Showing posts with label wayward crafts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wayward crafts. Show all posts

Tomatillos: Charred Tomatillo, Chicken & Broccoli Salad

I've only ever used tomatillos in salad dressing, but I was excited to give them a chance to star. I adapted a recipe from EatingWell 500-Calorie Dinners Cookbook when I read that tomatillos are great charred. The cookbook had a charred tomato salad, so I made it into a charred tomatillo salad.


4 c broccoli florets
1 lb tomatillos (smaller is better, I'm told)
2 tsp + 3 Tbps extra virgin olive oil, divided
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
1/2 tsp chili powder (I omitted this)
2 Tbsp lemon juice
2 Tbsp balsamic vinegar
2 14-oz cans chunk chicken

1. Bring about 1" of water to boil in a large pot. Add broccoli and cook until crisp-tender, about 5 minutes. Drain and rinse with cold water; set aside.

2. Peel off leaves and rinse them. Toss with 2 tsp olive oil. Cook in a heavy pan over high heat until charred. Remove from heat and quarter. Do not clean the pan.

3. Heat remaining oil in the pan over medium. Add salt, pepper, chili powder, lemon juice and balsamic vinegar (watch out for spatter when adding liquid). Stir, scraping up any brown bits.

4. Break up chicken, and combine tomatillos, broccoli, and chicken. Pour pan sauce over. Serve warm or cold.

This was kind of acidic for me. If you like tomatillo flavor, you might like this, but we . . . didn't.

Wayward!

Not so delightful S'mores Delight Pie

Two years ago, I embarked on a PieQuest. My PieQuest began with reading magazines. This recipe comes from Spirit magazine from Southwest Airlines but unfortunately, it didn’t quite turn out like it did in the picture.



S’mores Delight Pie is originally from Perfect Pies: The Best Sweet and Savory Recipes from America’s Pie-Baking Champion by Michele Stuart. Unfortunately, when I made it following the recipe instructions, it didn’t turn out even close to the intended result.

This pie is almost a s’more cream pie. The idea is a graham cracker crust coated with hot fudge sauce and filled with marshmallow-flavored-and-studded custard. On top, hot-fudge-dipped graham crackers, whipped cream/marshmallow cream and toasted mini marshmallows.

If that sounds like a lot of work—it is. The hot fudge sauce is made from scratch and requires 5 hours’ cooling. The custardy filling, which you can make while the hot fudge sauce cools, has to be refrigerated for an hour and a half before assembling the pie. And then you refrigerate for another 12 hours. And then you top it and broil it.

So basically this is an 18-hour pie. That might be worth it—once—if it turned out amazing. Or even turned out at all. It didn’t.

For starters, I don’t think the hot fudge sauce was supposed to actually be chilled before you poured it in the crust. The directions do say “pour” not “scrape out of the bottom of the bowl and spread,” as fully chilled hot fudge sauce requires.


Another problem with this recipe was in the “marshmallow vanilla cream.” How long do you think it would take just over six and a half cups of a cold liquid to heat to bubbling on medium heat in a medium saucepan, while whisking constantly? Here’s a hint: not four minutes.

However, the directions said, “Place saucepan over medium heat and cook, whisking constantly until the cream starts to bubble and thicken, about 4 minutes.” (And yes, my stove was already warm.) After 10 minutes of constant whisking, the milk had barely begun to froth. Was that what they meant by bubble?

I’ve made puddings before. I know what it means for something to bubble and thicken. This wasn’t it. And yet I’d diligently followed the directions, and I’d cooked it for two and a half times the recipe’s direction. Torn, I decided to pull the “marshmallow vanilla cream” from the stovetop. It was the wrong decision.

I cooled the filling with an ice bath and stuck it in the refrigerator for as much time as I had (another error: I only allotted an “insignificant” 14.5 hours to making this pie). Then I assembled the pie. Because the graham cracker crumb crust apparently isn’t enough graham, the hot fudge layer on the bottom of the cake is topped with graham crackers. Do you know what happens when you pour a not-thick-enough pie filling on top of graham crackers?

