31 May 2009

I scream... You scream...

We all scream for ice cream!

Did you know that for a multiple pregnancy 1 cup of ice cream is considered a valid serving of dairy?
When you need 8 servings of dairy a day and you're pregnant in the summer this is FANTASTIC news. Did I mention I've never really cared for ice cream prior to the twins?

It's the beginning of stone fruit season. And the first stone fruit to become available at the grocery stores is my favorite: Cherries! We buy two or three bags to pit and freeze when they are 2.99 a pound. Cherry pie on demand... mmm. So in honor of these two momentous occasions I had a creative celebration.

Cherry Amaretto Ice Cream!


  • 1 cup milk
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1-2 cups pitted cherries
  • 1 pint whipping cream
  • 1 teaspoon real almond extract
  • 3 drops red food coloring (if desired)
  • 1 drop blue food coloring (if desired)
  • some sliced almonds might be nice too!
  1. Run the sugar milk and pitted cherries through the blender to combine (nuts if you added them too!).
  2. Add almond extract and whipping cream, and food coloring (if using). Put through the blender on stir setting for no more than a few seconds.
  3. Freeze according to your ice cream maker's instructions.
  4. Enjoy in your favorite teacups (so it lasts longer than a day!)
Recipe adapted from Pleasant View Schoolhouse's basic vanilla recipe.

P.S. My husband started a hysterical blog today for your kicks and giggles. Hope you enjoy.

30 May 2009

Maternity Sewing

I've been sewing like a madwoman recently because I finally have developed enough tummy to lift normal length shirts to too short lengths! I needed some longer tops!

I am really enjoying both Ottobre patterns (despite having to trace them out and add seam allowance) and sewing with jersey fabric on the new machine. I did discover that although I measured a size 42, it was better for me to go one size down due to my really narrow upper body. My first top (which should have been my favorite) didn't turn out so well because of the size issue. It's still cute, but will probably only work out when my belly is gigantic!

Here's a list of what I've completed so far in the order completed:
  • Navy knit gauchos from this pattern. These are like summer maternity sweatpant equivalents. Ahh.. If I made them again I'd use a more drapey knit.
  • Navy knit skirt that I free styled.

  • Naughty and Nice Nighty which I added 4" to the center front pattern (which I pulled up in the pleats) and also added a 6" or so in length.
  • Maternity Crossover Top from Ottobre 2/2007 # 20. Top still waiting on a substantial belly to fill it out. Green, cream, and brown print fabric-it's all wonky at the seams and binding.
  • Red Jersey Vogue 1027. I made this in what should have been my pre-pregnancy size (though I flared out the waist to the next size up) and I would definitely recommend sizing down 1-2 sizes because there is a whole lot of unnecessary wearing ease for a knit garment. I love it though! A grown up twirling dress!

  • Pintuck Top from Ottobre 2/2008 # 1 unaltered in green jersey.

  • Pintuck Top from Ottobre 2/2008 # 1 in purple jersey. I added about 4 inches extra width to the front piece and pleated the neckline instead of pintucking.

  • Tankini top from this pattern. I chopped off the crotch portion, added about 4" length (I'm super long waisted!), added 1 1/2" to the side seam of the front piece (altering out the waist curve), and cut the front piece so it was slanted on the fold to add an additional 5" to the bottom width. This will fit probably for the next month or so, but I'll have to make a second top to finish out the summer. I'll add 2" or more to the bust panel width (it's definitely drafted for an A-B cup) and will probably add a swimsuit bra for more support in addition to adding more twin belly ease.
  • A self-drafted double layer brown linen skirt. I should have made a tutorial while making it. If I see a suitable fabric lying around the house maybe I'll do so!


My mom sent me a HUGE box filled with her friend Beth's maternity castaways so the wardrobe project is a little less demanding at the moment. I think the tan wool flannel jacket is up next on the to-make list. I have nothing to wear to keep me warm or cover up bare shoulders in the blaring Air Conditioners of the south ;)

21 May 2009

Twin Girls!

I can no longer resist the urge to show off their cute little ultrasound photos here on the blog!



Since they are the same gender, we are all still wondering if they are identical or not. They do not have any of the identical twin "markers" since they do not share an amniotic sac and the ultrasound tech is pretty sure the have separate placentas, but those markers occur the later the egg splits. If they egg split early and they are identical, we'll have to wait until they get here to know! So what do you think from the photos? Identical or fraternal?

