Saturday, September 25, 2021

Good day yesterday

What with perfect weather, knitting group with new member Fumiko,  fearless leader Meg with current work, golden soup, skirt going well, what more could a person ask?

And the America's Test kitchen book, which needed its own wheels, arrived. 

Here's the doings.


Gathering the skirt into the waistband. This is a tricky operation, where despite all the pinning prep, you still need to adjust the gathers with the tip of your needle as you go.

I realized that this tiny series of adjustments is something nobody taught me in words, just by  example. I remember my mom and my needlework teacher doing it as she gathered, to preserve the tiny gathers in good order. 

It's the advantage you have of the inadvertent teaching you get in childhood, those subtle skills that make a lot of difference to your results. 

 
Here's a section of the gathering in process

And today I'll finish the waistband, running elastic through the waistband to draw it up snug. After that, deciding on length and hemming and I'm done. Or the skirt is, whichever happens first.

And speaking of skills, here's knitting group leader, reference librarian Meg, holding up her shawl in progress. 

She had great skills demos in childhood, too, with a mother and grandmother who knitted, sewed, gardened, had nursing skills. 

So when she was adult she was able to take up beekeeping, gardening, knitting and really started as more than a beginner. This was alongside a career in the book wholesaling world, marriage and children. 

 Her "beginning" knitting a few years ago, was almost instantly expert. Likewise she tried her hand at small tapestry weaving, and made beautiful works. She just has those latent skills waiting to be used. She's thinking of crocheting next! Maybe embroidery, though her family expertise might be a bit intimidating, what with heirloom pieces.

And while I was at the library, I picked up what turned out to be such a heavy book they'd held it for me at the counter instead of the high shelf my alphabetic place would be, fearing it could flatten whoever lifted it down.


I didn't realize, when I requested it, that it was every recipe for the twenty years of the television show, plus notes and sources and explanations of the chemistry. Mainly I want ideas rather than recipes. 

I'm also starting to keep track, for interest and for avoiding repetition, of the monthly dinners for Handsome Son. The blog came in handy here, memory failing.

And here's the soup for our October dinner, a golden one of butternut squash, red lentils and carrots, with a chicken stock. I'll have the cook's sample today and the rest is in the freezer.


Such a lovely color, great fall produce. Reminded me to get a pumpkin for the front step.

And here's one of my favorite accounts on Twitter, a maker of miniature animals and dioramas. 

Here's one, a still from a brief video, of a tiny animal coming out at night in secret to read. She and Maggie Rudy keep me going.

Here's to another lovely day. 


19 comments:

  1. Well I definitely think you can get an idea or two from that book! Yes, m'am!

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  2. I love your creativity. I just read that to be creative is one of the best things we can be as we age. I think you are way ahead of the game. Have a nice weekend.

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  3. I'm glad you found a copy of America's Test kitchen book. That is a newer version than mine as I think they update it every year. Yes, it is huge! Your skirt is looking good. I love the bright, happy color.

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    1. This one includes this year and an account of how they were operating from their home kitchens!

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  4. I still have three small butternuts from the compost pile bonanza and I've been considering making soup from them. we had our first taste of fall but I'll probably wait til fall is a little more regular.

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  5. Happy Heavy Cookbook!
    The skirt will be a bright spot in your wardrobe.

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    1. The book is 1100 pages. I had expected one year of programs, not 21!

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  6. My husband is practically perfect, but he does not like winter squash. Whereas I love winter squash so much that my grandmother used to stuff a small acorn squash in the toe of my Christmas stocking, while my siblings found the traditional orange.

    It took me many years to realize that I could make squash soups (and other squash dishes) for myself. Such a wonderful indulgence! That is all to say that your soup looks FABULOUS! As does the coming-along skirt!

    The knitting group is able to meet in person again? Your Fearless Leader sounds both highly skilled and with a twinkle in her eye.

    Don't drop that cookbook on your toe. Do have fun with recipe-tweaking.

    Chris from Boise

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    1. Butternut is the only squash, winter or summer, that I can tolerate. I've grown and tried many, hated them all but bnut. It's the only one with its own flavor to my way of tasting. And the color is a definite plus.

      We met, three people, distanced, masked, windows open! It's literally the only time, an hour and a half a week, that I'm in a room talking with people. It's precious time.

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  7. I love the colors in your skirt and your friend's shawl and that diorama is very cute. I wonder what portion of that 1100 pages is vegetarian? and if you would share with me your current soup ingredient list? Did you blitz it before serving?

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    1. I suspect a lot of the book is about meat. Most recipe books are. But there are useful tips about food chemistry which are applicable to a lot of situations. I'm not in it for the recipes as much as the ideas.

      Current soup: large butternut squash, big handful of red lentils, double handful of carrot slices, same of onions, stock, I forget if it was veggie or chicken, seasoned with big blurt of turmeric, kosher salt, Old Bay. Brought to boil, simmered about 45 minutes, blended with stick blender, simmered a bit longer, milk powder stirred in. The pumpkin was so big, several pounds, that I ended up with eight helpings of thick soup.

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  8. Oh my goodness, that knitting project made my jaw drop. She has some mad skills! Looks like you'd almost need a small truck to haul that cookbook around but I imagine it's fascinating to look through. Just don't try to do so in bed because if you ever fell asleep with it, no doubt it could give you a concussion (or worse!).

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    1. I can't even carry it upstairs, no worries about reading it in bed!

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