First comes love, then comes marriage (finally, 9 years later!), then comes a blog. That's how it goes, right?

Monday, July 29, 2013

Grad Party Part 2 - Food

For decor, see Part 1 HERE.
For the complete party recap, see Part 3 HERE.

The decor for my mom's grad party took about a week's worth of evenings after work to make. The food was a lot easier. Since we were going for a high tea style party, I decided that tea sandwiches were the best bet. I just looked at photos online and then went with whatever I thought could be made easily in large amounts.

Aren't they pretty?

So here's what I came up with for sandwiches:

- Asparagus with lemon cream cheese on white bread
- Cucumber and chive butter on both pumpernickel AND rye
- And, for the less adventurous of the crowd - Ham and swiss on wheat bread (also made some on white for extra picky eaters)

For the asparagus sandwiches, I used that photo on the left as inspiration. I rolled them up w/ white bread, but I did it w/ 2 pieces of asparagus facing different ways, and then just cut it in half once rolled so it would make 2 sandwiches and every piece would have the stalks sticking up.My step-dad went crazy for these sandwiches!

My favorite sandwich was the cucumber on pumpernickel, but my husband preferred it on the rye, so it's all a matter of taste! Also, I actually ended up using green onions instead of chives - I just cut them really thinly. I mixed room temp butter with the onions, some garlic powder, salt and pepper, and a tiny bit of lemon juice, then spread it on both slices of bread, and cut into triangles.

The ham and swiss sandwiches were spread with a honey mustard - literally just 1/2 dijon mustard and 1/2 honey, and then 2 slices of black forest ham and one slice of swiss cheese. I made more of these than the others because I honestly thought people would be picky, but I was surprised to find that most people went for the veggie sandwiches!

We made all of the sandwiches the morning of the party at my mom's house - my poor parents - I go to visit them and turn their kitchen into a total disaster area - oops!

Desserts I made in advance, and I was slightly more creative with them. I wanted to make desserts that had some connection to literature. I thought about making Turkish Delight (from the Narnia series), but I'm kinda iffy on candy-making - seems too dangerous to me. I tried a couple of Google searches for foods from literature and was able to come up with several, but not many desserts. I did keep seeing things for butterbeer (Harry Potter) and knew I wanted to do something with that, but wasn't entirely sure what.


Since I was making a 12 hour drive with whatever I made, I wanted it to be small and portable, and not have to do too much to it once I got there, so cupcakes were out - I had no desire to frost 60 cupcakes while trying to rush doing everything else for the party. Instead, I decided to make "Butterbeer Brownie Bites". If you want to make these, here's what I did.

-Make a triple batch of your favorite brownie batter recipe (I made a double batch of dark chocolate and a single batch of milk chocolate)
-Mix in butterscotch chips
-Pour into greased pan, drizzle butterscotch over the top, and bake according to directions
-Cool and chill (chilling is important)
-Once chilled, the brownies will have firmed up some, making them easier to cut into 1"x1" pieces
-Place in a freezer bag if you are transporting them.
-Once you have these on the serving tray, you can add a tiny bit of whipped cream to each one (I usually prefer to make my own, or use cool whip, but it might be easier to use the canned kind for this since the pieces are so small), and then drizzle butterscotch sauce over the top. (We realized once we got to the venue that we had forgotten the whipped cream at home and didn't want to worry about it, so I just used the butterscotch drizzle and it was perfectly fine.)


While I was looking for literary treats, I found a blog where there girl makes food from all kinds of books - so cool! I decided to make her recipe for Earl Grey and Lemon scones as a tribute to The Da Vinci Code. My love of Earl Grey is inherited from my mother, so I knew these were a must. I cut circles and then cut those into quarters since the whole party was finger-food.

Top left is the photo from the website, then my little scone pieces, and the ingredients.




We also had fruit to complement the pastries - strawberries and pineapple, and my mom had some caramel chocolates on hand that she put out as well.

