Tuesday, October 30, 2007

One Down, Sort Of



One 2 1/2 year old unfinished project complete. Aren't they beautiful? Some of you may not appreciate the color selection, but then you probably never cared for the colors I painted my house in Bethel either.


It feels great to finish something that I'd kind of given up hope on ever completing. I guess I need to thank Oona for getting me going again. After seeing her post on the slippers she was making, I dug mine out and got her to help me figure out where I'd left off on mine. I probably should have asked for a wee but more help though because it appears that over the course of 2 1/2 years, not only did I lose my place in the pattern, but I sort of forgot which style of slippers I was making....was it high cuff or low cuff?


Oh well, now I have one of each! Yep, I goofed on the second slipper and made a high cuff one, thinking that was what I had made before. But it wasn't. I knew this was an issue before I felted them. I knew it was an issue two rows into the orange cuff, when the slipper I was knitting had more rows of purple between the sole and the cuff....but I was lazy. I didn't rip it and fix. I figured felting was a forgiving process, perhaps with some stretching I could make one match the other....but it wasn't as forgiving as I'd hoped. And now there's no way to rip and fix.

Live and learn......at least they are done, sort of.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Uncle Ted

Laura, Get Away From the Internets!

Spicy

Goodness, I guess its been a while since I posted. So much for those goals......

So earlier this summer, Peter introduced me to pickling carrots and beets. Little did he know the food preservation monster he was creating. Since then, we've done more carrots and beets (though sadly not as many as I'd like), pickled peppers, cucumbers, crabapple jelly (from our tree) and last night, this hot pepper jelly:


I know its probably not something most people who knew me as a child would think I'd make into jelly, but we had all these peppers from our box, as well as the obligatory onion laying around and it sounded interesting to say the least.

My mother is probably reading this, jaw dropped in amazement because I was the kid (and lets face it, college student as well) who subsisted pretty much on cheese and bread, or cheese and pasta, or any other cheese/starch combination. I did not eat vegetables, except potatoes (duh, cheese and starch), cucumbers, corn, and beans. I ate the same thing everyday for lunch throughout junior high school-- refried beans and (you guessed it) cheese in a tortilla, and the same thing everday for lunch in senior high school-- two rice cakes with peanut butter (and no healthy PB back then, I was all about the jif) and a kiwi fruit.

I branched out into meat in college, steak only at first, and then in Bethel just perhaps 4 years ago, I tried my first hamburger (oh god was it good). I've slowly incorporated more and more veggies to my diet, first red peppers, then broccoli, then eggplant, spinach etc. This year was the first year for beets, which I love more than life itself when they are mashed up with potatoes and fried into little patties, or mixed with shredded cabbage and carrots and a little blue cheese. I could fantasize about beets all day....Dwight Shrute does at least have beet farming going for himself.

But back to the jelly and food preservation....Last weekend we were at Title Wave, taking a breather from tiling the floor. Normally we get our coffees and head over from Kaladi, I beeline for the knitting and sewing books and Peter heads to architecture. Well imagine my surprise when I discovered the knitting and sewing section is now located next to the cookbooks, which means I will likely never make it into the other side of the store anymore. As I perused the shelves, my eyes were drawn to the spine of this gem, and since I had a gift card burning a hole in my wallet I snatched it up. The book is great, she's got explanations for all those things that you've always been told to do/not to do, and there are a number of recipes with very clear directions for how to properly process and preserve.

The book is put out by Storey publishing, who also did this favorite of mine, as well as recent books by the harlot. They emphasize down-home, do it yourself type books and I think I may be turning into one of their biggest fans. I've been pouring over the canning book all week, planning my next foray into food preservation and I'm thinking I might need to add a pressure canner to the wedding registry (which I am keeping by the way).

Now, since the theme of today's blog is food preservation, everyone please think good thoughts for Tiffany, who is presenting and interviewing in Fairbanks this week for a big old grant from Alaska Marketplace to make chum salmon jerky goodness for Alaskans. Good Luck Tiffany!

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

(Not) My Priority (anymore)


Thank you Board of Game for not advancing the Nelchina non-subsistence area proposal. Now, if you could kindly remove the income requirements (subsistence does not equal welfare), and re-establish a rural priority, we'd all be just dandy!
Hungry Teresa? I'm heading down to the freezer right now for some much appreciated dryfish.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Last Night


There is something so nice about a Friday evening spent in the kitchen. Upon opening thursday's veggie box, I was delighted to find these beautiful eggplant and spinach and knew immediately what I would do with them. A few months back, a certain pizza place (in too close of proximity to our house I might add) informed me they would no longer be making my favorite pizza, the eggplant parmesan. So, after a trip to costco to indulge in a bottle of good red wine, I devoted last night to creating my version of the perfect eggplant parmesan pizza (and a small batch of eggplant parmesan proper for the freezer).
Any solo cooking event is greatly enhanced by good music and the Dawson-inspired playlist I hastily made provided the perfect soundtrack. I can't remember exactly who / what was on there but ESL, Feist, Neko Case, Old Man Luedecke, Jenny Lewis and Carolyn Mark were on there...and for some funky fun, a little George Michael, G. Love, and of course, Beastie Boys.
When the music was over the pizza was ready and not only did it prove to be healthier than the original (almost entirely whole wheat crust, baked breaded eggplant instead of fried, and only 1 oz of cheese), but absolutely delicious as well. I'm sorry, but I was thinking with my stomach when it was ready and did not pause to take a photo. The rest of the evening was spent working on beastie the blankie and watching Fast Food Nation, an interesting movie. Funny it had the same effect on me as the book. When it was over, I really wanted French Fries. The ending of the movie is not for the faint of heart however, and it (along with today's beef recall) will keep me off meat for awhile.
Tonight I'm supposed to meet up with friends to see The Whipsaws play at Blues Central but since I've still got half a pizza, half a bottle of yummy wine, half a blanket to make and at least 5 hours of instant viewing on ye old netflix account, I think I'll stay in again. Sorry guys, I'm old and lame......or maybe I just miss all the quality movie/cooking/knitting time I used to spend this time of year back in Bethel.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Inertia


I feel like the dogs today. I'd love to just lay down on the couch and nap a bit. It's cold, outside and in and I want to snuggle up with a down blanket, good book, and cup of hot chocolate.

Guess I'll have to settle for down booties on my feet and hot chocolate while I work.