Author name: Angela Baker

FO – Baby Sweater

Days of being able to sit and knit for hours on end while I watch Jane Austen movies and drink tea happen so rarely nowadays.  That it not the current season of my life, and I am glad for the busy-ness and responsibilities that come with having little ones, but it means that knitting projects are slow to be completed.  For everything there is a place and time

Yesterday, I finally got an hour to sit down, assemble the green baby sweater I started ages ago, and sew on the ribbon ties.  (Not sure I would make this again, though.  I knit it to gauge, added a few stitches on either end, and it still knit up too skinny for my liking, but maybe the friend’s son will wear this when he’s born won’t be quite so barrel chested as Tum Tum!)

The pictures don’t do the color justice.  It’s a deep emerald green, with cobalt blue ribbon ties.

Now, on to the next baby project. (Why is it that everyone seems to be having babies this winter, right when I’ve got Christmas gift knitting/sewing/baking/canning to finish??)

Cranberry Upside-down Cake

This is one of my favorite holiday cakes, mostly because I love cranberries and this cake highlights them so nicely.  It’s quick and easy to make.  It is also tart, not too sweet (which is a good thing, because the holidays can easily be a sweets-overload on the palate), and is perfect with whipped cream.

The inspiration is from an upside down cake in Fannie Famer Baking Book that used canned cranberry jelly (which turned out, shall we say… less than super?   So, I reworked the recipe a lot, and feel okay calling it my own because it is now an entirely different cake from Fannie’s.)

Larksong’s Cranberry Upside-down Cake

 (serves 10-12, a small slice is just enough)

For the cranberry topping (which will go in the bottom of the pan):

1 bag fresh Oregon cranberries, rinsed, and picked through to remove unsuitable berries

2/3 C dark brown sugar

1 Tbsp orange juice

the zest of one orange (the more finely zested the better – I use a microplane)

For the cake :

 1 cup all purpose flour

1/4 cup whole wheat flour

3/4 cup granulated sugar

1 tsp baking powder

1/2 tsp baking soda

1/2 tsp salt

1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract

5 1/3 tbsp unsalted butter, softened

1/2  cup orange juice

1 egg, lightly beaten.

Directions: Preheat oven to 350F.   In a medium skillet (you may choose to use a cast-iron skillet here - somewhere around 9-inches, and just bake the cake straight in the pan), on medium heat, cook the cranberries, orange zest, brown sugar, and tablespoon of orange juice until the berries pop, cook down, and reduce to a nice, thick consistency, stirring constantly to avoid scorching.   

Butter a 9-inch sprinform pan and transfer the cooked berry mixture to the bottom of pan, spreading into an even layer (if you can see metal at the bottom of the pan, that’s a spot where cake will run in and show on the finished cake).  (Obviously, omit this if using a cast iron skillet.)

Sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a small bowl.  In a mixer with beater blade, beat the butter and sugar until fluffy, then add vanilla, orange juice, and egg.  Add the dry ingredients slowly until just smooth and combined.  Pour over the cranberries and gently spread into an even layer.

Bale for 45 min or until toothpick comes out clean.  Let rest 5 minutes before inverting and removing from pan.  (You may need to arrange a few of the berries if they stick to the pan).  Garnish with a twisted orange slice and serve with fresh whipped cream.

From the portfolio of a 4 year-old

 

A dear friend from college gave Firecracker some Stockmar beeswax crayons a while back.  They were quickly used up to little nubs, and now we’re on our second box ( Portlanders, I just saw that a local Waldorf supply shop, Gossamer, stocks these!). Â

The other afternoon, Firecracker did a little drawing with them. Â

 The first picture, is, of course, a fairy.  The second is Firecracker’s conception of what “vacteria” look like (I just love how she’ll say “vacteria“, but also “Mt. Eberest” – too cute.)

Local Dinner II

We’re still trying to eat local when at all possible (Meaning, when it’s a prudent use of our financial resources.)  That includes growing our own food whenever we can.  This dinner contained:

from Oregon - 8 young organic carrots (from our garden), 1 onion, 3 garlic cloves, 2 tbsp unsalted butter, 1 ambrosia apple, large handful of cranberries,  3 small links organic bratwurst, dried parsley (from a friend’s garden)

 from Washington – merlot for drinking and in the sauce

from California – organic brown rice, organic white rice (the sticking point on “all local” is always the grain or pasta, which I can never seem to find locally grown at an even semi-reasonable price).

