We’re getting quite a bit of sun through our new glass back door at the moment. I’m looking for some sort of a shade we can use just for the mornings. Do those suction cup roller blinds for cars work very well? Not looking to drill or permanently install anything…
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A holiday visitor
As I was finishing my morning coffee, my eye caught movement on the fence outside the house. I thought at first it was the neighbour’s cat, who is engaged in a prolonged war with the Snook. (The cat wants to crap in our garden; Rodd would prefer it didn’t.) But it wasn’t a cat – it’s a brush-tailed possum! I know they’re around, but I’d never seen one this close to the house before. We kept an eye on him to make sure he wasn’t hurt, and eventually he climbed the Davidson’s plum up to the balcony above. Stay cool today, friend.
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Shared today on Facebook
TIMPANO!! We actually pulled it off. Check out my blog post for commentary… Happy Boxing Day, everyone! 🥁❤️ https://www.web-goddess.org/archive/26631
Happy birthday, Cam! I send you positive vibes every time I use my Moominmamma tea towel you gifted me. 🙂
As I was finishing my morning coffee, my eye caught movement on the fence outside the house. I thought at first it was the neighbour’s cat, who is engaged in a prolonged war with the Snook. (The cat wants to crap in our garden; Rodd would prefer it didn’t.) But it wasn’t a cat – it’s a ring-tailed possum! I know they’re around, but I’d never seen one this close to the house before. We kept an eye on him to make sure he wasn’t hurt, and eventually he climbed the Davidson’s plum up to the balcony above. Stay cool today, friend.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_brushtail_possum
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Timpano 🥁
I’ve been reading Stanley Tucci’s autobiography, and in it he talks about his family’s tradition of making a timpano for Christmas Dinner. It means “drum,” and it basically involves encasing pasta, meatballs, hard-boiled eggs, and cheese in dough and then baking it in the oven. (A timpano features in a famous scene in Tucci’s film Big Night.) I suggested to Rodd that we give it a try.
Tucci’s recipe is, shall we say, quite involved. I realised when we made the shopping list that it was going to take multiple days and cost a mint. Then Rodd found this Food52 version, which seemed a bit simpler. With apologies to Primo and Secondo, we decided to go with the easier one. I handled the meatballs and sauce, while Rodd worked on the pastry.
This is where we ran into an issue. We neglected to notice that the Food52 recipe deliberately uses a pastry crust rather than a pasta dough. Rodd followed the recipe but struggled when it came time to line our pot. He’s couldn’t get it thin enough without it falling apart, and he therefore ended up having to make additional batches to have enough. He eventually managed to get it lined though, and I filled it up with pasta, meatballs, sauce, and eggs.
Then Rodd capped it off and sealed it. I honestly thought as he put it into the oven that we had maybe a 10% chance of it actually coming out in one piece.
We let it bake in the oven for a good 75min or so, and then brought it out to cool and contract.
And then it was the big moment… Time to get the sucker out.
Rodd used a cookie sheet to cover it and then carefully flipped it over. He gently wiggled and lifted until…
SUCCESS!! I could not believe it. It was every bit as thrilling as the moment in the movie. We all cheered. (We had guests over to help us eat this monster.) The crust was still looking a bit blond, so we decided to pop it back in the oven for some additional colour. It worked, but it also caused a minor structural failure…
No matter! It was still delicious.
If we were going to do it again, I’d definitely use Tucci’s dough recipe. It’s more of a stretchy pasta dough rather than this thicker crust.
And of course, the Boxing Day feast involved a lot more other food too…
And the Snook’s delicious homemade tiramisu was the perfect finale.
Happy Boxing Day, everyone!
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Shared today on Facebook
Merry Christmas! We caught the ferry to Manly and had a picnic at Delwood Beach. The Snook wandered the rockpools, and I had a paddle at Manly Cove. We got an outdoor seat on the Opera House side on the return voyage. Glorious day in our beautiful city!
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A Christmas Picnic
We decided to have an Outing for Christmas. This morning we packed up and caught the light rail to Circular Quay before boarding a packed ferry to Manly.
