I can hardly believe it! I am going out for New Year's Eve. Normally, I sit at home and gloat that I'm not out on the road dodging drunken idiots. I usually don't go to bed, though, until the neighbors stop shooting off fireworks and firearms.
Well, actually what happened is that the season theater tickets I have are for Wednesday night and so that's when we will be going to see Annie, admittedly not one of my favorite shows. Of course, I may be just a little jaundiced, since the last time I saw it was at the Starlight Theater and the little urchins sitting next to us sang all the songs along with the actors. Might have been kind of cute had any of them (the kids) been able to carry a tune.
Went out today and, as my mother used to say, "got the stink blowed off". It is so nice out--a little windy, but warm enough for a sweater. I hung a little wash out (sheets) and know they will smell nice and fresh when I bring them in. May have to go back out and finish raking leaves. My oak tree takes forever to drop leaves. In fact, there are still more than a few stubbornly clinging to the tree, but I'm sure the neighbors will appreciate not having mine stuff blowing all over this winter.
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
The Goose is getting fat
The weather here in Kansas has been pretty icky for the last week, so to cheer me and possibly you up I'll put in a picture from my recent trip to Australia. This is from Tasmania off the shore of Oyster Bay near Freycinet National Park. While it was still fairly chilly while we were there, it was better than the last few days here.
It's not just the goose that's getting fat. I have been busy sampling and tasting things as I've been preparing for Christmas dinner. I'm not being very traditional this year. There will just be three or four of us friends, who have all been at my house a number of times to share holidays with my family. I made the decision early this year to do no traveling over the Christmas season and, because of the weather, I'm so glad I did.
We will just enjoy (I hope) Beef Daube with penne pasta au gratin, broccoli with optional cheese sauce, homemade Ciabatta, tossed salad and an apple salad. For dessert I'm making gingerbread trifle and a pumpkin pie. That should be enough for the four of us!
I have started knitting again. I have two projects in train. I'm working on the second sock. The first one seemed to go a lot smoother. At this rate, I'll never get the second one done. I'm also trying out a dishcloth pattern that is way more intricate than need be. Not only does it have a four row repeat, but row four includes a p3t. I hate purling anyway, and then to have to jam three stitches on and get them all off at once is just plain painful. At least the yarn feels good.
Thursday, December 18, 2008
It's been entirely too long since I posted to this blog. However, she said virtuously, I have actually addressed all my Christmas cards, written a letter, bought official Christmas stamps, AND gotten them in the mail. Whew! For me this is almost a first. My friends and relatives will probably all fall over, since I usually don't even put cards in the mail until Dec 29.
I have also been cataloging my collection (for want of a better word) of tea cups. Either I don't own as many as I thought I had, or there are some floating around somewhere in this house, which is entirely possible. My house is definitely not "a place for everything, and everything in its place" example of housekeeping. Especially today, it's more like, "oh, here's a horizontal service; can I add just a couple more things to it before everything slides off". Time to reform. Well, after I put away all the Christmas stuff. Maybe. Yeah, sure.
I had to buy a new mail box this week. Last Saturday's wind blew my old one into the street, where it was bashed rather well. I had to use a pair of pliers and a screwdriver to pry it open and then I couldn't get it to close properly. I was prepared to have to pay an arm and a leg, but surprisingly enough, official US mail boxes are a bargain. The steel ones were less than $15 and plastic was $5.
Today I received my first 2009 seed catalog. It's from a Heirloom seed company I've never heard of and it's addressed to me by my nickname. I don't know how I got on their list, but it is a good looking catalog. I just wish I had a green thumb. In the past 18 years (since I've moved to the Kansas City area) I have had exactly two tomato plants live past age one month. Off those two plants I've managed to harvest 4 tomatoes. I ain't Mother Nature.
I have also been cataloging my collection (for want of a better word) of tea cups. Either I don't own as many as I thought I had, or there are some floating around somewhere in this house, which is entirely possible. My house is definitely not "a place for everything, and everything in its place" example of housekeeping. Especially today, it's more like, "oh, here's a horizontal service; can I add just a couple more things to it before everything slides off". Time to reform. Well, after I put away all the Christmas stuff. Maybe. Yeah, sure.
