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Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Mechanical Marvels...

I'm not very good at remembering to wear jewellery, I have lots, and I always take some on holiday or if I'm going away for a weekend, but when it comes to putting it on I just never remember. 

I find it often gets in the way, beautiful bracelets that dangle around your wrists end up getting stuck in jumpers or bashed against almost every solid surface I pass by. Necklaces get stuck to other necklaces or tangled in knots and start to strangle me ( this happened in the middle of a yoga class on the one rare occasion I put a necklace on and then forgot to take it off... my instructor had to untangle me as I started to choke.....) or they get stuck in my hair. Earrings undoubtedly attach themselves to jumpers, scarves, hair you name it.

I wish I wore more of it, I have some beautiful pieces from friends and family, but apart from the staple studs, friendship bracelets and travel based mementoes I really am useless. I think half the time the problem is, other than looking pretty, I find jewellery has little purpose. So while stumbling around on the internet under a blanket with a cup of tea this afternoon I came across an amazing website. Dukno Yoon is a metalsmith and jewellery maker who has created some of the most incredible mechanical jewellery that simulates the movement of wings when worn.




*all images from http://www.duknoyoon.com/Wings_e.html

Now if all jewellery was like this, I think I'd be more inclined to wear it! However.... I'd probably end up being so distracted by it I'd never make it out of the house to impress any one with it! Do take a look at the website to see more of his amazing pieces.

Sunday, 13 January 2013

Pasta perfection


Dinner parties with friends are some of the best possible fun. There's wonderful food, copious amounts of wine and hours and hours of mindless chatter and catching up with each others' lives. The most magical thing about them is that even though they happen so irregularly, when the company is right it is always as if you've hardly been apart. To make a magical dinner party even more perfect, this time we made ALL our food from scratch especially the pasta....


Cooking a fresh meal is satisfying on its own but hand making pasta was something else! I won't lie it was a long process (and due to certain guests insisting the wine be opened before we started, it certainly took even longer than planned!) but it really was so much fun! Combining flour and eggs is all there is to it, then there is lots of kneading to be done and having many hands makes that a quicker process.


Then there's the rolling.... a pasta machine makes this an easy process but again a long one! Rolling pasta however is not only great fun, involving everyone in the kitchen as each chunk of dough gets stretched out to be about 2 metres long, its a lovely thing to play with. It feels like soft leather in your hands, it is so thin in the end, but still it feels strong and almost waxy.


On our first attempt at slicing the pasta we rolled the dough up and just roughly chopped it then tried unrolling it. This wasn't so successful as it all stuck together....it also didn't produce the most beautiful pasta! It certainly looked home made!


Our more successful attempts used the tagliatelle cutter on the pasta machine and this produced such beautifully even strips of pasta that we continued to use it for the final chunks of dough. All the pasta was then hung up on the drying rack to crisp up before cooking.. a hilarious sight to see in the middle of the kitchen!


Most importantly.... the taste. Fresh pasta is amazing, I'd never had it before but it is so light, fresh and juicy I really would recommend making your own! If you don't have a pasta roller, you could easily make ravioli rolled with a rolling pin and chopped up with something tasty inside. Our beautiful pasta was served up with a lovely home made tomato sauce, goats cheese and meatballs. Simple. Delicious.

Thursday, 10 January 2013

Brioche Success!

The second instalment from my French cookery extravaganza was La brioche aux praline de Josephine and my goodness was it a success!


It rose beautifully, baked well and tasted amazing. I've never made a brioche cake/bread before and I was pleasantly surprised how well this attempt turned out. It wasn't a quick process, once the dough was made, its spent a day and a night in the fridge in the end (it should have only had a night), then it was rolled out, folded and re-rolled a few times. Next the filling was added and the dough was  rolled into a sausage, chopped up then left for a further 3-4 hours to rise somewhere warm. But it was totally worth it...


For the filling I used a bar of dark chocolate with fruit and nuts in which I crushed up then sprinkled on the flat dough before rolling it into a sausage, this was a lovely almost-healthy-filling..... The recipe asked for pralines however I couldn't find a translation that really explained what this was so we improvised with chocolate!


Most importantly... the bake was so good there wasn't a soggy bottom in sight and with friends round for dinner it also didn't last long.

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Baking The Unknown



So here is my first foray into French pudding baking! Taste wise, a total success, everyone enjoyed this recipe Les tuiles aux amandes (Almond tuiles). However, this cookery book has no pictures whatsoever.... so those final preparation and presentation points are all left to guess work!