I saw this adorable photo online of individual crudite cups and thought it was such a great idea! Not only does it add color to the table, but it's perfect for a party because people can just take it and go without having to worry about a messy bowl and spoon for dips or anything like that. I found little clear plastic shotglasses at Party City that worked out perfectly. My 15 year old brother ate approximately 3395382749 of these babies.





This photo has peppers and cucumbers - we just used tri-color peppers. You could put in other veggies though, like strips of portabello mushrooms, carrots, snow peas, etc! Anything long enough to stick out of a shotglass.

I only had one drink in mind and then my mom handled the rest - she did plain iced tea, a pineapple iced tea, and a citrus-cucumber-mint water. I did something that I called "The Grape Gatsby" which is not at all from the book - I just wanted to use the play on words haha! It was half white grape juice, half Sprite (or whatever lemon-lime pop you prefer), and then a bunch of frozen green grapes. The Sprite makes it bubbly so it looked like champagne which kinda works for Gatsby since the drinks were always flowing! Drink photos to come in Part 3!

I also made all these little labels so I wouldn't spend all night answering, "What is this?" The backing is just a sparkly white cardstock, and then I used more pretty floral cardstock cut into different shapes with scalloped scissors.


So that's it for food! Here's a tiny little sneak peek of some of the food in action at the party.

Asparagus and paper flowers, oh my!



Grad Party Part 1 - Decor

For those of you that don't know, my mom (who has been going to school and getting degrees for almost as long as I can remember) recently graduated with a Master of Science in Mental Health Counseling. A MASTERS DEGREE! Pretty awesome. And oh yeah, did I mention that she graduated with Distinction? Yeah, my mom is kind of a badass.

She had orignally planned to take a vacation after graduating and before starting down her new career path, but as we all know, life gets in the way sometimes and she had to adjust her plans. She mentioned off-hand that she was thinking about having a graduation party and I told her that it wasn't even worth questioning, that she could definitely do it, and despite the 730 miles between us, that I could plan it. After a very short-lived idea for a luau/tropical theme, my mom decided that she wanted her party to have a literary theme with psychology references if possible.

I introduced her to Pinterest, and then I didn't hear from her for a week. Ha! Only joking. (But seriously, Pinterest is the great time suck to end them all!). I started a Grad Party board that we could both pin to and after a few weeks of looking at inspiration photos, I dove into crafting. In this entry, I will show you the process for some of these crafts, and some sneak peak photos. I will also post a similar entry about food and drinks. The third entry in this series will be about the party itself and show pictures of how everything came together. Now keep in mind that while I did gather some inspiration photos, they were to be used for just that - inspiration. So don't expect exact replicas here because that's not what I was going for. So with that, let's get started, shall we?

A couple of months ago I saw some cute floral print plates and napkins at Party City and ended up using them as the base of my inspiration. I thought they were really cute and tea party-esque and decided to pull colors from them for the rest of the decor.



After that, it was time to craft. First up: Tissue paper flowers.


I have seen these tissue paper and/or coffe filter flowers all over the place but never really had any reason to try making them myself until now. I used tissue paper so that I didn't have to bother dying coffee filters, but you could use either. Everyone will have their own method, I'm sure, but here was mine:

Lay out a stack of 8 sheets of tissue paper.
Trace a large scalloped pattern on the paper as many times as you can. (I try to throw away as little paper as possible)
Place a staple or brad in the middle of each flower.
Cut around the template into more manageable squares.
Trim the edges.
Starting with the top layer of paper, pinch up and crumple into a little ball so the other layers will have something to form around.
Bring each layer up individually until all layers are crinkled.
"Twist" the finished product in your hands, carefully, not ripping the papers.
Open up the layers some, and "fluff".

Getting started... Popcorn for breakfast and Sorcerer's Stone keeping me company.



A whole bag full of paper edges. Oops.

I also considered making teal and lilac flowers, but didn't want the colors to get muddled, so I just stuck with white, pink, and yellow.



