TGIF!

Well, it may not seem like much, but in the middle of so many other things going on I finally finished the hand quilting on my untitled wall hanging! This project has been in the works for so long I can’t even remember when I started it. I also have the binding made and ready to attach and the quilt hanging sleeve! AND I know where it is going! Yes, I am very excited over this one!

So now I am off with my husband to check out the American Quilt Society’s quilt show in Grand Rapids! We are both so very excited to see what an international quilt show looks like. He doesn’t yet realize there is shopping involved….

Then Saturday, Saturday!!

I’m gathered with some online friends to meet in real life, for the first time. We will be making quilts for Margaret’s Hope Chest, one of my very favorite quilt charities. And it is actually based out of Grand Rapids, which is pretty cool! And to meet and work alongside Amanda Jean, of CrazyMomQuilts, is super cool! And don’t be jealous, green isn’t becoming on you…

Have a great weekend! I’ll see you on the other side!!

  

Posted in Can I get a Whoop Whoop, Linkys, Quilting, Sewing, Show it off Friday, TGIFF, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

Butter Chicken

Watching the recent Olympics games brought back so many wonderful memories of our trip to London and one memory that we won’t soon forget has to do with food.

Surprise, surprise!

Going into it, we didn’t realize that London’s Indian community makes up more than 6 percent of their population so finding a fabulous Indian restaurant is about as hard as finding a fudge shop, on Mackinac Island.

The one we researched and chose was Masala Zone, in Covent Garden, just a short cab ride from where we were staying. This location has several hundred vibrant puppets, from Rajasthan, suspended from the ceilings. A fascinating place.

We were seated at a long row of tables for two and had no idea what we were doing when ordering.

We were grateful that the couples sitting on either side of us were so friendly. It was suggested that we order the Thali, a large stainless steel platter with an array of small bowls, of different dishes, to provide a variety of tastes, texture, flavors and colors. We were so glad we did. This is where we first experienced murgh makhani, as our table mates, from the Netherlands, explained, to us, what we were eating!

This one, we had to try recreating. And we did. Though the flavors of this trip may be fading, the memories of the wonderful food and friendly people, we met along the way, is only growing stronger.

This is our version of murgh makhani also know as Butter Chicken.

Butter Chicken (or murgh makhani)
printer friendly version

serves 4

1 pkg boneless skinless chicken thighs, cut into bite size pieces, mine was 1.4 pounds/6 thighs
5 cloves garlic, minced
1-2 tsp freshly grated ginger
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoons black pepper
½ teaspoons cayenne pepper
¼ teaspoons ground coriander
¼ teaspoons cumin
¼ teaspoons cardamom (I know, I know, but don’t skip because of the price!)

1 whole lime, juiced

1 whole onion, diced
¼ cup butter

1 14.5 oz. can tomato sauce (if needed, check to confirm it is gluten-free)
1 14.5 oz. can of petite diced tomatoes or a pint of home canned
1/3 c full fat Greek yogurt

¼ teaspoons ground coriander
¼ teaspoons cumin
¼ teaspoons cardamom

1 bunch fresh cilantro, to taste
Basmati or white rice for 4 (or however much you want), prepared (if needed, check to confirm it is gluten-free)

Combine first 9 ingredients and marinate overnight or at least an hour.

Saute the onion in the butter until soft. Add marinated chicken and cook about 10 minutes. Add in the second batch of spices and fry in. Add the tomato sauce, diced tomatoes and yogurt. Cook covered for 30 minutes over medium-low heat. Some people would add in a cup of heavy cream after it simmered, but we didn’t. We didn’t miss it or the belly ache. Top with cilantro just before serving over rice.

This has a nice warm heat, though you can cut back on the cayenne if you want, most people won’t find it hot, just nicely warming.

Note: next time we are going to try grilling our chicken to get it nice and crusty before chopping it and throwing it into the sauce more like tandoori cooked chicken. We were looking for a quick dinner when we whipped this up. I can see where using leftover rotisserie chicken could work, too.

Cheers!

Posted in Cooking, Eating, Gluten Free, Recipes, Recreating foodie memories, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Need more thread.

I tried to duplicate Malka Dubrawsky’s zig zag quilting on my Honeycomb quilt.

Without much luck. I just couldn’t get the hang of the smooth zig zagging, without pointy curves…. Anyone else tried this stitch? Can you share how you did it? I really, really wanted to use this style but just couldn’t get the hang of it.

This is Malka’s example straight from her book Fresh Quilting. I love this book. So many inspiring ideas.

