Thursday, October 15, 2009

Fall Scarves



I’m still working on that beautiful Kiogu Snowflake Scarf that I blogged about last month here.  There isn’t that much yarn left to work with so the end is definitely in sight  - one or two more rows then I’ll post a photo of the finished project! In the meantime,  we have a nor’easter hitting us and the temperature has dropped into the 30s and 40s. Brrrr -its cold outside!  So I pulled out a beautiful and easy-peasy scarf I had crocheted a few months ago to wear as a back up with my fall demin jacket.  It’s a Ruffle Scarf made with Lion Brand Homespun yarn.  The pattern is available as a free download from their website and was super quick to make, taking only 1- skein of yarn.  I was pleasantly stunned by how many compliments I got on it this afternoon and had to promise to bring the pattern to some of the teachers at my children’s aftercare program at the elementary school.  Here’s a closer look at the stitching:




Crocheting scarves to go with my fall jackets seems to be a theme this year and I’m already eyeing up my next project.  For  a sneak-peak visit Sarah at Sarah’s SweetHearts and check out her Surreybelle scarf pattern!

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

No-cost Fall decorating

Last October, my next door neighbor and I were lucky enough to get tickets to the Martha Stewart show in NYC.  We had an outstanding time and were awed by her set.  It was completely decked out for fall and had total eye-candy everywhere you looked!  One quite beautiful decorating detail was oodles and oodles of bittersweet vine berries tucked among all the creamy white dishes.  It looked so warm and inviting, that it was something that I had to give a try at home.

Bittersweet is a vine native to the US and has yellow berries in the fall - these burst open later in the season revealing a gorgeous orange berry framed by a yellow paper frame.  Its not too difficult to find bittersweet vine on a nature walk in the northeast.  For me in NJ, this meant hopping over the fence into the “natural” area behind our home.  There was an American Bittersweet vine inhabiting one of the small trees, not too far from the fence.  American bittersweet can be distinguished from it Chinese counterpart by the absence of thorns.  Since the vine was about 7 ft up, I had to jump up to get a grip on the tree branch to pull the tree slightly over to one side.  Had this been a cartoon, no doubt the tree would have snapped back to upright and catapulted me off into the air to land several miles away - a fact that my husband, who I love dearly, relished in telling me as he stood safely on our side of the fence!  After a little hard work, I had several generous branches of berried vine.



I’ve never been one of those people who can artfully arrange drying branches in a vase or across a mantle to make that beautiful display with the crinkly leaves.  My mother-in-law can do this with both hand tied behind her back, and last year arranged a gorgeous vaseful for us!  I tried to do the same this evening but to no avail - however I arranged it, it just looked like I had brought dead smelly tree branches inside the house.  So I settled on harvesting the twigs laden with berries, removing the leaves and making tiny sprays of bittersweet.  These were tied with some left over ribbon from another project and tucked them in strategic places around the house.  I think they give our house a homey fall look and the best part, cost nothing at all!


Bittersweet vine on a kitchen bookshelf


Tucked into a towel basket in the powder room
(I need a ribbon around this, don't I?)



Next to the pumpkin in the entryway


On some silk leaves in the dining room

Monday, October 12, 2009

I'm back!

It’s been quite the week and a half since I last blogged.  I totally got thrown off my game when my daughter fell ill last weekend.  In all of her 8 and a half years of life, this was undoubtedly the most sick I’ve ever seen her. The first day wasn’t so bad and comprised of a sore throat and low-grade fever.  A negative strep test later, we were back home to wait out the virus. However, later that night, her temperature spiked to 104⋄F and stayed there for 3 full days.  J has always run very high fevers, necessitating several trips to the emergency room when she was a baby - there is nothing like a 1-yr old with a 105 ⋄F to mobilize an emergency room!   This virus was no exception, and Motrin or Tylenol alone was not enough to control the fever.  Every 24 hours, she seemed to get worse - including day 3 when she basically slept the entire day.  Thank goodness on day 4, the fever broke but by now my son had it too.  Fortunately, he rallied within 24 hours and didn’t get thrown under the bus in quite the same way as his big sis.  I’m convinced this may have been swine flu and wanted the pediatrician to test the kids for it.  I figured that their school would want to know if they had cases spreading among their students, and I wanted the information before having to make a decision on whether to get the kids immunized with the swine flu vaccine.  If they’ve already had this season’s H1N1, there’s no point to having them vaccinated as they already would have the antibodies to virus.  I was surprised that the pediatrician was not testing for H1N1 and stated that we weren’t seeing it widely in this area.  So now I don’t know, so we will be making the decision when the vaccine becomes available in our area.

