Tag Archives: Family

Stoneview 2012-04-09 11:55:13

013 sweet potato rolls, sourdough version 022 023 025 Red Velvet Cake

We were excited to have Chris and Sara join us for Easter this weekend. I wasn’t sure if they were coming so it was an awesome surprised to get a “we’re here” text from Sara Saturday night. Jason and Daniel went to PAX East (a gaming convention) on Saturday while Chris and Sara did a power walk on the Freedom trail and finished in a record 90 minutes. They came back and spent the afternoon with me.

I adapted my sweet potato roll recipe to include sourdough and had a lightbulb moment when I realized it’s much easier to roll the dough out all at once and cut it into strips with a pizza wheel before forming the knots. It went much faster that way.

Sweet potato rolls

1 cup “fed” sourdough starter
1 tablespoon honey
2 1/4 teaspoons active dry yeast
3/4 cup skim milk, 100 to 110 degrees F.
3/4 cup sweet potatoes, cooked and mashed
3 tablespoons melted butter, divided
1 1/4 teaspoons salt
2 large egg yolks, lightly beaten
5 cups bread flour, divided
cooking spray

Combine the sourdough starter, honey, yeast, milk, 1 tablespoon melted butter, and sweet potatoes in a large bowl. Mix until thoroughly combined, breaking up any lumps of potato. Beat in egg yolks. Add 3 cups of the flour and mix with a spoon until smooth. Now add salt and enough remaining flour to make a smooth dough. Kneat 8-10 minutes and transfer to a large bowl coated with cooking spray, turning to coat. Cover tightly and let rise until doubled, about an hour.

Preheat over to 400F (convection if you have it).

Roll out dough on a floured board to about 3/8-inch thick into a rectangle approximately 12 x 20. Using a pizza wheel, cut dough into about twenty-four 12-inch strips. Spray two baking sheets with cooking oil. Form strips into knots and place on cooking sheets. Cover loosely with towels and allow to rise about 30 minutes or until double.

Brush with melted butter and bake at 400F

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. fifteen minutes or until lightly browned, turning the pan halfway through cooking.

Dessert this year was a red velvet cake, one of Daniel’s favorites and a bit hit with all. It’ll be prettier if you do a crumb coat but since I was doing frosting late in the evening I skipped that.

 

Red Velvet Cake

2 1/2 cups sifted all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
2 oz. red food coloring (two bottles)
1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 eggs, at room temperature
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup buttermilk, at room temperature
1 teaspoon white vinegar
1 teaspoon baking soda
Cream Cheese Frosting Ingredients:
1 lb cream cheese, at room temperature
1/2 cup butter, at room temperature
1 Tbsp. vanilla extract
3-4 cups powdered sugar, sifted

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
In a small bowl, whisk the flour, baking powder, and salt. Whisk food coloring and cocoa powder together, until smooth, in a prep bowl.
In the bowl of your mixer, beat together butter and sugar, until light and fluffy. Beat in eggs, one at a time, then add vanilla and cocoa/food coloring. Add flour and buttermilk, alternating each, beginning and ending with flour. Mix vinegar and baking soda in a little cup and then gently fold this into the cake batter. Split batter into two cake pans that have been greased with the butter papers. Bake 30 minutes at 350F or until a cake tester comes out clean. Cool in the pan 10 minutes then remove to a wire rack to cool completely.

For the frosting:
Whip together butter and cream cheese then add 1 teaspoon vanilla and gradually add the confectioner’s sugar until a spreadable consistency is achieved. Place your first layer on your cake stand and spread the top with a dollop of frosting leaving it thicker at the edges. Invert your second layer onto this. Now transfer a little of the frosting to a small bowl and spread a thin coat over the cake. Don’t worry about crumbs at this point. Place the cake in the refrigerator for 15 minutes or until the crumb coat is firm (chill the rest of the frosting if your kitchen is too warm). Now frost the cake with the rest of your frosting. Chill several hours or overnight before serving.

