Hi all, had such a busy day today so I'm just flaking out on the sofa with my candles lit and the fire going...Bliss! Made a super delicious steak and ale pie for tea; at this time of year stews, pies and casseroles are the order of the day, hearty comfort food is just the ticket when it's so cold outside. If you fancy making your own here is my mum's tried and tested recipe: 1 1/2 lbs lean diced steak, three handfuls of mushrooms roughly chopped (any will do but porcini are particularly delicious),plain flour, salt and pepper,1 bottle of 'old speckled hen' ale or similar, 2 or 3 beef stock cubes according to taste,2 strong white onions and 2 cloves of garlic, dash of worcester sauce,1 dessertspoon english mustard. Dessertspoon of cornflour.
For the pastry: 8 oz plain flour, 6 oz butter, 150ml cold water.
Method: season the flour and toss the steak in it. Brown off the steak in a little oil in a heavy casserole pan. Add the onions, garlic and mushrooms and cook for a few minutes until golden and softened. Add your ale and stock cubes. Bring to a steady simmer...not a boil...and cover. This can simmer for a minimum of 2 hours on the hob. While the filling cooks, make your pastry. This is an easy puff pastry so not too much mixing or kneading required. Cube your butter and add to your flour, mix with a knife till the butter is covered. Gradually add your cold water and mix with the knife to form a soft but not sticky dough. Roll dough out on work surface till you have a rectangle that is twice as long as it is wide. Fold the two shortest sides into the centre, turn and roll again. Repeat the process a minimum of three times. Wrap in clingfilm and place in the fridge until needed. When your pie filling has stewed nicely for a couple of hours, mix your cornflour with a little cold water and add to the mix gradually, stirring constantly. Finally add your mustard and transfer to a deep pie dish. Roll out your pastry and drape over your pie dish. Pierce the top several times and place in the oven at 200 °c until the top of your pie is golden brown. I would love to show you a picture of the pie but unfortunately it did not last long enough to get the camera out! You will have to make do with the one remaining slice...
There is just something about the autumn that I absolutely adore, the crispness of the days, the golden quality of the light, the beautiful rusty colours in the trees and the feeling that there is no place like home. It really does warm the old cockles to set up camp next to the fire with a glass of mulled wine by candlelight and curl up in an enormous comfy chair with a good book and a favourite blanket. My favourite snuggly quilt that I like to snuggle up with of an evening is homemade and holds many memories for me on account of it being made out of my children's old pram blankets and cot quilt. I just couldn't bring myself to give away these precious items that my babies were once wrapped in for nighttime feeding, sofa snuggling and wintery walks, so I decided that a patchwork made from all these things would be a lovely keepsake and a way to feel close to my girls as they grow up and become more independent from mum. I have never done a patchwork before so mine is really the most basic bit of sewing you could possibly come across, but the finished article is still very lovely. I basically cut out the blankets into equal sized squares. I then laid them out on the floor to decide on a pattern I liked. I decided the simplest way to make the quilt would be to have a large rectangle in the centre and use the patches as a sort of border around the edge. I started to piece the quilt together by sewing all the patches in a long row wrong sides together that would fit along the long edges of the rectangle. I then did the same for the short edges. When I had four lengths of patchwork to fit around the rectangle, I pinned them in place around it and sewed them on wrong sides together. I now had an extra large rectangle with patchwork edges. I then did the same again, creating long lengths of patchwork to fit around the edges of the rectangle and sewing them in place. I finished with an applique heart in the corner of the patchwork. I had a small cot quilt which obviously was too small to be of any use in a normal sized bed, so I used this as the centre padding for my quilt. I also had an old cream coloured heavy cotton throw that had a couple of stains in the corner, so I cut out the clean part and used this as the back of my quilt. I sewed the throw to the patchwork piece wrong sides together leaving part of the short edge open. I turned the resulting 'envelope' right side out and stuffed it with the cot quilt. I hand stitched the opening closed. To hold the quilt in place inside the cover I sewed around the whole thing about an inch in from the edge. I am so thrilled with the result and I definitely intend to try doing a bit more patchwork as it just looks so pretty and is a really great way to upcycle any pretty fabrics of sentimental value. You could even use precious items of clothing. I'm certainly not the only one in the family who loves the quilt! Have a great evening everyone xxx
A blog about being a homemaker and homeschooling mummy. Inspirational crafts, food and homemaking ideas.
