I have moved

You can mostly find me here these days instead. I'll do cross-posting for a while longer though.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

.. I'm gonna make you pop-u-lar

After a long Christmas holiday filled with illness I thought I had rounded it off neatly with a strep infection.

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Only to discover yesterday that Isabel's got a UTI.

This just never ends.

But! Tonight is a fun night. I'm going to Denmark to see the dress rehearsal of Wicked in Copenhagen.


My aunt works in the costume department as a tailor and has sewn a few of the costumes for the performance and she arranged tickets for me and my mother.

We're taking the train across the sound and we're all having dinner before the show.

We saw Wicked on Broadway in September and I know the English lyrics almost by heart, so it's going to be interesting to see in in Danish.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

House of Pestilence

I've been meaning to start quilting the runner both tonight and last night, but gotten caught up in old episodes of Fringe.
My husband watched it from the beginning, but I've only seen bits and pieces of the first and second season.

Our big girl has developed chicken pox too and she is in a really bad state. My heart bleeds for her. She had a big pox on her forehead that had gotten infected and she cried when we washed it out for her.
I had wanted to comb out her hair but I think several poxes hide in her scalp and I don't want to chance it.

I hope she'll start feeling better tomorrow. No new poxes have shown up today so - fingers crossed.

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We usually celebrate Epiphany with family but this year that will have to be postponed. My dad's worried about contracting chicken pox because he's not sure he's had it.

Instead I'll go shopping tomorrow after work and we'll have a nice meal together on Thursday afternoon.

I should also try to get to a pharmacy to find some antihistamines for Isabel. I think she could use some.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Remake

Isabel's Birth Quilt

I made this quilt for Isabel in 2004 just before she was born. Today I can't believe I actually got it finished. A pin wheel design isn't something for a beginner.

It's not perfect but it filled its purpose and now it's too small for her. So I've been toying with the idea to make her a new one on the same design.

I have some French General fabric at home that I had intended to make a dress or skirt for the girls from. But I'm thinking a quilt would be just as lovely.

Fore thought

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Over a year ago I saw a video tutorial on Youtube on how to make a Christmas tree table runner from a Jelly roll. It was super easy and I really wanted to have it done before Christmas this year.

I bought Fruitcake by Basic Grey for Moda and it's perfect for this. I used part of the jelly roll block to make curtains for the lunch nook and I had well intended plans to make a runner before the holidays.

Then Sofia got chicken pox and suddenly it was Christmas and no point any more.

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But when my free Saturday rolled around on Jan 1st I decided to start it and that way I might have the runner done by next Christmas.

I basted it last night and started quilting it on my machine, but since I used green thread on the top and white on the back it looked really bad on the backside.

So I've almost decided to pick out the quilting I've done and hand quilt it instead .. after all. I have almost 12 months to get it done.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

2:365

2:365

I started a 365 photo project yesterday.

I won't beat myself up about it if I don't make it, but I intend to try.

I'll put up a link in the side bar to the Flickr set so it's easily accessible.

I also do not intend to post every picture here.

Monday, December 13, 2010

St Lucy's Day

Today it's Lucia-day and all over Sweden parents are choking back tears as their little ones sing and celebrate Lucia.

We're invited to my littlelest one's daycare at 3:30 pm for an outdoor celebration.

They combine the celebrations of all three units and parents and relatives are invited to come watch and listen.
After the kids are done we're invited to stay and have some fika, but we have to bring it ourselves.

Since we live so close to the school we usually walk home afterwards and do fika at home.
This year the girls' grandparents (my in-laws) are joining us for dinner at home.

I'll post pictures tomorrow or maybe later tonight, but here are two from last year. Both girls were there then. This year my oldest is in school and won't be joining her sister.

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Thursday, December 9, 2010

Swedish Christmas baking 2010: Mandelmusslor

Every year my grandmother bakes lots of cookies for Christmas.

When I was a little girl I helped her with some of them, ginger snaps mostly.

This year she had a bad fall in October and broke her arm and once that was healed we couldn't understand why she didn't feel better. She couldn't walk and she was so pessimistic about things she normally wasn't.
Turned out she had fractures on her pelvis. We're not sure if it was from the fall or if it's because of some other condition - she is 87 years old after all.

But it's sorted and she's on the mend. However, baking cookies in any larger quantities is sort of out of the question.

So last weekend I softened 2 lbs of butter and set my Kitchen Aid to work. Most kinds of cookie dough is supposed to rest in the fridge anyway, so I quickly mixed up 5 kinds of cookies in the Kitchen Aid and put them to rest in the fridge.

I baked two kinds on the Saturday, but then life happened and I didn't get to do the others until Monday.

This is a recipe for an old Swedish cookie that's usually reserved for Christmas.

Almond cups. A literal translation would be Almond clams. They're made from a pretty regular cookie dough with added almonds.
I'm pretty sure housewives of old would blanch and peel the almonds to make them as white as possible, but I opted on not doing that.
I was also out of bitter almonds and keeping the peel on the sweet almonds ups the almond taste a little.

mandelmusslor

The dough is made by mixing sugar and butter until soft, then adding ground almonds (sweet and bitter), flour and an egg.

The dough is put in the fridge over night then you take it out and work with small portions at a time to keep it from going too soft.
If the dough gets too warm the butter will start to leak and the dough is hard to work with.

Soften the piece you're working with and roll it out. The length and size of the roll is not important. Cut it up into smaller pieces and put a piece in each aluminium cup.

Now, about the cups - I borrowed these from my grandmother. They're seasoned and doesn't need to be buttered. New cups will have to be buttered or sprayed with cooking spray otherwise the cookies will not come out of the cups.
It's also possible to use disposable aluminium cups for baking and keep the cookie in the cup if they won't come out. It will be a bit harder to eat them though.

Each dough piece is pushed up the sides of the cup and evenly distributed. If the piece you put in the cup is too small and there are gaps in the dough, just cut up and extra piece and add to what you already have (did that make sense?).

The dough should be thin, but not so thin the cup shows through.

My grandmother has a lot of these cups in various shapes so I work with about 10-15 at a time. Put them on a cookie sheet and bake them at 400 degrees (F) for about 8 minutes.

They shouldn't get too much colour around the edges. Mine are a bit too browned.

Take the cookie sheet out of the oven and let the cups cool. As soon as you can flip them over and some of the cookies might come out of the cups immediately. If not them leave them until the cups have cooled enough to be handled.

I lift the cups up a few inches above the cookie sheet and just drop them. That usually does the trick.
Sometimes there's formed a vacuum between the cup and the cookie. If that's the case then pull on the sides of the cup a little so let air in and try again.

Any broken cups can be ground up and used for breading cake pans. Or you can just eat them off the sheet.

Let the cookies cool completely and store in an air tight container in the fridge or freezer.

Serve the cookies filled with whipped sweetened cream and some nice jam. I like a good strawberry jam, but anything goes. A cinnamon-y apple sauce can be perfection!
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