Both Jordan and Ben are back at school now, armed with some very cute gifts for their teachers and the school nurse.  Thanks to Just a Girl for the idea!  According to J, the third-graders are having a great time hamming up the “toxic” effects of the hand sanitizer.  Now I need something equally as cool for next month!


Halloween Hand Sanitizer

Thursday, October 1, 2009

LES Clothing Sale

 

On and off for the past month, I’ve been busily tagging children’s clothes for sale at our elementary school’s used clothing and toy sale.   This is a fundraiser for the PTO organization and raises several thousand dollars for the school.  If you are in the Lawrenceville, NJ area this Saturday, October 3rd and need fall or winter clothes for your kids (or toys, strollers, bikes or kid equipment), it is definitely worth the trip!  We have people who come in from all over the state for this and typically, a line forms before we open the doors at 8 am on Saturday.  From articles in the news lately,  second-hand clothing sales are big business this year with everyone suffering from the recession.  We have a lot of sellers this year and are expecting a big crowd.

Here’s the way its run:  All the sellers are parents, who tag and set prices for the items that they are selling.  When you check-out - a 15% surcharge is added to your purchase.  For example, if you purchased 2 shirts for a total of $5.00, you would pay $5.75 upon checkout.  The 15% goes directly to the PTO which fed right back into the school.   The seller also has 15% deducted from their total (I would make $4.25 for those two shirts you bought - also donating 75¢ to the school).  In this way, the PTO realizes 30% from each purchase.

The hardest part for me is getting organized before Friday night. Tagging the clothes takes a quite a bit of time, and even though I’ve been working on this for over a month.  I see so much more stuff around the house I could clear out!  But tagging and giving away these items is also bittersweet too.  I remember how handsome and grown up Ben looked in that 3T sweater, or how sweet Jordan looked in the red holiday coat with black velvet trim on our first Christmas time NY trip.  I have photos and memories, but it still difficult for me to get rid of those things that are part of my children’s history.  Nonetheless, I have several toters of stuff all set and ready to go.  If you see me on Saturday morning, make sure you stop by and say hello, and if you purchase any of my items, please cherish your children in them as much as I've cherished mine!


Jordan and MeMom
Size 6 Red Holiday Coat in NYC
Will be available on Saturday!

Monday, September 28, 2009

Menu Plan Monday - Week 4



I know I should be menu planning, I know I should be menu planning.  If I keep saying it over and over again, I’m going to get to it, right?  The last few weeks have worked unbelievably well.  I know we’ve saved money on our grocery shopping and we’ve been eating more wholesome and delicious food.  This is not to say that my family has exactly followed the plan that I set forth at the beginning of the week.  Life has crept in and mixed things up a bit causing a couple of meals to get dropped.  But we had 5 of 7 meals planned last week.  As always, fresh ingredient dinners get preference over pantry ones that way they can be shelved for another week.  Alright  I think I’ve motivated myself now!  So here’s what I’ve come up with for this week:

Monday - Girls scout meeting - Left-overs - Sweet Potato Risotto from Friday night.

Tuesday - Stuffed Shells with green salad.  I’m sure you all figured out I made sauce on Sunday from hubby’s guest post!

Wednesday - Crab Cakes (Frozen from Trader Joe’s.  YAY!  They are finally open in my area!) More salad or something green.

Thursday - Orange Chicken, Broccoli, brown rice

Friday - Pizza night 

Saturday - dinner out, nephew’s birthday!

