetable broth
heavy cream-optional
1. Cut carrots into large chunks and place on a baking sheet with halved squash placed cut side down. Roast until you can pierce the skin of the squash easily with a fork.
2. Let squash cool. Remove all flesh with a spoon and discard skin.
3. While squash is cooling, sweat onion in 2 Tbsp olive oil in a large soup pot.
4. Add bay leaf, salt and pepper. Stir.
5. Stir in squash and carrots.
6. Add broth, ginger, and orange zest. Stir well, and bring to a boil.
7. Reduce heat and simmer 20 minutes.
8. REMOVE BAY LEAF.
9. Blend until nearly smooth either in batches in a blender or with an immersion blender.
10. Stir in cream if desired, totally not necessary.
11. Great garnished with frizzled, salted leaks.
Tri-Color Salad with Dried Cranberries
Salad:
1/2 a head of radicchio, sliced across the grain into thin strips
1 bunch watercress, washed and thick lower stem removed
1 endive, leaves and core sliced
1/2 cup dried cranberries
blue or goat cheese- optional
Dressing:
You can use any vinaigrette. I make one with
Olive oil
Balsamic vinegar
a splash of water
Tbsp dijon mustard
Tbsp honey
Mix all salad ingredients except cheese. Dress and toss. Top with cheese if desired.
Yummy Yum!
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Yes, My Kids Do Eat Their Veggies
Breakfast: Fried Eggs with Polenta
Lunch: Turkey Sandwiches (not that earth shattering)
Dinner: Pasta with Romanesco Cauliflower and Roasted Sea Bass
Not to mention that, in between, I made fresh baby food purees of peas, carrots, and mango, and a batch of our very own butternut squash soup for tomorrow.
The main item of note was the Pasta with Romanesco Cauliflower. While walking through my favorite market, DePiero's, I saw a pile of Romanesco Cauliflower, and immediately thought it would be fun to show my daughter. She likes cauliflower, and, because she's a curious, goofy toddler, she likes all things wacky. I quickly chose a head of this psychedelic vegetable to bring home. Naomi preferred the cauliflower plain, and liked it both raw and boiled. The recipe I tried is below, but allow me to digress for just a moment.
At our house, it's sort of an if-you-cook-it-they-will-eat-it-or-at-least-try approach. Some of the tips for making this work, at least in my house, are these:
- Let your kids wander with you in the produce department. Teach them to stay close to you and the cart, but allow them to ask what everything is and to choose the items that look good.
- Explore favorite produce in various preparations or varieties. Have a taste test of raw and cooked veggies. If your child loves broccoli, try broccolini or broccoli rabe. Do they like it when tossed with a bit of olive oil and garlic? If it's cauliflower, try roasted with garlic or mashed with parsnip. Likes cantaloupe, how about Crenshaw melon?
- Find produce that's your child's favorite color. Around here we get excited about yellow varieties of tomatoes, carrots, potatoes, and beans. We also discovered that Naomi loved eggplant because she was in a really purple-loving mood one day at the store. We watched it turn colors while cooking and it's been a favorite of hers ever since.
- Try, like I did today, to pick things up with strange names or shapes. The pumelo is popular in my kitchen these days because it's an "egormous" grapefruit. The romanesco cauliflower of tonight's meal is a "crazy cauliflower" with spikes, and "isn't that so silly?"
- Figure out a safe way for your child to help you cook. Let him watch the food you chose together at the store change shape and color. Make sure he has a job, so he's really helping you make it.
- In any case, if you end up with an item that you're not sure how to prepare, look it up. Don't let that be a reason not to try it, and don't let that be the reason your kids don't try it.
- Our rule is that you have to try it. One bite is enough, and if you don't like it you don't need to eat any more and we'll find something else. (If you really don't like it you can VERY politely spit it out. This has only happened twice.)
