Sunday, December 16, 2012

Bacon Wrapped Shrimp

People often use scallops to wrap in bacon. But, scallops are a bit more fussy to cook and wrap. They are also really expensive in the larger sizes. I used shrimp. Don't skimp on the size of the shrimp. They need to be big enough to grab and work with.  Size 21-30 was the size I used, but colossal or other large sizes are also good. 

Bacon Wrapped Shrimp
1 large package Boar's Head Bacon (16 oz). You want a good-quality bacon that has a nice flavor.
2 lbs - 21-30 count shrimp (raw, uncooked. I like to leave the tail on)
wood tooth-picks

Clean shrimp. In my case, I use de-veined with tail on. So, I remove the carapace (body armor) and legs, but leave the tail intact. The tail gives people something to hold onto! Rinse shrimp in cold water and let drain on a paper-towel. {sprinkle with your chosen spices if you elect to add them}

In a microwave, half-cook the bacon. You want it totally flexible but partially cooked. So, experiment with your particular microwave. By half-cooking the bacon, you'll ensure that you don't overcook the fast-cooking shrimp. From this point on, work quickly since the bacon is languishing in the "food danger zone."

Turn grill on high (aiming to 400F).

Wrap each shrimp in a piece of bacon. Whenever possible, cut the bacon lengthwise with kitchen scissors and use narrow strips. Using a wood toothpick, secure the bacon. It works well if you use an in-an-out motion as if you were sewing. Set the wrapped shrimp aside. 

If you have an assistant, they can start cooking the shrimp. At this point, ignore the bacon. The only concern during cooking on the grill is to time the cooking to ensure that the shrimp is cooked properly. Gill on one side until they just start to turn color.Flip and finish cooking. They should be removed from the grill before they are totally done. It takes about 4-6 minutes in total, once your grill is up to temperature. Remove from heat. Serve warm.

*a note on food safety. You are working with raw pork and fish, then partially cooked pork. Work quickly and keep the cold stuff cold until needed. If you are working in a warm climate (or very warm kitchen), keep the shrimp iced until wrapped. Quickly cook the shrimp in smaller batches so the wrapped-bacon does not linger in the 'food danger zone'.  Also, I would tend NOT to re-heat unused shrimp, rather use is cold. 

**There are tons of recipes that include cheese, jalapenos, asian spices, garlic-ginger marinade  and every other taste option. These are probably lovely. I was making these with my 3-year old son in mind, so avoided some of the stronger flavors. But, experiment and make these your own.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Childhood Christmas Memories, Fried Bow-tie Cookies

For every person, there is something that their mother or grandmother made for the holidays that they still think about. It is "the" part of the meal that you look forward to. It is the taste, smell and texture of the holidays. In my family, we would all gather in the kitchen (after working all day at the bakery) and cook for the holiday. That one food that is the Christmas season, to me, are pinolata cookies. These are simple cookies that are deep fried and then drenched in honey. They are crispy and drenched in honey. Did I mentioned drenched in honey?

In the north of italy they make towers of balls called Stroffoli. In Sicily, from where my peeps hail, they make bow-ties, called crostoli in Naples. In my family, they are called pin-ya-lat. The base ingredients are so simple: flour, baking powder, eggs, salt. That is it.  Some families add wine, lemon zest, and vermouth. In my family, not such adornment was used. The most humble of ingredients made the base of my childhood memory.


Once I was diagnosed as a celiac, my mom and I tried to make these using rice flour. They were an utter, gritty failure. We tried again and again, all were total failures. We tried using fancy binding ingredients and bean flours. All awful  Eventually, we stopped trying and accepted that, perhaps, they could not be made GF. After a 15 year hiatus, I decided to try again. I've learned so much about gluten free cooking. I now know that you can't simply replace flour with rice flour. Nope, it takes some blending and chemistry. Also, I also know that you must, must use superfine flours in baking.