I’ll tell you: they float. I was too afraid to find out, but I worried that not only did the graham crackers float, but that they’d pulled up the hot fudge sauce and the graham cracker crust underneath. I closed my eyes, spread the hot fudge sauce on the top layer of graham crackers (again, chilled hot fudge sauce isn’t something you can dip a graham cracker in, at least not to coat it for a pie, so this looked pretty ugly already), and stuck it in the fridge to hope for the best.

The next day, I took a peek at the pie-fail I was hoping to bring to a potluck. I tilted it to one side—and decided to make cookies.

After nearly 24 hours in the refrigerator, I knew it was time to give up hope my s’more pie soup would magically turn into a cream pie. Unwilling to throw good food after bad, I decided to forgo the “fluff whipped cream” (another 30 minutes of effort and cream and marshmallow fluff) and just top with the mini marshmallows and broil.


It looks good here. I’m creative like that. Just take a look at this filling:


This is what we call a “Bake Fail.” I think “epic” is overused in Internet slang, but it might actually apply here. The only part of the pie that actually worked out was the store-bought crust. And you know what? That’s probably good, since the other recipe from this book featured in the magazine was a traditional pie crust: and it called for so much shortening that it crumbled at the slightest touch.

Could this pie work? Yes, if you have two days before you want to eat the pie, and you trust yourself more than the directions. But barring that, make this s’mores pie, which is faster (and tastier in my experience), or try this alternative: s'mores delight. Not only easier, but faster and foolproof. What’s not to love about this?


Wayward Pin Fail

Ever seen something on Pinterest you think you can do? Yeah, yesterday we decided we would make something we found. We (I'm at Jordan's house and decided to make fun things with her kids) decided to make unicorn cookies/ rainbow swirl cookies.
Well...they did not turn out as expected. I had Jordan's 3 older kids help make the dough, stir in the food coloring and roll out "snakes" of each color. I only figured out how to really swirl the colors after I had done most of the batch. And the colors didn't turn out well. Also, MORE FLOUR! It might be that whole higher elevation thing but wow...these were flat flat flat. At least they tasted good!

These were definitely WAYWARD!


To pick out or not to pick out, that is the question!

It is the wayward crafter's eternal question. Is it good enough or should I do it over?

I am still working on the baby quilt for Jordan's baby. I was a little disappointed with the front because not every angle matched perfectly. I was extra careful in the back. I picked out seams and recut and squared up. And guess what. Yep, still not perfect. 

When do you decide your product is good enough and when do you decide you must redo it? This was my dilemma when I was doing free motion quilting on the quilt. I can sew for about an hour on one bobbin. After one bobbin change, I didn't change my thread tension back to where it needed to be.  When that happens, the top thread shows on the bottom of the quilt too much. It makes the stitches feel rough. I didn't realize this until the next time I changed the bobbin--an hour of free motion quilting later.

Was it good enough? Did I want to take out that much stitching? 

I decided I did. It took as longer to pick it out than it did to put it in. What a pain! 


All those little dotted lines used to be stitches. All told, it was about 2 square feet of stitching or about this much thread.

I am getting ready to do it over now and I don't regret my decision at all. I know I will be much happier with the result. 

In this case, I decided to pick out, but earlier I decided not to redo the angles in the quilt that weren't perfect. I don't really understand my criteria or my tolerance level for my own imperfections, so I am asking my fellow crafters what they think. (Of course this assumes that a few of you are also less than perfect, too.)

Here's what I want to know...

  • How to you decide when your craft is "good enough?"
  • Is "good enough" really good enough?
  • Do you feel compelled to point out mistakes in your own work when others look at it?



Apple braid: healthy makeover!

Last fall, I made a tasty apple braid. This fall, I decided to see if I could give the original recipe a healthy makeover.

It was an all-day endeavor, and there were tears shed. Literally. Actual tears.


The healthy makeover!

For the filling:
  • 3 medium Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored and cut into slices.
  • 3 Tablespoons Xylitol
  • 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • 2 tsp lemon juice

For the 100% whole wheat bread, from Heavenly Homemakers--This makes two loaves, so either half the recipe or make one loaf of bread in addition to the apple braid.