Photogenic

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I finally pulled out the negative scanner and finished scanning that last giant pile of negatives I unearthed in the scrapbooking boxes. I *think* I am all done with those. Next up is the gargantuan task of going onto Flickr and orienting them all in the correct direction and labeling them as best I can.  Some of the last stuff I scanned is from our trip to Hawaii in 2003, shortly before we switched to digital.

The Top Of New Jersey …

HIGH POINT STATE PARK,  which is the highest point in  New Jersey is located in Montague in Sussex County. At 1,803 feet above sea level it is the highest peak of the Kittatinny Mountains.  At the peak of the highest point is the 220 ft High Point Monument- from the top you can see New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania.

It’s been 40 years since I’ve been there so on a recent summer-like day in March my daughter Patty, granddaughter Tiffany, and I decided to go exploring.

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There are 291 stairs to the top.  I climbed it on my first visit to the monument in Sept, 1972.. I snapped this picture because I knew I’d never do it again.  The monument isn’t open for the season yet so I didn’t have to find out if I would or not.. I like to think I would have tried.

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Same view today but from the base of the monument.

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Views of New Jersey

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New York

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Pennsylvania

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With a little help from this…

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… you can see really, really far…

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There are hiking and biking trails, picnic areas and a lake.

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As the name of my blog implies yes, I am obsessed with Martha’s Vineyard… but I am also proud of my home state of New Jersey.

(There may have been some liberties taken with a few of the photographs… can you guess which ones?)  :)


Hey there Spring!

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12



So spring came early, huh?

This was my Dappled Nishiki willow on the 11th, just ready to pop,

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

and today it is totally leafed out and looking great.

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

Because I love befores and afters, and because I can't stop myself from doing the same tedious spring posts every year, I have compiled a selection of pictures from the 11th of this month, and from today (the 24th), to show how happy our plants are here this very early spring.

One section of the daylilies on the 11th,

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

and today.

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12


Star magnolia on the 11th:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

Today:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

White bleeding heart on the 11th:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

Today:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

Japanese maple on the 11th:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

Today:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

Yarrow on the 11th:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

Today:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

Irises coming up on the 11th:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

Today:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

Honeysuckle on the 11th:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

Today:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

Columbine on the 11th:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

Today:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

Blueberries on the 11th:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/11/12

Today:

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

And a few random things too...

Strawberries survived the mild winter in the rapidly disintegrating coir hanging baskets. I guess they can just stay there another season, huh?

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

Weeeeeeeeeee little grape leaves,

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

teeeeeensy tiny lilacs,

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

raspberries and blackberries,

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

lots o' lamium and my favorite bleeding heart (shhhh, don't tell the white one in the other bed),

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

daylilies and mint in pots that never even got put away for the sorry excuse of a winter we had,

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

and new guy!

Spring Sprung early -- 03/24/12

I wanted something special for the space behind the composter and this is it: a "Blue Muffin" viburnum. I am hoping I get an okay yield on the amazing sounding berries it is supposed to get later in the season, but I do not have a cross-pollinator on my property, so we'll see. I'm sure I could be persuaded to plant another viburnum somewhere else in the yard...

In other news, I have started converting the tiny crawly hole in one of the bedroom closets into a walk-up attic (pictures soon), I am still sporadically adding to my wonderful little log cabin blanket,

haven't taken a picture in a while

the boys just keep getting bigger,

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and we are now only two months away from Miss Lydia's arrival!

32 weeks - side

And that's all she wrote. For now anyway. :)

Wash Day …

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Circa 1911


Painting Party …

Recently I had a birthday – a big, scary one.   To ease the transition into a new decade I decided I’d like to spend part of the day doing something with my daughters Patty and Deb.  We rarely do anything together and so I wanted it to be something we’d all enjoy.

Last August Patty and I went to Pottery Pizazz to paint pottery and had so much fun that I decided it was what I wanted the three of us to do. (CLICK HERE)

Patty brought home made chocolate cupcakes (two had chocolate pudding in the middle…yummm) and a birthday balloon.