Next time I’ll change one thing – I’ll add a large handful of vitamin-rich chopped kale.  Truth be told, we were late getting home from Girl Scouts, I was in a rush to make dinner, and didn’t feel like taking the time to go out in the dark and pick some greens. 

Total estimated cost for dinner for 4, and leftovers for 1 lunch, not including whole milk to drink (for the girls) and wine to drink (for the adults) –  $5.80.  The primary expense? $3.23 for the 3 organic, local, sausage links (on sale at New Seasons).  We are finding more and more that you can be very frugal and feed your family local, organic, nutritious meals.

Little Hen with the carrots she dug this morning.

Simple Skirts

Firecracker has been begging me to make her a skirt out of some blue fabric with white flowers that I picked up at the thrift store.  So, this week, I pulled my sewing machine down from the attic, and we all sat down to make some skirts. 

I’m no seamstress, and with one little girl or the other sitting in my lap to help guide the fabric or work the pedal, the seams are less than perfect, but it was a great learning experience for them, and we had a lot of fun.  I used this pattern as a guide, but made some alterations.

I have to admit, we got carried away, and over the past few days the girls and I have made 18 skirts!!!  I have a feeling that several little girls we know may be getting skirts for Christmas gifts.  A few of the finished skirts:

All the fabrics and all of the lace and ric-rac and ribbon are from the thrift store, except for the pink wool, which my grandmother-in-law gave me.  I estimate the total cost to be less than $3, for all 18 skirts.   

Next skirt project  – the tiered skirt from Just Tutes!!!

I hope your day is full of straight seams and lacy trim!

Simple Lunch

Some friends and I were talking about our “life is crazy, Mama is stressed and tired, but the kids need something healthy but quick to eat and I’m not breaking down and getting Taco Bell!!!” meals. 

I’ve been having “one of those weeks” for the last 3 weeks straight, so I thought I’d share one of my standby quick/easy/fairly healthy meals.  It consisted of free-range scrambled eggs (cooked in butter and topped with smoked Spanish paprika), homemade organic blackberry-applesauce (which we had canned back in September), and a glass of whole milk.  I know, a little lacking on veggies, but it’s much better than fast food, lunchables, etc!  Picture below taken by Little Hen:

100% local, very filling, not guilt-inducing for Mama, and easily put together on a very busy day.

We’re in love with OMSI!!

Last week, the girls took a chemistry class for primary-age homeschoolers at the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry.  We came early, and spent much of our time in the Science Playground (a free-exploration area for those 5 and under.)  We haven’t had such a fun outing since our trip to Hood River.  The girls keep talking about what a great day it was.

I couldn’t go into the chemistry class with them, since Tum Tum wouldn’t keep his safety goggles on (yup, even 5 month-olds have to wear safety goggles in the chemistry workshop!), so we chatted with the other moms outside. 

After the workshop – more exploration, this time downstairs in the physics area with the other homeschool kids.  We were there from 10:30-3pm!  We would have stayed longer, but Little Hen had to get to Girl Scouts.

I think an OMSI membership is something we have to look into.  It would make a great place for us to run around on rainy winter days, and provide a great opportunity for immense amounts of learning.

A Pleasant Afternoon

Yesterday was an unusually dry, warm day in the Pacific Northwest.  We couldn’t have asked for nicer weather – almost 60 and a nice, blue sky.  After Hubby helped friends load their moving truck, he came home and spent the afternoon raking leaves in the backyard with the girls (As you can see, the leaves were everywhere – it was quite a task!).

Little Hen kept taking breaks from the leaf raking to snack on some peas.  (Our Alaska, Tacoma, and Sugar Pod II varieties are still producing, and are miraculously healthy and free of powdery or downy mildew, despite the rainy weather of late.)