I had to buy a new mail box this week. Last Saturday's wind blew my old one into the street, where it was bashed rather well. I had to use a pair of pliers and a screwdriver to pry it open and then I couldn't get it to close properly. I was prepared to have to pay an arm and a leg, but surprisingly enough, official US mail boxes are a bargain. The steel ones were less than $15 and plastic was $5.
Today I received my first 2009 seed catalog. It's from a Heirloom seed company I've never heard of and it's addressed to me by my nickname. I don't know how I got on their list, but it is a good looking catalog. I just wish I had a green thumb. In the past 18 years (since I've moved to the Kansas City area) I have had exactly two tomato plants live past age one month. Off those two plants I've managed to harvest 4 tomatoes. I ain't Mother Nature.
Labels:
Christmas cards,
clutter,
Mail boxes,
Seed catalogs
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Baking Up a Storm
I baked bread yesterday--two kinds, Oatmeal Bread and Dilly Onion Bread. This is one of the things I enjoy doing. And since I live alone and don't really need lots of bread in the house, I take it to the library where I worked before I retired and sell it. The money goes into the fund that the L.O.T.E. Relay for Life team has set up for the American Cancer Society.
I usually make 6 small loaves and 1 large of each recipe, but it varies according to what kind of bread I make.
Anyway, I got an exceptionally good do on both batches of bread. I'm always getting feedback (there are no shy people working at my library) about what worked and what didn't. It's a good thing I don't try to do this commercially, since I've had some loaves that were far from perfect and I can pick just when I want to bake.
I've started a biga to make some Italian bread later this week, probably tomorrow. I really need to get a bigger baking stone if I'm going to do much more of this. Hmmm, I wonder what baking in a wood-fired oven would be like. Just kidding.
Just finished reading Janet Evanovich and Leanne Banks' book Hot Stuff. The title works so well on so many levels. I think Janet writes some of the best animals ever to appear in a romance. (Well, that sounds rather depraved. For those of you who don't read her books, no animals are harmed in the course of the novel.) Her pets all are the kinds of animals I would end up with--lovable doofuses. Okay, I'll admit it's not just the animals I read these books for. I'm always on the lookout for another Joe Morelli or Ranger, to switch to another of her books. Anyway, Hot Stuff is a fun hour read, with characters that are clearly related by type to the Stephanie Plum books.
I usually make 6 small loaves and 1 large of each recipe, but it varies according to what kind of bread I make.
Anyway, I got an exceptionally good do on both batches of bread. I'm always getting feedback (there are no shy people working at my library) about what worked and what didn't. It's a good thing I don't try to do this commercially, since I've had some loaves that were far from perfect and I can pick just when I want to bake.
I've started a biga to make some Italian bread later this week, probably tomorrow. I really need to get a bigger baking stone if I'm going to do much more of this. Hmmm, I wonder what baking in a wood-fired oven would be like. Just kidding.
Just finished reading Janet Evanovich and Leanne Banks' book Hot Stuff. The title works so well on so many levels. I think Janet writes some of the best animals ever to appear in a romance. (Well, that sounds rather depraved. For those of you who don't read her books, no animals are harmed in the course of the novel.) Her pets all are the kinds of animals I would end up with--lovable doofuses. Okay, I'll admit it's not just the animals I read these books for. I'm always on the lookout for another Joe Morelli or Ranger, to switch to another of her books. Anyway, Hot Stuff is a fun hour read, with characters that are clearly related by type to the Stephanie Plum books.
Sunday, December 7, 2008
It must be Christmas. Last night was our annual L.O.T.E party with our visit to the Martin City Melodrama. This year's production of Rudolph The Recycled Reindeer was absolutely terrific, only marred by the the L.O.T.E.'s insistance on performing their own tootling version of Deck the Halls when they were introduced. We promise we will never, never do that again! We will leave the music to professionals from now on. Thanks to Jeannie and Jon and the rest of the cast for the hilarious evening. (And the dessert afterward at The Cheesecake Factory didn't hurt.)
In honor of Rudolph the Recycled Reindeer I did my themed Christmas tree with, you guessed it, reindeer. Actually, I chose the theme last year during the after Christmas sales, and I must admit that the tree looks pretty good. Between what I already owned and what I bought over this past year, I have a herd of about three dozen deer. I couldn't stand it any longer and bought a tree with the lights already strung. I had to promise my daughter I'd get rid of one of my other trees, since she thinks I have too many. I went one better--I discarded my two big ones--a tippy big fiber optic thing and my 7 1/2 foot space hog.
I have started another blog with my book reviews/comments/rants so will probably not include too many here. But then I've only read one book since the last post--too busy cleaning house and cooking for the party.
There is something about mechanical creations that hates me. They just take one look and give that evil bwahahaha and my life becomes misery. It apparently was the vacuum cleaner's turn this month. In the midst of all the cleaning it died--may it rest in pieces.
In honor of Rudolph the Recycled Reindeer I did my themed Christmas tree with, you guessed it, reindeer. Actually, I chose the theme last year during the after Christmas sales, and I must admit that the tree looks pretty good. Between what I already owned and what I bought over this past year, I have a herd of about three dozen deer. I couldn't stand it any longer and bought a tree with the lights already strung. I had to promise my daughter I'd get rid of one of my other trees, since she thinks I have too many. I went one better--I discarded my two big ones--a tippy big fiber optic thing and my 7 1/2 foot space hog.
I have started another blog with my book reviews/comments/rants so will probably not include too many here. But then I've only read one book since the last post--too busy cleaning house and cooking for the party.
There is something about mechanical creations that hates me. They just take one look and give that evil bwahahaha and my life becomes misery. It apparently was the vacuum cleaner's turn this month. In the midst of all the cleaning it died--may it rest in pieces.
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
"Tis the Season to be Merry
Getting ready for a party can take far longer than the party itself. The bad thing is that I love to plan parties, love to organize parties, (hate to clean the house for parties, which is why I like to plan parties for other people to give), but I really don't like to go to parties.
I also love Christmas time, the whole over the top, over-decorated, over-fed, over-everything--except I don't want it to start until December. Actually, I like the idea of the 12 days of Christmas between December 25 and January 6. We used to laugh about my mother's habit of using so many sequins on Christmas decorations--if it didn't move it was apt to get a little holiday "sparkle". The only thing safe was cookies--and those got lots of frosting and sprinkles or sugar.
I have been reading On Kingdom Mountain by Howard Frank Mosher. Miss Jane Hubbell Kinneson is just enough off balance and feisty enought to appeal to me. The two problems facing her, the proposed highway through "her" wild mountain, and the hunt for Confederate gold by the high flying Henry Satterfield, are big but she is equal to anything. She is armed with a sense of her own rightness, several drams of Who Shot Sam, and an ever-ready over/under shotgun. I liked this story and think it might even make a charming movie (although that rarely happens). Where is Katherine Hepburn when you need her?
Time to go put up another Christmas tree. This year I am only putting up three; the big one in the living room, the smaller one on the upstairs landing, and my poor Charlie Brown tree. It's probably the last year for the PCBT. It leans against the wall and is shedding it's little fake needles all over the bathtub. (Yes, I know it's not usual to put a tree in the bathtub, but what can I say. At least nobody else is using that bath this season.)
I also love Christmas time, the whole over the top, over-decorated, over-fed, over-everything--except I don't want it to start until December. Actually, I like the idea of the 12 days of Christmas between December 25 and January 6. We used to laugh about my mother's habit of using so many sequins on Christmas decorations--if it didn't move it was apt to get a little holiday "sparkle". The only thing safe was cookies--and those got lots of frosting and sprinkles or sugar.
I have been reading On Kingdom Mountain by Howard Frank Mosher. Miss Jane Hubbell Kinneson is just enough off balance and feisty enought to appeal to me. The two problems facing her, the proposed highway through "her" wild mountain, and the hunt for Confederate gold by the high flying Henry Satterfield, are big but she is equal to anything. She is armed with a sense of her own rightness, several drams of Who Shot Sam, and an ever-ready over/under shotgun. I liked this story and think it might even make a charming movie (although that rarely happens). Where is Katherine Hepburn when you need her?
Time to go put up another Christmas tree. This year I am only putting up three; the big one in the living room, the smaller one on the upstairs landing, and my poor Charlie Brown tree. It's probably the last year for the PCBT. It leans against the wall and is shedding it's little fake needles all over the bathtub. (Yes, I know it's not usual to put a tree in the bathtub, but what can I say. At least nobody else is using that bath this season.)
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