I made a TON of these flowers. Probably like 60. I used some of them just scattered around the room and tables, and then others were used in bouquets with the next project - flowers I made from book pages.


Aren't those adorable? I used them as the jumping off point for my page flowers. I used some old packing paper I had, some book pages, and some little tweed flowers for the middle. It hurt my heart a little bit destroying a book.... but it wasn't a good book, so I was able to forgive myself.

The Process:
Borrow an array of paper punches from your ever-crafting mother-in-law.
Rip up a book. Cry a little. Drink some wine if that's your thing.
Punch out whatever papers you are using. I made large book circles, medium plain circles, small page flowers, and some little leaves.
Put the flowers together - I used these little green sticks with small copper wire that I got from the floral department at Hobby Lobby. You could use pipe cleaners or wire or any other number of things - this is just what I had on hand from a previous project so I made it work.
Hot glue mini tweed flower to the middle of each flower.
Reinforce at the base of each flower where it connects to the stick/wire/whatever with a dab of hot glue.
Place upright (I used mason jars) to dry completely.


Oof. :(


Finished flowers.

After I was finished making all of the flowers, I attached some of the tissue paper flowers to the sticks as well, and then I bunched some together to make bouquets. Each bouquet was made up of 4 flowers - 2 white, one book page,  and either 1 yellow or one pink flower. I just squished them together and bound the "stems" with a tiny rubber band.






As you may have noticed, the bouquets were then placed in some little mason jars. I figured those would go well with the whole kind of high tea/garden party theme we had going on.

Process:
Gather leftover pages - measure to cut to fit around the jars.
Make a couple more page flowers to place on the jars. Add leaves. (I used hot glue.)
Tie a cute ribbon or twine around the top of the jar. Voila!

Originally, my mom pinned those sparkly faery light mason jars to our board - let me just say this - that pin is totally bogus. I thought it looked too good to be true so I tried it with one and it was a disaster. SO not worth it, seriously, stay away. So instead I used my mason jars for vases, a la the second inspiration photo, and we put some uncovered mason jars with tealights in them on the outside tables next to a vase of paper flowers. Below are my inspiration photos, and some of my decorated mason jars.







I also made a penant banner to hang in the room - it was just a plan brown banner and I used different fancy papers to cut out the words "Hooray Grad!" - the completed photos will be in the entry with all the finished products, for now, here's a sneak peek:


Mom also pinned a picture of this sign that points out the paths to different fictional places. If we were having an outdoor party, I might have tackled actually making the sign, but since it was a party in a room, I instead just blew up and printed the photo, matted it on some floral printed paper, and put it in a pretty brushed brass frame.


My absolute favorite thing that I made though, was this paper "curtain" - I didn't know where I was going to put it or how it was going to fit into the decor, but I saw a photo on Pinterest that I LOVED and wanted to make my own version of it.



I used the paper punches again with some pretty cardstock and the scraps from my pages.

Process:
Use a ruler to mark off a small rod (I used a 3 foot rod) so that you can evenly space your hangings.
Measure out several lengths of string/fishing line/ribbon/twine. I just used white string. (Oh, and my "measuring) was having my husband hold his arm up in the air and cutting string from there to the floor - ha!
Tie your string to your dowel/rod where you marked it off. Add a small dot of glue to reinforce.
Lay dowel on floor and stretch out the strings.
Punch or cut out all of your circles/shapes and staack so they are ready to go.
If you have a focal point (mine were the book page flowers), place those next to the string so you know where you want to put them before attaching them. Place a small dab of hot glue on one piece of paper. Put it under the string, and place a secon piece on top of the string. Hold for a few seconds to firm up.
Repeat with all main pieces.
Use the same process for the smaller/colorful pieces.
Add small decorations to the rod to cover where you tied off the string. (I used the small tweed flowers from earlier, and a couple of the large pink paper flowers for the ends.)




I loved this - I just thought it was so cute! It took forever though - but it was worth it!

And lastly, *deep breath* a few inspiration photos that aren't exactly crafting, but I don't want to show the photos for from our party until the wrapup post.