- And please, never tell your child what they do and don't like. What not to do:"Oh, that's a (fill in the blank), you won't like it." Instead, try: "That's a ______. Can you believe how (big/bumpy/shiny/pretty) it is. Would you like to try one?" If you've never seen something or eaten it, tell your child that. Suggest trying something new together. Don't go too over-the-top, but try to make the item seem interesting, mention a few ways you could use it at home. It's no guarantee that your kid will say yes, but at least it's your kid who will decide. Yes, sometimes food will get wasted, or you'll end up eating something you don't like best because your child won't finish it. But you never know what item is the one she'll love.
Pasta with Romanesco Cauliflower
adapted from Rachel Eats
A head of romanesco separated into florets, and stalk cut into small pieces
Extra virgin olive oil
3 cloves of garlic, peeled and smashed with the side of a knife
Freshly grated parmigiano
Salt and pepper
Red pepper flakes, optional
1 lb of a pasta that will hold sauce well. I suggest something with lines or curls.
- Boil salted water in a pot big enough to hold the cut-up cauliflower.
- Rinse the cauliflower. When the water starts boiling, add the cauliflower and boil for 5-8 minutes over medium-high heat. The cauliflower should be very tender and break easily when pierced with a fork.
- Remove the cauliflower from the salted water with a slotted spoon, but save the water for the pasta! Bring it to a boil again, adding more water if needed for the amount of pasta you’re cooking, and cook your pasta al dente according to the package directions.
- While the water is coming to a boil or the pasta has just been added, in a large frying pan, heat up a few tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil, pepper flakes, and cloves of garlic. Let the garlic and pepper infuse into the oil for a few minutes. Remove garlic cloves.
- Add the cauliflower florets and saute them over medium-high heat, starting to gently smash them with your spoon so they break down into an almost-creamy mixture.
- After the pasta is drained, mix together the pasta and the cauliflower off the heat and add an extra touch of good olive oil.
- Serve with a generous sprinkle of parmigiano.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
DIY Blog at Gift Giving Time
There are projects in the works that I'd like to write about, but they're gifts for folks who I believe read this, at least occasionally. What to do? If I post the works-in-progress I'll spoil the surprises. If I don't, I might not have much else to say for the next few weeks. Something to ponder. Maybe I'll just have to really motivate to work on more things so I have posting material that won't interfere with my gifts. That might be the solution. Anyone know how to add a few hours to the day?
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Super Baby! and other adventures of applique
After making that onesie a few months back, I began to collect basic shirts that could become my next project. If you read my last post, you know that I've also expanded into my own attire. Here are a few photos of some recent jersey victims:
I was trying to decide what to make for a friend's new baby, and, with applique on the brain, went right to a solid pink hoodie. The question of what to sew onto it was clearly inspired by my love of the "Incredibles" and interest in the new family show "No Ordinary Family." Who doesn't want, in some small way, to be a super hero? Taking my cue from comic strip exclamations, this hoodie was born. (The B is the baby's initial, by the way, not just for "Super Baby.")
How to:
Iron applique onto the shirt in desired location.
Iron the stabilizer to the inside of the shirt, being sure to cover entire applique from behind.
Sew as you like, I chose satin stitch for this one, but the orange shirt (above) is just a doodle-ish free motion stitch.
Tear away the stabilizer, it will essentially be perforated by the sewing machine needle.
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Merino Bouquet
The sweater comes in a bunch of great colors, but I settled on the charcoal so I could go nuts with the colors of my applique.
Here's what happened next:I cut small rectangles out of a number of fabric scraps in my stash. Then I ironed fusible web onto each piece so I could cut shapes out and iron them onto my sweater.Once I decided on a design, some simple daisy shapes this time, I arranged all the pieces and began to iron them in place. I placed a few near the collar, and a few wrapping around the ribcage on one side and climbing up the back.After ironing everything down, I sewed the applique. I free-motion stitched the pieces, and I imagine I'll like it even more when the edges fray a bit after washing.
Here are a few shots of the finished product:I have to admit, I was wearing it today when I went into Gap to consider buying another blank canvas. I debated for a while between the orange and olive (and royal blue and pink, argh, impossible tasks), but ultimately walked out empty handed. They were marked down to $35, but that seemed like a mark-up after my original deal. I figure I can check back next week, maybe they'll be back down to $20. And by then the slimmer pickings might help me choose another color. Or two.