  • 6 cups (give or take) whole wheat flour, divided
  • 1 ¾ cups warm water, divided
  • 1/3 cup honey
  • 1 package active dry yeast (2 1/4 teaspoon)
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • 3 Tablespoons melted butter

For the drizzle:
  • 1 tbsp Agave Nectar
  • tiny dash imitation vanilla
Yep, there's no actual sugar in this recipe!

Begin the bread first, following Heavenly Homemakers' recipe through the first rise. In the last 15 minutes of the first rise, make the filling by combining the filling ingredients in a bowl. 

After the first rise is finished, preheat the oven to 350. Roll out half this amount of dough and cut the outer thirds in ribbons (being careful to keep them even because you don't want to end up with too many ribbons on either side).



Remember that whole wheat dough is that it generally doesn't have as much stretch as white bread dough, so the ribbons might need to be extra long to fit over the filling.

Lay the filling down the middle of the bread and overlap the ribbons to form the braid, pinching the dough in place. Since my dough was less elastic than the last time I made it, I actually just pinched them together in the middle. I tried to give this a chance for a second rise . . . didn't happen. It also didn't happen for the other loaf of bread I made from this dough. I'm VERY frustrated, after grinding my own freaking wheat, using yeast I just opened last month, spending four hours making the dough and six MORE hours trying to get it to rise the second time. . . .

Ahem. Anyway.

Bake the apple braid at 350 F for about 25 minutes or until golden brown.

Combine the drizzle ingredients, warm slightly and drizzle over the cooling braid. Cut into 10 slices.

So, how did the healthy makeover go?
As you can see, the analysis by CalorieCount.com shows there's almost no difference between the before and after in raw nutrition data. Calories, fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, sodium--it's all very close. However, the reduced sugars and especially the whole grains earned the after version a nutrition grade of B+, as opposed to C+, making this a dessert you don't have to feel too guilty about.



And most importantly, how did it taste?

I HAVE NO IDEA. 

Again, I'm super frustrated about this. I brought this to my friend's house, and my friends had pieces (and seemed to like them), but I was too full to eat any. So I brought it home and put it in the kitchen.

The same room as a bunch of bananas a neighbor gave us that afternoon.

The bananas were infested with fruit flies which took over my apple braid which I seriously spent six and a half hours making.

Wayward rage.

Ahem. Anyway.

So, if you try this, let me know how it tastes! I don't think I have six and a half hours to go through all this grief again any time soon.

"Faux"-tatoes? (and easy Parmesan chicken!)

A couple weeks ago, I came across a dinner recipe I knew I wanted to try: Parmesan chicken and "faux"-tatoes.

The "faux"-tatoes were made from cauliflower. I had visions of fluffy, creamy mashed potatoes made with a less starchy and presumably more healthy vegetable (which my kids might not eat as readily).

You steam the cauliflower in the microwave, then you're supposed to be able to mash it with a potato masher.

This is where I should have figured out my dreams were not going to come true. My potato masher has a round, flat bottom, and didn't do anything to the cauliflower. I resorted to the food processor pretty quickly.

I added the recommended sour cream and pepper into the food processor, and while it tasted good, there was something missing. (In addition to any resemblance to potatoes.) I thought of real potatoes and added milk, butter, and salt, and continued food processing. It did get smoother and fluffier.

The last step is to mix in some cheese (I used shredded Parmesan), put it into a casserole dish, top with more cheese and bake until warm and golden brown.

It looked perfect!

It tasted like little tiny bits of cauliflower in a tasty sauce. Which is tasty enough, but my poor dreams of healthier "faux"-tatoes were sadly shattered.

The Parmesan chicken turned out pretty well, however, and because this is a recipe on the Internet, I made it with a few changes ;) . Which is to say, I did whatever I wanted. (Wayward, hello?)


I mixed some breadcrumbs with a spice mix we got at the North Carolina state farmer's market and dredged the chicken in them, then broiled them for a couple minutes. After I flipped them, I added shredded Parmesan on top and broiled them for a couple minutes again.

