Thursday, April 1, 2010

Still working on that kitchen!




Well, it seems like a Neverending Story, with all the monsters and gremlins and fantastical creatures hiding in the woodwork waiting to jump out at us with more surprises. But at least I have done the wallpapering. That old newsprint just had to go, and I had leftovers (which are good sometimes) of faux grass wallpaper, really good heavy stuff (until you add the paste, then it takes on a crabby life of its own). Then in between I just craved a springtime treat, and whipped up a blackberry cobbler, which hubby assures me is wonderful with ice cream. That helped me make it through those last panels, believe me.

So here is the newly finished part of the kitchen, and here is my cobbler:

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.
Mix together well in a large bowl (I used a wooden spoon, whipping out my anxieties on wallpapering) 1 cup sugar, 1 cup self-rising flour, and 1 cup heavy cream (that is whipping cream in case you don't know). Melt one stick of butter in the 'wave (1/2 cup), and mix it well into this batter. Pour the batter into a PAM sprayed 12 X 8 inch pyrex baking dish, spoon 3-4 cups of frozen and thawed blackberries all over the top of the batter. Blend 1/4 cup sugar and a teaspoon of cinnamon and sprinkle that all over the blackberries. Bake at 350 degrees for about an hour, and serve it warm with ice cream, something good to eat while watching your wallpaper dry.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Spring and chocolate



Yeah, you wouldn't think they were related, but you know those Cadbury bunnies, they just keep on producing those chocolate eggs, and darn it, you just have to reward their good behavior by patronizing the little darlings. Then the M&Ms come along with the peanut butter inside their equally yummy chocolate shells done up in pastel spring colors. Well, then see, spring and chocolates DO go together!

So I whipped up some batches of different kinds of chocolate chip cookies, to see which was our favorite. It was a tie, between the oatmeal with cinnamon and two kinds of chocolate (healthy for us--oatmeal!) and chocolate chocolate chip cookies. And started giving them away. The last of the double chocolate cookies went into a big jar for Jeff, our kitchen guy, who promised to consume many for breakfast with his milk. Milk and cookies--what a great way to start the day! I still have two more recipes to try out, thank you very much Midwest Living Magazine! Because that is where I found those new recipes.

While indulging in chocolate, I realized I had a few beading projects to get to, for our church youth mission fundraiser. And found more chocolate! To be precise, chocolate jasper in clever little square beads, drilled on the points; paired with some pink coin pearls, we now have a pretty necklace almost good enough to eat.

Still dreaming of chocolate...

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Another Elderberry trip










Sometimes our Elderberry trips are overnights, other times week-long, other times merely a hop and skip down the road to Olathe or Pleasant Hill. This latest trip took nine days and several thousand miles, to Manila in the Philippines. Because of our trip to Wichita, KS, and meeting with Gracia Burnham last year, and because of our Elderberries and their big hearts for orphans and people in need, we were invited as a group to visit Manila and some of the operations which the Burnham Foundation assists. So hubby and I discussed it, and thought and prayed (a lot) about it, and he volunteered to be in this group of seven. They flew over end of January and returned right before Valentine's Day. They saw many sights, and visited orphanages, a birthing center, and prisons, not your usual tourist destinations. They were also able to squeeze in a visit to the American cemetery of WWII soldiers who died on the Bataan death march. Our pastor's wife had an uncle who died in this heroic struggle during WWII, so they made it a mission to locate his grave--which they did, and take pictures. Then they did a day trip over to Corregidor, and observed all the ruins and the monument to Bataan, and got a look at Manila Bay from Corregidor.

Hubby loved seeing the different road vehicles, like Jeepneys, mo-peds, motor bikes with attachments, so I made sure to include these pictures too. He brought back many memories, all special, and even remembered pearls, for which the Philippines is famous.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

More winter crafts


It's still baby time--time to get that quilt finished before baby comes! Been burning the almost midnight oils at the sewing machine and it is DONE!!! Plus, had an extra square so made a pillow cover with the leftover scraps, for mama to keep at her back while she rocks baby. Hope baby is a happy snuggler when he/she arrives.

2/ 22/10 Great news flash--it's a baby girl! Hope she likes her animals.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Winter Craftiness






In addition to kitchen renovation, and our usual travels, with Elderberries and west coast family visiting, I managed to sandwich in some jewelry projects, for ladies of the family who are involved in various and sundry special occasions, such as weddings, birthdays, etc. And babies, don't forget the babies! I have been turning out those baby bath hoodies about once a month lately. Since my friend explained to me how to make a double thickness flannel receiving blanket, that scored a huge hit on my sewing machine. Now I just wish the stores would discount flannel as much as they do fleece. Ah, I will wait for another month, and then bet they will! Meantime I use the fleece for baby hats too, so cute and tiny! Hope you enjoy what you see here.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

We're making progress!




Got another phase of the kitchen done--all cabinet doors are now in place, and the glass has been mounted. Something we learned when we got the glass cut, glass is now EXPENSIVE to cut! Of course you could say that goes along with everything else via inflation, but years ago I remember getting a piece of glass cut for a dollar or two. Must have been in the '80s...sooooo long ago. Hubby figured out the silicon caulk and said it went on easier than expected. Good news for this part of the project. My drying and curing table came in handy, another use of the dining room, which so far was the repository of all the kitchen gadgetry, drawers, etc. Now it is back to being a dining room. Until the next phase.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Still snowing!



Remember that Midwest blizzard I was complaining about? Well, it hasn't stopped. Snowing that is, and blowing snows and dropping temperatures down to the bottom, zero and below. We didn't get our mail yesterday and that is most unusual, because our rural mail delivery is always there in bad weather. Who knew our road would be impassible even for the postman? Well, soup's on tonight, and we are just thankful that we have a good neighbor who plows great heights of snow with his tractor, and a great rural co-op to keep the power on and us warm.

Ralph Waldo Emerson still speaks to our times in his snow poem...

"Announced by all the trumpets of the sky,
Arrives the snow, and, driving o'er the fields,
Seems nowhere to alight: the whited air
Hides hills and woods, the river and the heaven,
And veils the farm-house at the garden's end.
The sled and traveller stopped, the courier's feet
Delayed, all friends shut out, the housemates sit
Around the radiant fireplace, enclosed
In a tumultuous privacy of storm."