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Archive of entries posted on December 2009

Kerry Has a Give-Away…

Check out a fun posting on Kerry’s blog

Kerry

Kerry is an accomplished musician, and has a professionally done CD of her original arrangements of traditional Christmas music available.  AND she’s giving away three copies of her CD on her blog.

Kerry CDIf you’re lucky enough to win one, you will be delighted with the music.  It’s all I played last year.  I believe Kerry has a link to a sampling of some songs on her posting.  Be sure to check it out.

–Sue

PS:  I should mention that I used Kerry’s photos with permission.

*Jingle*Jingle*Jingle*

(12/16/09 NOTE:  This is such a good “to do” list for me, I’m going to modify it as I complete these tasks.)

That’s how close Christmas is — I can already hear Santa’s sleigh off in the distance, like the ticking of a clock, reminding me of all the things I need to do in the next week.

BAKING:  I am not a prolific baker like my friend Pam who is making 13 kinds of cookies this year (and she doesn’t do easy cop-out cookies either!).  I’m making my favorites:  Swirled Mint Cookies, a peppermint pressed sugar cookie, Capuccino Flats (coffee/cinnamon/chocolate cookie), and neighbor Marilyn’s Taffy Cookies, a brown-sugar shortbread cookie with Hersey bar piece melted on top.  The sugar cookies are done; two more batches to go.  Mmmmmm. 

SHOPPING:  (almost) done.  Now, in the spirit of truthfulness and full disclosure, our family is small, plus we draw names for each other, (plus I do smaller “mom” gifts for the “kids”).  I have DH left to buy for (Jim, are you reading this?  Reminder to leave a Sears ad out with some things circled).

CHRISTMAS LETTER:  Done & Mailed.  I have done a Christmas letter every year for probably 36 years until last year.  It seemed like it was too depressing, since we were in the middle of some medical testing and didn’t know the outcome yet.  Why make people worry?  Skipped last year.  All the medical stuff came out quite well, so I needed to do a letter for this year.  I spent a couple of hours at the computer trying to do some kind of letter, and I felt like I was writing the same letter I had written 35 or 36 times before.  So stale and boring.  Here are most of our letters since 1996, including one written in verse; it’s a fun way to look back at what’s been happening in our lives since then:
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So I searched on line for Christmas letter tips.  Just the spark I needed.  So my Christmas letter is now a newsletter (which I’ve done before), but I added a quiz.  There were several other ideas on this web site for ways to make your Christmas letter more interesting, and I was able to keep to my cardinal rule:  no more than one page.    Once I had some fresh ideas, the letter practically wrote itself.  Now I need to print the labels for the envelopes (yes, I know handwritten is more personal), and get those puppies in the mail!  I like my letters to reach their destinations shortly before Christmas, so I am actually on track.

TREE & DECORATIONS:  DoneArtificial permanent tree has been up and lit for two weeks, with nary an ornament to be found or my sweet angel on top.  Yesterday I added ornaments, but only about half of them.  I only hung the crystal and glass ornaments, the silk poinsettias, and the icicles.  I’ll see if this tree grows on me this year.  It looks a little sparce without all the kids’ ornaments on it. 
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Put up my snowman wall quilt, have to find a home for my little Christmas tree wall quilt, got out the silk poinsettias, put out my very favorite table runner, along with some other miscellaneous trims.

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QUILTING:  Have one gift quilt left to finish.  (two days’ work)

FUN & PARTIES & FUN & FUN:  A brunch, an afternoon “dinner”, a tea luncheon, Wednesday quilt group with cookies & snacks – get out my elastic-waisted pants and I’m ready!  And we will try to get a date to work out for our card-playing group as it’s our turn to host (after Christmas).

CLEANING:  Hah! 

MAILING:  Done!  Package to DS in Virginia, and get the cards with letters in the mail (tomorrow).

CHRISTMAS DINNER:  We always have the same thing — shrimp de jongh with rice, bread, and salad.  Easy and special.
Okay, I know I’m forgetting something.  Oh….