For the sauce, I used a can of diced tomatoes with sweet onions. I poured about half the 14-oz can into a 8x8 baking dish, added the remaining breadcrumb/spice mix and some minced garlic and stirred.

Once the chicken was ready, I placed the pieces in my sauce, poured the rest of the tomatoes over the top and topped with mozzarella. Bake until the chicken is cooked through and enjoy!


We really liked the texture of the diced tomatoes instead of a traditional pureed marinara, and the flavor had a great kick.

What wayward or wonderful recipes have you tried lately?

Lemon cake: 3 minutes, 100 calories!

A couple weeks ago, my four-year-old decided it was my "betend buwtday." To celebrate, she served me "betend wemon sauce cake."


And then I wanted real lemon sauce cake. But I knew I didn't want a whole lemon cake in my house, so I tracked down a microwave lemon cake recipe. The original recipe called for 3Tbsp of oil, and one commenter had trouble with the cake turning out oily. So I cut calories and fat by replacing half that oil with applesauce.

The recipe:

3 tablespoons all purpose flour
3 tablespoons confectioners sugar
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
pinch of salt
1 1/2 tablespoons canola oil
1 1/2 tablespoons unsweetened applesauce
3 tablespoons milk
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice (I squeezed 1/3 of a medium lemon)
1/4 teaspoon lemon zest
splash of vanilla (oops, I forgot this!)

Mix the dry ingredients, then add the wet ingredients. The lemon juice will probably react with the baking soda and begin bubbling, resulting in a fluffy pancake-like batter.


Divide the batter between two ramekins and microwave. The original recipe suggested 45 seconds and that a full minute was too much. However, even after a minute, the edges of my cake were totally liquid. I ended up microwaving for 1:30.

The original recipe used a lemon juice + 2Tbsp confectioners' sugar glaze, but I used some leftover blackberry syrup. I'd also wanted to use this beautiful jar of lemon curd I have, but after the results, I decided it wasn't worth opening the jar.

The result was a little gummy at first and didn't release from my bowls well (even though they were greased and floured)--hence the :S on the plate.


However, after it had a few minutes to set, it tasted pretty darn good! I let my four-year-old try a bite and she insisted I share my cake with her. The bright flavor of lemon—and the word "deewicious!" from my daughter—totally brightened my day.

Each cake is 95 calories. Woot!

Have you tried microwave cakes?

More kitchen makeovers!

So my husband went out of town for a couple days last week with our church youth group, and I took advantage of that time to add something else to our recent kitchen ceiling makeover: new cabinets!


I used Rustoleum Cabinet Transformations, and I was really excited by the initial results. I loved that the grain is supposed to show through with oak cabinets.

But now that I see them up close, I'm not quite as thrilled.


Yeeeah, I wasn't so much going for the "antiquey" look as my cousin generously described it.

Did I mention my husband was out of town? And I have three kids 6 and under? Yeeeah. I'm insane.


My kids spent a bunch of time in front of the TV while I was working on these (don't worry, we also hit the splash pad, the dentist and the store, so they weren't totally neglected). I really did work around the clock: the first night I was up until 3 AM, the second night I was up until 2, then woke up before 6 to put the final coat of protective cover on.



I got two doors up before DH got home, but was too discouraged & exhausted to finish at that point. When he got home, he helped tighten the hinge screws and hang the other 15 doors. It was a lot easier with his help!

I also bought new handles, which w love (but then found cheaper at Home Depot. CURSES), and spray painted the old hinges (probably should have just sprung for new ones).


The approximate numbers:
Cabinet kit: $75
Miscellaneous supplies (drop cloth, brushes, spray paint, etc): $35
New hardware: $100 (for all 50 cabinets)
Time from start to finish: ~48 hrs

I'll try another coat of the "bond coat" for touch up, but right now I kind of feel like this:



My tips? Paint in a VERY well lit area and paint THOROUGHLY.

Another Barrette?!? Not so much.

