Monday, December 31, 2012

Monday: NYE edition



I know since it is New Year's Eve I should pause and reflect on this year of sewing and life, think about what mattered most this year, and put 2012 in perspective. But, that isn't going to happen today. Maybe tomorrow instead? We will see ;) I do have some goals for this week, but before I get to those, let me go over last week's progress.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Pattern Organization: Step 1



I have been trying for the past year to get a grip on my patterns and come up with a suitable pattern storage solution. Pattern and fabric organization is something that almost every person,who starts sewing,I assume, must encounter. Maybe there is someone out there that buys *one* pattern, then "the right" fabric and then whips out their project. These people must be some greater form of human. I buy fabric when I find something I like and the same is true of patterns. No particular rhyme or reason. This is where stacks of random patterns enter my life and sewing area, so maybe my way is not the best, but I will deal with that flaw later ;)

Friday, December 28, 2012

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Oven Roasted Tomatoes



I love making gifts. Christmas, obviously, is when my crafting/cooking inner demon really comes alive and wants to make everything for everyone. If I was more organized I would start this process in July. Maybe that will be one of my New Year's resolutions? It is just hard for me to start thinking about twinkling lights and christmas ribbon in July when the sun is shining, the air is warm and thick and all I want to do is grill and eat hot dogs. Hot dogs. Yum.


I have been making most of my gifts from an early age. I have always loved to make something rather than buy it, if possible. I have dabbled in flavored oils, had success with caramel sauces and even went so far as a faux-fur cape for my niece. Note to anyone who will listen: three year old little girls really only care about dolls/toys/anything-Princess-related on Christmas morning. A cape that their aunt spent WEEKS making? Not so much.

This year, due to my normal time crunch, my husband and I decided on roasted tomatoes. It sounded pretty easy, and I could get cute jars to put them in! Double score! But these were not just roasted tomatoes, they were s-s-l-l-o-o-o-w-w-w roasted tomatoes. How slow? 10-12 hours.

The first batch we did overnight. We took 5 pounds of Romas, sliced them in half, drizzled a little olive oil, salt and pepper and then we all went to bed — the tomatoes were tucked into a 180 degree oven. The next morning they looked pretty good. Not exactly what I wanted but still tasty. Our first batch went to our second-family-of-sorts. The entire jar was gone before we left their house Christmas Eve.

The second batch, we tried a different approach. We started the the same way, 5-6 pounds of Romas, but this time, half the amount cut in half, the rest quartered. We added unpeeled garlic cloves, a smidgen of sugar, and a much heavier pour of olive oil. After an hour at 350 degrees, we took a look. Not yet there, more steamed and soft, than the roasted we were hoping for. We left them in the warm (turned off!) oven while we were out eating and drinking merrily for a few hours Monday night. When we got home, we turned the oven back on to 170 degrees, and then we (or I) passed out. Others, the tomatoes and my husband, just went to bed.

The next morning, the smell was amazing. Even at eight in the morning! The photo above is them straight out of the oven. They tasted as good as they looked, they were bursting with flavor. These were packed in the remaining jars and taken to my family's house for distribution. They were a hit! My dad made us stop eating his jar so he could use them for pasta tonight.

For those attempting to make these, I am not sure if our technique of an hour of intense heat followed by hours of slow heat was what achieved what we wanted. Regardless, if I am to make them again, and indeed I will, I will do the same thing. We also found that the quarters tasted better than the halves, but you decide :) It really doesn't need a recipe, but here it is:

Slow Oven Roasted Tomatoes
adapted from this recipe, and this recipe 

5-6 pound rinsed tomatoes, quartered (we used Romas, but I think any would work)
Salt
Extra Virgin Olive Oil (don't be shy)
1 head of unpeeled garlic cloves
2 teaspoon of sugar (ratio is about 1 teaspoon per kilo of tomatoes)

  1. Arrange tomatoes on baking sheet.
  2. Sprinkle with salt, olive oil, and garlic cloves.
  3. Place in 350 oven for 1 hour
  4. Turn down heat to 170 and cook for about 10-12 hours.
  5. Remove from oven and cool. Place in air-tight container. Keeps for about a week in fridge.
You can add herbs if you want, we didn't have any on hand, so we didn't. You can eat these with bread and fresh goat cheese, pizza, pasta or just straight from the jar to your mouth. Like I did :)


Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Christmas Eve: Monday Goals





Well, it is here and not without warning. Christmas Eve. All weekend at the cheese shop, customers kept asking if I was ready for tomorrow. My answer today is the same as yesterday and as the day before: not really.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Vogue 8728: the Brown Dress



"The brown dress" Such a catchy title, eh? So creative I am ;)
I am open to another name for it by the way...

I realized that I mentioned this dress on Monday in my goals, and figured it needed an explanation.

Monday, December 17, 2012

Monday, Monday...


I am going to try something new here this week. I have intentions to do it every week, but we will start with this one ;) I want to put my weekly goals up and then recap at the end of the week or at some point. So without any further ado....

Week of December 17th, 2012:
  1. Slip stitch neckline of brown silk dress (cell phone pic above)
  2. Finish Keep knitting red scarf
  3. Decide neckline options for brown silk: beaded or not?
Three small goals. I think that will be a good start. I am trying to keep what else I have going on this week in mind. It is getting close to Christmas, and let's be honest, I am really behind on everything! How did it get this late in the month already?!?! Is it just me or did the holidays seem to come earlier this year? ;)

Here is to a productive week!

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Some Light Cleaning


It has been awhile since I posted. I am sure that you may have noticed. I have decided today that I need some sprucing up here around this old blog. There might be some cobwebs in places there shouldn't be and a layer of dust thick enough to write "shame on me" residing on my sewing machine. I am still here, and today have made the decision that things are going to change. For real. Not like my yearly attempt to stay up past midnight on New Year's Eve — some things I just have to face.

I want to blog about sewing. I want to sew more. It makes me happy.

One post done. Baby steps :)

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Wedding Dress: Finished


Well, here is the final project finished with my photos and really fancy photos taken by the photographer. You will be able to tell which ones are mine and which are hers. Trust me.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Finally. A little update...


It has been a long time. Actually it has been about six months. Clearly when I get overwhelmed or super focused this is what happens— something has to give. Unfortunately it seems it is always the blog. But I will say that in those six months I finished my friend's wedding dress, one bridesmaid Bombshell dress, three-quarters of another Bombshell dress, traveled to St.Louis, London, Dublin (finding great vintage finds in each city) and all the while running two cheese stores. It has been exhausting, exciting and rewarding.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Something Stinks: Fabric Prep


As I have mentioned I enrolled in Gertie's online class, and I have chosen my fabric. Much to my husband's happiness, I found in my stash this piece of black and white houndstooth silk suiting with enough yardage of four and half yards. I purchased it about a year ago during a super sale on fabric.com for $4 yard. Even though the class is geared to making a summer dress,  I really wanted to make a slightly heavier dress to straddle the in between seasons. It is lightweight enough to drape, but not too light. And I figured depending on accessory color, I could go either spring or fall/winter with the black and white. Maybe red or plum for winter and pink or coral for spring?

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

The Wonderful World of iDye


Since I last posted, many things have happened. Well, many and then not so many, really. Let's get on to what did happen, which I will try to put in a timely order: