a trip to detroit

it’s been over a year since i’ve seen my dear friend in detroit, so when a four day weekend appeared in my schedule and round trip train tickets were discovered to be only $131 (including an upgrade to business class for one leg of the trip), i jumped at the chance.  the trip actually started with a bus ride where i discovered that the wheels on the bus song is true!  i noticed that the wipers on the bus were going ‘swish, swish, swish’ and that later the horn went ‘beep, beep, beep’ and the children’s librarian in me had to giggle to myself.

the photo at the top of this entry is from chicago’s union station.  most of the train station is pretty depressing, standard mass transit fare–low ceilings, insufficient lighting, rushing crowds and cramped escalators.  but then there’s this great hall with soaring ceilings and wooden benches like pews and a relative hush.  granted, this is also the area where the unhoused take peaceful naps and hucksters ask you if you can spare a dollar or two so that they can buy a train ticket, but i still find the atmosphere so calming that i’d much rather hang out in this space than anywhere else in union station.

i find something charming about eating paper-wrapped sandwiches on a train, so i bought lunch at the train station, but waited until i was on the train to eat it.  it was actually surprisingly tasty for “food court food.”  and i made an impulse purchase at the sandwich shop that turned out to be the best decision of the whole trip:

this tub of jelly bellys (only 89 cents!) lasted me all the way there and all the way home.  it may become a travel tradition.  i mean, i got that fuzzy teeth feeling, but the variety of flavors kept me from popping them all into my mouth in giant handfuls and kept my tastebuds entertained.  my brain was kept entertained by reading the most recent popular vampire romance teen novel.

when i arrived, we enjoyed dinner at a local brasserie, then drove home and tumbled into sleep.

the next morning, we visited the local farmer’s market.

i couldn’t resist the hotdogs as soon as i saw they offered sauerkraut as a topping!

remember this baby?  he grew up a little.

and he got a little brother (whom he lovingly calls, “labula” or sometimes, “bulabula.”)

(does that quilt look familiar?)

later that day, we took the kids out trick-or-treating at some of the local businesses.  the two-year-old went as a devil.

at first, he didn’t really know what was going on.  he didn’t want to wear the horns and he didn’t want to carry his treat bag.  after two stores, he was running ahead of his parents, bag in tow.  although sometimes the handles got frustrating:

the other boy zonked out pretty quickly and missed out on the candy.

that evening, i had the distinct pleasure of meeting rebekah–my first blog-to-real-life friend!  we met for dinner at cafe habana for some really delicious cuban food, then we went to the creative arts studio for some fun “adult night” crafting.  i had some trouble deciding which craft to try out, but in the end, i chose to do some more glass fusing (i’m an addict!)

rebekah chose to paint this great mug.  apparently, when after it’s fired, it won’t be red at all!

my other friend, anna, couldn’t decide what craft to do, so i loaned her my camera to play with and she got some great shots around the studio.  this was my favorite:

“after”photos are available here (thanks, rebekah!).  i had so much fun meeting rebekah.  i was a little nervous beforehand, but it turns out that there’s something comfortable about meeting someone whose blog you’ve read for awhile–you already know some of the things they like to do and the conversation can skip right past small talk and dive right into discussions of things you know they’re currently working on (thanks for the free-motion quilting tips and hints!  i love the way your common threads quilt turned out.)

sunday was a lovely cozy day at home.  we made beef stew and homemade bread.  in the afternoon, anna ran out to buy a few groceries for dinner and on the way home, she saw that one of the houses she had been keeping an eye on had an open house.  she stopped and had to go in and … she fell in love.  as soon as she got home, she told me about it and i walked over to the house and took lots of photos.  since i don’t know if she’ll actually get the house, i’ll just post this one:

lots of really great architectural details!

we stayed up late each night, chatting and catching up.  what a treat!

the next morning, it was time to head home.  i love that train travel is so unfettered.  the location where i caught the train didn’t even really have a station–just a sidewalk and a small shelter (like a nice bus stop).  you wait there for the train and when it stops, a train employee hops out, puts out a stepping stool and calls for people to board.  they don’t even check your ticket until the train is on its way again.  i splurged (all of $13!) to sit in business class on the way home to see if it was any better.  here’s the scoop about the perks of business class on amtrak:

1.  more foot room and recliner-like leg rests and seats that recline further than in coach.

