Great Summer Read

For all you cat lovers (or just lovers of animals) out there!
 

A friend recently gave me this book as a gift.  GREAT story!  I enjoyed it so much that I’m recommending it to you.  Isn’t he just the cutest kitty?  Thank you, Susan!

Enjoy!
Barb

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UFOs

All Quilter’s know that UFO’s have nothing to do with outer space aliens.  In a Quilter’s world, UFO stands for UnFinished Object.  We also have PIGs (Projects in Grocery Sacks) and my personal favorite, PHDs (Projects Half Done.)  So much nicer to be able to say, “I’m working on my PHD” when we head to the sewing room, don’t you think?

So today I’m sharing a few of my UFOs, PIGs and PHDs.  Mind you, this is definitely not an all-inclusive list!  Every time I clean and organize my sewing room I find new treasures that have been hiding and it’s like Christmas all over again.  And I’ve only been quilting for 12 years.  Remember how I told you that quilting takes over your home and your life?  This is just one example of how that works.

This UFO is nearly finished.  It could affectionately be called a “finished object” at this point because it is a finished quilt top.  You can rationalize with various degrees of finished when you are a Quilter.  (We are all about rationalizing as much as possible in the quilting world.)  It still, however, needs to be quilted and bound before it could be called a finished quilt.  And some would say it isn’t finished until the label is on – but that’s a whole ‘nother story, right Judy R?  For those who might be interested, this pattern came from a book called Scrap Basket Surprises, which, at the shop where I work, we affectionately call The Book.  That’s because we have sold about a gazillion copies of it, more than any other in the history of the shop!  It has many really cool patterns in it.  I wish I’d written that book!

This little UFO is just a preprinted panel to which I added some borders for last July’s Christmas in July at the shop.  Yes, that’s July 2009.  I know, I know…. it’s almost time for Christmas in July 2010!   (That would be July 19-24 at Quilter’s Dream in Colleyville, Texas.  Come on by if you’re in the area!  Free patterns, refreshments and a nice sale too!)  Anyway, this little quilt also needs only quilting and binding to be called done.

This little treasure is a UFO that may be a UFO for many years to come.  I’m piecing these little diamonds all by hand and originally was just going to make a small wall piece.  But I love the pattern so much that I want it to get bigger.  I’m using a technique called Inklingo to do this and if you don’t know about it, you need to go the Linda Franz’ website and check it out!  It is a really cool technique that works for hand OR machine piecing and if you try it, you’re going to want to use it for everything you make!  It’s really cool.  Check it out!  You won’t be disappointed. 

This project was started back in 19xx.  It only needs borders to be a finished top.  Of course then it needs quilting and binding and a label.  But you get the picture by now.

Aren’t these stars cute?  I love this pattern.  I believe it came from an old Fons & Porter book.

This is a cute little table runner that only needs quilting and binding.  I think last year I used it on the table on top of another quilt so you couldn’t tell without looking closely that it wasn’t finished.  We Quilters are very creative that way.  And I’m sure you’re seeing the pattern here without further explanation needed.

This project could most certainly be called a PIGs and not really a PHD (see above.)  It almost isn’t even that as there is nothing in a sack for this one.  I’m just pulling leftover black and white and bright fabrics as I find them in my stash.  I’m sure it will require more purchases in the future.  It was started in a class with Ami Simms (that’s her pattern) in January (I think) at my guild.  I enjoyed the construction of these blocks and definitely want to make a whole quilt with the pattern one day.  Just as soon as I finish the 999 other things I’ve already started……sigh…..

But look!  Look at what a teeny, tiny, little pile those 7 projects make on the end of the ironing board!  Oh, but not to forget Janna’s T-shirt quilt (#8) on the design wall in the background.  She’s probably going to want that one finished before the year 2020.  And if I looked through some drawers and pulled out more UFOs, I’d have enough to keep me busy until 2025 at least.  But who’s counting?  It’s the life of a Quilter.  It’s just what we do.  At least most of us do.  I actually have some friends who finish one thing before they start another.  Horrors!  How can they work that way?  Sounds very boring to me.  There’s always at least one rebel in every group, right?

And don’t even ask about this pile…… again all UFO’s that need to be finished.  But at least these are really, really close.

And the piles live on…….

