Sunday, 22 April 2012
Spinach and Feta Pasties
I've been prompted out of blogging silence (and my, what a silence it was) by the need to share our lunch. I found the recipe for these Spinach and Feta Pastries at Jorth and highly recommend you try them out. They were so easy that two of my daughters made them pretty much all by themselves and they were eaten by nearly all the family - except the boy who couldn't quite handle the "green stuff". I added half a tin of lentils to the recipe for added protein and because I love feta and lentils together.
Thursday, 28 October 2010
I finshed something!
Look! It's finished! I made a little cardigan/waistcoat for Ruthie and I finished it yesterday! It has buttons and everything! And it's only a little on the short side... I love the wool, which I found in the charity shop, I love the buttons, which I found in the charity shop and I loved my vintage needles, which I found in a charity shop. The pattern came from pickles and I highly recommend it. It was a joy to knit, and I'm planning more for Kim and myself, if I can ever work out how to size it up quite considerably!
Monday, 22 February 2010
Yarn Happy!
What will this rather luscious pile of wool become?
I'm about to start a Playful Stripes Cardigan from Alana Dakos at nevernotknitting. I'm hoping that blogging my intention will keep me on track with my New Year's Resolution of Finishing Projects. I'd become a bit overwhelmed by works in progress, so I've set myself some rules, namely that I'm not working on more than two projects at once, one of which must be a pre-started project, and that I don't start another until one of these is finished. I'm doing well so far. I've finished a hat for my cousin in Australia, a needlework picture I started while expecting my first child (over 4 years ago!), a first attempt at an embroidery for my god-daughter, and these two items for my youngest daughter.
This is a high chair cover for our cheap IKEA ANTILOP high chair. It's about to be replaced, following our imminent house move, so, after a no-nappy disaster on the shop-bought previous cover, we needed a cheap replacement. The pattern is from Lidija's BluDor Magazine blog and I'm very pleased with how it turned out.
And these are legwarmies! Knitted with love from Alana Dakos' pattern. They keep Ruthie's legs warm and I like them too. Here's hoping the cardigan will be such a hit with her sister!
Tuesday, 1 December 2009
Happy Advent!
I've been meaning to share this rather excellent advent calendar for a while, but today seemed an appropriate moment. My daughter and I found it in a charity shop in Geneva for a measly CHF 5 and I instantly grabbed it. I don't know when it was made, or by whom, but it is gorgeous. And rather spookily, and in the way that often happens with charity shops, the day before we found it, I had parcelled up our family matchbox advent calendar to send off to my little sister. I think we were meant to find this and use it for our kids. Look at the picture on one of the boxes...so cute!
It's filled with chocolate coins and is hanging in our kitchen at the minute. The two eldest are taking turns opening it in the mornings.
We actually have four advent calendars in our house. Each year my little sister makes one up for me and I return the favour. It's filled with little bits and bobs and is very exciting. This morning it contained what my daughter refers to as "clenching kittens" which are little paper-clip type doo-dahs that clench paper between their bum cheeks! The children have another one that is filled with Christmas books, one for each day of advent, and I made my husband one - I may post a photo later...
As you can probably tell, I love advent calendars!
I hope you enjoy opening yours!
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
I'm still here but I've been busy...
...doing this jigsaw. Last Wednesday, we came home from playgroup and I wanted to make a jigsaw. We chose this one from the collection (of 4...I'm really not jigsaw crazy) and set about it. My daughter was keen to help so we picked out all the pieces with writing on them until 10 minutes had passed and she informed me her arms were "too sore" to help any more. She told her granny that we had been doing a jigsaw with "nearly one million pieces." I guess that over 1000 is a lot more than her usual 64.
After burning a few bottles of midnight oil, voila! A completed jigsaw! Well, almost. There was a note inside the box which told me that there were two half pieces missing and, sadly, another seems to have gone missing since then. Still, it was such a nice jigsaw that I didn't let it put me off. I even put it back in the box and added a bit of information to the note, in French, to update the situation for the next person who tackles it.
The jigsaw looks like a family heirloom, but it came from a charity shop which gives jigsaws away for free. So it'll probably go back there at the weekend to replenish the ether, even though I need jigsaw pieces for a craft project I've got planned. I'll hopefully get one I don't like so much. A thatched cottage perhaps, or Scottish mountains or something with a lot more missing pieces...
After burning a few bottles of midnight oil, voila! A completed jigsaw! Well, almost. There was a note inside the box which told me that there were two half pieces missing and, sadly, another seems to have gone missing since then. Still, it was such a nice jigsaw that I didn't let it put me off. I even put it back in the box and added a bit of information to the note, in French, to update the situation for the next person who tackles it.
The jigsaw looks like a family heirloom, but it came from a charity shop which gives jigsaws away for free. So it'll probably go back there at the weekend to replenish the ether, even though I need jigsaw pieces for a craft project I've got planned. I'll hopefully get one I don't like so much. A thatched cottage perhaps, or Scottish mountains or something with a lot more missing pieces...
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Our crazy house
There's not much time to post, since I'm helping my husband reconstruct a double stroller we picked up for next to nothing in the charity shop last month. It was pretty filthy, and in order to clean it, he had to unscrew quite a lot of it. It seemed quite simple at the time, but even with two physics degrees between us - three if you count his PhD - we can't get it to be anything but "a bit too floppy."
Meanwhile, I need to keep nipping off to check if enough tomato ketchup has pooled in the bottom of a new bottle for me to squeeze into an old bottle. My 2 year old son tried to set the table for tea (putting out only what he viewed as essentials i.e. the tomato ketchup and nothing else) but the baby grabbed it, dropped it on the floor and smashed the top. It hadn't yet been opened which saved a considerable mess, but it was a non-squeezable bottle of squeezy suace. Still, we're lax in the frequency of our trips to the recycling centre, so the old bottle with top intact was still in a box in the garage. Disaster was averted.
My husband wishes he had taken photos of our floppy stroller. I am off to pour a whisky to calm and help him.
Here's a photo of my unintentional footwear combo to keep us non-drinkers calm.
Meanwhile, I need to keep nipping off to check if enough tomato ketchup has pooled in the bottom of a new bottle for me to squeeze into an old bottle. My 2 year old son tried to set the table for tea (putting out only what he viewed as essentials i.e. the tomato ketchup and nothing else) but the baby grabbed it, dropped it on the floor and smashed the top. It hadn't yet been opened which saved a considerable mess, but it was a non-squeezable bottle of squeezy suace. Still, we're lax in the frequency of our trips to the recycling centre, so the old bottle with top intact was still in a box in the garage. Disaster was averted.
My husband wishes he had taken photos of our floppy stroller. I am off to pour a whisky to calm and help him.
Here's a photo of my unintentional footwear combo to keep us non-drinkers calm.
Monday, 2 November 2009
Hallowe'en Excitement
So we dressed up, ate slime soup and witch's hair, drank blood juice and dooked for apples. And we carved punpkins. My childhood memories of Hallowe'en involve aching fingers from gouging out the inside of a neep, and stealing the said neep from the local farm shed. Boy did we pedal back quickly from those outings! My dad assured me he had the permission of the farmer, but thinking back, we never stopped to say hello... Luckily for my children, neeps are hard to come by at the best of times in this neck of the wood, so we plumped on carving some pumpkins picked up at a local farm (and paid for!) I found a great resource over at The Junior Society and copied my favourite picture.
Hope you had a Happy Hallowe'en.
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