(i brought slippers to wear on the train.  comfy!)

2.  unlimited free coffee, hot chocolate, and hot tea, plus one free soft drink.

this hot chocolate, while made from a simple powder-in-a-packet mix, was mixed in the most theatrical manner i’ve ever seen.  he poured it rapidly from cup-to-cup until it was sufficiently mixed–reminded me of an energetic bartender–only with hot chocolate.  here’s a photo of hank, the cafe master:

3.  free copies of the new york times (no photo–i didn’t really read mine).

4.  electrical outlets for each passenger.  i was able to re-charge my phone and work on my laptop freely.  coach also has some outlets, but maybe not as many.

another thing i love about train travel is the scenery–quaint train stations (have you ever seen a quaint airport?  i think that might worry me in air travel…)

the grey clouds just made my train ride seem all the more cozy.  beautiful fall scenery rushed past my window.

one more silly photo–i loved the train’s “symbol” for soap!

hmmm…. looks like needlepoint inspiration to me!

Posted in autumn, fun stuff, stuff that makes me smile | 4 Comments

lovely

today, one of the many blogs i read pointed me to this video.  and its sequel here.  i’m not exactly sure why watching them moved me to happy tears (dang ‘ol music), but i thought i’d share them with you too.  i’m inspired to do something, but i’m not certain exactly what yet.

as a side note, the name of the creator of this duo of mini films sounded familiar.  in the middle of the first video, i had an a-ha moment.  i love the books “little pea” and “little hoot.” both so very cute.

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

happy tidbits

i’ve been tidying up all evening–scary stuff in my refrigerator, the clutter on my kitchen island, and downloaded photos in picasa that i meant to blog about and haven’t yet.  so here are my favorites from the past week or so.   the photo above was from my most recent epic visit to macha teahouse where, in addition to drinking lots of cozy cups of tea, i also finished my homework and got a pretty sturdy outline written for the book chapter that’s due at the end of this year.  i think i mentioned that last fall, i wrote a chapter for the 2009 summer library program manual, but did i tell you what a thrill i got earlier this month when i (and every other children’s librarian in about 47 states) received our manuals and there, on the title page, is my name.  my name!  and there, in chapter 7 are my ideas, in my words, illustrated by some professional illustrating person!  neeeeeeato.  so yes, i am now in the process of writing a chapter for the 2010 manual.

on another day, i got these beautiful quilt blocks in the mail.  i’ve gotten several packages of quilt blocks in the mail, but most of them, i’d seen online before i received them.  these were a surprise.  they were beautifully wrapped in white tissue paper and i just love the embroidery embellishements.  i mean, check this out:

i love the way she’s encouraged the two prints to come together on the neutral ground and play nicely together.  i’m so very curious to know how this quilt is going to look when it’s all done!  i mean, i have a plan, but with so many collaborators working together, there’s just no telling what the final product will actually look like.

and lastly, an apology to mr. happy stuff.  when i was posting our finished art projects the other day, i somehow missed his fused glass bowl.  here’s how it turned out in the end.  isn’t it great?

well, that’s about all of the loose ends.  ahhhhh….. feels good to tidy up the blog.

Posted in crafty stuff, library stuff | 4 Comments

fun trip to chicago

way back in march, i took a trip to michigan city with friends.  most of them were interested in march madness.  i was lured by the promise of interesting shopping.  we had considered the possibility of taking a day trip to chicago for some “interesting shopping” one of those days, but with weather and schedules…. the chicago part didn’t happen.  i’d put together this great google maps calendar with fun shops to visit and bakeries to do a “cupcake crawl” among, and i really wanted to do this trip sometime.  so this weekend, we finally went!  we started off the trip at mitsuwa–a japanese superstore in the ‘burbs that is mostly groceries, but also has a food court, a bookstore, a travel agency and a purveyor of dinnerware.  i was sorely tempted by several books, but decided that i really needed to use the one i bought last time before i can justify buying more.  but they have such beautiful photography!  there were a few sewing pattern books that i liked, one of dinner table origami, and a very unusual book about wire art (it had little wire chairs, little wire birds and birdcages, and these funky vase-on-the-wall things that combined wire and test tubes).  i settled for this cute kitty bowl (it has a nice plastic lid for leftovers!) and two bento boxes.  now i really need to start packing bento lunches.  my friend and i enjoyed some simple avocado and cucumber sushi rolls before we headed deeper into downtown.