19 May 2009

Creative Genes: Part 2

My sister visited last week and we had so much fun playing cards, altering a dress, painting rooms, and getting high off of paint (we sure had a serious case of the giggles!). She decided to make us dinner on Wednesday and this is what she made:


We froze the leftovers to eat when we came back from our trip because this macaroni and cheese was so good! I went shopping with her so I sort of know what went in and what order it was cooked in, but since her Mac and Cheese uses our Creative Genes, it may not turn out perfectly for me (or you) again!

Ingredients to Have on Hand
  • box of pasta (she used the swirly kind)
  • yellow cheddar (shredded or cut in thin slices)
  • sharp white cheddar (shredded or cut in thin slices)
  • 2 can Campbell's cheddar cheese soup
  • Worcestershire sauce
  • Dijon type mustard
  • McCormick GrillMates Montreal Chicken Seasoning (this is our family's signature spice)
  • 4 eggs
Unscientific Instructions
  1. Put on the pot for the pasta. Preheat the oven to 350
  2. Warm 2 cans soup in a saucepan. Add 2/3 of your shredded/sliced cheese. Stir to melt cheese.
  3. Cook pasta now that your water is boiling.
  4. Continue to melt the cheese. Add Worcestershire sauce, dijion mustard, and Montreal Chicken Seasoning to taste.
  5. Remove now melted sauce from the burner. Add the eggs one at a time, stirring vigorously as you add them.
  6. Put the pasta in a casserole dish. Pour cheese sauce over. Place the remaining 1/3 of your cheese on top of the casserole.
  7. Bake for 45 minutes to thicken. Turn on the broiler at the end to melt the cheeses a little better if you would like.
  8. Enjoy while wearing a cute apron.

17 May 2009

Pottery Painting

The twins are girls! Poor Derek and Moonbeam's lives will forever be filled with giggles and dresses and tutus and tea parties and lots of drama! But I think the two of them will manage ;)

In honor of a rainy day and wanting to get something for the girls while we were celebrating our anniversary trip to Helen, Georgia, Derek and I spent about 2 1/2 making this set! Honestly, I was surprised by how much Derek enjoyed the process of designing and painting these. He can be a meticulous as I can be!

Unpainted


Derek Painting the Tray and our color selections


Me painting the cream pitcher


Tray and Teacups


The Finished Set. I can't wait until they fire it and ship it to us!

09 May 2009

08 May 2009

Creative Genes

My sister and I mostly inherited our creative genes from our Dad. We have priceless memories of paper mache Humpty Dumpty, a huge hand built greenhouse, a hand engineered waterslide into our pool, carrots and bell peppers turned into palm trees at my wedding, duct-taped Giant Waffle Block Cars, and sweetly doodled Heart Birds.

Dad was also the one who taught us how to cook. Mom cooked most of our meals as kids: she's a master at following a recipe, or back of the box instructions and we always teased her about her "Homemade" mashed potatoes and gravy. Her cooking is precise, scientific and done out of necessity. But Dad can walk into the kitchen and suddenly he's transformed into a magician. A little smoke, some spices here, an onion chopped there, and sometimes a pretty good grease fire later, and something magical would emerge to be set on our plates. My sister and I were enthralled; luckily Dad involved us in his magic as soon as we were old enough to demand happy or sad faces on our pancakes.

But cooking like Dad taught us has one huge disadvantage: when we totally rock a dish, the odds are not one of the three of us know how to replicate it again. We may be able to remember the ingredients and even the order of cooking, but the dish will never live up to the original. We're not scientific. We don't measure.... we don't even write down what was used!

For instance, shortly after Easter I glazed a half ham with a delicious honey mustard combination. It was wonderful! Derek practically licked the plate. I'm cooking another ham tomorrow and for the life of me cannot remember what all I put in that glaze! I know it had honey, yellow mustard (Dad would be ashamed that I didn't have any dijion mustard in the house) and cloves in it. I'm sure the glaze won't be the same this time; I'm sure I'm forgeting something...

However, the other night I was engrossed in creating a pot of homemade stroganoff. I took careful mental notes to share with you the process of creative cooking. I love stroganoff and the occasion of having hamburger to use up gave me an excuse to make it. I made the hamburger into meatballs separately, but if you'd like to make this you could also use any cut of beef you like. I usually use beef stew or chuck and let it cook separately before adding it to the onions.