I needed to refresh my barrette collection, and what better way than by making them yourself? I have worn the other two that I made, and thought I would try one that was a little more intricate.
It was a little harder than I expected! I wanted to make a braided faux metal barrette using the Aleene's Tacky Glue method.
First I had to figure out how to draw a braid. This took a long time. I actually Googled images of braids and then traced and reworked it. I ended up with these pieces:

I tried out the braid:

I used the process to antique the pieces and then braided them. (This is SO much easier said then done!)

After that, I used the gold rub on a small square of brown paper bags. I punched out 2 circles to use for rivets. I used Bead Fix because I know how well it works.

So I went through all these steps, and it didn't really turn out like I had hoped. I don't think I will wear it as it is. I might try again.... I don't know. I just couldn't get the braid right. It is uneven and wayward.

Should I just give up this idea or try to rework it?

PS: This is truly a wayward post. When I looked back to get the link to the other barrette, I realized I did one of the steps wrong on this one. I don't think it would have made me like this anymore than I do now, but if I try again, I will do it right.

Daisy cardigan with patch pocket pattern

This weekend, we'll be hosting our own Wayward Weekend Link Party! Be sure to come ready to share your favorite crafts and comment on others'!

I started knitting . . . oh my goodness, it was 15 years ago! But I didn't start trying to really improve my skills until the last few years.

When my oldest (who'll be 6 in a few weeks) was a baby, I made my first sweater using the Daisy pattern from the summer 2003 issue of Knitty (a free online knitting magazine!). It's a raglan-sleeve cardigan in stockinette stitch, with seed stitch ribbing. I made it using Sonata, a yarn Elann.com has now discontinued. It's a double-knit weight mercerized cotton, so it's shiny and strong, with well-defined stitches. And I love the color!


And here's my son modeling it, in washed-out-ghost mode:

This took me almost exactly six days, which I think is pretty quick for any project. I was pretty pleased--and that was enough to convince me that baby sweaters are the BEST for quick projects!

Now, for the confession. This craft was, of course, a little wayward: I added the patch pocket to cover up a particularly ugly failed graft between two balls of yarn. I think the result is really cute though, so if you want to replicate it, here's what you have to do:

Patch pocket pattern (standard abbreviations used—hover over the first mention of a term for an explanation)
CO 8 sts.
Row 1: Knit.
Row 2: p1, m1, p to last st, m1, p1.
Work 8 more rows in stockinette stitch, knitting the right side, purling the wrong side.

Seed stitch edging:
Row 11: * k1, p1, rep from * to end.
Row 12: * p1, k1, rep from * to end.
Row 13: as Row 11.
BO all sts.

Sew onto sweater, seed stitch edge on top.

What's your favorite way to hide a mistake?

Originally blogged at MamaBlogga

Top 10 Posts of 2011

Since today's the last day of 2011, we thought we'd share our favorite posts from this year. Since we've only been blogging since April 2011, these posts are our favorite of all time =)

Mom/Diana is up first, since she's always last =)


Mom said I think the pillow turned out really well...not wayward at all.
WGC said: She's totally right! This pillow looks so pretty and totally a part of the bedroom set.


Mom said: Mrs. Pigg loved it!
WGC said: We just think this quilt is so adorable! Mom showed us how to curl grosgrain ribbon and use freezer paper applique in this quilt. 

Next we have Jasmine's favorites:



Jasmine said: My love for Harry Potter lead me to make my very own HP craft
WGC said: We all really love Harry Potter. I'm not sure who loves HP the most--Probably Jasmine since she did an HP craft!



Jasmine said: This was so fun to make with Brooke! 
WGC said: Those popcorn kernels are so cute! What a clever idea for all those movie tickets we all save. 


Brave Brooke's two favorites are:


Brooke saidThe reason I love this post so much because I literally use this everyday. It has made getting out the door, which is sometimes the hardest thing, that much easier. People ask me about it everywhere I go and I'm proud that I made it.
WGC said: This may be one of the most useful sewing projects from our blog!


Brooke saidI liked this post because I felt confident wearing these shirts and they were super simple. I think twice about throwing out clothes now!
WGC said: Man for someone who says they're a sewing novice, Brooke sure does a lot of sewing! And she's good at it too!