Of course, a few were left by the Garden Fairy’s house that Little Hen and her daddy made.  Afterall, she likes to share with her friends.  The peas absence in the morning will be evidence that her friends enjoyed her gift, of course. 

Wishing you a little late fall sunshine, and a handful of fresh, sweet peas.

Hats for my baby boy

I finished this hat a few weeks ago.  It’s a Debbie Bliss pattern that I altered quite a bit, made of 100% merino handspun (although, not my handspun – I bought it at an estate sale.)

After two ladies in two different places asked me what my baby girl’s name was, I thought I should probably make him one in a different color.  (I personally don’t think purple is a particularly “girlish” color, but I guess some folks do.)  So, here’s the one I made in yellow.

Honey Cream Cheese Frosting

This is the world’s easiest frosting.   It’s super tasty, not too sweet, doesn’t use refined sugar, and goes well with carrot cake, gingerbread, banana cake, or any spice cake, including Apple Sauce Cranberry Cake.

Take the word of these two experts – it’s beyond delicious. 

Larksong’s Honey Cream Cheese Frosting

1 stick unsalted butter, softened

1 package (8 oz) cream cheese, softened

1/4 cup honey (I used local, organic lavender honey)

1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract

Directions: In your Kitchenaid stand mixer, with the whisk attachment, beat cream cheese and butter until whipped and fluffy.  Beat in honey and vanilla until fully combined and fluffy.  Makes enough to spread one two-layer 8-9 inch cake (middle and top only, not sides). 

 If the kitchen is warm, or you are taking the cake to a warm place, I recommend chilling the frosted cake in the fridge until ready to serve.

Apple Sauce Cranberry Cake

This is my favorite baking book. My mother gave it to my husband for Christmas one year when we were still dating. I bake from it at least once a week. After Martha, it’s my old standby for great recipes (A Little Warning: I have found several recipes that did not work out well the first time and needed quite a bit of tweaking, so my book is full of notes and corrections. If you’re not an experienced baker, this book may disappoint because your recipe may not rise or set or fit in the pan, or might be too spicy or runny! That being said, the concepts are great, even if many of the proportions are wonky, and there may be an updated and revised edition – my copy is 10 years old.)
We attend a book study on Tuesday nights, and I always try to bake dessert. There are lots of little children, so I try to bake something I can rationalize as “nutritious” (pumpkin bread, banana cookies, etc).

This week, I made a seriously tweaked recipe, inspired by the Hot Apple Sauce Cake in Fannie Farmer. My rationale for calling it a healthy dessert? My version contains applesauce, cranberries, whole wheat flour, and walnuts (optional -I left them out this time due to nut allergies in some folks at the study). Also, the frosting (not from Fannie Farmer) contains no refined sugar – only honey (I’ll post that next time).

  • Parkrose Permaculture’s Cranberry Applesauce Cake (inspired by a recipe in the Fannie Farmer Baking Book)

Creamy Cotton Baby Sweater

I knitted this sweater while pregnant with Tum Tum.  It’s size 12 months, and runs true to size, but today he tried it on and it fits him well, since he’s a hulk of a baby!

The pattern is from this book.  It’s her knit-in-one-piece-type baby sweater, which is supposed to have a ribbon tie in the back,  but my boy is actually wearing it backwards as a v-neck.  I think it looks pretty cute that way, don’t you?  The things I’d change next time – make the sweater a few rows longer, since Tum Tum has a long torso, and I’d make the sleeves a bit shorter, since I had to cuff them twice.

The yarn is an organic unbleached cotton from France that I purchased at an estate sale.  It is soft, buttery, and wonderful to work with – more stretchy and forgiving than a lot of cottons I’ve used previously. I spent $1 and got enough yarn for maybe two baby sweaters plus booties.

I have two other FOs waiting to be posted – including the yellow project from last weekend.  I hope to get to them up soon – it’s just difficult to get a decent photo of a very squirmy 5-month old in his new gear!

Meadowlarks on the Prairie

 

We are continuing to work our way through the life of Laura Ingalls, and today we reached the following passage in Little House on the Prairie:

“The rising sun was shortening all the shadows.  Hundreds of meadow larks were rising from the prairie, singing higher and higher in the air.  Their songs came down from the great, clear sky like a rain of music.  And all over the land, where the grasses waved and murmured under the wind, thousands of little dickie-birds clung with their tiny claws to the blossoming weeds and sang their thousands of little songs.”