Hugs,
Barb

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Inside or Outside?

Meet Miss Kitty……
 

Miss Kitty lives outside.  Boo, who you have already met, lives inside.  That’s partly because Miss Kitty has her claws and Boo does not.  And partly because Miss Kitty grew up living outside and, for the most part, she likes it outside.  And Boo grew up inside and, for the most part, likes it inside.  Except once in awhile……

“Can I come in?  Huh?  Can I, can I?  I’ll be good.  I won’t tear up the furniture.  I promise.”

One would really like to go outside – and the other really wants to come inside.

“Aw, come on, Mom.  Open the door and let me go outside for awhile.  I’ll be good.  I won’t wander off.  I promise.”

“Look at this face.  Can you really say no to these blue eyes?  Can’t I puhleeeease come in?  It’s hot out here!”

“Come ONNNNNNN!  Open the door!”

“Can you honestly say no to this face?  I mean, really?  Just for a little while so I can cool off.  Please, pretty please?  With sugar on top?  Or maybe I would like a little cream on top…..”

“Nooooooooooo!  I don’t want to stay outside!  Look at this fur.  I need some relief.  Did I mention that it’s HOT out here?”

Which just goes to show you that even in a cat’s life………

……. the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence.  Or in this case, the other side of the door.

Even if all Boo wants to do is eat the grass.

“Hey Boo!  Can you help me with that big weed behind ya while you’re at it?”  Maybe not…… the thorns look a bit menacing on that one.

Perfectly happy with the grass on my side of the fence,
Barb

Posted in Boo, Miss Kitty | Tagged | 6 Comments

The Best Meatloaf I Ever Made

A while back I did a post and told you that I’d had a mealoaf sandwich for lunch that day.  Just so happens it was a pretty good sandwich.  In fact, I told you that Dear Hubby declared it “The Best Meatloaf I’d Ever Made.”  Funny thing.  Many of you zeroed right in on that and couldn’t believe that somewhere in that post I didn’t include the recipe for the meatloaf!  So for today – your wish is my command.  Today is meatloaf recipe day!

Here are the ingredients……

 

Ground beef, onion, garlic, Italian Style breadcrumbs, egg, Montreal steak seasoning, chili powder, worcester sauce, liquid smoke, salt & pepper.  I also have to admit.  The night that I made “The Best Meatloaf I Ever Made” I also added some carrots – chopped up real fine.  I forgot to add them when I re-made the recipe for you.  You might want to add them.  A good way to get extra veggies in your family’s diet.  Disguised, in case your kids don’t like carrots.

Instead – the night I did the remake I added these:

….green peppers.  I hesitated in putting this picture in the blog today, knowing that I have just lost my dear friend, Sally.  She despises any kind of peppers.  Can’t touch them.  Won’t eat anything they have touched on a plate.  OK, I exaggerated a bit with that last one.  I actually have seen her pick the peppers out of a dish.  But only if she’s really hungry and determined to eat said dish.  Sort of reminds me of my niece, Janna, who as I told you on Brownie day, doesn’t eat any kind of nuts.  Only then she left a comment and I found out that she does eat peanuts and cashews – but only alone, definitely not added to a recipe.  The things you find out by writing a blog!  Who knew?

Hang in there, Sally!  (And you really can just leave out the peppers.)

Chop up the onion.  I now use this technique from The Pioneer Woman for chopping onions.  The only thing I do differently is I lop off the top end before I cut the onion in half.  Then I can set the onion on the flat top to slice it in half.  More stable that way.  And I’d like to point out that by leaving the root end attached, you have something to hold onto while you chop.  Which, of course, this picture doesn’t show.  Because my other hand is holding the camera.  I had to tell you that just in case you couldn’t figure it out for yourself.  Didn’t know you were going to learn the fine art of chopping onions in a quilter’s blog, did ya?  Stick with me, schweetheart, and who knows what all you’ll learn.

Then whack the garlic with the side of the knife to release the skin and peel it off.  Chop the garlic into fine little bits.  Or you could use a garlic press.  But then you wouldn’t be able to take out all your frustrations by whacking it.  If you haven’t done that before, you need to try it.  So much better to whack.  Just my humble opinion.