Then I turned to stippling.

And I wasn’t any happier with that. At least I could do that one. Though this is not a good example, it was just a thread wasting test. I’m not sure why I wasn’t happy with that. Maybe the thought of turning this humongous quilt under the throat of my machine was too much? Maybe it because it seems as if stippling is? Over used? Too common? Too girly? I’m not sure, but not crazy about it on this quilt.

I considered hand quilting, but somehow that wasn’t the look I really wanted, either.

Apparently no one else on the World Wide Web has created a quilt like this. Really??? I am on my own for quilting ideas?

I decided to try outline quilting, which is generally my go to style for quilting both by hand and machine. Using my Accufeed, dual feed foot, I stitched about 1/4″ on each side of the vertical seams, then again 1-1/4″ from that same vertical seam. It only took dots, not full fledged marking, to keep the inner stitching rows aligned.

I think I found what I was looking for!

a

Posted in Books, fabric, Fabric Tuesday, Linkys, machine quilting, Quilting, Sewing, WIP | Tagged , , , , , , | 15 Comments

Re: Garlic

Last week, I talked about how easy it is to grow garlic.

Well, that is easy for me to say. I’m digging up a small patch of landscaping and with a wish and a prayer, growing a few heads. Yes, they are multiplying each year, but I’m not to the point, yet, where I need to dig up the yard to plant a field of garlic.

Thos. Moser’s people got wind of that post and made contact to share some additional information and photos. If you remember, it was one of Thos. Moser’s craftsmen that gave us that one lonely clove back in the fall of 2009.

Our cabinetmakers are passionate about building the very best furniture in the world, and that passion carries over to other parts of their lives as well. One such example is “Garlic Bob”, a cabinetmaker for 20+ years who is equally as passionate about organic gardening. He is thrilled to hear that you are having success with it! He told me that what you have is either Russian Red or German Red garlic. (That comment jarred a memory that reminds us that ours is of the German Red variety.)

Bob started out much the same way you (sewfrench) did, planting just three cloves that he bought at a farmer’s market. After about 8 years or so he was up to 5,000 garlic plants until one snowless, but bitterly cold, Maine winter he lost nearly all of them when the heads were pushed up out of the ground by frost heaves. He was devastated and almost stopped growing garlic. But his passion for growing won out and he started over, and this year harvested about 6,000 heads of garlic (about 3,500 are his, the rest are his neighbor’s). They expected to plant about 8,000 this year, and they’ll do it all by hand in just one day!  They will be ready to harvest next summer. 

These photos are from his recent harvest of nearly 6,000 garlic plants! Read more about Bob over at the Thos. Moser website.

This is what a field of garlic looks like! Two rows of garlic, ready for harvest.

And when harvested it fills the back-end of a pickup. This is after it’s been cleaned.

And another truck full! Just look at the size of those heads in the bushel basket!! Wow!

And a third??? Yes siree, Bob!

This is what garlic is supposed to look like. Mine looks a little puny in comparison. I think I need to work on its nutrition!

The garlic harvest is a family affair…Bob’s daughter is cutting the top stalks off the garlic itself.

Now that is a job, I wouldn’t mind volunteering for. While wearing my cargo pants… Why yes, my thighs are naturally lumpy…. thank you very much…

Thank you Scott for passing all this information and Bob’s incredible photos along!

And a big thank you, to Bob, for making this world a better tasting place, one big, beautiful garlic clove at a time!

Posted in Cooking, Gardening, Health, Landscape, Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Tomorrow Morning

Yes, that is the newest quilt’s name. Tomorrow Morning. And it’s done.

A few days ago, Amanda was helping me with the photographing of this new quilt, when I decided to run back up to the house, to get a nail, to hang the quilt onto the fence with. Brilliant idea. It is a wall hanging and had a pocket with a rod in it, we just needed a nail to hang the rod over.

Remember we have a deep back yard. Really deep. This picture was taken from our back deck. The fence, I photograph quilts on, is as far back as you can see. Past the red trees, just in front of the solid tree line. Anyway, it took me a minute to run all the way back up to the house for a nail. (You would have thought my husband would have a nail in his woodworking studio, there, but no. He only uses screws and glue, no nails allowed….)

Anyway… daughter was patiently waiting for me, with the camera around her neck, when she heard a crashing noise. She turned around to see a doe and her fawn jump the fence then stop to pose for her. Not sure where the other fawn was, but momma has another one.

Scared the bejeezus out of her!

 

And off they went. I totally missed it!

Back to this week’s finish.