 

(This photo in the public domain)

I would have loved to see an event like this!  Can you imagine that this was a daily occurence for the Ingalls family?  When we lived in Iowa, I felt priviledged to see just a handful of meadowlarks singing in a field. 

Now, it’s no secret that the Western Meadowlark is my favorite North American bird, so I was really glad when Firecracker asked what a lark’s song sounds like.  This is one of those times when I really like having internet at home, because we looked up this website and spent quite a bit of time looking at pictures and listening to the songs of birds that Laura might have seen while she lived on the prairie. 

 Maybe I have two more little ornithologists in the making?

Making Chapatis

I’m a big fan of Madhur Jaffrey’s cookbooks (her vindaloo paste is one of the best recipes I’ve ever tried - just heavenly).   We tend to cook a lot of Indian food around here.  On Thursday, I had planned to make a Madhur red lentil/spinach dish and a side dish of spicy tomatoes/eggplants and I assumed I’d make a pot of basmati rice to go with it.  Agh!  We were out of rice!  No problem, I’d whip up some naan instead.  I check my fridge and what do you know – no yogurt!!  Real naan has to be made with yogurt, so we scrapped that idea and decided to try something new – chapati bread.

The recipe couldn’t be any more simple – chapatis are an Indian unleavened bread, sort of like a tortilla.

You’ll need – 1 cup whole wheat flour, sifted, and 1 cup white flour, sifted (Sifting is important, otherwise you end up with an overly dense and tough chapati – alternately, you could use a specialty chapati flour from an Indian grocer). 

(This is what happens when you try to sift flour and take a picture while also holding a grabby-hands 5 month-old)
(This is what happens when you try to sift flour and take a picture while also holding a grabby-hands 5 month-old. I do love those chubby baby fingers, though.)

Combine these with 1 tsp salt and enough water (close to 6 oz) water to make a soft dough.  Turn out and knead for 6-8 minutes until dough is smooth.  Cover and let rest 30 min. 

 After 30 min, knead the dough a few more times.  Divide into 16 pieces and roll each piece into a ball.  Cover all pieces, removing only 1 at a time to cook.  Heat a heavy skillet on high heat until quite hot, and then reduce the heat to low. 

Roll out the chapati until very very thin.  Firecracker, who is 4, was actually really good at this – she rolled out all of the dough without any help – the pieces were small enough for her to handle, and the dough wasn’t delicate at all.  We had a little assembly line going – Little Hen handed the dough balls to Firecracker, who rolled them out and passed them to me, who cooked them.   

Cook on the skillet for 1 min on one side, and flip, cooking 30 seconds on the other.  Then set directly on the burner to brown (Yes, this works best on a gas range, but I haven’t got one, so I make do). The chapati will puff up and brown in spots.  Remove and cover with a towel until ready to serve.

The final result – dinner for 4 plus more than enough for Hubby to take for lunch the next day - vegan, not so local (except the onions, garlic, spinach, tomato), but I estimate it cost about $4 total.  Biggest bonus – the girls loved it and ate it all up with compliments to the chefs.

A little drawing

In keeping with the ever-present fairy theme around here, Little Hen wanted to share her picture of “The Fairies Go to the Ball”.  My favorite part is how the fairy in the middle has to climb a ladder to reach her shelf of goodies, “just like Mama has to climb a ladder into the attic to reach the craft supplies.”

Doll Making – Freestyle, Part II

WordPress is being a little wonky, and wouldn’t let me put everything in one post – so now we conclude our impromptu doll making.

Where were we?  Oh, yes - next we cut the doll out of the fabric, leaving a 1/4″ seam allowance, and using a spoon handle and tweezers, we turned the dolls right sideout, stuffed them, and hand stitched the side closed. 

After that, we laid the dolls down on top of the dress fabric, and free-handed a dress out of the main fabric, and an apron out of the contrast fabric (for little girls fascinated with Little House on the Prairie, aprons are as much a fixture around here as bonnets.)  We sewed the aprons to the front of the dress, then sewed the two dress pieces together, flipped them right side out, and slid them onto the doll.