Here is my recent version. I think they are successful, but the true test will be from my mom. I stuck very close to my grandmother's ingredients, but changed the flour to GF and added just a tiny bit of sugar to the dough. The honey that will be served over these will be sweet enough, but I wanted to slightly mask the rice taste.


Pinolata Cookies

flours (follow Glutenfree Girl and the Chef's guidance on making 40/60 flour to starch, all purpose guidance)
3/4 c superfine brown rice flour (this MUST be superfine)
1/2 c tapioca starch (or flour, same thing)
3/4 c sweet rice flour 

other
2 tsp. baking powder
1/8 tsp. salt
2 tsp. sugar
3 eggs
1 T butter (melted, but not too hot)
peanut oil (for frying)

Instructions Sift together the brown rice flour, tapioca starch, sweet rice flour, baking powder and salt in a separate bowl. In food processor, place the 3 eggs. Mix for about 2 minutes. Drizzle in butter and sugar.  Add the dry stuff and mix some more. The dough will form a nice, smooth textured ball. Just at all looking like gluten-containing flour. This is correct. Do not thin the dough to make is look like normal GF dough.

Cut the ball into 8-10 equal pieces. Keep covered with a clean towel. Place a ball between two sheet of parchment paper. Roll to paper-thin consistency. Really, super thin. Take off upper sheet of parchment paper and then slice into 1 1/4 inch wide strips, no more than 4 in long. They don't have to be exact. 
Use a thin, sharp knife to release each strip. Use thumb and pointer finger to squish the center, gently, to form a bow-tie. Stack them up and keep them covered with a towel. 

In the meantime, heat peanut oil to 350 F. Once Add bow-ties to oil 3-4 at a time. Fry 15 to 30 seconds, or until golden or lightly browned; turn. Using tongs remove first stripes. Drain over skillet, then drain completely on paper towels. Continue with rest of the bow ties cooking 3-4 at a time. 

 Store in tightly covered container up to 3 weeks


Honey Topping (TBD) - I'm still waiting for details from my mom!

Friday, March 2, 2012

Kite Quilt

My hubby resurrected one of our older computers so that we'd have a working one at home. All drives from our old machine have been saved, so we didn't lose anything. Whew. 

My 2-year old and I have had a rotten cold. We are both on the mend, so hopefully I'm back on a weekly posting schedule. 

free-pieced kites
I've been working on a "scrap" kite quilt. I use the word gently. I'm tend to prefer more contemporary quilts with less of a scrappy look. However, I've been cutting my scraps into fixed sizes, so finally had enough to do something. I'm not sure why, but I decided to do a kite quilt. This will live in our living room and will be one of the only quilts, to date, that I've made explicitly for us. 



After perusing photos online, I free-pieced a bunch of kites. These are on my informal design door (a unused curtain tucked over the top of my door). There are a few more. These range from totally free pieced and then cut to size (like the trapezoid in the bottom left) to log-cabin style kites (two in the upper right). I also experimented with other shapes . This was a lot of fun and totally doable while my son and husband were in the same room watching truck videos (my son's current obsession). 
background for kite quilt on design wall

After making a bunch of these, trying to vary the sizes, I had to decide on a background. I thought straight lines would be busy and too boring with this approach. So, I went with large blocks of curved fabrics in tonals that range from medium to light in the "sky" of the quilt. Here is the background on my larger design wall. This is just a piece of white flannel hanging from a set of Elfa shelves. I have a plan to make a better one, but this is fine for now. There is still a gap between the blue sky and the green ground. Since I will be directly piecing these curves, rather than applique, I wanted to get the bulk of the background sewn before I fill in that last curved area. Not sure if it will be sky or ground yet.  

I learned the basic method of curve sewing from Alicia Merrett's videos on YouTube entitled "Contemporary Art Quilt Demonstration (3 parts). Her videos are amazingly clear and her work is stunning. Here is the first of her three videos. 



I've used this method on a number of projects. Batiks are a bit more resistant to ease the curves, but it is still totally achievable. It just takes a bit of patience. I'd recommend starting on non-batiks.