Creative Beef Stroganoff
Ingredients to have on hand:
  • Thmye
  • Garlic Powder
  • Black Pepper
  • Large Onion
  • Stick of Butter (yes REAL butter nothing else will do!)
  • Mushrooms (mixed exotic are really yummy... but any will do)
  • Flour (I used wheat b/c that's what I had. White works too)
  • Box of beef broth
  • White wine (optional)
  • Sour Cream (yogurt works too)
  • Corn Strarch or Arrowroot starch (for thickening emergencies)
  • Meatballs, beef stew meat, or chuck steak meat cooked seperately
  • Cooked rice or noodles
  • Frozen peas if desired.

Highly Unscientific Directions
  1. In a medium stock pot, melt half a stick of butter over medium heat.
  2. Add thinly sliced onion, thyme, garlic, and pepper (I used at least a teaspoon of each except for the pepper).
  3. Carmelize the onion. To do this cook it on no higher than medium heat in the butter. Onions will be transluecent and oh so sweet when you are finished. Carmelizing can take awhile, like 10-20 minutes. So walk the dog, or put away the dishes to keep yourself from stopping such a yummy process.
  4. Once the onion is carmelized, add the sliced mushrooms. Let them cook until they start exuding their yummy juices.
  5. If the mushrooms sucked up all the butter (they are prone to do so) add some more butter to the pan and melt it.
  6. Slowly add flour to the butter-veggie mixture until everything is coated well but still looks sort of wet. (I imagine this is about a 1/4 cup of flour). Let flour cook (still on no higher than medium heat!) for 2-3 minutes.
  7. Slowly add a 1/2 cup of white wine (if using) while stirring frequently. The mixture should still look puffy and floury. Cook off the alcohol for 2-3 minutes. (if you're using stew or chuck meat add it to the sauce now fully cooked).
  8. Start pouring beef broth out of the container while stirring frequently. The mixture will be very thick and first and thin out some as you go. Stop pouring somewhere before it gets too liquidy.
  9. Bring to a slow boil and it should thicken nicely.
  10. If (like me) you add too much broth and it does not thicken after boiling a little while, mix together some cold broth or water with a bunch of corn or arrowroot starch and slowly pour and stir this into your sauce. It should thicken for sure then!
  11. Turn off the head, add about a cup of sour cream. Serve with meatballs and noodles or rice. Adding frozen peas to the sauce with the sour cream is also yummy.
  12. Remember to feel free to add as much thyme (or rosemary), garlic, and pepper to the sauce as you'd like during cooking it!


Hope you enjoy!

05 May 2009

Updating

Today I upgraded from this charming hard working old lady...


...to this modern hard working beast.

04 May 2009

Ballgown Progress

I sewed up the sheer overdress today! It's still lacking closures and I'm not sure what to use. I was thinking either a sash at the back waist with snaps at the neckline or snaps at both the neck and waist. However, I was worried that snaps might come undone unexpectedly. I was also trying to squeeze a headband and the uppers of slippers (and perhaps the binding for a straw bonnet) out of the red silk so the sash could use way too much fabric. I guess I could make the slippers out of the peach scraps if there's not enough red. Sigh, 1 yard of fabric isn't a whole lot to play with...

The overdress turned out exactly how I had envisioned it (minus the gathers in the front skirt to make room for babies...). I'll post pictures as soon as I have something not so sheer to wear under it ;)

I'm not trying to figure out if I should use the same modifications to the regular S&S Regency pattern to make the underdress/petticoat, or whether I should use the drawstring dress from the Elegant Ladies Closet pattern. There a pros and cons in either direction.

The back closing Regency may be hard to pull off because the China silk is so thin! I could use a buttonhole facing, but even then I'm afraid buttonholes would put runs in the fabric. But if I used the regular pattern then I could be sure that the petticoat neckline would be lower than the overdress without doing any tinkering beforehand.

The ELC has the positive of having a drawstring closing so that there is both room for babies and no closures to worry about. But I'd have to do some tinkering to make sure the neckline was low enough and there would be gathers in the bodice of the underdress that may distort the pretty fan front of the overdress.

Decisions are tough to make with $10 a yard fabric.

On an exciting note I get to pick up a new sewing machine tomorrow! I love my 1952 Singer; she's a workhorse who makes perfect straight stitches. However, I need zigzag stitch to sew knits and would love a some more stretch stitch options. I'm getting a Viking Emerald 116 since I like simple to operate workhorses. :D I don't know how I feel about using a foot pedal rather than a knee pedal, but I'll sew up a few things I already have cut tomorrow and see how it goes!