We may eventually add some wool roving for hair, but for right now, we all liked the very simple look of the dolls.  Little Hen likes her’s so much, she took it to homeschool group for her show and tell. 

Firecracker’s little doll with the bright pink dress has been named Mary, Little Hen’s with the pale blue dress is Lucy, and the girls named my doll Caroline (I guess I don’t get a say in these matters).

Overall, I don’t think this was a bad way to spend the afternoon.  Next time I’d make larger dolls (it was hard to turn the thick wool fabric right side out on those skinny arms and legs), and we might get brave enough to try making a Daddy and a brother doll dressed in pants and shirts.

Doll Making – Freestyle, Part I

Last Christmas, my mother gave me a box of 100% wool fabric scraps that were leftover from a Christmas tree skirt she had made.  This past week, we used a few of those scraps to make some very simple, rustic wool dollies.  (The girls wanted to make each other handmade dolls, like Mary had made Laura a doll in Little House in the Big Woods.)

The girls picked out which fabrics they wanted (and I picked out some  for my own doll!), and we free-handed a doll shape on a double-layer of the skin-tone wools.

We took the sewing machine down from the attic, and set it up on the kitchen table.  Each girl took a turn sitting in my lap and together we guided the other girl’s doll around until it was fully stitched, except for a slit on the side.  I gave them each a chance to work the pedal while we sewed my doll, as well. 

In the next post we’ll finish the dolls…

Traditional Toys IV – Handmade Dolls

Below are a few of our handmade dolls, including three we made a few days ago (I’ll post on that adventure in a day or two).  We didn’t make all of these, but they are all lovingly handmade, and somehow I think that children can tell when a toy is handmade – they can feel that love sewn or knitted into every stitch.  

Their great aunt made the Raggedy Anns just like my mom made mine.  Very special, and very played-with.

 

The handmade doll has something special – she has quirks and imperfections that make her a unique little personality.   

 

My girls do have some factory made toys from their aunties and grandmas, but the handmade dolls hold a special place in their play.  These are the dolls they choose to take to homeschool group for show and tell, these are the dolls they sleep with and tuck into their dolly slings for trips to the park.  These are the dolls they will pass on to their daughters.

A Hearty Fall Meal

It’s that time of year – cold days spent out-of-doors that chill your nose and toes, and the colder nights that follow.  At our house, that means slow cooked meals that can simmer on the stove for hours, warming our little home and filling it with wonderful aromas.  (I think I instinctually add richer ingredients as well, which often leads to a little fall padding on me and my hubby.  Good thing I’m nursing a ravenous baby boy, so my waistline is shrinking instead of expanding this fall!)

I know we’re not alone, but lately we’re feeling the economic pinch a bit, so dinners have been thriftier, but no less tasty, enjoyable, and healthy.  The following dinner cost us about $6 for 4 people – including a large side of steamed basmati rice –  although a year ago, it would have cost closer to $3.50.  

Larksong’s Pumpkin Banana Chickpea Curry 

1 small local winter squash, peeled and chopped into 1 inch pieces (i like a dry-fleshed variety, and often use half of a Hubbard or Kabocha squash, but today it was a pale buttercup, that’s what the farmer’s market had available.) (wash and save the seeds for roasting!  They make a wonderful snack!)

2 medium bananas, peeled and chopped into 1 inch pieces

5 small local shallots, sliced into thin rings

2 tbsp virgin olive oil

1 can chickpeas, drained

1 can organic, unsulphered coconut milk (I splurge here because I don’t react well to sulpher dioxide preservative)

1 handful roasted peanuts

1 handful organic chopped parsley

1 heaping Tbsp Penzeys Sweet Curry

Directions:  In a heavy pot, sautee the shallots in the olive oil until soft.  Add the pumpkin, and cook 5-7 min.  Add the curry to coat the pumpkin, until fragrant, about 1-2 min.  Add the remaining ingredients, except banana, bring to a boil, then reduce to simmer, and cook, covered, 15 min.  Add banana, and continue to cook until pumpkin is soft, about 10 min more.  Serve over basmati or jasmine rice.