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Took awhile but finally we chose what we wanted to paint and then set about our task.

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Patty’s

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Deb’s

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Mine

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The pottery painting was Patty’s present to me and this is the gift card she made.

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Me and my girls.

(The above picture has been tweaked … ya think :) )

I still have one more gift to collect so stay tuned in March to find out what it is and where Deb and I are going !!!


Moosie

Growing up, I always thought of my grandparents -- my father's parents -- as being REALLY old.  And, well, they were...if they were still alive, they'd be turning 99 and 104 this year.  And they were much older than my other set of grandparents.  So it was a surprise when I realized, about a month ago, that my grandma Moosie, the youngest of all my grandparents, was, suddenly, my oldest grandparent -- she'd outlived all of the others and was older than even my dad's father had ever been.  

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Moosie and me, 1978

Today would have been Moosie's 88th birthday.  But she missed it by two weeks -- after declining steadily over the last six months or so, she died on January 22.  She'd gone to the hospital just a week before she died -- she was having trouble breathing -- and it was pretty clear that she was at the end.  She came home on Saturday afternoon and died just about 25 hours later, quietly, just like she lived.  It was peaceful, in the end.  My mom and my uncles, my sisters and my cousin and I were all with her.

It sounds so trite to say, but truly, there is no one quite like a grandma.  It's so difficult to put into words everything that she meant to me, and I find myself simply lapsing into snippets, anecdotes, about her life and about our time together.   There are so many things I will always remember: Going on walks with her.  Her oatmeal cookies and her homemade chow mein.  The letters she wrote me while I was away at college.  The summer during college that I lived with her, when she insisted on packing my lunch every day before I left for my job as a day camp counselor (and would sometimes even send me in with a batch of cookies to share with the kids at camp).  The many nights at her house playing cribbage and Scrabble -- sometimes just the two of us, sometimes a whole lot of us.  How she took me out driving, when I turned 16 the winter after my dad died, because my mom was too scared to do it herself.  Her delight in her great-grandchildren.  How she took me shopping, the week before my wedding, to help me find a pretty barrette to put in my hair because I wasn't planning on wearing a veil.    

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Moosie and me, 2000.

I could go on and on.  There are a million memories, and yet they aren't enough.  They could never be enough.  When you love someone, it doesn't matter how much time you spend with them -- you always wish it could be longer.

Moosie lived a life that sounded like something out of a storybook.  She was orphaned twice as a young child, and eventually was taken in by an elderly aunt and uncle.  She met my grandfather during World War II when her cousin suggested that she write to a nice young man from Louisiana that he'd come to know -- they wrote throughout the war, he came to Connecticut after he was discharged, and the rest is history.  She ran our town's post office out of the back room of her house from the late 1960s until the mid 1980s.  

I always loved to listen to Moosie's stories about growing up, particularly because I, too, grew up in the same town.  It always seemed vaguely preposterous that we'd grown up separated only by fifty-four years, because her childhood seemed SO different from mine.  She told stories about doing things like sledding down the road in front of her house.  Even then it was the main road in town -- but then it was a quiet country lane, and now it's a state highway with a 50mph speed limit.  She went to a one-room schoolhouse and then attended high school in an adjacent town, since our town didn't have its own high school until the 1960s.

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Ian, in the one-room schoolhouse where his great-grandmother went to school (!!)