Stay tuned for the next post - food!

For food, see Part 2 HERE.
For the full party recap, see Part 3 HERE.


Thursday, July 18, 2013

Success!

I recently had a successful shopping excursion and figured it might be the teensiest bit blog-worthy. I know it's not for everyone, but I'm a sucker for good deals and always have to brag a little when I get one - or in this case, three!

I've been doing a lot of crafting lately and I realized that I was out of pretty cardstock, but I needed some more to finish up one last project, so I decided to head on over to Hobby Lobby, which is basically my 2nd home - ha!

I headed on over to the scrapbooking area because even though I don't scrapbook, most of the stuff I do is considered "papercrafting" so that's where I usually stock up on most of my supplies. And then, something marvelous happened. All scrapbooking paper books were 50% off! I never ever EVER buy those books because they are $19.99 and as much as I love pretty paper, I just cannot justify dropping a twenty dollar bill on it. I had only intended to pick up about 5 sheets but at only $10, I just couldn't resist this book.






Once I got home I was able to finish up my last project, and I still have about 170 pages to spare for future projects - whoo-hoo! I know, I know, I am way too excited about paper... hey, I never claimed to be cool!

After that, I had the shopping bug and decided that while I was out, I might as well go and see if I could find a cute new dress to wear to a party this weekend. More success! I found a cute, summery dress AND some adorable little brown flats to pair it with for under $30 total! Sa-weet!!





I came home all excited and had to share with my husband the steals that I got. He was not nearly as excited as I was, but I'm just going to pretend that's because he was busy playing Call of Duty. Yes, I'm sure that was the reason his eyes started glazing over as I went on and on and on about my pretty paper...

Folks, denial is not just a river in Africa.

So, how about you? Have you scored any fabulous deals lately? I'd love to hear about them!


Husband Cooks.

So last weekend while I was working, Clinton decided to go through my newest Food Network magazine and pick out some recipes. He drafted a meal plan and went shopping for everything before picking me up at work later in the day. Since then, he has been cooking every night while I have been working on some crafty things (that will have their time on the blog at a later date!). I just wanted to brag a little bit and show y'all how lucky I am to have a husband that cooks just as much as I do - and he's pretty good at it!

IG photo of the white board in our dining room.

Sunday - Spicy Pasta with Tilapia


Review: We didn't dislike this dish, but we didn't love it either. Despite our best efforts, neither of us is a huge fan of tilapia, and we agreed that he should probably have only used 1/2 the box of pasta, since using the whole box absorbed a lot of the sauce. It was a perfectly acceptable Monday night meal though - and when I went to clean the dishes after my shower, I saw that he had already done that too. SCORE!

Monday - Salmon and Curried Lentils


Review: I loved this! Honestly though, I love salmon (it's probably my number one favorite food) so much that I will love any dish that has it! According to Clinton, this was his first time eating lentils (hint: it's not. I use them sometimes in soups, and to bulk up other dishes like tacos or certain crock pot meals), and he liked them. He said they tasted like "earthy oatmeal" - I personally thought they tasted more like beans, but either way, it was very tasty. The salmon was perfectly cooked and flaked effortlessly. Despite eating a snack after work, I still managed to clear my plate on this meal which NEVER happens. I was very full, but it was worth it!

Tuesday - Pork Chops and Pineapple Salsa with Jasmine Rice


Review: Very tasty! I'm not the world's biggest fan of pork so we rarely have it, but this was quite good. The pork chops and pineapple were grilled, and the pineapple salsa was made with some Chinese five spice which gave it a really nice, subtle heat, which was perfectly balanced by the slight sweetness of the jasmine rice. The pork was cooked to perfection and did not dry out at all. The pork chops were HUGE though, so I only ate 1/2 of mine. This is the only meal that I "helped" on at all, and really it was only because it was convenient - while Clinton was outside grilling, I was inside baking, so I cooked the rice on the stove top.