Showing posts with label Craft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Craft. Show all posts
Wednesday, 5 November 2014
Thursday, 30 October 2014
Snow globe tutorial
Hello everyone,
I can't believe it's almost officially wintertime already, but I actually rather enjoy getting snug indoors and feathering our nest ready to hibernate on the sofa with my girls. I like to change things round a little indoors when it begins to cool down to make home feel more cozy and inviting to reflect the season. This means piles of pretty blankets and handmade quilts (I shall be writing another post about quilts shortly so look out for that one), copious candles and fairy lights for softer lighting, stacks of favourite old books and pretty biscuits and snacks in kilner jars or on beautiful china plates, because, let's face it, we all like to put on a bit of extra winter insulation at this time of year :-) . The extra time spent indoors also means lots more crafting in this house, and today I wanted to share with you a simple little craft idea which adds to that magical feeling winter brings and also makes a fabulous handmade gift if you are stuck for something personal and a bit special to give. It's also a craft that the children absolutely love so that's a bonus! I have lots of little trinkets about the place that belonged to my lovely nan who passed away last year, and being of such sentimental value I wanted to make a feature of one or two of them, so after a short mooch through ideas on pinterest I decided to make a snow globe. Snow globes always held a special intrigue for me as a child, ever since I watched Shirley Temple in Heidi receive a snow globe containing a miniature of her grandfather's house. I found it fascinating that there was this tiny little world in a flurry of snow that you held in the palm of your hand. So this was a perfect craft for me. I chose a small plastic deer for this project, which can be found everywhere in the shops around Christmas and are just deliciously kitsch. I remember being allowed to play with this one as a child and I thought it was completely gorgeous. I don't know why my nan kept it but she was a bit of a magpie and just loved animals and anything a bit cute. Anyway, to make your snow globe you will need an old jam jar and lid, perhaps a more globular shaped one would be best, some boiled cooled water and a bottle of glycerine which you can buy over the counter at Boots, some glitter and fake snow, and ribbon or any other little embellishment you may fancy. I used faux gemstones and some cute little toadstools I found at Wilkinson. You will also need a hot glue gun. You may need to begin by gluing your chosen figurine to a bottle top so that it's slightly raised up on the jar lid. You can then glue the figurine and bottle top to the inside of the jar lid. Fill your jar 3/4 full with the cooled water and a couple of tablespoons of glycerine. Add your glitter and faux snow and check that the liquid is viscous enough that the glitter etc takes a while to settle. If need be add a tad more glycerine. When you are happy with the liquid, screw the lid to the jar and hot glue around the edge. You can then add your embellishment. I'm sure you will agree the effect is rather charming! I shall be making more of these so will post pictures of the results. Have a good evening all xx
I can't believe it's almost officially wintertime already, but I actually rather enjoy getting snug indoors and feathering our nest ready to hibernate on the sofa with my girls. I like to change things round a little indoors when it begins to cool down to make home feel more cozy and inviting to reflect the season. This means piles of pretty blankets and handmade quilts (I shall be writing another post about quilts shortly so look out for that one), copious candles and fairy lights for softer lighting, stacks of favourite old books and pretty biscuits and snacks in kilner jars or on beautiful china plates, because, let's face it, we all like to put on a bit of extra winter insulation at this time of year :-) . The extra time spent indoors also means lots more crafting in this house, and today I wanted to share with you a simple little craft idea which adds to that magical feeling winter brings and also makes a fabulous handmade gift if you are stuck for something personal and a bit special to give. It's also a craft that the children absolutely love so that's a bonus! I have lots of little trinkets about the place that belonged to my lovely nan who passed away last year, and being of such sentimental value I