Moosie also did a ton of crafts, as did most women of her generation.  She sewed a lot, and could knit and crochet (though she didn't enjoy either and I don't recall her ever doing either, although she must have at some point because a few years ago she gave me a bunch of crochet hooks and knitting needles), but mostly, at least in the years I knew her, she did rug braiding, shuttle tatting, and chair caning...three things that fall into the category of "things no one can do anymore."  I'm tremendously sad to say, though, that I didn't learn any of these things from her.  She tried to teach me to tat several times, but I just literally could not wrap my fingers around it (I think that now that I'm a good knitter, it would probably make more sense to me -- I must find someone to teach me!).  Chair caning was something I wanted to learn -- but by the time I had the time and the inclination to learn, her eyesight had deteriorated enough that she couldn't really do it anymore.  The same with rug braiding -- I don't know when exactly she gave it up, but she already had by the time I was ready to learn.  Still, though, despite the fact that I didn't pick up those three particular things (though I intend to learn someday!), I learned so much from her.  She taught me how to sew and mend, and the values of having a button collection and various notions handy at all times, and she always loved to try out new things -- something I definitely picked up from her!  In her later years, even after she had to stop doing handwork herself, she always loved to see what I was working on and talk shop with me.  For many years, she demonstrated chair caning at our town's historical fair, and I like to think that now, as I demonstrate spinning there, I'm following in her footsteps.

One thing my family is lucky to have is a LOT of pictures, going back into Moosie's childhood and even earlier.  We've all been going through them over the last few weeks.  I scanned a lot of them for a display at her memorial service, and have continued going through and scanning others so that we can have a digital repository and share them amongst our family members.  I leave you with one of my favorite images we found -- Moosie, from sometime in the early 1940s.  I love how beautiful and ethereal, somehow, she looks in it, and I love that it's not a typical posed photo.  It's so like her -- always doing something with her hands.  

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Happy birthday, Moosie.  I love you and I miss you.  

A Bunch o’ Stuff

So I guess I have hit an official blogging slump. I have been doing things, at least I think I have, but most of them are not things I take pictures of. And the creative stuff has been mostly long-term projects -- not the kind of things I want to keep posting updates on as it would probably bore everybody to tears.

But I have a few little things to share. First off, some yarn dyeing, Or overdyeing if you want to be accurate.

all of them - just out of the pots

One of many wonderful Ravelry friends had some leftover Juniper Moon Farm yarns that she was willing to swap to me so I could put them toward my Log Cabin Blanket.

They were all lovely, but not quite bold enough next to my other colors, so I decided to dye them a little darker.

The green was a very pale mint green to start,

green before

green after - wet

and became sort of a brown and green mossy color when it was done.

green after - side of cake

The red was very pink-y/magenta-y,

red before

red after - wet

so I oranged it up a bit.

red after - side of cake

The blue was so pale that it was not even as blue in person as it appears in this photo.

blue before

blue after - wet

I am pretty proud of this one. :)

blue after - side of cakes

So that's that for yarn dyeing adventures for the time being. I'd love to do more, but I absolutely cannot take on another hobby at this point in time.

A cool thing was this suitcase that the boys and I found by the side of the road when we were out walking the other day.

fun decal

have to try to preserve this sticker

I gave it a good shake to make sure it wasn't filled with anything (believe me, my mind was going over all the terrible possibilities of what might be hiding inside a locked suitcase on the side of the road). When it felt empty, I decided to go for it and we carried it home.

good sturdy handle

The locks were easy to pick, thank goodness.

classy

And the verdict is: a million dollars in unmarked bills!

Sorry, no, that's my fantasy version. In real life, it was empty as can be, but in excellent condition!

clean and really nice inside!

No smells or anything, so we are good to go. Now to decide what to use it for!

Other recent acquisitions include some very special baby clothes.

This dress (actually a toddler size, rather than a baby size) was made for my mother, for a wedding she was in when she was about four years old.

a dress my mother wore around the age of 4

dress detail

Needs a cleaning and has a small stain, but it will make a little girl very happy someday I am sure.

This sweater and matching bonnet were made for me when I was a 6-9 month sized person and will be perfect for Liddy's first winter!

another one of my baby sweaters

yoke detail

And THIS sweater.

a sweater I wore as a newborn

Newborn sized, lightweight, covered in these little gathers that remind me of little daisies,

gather detail

perfect for a May baby! I think if I can make a matching hat, Lydia might wear it home from the hospital.

Now a super quick update on the ever growing Log Cabin:

progress and next colors planned

I am OBSESSED I tell you. Love this project so much.

can't stop staring

A sort of recent project that is not especially pretty but is inherently useful is this set of cast iron skillet handle covers I made.