WRAPPING:  Not done.

And let me share three wonderful gifts I got from three wonderful friends (we celebrate early — and often), in case there’s a gift idea that works out for you:  an Oregon Scientific atomic alarm clock with the projector for the ceiling, a pressure cooker cookbook – Miss Vickie’s, and a purse (I was able to pick out the purse because I returned a gift that was a duplicate).

So, what are you doing reading my blog???  Don’t you have holiday prep to do?  I know, some people are much more together than I am, but I feel like (finally) things are almost under control at our house.  

How are you doing — can you hear the jingle of the sleigh???

–Sue

Reality Check…and a puzzle

Yesterday I longingly showed pictures from Texas.  I really am in Minnesota, it’s December, and winter is here (as well as over most of the rest of the country!). 

Snow December0000

Our pond is frozen over and covered with snow.  It snowed yesterday and last night, but the biggest factor is going to be the wind and the cold, with temperatures falling.  I can hear the wind howling occasionally this morning.  Very chilling!

A few more pics:

Snow December0001Snow December0004

Did you see the orange sticks in the 2nd photo?  That’s to tell the plowers where the driveways are.  Snow December0005Snow December0002The last photo is the inside of my side light window by the front door.  It rarely gets blown in against the window, as the entryway is somewhat protected.

Today is the day we are scheduled to be on Kare-11′s 5:00 broadcast with our dolls for Toys for Tots.  And it’s on the other side of town!  I did get my two quilts done for my doll and one donated by a neighbor:

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 The little quilts turned out so cute — I especially like the white one with pink.  The pattern got a little lost in the pink with white one.  We’ll make this one Wednesday’s Puzzle, with a USA cut, since so much of the country is experiencing this storm:

Click to Mix and Solve

 I never choose this puzzle because I’m so geographically challenged.  It wasn’t bad, so give it a try!

Stay safe and keep warm…

Sue

Telephoto Tuesday

I keep going back to my Texas pictures because, quite honestly, there isn’t much going on outside my windows lately!  We are forecast to get snow today and tomorrow.  Brrr!  So I guess a visit back to Port Aransas, TX, on Mustang Island doesn’t sound like too bad an idea!

There were quite a number of green-winged teal at the birding center.  They are so much fun to watch because they come in a little closer to the boardwalk than a lot of birds do, and they are so active! 

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This picture of a tri-colored heron always makes me smile because it looks to me like we’re getting a peek at her undergarments (I was going to say “petticoats”, but when is the last time you hear THAT term???):

 

 

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I hope you’re having a great day.  I’m heading back to the sewing machine!

–Sue

New Addition…

to my kitchen!!!  I have wanted a pressure cooker for preparing meals for quite a while.  I have a ginormous canning pressure cooker, but I wanted one of the top-of-the-line models in a more dinner-friendly size. 

PressureCooker

Judy L swears by Kuhn-Rikon.  They are pricey, but it’s something that would be used often, plus the reviews on these cookers are very good.  DH told me some time back I should go ahead and get one, if that’s what I wanted.  Yes, that’s what I wanted, but $200 for a pot?  I wasn’t sure I could do it. 

Well, it took me a year of dithering, and Saturday I took the plunge.  I went to Eden Prairie Center to a shop called Kitchens so I could touch it before buying.  I got the 5-quart, which is a great size for the two of us (remember, you can only fill it 1/2 to 2/3 full). 

Saturday night I cooked up an inexpensive roast using a recipe out of the included cookbook.  It made beef chunks in an orange-infused sauce.  I think the cooking time was something like 20 minutes.  Counting the chopping time, browning the meat (in the same pot, just no lid), bringing the cooker up to pressure, letting it come back down — the total dinner preparation time was probably an hour.   Click here for the recipe.

