Posted on 12/03/2022 5:57:11 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin
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Thanks, Pete!
Must be nice to have something blooming, but I’ve always been a ‘Four Seasons Gal’ and I love the down-time of Winter. :)
Those ‘helpers’ are cuter every week! Somehow I just knew there would be a Christmas-themed doggie sweater involved, LOL!
Are you still getting that new puppy? I am getting Puppy Fever these days. Hoping I can hold off until Spring. ;)
These two links have absolutely nothing to do with gardening, but in the Spirit of the Season, they were too good not to share.
Eight Hours of Vintage Department Store Christmas Music:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2tx5NHDcHA
The 2023 Master List of Reading Challenges:
https://www.girlxoxo.com/the-2023-master-list-of-reading-challenges/
Merry, Merry! Happy, Happy! :)
Yes on the puppy.
My daughter is picking her up on the 15th of December after she’s had all of her shots and some training.
They just got brand new (expensive) rugs for their home which I didn’t think was a good idea with a new puppy. I suggested they put them away for at least a few months.
The Complete Book of Composting has an insane amount of info, 1,000 pages. Bigger than any others in my list.
We have a neighbor that is currently composting a horse. Another guy I know composts his goats when they pass.
It’s actually an efficient process. Not suggesting it for humans, though, LOL!
I need to add Elliot Coleman’s books to our list. :)
I particularly love the touch of blue in it.
One of my dearest friends and my hiking companion virtually every weekend for a couple of years (we did about 1,500 miles together), got lost in a snowstorm & died in the Sierra Nevada mountains in 2005. It took a year to find/recover him. I was crushed, more than I can describe - the ‘sharp edges’ of losing him have dulled a lot, but the grief still lingers.
Anyway, he is in a Vet’s cemetery about 45 minutes away. He loved the outdoors, nature, lived a simple, frugal, unpretentious life. For the first 5 years or so, I made him a Christmas wreath every year .... red nandina berries, running cedar (our woods are loaded with it), cedar (especially with blue berries - lots of that, too), pine, maybe some cones .... they turned out really nice. I would get the forms/stand at AC Moore (which is now Michael’s). The first one was tough, but I got pretty good at making them. After NEEDING to go see/talk to him after he ‘came home’ for the first couple of years, I don’t need to go to the cemetery any more like I used to, but I think of him all the time.
From my experience, I can highly recommend making wreaths out of things you find in the yard/fields/nearby woods - beautiful, meaningful & satisfying. Also, we have a book showing the wreaths that decorate Williamsburg & instructions for making a basic wreath. These wreaths are made from naturals (no ‘fake’ anything in Colonial days!), including a lot of fruit - they’re gorgeous. There is one that is mostly pine cones & seed pods ... so beautiful - gave my niece the book for that wreath alone. I think she has on her property what it would take to make it.
For those not familiar with the Colonial Williamsburg decorations, you can scroll through & see many of them here:
https://www.qwant.com/?client=ext-firefox-sb&t=images&q=colonial+williamsburg+wreaths
I lost my BFF, Cathy, to cancer over a decade ago. You’re right about it not hurting as much, but the grief does linger. I ‘talk’ to her all the time, though. We laugh a lot. ;)
And you’d think I’d be sick to death of Christmas wreathes and bows and all that Holly Folly after selling thousands of Christmas Trees, Wreaths, miles of Garland and making at least 10,000 BOWS at the Garden Center, but strangely, I’m not!
Finishing up Christmas Decorating, today; still have the Mantle and the Dining Room Table to finish. I told Beau I’d have the house back in order by today.
I moved my tall porch planter to the kitchen window, covered it in evergreen boughs and red twig dogwood, put a plate in the middle and filled it with birdseed & peanuts. I’ve got Blue Jays right in my kitchen window and all kinds of finches and juncos and nuthatches. The cats are especially loving it. Cat TV, LOL!
First Christmas Party, tonight. I am so READY to Holly Jolly! :)
Wish I had your Bacon Socks to wear, LOL!
Thanks for the great pictures. Love the Christmas one, did you make the tree skirt? Cute idea.