I've never made/seen tuiles before so I wasn't sure how they should look and my first attempt saw me trying to wrap them up too tight (around a wooden spoon) rather than merely curling them (over a big rolling pin) so shape wise, in the end I just left them as flat biscuits!


The sneaky technique of giving them a lovely dusting with icing sugar did however cover all manner of sins and finished of a lovely dessert. I'll definitely bake this one again and next time I might make a tasty little sauce to drizzle on the top too.....


Sunday, 6 January 2013

2013 has some BIG boots to fill


New years resolutions. 

I never usually buy into them, mostly because I'm not fussed about celebrating NYE so I normally drift into January on a Christmas come-down focused only on short term goals. In the past those goals have revolved around university. 2012 was a brilliant year and has left behind some big boots to fill. 2013 however, has left me feeling a little unsettled already. This is the first year of post education life and I've been working in a 'proper job' as every one describes it since September, for the foreseeable future. The next few years of my life are no longer split up into years at university, terms and holidays, essays and exams and as delightful as this new pressure free life is, I feel like I'm drifting towards a completely unknown goal, or simply just drifting.

With no impending Olympic fever to look forward to (wasn't summer 2012 just amazing?), no end-of-uni-celebrations/trips/shenanigans to break my year up I just don't know what to look forward to. So for the first time in as long as I can remember, I'm jumping on the resolution bandwagon.....and I'm really looking forward to it!

I currently have very little planned for this year, no gigs to look forward to so far, no trips planned and no life changing career plans so I'm seriously going to have to make this year as exciting as I can. So, 2013 is to be my year, as I make it, and this blog will form one of my resolutions, as well as document the rest of them.

So those resolutions....

1. I'm going to cook more. I promised my mum when I moved home I'd cook once a week and that lasted a month at most. I have this wonderful French cookery book I bought in France a few years ago and it is dedicated solely to puddings so every week I'll be cooking a different pudding from this book. Not only will this test my cooking skills but my understanding of French. (As a warning it should be noted most of my cooking attempts are exciting to say the least...)

2. By Easter I'm going to open an Etsy shop full of beautiful things I've made and start directing my crafting skills into something useful.

3. That age old favourite... get fit. Last Easter I ran a marathon in my fastest  time yet of 5h32, for me a real achievement.  In the summer I cycled 180 miles from home to Cornwall, and since then I've done NOTHING. So I shall hop back on that bike and sort my life out. I work 14 miles from home and by March I will be cycling to and from work at least once a week.

That's all for now. I think three is enough to be going on with, especially as they are long term goals. I think it will be a better success story if I can continue all three of these throughout the year, rather than take on 13 different goals that I will undoubtedly only drop along the way.

So, 2013 blog post number one done. Watch this space for a weekly update on all things crafty and inevitable cookery disasters.

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Time to cosy up...

Finally.

I've found my creative mojo again. I've felt out of touch and unorganised lately, so much so that I've felt I've had no attention span whatsoever and haven't had the concentration to start let alone finish anything. This weekend I came across a lovely pattern for some slippers from one of my favourite blogs, One Sheepish Girl.

It is a really great pattern that I accessed through Ravelry, a great online database of patterns for knitting and crochet and I'd recommend it to anyone! The pattern was so easy to follow and really quick to make, I started each slipper at about 4pm and was finished by bed time! Not only that, they are so comfy!! So here are a few quick snaps of my chunky knit slippers which I have barely taken off since I've finished them!




Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Searching for creativity.

I've really been feeling the stress in my life lately, usually I'm good at pushing stress to one side and just carrying on with life but recently it's all been adding up and just bubbling beneath the surface. As a result I've still not managed to get back into the swing of being creative. However, I'm seriously loving having a blog, this might not be being read by anyone at all other than a few lovely friends, but currently it is the only creative motivation for me! I'm still in love with being creative and feel constantly excited and inspired, but the stresses in life are preventing me from sitting down for longer than an hour or so to actually start something let alone finish anything! So today's post is just a small projection of things I'm working towards, a few snaps of small prototypes and inspiring ideas I'm working with. Anyone who is reading this, stay with me I promise these posts will get better soon!!


This is a prototype for a small purse I'm making a pattern for, I  was playing with shape and details.


Typing on fabric worked better than I'd thought it would, and has a very distressed/vintage type look.


These are some crocheted lace strips I made, measuring about 12 cm in length, they could be scaled up to make collars for clothing.


These lace strips were crocheted with eco wool, not only are the colours beautiful tones, but they are made from finely chopped up clothes fibres reformed into wool, wonderful for the planet and pretty!!