Just Jaime's two favorites are here:

Jaime said: I loved this shower. It was my first time throwing one and I put all I had into it. I LOVED what we (me, Brooke, my mom, and my best friend) created!
WGC said: There is so much to see in this post! That's a lot of hard work!

Jaime said: I love this chair. I love the deal I got on the fabric, and I loved working on it with my friend, Anne. It makes me happy when I look at it and sit on it.
WGC said: Yay for crafty friends and staple guns!

Finally, we have Jordan's two favorite crafts from 2011:


Jordan said: Because they were really tasty! I was quite proud of them
WGC said: Um, we'd like a bite!!


Jordan said: I was really proud of how this came out. It's been very useful for our family.
WGC said: This is so impressive! Couldn't we all use a command center?!


Thank you all so much for a successful 2011! We are so thankful for our followers, the comments and for the fun we've had on this blog. We look forward to 2012 and lots more projects! 

Grownup Swiss Cake Roll (Okay, Okay, Yule Log)

I know, I know, my tastes should have matured, but I think most people have a soft spot in their hearts for the junk food of their childhoods—and Little Debbie's Swiss Cake Rolls are one of those foods for me. So when I was looking through an old Martha Stewart Holiday Magazine and saw the Yule Log, that's what I thought of. But it's not just bigger—the recipe appeals to a grownup palette, too.


The cake layer was easy to make—it's almost like an angel food cake, except that you also beat the egg yolks and use them, too. But it calls for very little dry ingredients, and in a large jelly roll pan, it bakes quickly.


I've seen a few other people (like Nicole of Thrifty Decorating) do cake rolls recently, and they recommend rolling the cake up while it cools. So here's my cooling cake.

Once the cake was cool, I made the white chocolate mousse filling. I don't like white chocolate, but I followed the recipe. (WAYWARD ALERT: READ ON BEFORE YOU RUSH OFF TO MAKE THIS!)

Maybe I didn't let it set up enough, but the disaster came right after I spread the cooled white chocolate mousse on the cooled, unrolled cake. The mousse layer was at least as thick as (and probably thicker than) my cake. And it was a lot less solid.

I had done my best and followed the directions (and I know from experience, I forget things in the fridge at critical moments, so I couldn't just leave it there and hope to get back to it at the right time). So I started to roll it up.

And instead of rolling up along with the cake as a layer of tasty goodness, the mousse just slid down the cake.

I tried to roll it faster, and the cake flopped all over. It unrolled what I'd done, and deposited all the mousse in the middle of the cake.

I rolled it even faster, and I heard this odd "slop plop lop" sound, but I couldn't stop what I was doing when I was so close to making progress. The roll was less of a spiral roll and more of a tube by the time I gave up.

And then I discovered the source of the sound effects:




You can also see how sad and flat and rolled-like-a-scroll my yule log was. I decided I'd already put so much effort into it, I had to see it through. So I squeezed it as tight as I could, embracing the slop, and secured it inside the parchment paper and a kitchen towel. I let it chill in the fridge until I was ready to face it again.

This time, instead of Martha's white frosting, I decided to go with a dark chocolate glaze (yum!). I sawed off the ends of the log and made up this glaze from How to Cook Everything (this recipe has been halved):
  • 1/4 c + 2 Tbsp powdered baking cocoa
  • 3 Tbsp butter, cut into bits
  • 1/4 c cream
  • 1/4 c + 2 Tbsp powdered sugar
  • teeny pinch salt
  • 1/4 tsp vanilla extract (I skipped this)

Combine the ingredients in a small saucepan and stir over low heat. (I recommend using a heat-safe spatula for stirring.) As the butter melts, it goes from a powder with chunks to an almost buttercream consistency to a smooth glaze. Pour it over the chilled cake and it's beautiful!


I think you'd be safe with halving the white chocolate mousse recipe. (Deliciously Noted, whose links helped me find the recipe online, agrees that the filling is too much.) Also, the print version of my recipe had an error the instructions 1 1/4 c cream whipped in step 4, instead of 1 3/4), but honestly, I don't think that made the difference. And knowing that reducing it by 20% still didn't help—yeah, halve it.

What kind of yule logs or cake rolls do you make?
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