Take a look at Sew What You Love a great sewing book of fun projects. Author is Tanya Whelan of Grand Revival Design. Great photos and instructions. Lots of bags and little kid clothes.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Technical issues...

Hi everyone. Our home computer died unexpectedly. So, I have not been able to write any posts. I'll be back as soon as I can.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Working on a Tutorial....Busy this week

In between naps (the baby's naps...not mine..oh...for the time to nap) and work, I've been working on a tutorial for a block with paper-piecing, circles, and reverse (or traditional) applique. The design is still working it's way through my mind, but I hope to have it up next month.  I'm pretty busy this week between planning a friend's baby shower and my mom visiting. Keep posted any of you that are peaking at my pages. I had a high of 100 views in one day! Wow! 

Monday, January 30, 2012

"Free Motion Madness" Taught by Diane Loomis

If you have never heard of Diane Loomis, I can't recommend finding out about her work enough...and, click to look at her stuff up close. You will be amazed. In her showpiece quilts, some of the free motion designs are pea-sized circles. And they are all perfect circles. I mean OMG!!


Diane Loomis tracing a stencil with fabric marker to demonstrate
doing so without a pounce/chalk option. She explained that we could
use all or only a part of the design. Sorry about the bad lighting Diane!
Diane taught a class at Wayside Sewing. Day 1, we arrived on a Friday night at 6 pm and worked until 10 pm. The bulk of the time was spent on "learning" the basics. The class participants ranged from total novices to old pros. I fell somewhere in the middle skill-wise. Much of the beginning material she covered was pretty standard quilting stuff. But, the details are what set her quilting apart from the typical. She uses wool batting (to keep it poofy), silk 100 weight thread, size 70 sharp needle, and silk-sateen fabric. 


Cathy from the class showing how we
learned to free-motion grid line. Look
ma, no walking foot!
These changes in materials mean that you need to spend a lot of time getting the tension just right and the technique just right. Using only a size 70 needle means you have to really time your hands and material perfectly during free motion or 'plink'...broken needle. I broke 2 before I got in a good timing. The real meat of the class was on Day 2, running from 10 am to 3 pm. In that time, we had to finish our practice piece from Day 1 (or as much as we wanted) and get our 'official' one sandwiched. But, before you sandwich the quilt, you have to mark the top. I just learned this. See, I've never marked a quilt top. I had not idea you could use a stencil and then free motion it. 


So, on my 'official' piece, I choose copper silk sateen with a star that swirled into flowers. The outer area would be a grid.  I used the pouncing method to transfer the designs. Then, pin-basted with teeny, tiny #1 brass pins. I mean tiny.  This was and is my most hated task in quilting. I don't like those little pins. I don't think that you could use the Quiltack either, as the pointy-inserty thingy is probably too large in diameter and the fabric would never recover with the silk blend. 


The real kicker is that this is whole cloth. No piecing. No patterns. No nothing. The entire design is based on what you sew and the difference in density (aka poofiness) between the stitched elements. So, Loomis intensively sews every element. Her method involves sewing over all the marked elements, then echo stitching around each of those. Then, intensively free motion in the unmarked field to get the main design to really pop. She uses a variety of free motion designs within the field to keep the design fresh. Many demos and attempts later, most of the class had a start on the project piece. 


I really enjoyed the class and Loomis as the teacher. I'm not sure that I'll ever complete more than the project piece, but absolutely see how I can apply the method and techniques at a smaller scale. I also loved having like-minded folks in the room asking smart questions that I never thought of. Loomis' teaching presently is focused on the New England area, so look for a class by her if you get the chance.


2/2/12 UPDATE. Added photos from the class.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Quiltack Hints

For Christmas, my dear pal gave me the Quiltack Quilt Basting System. The kit comes with the gun, a replacement needle and a bunch of tacks. The whole thing is easy to use and very well described in the instructions. 