our next stop was the (slightly creepily named) “uncle fun.”  imagine a tiny, packed store, filled to the brim with funny gags, tiny plastic thing-a-ma-bobs in drawers, oddball books, antique and/or inappropriate postcards, fun toys (for kids or for older kids like me), and a few other things (like bacon, pickle or toast band-aids).  after i got over the stimulation overload, i walked out with a girl version of the classic “wooly willy” game (the one where he has metal shavings for hair and you can rearrange it with the magnet-on-a-stick), a teeny, purse-sized version of that game that consists of water, tiny plastic rings and posts and when you press a button, air shoots up into the water, making the rings spin up and you try to catch them on the posts (this game totally fascinated me for hours as a kid), and lastly (but probably my favorite find of the whole day) a toy helicopter for only $4!  great addition to my stash of kid toys for visiting children.

when we left uncle fun, my traveling companion noticed that there was a store called “paper boy” across the street.  i’d read about (and wanted to visit) this store, but had somehow missed that it was so close to uncle fun (although according to their website, the stores are part of the same empire), so i happily followed her across the street.  oh readers.  have i told you about my paper fetish?  over the years it has manifested itself in different ways–stationery, wrapping paper, blank notebooks–but here it is:  i. love. paper.  and paper boy has lots of different kinds of paper.  i couldn’t quite bring myself to pay for the letterpress thank you cards from egg press, but oh man were they fantastic.  i also drooled over stationery designed by angela adams, lotta jansdotter, and denyse schmidt (all from chronicle press), but in the end, i stuck with a single box of lotta jansdotter stickers/labels.  that took a lot of restraint, but i do love the box of stickers i got.

next, back to the car where we hopped in and went in search of another parking spot (i got to practice my parallel parking skills so many times!).  we parked near a store we were planning to visit, but then when we started walking, we changed our mind (i love traveling with people who are willing to change plans as we go) and decided to go in search of quiltology.  i’d found them online and they sell freespirit fabrics, so i wanted to see some of those prints in person.  we didn’t quite realize that it would be a fifteen minute walk from our lovely parking space.  hooray for spontaneous exercise opportunities!  the fabric store was very small and as far as i could tell, pretty much only carried free spirit (is kaffee fassett part of that line?  his fabrics were there too) and some batiks.  i drooled and drooled, but because i didn’t have a specific project in mind, i settled for 6 fat quarters.

by this time, we were both pretty hungry, so we hiked back to the car and drove down the road in search of minnie’s (abandoning plans to visit two cupcake shops on the way).

i’d read about this sandwich shop and just had to see their tiny sandwiches.  i thought it might just be a gimmick (remember mini-burgers from burger king?) but i was pleasantly surprised.  the restaurant decor was charming and the sandwiches were quite tasty!

my favorite was probably the chicken salad (despite the oil on the toasted bread having a strange flavor on my last bite), but the mykonos (greek) and the cuban were yummy too (although i wished the slice of pork on the cuban had had more flavor–not so “pork”-y).

my vegetarian friend had plenty of options to choose from and ended up going with a cucumber cream cheese sandwich, a brie and apricot jam sandwich, and a mini veggie pizza.  her meal also came with very skinny fries (which tasted way better that either of us expected them to) with a creamy dipping sauce, and a teeny tiny “carafe” of wine (about the equivalent of one glass).

the waiter was also nice enough to bring us each samples of a “mini-freeze” which i’d thought would be more milkshake-y but ended up being so thick, it was more ice-creamy and wouldn’t have really worked as a drink with the meal.  plus, i was still holding out hopes for cute cupcakes.