Ta Da!! I’m so excited!

“Tomorrow Morning”
a Sewfrench original
Wall hanging, quilt
44″ x 45″
machine pieced, machine quilted
A variety of Kona solids
Hobbs Heirloom 80/20 batting

I have been playing with this idea since February. I talked about it, a week or so ago, and now it’s done! And I love it. Totally freehand and without a finish in mind, I just kept plugging away. I can’t believe it came out entirely flat *and I was able to square it without removing too much work!

I also love that I went with machine quilting, as opposed to hand. I was able to get so much texture with the stitching. Stitching as close as 1/16th of an inch and as far apart as 1/2″. Some hand quilters might have been able to do it, but I’m not so sure my hands would have held out for all the layers. Or maybe it was a patience thing….

  

Posted in 2012 completes, A Sttitch in Time, Can I get a Whoop Whoop, fabric, Landscape, Linkys, machine quilting, Nature, Photography, Quilting, Sewing, Show it off Friday, TGIFF | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 25 Comments

Life is good!

Sewfrench's avatarSewfrench

While both our girls were here canning with me, on this day, it is strange that there are no pictures of them… I’m guessing they had their PJs on already!

I am so glad I passed on the knowledge of canning, to my girls and that they proudly do it! Woo Hoo for being publicly acknowledged for it Krystal!

Seems like just yesterday the cherries trees were in bloom.

But that was back in April. After 2 solid weeks of temps in the 70s and 80s in March, blooms came much sooner than the last frost. With every frost, more blooms were lost, meaning fewer cherries survived. You may not know it but Michigan produces 75% of the nations tart cherries, those used in pies, cherry juice for their anti-inflammatory benefits, cough syrups and many other food products. We also produce 20% of the sweet cherries and rank #3…

View original post 341 more words

Posted in Canning, Cooking, Cottage, Dairy free, Eating, Gluten Free, Health, Nature, Recipes | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

I know it’s too early to celebrate, but….

An hour of this

is extremely

Honeycomb quilt

rewarding.

Though you can bet I’ll be whining about the soreness tomorrow, because pin basting a 100″ x 106″ quilt is one of the toughest workouts evah.

Posted in fabric, Fabric Tuesday, Linkys, Quilting, Sewing, WIP, WIP | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 18 Comments

A Baker’s dozen from Julia Child

“The only real stumbling block is fear of failure. In cooking you’ve got to have a what-the-hell attitude.”

“The best way to execute French cooking is to get good and loaded and whack the hell out of a chicken. Bon appétit. ”

“Life itself is the proper binge.”

“The only time to eat diet food is while you’re waiting for the steak to cook.”

“I always give my bird a generous butter massage before I put it in the oven. Why? Because I think the chicken likes it — and, more important, I like to give it.”

“…nothing is too much trouble if it turns out the way it should.”

“It’s so beautifully arranged on the plate – you know someone’s fingers have been all over it.”

“Just like becoming an expert in wine–you learn by drinking it, the best you can afford–you learn about great food by finding the best there is, whether simply or luxurious. Then you savor it, analyze it, and discuss it with your companions, and you compare it with other experiences.”

“Everything in moderation… including moderation.”

“Just speak very loudly and quickly, and state your position with utter conviction, as the French do, and you’ll have a marvelous time!”

“…small helpings, no seconds, no snacking, and a little bit of everything.”

“You don’t have to cook fancy or complicated masterpieces – just good food from fresh ingredients.”

And finally when a sommelier asked her to name her favorite wine, she replied, “Gin.”

In honor of JC’s 100th birthday, I say we should celebrate fresh. And gin.

Cucumber Collins
printer friendly version

1 1/2 oz gin
4 1/2 oz cucumber purée*

Shake ingredients well and strain over fresh ice, in a tall glass, garnish with a cucumber spear.

*To make cucumber purée: Blend 1 cucumber with 3 oz freshly squeezed lemon juice and 4 oz simple syrup

“Bon A Petiet” ~Julia Child

Posted in Birthday, Celebrate, Cocktails, Cooking, Quotes, Recipes, video | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Can you smell us coming?

Several years ago my husband and brother-in-law were participating in the Customer in Residence program at the Thomas Moser studios in Freeport, Maine. If you aren’t familiar with Freeport it is the home of the Moser furniture empire and an old-fashioned outlet store town all wrapped up in one. It is also in one of the prettiest parts of our country. Husband was there to build a chair and I, and my sister, were there to get in some sister time and to shop. A perfect plan, I’d say.