I sandwiched layers of plain and printed vintage feedsack over some vintage wool batting I took out of a dry rotted lap quilt, and put pieces of an unwanted pot holder in the middles for added protection.

short handle snap-on cover

The feminine hygiene product looking ones are for the short handles. As you can see, they wrap around

wrapped around

and snap securely in place.

snapped

For the long handles, I layered some some longer rectangles the same way, but sewed them together into tubes then so they can just slip on and off.

long handle sleeves

They work SO WELL! I snap them on before I start cooking and they stay cool to the touch and do not burst into flames the whole time the meal is being made!

now safe and easy to handle

They even work on a skillet that has been baking in the oven (but obviously I do not keep them on the handles during the baking...)

Anyway. Finishing up a very lengthy post with some love.

Love item #1: I joined Pinterest.

HOLY COW I LOVE IT SO MUCH. Seriously, it is what I always dreamed of in a site for categorizing and sharing my favorite things. Love, love, love.

Look me up over there, if you are so inclined. (Link above) I will be busy filling up my boards and spamming the crap out of my followers with pictures captioned with such descriptive gems as, "WANT!" and "COLORS!" and "GARDEN LOVE!"

Love item #2: The other morning, Ethan magneted a message on our refrigerator to remind us to "go out and love people."

Ethan's reminder to go out and love people

A few hours later, I came across Love item #3: a tiny flour heart on the bottom of my hotdog bun at lunch.

random heart on a hot dog bun

(And yeah, I checked first to make sure it was flour and not mold. Either way, it was still a tiny heart.)

I think that's all for now. I am exploding with ideas but finding myself with little motivation to actually do much other than knit and sit in front of the computer. But I have a few things lined up for when I have those bursts of productivity...

Mom’s And Mine …

My mother did these two counted cross stitches over 80 years ago.

Gay Head Lighthouse still had the lightkeepers house attached to it.

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Only 4 lighthouses instead of 5 on the Vineyard map – do you know which one is missing?

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My counted cross stitch of Gay Head lighthouse done in 2004.

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Vineyard map done in 1993… my first of 11.

100_0659CLICK HERE to read the post I did about our two Vineyard maps.


A new long-term knitting project

log cabin blanket started!

A few weeks ago, a Ravelry friend and I had a "little" swap -- some of my soaps for some of her extra Juniper Moon Farm yarn.

It turned out to be more than a little yarn!

OH HEAVEN!!!

I thought of some small projects to do with some of the colors, but I kept wondering if I could really break it all up. Even though it didn't all "match" necessarily, I loved the way it looked all together.

I stewed over it for a while and it came to me. A blanket. Something big enough to use up and showcase all of these glorious colors (and a few hanks of alpaca-y heaven that my friend Susan had sent me as part of a HUGE box of yarny goodness before Christmas).

Classic Elite Inca Marl

Angel's Kiss - Fern

Once I saw them all wound up together, I knew I was making a good choice.

a little yarn winding today...

Something about the bold colors seemed that they would really lend themselves to a free-form, very geometric plan, and I found myself thinking about some of my favorites of the Gee's Bend quilts.

So I decided on a Log Cabin style, but with a more relaxed feel (aka: I don't want to have to follow a pattern for this).

more Log Cabin progress

It knits up really fast and easy. And since it is totally a free-form knit, I can take it anywhere and stop and start at any point without getting messed up. Perfect project-between-projects!

log cabin blanket progress 1/23/12

I am expecting more yarn today, and some more at some point later this week. Gotta love swapping! So expect periodic blanket updates. I am thrilled with this project and can't wait to see how it progresses.

Speaking of expecting, here is last week's gratuitous belly shot. I am taking them every week now and this one was at 23 weeks. Hard to believe how far I am already. Seems like I've already been pregnant for so long, and yet not long enough at all again.

23 weeks 3/4 view

That's all for now, but I'm sure I'll come back soon with another blanket update. :)