Friday 21 January 2011

Feel Good Friday


Apparently it's Feel Good Friday. So I guess I'll hop on this happy smiley shiney bandwagon, and join my blogging voice to all those others out there in Bloggoland :) The idea is from The Girl Next Door Grows Up you can see all the prompts she suggests there.

I am choosing this prompt from the 5 that are suggested:

Just make a list. List 5 things that made you really happy this week. No matter how bad or boring you think your week was, I bet you can find 5 things.

  1. I have knitted and blocked a beautiful shawl in my own handspun yarn, and I love it. So do many others apparently, at least according to the feedback I've had on Ravelry. Happeh dance.
  2. My husband has been very attentive, with lots of lovely hugs and kisses. More happeh dance.
  3. I have lost weight. And a fair bit of it too :) Very happeh dance!
  4. My husband has agreed to take me to WonderWool in April!!! Excited happeh dance!
  5. I downloaded my newest audiobook, The Captive Queen, to which I am spinning some lovely fibre from Sarah Babylonglegs! The happeh dances have now quite worn me out, so I'll sit back and eat my uber-delish Buffalo Dip... nom nom nom....

Monday 17 January 2011

First FO of the new year!


My first FO of the new year is the Oslo Walk shawl, and I will have to make more of these... I have some handspun 50/50 white baby camel/silk just begging to become one of these beauties! The beading was a real b*tch and took absolutely ages! Well... it took a few days. Then the rest of the lace, and when I got to the main body, the rest was a walk in the park. A walk in an Oslo park to be specific. The Vigeland sculpture park.

Knitted in the talented Babylonglegs' Boolace in "Cushdie" (that I rescued from her stall at KnitNation in the summer), it is more burgundy than in the cruddy picture, more like a glass of well aged port! The beads were 9/0 rocailles beads in 3 different shades of pink, bloody small, fiddly and annoying - but came out beautifully nonetheless!

Now I am nearly done with the lace edging of the Peacock Shawl by 'Kitman Figueroa' - this one in some handspun 2ply fingering weight, spun from a luuuurvely merino blend called 'Winter Grounds' I got from Yarnahoy's etsy shop. The yarn was spun and finished, but languishing in the deep recesses of my stash. It's not looking too bad at the moment, so I guess I'll just have to wait for the magic of blocking to see the end result... After I've finished it that is :)

Thursday 30 December 2010

Christmas, check. New Year, to do.

Christmas is done. Presents visited, food opened and relatives cooked... erm... never mind... it's been one of those Christmasses. The kids had fun though, and according to the eldest monkey, it had been the best Christmas Day ever. Ok, he's only 10, so he can't actually remember that many, but I thought I'd let him get the credit for lifting my spirits, if only a little. Working in retail has definately killed off my Christmas spirit, leaving me feeling decidedly Scrooge-like in my bah humbugness! Where was the excitement of putting up the decorations, the joy of baking Christmas cakes and biscuits? Where was the fun in wrapping the presents, and bringing them downstairs in SAS secret mission style? This year I made my Christmas pudding in October, and my cranberry sauce on Christmas Eve. That was the extent of my seasonal culinary preparation. Those 2 things. Nothing else. Not a Norwegian Christmas bikkie in sight. Not even gingerbread. I didn't even do my Norwegian roast for Christmas Eve. Bleurgh. I wrapped the childrens' presents at the last minute, late on Christmas Eve. The rest of the family presents were wrapped earlier that morning, and dropped off by my husband to their respective destinations.

A couple of days off, and it was back to work on the 27th. Now I just have to get through New Year's Eve, then middle monkey's birthday on the 2nd, FIL's birthday on the 4th, and then the monkeys are finally back in school on the 6th. And that means that I have to take all the decorations down while the boys are still at home. Not a tempting thought.

To counteract all this miserable doom and gloom, I'm attempting to bake my way back to happiness... this time a Clementine Cake, a Nigella Lawson recipe, and given to me by my friend Sally - my sister in dessert consumption and baking, and knitting/spinning... and other things girly. The simmering clementines made the kitchen smell absolutely divine! Now they are cooling, waiting to have the pips removed, and then to be mushed with the other ingerdients and made into an actual cake. Then the consumption.... I can hardly wait! But alas, I have to wait, because I have to go and buy some party food for tomorrow. New Year's Eve in our house usually consists of the 5 of us stuffing our faces with finger food, then going to bed to sleep the new year in. Fireworks-schmireworks, bah humbug and all that jazz :)

Tuesday 23 November 2010

Where I'm from



After reading Picperfic (Marianne Cant)'s "Where I'm From" blogpost, I had to do the same. Lots of fun memories, and a few sad ones too.

I am from a happy childhood where we were free to roam, from lingonberry preserve with smoked meat, soured cabbage and medisterkaker (lightly spiced meat patties), from lefse & lompe, from gløgg and aquavit, from split pea soup with ham, and fairy wing-thin pancakes that we knew how to cook by the age of 10.

I am from a land of snow and ice, where the snowdrifts were big enough to dig tunnels, warrens and castles, and you could get lost in them. From the edge of a capital where you could roam the woods, be a part of nature and the wildlife. From picking coltsfoot and wood anemones in the spring, bluebells and hepatica (liverleaf), the red timber farm houses, the majestic white capped mountain tops and the bluey green of the rivers of glacial meltwater. I am from walking barefoot in the lush green grass picking wildflowers in the summer, and picking wild blueberries and raspberries in the fall. (home description... adjective, adjective, sensory detail).