i love this wallpaper!

i love this wallpaper!

we left the restaurant in search of wicker park.  i was very much enjoying exploring a different side of chicago than i was familar with.  normally, we see the highway, the airport, ikea, and maybe occasionally the downtown museum campus.  but this was a part of chicago i hadn’t really seen before.   i mean, once or twice when i was in college, or right after college, i took a trip to chicago and made my way via the subway to the crate and barrel store or something, but … chicago is a big city and there is still so much that i haven’t seen.  it’s fun to discover new things so close to home!

our next stop was the bakery “sweet cakes” where we finally got some cupcakes.  we got there about half an hour before they were supposed to close and the cupcakes were…. kind of meh.  although i had the option of full-sized or mini cupcakes (we decided to stick with the “mini” theme), there were only three flavor choices–lime, orange or coffee flavored–and they were cold.  and had a giant pile of frosting on the top.

i realize that this would be a plus in most people’s books, but i’m not a huge fan of frosting.  maybe a cupcake crawl isn’t really right for me.  oh well.  the bakery itself was charming and had some wonderfully bizarre art in the courtyard.

we back-tracked a bit, sure that we could find wicker park (or at least the wicker park my friend remembered visiting years ago).  we stopped, parked and walked on a street that looked somewhat promising and stumbled upon renegade handmade (the store that originally created the renegade craft fair) and enjoyed browsing through their shop,

then went next door to coco rouge, a chocolatier which boasted this on their sidewalk sign:

and we made a brief foray into a bead shop, then back to the car.  by this time, both of us were feeling kind of tired, it was getting dark, and shops were beginning to close up, so we decided to head home.  we did make one last effort to locate the wicker park of my friend’s memory and found it on milwaukee street, but like i said, it was late, the night crowd was starting to emerge and thrift shops were closing up for the night, so we filed the information in our “next time” folder and searched for the highway.

we made it home safe and sound and relaxed.

Posted in reviews, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

fluffy tapioca pudding

ever since we started having milk delivered to our home every two weeks, we sometimes find ourselves with a little more milk than we necessarily need.  what to do?  make pudding!  in this case, i decided to make tapioca.  and not just any tapioca, but fluffy tapioca pudding.  this recipe is a family favorite.  i learned during my last visit that my mom routinely triples the recipe when she makes it because it gets devoured so quickly.  the main ingredients are milk, eggs and tapioca–specifically, minute tapioca.  i like to buy it from bulk dry goods stores.

first, divide the eggs–whites into a mixer bowl, yolks into the pan you’ll heat the milk in.  then, start whipping the egg whites and slowly adding in a few tablespoons of sugar:

until they form stiff peaks:

meanwhile, combine the eggs, milk, tapioca and a few other things in a saucepan.

heat, stirring frequently (or constantly) until it boils.  when it boils, pour it slowly into the beaten egg whites and beat until no egg white lumps remain and add vanilla.  then, serve it hot over a scoop of ice cream:

(not very photogenic, but trust me, it’s so yummy.)  it’s also very tasty served cold by itself.  here’s the recipe:

fluffy tapioca pudding

2 cups milk

1 egg separated

3 tablespoons sugar

1/8 teaspoons salt

3 tablespoons minute tapioca

2 tablespoons sugar

¾ teaspoon vanilla

mix yolk, milk, tapioca, salt & 3 tbsp sugar in heavy saucepan. let sit for 5 min while you whip the whites. when they are foamy, gradually add 2 tbsp sugar until you get stiff peaks.

set aside. slowly bring other mixture to a rolling boil. pour the boiling pudding into the egg whites while beating. scrape the sides of the bowl and finish with a hand whisk until there are no big egg white lumps.  add vanilla.

serve warm or cold.

