Saturday, January 30, 2016

Wavy Moss Hat - Long Distance Hug

I have a dear friend, let's call her May, that has had not the best month.  January is supposed to come with feelings of renewal and potential, but hers has not quite been so.  I live half a state away and sadly have to comfort and encourage her from a distance, when all I want to do is have her coach me through making her a good bloody Caesar and proceed to talk and hug it out.

Over the last month she has not been directly physically, emotionally, or professionally harmed.  Her friends have.  With the heart this girl has, bad things happening to friends feels just as horrible if not more so.


My solution is of course to knit.  I knit her my version of a hug from a distance and sent it with a loving note including a cute squirrel picture or two.

I know knitting doesn't come close to making the bad feel better.  Only time does that.  But she might as well pass that time in something made of yarn made my someone who loves her dearly.

In my world, yarn is love and it forever will be.






Thursday, January 28, 2016

Trying my hand at Brioche

I've only ever seen pictures of knitted brioche.  The way the colors intertwined mesmerized me and I convinced myself it was "too advanced" or "too fussy" for me.  I'm here to tell you that I was wrong and appreciate brioche for what it is: clever and actually very simple double knitted ribbing.  Seriously, it's very easy!  If you can do basic ribbing and know how to yarn over, you can make this happen.  Trust me! 

Now, I don't do much knitting requiring more than one color (making two custom Christmas stockings out of acrylic the first year the Husband and I were married put me off to color work for a while), but brioche is essentially knitting horizontal stripes without letting anyone know.  Each row alternates between each color, and you simply knit together a yarn over with the previous row.

Ok, I'm just making it confusing.  The pattern from Purl Bee is A LOT better at explaining than I am.  I used their pattern for the Brioche Cowl, but cut down the stitches from 218 to 124 to make it a single wrap cowl.  Find my Ravelry project page here.  So far, I love the results.  I always knew there was a reason I stored these two colors in the same baggie after all of these years.



For this project I used some stashed Knit Picks' Wool of the Andes Worsted Yarn in Tranquil (teal) and Fairy Tale (magenta).  This picture totally doesn't do the colors justice, but I love how each color pops between the other.  Note to self: Get off the couch and out of your yellow-walled family room to take some descent project pictures that actually show them off once in a while!

Now that brioche is firmly in my "I can do this" camp, here are a few other brioche projects that I've promptly put into my favorites.

Kennermerland hat, cowl, and mitten set by Alexandra Richards

Vintage Deco wrap/scarf by Nancy Merchant (frankly, I should just include her whole collection)

High Vibe by Maiko Hikosaka

Shallow End Brioche Accent Pillow by Trudianne Temple

Ah, Brioche.  Let's be friends forever.....

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

The Rainbow Fish Cowl has been Flushed

The Rainbow Fish Cowl has been flushed....  making a joke of it didn't make me feel better.  I thought it would.  Damn.

I made it through nearly 6 inches of this 280 stitch double wrap cowl before diving into my second skein.  Only to realize that the pinks were way more "pinky" in the second, and the gorgeous teal was pretty much nonexistent.  After having to redo the cast on several times to begin with (280 stitches on size 8 needles needs a long long long tail cast on, yo), it was so painful to rip it out.


After nice strong beer that night and a feel good movie, I have resolved to take this as a lesson to alternate between skeins within a large garment, and will be making something a bit different now that I'm back at square one.  I decided that I'm going to make a single wrap cowl along with a matching headband and fingerless mitts.  It'll be a cute little set that will still have the twisted rib and slip stitch "fish scale" elements of the first.

But for now, I need another project to take my mind off of the tragedy that is frogging... flushing... whatever I want to call it.  My twin nephews' birthdays are coming up in March... and I think they may need a neck warmer that goes with their adorable fox jackets my mom made them :)



Sunday, January 17, 2016

Musings About Christmas Yarn

For Christmas my wonderful husband's big present to me was a box full of yarn.  Delicious, spectacular, colorful YARN!!!!  While opening presents, we were in our PJ's and sitting next to our gas fireplace.  All warm and cozy, and even then, I kid you not, I got chills when I opened this box of yarn.

My fellow yarn lovers will know, a box of yarn can be a magical thing.  It is not just delicately twisted, dyed, and wound up string of varying thicknesses.  It is potential.

I'm going to get a little nerdy, so bear with me here.  If you're learning basic physics one of the topics when studying energy and force is potential energy.  The most basic example of potential energy is placing (to keep us at least a bit on subject) a ball of yarn at the top of a hill.  Although, of course, none of us would ever subject our precious yarn to touch outdoor ground unless the house was on fire and the only way to save the stash would be to toss it out the window.

While at the top of this hypothetical hill, the yarn has the potential to roll down the hill with its 100g mass with the help of gravity and the height of the hill.  Potential energy is the energy stored in an object, such as this yarn at the top of the hill... but I don't think that's quite true in the figurative sense, at least not when it comes to yarn.

The potential in yarn goes so much farther than a skein's relative mass and distance above ground.

When opening that box of yarn you ordered to make family and friends Christmas presents, sometime around August and September, you don't see hours and hours of selfless knitting for others.  You see the look on their faces when they open and pull out the personalized garment of their favorite colors made just to fit them and their personality.  Even if you never see this FO again, you will hold in your memory their faces and how their hands lovingly touched what you knitted for them as they eagerly put it on.