I am from respecting your elders, curtsey to say thank you, a passion for nature, from Vågå and Dovre, from Langdalen and Johansen, from Auntie Astrid who always made us waffles and her delicious soft ginger cake, from coffee and cakes when you go visiting, from grandparents I never knew, from being the youngest of two sisters.

I am from the short temper of my dad, and from mum’s ability to put her foot in it. From Auntie Astrid’s love of cooking, and good, traditional Norwegian farmhouse food. I am from dad’s love of nature, and mum’s creative mind.

From “don’t eat snow” and always say please and thank you. From good manners and try your best.

I'm from Oslo, the capital of Norway, from fantastic public transport, a welfare state to which none can compare, from the best place in the world to live (8 years running). I am also from the deep valley of Gudbrandsdalen, home of Peer Gynt, Hall of the Mountain King, from rich and steep fields that provide for the cows that give us Gjetost. I am from the land of Grieg, the birthplace of the cheese slicer, from the 2nd European country to give women the right to vote. I am from children’s parades on the 17th of May, with bunads and little flags, eating hot dogs, ice cream and waffles until you were so stuffed you could hardly walk.

From hiding behind a rock when dad was in a huff, to make him think we’d walked to the shops. From digging a snowtunnel, falling into it head first and not being able to get back out – finally being rescued an hour or so later by a slightly frantic dad. From sitting in the sandpit sculpting roadschemes rivalling spaghetti junction. From skiing with dad on a winter’s Sunday with hot dogs in one flask, and hot blackcurrant cordial in another.


Tuesday 19 October 2010

Apple cake is good for you, honest!

I have had a couple of requests for this recipe, so here goes. It's an old family recipe I got from my mum, and hope to pass on to my monkeys when they have bakers of their own.

Applecake

3 eggs 180° C for about 30 min.

150 g granulated or caster sugar

150 g unsalted butter

150 g self raising flour

1 tsp baking powder

4 – 5 apples (peeled, cored and cut into wedges)

Cinnamon & sugar to sprinkle on top.

Beat eggs and mix in sugar, add melted butter and baking powder, then add the flour bit by bit. Distribute evenly in a greased and lined tin. Poke the apple wedges into the batter, sprinkle sugar & cinnamon on top. Serve with whipped cream or good quality vanilla ice cream.

Tuesday 14 September 2010

I can haz a purty!!!


I have just this morning received my brand new blocking wires in the post, very promptly, as I only ordered them on Sunday :)... Then I realised I could have collected them as the shop is only a few miles away...

So after excitedly opening the tube and finding the wires and T-pins inside, I set to blocking my freshly finished Centrique in my luuuurvely Babylonglegs Semi-Precious yarn specially dyed for ME! And boy, was it a good buy! I am a blocking convert, and every shawl, shawlette, scarf and neckerchief I knit will now be properly blocked instead of just flattened with that clothes-flattening-device-thingamabob that hubby uses on the boys' school shirts.

The Centrique (pattern by Carol Feller) was a very quick knit, and although it looks rather intimidating at first, beginner lace knitters should not fear! It is deceptively simple, and with rather instant gratification too - what more can you ask for? I made only one mod to this pattern (and I'm usually a very heavy mod'er), and that was the centre. I didn't want the spine you get
with the yarn over increases at the centre the pattern called for, so decided to try something else. When I got to the centre st, instead of the YO, I picked up and knitted the front of the st below the centre st, knitted the centre st, then picked up and knitted the back of the same st below... Does that make sense? Anyone who wants is welcome to nose in my Ravelry projects to see more pictures.

Monday 13 September 2010

A year! Phew!


Omigosh! I can't quite believe it's been a year since my last post... See, I said I was a terrible procrastinator. So since my last post I have made a few batts, sold a couple, spun a lot of yarn, and bought 2 new wheels. Oh, and Freya is no longer in the McCormick household... she's with a friend who is sure to look after her. Now I'm beginning to really miss her, even though she's been gone for months. In February I bought Ginny, the Ashford Joy, and about 6 weeks ago I bought Tilly the Ashford Traveller. At the moment she has some merino silk in Woodland from Saras Texture Crafts on her bobbin.

I also went to Knit Nation this year, as I couldn't make it to Wonderwool... I WILL be going to wonderwool next year :) as hubby has promised he'd take me. I spent far too much money and bought loads of fluff anyd yarn. 2 skeins of Wollmeise lace came home with me, 2 skeins of Natural Dye Studio Dazzle HT, plenty of Babylonglegs fluff, some alpaca sock blend and cappucino alpaca/merino from John Arbon, some Easyknitter BFL, 2 braids of Juno Fibre Arts fluff.... and some wicked little stitchmarkers from The Bothered Owl. I am sure there is more, but I can't remember.

In a few days, my eldest son will be 10. That is scary. And just last Monday was my youngest's first day at p/t preschool... That was even more scary. I admit it, I cried like a girl. Well, I am a girl so I'm allowed to do that, right? Besides, he's my baby and he's growing up - something he should never do. He should remain my little cuddler. No, he should grow to be a big, strong kind little brother (although I do have my suspicions that he'll be the biggest of them all). He's settled in fine, and is learning new stuff at an alarming rate. He'll be fine.