Posted in trip down memory lane, yum | 2 Comments

pretty things

i promised to show you the results of our door county crafting when it arrived, so here are some photos:

first, the fused glass pendants.  i’m pretty happy with the way they turned out.  i like some better than others.  like that sort of beer bottle shaped one in the bottom corner.  and the orange slice on the other side.  (mr. h-s helped with the orange slice.)

i’ve already made one into a necklace–using silk cord that i bought in door county.  now i just need to go buy a few more jewelry bails to make the rest into pendants.

i also made some ceramic pendants.  some worked better than others….   aren’t the polka dots cute?!  i was inspired by bee designs (i own one of her necklaces) and making these few bits made me really appreciate her jewelry even more.  hmmm… i just noticed how the top line of pieces in the photo above sort of looks like it spells “boo.”  spooky.

and last but not least, here’s the bowl that mr. happy stuff painted for me while he was waiting for me to finish glazing the pendants above.  he picked out the bowl and painting it in my favorite blue and white stripes was completely his idea and i love it!  what is it about blue and white striped pottery?  swoon.

Posted in crafty stuff | 1 Comment

slow and steady….

today i ran my first 10k race.  i’ve run a few 5k’s and even one 6k, but i’ve never (even in training) run as far as i did today.  the weather was lovely–a little warm if anything, but the skies were clear and the air was crisp and the route was (mostly) flat.  it was the annual literacy network run.  i did the 5k version a few years ago, so i was pretty familiar with the first half of the course, but the second half was all new to me.

i stayed up (way too late) last night finding new music to add to my running mix.  mr. happy stuff got caught up in the hunt for tunes that had the right beats-per-minute too.  we found some real winners and the new tunes were a nice motivator during the run today.*

so, how did i do?  well, i’d hoped to finish in under an hour and a half and i came in right around an hour, twenty and i ran the whole way–didn’t have to walk–which was my second goal (i didn’t honestly expect to be able to do that!) and i didn’t experience the hip pains that plagued me last year or the toe numbness or any of the other physical discomforts that make running less fun.  woo hoo!  i also managed to come in last.  i ran the last half of the race with another woman who had more of a “run fast, then walk, then run fast” pace.  we yo-yo’d back and forth for awhile, then she decided that since i had such a steady running pace that she’d just use me as a pacer.  fine by me!  today was her 52nd birthday.  so, as a gift to her, i let her cross the finish line a few miliseconds before me, so that she wouldn’t finish last.  i had a great run and i am so thrilled that i didn’t have to walk and my body didn’t fall apart.  i did,however, have to take a long nap this afternoon.

*in case you’re curious which songs made the cut, here are a few of the new titles i heard during my run today:  16 military wives by the decemberists, zak and sara by ben folds, & dance tonight by paul mccartney

Posted in sporty stuff | 4 Comments

escape to the north

this past weekend, mr. h-s and i took a few days off and drove a few hours north to door county.  this was our second trip to the county and we had a better idea of what to expect.  life up there moves a little more slowly.  lodging is a little more rustic.  food is simpler (for the most part).  shops (and restaurants) close up a little earlier than we’re used to.  but there is space to breathe.  time to just … be.

but because i am a person that finds slowing down challenging, we started the weekend at my favorite door county spot–the hands on art studio.  the last time we came up here, mr. h-s and i spent a fun evening in the metal shop, learning how to spot-weld and designing art pieces out of the metal pieces they offered.  this year, the studio has expanded and in addition to a much larger metal shop in a new building, they also have a glass studio building and that’s where we spent our time on friday night.

the tools for lampworking and glass blowing weren’t functioning correctly, so we focused on glass fusing.  i’ve been wanting to try glass fusing for a long time and this was a great opportunity to play with the materials and learn how to cut glass without having to learn a whole lot about types of glass or kiln temperatures or other more technical bits.

mr. h-s decided to design one large piece (a bowl–it looks like a flat circle here, but when they put it into the kiln, it rests on a ceramic mold that will allow the circle to melt down into a bowl shape.) and i decided to design a bunch of small pendants.

i think we spent about three hours designing our pieces.  we were briefly interrupted by a chicken running into the studio (it’s on a farm).  i got to hold it before it was banned to a less disruptive location.

then, i went back to my pendants.

as i was working on my pieces, a fellow glass exerimenter was walking around the room, looking at other people’s pieces.  when she saw mine, she said it looked like a quilt and that made me giggle.  (i think she thought it was all one piece, but still…)  i may have to see if i can find a glass fusing studio closer to home.  so much fun!