Wednesday - Turkey and Quinoa Salad


This. Was. AWESOME! I really love love love Mediterranean style food - I love eating meals that are lighter and with lots of vegetables - it feels nourishing, but then doesn't feel like it's just sitting in your belly, and this was the perfect meal for that! For plating he layered all the components, and then when I was eating it I just made sure to get a little bit of everything in each bite. It was filling and so so so good. Oh! And I forgot to take a second picture, but after I started eating it I remembered that we had some feta cheese in the fridge and thought it would enhance the dish, so we both added some of that to our bowls. DELICIOUS.

Thursday - BLTs and Grilled Sweet Potato Salad


Review: The BLT wasn't from a recipe or anything, it was just a BLT - But he toasted the bread, so major bonus points for that. I love toasted bread for sandwiches! The main part of this dish was the Sweet Potato Salad, and it was good! It tasted pretty vinegar-y so I wouldn't recommend it if you don't like that, but I do so it worked! I didn't eat it all just because I wasn't very hungry.

- - - - -

And thus ends this week's adventures in Husband Cooking! Hope you enjoyed reading about it as much as I enjoyed being a little spoiled this week!

Friday, July 12, 2013

Recipe - Parmesan Penne with Broccoli and Kielbasa

Last night I threw together this recipe for a quick and easy supper. My sweet husband helped himself to no less than three servings of it, so I figured it was blog-worthy!

Ingredients:

- 1 package turkey kielbasa sausage
- finely shredded parmesan cheese
- ricotta cheese
- broccoli (amount is totally up to you)
- your preferred pasta
- dried italian seasonings (basil, rosemary, oregano, parsley)
- extra virgin olive oil
- butter



Directions:

1) Pre-heat a large skillet and add a drizzle of the olive oil. Get a small pot of water boiling on another burner.

2) Open your package of turkey kielbasa, and slice it on the bias. (This stuff is pre-cooked and I usually don't buy it, but it was BOGO at the store last week! I usually buy uncooked chicken or turkey sausages so if you have those on hand that's fine too - just cook them first, and then slice them and add back to the pan.) Add the sliced sausage to the pre-heated pan. Add ~2 tsp. of italian seasonings. Stir occasionally, but allow the sausage to brown a little bit.

3) Meanwhile, while sausage is browning, cook your pasta. I only used 1/2 a box of mini penne. You can use any pasta you like, but I like this one because the penne gets sauce in the middle of the noodle for some extra flavor, plus is's substantial enough to hold up to the sausage.

4) Steam a bag of broccoli. Confession: I just used one of the microwave steamer bags of broccoli because it's way easier than dirtying another pan. I always have this on hand because we love broccolil in our house.

5) Drain pasta. Add cooked pasta and broccoli directly to your pan with the sausage. Add the following ingredients:
- 2 heaping Tbsp parmesan cheese
- 2 heaping Tbsp ricotta cheese
- 2 Tbsp butter
- salt and pepper
- drizzle of olive oil

6) Mix everything together, pile your servings up in a bowl, and top with more parmesan cheese if you like. Enjoy!

Yield: 4-6 servings, depending on your portions.

Sorry for the instagram filter, I didn't remember to take a regular photo!

This recipe is great because it literally takes about 10 minutes to make from start to finish. Even if you used uncooked sausage it would still probably only be a 20 minute meal, so it's perfect for a worknight. You can add other veggies to it too if you like (I think next time I'll throw in some fresh spinach) or tweak it to your taste. It would also be good meatless (I like to refer to myself as a part-time vegetarian), but definitely might need more veggies to bulk it up.

Also, as a small aside - there is a small possibility that last night was the peak of our boring-married-coupledom. There is a slight chance that I prepared and ate supper before 5pm because I was tired and wanted to go to bed really early. That might have happened. Maybe. I'll never tell.

Easy Isn't Always Easy.

You know how there are things that every able-bodied human should be able to do? There's always at least one guy who, despite the odds being stacked in his favor, just simply cannot do those things. I think I might be that guy.

