Mar 22
Welcome, Spring
icon1 J. | icon2 Cook, Make, Read, Think | icon4 03 22nd, 2010| icon32 Comments »

Spring started yesterday.

Fall remains to be my favorite time of year, followed by winter. But I have to admit the enthusiasm of people around me about longer, sunnier days is catching. I’m thinking about the produce that’s soon to fill local farmers’ markets and the season-appropriate recipes I’ll get to try my hand at. These are on my list!

Clockwise from the top are Smitten Kitchen’s Artichokes Braised in Lemon and Olive Oil, a recreation of Avocado Toast by Cafe Gitane in New York, a classic Salad Nicoise and Fried Squash Blossoms. Yum!

Also, the warmer weather and drier days signal my annual breadmaking musings, when I start thinking about all the wonderful homemade bread I can attempt to make. I say “attempt” because I always tell myself to start considering the exploration of all things bready this time of year, but I always forget. This year, however, I want to make a solid effort. I got myself a copy of Beard on Bread, which was my mom’s breadmaking bible when we were kids. Maybe this time I’ll actually turn out a roll or two! ;)

beard-on-bread

Happy Monday, all. :)

Mar 12

In case you find yourself twiddling your thumbs this weekend, I have an easy craft project to cure your Idlehands-itis.

I made this simple Lemon Green Tea Sugar Scrub in no time and with very little elbow grease. It smells fresh and rings in spring with citrusy goodness. Best of all, it isn’t gloopy like other sugar scrubs and is perfect as a homemade gift.

It’s adapted from Mark Montano’s Big-A** Book Of Crafts. (I don’t swear much, not even in writing! So you can just deal with the asterisks, haha!) It uses easy-to-find ingredients, most of which are probably already in your pantry. (In fact, this scrub is so natural it’s edible! If you’re stuck in your bathroom during a nuclear fallout you can probably eat this. But let’s just hope you use this for vanity’s sake, not survival!)

You’ll need:

1 cup sugar
3 tablespoons Epsom salt
10 teaspoons olive oil (I used one marked “Light” on the bottle so it wouldn’t have a strong smell)
2 teaspoons honey (the darker, the better!)
3 green tea bags
1 lemon to zest (organic preferred)

Zest your lemon and set aside.

Combine the sugar and Epsom salt in a large mixing bowl. Tear open your green tea bags and mix the now-loose tea right in. Add the olive oil, mix in, then add the honey. This is actually efficient because the sugar-salt-tea mixture is able to break down the thick honey, plus the leftover olive oil in your measuring spoon allows the honey to slide right out.

Somewhere in the middle of all this mixing and stirring, you have to laugh when you catch the honey bear and your zester exchanging pleasantries/flirting. ;) Haha!

Add the lemon zest last.

What you get is this awesome, all-natural potion of good things that has exfoliating and moisturizing powers.

If you were to give this as a gift, take a beautiful container (mine has a matching small scoop)…

…and fill it with your homemade scrub. (By the way, I had to double the recipe above to make enough for my glass jar.)

Finish off with a handwritten label and some lovely baker’s twine. (I got mine from Odette and her pretty Etsy shop.)

Package in wrapping tissue as a sweet, homemade gift—this one went to E.’s mom for her birthday (though I liked it so much I’m making a batch for myself)!

Yay, Friday! Have a fun, crafty weekend, all. :)

Further Reading Into The Art Of Sugarscrubology (or other stuff to learn because, you know, learning is sexy)

Mark Montano’s Big A** Book of Crafts (with free links to other crafty ideas)

Sugar scrubs are cool. (And good for you!)

What is Epsom salt? (Because I sure as heck didn’t know!)

Why is darker honey better?

“I want to get a flirty zester like yours to keep my whisk company.”

“That glass jar is fabulous! Where did you get it?”

Martha Stewart pre-cut tags are cute beyond words. Because she’s a genius.

You need this Baker’s Twine from the Packages & Strings Etsy shop in your life. Trust me.

Mar 10

Dear Person Who I Don’t Know Who’s Going To Get My Scarf,

As I packed the red scarf I made for you through Craft Hope to be sent off to The Orphan Foundation, I was hopeful. Hopeful for you, because you’re going out into the world, and with something I made to warm you through the journey. When you’re in college learning about many things in life that matter, know that a lot of love went into the double-crochet stitches that make up this scarf.

I don’t know you, but I know you’re cool. Because the scarf you’re getting is magical. With it you can be and do anything.

Now go be awesome with your cool, new, magical red scarf. :)

Yours In Yarn,

J.

Mar 5
Sweet Stitches
icon1 J. | icon2 Make | icon4 03 5th, 2010| icon33 Comments »

Embroidery was the very first handicraft I learned. It was through home economics class in third grade. My first project was a handtowel with a very poorly satin-stitched watermelon and the word “Juicy!” To this day, I still can’t satin-stitch to save my life. But split stitches, whipped stitches, chain stitches, I love. :)

This was a pillow sham for my friend Bona’s baby, Joshua. It was for his first birthday. I thought it would be nice to make him an heirloom of sorts, one hae can keep through the years, and the vintage pattern on it was perfect.

I got the whole thing as a kit from a quilt show I went to. It included the sham, iron-on patterns by Lace Tales and embroidery floss. The pillow form was from Michael’s.

I had this thought that the pillow would be perfect as a bedtime-reading pillow, so I gave it to Joshua with one of my favorite childhood bedtime storybooks. Goodnight Moon was the best choice because the pillow had a smiley moon on it, too!

