Monthly Archives: September 2012

Fall table linens

IMG_8198
I just finished up these quilted placemats and reversible napkins.

Bijou Basin & Undersea Garden pattern winner

Congrats to Kathy #20!  I’ve emailed you.

A little Cast Iron Love


first meal of the new year!

Last May, if you recall, I was lucky enough to find an awesome old stove on Craigslist. Part of my strong desire to switch back to a coil top range was my wish to switch to cast iron skillets for our stovetop cooking.

taters and veggies

There are some of the flat top ranges that claim to be able to handle the weight and heat retention of cast iron, but our stove wasn't one of them and it just seemed too risky.

one fish two fish we ate bluefish

Cast iron has proven to be my favorite way to cook many different foods. And with minimal effort on my part, I have a safe alternative to chemical-laden nonstick coatings.

ham and kale frittata

TINY SKILLET!!!

k a l e

Now, I am actually getting around to something here. (No, really!)

See the colorful cover on the handle in the last picture? I made some custom covers for my skillet handles back in February, and talked about them at the bottom of an interminably long and rambling post, if you're feeling brave...

For the sake of not digging back through, here are the shots of the first set:

short handle snap-on cover

wrapped around

snapped

long handle sleeves

They were really easy to make. No pattern, no measuring, just sized them up on the handles as I went along. All they took were a few layers of flame-resistant fabric (I used plain and printed vintage feedsack scraps), some heat-proof material (in my case, some nasty looking oven mitts from the scrap pile), and some snaps.

Overall, they have worked perfectly for us. In fact, I almost never take them off!

now safe and easy to handle

Now then. Why am I telling you all this again? Well, I was one of several people interviewed for an article on cast iron cooking here in Berks County. The article is running tomorrow (Wednesday, 9/5/12) in our local paper, The Reading Eagle. If all goes as planned, it will include some of my always-endearing rambling, a recipe, and perhaps a picture or two.

No matter what does end up making it in, I have finally gotten around to making a tutorial for anybody who might want to whip up some of their own little handle covers, and I will be posting it tomorrow (with a link to the newspaper article too of course!) so stay tuned. :)

Snap …

My creation

Snapdragons.


Findley Fall/Winter 2012

We’re very pleased to announce that Findley, our super-popular laceweight yarn, will be released in 10 gorgeous new colors this fall!

May I present:

Oyster, Dove, and Cocoa,

Garnet, Tyrian, and Mermaid,

and Rappahannock, Tiger Lily, Malachite, and Menemsha!

This makes a total of twenty-two solid colors (plus the eight variegated shades of Findley Dappled) from which you can knit your next lace project. I hope you love the new colors just as much as we do!

I’d also like to share with you the four free patterns that I’ve written to go along with the yarn. I wanted to design approachable, wearable pieces, but I also wanted to challenge my own ideas about what could be done with a laceweight yarn. I think you’ll find this collection fun to knit and lovely to wear– please enjoy!

Springer, a zip-up jacket in men’s and women’s sizes, worked in a slip-stitch pattern using Findley held doubled, test-knit by Gina Assetta.

Download the pattern here.

 Gambrel, a visually striking colorblocked cardigan that’s got a surprise to share– a ladder of dropped stitches down the spine!– test-knit by Sue Isenhart.

Download the pattern here.

Gable, a large rectangular wrap in Indian Cross-Stitch, test-knit by Deb Terrio. It’s a stunningly simple stitch pattern that, when used in a mass like this, really makes the Findley shine.

Download the pattern here.

and Coulter, a two-color reversible slouchy beanie in a dead-easy basketweave stitch, test-knit in two different sizes by Sarah Lebel van Vugt and Jessica Nelson.

Download the pattern here.

The biggest of thank-yous to our swift-stitching test knitters, lovely test-knitting coordinator, talented photographer, endlessly patient technical and general editors, beautiful model (my sister, Charlotte), sharp-eyed stylists, and to everyone else who helped us bring you this collection.

Now, what are you waiting for? Queue them up on Ravelry, download them here, and then get knitting!

Tomorrow, we’ll be showing off a brand-new yarn and a fun collection of accessories to go with it. Make sure not to miss it!

Labor Day Laboring

While most everyone else we know is barbecuing and relaxing for the holiday weekend we’ve been working our backsides off inside and out.

Paul’s been playing in the mud rescuing the stream from the mangled tree debris that our less than wonderful landscaper piled there, and I’ve been cleaning, working on lesson plans and making pasta.  There was also a brief time out for the new season of Dr Who.  Because we’re still obsessed, y’all.

We had to install this culvert so we could extend some logs and mud over to stream as a land bridge without interfering with the water.

Did I mention that neither of us has any idea how this kind of thing is supposed to get done?  At least Paul is having fun with the backhoe attachment on our friend’s tractor.

Now all we need is more dirt and maybe some gravel to cover over it all.

The side Paul has finished up is flowing nicely again.  We even saw a fairly large crayfish (crawdad for you Southerners) hanging out on the bank.

See all the debris still on this side?  Don’t you love it when you pay someone to do a job for you and then you end up having to re-do it all?

All I know is it’s getting done.  Paul even thinks we may start fencing next weekend.

What a fabulous birthday present for me!

As for inside the house, there is pasta drying in preparation for the freezer.  September is when the basil in the garden has grown into a giant, bushy shrub and must be harvested before the first frost.  My favorite thing to do is make up a huge amount of pesto and make ravioli with it.  I can freeze enough to last all winter if I don’t get sick of making pasta before I’ve used it all.

I use Susan’s pasta recipe – in fact if you click that link you’ll see my hands creating the last big batch of pesto ravioli we made last year at this time.

Sweet heavenly pesto.  I could eat it for every meal.

Little pillows of delightfulness!  I let them dry on a cheesecloth or clean dishtowel for an hour or more (until they are not sticky anymore) and then toss them into a ziploc freezer bag.  They can be tossed in boiling water from frozen or fresh and take very little time to cook.

For my pesto I fill a blender with fresh basil leaves, toss in a handful of cherry tomatoes, a handful of parmesan cheese, a heaping tablespoon of minced garlic, about half a teaspoon of sugar, a handful of pine nuts, and 3 or 4 tablespoons of olive oil.  These are all approximate values, and I adjust according to taste.  Not everyone likes sugar or tomatoes in their pesto, but I find it gives it an extra something.  You can also substitute walnuts if you don’t have pine nuts, but I prefer the pine nuts.


Tagged: Farm, food, Garden

Cinnamon Twist

IMG_8189 IMG_8190

I was planning to make a  cinnamon wreath but I didn’t cut my roll all the way through so instead I braided the two halves together and got this gianormous braid-ish sort of thing. It was not as pretty but still very tasty!

Happy Labor Day!

Churchill sends you the best wishes of the season!

I hope you had a wonderful weekend and are spending today doing something besides laboring. I am laboring away on the finishing up the magazine. Today I’ll be squeezing in one last-minute photo shoot of a project for BY HAND, and filling in the blanks in the layout. So much to do but I am right on track, time-wise.

I do have all kinds of news to share with you this week, starting with the big reveal of our three pattern collections and yarns for Fall/Winter 2012. We’ll get started tomorrow with the Findley collection.

In the meantime, I hope you enjoy this day off and do something outside to celebrate the end of Summer.

 

 

Good Morning, Gladiola!

Weekly Mosaic #2 …

Moon – Star – Buttons – Dog – Friends – Wheel – Sign

My creation