When I opened that box of yarn the Husband got me this year for Christmas, I saw hours and hours of selfish knitting... for once!  After knitting selfless gifts for the last few months, this is the best present I could have hoped for.  Of course the yarn, but the gift of the potential.

Here is how some of that potential is coming along so far.  I'm preemptively calling this the Rainbow Fish cowl.  I'll work on publishing the pattern when I'm finished and satisfied.  I'm using Knit Pick's Hawthorne Sport Multi in Happy Valley.  You can find my Ravelry project page here.

Monday, January 11, 2016

Loaded Black Bean Soup

Do you ever have those days where you know you ate too much earlier in the day and you know darn well you shouldn't have much for dinner?  Lunch almost always ends up being the largest meal of the day for me.  This is usually because I pack a ton of veggies or fruit to eat along with my proper lunch of a soup, rice dish, or salad.

This lovely soup came about around New Years when the Husband was determined as all-get-out to meet one of his goals for 2015: to get under 184 pounds.  This was a goal he had reached earlier this summer, from starting at just over 200 lbs last January.  Since summer, however, he had become more lax, and of course Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas came to pass with endless goodies around.  For him, he considered this goal a failure if he didn't achieve this goal just before midnight of the new year.

(Now, for the record, I asked about the logic of achieving your goal only on New Years, rather than making healthy habit for a lifetime... in the Husband's mind, a goal is a goal, so I went along and try to steer him as healthy as I could.)

So, for the last week or so before New Years, he dropped all beer from his diet (leaving me to have my occasional evening wine glass to myself).  Three days before New Years he was at the gym daily sweating it out.  Two days before New Years he severely limited his food and drank green tea almost constantly.

Now, fundamentally, I don't have an issue with dropping beer (other than we just bought a keg for our kegerator and now it is sitting idly in the garage), and I don't have an issue with him going to the gym religiously as long as he's not hurting himself.  I DO have an issue with not eating.

So, in an effort to help him to achieve his goal while coaxing him to eat some decent food and not go hungry, I made this Black Bean Soup from Jill Nussinow's pressure cooking cookbook, The New Fast Food, and altered it a bit to include more veggies, more spices, more beans, and some corn.  When calculated out, this large 8+ cup recipe serves 6 and is under 200 calories per serving.

This recipe can EASILY be adapted for the stovetop with a bit more cooking time and using only canned beans.  Please see my notes below.

Loaded Black Bean Soup
Print this recipe!
(adapted from Jill Nossinow's original recipe, which you can find here)
Serves: 6
Time: 10 minute prep, 5 minute saute, 7 minute high pressure, natural pressure release, 1 minute high pressure, quick release

Ingredients:
1 large onion, chopped
1 Tbsp minced garlic
3 large carrots, peeled and diced
3 large celery ribs, diced
1 Tbsp ground cumin
1 tsp smoked paprika
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper (more or less to taste)
1 bay leaf
2 tsp dried oregano (or 2 Tbsp fresh)
1 1/2 cups dried black beans, soaked for 8 hours
6 cups vegetable broth (homemade or low sodium preferred)
........................................................
1 can black beans, rinsed and drained
1 cup frozen corn, not thawed
........................................................
salt to taste
cilantro to garnish
soy yogurt or sour cream to top (optional)

Instructions:
  1. Prepare all ingredients before beginning.
  2. Sauté the onion and garlic for 2-3 minutes in a heated pressure cooker, adding water as needed to prevent burning.  Add in the carrot, celery, and spices.  Stir well to mix and sauté for 2 more minutes.
  3. Add in the soaked dried beans and vegetable broth.  Lock the lid and set to cook at high pressure for 7 minutes (those with an InstantPot can alternatively use the soup function for 7 minutes).  When the timer is done, allow the pressure to come down naturally.
  4. After the pressure has been released, carefully remove the lid.  Use an immersion blender, or scoop several cups of the soup into a blender.  Blend until about half of the soup is creamy, leaving quite a few small chunks behind.
  5. Add in the canned black beans and frozen corn.  Lock the lid and set to cook at high pressure for 1 minute.  Once the minute is up, carefully quick release the pressure.
  6. Serve hot with cilantro to garnish and soy yogurt/sour cream to top.  Leftovers will thicken up in the fridge and the flavors will marinade to make the soup even better the next day!

Notes for adapting for the stovetop:
  1. Prepare all ingredients before beginning.
  2. In a large soup pot, water sauté the onion and garlic.  Add in the carrot, celery, and spices.  Stir well to mix and sauté for 2 more minutes.
  3. Add in 2 cans of washed and drained black beans along with the vegetable broth.  Bring to a boil, reduce heat and simmer for 20 minutes with the lid on.
  4. Use an immersion blender to blend about half of the soup.
  5. Add in the 3rd can of rinsed and drained black beans as well as the frozen corn and cook for an additional 10 minutes without the lid.
  6. Serve hot with cilantro garnish and soy yogurt/sour cream to top.  Leftovers will thicken up in the fridge and the flavors will marinade to make the soup even better the next day!
Nutritional Info (as calculated on MyFitnessPal.com)
Serving size: 1.5-2 cups soup
Servings per recipe: 6
Calories: 174; Total Fat: 1 g; Cholesterol 0 g; Sodium (varies with broth and added salt) mg; Potassium 314 mg; Total Carbohydrate 45 g; Dietary Fiber 21 g; Sugars 5 g; Protein 14 g