Quilt Basting System Tool, MicroStitch and More by QuilTak
Photo from Quiltack Website at www.quiltack.com
You essentially poke the pointy end through all three layers of your quilt, slide the tip to the side and hit the trigger. If you've done it correctly, you have a nicely inserted  tack to baste. I love this part. It is fast and super easy with a little practice. I basted a twin sized quilt in 5 minutes with much less strain and pain in my hands. I inserted a tag every few inches as instructeds. Previously, I had used the pin-basting method. It is fine. But, I find it time-consuming and I poke myself a lot. 


This system made quilting this quilt a dream. I did not have to stop over few inches to remove a pin. I didn't have to worry about how to get thread our from under the quilting if I thread-basted. 


I thought I'd share a few hints I've discovered. 


1) This system does no eliminate proper prep to baste. Your layers still need to be smooth and tight. I use June Tailor's Quilt Basting Spray when the weather is nice and I can open the double doors to our deck and work on the dining room table.


2) Yes, you really can sew right over the tags. Really. I use a Schmetz Topstitch needle to free-motion and had no issues when I went over a few of them. The thread is Aurafil 50wt (my fav!). 


HOWEVER, be mindful how you sew over them. The top photos shows the stitch dead center in the tack. To get this one out, I had to tension the stitch upward to remove the tack. Depending on what you are making, tensioning the thread may be an issue. 

The second photo shows stitching about 1/3 of the stitch. This worked fine. I was able to easily slip the tack out from beneath the stitch. So, if you can be mindful when stitch, you'll save yourself some stress.




3) I use nail clippers to cut the tacks FROM THE BACK. REPEAT...cut from the BACK. That way if you nick the fabric, you don't have a hole on the front (see Giraffe Baby Quilt). You can also use cat nail trimmers, but I find that the holes in the handles are too small for my fingers. So, the nail trimmers work for me. 


4) The instruction have you insert the tacks on top of your cutting mat. This works and is a good idea. However, if you have standard cutting matts (36x24) you have to do a lot of sliding around to keep this under your quilt. I don't have an easy solution for this one. But, bear this in mind if you use a frame of some sort for basting. 


5) When you remove the tacks, there will be lots on the floor. So, if you have a kid of the age to stick everything in their mouth (or a pet), be prepared to vacuum under your work area right away. That said, at least with a kid, these are small enough and dull enough that I'm not overly worried if my son manages to consume one or two...bad mommy.


6) You will have hole in the fabric after using the Quiltack. I had not problem with this and they totally disappeared after washing. But, if you are making a art quilt and won't (or can't) wash the result, you might do some testing. I think if you inserted the tacks along a seam line, it would be fine -- but I did not test this.


7) Off label use. I was making quick drapes for a friend and the fabric was a bit annoying. So, I used the Quiltack to hold the hem in place. I worked fine for the woven fabric I was using.


8) I used an entire stack/column of tacks for a 40x40" inch quilt (101 x101 cm) about 100 tags. So, if you quilt a lot or do big items, you will use a lot of tacks. But, it is only $17 for a bulk pack of 1600 tags (so that makes them about a penny each or $1 for the tack I used for my quilt)

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Leatherback Turtle Art - Susan Carlson's Fabric Confetti

 A while back, I made two wall hangings...brilliantly entitled Turtle 1 and Turtle 2. I used Susan Carlson "Serendipity Quilts" for the technique. Carlson's website is http://www.susancarlson.com/Welcome.html.  Give it a visit to some utterly amazing art quilts.


I found the Leatherback Sea Turtle outline surfing through some free clipart. I simplified the design and added some detail into the carapace (aka shell) to guide my later addition of the fabric.


I used MistyFuse and traced my outline on it. The basic design is simply the sea turtle in a empty field. From there, you use fabric that is shredded into small pieces to make the design. I choose to use two very different colorways on the same image. 


I made the yellow-green one first. I simply used free motion quilting to hold the fused pieces in place. In both, I kept reminding myself to choose the source-point of the light and let that control the design. So, the light is coming from the upper left in each and I added darker fabric right under this version of the turtle to indicate a shadow. This colorway makes me this of warmth and earthyness. This colorway represents the warm marine waters where these turtles spend the nesting season.