wanted to make a feature of one or two of them, so after a short mooch through ideas on pinterest I decided to make a snow globe. Snow globes always held a special intrigue for me as a child, ever since I watched Shirley Temple in Heidi receive a snow globe containing a miniature of her grandfather's house. I found it fascinating that there was this tiny little world in a flurry of snow that you held in the palm of your hand. So this was a perfect craft for me. I chose a small plastic deer for this project, which can be found everywhere in the shops around Christmas and are just deliciously kitsch. I remember being allowed to play with this one as a child and I thought it was completely gorgeous. I don't know why my nan kept it but she was a bit of a magpie and just loved animals and anything a bit cute. Anyway, to make your snow globe you will need an old jam jar and lid, perhaps a more globular shaped one would be best, some boiled cooled water and a bottle of glycerine which you can buy over the counter at Boots, some glitter and fake snow, and ribbon or any other little embellishment you may fancy. I used faux gemstones and some cute little toadstools I found at Wilkinson. You will also need a hot glue gun. You may need to begin by gluing your chosen figurine to a bottle top so that it's slightly raised up on the jar lid. You can then glue the figurine and bottle top to the inside of the jar lid. Fill your jar 3/4 full with the cooled water and a couple of tablespoons of glycerine. Add your glitter and faux snow and check that the liquid is viscous enough that the glitter etc takes a while to settle. If need be add a tad more glycerine. When you are happy with the liquid, screw the lid to the jar and hot glue around the edge. You can then add your embellishment. I'm sure you will agree the effect is rather charming! I shall be making more of these so will post pictures of the results. Have a good evening all xx
Tuesday, 28 October 2014
Hi everyone, just a quick post today as I have to get on with the very important task of watching Bambi with my girls. Love that movie.
Anyway in the interests of cozying up for our movie afternoon I've lit the candles, put the fire on and made a pot of tea. I got some cheap fairy lights in Wilkinson this morning ( I get so many fantastic bargains in that place, only £3.50 for a string of led's) and decided to use them to finish off a little chandelier I made out of galvanised garden wire last year. I have made quite a number of these now, the design is fairly simple although you do end up with hands covered in blisters by the end of it, but I do think it's worth the pain to have something beautiful and handmade in your home. I'm not sure I could write a tutorial for one of these but I will see what I can come up with. I used mine to glam up a lacklustre corner of my living room and I'm thrilled with the result now I've added a bit of sparkle with the lights. You may notice a little cobweb in the picture... I'm afraid I didn't have the heart to evict it's tiny inhabitant so it will just have to stay for the time being!
Well I'm off for a lovely sofa afternoon now, Lidl is now stocking those gorgeous iced German ginger biscuits now in time for Xmas so I shall be tucking into one or two of those with my cuppa! Have a lovely afternoon x
Anyway in the interests of cozying up for our movie afternoon I've lit the candles, put the fire on and made a pot of tea. I got some cheap fairy lights in Wilkinson this morning ( I get so many fantastic bargains in that place, only £3.50 for a string of led's) and decided to use them to finish off a little chandelier I made out of galvanised garden wire last year. I have made quite a number of these now, the design is fairly simple although you do end up with hands covered in blisters by the end of it, but I do think it's worth the pain to have something beautiful and handmade in your home. I'm not sure I could write a tutorial for one of these but I will see what I can come up with. I used mine to glam up a lacklustre corner of my living room and I'm thrilled with the result now I've added a bit of sparkle with the lights. You may notice a little cobweb in the picture... I'm afraid I didn't have the heart to evict it's tiny inhabitant so it will just have to stay for the time being!
Well I'm off for a lovely sofa afternoon now, Lidl is now stocking those gorgeous iced German ginger biscuits now in time for Xmas so I shall be tucking into one or two of those with my cuppa! Have a lovely afternoon x
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)