I was thinking about this last night as I fell asleep. I had a traumatizing experience at work yesterday that brought it to light. I was coaching one of the reps on my team, and at the end of our session (which went very well, and ended on a high note), he laughed and put his hand up for a high five. My stress level went from about 2 to 10 in oh, I don't know, half a second. Why, you ask? Here's the dirty truth:

I am terrible - terrible - at high fiving.

COME ON. Who can't high five? Me. I can't. I can't high five. I had a moment of panic trying to decide whether I should go for it or not - I did, but it was weak. I am totally incapable of giving the cool movie high fives where you run and smack someone's hand and it makes a totally sweet noise. Unless you want to lose an eye, don't ever expect an enthusiastic high five from me! I high five the way I imagine cotton candy or marshmallows or cotton balls might high five. My high fives are full of fluff and trepidation, and they certainly don't leave a lasting impression. I mean, of course, unless I really go for it, in which case I'll probably get my thumb stuck in your nose. It wouldn't be pretty. So I just stick with my fluffy fives.

Don't ask me why I am so bad at this - I don't know. My husband teases me mercilessly for it but I'm not even mad, I totally deserve to be teased for that. It's not like I have bad aim or my depth perception is otherwise off so I seriously don't understand where it comes from - and the ridiculous thing is that it's a self-fulfilling prophecy. Someone goes for the high five, I get nervous and overthink it, and then I totally butcher it thanks to my flying hand anxiety. RIDICULOUS. I can't even deal with this.

Another example I can think of off the top of my head is a word that I can't pronounce. I can NOT say horseradish. I mean, I can say it if I say it reeeeeeally slow, but I can't say it the way that a normal person would just say an ordinary word. I always say HORSHradish and I annoy even myself with that. Maybe it's because I grew up with an English teach for a mom, but mispronunciation of words really bugs me, so the fact that I do it myself irritates me more than I can even explain.

I also can't whistle, but I don't think that's quite as outrageous as the other two, so it barely made the cut for this entry.

Honestly, I don't know how I get through life. #failure #hashtagsdontexistonbloggerbutidontcare

On the other hand, my adorable husband cannot say abominable - so at least I've got that one thing on him.

What about you? Anything you should be able to do but can't? Seriously, I'd love to know so that I don't feel ridiculous out here on my own in Not-A-Successful-Human Land.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

30 Before 30

Here's something I've seen floating around the blogosphere lately - it's basically a Bucket List for your twenties full of things you want to do before you turn 30. I've been working on this list for awhile and I think I've got it narrowed down now, so I'm gonna post it here and occasionally re-post as I knock things off the list. I turn 30 in June 2016, so I've got some time to do this stuff. Hopefully my blog will still be around by then!

1. Get a 2nd dog. Emmy needs a friend!
2. Host a New Year’s Eve party.
3. Buy a house.
4. Have a baby.
5. Play my saxophone in public again.
6. See a Mavericks home game.
7. Visit Mount Rushmore.
8. Go to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter.
9. See a waterfall up close (not a tiny one).
10. Hike the Grand Canyon.
11. Cut my hair short again. Done! See here.
12. Vacation in Seattle.
13. See P!nk in concert.
14. See Prince in concert. Done! But I haven't blogged about it yet.
15. Take a real road trip. The several stops, drive for at least 10 hour stretches kind.
16. Complete Couch to 5K.
17. Vacation in San Francisco.
18. Learn to play the piano.
19. Make an apple pie from scratch.
20. Make every single recipe from at least one of my Bobby Flay books.
21. Read 50 books.
22. Touch a manatee.
23. Pull an all-nighter, just to prove to myself that I still can.
24. Build something from scratch, all by myself.
25. Get a new tattoo.
26. Host a fancy sit-down dinner party, with Beef Wellington as the main dish.
27. Buy a new car.
28. Visit at least 3 more MLB stadiums.
29. See a live comedy show.
30. Visit either a brewery or a vineyard/winery.