Hope your weekend is filled with sweet slumber! :)

Feb 5
B4D FTW
icon1 J. | icon2 Eat, Make | icon4 02 5th, 2010| icon36 Comments »

Look at a picture of today’s weather in Los Angeles:

Why don’t we replace it with this?

Yum! Did that make you smile? (Or hungry?) :)

I’m sitting here warming up with thoughts of the wonderful B4D (Breakfast For Dinner) Party we had with friends last weekend.

This kind of party is easy to put together and is a cinch to host. I thought maybe if I could think of breakfast fare that can all go into one oven and cook together, it would make hosting that much easier. So on the menu for the evening was: Spinach Cheese Frittata, Baked Chicken Sausages, Homemade Waffles and fresh fruit. And oh, Mimosas! Because who doesn’t like champagne + orange juice on a Saturday night?

The Baked Chicken Sausages were a healthier alternative to pork ones, picked up from Trader Joe’s. The dish was actually an experiment. I tossed some halved fingerling potatoes (no peeling, so easy!) with some sliced onions and green peppers with some olive oil, salt, pepper and garlic powder.

Laid those in a pan around the sausages that had little diagonal incisions on top. Baked at 375 degrees covered for 20 minutes (so the steam thoroughly cooks the sausages) and another 30 minutes or so uncovered (for browning). They came out full-flavored from the browning, with the peppers nice and soft, the onions caramelized and the potatoes thoroughly seasoned. I’ll be making this several times from now on. :)

As for the Spinach Cheese Frittata, would you like the recipe? Fancy a Frittata for your Friday? Here ‘tis!

Spinach Cheese Frittata
8 large eggs
4 large egg whites
2 cups spinach, fresh, baby leaves, chopped
4 Tbsp scallion(s), finely chopped
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp black pepper
1 cup shredded fat-free or lite cheddar cheese

Spray an 8×8 baking pan with cooking spray. In a large bowl, beat together eggs and egg whites; stir in spinach, scallion, salt and pepper. Pour mixture into pan, top with cheese. Bake at 375-degree oven. Mine took a while, maybe 30-40 minutes, because the eggs had to set and the cheese had to turn a golden brown. You can probably test at 20 minutes to see how “behaved” your egg mixture is. Let stand for a bit before cutting into wedges. The next time I make this I plan to throw in some red peppers and mushrooms, too! Another one for the recipe box. :)

The waffles were fun to make with this home-use, personalized waffle maker, the Presto Flipside (lots of great reviews on Amazon). You wait for it to heat up, pour in the waffle mix, flip it over to the other side and a beep goes off telling you your waffle is done.

Hello, Waffles. I believe it’s time you met my tummy!

We topped ours with peanut butter and real maple syrup. Yes, peanut butter. It’s an oddly awesome combination that E. introduced me to—he grew up with peanut butter + syrup on his pancakes and waffles. You should give it a try the next time you have these breakfast treats. It’s uncommonly yummy. :)

We finished the evening with more Mimosas and rounds of Super Mario Wii—which I’m bad at, but it’s ok. In the kitchen, I’m good. Avoiding poisonous mushrooms and snapping monster plants, not so much! ;)

I hope you get to throw an omnommnomy B4D party of your own, too! :)

Jan 25
I Dream In Pasta
icon1 J. | icon2 Eat, Make, Think | icon4 01 25th, 2010| icon34 Comments »

In a perfect world, I would have the chance to cook (and eat) every imaginable pasta shape out there. I’ve been thinking about pasta a lot recently, and this may be because I’m trying not to eat too much of it. Last night, in fact, I dreamt about making rigatoni with sausage and peppers. With homemade marinara sauce from ripe, plump Roma tomatoes, made bold with healthy servings of garlic, fresh basil and thyme, finished off with a hunk of warm, crusty bread.

In my hankering for all things pasta, I’ve unearthed these photos from one of the more memorable pasta meals I’ve made. It’s a no-holds-barred Chicken Alfredo (modified from this recipe), the kind you only make once every two years or so for fear that you’ll keel over after the last bite. The kind of pasta dish you hold in your memory—for the joy in making it as much as the joy in eating it!

I remember making this after discovering the pasta Shapes Library (yes, there is such a thing) over at the National Pasta Association website. I was looking through all the shapes and realized I’d never worked with Cavatappi before, so I promptly set about to remedy the situation by declaring dinner as an excuse to test-run this particular pasta shape.

There’s so much more out there to try! How about these interesting-looking ones for your next meal? I think learning to pair which pasta shape to what sauce is an unexplored culinary art form, and I’m hoping to get several chances this year to uhm, “enrich my studies” (read: Cook and eat more of these things!). Look, there’s even a pasta shape for a curlyhead like me! ;)

screen-capture-13 screen-capture-31

If YOU dreamt of pasta, what kind of dish would it be? :)

Jan 23
Crochet Saturday
icon1 J. | icon2 Make | icon4 01 23rd, 2010| icon34 Comments »

Making headway today on my red scarf for The Orphan Foundation while watching the US Figure Skating Championships–can’t wait for the Winter Olympics. (That’s Belbin and Agosto on screen!) And I’m loving my very useful cupcake tote. It was a Christmas gift from E.’s mom T. and I now use it for my portable projects. :) Hope this Saturday finds you loved and warm and crafty! :)

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