Sauteed Kale with Lemon

4 Large handfuls of Red Russian kale (the kids pick it for me from the garden), remove stems and chiffonade.

1 half lemon, washed and zested and juiced

3 cloves garlic, sliced very thinly

Directions: Sautee the garlic on olive oil on until caramelized.  Add the kale and lemon zest and a little water to the bottom of the skillet.  Cover partially and steam until water is gone and kale is tender (don’t over cook here!).  Drizzle with the lemon juice, add salt and pepper to taste.

Traditional Toys III – Wooden Circus Blocks

These wooden circus blocks are my all-time best thrift store find.  We bought them when Little Hen was two and Firecracker was a newborn.  At the time, we were on a super tight budget, since Hubby was in grad school.  The set was $12, and I really wanted it for the girls, but we couldn’t rationalize the price.  I waited for weeks, hoping no one would snatch it up, and what do you know, it went on sale for $6!! 

The blocks are all hand carved from various woods, and includes a bear and a cub, two camels, two alpaca, a donkey, an elephant, a giraffe, two horses, two men, a tractor, a see-saw, various blocks, and a circus box.  I can tell that they were gently played with, because they are in beautiful shape, but also have a smoothness and patina from being handled frequently. 

I kept these in our “gift box”, waiting for the right time to give them to the girls.  For 3 1/2 years we waited, and ended up giving them as a welcome gift from their new baby brother on the day of his birth.  They have been a big hit around here, especially with Firecracker, who likes to stack the animals into tall towers.

Some great blogs with lovely wooden toys – Woodmouse, Mamaroots, Ninny Noodle Noo, Waldorf Mama.

Do you and your little ones have a favorite wooden toy set?  If so, I’d love to see it!  Next time – Handmade dolls.

WIP in Yellow

Yesterday, the girls and their daddy went to the zoo, and Tum Tum and I had a quiet afternoon.  He napped in the crook of my arm while we snuggled under my favorite, faded, raspberry-colored wool blanket.  I watched Miss Austen Regrets and I even got some work done on a new WIP.  The wool is my old standby - Brown Sheep Lamb’s Pride - in “Lemon Drop” (although the shade is deeper than its name suggests – the top photo is pretty true to color).

So, what is it?  Just a quick, simple garment for the baby.  Can you guess? I hope to have pictures of him wearing the FO in a few days.

knitted bunny

Keeping with the toy-making theme of late, today I finished a knitted bunny for Tum Tum.  It’s a Debbie Bliss pattern made of leftover bits of Cascade 220 my sister-in-law gave me.  The pattern was very easy, and I liked the shaping, although if I make it again, I will alter the ears – they are stockinette and are therefore supposed to curl in, but I think they look a little crude compared to the careful shaping of the rest of the bunny.

Purple may not be every boy’s favorite color, but, it’s his Mama’s!  Firecracker has christened the bunny “Hippety Hop”, and I think she wishes he belonged to her instead of her little brother.   

So far, Tum Tum just likes sucking on the ears…

Happy Halloween!!

 

 

 

 

A Happy Halloween to everyone…

 

…and a very happy 4th Birthday to my little Firecracker!!  You are a crazy crazy girl – I love your energy, your excitement and how life is just a thrill for you.  Mama and Daddy love you so much and are glad we get to have you in our family!!

Traditional Toys II – Tea Set

 

The girls love to play with their “fairy-sized” china tea set.  It’s a mish mash of pieces we’ve collected from thrift stores.  I don’t think we’ve spent more than $3 in total.   There are duplicates of some pieces, and we’re missing a few cups and sugar bowl lids, but the girls still enjoy serving tea to their little guests.

 

Some days they even make paper food (cut from magazines, or drawn on construction paper) to serve on the dishes, and fill the tea pots with water.  The girls love the feel of real china, and the proportions seem to be just right for their favorite dolls, or a visiting invisible fairy or two. 

 The fact that we have a rather eclectic set means that the occaisonal broken piece isn’t the end of the world- we’ll find another that “almost matches” within a few trips to the thrift store.