Tuesday, 16 February 2010

Everything Must Go!

Help a girl out - the lease on my current flat runs out at the end of March, and I'm in the midst of looking for new flats, and packing frantically. And I've discovered that I own lots of stuff...I swear I didn't even buy some of that stuff, they just appeared, like leprechauns. 
Anyway, I'm listing a few items on my blogshop, in the hopes that I'll sell them before I move and won't have to pack them up. I've got a couple pairs of shoes up there now, and I'll be posting a few other items soon, so please keep checking back over the next few weeks to see if there's anything that may suit you. 
I've also got a whole stack of minty green bias binding, so I'm listing them in 10 metre packs in my Etsy and Artfire shops. I'll be happy to sell more than 10 metres at a time too, should you guys need it.
So, while it's not really an 'Everything Must Go' sale, I certainly would like to get rid of some stuff before I move, and I would be sooooo grateful to you guys if you'd just help me spread the word. 

Anyway, speaking of Etsy, I've been hard at work on a 'Spring/Summer' collection, and more capes, so keep an eye out!

P.S. If you're in the London area and would like to meet up to receive an item instead of paying for postage, just drop me an email and we can work something out.

Wednesday, 10 February 2010

A Veritable Trevor Trove!

I made some new friends at the op-shop on Saturday. Their names were Chadwick...
and Dorcas.
Some of them were much too shy to tell me their names, but I invited them all home with me anyway.


Sometimes, it's great being short. If I were further from the ground, my eyes wouldn't have alighted on a rather unpromising looking John Lewis bag and I wouldn't have ventured over to take a peek and discover these treasures. Just over one kilo (I weighed it on my kitchen scales when I got home) of wondrous old thread, all for the embarrassing price of £1.50! A bag of spinach costs more than that! Some of them, like Chadwick up there, are still in their original wrapping, while some spools were nearly empty. The yellow ones up there feel like silk. I'm not sure how I'll use them all yet, but I'm so happy they came home with me. 

Monday, 8 February 2010

Root Vegetable Gratin

Inspired by this recipe from the ever-erudite Weird Vegetables blog, I sliced up some parsnips, celeriac, carrots, swede and potatoes, and soaked them in a warm bath of chicken stock and cream.

It was the best of friends with a slice of pork and some watercress, all devoured while watching some vintage Dr. Who (this time with Jon Pertwee in a rather magnificent cape). 

Friday, 22 January 2010

Experiments With Purple

Made a fruit loaf using this recipe, but substituted frozen cherries, smoked prunes and a spoonful of blueberry jam in place of the bananas. I also used some vanilla soy milk and a tiny splash of ginger wine, instead of the coffee I used in the earlier recipe. The insides of the loaf were a lovely shade of purple, and it was great toasted, with some Nutella on top.

Red cabbage casserole, with grated cheese on top. Yes, it really was that violent shade of purple. May not be the prettiest dish around, but it was hella tasty.

Used a couple of leaves from the red cabbage to dye some white crochet cotton, and it came out this lovely shade of pale blue. My earlier experiments using vegetable matter to dye stuff can be seen here. I always get a little surprised when picking them out of the dye bath, as the colours are never really what I expect them to be.


Wednesday, 20 January 2010

A Doll's Macarons

Macarons have been floating around the interwubs for a while now, haven't they? My own macarons have been nearly a year in the making - I first decided to try baking my own a year ago, when I was back in Sydney for the summer.Those plans soon got shelved after I came back to London, and two new flatmates moved in. They were stereotypically bad housemates - filthy, inconsiderate, noisy, and really bad cooks (sweetcorn in EVERYTHING! Argghhhhh!). Things got so bad that I pretty much locked myself in my room when I knew they were home, only emerging to run to the loo or grab a hurried bite. I hated having awkward, forced conversations with them, and hated cooking anything when I knew they were home, or would be coming home soon, because I didn't want them to mess up my dishes, or get dust over my newly iced cupcakes.
But that filthy fool and his shrill harridan of a wife finally moved out last month, and since then, I have been baking and cooking with renewed vigour, making up for lost time. Now that we've cleaned the kitchen, I'm finally ready to invest some time and energy into attempting macarons.

I should thank Henrik Ibsen for first sparking my interest in these fragile jewel-toned delights. We had to  study A Doll's House way back when in sixth-form drama class (a whole decade ago!). His 'childish' protagonist Nora had a predilection for 'macaroons'. Our class of rather naive young ladies were told by our drama teachers that Ibsen meant those biscuity, coconuty things  - which, for some reason, struck me as very odd, more so than anything else about that play, or even that class. Sure, macaroons are sweet, and when done correctly, are tasty enough that I could eat more than one. But I just didn't understand why Nora Helmer would be obsessed with these brown, rather plain biscuits, over any other kind of pastry, or anything else, for that matter. Isn't it funny when one tiny, almost insignificant point like that leads to you not understanding the play at all?

A few months later (way after we had finished A Doll's House and moved on to some other play), I saw a photograph of some macarons, and realised that these had to be what Ibsen meant, and the play finally fell into place for me. It made sense to me that macarons - those rainbow-hued, light as air confections with their almost hidden, sweet centre) would be Nora's secret little indulgence, but my teachers hadn't really bothered about what they were, they could have been any kind of biscuits, for all they cared - which initially ruined my understanding of the whole play. So...to sum up, some teachers are crap. (I'm restraining myself from having a rant about teachers, since this post is supposed to be about baking and not about school.)
Well, anyway, this post is supposed to be about my macarons, not school or bad housemates. I got the recipe for the macaron shells from this Serious Eats article, although I may try some other recipes in future. The filling was a simple lime and lemon curd, with the sourness of the curd helping to offset the intense sugary burst of the shells.

Lime-Lemon Curd
Ingredients
4 egg yolks
1 heaped tsp cornflour
3 limes, juiced
1 lemon, juiced
some zest
150 gm unsalted butter
250 gm caster sugar

Directions
- Melt butter in a double boiler (you can make one by popping a glass bowl over a pot of water), then mix in zest, juices, sugar and cornflour, and stir till sugar has dissolved.
- Beat egg yolks lightly, then sieve into mixture.
- Stir for 7-9 minutes, until mixture is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.
- Remove from heat, pour into a sterilised jar and let it cool down. It will thicken even more as it cools down, and you can then keep it in the fridge for about 2 weeks.

These are the very first macarons I've ever made, so I must confess I was a little nervous prior to starting them. I'd read all the horror stories about 'feet' not appearing, too many air bubbles in shells, and everything else that can and will go wrong when preparing these delicate things. So I was surprised when I achieved the much-craved for 'feet', although my piping skills do leave much to be desired. I got bored with carefully piping out tiny little circles, so the last couple of batches I did consisted of huge discs - some of them were almost 2 inches across!

Lookswise, they probably need quite a lot of surgery before I can produce anything resembling the Crayola-coloured confections of Laduree et al. However, I was pretty happy with how they tasted. The shells were crispy on the outside, leading to a soft, sweet inner bit, and the sourness of the curd helped balance the sweetness of the shells. I'll be attempting more macarons soon (we'll need to finish up our current batch first) and I'll even attempt to add some colouring to them next time. 


Thursday, 14 January 2010

Shiny Two Shoes



My late Christmas present to myself - the Wrestlemania boots from Irregular Choice. I had to get them as soon as I glimpsed them on the website, if only because they reminded me of Mexican wrestling outfits. And Fag Panic.