the next morning, we slept in until the sun shone into our hotel room and woke us up, then we ambled off to find breakfast at julie’s cafe.

mr. h-s needs his coffee.

i need my fresh-squeezed orange juice.

and my stuffed french toast.  with cream cheese and door county cherries and whipped cream and powdered sugar arranged to look like a butterfly.  i had a bit of a sugar rush by then end of breakfast.  speaking of rush, we have never gotten a meal at a sit-down restaurant so quickly.  we were actually kind of curious about how they had time to cook the food between the time we ordered and the time it arrived…..  but it was very tasty.

after a relatively fruitless morning of shopping (most stores sort of all carry the same bizarre assortment of products except for my one favorite store–maxwell’s house in egg harbor.  they have so many drooltastic furnishings for the modern home.  this time i was actually able to afford something!  a mat of white pebbles that might show up in future photography.) we went to wilson’s for a quick lunch and, of course, ice cream!

they top their ice cream with jelly beans!  (guess i didn’t get enough sugar at breakfast…) we did a little more shopping in the vain hope of finding something else interesting (the blue dolphin house was kind of nice and the rustic fish across the street had some nice twig stars that i was tempted by.) but we were mostly just killing time until our dinner reservations at the whistling swan.  we’d decided to splurge on one fancy, foodie meal while we were up there and this restaurant won the toss.  we loved the atmosphere as soon as we walked in–casual elegance done just right.  instead of flowers on the tables, they featured these great carved wooden birds perched on stones and a scattering of riverstones on the table as well (these next photos were taken with an iphone–it seemed too awkward to bring my big black camera into the restaurant.  how do other people do that?).

we both started our meals off with the “mixed greens salad” which included roasted beets, goat cheese, pine nuts, parsnip chips and lemon-truffle vinaigrette.  i found it very tasty.  mr. h-s wasn’t sure about the beets.  or the cherry tomatoes (not mentioned on the menu, but they were on our plates).

for entrees, mr. h-s chose the carmelized apple stuffed royal berkshire pork chop (accompanied by nueske’s smoked bacon, fingerling potatoes and a gruyere cream sauce) and i went with the rainbow chard duck breast roulade (accompanied by sunchokes, figs and a few other veggies and a port wine duck demi glace).  the pork chop was a big hit, the duck was … a bit odd.  this is one of the dangers of ordering things on the menu that you wouldn’t normally eat–you get unfamiliar flavors!  but i did enjoy it for the most part, it just wasn’t my most favorite part of the meal.  that honor goes to dessert.

firstly, the desserts we got were the most beautiful desserts i’ve ever been served.  the plating was gorgeous and yet, i knew that it would taste so good that i had no problems digging right in.  mr. h-s ordered the honey crisp tarte tatin with honey mascarpone ice cream, and a cinnamon sugar cookie.

i ordered the coconut almond chocolate cake with luna stout ice cream and caramel fudge sauce.  oh man.  c’mon.  i wish i could share the flavor of this with you over the internet.  the chocolate was lovely, dark and deep and yet didn’t overpower the coconut flavor in the cookie.  y.u.m.

we went to bed very well-fed.

after a quick breakfast at “good eggs” the next morning, we visited the beach.  i love the way that the water and the sky blend into one another in the shot above.  then, we headed up even farther north to make our way to washington island.  we’d booked one night’s stay at the washington hotel.  you have to take the ferry to get across to the island.  it’s a little cheaper to take bikes and it’s not that far from the ferry to the hotel and we were both attracted to the idea of traveling lightly, so we packed overnight supplies into backpacks and pedaled onto the ferry.  when we arrived, we decided not to try to squeeze in a bunch of activities on the island, but instead to just take it easy.  so, after checking in, we biked into town for a late lunch/early supper, then biked back to the hotel for the rest of the evening.  to enhance the quiet calm atmosphere of the washington hotel, i’ll just show you a bunch of photos with very little chattery commenting.