The second one (blue-purple) has tulle over parts of it. At the bottom, there are several layers of tulle to simulate the light and dark of water and cut away some from the carapace (aka turtle shell). I really liked the layers of tulle and the texture it added. This is a much cooler ocean for this turtle. The darks are darker and the light are whitish. This colorway represents the cold, deep ocean where this species spends most of the year foraging far and wide (in fact, they are the most wide ranging species of sea turtles). They forage on jellyfish and turn bright red from the nematocycts (painful stingy things), hence, the red-orange body in this version. The little circle around the neck are suggested of those plastic things used to keep soda cans together. All sea creatures are at risk of entanglement and death from those horrible things. 





After completing the centers, I added a border around each (log-cabin style) and then added a backing and some batting (just for the look of it). I used some of my built-in stitches to make the border more textural on the blue-purple. The 'binding' is  three strands of some fuzzy wool yarn with a wide zigzag over it. I cut the yarn to the estimated length for the perimeter of the quilt and then simply held it while I zipped around. I overlapped the two ends and simply zigzaged over them. I ended up going over the yarn twice as I liked the look of the stitches closer together. The thread was the same basic color as the yarn. Finished sizes are around 8x8 or so.


The book by Susan Carlson is very well written with clear diagrams and instructions. She gives a lot of information and does not dwell on the 'how to quilt' basics that seem to be de rigour in the first few chapters of most books. She spends the right amount of time on design and methods. Her work is stunning, especially when you know that she actually draws all her designs in addition to the fabric work.  I used a full-size iron to fuse the fabric to the Mistyfuse. This was a mistake. I would very strongly recommend one of those small crafting irons. Your finger tips will thank you.

I love to try new things and challenge myself with quilting. This was that, so for the process quilter that I am, it was perfect.




While I enjoyed the journey of this, I did not really love keeping track of all the bits of fabric. I ended up with 30 sandwich bags filled with individual fabrics in 'chips.' This seemed to just add to my organization challenges for my very small crafting space. I also had to keep fighting off my cat who kept looking at me like, "oh...how nice, you made all these fluttery play toys for me. Yippee" as she did kamikaze runs across my work table to watch the fabric chips fall to the floor.  


But, I say this was worth it as an artistic push for me and, maybe, others.  


Tomorrow, I'm off to a free motion quilting course at my local quilting store, Wayside Sewing (Marlborough, MA). Lovely owner, great show and great location. This will be my first official lesson in free motion since I took a basic how-to a few years back. From the sample, it looks like there will be some use of chalked on designs. Looking forward to it.


If you want to read more about Leatherbacks Sea Turtles, check out National Geographic's website http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/reptiles/leatherback-sea-turtle/


For information about Leatherback rescue work, check out Leatherback.org
http://www.leatherback.org/pages/rescue.htm

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Secret Baby Quilt

One of my two best friends in the world is having a baby. A little girl if the ultrasound is correct. I found the green animal print when my friend was first pregnant. It is "Rainy Days" by Winky Wheeler Licensed to South Sea Imports. I fell in love and went about designing around this fabric. But, here is the rub. I really care for my friend. And, it seems the more I care for the recipient, the more I struggle with every part of the design. So, knowing this, I decided to use a pattern. I don't normally use patterns, I'm much more a 'follow my muse' sort (thanks for the quote Annie Smith). But, I decided I wanted pinwheels and to make my brain calmer, I bought "Crazy for Baby" by Barbara Groves & Mary Jacobson. I largely followed the pattern of the same name from this book (btw...the book is lovely and shows two color variations for each pattern. Lite on 'how to' but that was fine for me). 