When we got there, we opted not to follow the crowds to the ocean beach but rather to follow the boardwalk around to the left. We had a nice view out to the headlands
Watch out for penguins! (We didn’t see any.)
We opted to find a nice shady spot to the secluded Delwood Beach and set up our picnic.
We had pasta salad and chips and cherries.
Later I read my book while the Snook waded in the rockpools.
Then we walked back to the beach at Manly Cove, where I had a swim in the protected section. (They have shark nets.) And then we had a beer. 😜
Time to head home! The return ferry was much less crowded, so we managed to get an outside seat on the Opera House side.
I took a cool selfie with the Opera House reflected in my sunnies.
There’s a running joke on the aus.social Mastodon server about the “gloriousness levels” in Sydney, with people reporting on the level each day. And folks, this was a pretty glorious Christmas Day. ❤️🎄
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Shared today on Facebook
I was productive today! I sewed a set of custom reversible quilted placemats for the dining room table, and I blogged how I did it. Don’t they look great?! (And thanks Susan Garberick for the flowers!)
It’s surprisingly hard to find “Jingle Rock Bell” on YouTube, even using quotes, due to YouTube’s assumption that I don’t know what I’m looking for. I assure you, I do. It’s a holiday banger! 🔔🎄
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Jingle Rock Bell
It’s surprisingly hard to find “Jingle Rock Bell” on YouTube, even using quotes, due to YouTube’s assumption that I don’t know what I’m looking for. I assure you, I do. It’s a holiday banger! 🔔🎄
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Marimekko placemats
I decided a few days ago that we needed new placemats to help protect our lovely new dining room table. I considered buying some, but I couldn’t find any that I liked that weren’t hideously expensive. (The cheapest Marimekko one is $36!) However, I do still have plenty of fabric left over from making the sofa cushions. Why not make my own?
I started by prototyping different shapes. I wanted something organic and asymmetrical, so I used some cardboard to try out a few different options. (I put a plate on top for sizing.)
The first was deemed by the Snook “too egg-like.” (I agreed.) So I tried a few rounded triangles and ended up with option #3.
I decided I wanted the placemats to be reversible, so I found a suitable backing fabric from my stash. I used my template to cut out 6 red front pieces, 6 black back pieces (with the template reversed!), and 6 pieces of thin cotton quilt batting (left over from making Baby Taos’s quilt).
Here are the pieces all set for sewing. The backing fabric is called “Psycat” by Rhynie Cawood, handprinted by Sydney’s Publisher Textiles. I picked up a remnant many years ago and I love how it looks like a Rorschach test.
To assemble, I laid down a red piece face up, then a black piece face down, and then the batting. I pinned them all together.
I sewed them together with a 1/4″ seam allowance, leaving a couple inches at the bottom open so I could turn them out.
Then I trimmed down the quilt batting to avoid the edges being too thick. I also clipped the curves, which basically meant going around the whole thing since it was all curves.
Then I used the opening to turn each placemat right-side out.
I spent some time making sure all the seams were fully pushed out, and I gave each placemat a good ironing. You can see there the opening at the bottom where I turned it out.
I folded in the seam allowances at the opening and hit that with the steam iron. Then I top-stitched all the way around each placemat at 1/8″, both for decoration and to close off the opening.
Pretty quickly I had a completed stack of six placemats!
Now it was time to decide on the quilting. I decided that the best options were either a spiral or a grid, so I mocked up a rough idea and sent it to a few friends for thoughts. Everyone voted for spiral.
I set up the walking foot for my sewing machine, as well as the “quilting attachment” – an adjustable metal bar that sticks out that you can use to sew parallel lines. I used it to ensure the first few spirals were roughly 1″ apart.
Once I got to the middle, I was basically free-handing it and just turning the placemat around and around. I LOVE how it turned out! It was really fun too. I blasted through the remaining placemats to finish the project off.
I’ve got a can of Scotchguard around here somewhere so I’ll probably hit them with that to make them a bit more stain-resistant. Don’t they look great on the table?
Woot, my knee-jerk don’t-overthink-it pub-quiz answer was Iran which seems to be [✓]. I ‘knew’ it was more populous than…