While the guys were hanging out with the woodworkers, they learned one of the craftsmen was a grower of garlic. When he found out we also grow, or more accurately, had grown, garlic, he wanted to share what he had with us. I didn’t take a picture of what he gave us because I wasn’t sure it would amount to anything.

He gave us one clove of garlic to take home and plant. Yes, you heard that right.

One clove. One precious clove of his treasured heirloom garlic varieties, of which I can not, for the life of me, remember which one it is.

As soon as we got back to Michigan, among the winter dormant plants, I dug a small hole and planted that single clove of garlic. I then marked it with a spoon. Hoping no one would mistake it, come spring, for a weed and pull it or that the deer or squirrels would dig it up and destroy our entire crop. That was November 2009.

Come late summer, the one lonely stalk of garlic had somehow survived. We carefully dug him up and dried him and come November we broke apart the cloves and planted them. This time there were 7 cloves to plant.

Harvest 2, summer of 2011.

Luckily they all took! The next November we proceeded to break the heads up and replant the cloves again beneath the gravel of our landscape and into the soil.

Harvest 3, 2012.

And this summer we had a great harvest. All 24 of stalks came up. We may have harvested them a bit late, there wasn’t much paper left on them to protect them, but they look really healthy, nonetheless.

And after *one* more year, we might venture to taste it. We should have enough then.

And it is just that easy to grow garlic. And with all the healthful and interesting uses for garlic, you really should give it a try!

And just for the record, yes, you can usually smell us coming. Garlic is known for making your body odor garlicky smelling, that’s a fact that no one can escape. The thing that most people don’t realize about this smell is that it is the one responsible for making garlic such a health food.

So really…. we don’t just smell of garlic, we smell of health!

If you ever get a chance to visit Maine, Just Do It!!

Posted in Cooking, Gardening, Health, Landscape | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Lots of Hugs

Another one bites the dust, yeah, I said that already.

This was March 7, 2012. Quite the pile of quilts to be quilted. You recognize them all by now, right? From the bottom up, Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend, (my) Wall Hanging, Bubbles and now Lots of Hugs.

This is the one I most recently talked about gifting.

Cross Terrain quilt

I fell in love with this quilt because of the scrappy potential and you know how I love scrappy quilts! This pattern was designed by Lee, for Moda, and was done in Terrain by Kate Spain, thus the title. I didn’t realize that is where the name for the pattern, Cross Terrain, came from until I dug deeper.  To the quilters, out there, it’s obvious that I didn’t use Kate Spain fabric. I used fabric that has been around longer than Kate has been in the biz! I love quilts like this.

To me, this quilt will forever be known as Lots of Hugs. That is what I stitched into this quilt, as in all my quilts, really. Lots and lots of hugs to wrap you in. And also because it looks like one half of the XO symbols standing for hugs and kisses. The hugs part, specifically, as four arms wrap around each other. And because each quadrant in this quilt is a different fabric, you can envision them as arms, right?

This original pattern called for using a matchy, matchy collection of 40, 2 1/2″ wide x 42″ long strips of fabric, aka a jelly roll, making for half the work being done for you. I opted, instead, to drag out all the fabric, I own, and cut bits and pieces from probably 64 different fabrics. I discounted at least that many for not being the right shades and then another stack that didn’t contain enough fabric! It wasn’t planned to destroy my studio that way, I just got to cutting and piecing and the color took me over! Or was that the piles? I was consumed by the memories of so many quilts past that went into this one, that I may just have gotten a bit carried away. I suspect you will see this quilt, with a slight variation, soon.

And of course, it is my latest favorite quilt!

And this is the beautiful photo I received last week.

Cross Terrain quilt

Emerald Lucille, being held
by Lots of Hugs. Emmie was born May 24, 2012 weighing in at just 6 pounds. She is the latest grand baby of my sister, Kim. Emmie makes number six, for her!

Lots of Hugs

40″ x 48″
Scrap quilt
Kona White
machine pieced
hand quilted
May 24, 2012

A bit of trivia~
This quilt went to the home whom houses more of my quilts than any, outside my own or my children’s. Onetwothreefour and five, the only wedding quilt I have ever gifted. How about that! And what a beautiful occasion for this last one, don’t you think?

Have a great weekend, everyone!

   

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Posted in 2012 completes, A Sttitch in Time, Can I get a Whoop Whoop, hand quilting, Linkys, machine quilting, Quilting, Sew and Tell Friday, Sewing, Show it off Friday, Show it off Fridays, TGIFF | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 32 Comments