(i just have to interrupt here to say that there was only one staff person at the hotel when we arrived and he was so very accomodating.  when i asked if there was a lap blanket i could use to keep warm while outside reading, he went back to his cabin (behind the hotel) and brought me one of his own personal throws and when i asked if i could have a cup of hot tea, he even brought it outside to me in this cute steeping cup.)

(although two bathrooms are shared among the eight rooms in the hotel, they both include luxurious steam showers.)

our last morning there was overcast and rainy.  the ferry ride was a bit choppier than it had been the day before, but we escaped without either of us getting seasick.

we drove back to the hands-on art studio to pick up our finished pieces and to create a few more.  mr. happy stuff was so patient and let me make a few more fused glass designs i’d been dreaming about since our first night there and he even painted a ceramic bowl while he was waiting for me to finish glazing some tiny pottery pieces i’d made.  i promise to post pictures of all our completed art when it arrives in the mail.

i haven’t even mentioned the giant flocks of seagulls trailing along the ground behind a tractor plowing the earth or the giant flocks of geese nesting in fields beside the road or the goats on the restaurant roof or the honeycrisp apples and caramel pieces or the chilly picnic by the lake with summer sausage, cheese and fruit or the drive through the peninsula state park and the view from the tall wooden observation tower or the unexpected detour that led to a short hike in the woods where i found a generous stash of rough walking sticks left by a tree and we also stumbled upon jens jensen’s lovely arts school for adults called the clearing which i might have to go back to someday or the fact that i got to read a whole book in (basically) one sitting but i’m sleepy now and this post is plenty long and image-heavy already, so i’ll just leave you with one last image of evening falling over a bay with trees just beginning to turn colors and peaceful waters and hope you enjoyed journeying with us through this blog.

Posted in autumn, crafty stuff, fun stuff, reviews, yum | 4 Comments

pie for breakfast

so, last week was apple pie for my man.  this week was peach custard pie for me, me, me!  (okay, i’ll share a little bit with mr. h-s.)  since i didn’t have any more frozen crusts and since i was out of crisco (a key ingredient in my dad’s favorite pie crust recipe), i decided to try just substituting butter.  i also took this opportunity to try making a pie crust in my new, 9-cup food processor (it’s so smoooooth….).  of course, after rolling out the crusts, i had to roll the scraps into pie-crust-cinnamon-rolls (a long-standing pie tradition in my family).

but i think i didn’t roll the crust thin enough.  or maybe it’s just a butter crust thing.  they were a little more chewy than flaky.

and then i baked this delicious looking pie.  i may have used too many peaches (the custard spilled over the sides onto the cookie sheet i’d placed the pie pan on).  the pie stayed in the oven for at least twice the amount of time that the recipe called for, but it was by no means over-baked.

it was truly challenging to have to wait until the pie was cool (it’s waaaaay better cold than warm or hot), so of course, i had to have a slice for breakfast.

two days in a row.

maybe three.

Posted in yum | 7 Comments

lovely gifts from dear friends

i love surprise gifts.  (who doesn’t?)  so imagine my delight when i received a small, heavy box in the mail last week that contained this beautiful, robin’s egg blue glassybaby from a dear friend accompanied by a very thoughtful note.  it’s a vase!  it’s a candleholder!  it’s a drinking glass! i’m leaning towards the last option because i like the way it feels in my hand so much, but i might have to try that candle idea to see how nicely it glows when lit from the inside.

the next gift was slightly less of a surprise since i’d seen the beginnings of the design a few weeks ago, but i didn’t know that the artist would finish it so quickly.  i just love it!  i mean, look at this great painting!

she titled it “grenadine’s balloon” and confessed to me that her favorite part was the finely detailed fingers.  aren’t they cute?

since she is the friend who convinced me that i could ride a bicycle 400 miles in 6 days in 2004 to raise funds and awareness for aids (even though i’d never done anything remotely athletic before in my life), the bicycle wheel that grenadine is riding is especially appropriate.  (and aren’t those squiggly red-orange lines amidst the blue fantastic?)

peek-a-boo!

i am so lucky to have such wonderful, generous friends.  thank you both so very, very much!

Posted in stuff that sparks a glow in my soul | 1 Comment