I decided to make the pinwheels from bits of fabric I had. Notice that white fabric? That is from my stash of white 'shirting fabric' bought at a yardsale ($10 for 15 yards). To make the pinwheels, I used the method of cutting two squares and drawing a line down the middle, then sew 1/4 inch on each side of the line. Then, I cut on the line. Hope that makes sense. To piece them together, I used the following video and yielded almost perfect intersections. Woohoo. 
How to Quilt: Piecing a Pinwheel Block


That was the easy part. Then, I had to choose borders. And remove borders. And add borders...and remove them again. Notice the orange border outside the center that overlaps oddly. That's because I appliqued it down because I felt the white border was way too big. I originally used all the decorator fabric to make a scrappy border, but hated that. Remove it. I finally decided to just go with a simple white outer border with a binding made from a fabric I've had forever. 




Then, I quilted it. I hated what I did in the center, but went ahead and finished the rest. I love the rest of it. The pinwheels have spirals and the outer white border has a flower motif. 





Center inspired by Paper and Ink blog, during assembly
A few hours of work later, I loved the outer border quilting but hated the middle. I made it too dense for such a busy fabric. I slept on it and decided to cover it with an applique. So, web surfing I will go (remember...can't draw anything more complex than stick figures). I found a darling paper design by Paper and Ink (Paper and Ink a blog by Jennifer Peebles). If you scroll down to "Birthday Wishes + Free Goodies", you'll see an adorable bear, elephant and bird sign. She used "Paw Pack" font set by Silhouette. Drool...a silhouette. I reorganized the elements into a stack to fit into my space. I think this is much better than the original center with its too busy quilting. 



I have done one other intensive applique project, so knew to pay attention to the 'order' I sew this down to keep the intersections looking nice. All of the sewing around the perimeter was a very narrow zigzag with white Aurafil thread. I then used my trusty Pentel gel pen to add some features. Cute.

The quilt has the binding on (sewn on the back) and I have to finish sewing on the front. Then, remove the Quilt-tacks and, I...think...I'm...done. Now, just to finish planning for her shower in a few weeks. Eek.  





I'll try to post a better picture before I give it to her. 





Saturday, January 21, 2012

A super quick baby quilt

I just finished a super-quick baby quilt for a co-worker. You know the one. You totally ignored the obvious bulge in the tummy until her work baby shower just 1 week away? 


After heading to western Massachusetts for a work meeting and surviving a wind advisory while walking outside for several hours, I felt a treat for me was in order. I searched out a quilt store, typed the address in my Garmin, and I was off. I did not have a lot of time, but I was not disappointed in Southampton Quilts (6 Parc Place #D, Southampton, MA). The store was well stocked with fabrics, but not so tightly that I felt claustrophobic.  And they carried Aurafil in nice, big spools. There was also a lovely classroom in the back.  And they carried Aurafil (I thought it worth mentioning twice).   Well, I found two fabrics to make that long-delayed baby quilt super easy. The Jolly Jungle Labels by the Henley Studio, makower uk (tan) and a striped flannel (I've lost to selvege on this one). I simply quilted along the sides of the little pictures in both direction. I used a creamy colored thread for the top and bobbin. The binding is a bit of deep deal green that  friend gave me from her de-stash.  


I used the QuiltTac to baste the quilt. As I was rushing to remove them, while hearing my son fuss on the baby monitor and knowing my sewing time was at an end, I accidentally snipped the top fabric. The hole was small, but there. At the next nap cycle for my son, I decided I would applique something to cover the hole. Since I am totally unable to draw anything more complex than stick figures, I hit the web. I found a great giraffe appliqued quilt by Oh'Fransson Giraffe Applique (although this applique is no longer available as a pattern, the basic quilt seems to still be available). I think it turned out alright, but maybe a solid color would have stood out more. I wish I could have made it bigger, but I only had 8.5 x 11 paper available and did not feel like piecing together a bunch of pieces for a bigger pattern. 


About 4 hours total time invested...completed over two and 1/2 of my son's naps. 







Co-worker baby quilt. Done. Apologies for the bad lighting and photos. I have a tiny studio and makes taking photos tough.