But the food tasted like it was from a high-end restaurant!  Yummmm.  The meat was tender beyond belief, the sauce (which had a little wine, chicken broth, orange zest, garlic, etc.) was so tasty!  Saturday night we had the beef with yams (Target had them for 5 cents a pound after Thanksgiving, so I baked a panful to have ready to heat & eat.)  There was so much of this thin sauce with the meat that I should have had rice or noodles with it.  There was enough meat left for dinner Sunday, and we had it with rice this time.  Fabulous!

This is the pressure cooker I got.  Besides considering the size, you also want to pop for the stainless steel over the aluminum, if you can.  Also, you want to have the second handle opposite the big, main handle.  This pressure cooker was a breeze to use after reading through the booklet and noting the safety precautions.  The lid locks on very easily and securely, and the pressure gauge was also easy to monitor.  My only regret is that I waited a year to buy it.

Pal Marcia gave me Miss Vickie’s Big Book of Pressure Cooker Recipes for Christmas (we girls celebrated Saturday), and it’s going to be fun trying out different receipes; just reading through the book last night, I think I gained five pounds.  Tonight I am going to pressure cook a chicken.  Math Lesson For The Day:   Less time cooking = more time quilting!

–Sue

Design Wall Monday

Last week I had a big finish of a UFO from 2003 — Afternoon Tea

On my actual design wall is still Judy L’s Freeze Frame, patiently waiting.

Quilting plans for today are my last customer quilt of the year, and it’s a fairly small one.  Woo-hoo!

On my size 2 circular knitting needles is a pair of socks with the most wonderful yarn, Crazy Zauberball.  It is really lovely to work with.

I have two doll quilts to make for Toys for Tots.  This will be our Wednesday group’s third year to go down to the local NBC affiliate, Kare-11, and appear on the broadcast.  We will be on the Wednesday, 12/9, 5:00 pm news (probably about the time of the weather), bringing baby dolls with handmade doll quilts to go with them.  We’ve had a lot of fun in the past, and I’m sure this year will be equally fun!

– Sue

Sunday’s Stash Report

Well, my year of tracking fabric yardage in and out with Judy Laquidara is drawing to a close with only three more Sundays to go after today.  My original goal is long since abandoned, and I’m just hoping to come out even for the year.  I was so excited last week when I finally was showing 13+ yards busted.  Then I saw a large hand-dyed backing-sized piece I custom ordered from Vicki Welsh.  I hadn’t reported it the week before because it involved math, since it’s extra wide, to determine what the actual reportable yardage would be.  I did the math, and it comes out close to 9 yards.   Here is about 1/4 of the total piece, along with a close-up shot of a smaller portion yet.

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And isn’t it yummy?  I’m going use it for a twin-sized whole-cloth quilt for a brand-new great-niece.  I’m picturing some feathers, some flowers and leaves, maybe incorporate her name.  Any other suggestions for freehand quilting? 

Vicki W. does such beautiful dye work.  Please take a minute to check out her goods on Etsy.  You can click here to be directed to her blog; there’s information on her sale that runs through TODAY, Sunday 12/6, how to get the sale prices, and how to get to her Etsy shop.

Used this week:  3/4 yard for the binding of my Afternoon Tea UFO that I actually finished!  Yes, I said finished!  (imagine sound of Champagne cork popping…)
  • Used this week:  .75 yards
  • YTD:  200.4 yards used
  • Purchased this week:  9 yards
  • YTD:  195.65 yards purchased
  • YTD :  3.75 yards of stash busted for the year
  • And thankfully I don’t report on my thread stash/purchases, as I took full advantage of Connecting Threads’ sale this last week.

    StashReport0003

    I usually use a shade of gray, a shade of beige, black or white for thread.  Lately, however, I have wished for a specific thread color for a little top stitching or something of the like.  This assortment should keep me sewing for a good long time!  It was like opening a box of fabulous Godiva chocolates, but a lot less fattening.

    Thanks for stopping by!

    –Sue

    Thursday’s UFO / Friday’s Photo

    A two-for-one deal, almost as good as Black Friday or whatever they call the internet Monday sales!  Okay, maybe not quite, but here it is.