Thanks for sharing - fun to hear about other folks who liked the book and used it for making wreaths, decorations.
There is one decoration I would love to make for this year - it’s a “tree” made of oranges, with cloves poked in the oranges. Mmmmmmm ..... I can just imagine the glorious smell of oranges & cloves!
Here’s a link to a pic of something similar:
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/89227636345416731/
You can also make Christmas ‘balls’ with the oranges & cloves:
My mom was taking deviled eggs to a ladies luncheon Thursday. I have to make the eggs for her & I pipe in the filling & sprinkle with paprika (put in an empty salt shaker - works like a charm). The eggs are pretty enough, but she had a platter where the eggs go around the outside. She wanted to put some olives/sweet gherkins in the middle. Her initial thought was to put them on lettuce. I went to the garden and picked some rosemary & got some red nandina berries and decorated the center of the platter, alternating with the gherkinss/olives. Boy, was it pretty & VERY seasonal! The other thing I loved - the smell of the rosemary ... again, mmmmm ..... ‘delicious’!! :-)
We will remember you said that when they are all underfoot next year. LOL
That does sound pretty. Sometimes instead of paprika on deviled eggs, I use organic tomato powder. Same color but a nice tomato taste that goes great with the eggs.
I am the “expert” (in the family) on making deviled eggs, so I am always the one asked to bring them. Normally, making them is no big deal, but I had a ‘disaster’ Thanksgiving morning. My pastry tip kept clogging - I thought I had gotten it all mixed well (using my stick blender ‘processer’ unit), but evidently not. I ended up with filling squirting out of the top of my pastry bag - it was awful! I finally got enough egg halves filled to make a tray (holds 20). The rest was not ‘pipe-able’ so I chopped up the remaining whites, mixed it with leftover filling & had egg salad.
The eggs I made Thursday were the best ever! Mom had accidentally used up the sweet pickle relish (which will also clog the pastry tip when piping) so I used sweet gherkin juice. The juice worked two ways - flavor AND it thinned the filling instead of having to use more mayo. Boy, those eggs were just delicious & the filling piped like a dream! Sweet gherkin juice will be my go-to ingredient from now on.
I was not aware of tomato powder - will have to look into that ..... or do you make your own? I DO have a dehydrator that I rarely use. I got it initially to dehydrate tuna for backpacking trips - too stinky to do inside so I would do it on the front porch .... I think every neighborhood cat was attracted to the tuna smell, wafting on the breeze (LOL)!
I got my tomato powder on Amazon, link here -
I have never used a pastry bag, I always use a quart ziploc. Put all the ingredients inside, close bag, mush it up by hand and then cut a tiny corner and pipe it into the whites. Then the best part, throw the bag away.
Here is our old family favorite. Classic Christmas carols done the classic way, not all jazzed up.
Christmas Sing-along Mitch
Mitch Miller and the Gang
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHnRj3uwOOemcW0VZ5Puu7N54bX09c9T7
Thanks for the link!
I’ve done the ziploc method before - finally “splurged” (not much) & got a tip/bag. The bag cleans up easy if you do it right away. The tip makes for gorgeous swirled filling .... people “eat with their eyes” so I think that’s one reason the deviled eggs are so popular plus, there’s one guy in the family who would probably eat the whole batch if he weren’t so polite!
Indeterminate beefsteak tomato is reaching for the moon. Nearing 7 feet tall. Also growing yellow plum and mortgage lifter.
Salad table is percolating tom thumb, red romaine, and freckles lettuce, green and scarlet scallions, baby carrots, radishes.
More container gardening with russet potatoes, broccoli, turnips, beets, red creole onions, and slow-to-germinate celery. Additional tomato seedlings will be planted over the next few days and weeks. These include black cherry, red cherry, sungold and little blonde girl.
I am my own worst enemy, LOL!
The Spice House makes a nice Tomato Powder. I like either that or their (Spanish) Smoked Paprika on top of Deviled Eggs.
I think you can buy both in a Flat Pack and they ship those for free.
https://www.thespicehouse.com/
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