Sunday - Pasta Fagiole (since it got bumped last week!)

What’s on your menu??  Make sure to visit OrgJunkie for great menu planning ideas!  Remember to tell her how much you liked the new button!

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Lessons from the Family Kitchen - Guest Post!

Hi all - I'm incredibly excited to be able to host my first guest post today!  My dear husband, Ed, wrote this earlier this evening.  He maintains a personal blog - which is only open to family members, but had the idea of letting me cross-post today's musings to Unstructured Bliss.  Of course, I jumped at the chance! I hope you enjoy reading his writing as much as I do!

Nearly twenty years ago, my cousin, Sigrid, had the wonderful idea of creating a family cookbook.  She solicited recipes and anecdotes from everyone on my mom’s side of the family and compiled them into a wonderful book that I still use more often than any of the more than 50 commercial cookbooks in our kitchen.

My own lovely wife has started the process of writing a similar cookbook using recipes from her family.  Hopefully at some point not too far away, we’ll be able to actually devote some real time and effort to it so that we can have matching cookbooks on our shelves.  With so many still young and time-demanding kids on her side of the family, the task of going through recipes and writing down snippets of stories about family gatherings inevitably gets put on the back burner (to keep with our kitchen motif!), but we’ll keep plugging away!

The family cookbook idea has risen to our attention again because of an observation Christine made while fixing her delicious spaghetti sauce this afternoon.  She typically includes 3 links each of hot and sweet Italian sausage, and she did something different today in preparing the sausage that she realized was a big improvement.  But before we get to what that change was, let’s go back to our general theme of lessons from the family kitchen.

Family lore has it that my mom always began the process of cooking a pot roast by cutting off one end of the pot roast before she browned it.  At one point in my parents’ young married life, my dad asked, “Why do you cut the end off the pot roast?”  To which mom answered, “Because that’s what my grandmother always did.”

Turns out that, when mom asked Grandma Straub why she cut off the end of the pot roast, the answer was not some ancient cooking wisdom that one might have expected from a woman who was born at the close of the 19th Century and lived until almost the 21st.  No, the answer was as common-sensical as that same woman who spent her life on a farm raising chickens and selling eggs.  She cut off the end of the pot roast so that it would fit in the pan, which wasn’t big enough to hold the intact roast.

So sometimes, you watch someone do something in the kitchen, and you figure, “Well, that’s how you do it.”  Hardly an earth shattering concept, certainly, but there are probably many things we do that are the result of observational learning, and we simply follow what looks like a good example.

In Christine’s case in cooking sausage for spaghetti sauce, this meant following her parents’ practice of cutting up the links of raw sausage into smaller pieces so that they are then sized appropriately when the sauce is served in individual portions.

But cutting up raw Italian sausage links is a messy, ungainly process that leaves the kitchen area, the relevant knife, and usually the chef’s hands all a mess of raw sausage detritus.

Which leads us to last weekend, when Christine made a wonderful sausage soup from a recipe from my mom.  Having made that last week, Christine realized as she was about to start making spaghetti sauce that rather than cut up the sausage as the first step, she could do what was called for in the sausage soup recipe - cook the links FIRST, and then cut them up into little medallions!

Voila!  We had perfect little sausage medallions in our spaghetti sauce this evening, to go with the always delicious meatballs, which also were produced with a new cooking twist that may serve as a lesson for the next generation of our family.

Someday our children may be fixing meatballs for sauce and they will be asked, why are you putting the egg, bread crumbs, and parmesan cheese into that plastic bag?  Well, it just may be because today Christine had the bright idea of not getting her hands completely coated in raw ground beef to squeeze and mix meatball ingredients, but instead used the freezer bag the thawed meat was already in to serve as a “mixing bag” in which she kneaded all the ingredients and then made the meatballs.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Fall Decorating


Fall is definitely my favorite time of year.  I love the crisp, clear sunny days, watching the kids on the soccer field and visiting the local orchard for apples.  I especially love decorating for the fall season here are some photos of our efforts this morning.