    YES,  I DID finish my PhD (Project half Done) quilt in time!!!  I’m almost caught up on my sleep, and everything else in my life is very behind, but I have a large quilt very done.

     

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    And I love it.  I started it in 2003, in 2004 it went on a shelf and has been aging to perfection until this year when several of us decided to get out an old UFO and finished it!  What a good feeling.  And check out the socks! 

    Here are twelve of us (there were 13 counting a late arrival):

    PhD Graduation0004a

    And on the Photo Friday front, yesterday I was watching a blue jay taunting me, flitting from tree to tree, always too far away or behind a branch, or “look, I’m up close in a tree and you don’t have your camera”, and then he was gone!  There was also an osprey circling the pond, mostly white bird against snow-covered white roofs across the way — no photo.  I was feeling a little discouraged.  Two birds we rarely see so close, and no photos.  Then I saw something dart past into a tree by the side of the house:

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    A downy woodpecker!  You can see we just have a little snow that stuck onto the grass yesterday.  We are cold enough to keep snow now (boooo), with a current temperature of 14 degrees. 

    By the way, I’ll be adding individual photos of the PhD finishers with their quilts when I add a new tab to the top of this page called PhD (aren’t I original?).

    Thanks for stopping by!

    –Sue

    Wednesday’s Puzzle

    When we were in Port Aransas, TX, on Mustang Island a month ago (a favorite vacation spot), we noted some new businesses/buildings.  I know there are at least a couple of other Winter Texans reading my blog who spend time in Port A, so I thought I would let you know what’s new since last winter.  And even if you’ve never heard of Port Aransas, let alone know how to say it, come along for a tiny tour…

    First is the new Catholic church:

    PuzzleChurch

    I noticed there’s a new History Center, but I wasn’t quick enough to get a picture. 

    And now for the really important stuff — the Donut Palace (you have to love a town that has a donut palace):

    TeleTuesDonuts

    A very nice sandwich/bakery/coffee shop called Bundy’s:

    TeleTuesBundys

    I know the church was completed last year, but it was after we returned home.  They did a really nice job on it, and I like the style.  I don’t know much about architecture, but it has a mission look to me.  It is today’s puzzle:

    Click to Mix and Solve

    –Sue

    Telephoto Tuesday

    This seems like a good week to go back to last month’s pictures taken at the Texas Gulf coast, as our Minnesota temperatures are expected to drop into the teens by week’s end.  Brrr!  This is one of my favorite birds, a Tri-Colored Heron.  One thing I’ve noticed about all the birds is that they are continually looking for something to eat.  Do you think any little fish or frog around this heron has half a chance?

    TeleTuesTriColoredHeron

    During a beach walk to the south jetty (about 2 miles each way), we saw a Snowy Egret.  They are quite a bit smaller than the egrets we see here in MN, and are quite delicate looking.

    TeleTuesSnowyEgret

     

    This was a perfectly beautiful October day, and the fishermen and -women were fishing all along the jetty.  And a photography note:  The jetty is very long and the people were quite a distance away.  I used my zoom in taking this picture.  Notice how the zoom seems to compress the distance shown in this picture.  The people on the jetty weren’t as close to each other as it appears in this photo.

    TeleTuesJetty

    Stop here if the sight of fish blood would bother you. 

     This is the first time we saw someone with a shark as his “catch of the day”.The fisherman had cut off the tail of this blacktip  shark to bleed it out.  He said this is about the best tasting fish there is.  I would estimate this shark was between 2.5 feet and 3 feet long.  It was a little unnerving to know that someone pulled a shark out of these waters!  (I don’t know where I thought sharks would live, but I guess I assumed they were swimming off someone else’s beach.)

    TeleTuesShark

    And I’ll leave you with a more pleasant picture of some bicyclists enjoying an afternoon bike ride on the beach:

    TeleTuesBikes

    –Sue