 

Dump the onions and garlic into the bowl with the ground beef.  I have, on occasion, used ground beef mixed with ground pork or even turkey for my meatloaf.  But for the “Best Meatloaf I Ever Made” I used only ground beef.  Perhaps Dear Hubby is just a beef lover?

From here on out I just dump the ingredients in the bowl…..

A palmful of steak seasoning.

And a palmful of chili powder.

An overflowing handful of Italian breadcrumbs.  See how it overflowed my hand into the bowl a bit?  These are important measurements!  Not.

About a tablespoon of Worcester Sauce…….. and notice I’ve added the egg too.  It is virtually impossible to take a picture of yourself cracking an egg into a bowl.  But when I perfect the art, you’ll be the first to know.

A couple of teaspoons of liquid smoke.  I hadn’t added this to meatloaf before, but think it might be the secret ingredient that made it so good.  And now I’ve shared that secret with you.  Lucky you.  By the way – I hope your scroll wheel on your mouse works really good so you can zip on down through the pictures if you want.  I took a million of them and apparently thought it very important that you saw them all.

This is now the point where I dig my grubby little hands in and just mix this whole baby together.  OK, my hands weren’t grubby at all – I washed them carefully before diving in.  This is also just after the point where I decided to add the green peppers, as you can see.  Close your eyes, Sally and scroll past that picture quickly!

Here’s a little tip I learned from Rachael Ray.  She makes 4 little meatloaves instead of one big one so she can cook it faster.  She’s all about 30 minutes and all.  Well, I like them that way because I like having 4 individual sized ones so that each person gets more of the crispy outside edges.  If you score the meat in half and then half again, it divides more evenly and your loaves are more uniform in size.  Mine don’t ever come out exactly the same, but I hate it when I get to the end if I just scoop it out and the last one is a monster.  Then I have to decide if I want to make 5 instead, or add little bits to the other 3 to make them all even, etc. etc.  This little tip just works for me.  And now you can see if it works for you too!  (Works for hamburgers too…. any time you want to divide your ground meat evenly into four.)  I’m apparently all about the little tips today.

And what’s up with this?  I use a lot of this steak seasoning (sometimes called grill seasoning) so I bought the mega jar at the local warehouse store recently.  So is Canadian steak seasoning the same as Montreal seasoning or does all of Canada use something different than they do in the city of Montreal?  Inquiring minds really need to know these things!  Of course, I did not have the jar with me to compare ingredients when I purchased the big bottle – not that I cared.  They look about the same.  And I actually was pleased to know that there is NO MSG in the big one.  Not sure if there is in the other or not.  And I still haven’t compared the ingredients lists on the jars, so don’t ask.  Although now I’m going to have to because you will ask, won’t you?  And now I just can’t stand not knowing anyway.  I’ll let you know if I find out anything important when I check……

Here are the little loaves all ready for the oven.  I drizzle olive oil on the cookie sheet before I add them – and I sort of roll them around a bit to get the oil all over the tops too.

And here they are in all their deliciousness after they have come out of the oven.  I let them sit for just a bit before I put them on the plates and slice them up.

I served them with a bit of ketchup drizzled on top and a baked sweet potato on the side with butter, salt and pepper.  We are a ketchup-on-meatloaf family, but you wouldn’t have to add the ketchup.  In fact, I think the first time I made this meatloaf, I added a bit of tomato paste to the mix!  I can’t believe I forgot that this time!  And quite honestly, although Dear Hubby didn’t say so on the re-make for the blog, I think the meatloaf was a bit better that other time I made it.  This is the problem with meatloaf for me.  I just throw it together every time I make it!  However, when Hubby said it was the best ever, later that night I wrote down the ingredients.  But apparently I forgot to write tomato paste….sigh….  Now I know my friend Sally is going to say it was better the first time because it did not have green peppers.  But don’t believe her!  It was the lack of tomato paste, I’m sure.  So throw in two tablespoons of tomato paste in your meatloaf and it will be the best ever.  And now it’s forever included in this blog, so I won’t forget again either!  By the way – I buy it in the tube.  It’s very handy.  You can squeeze out the amount you need and store it in the fridge much easier and longer than the stuff in a can.  Just another tip for ya there…..

And although I love leftover meatloaf for just plain ol’ meatloaf sandwiches with ketchup slathered on, last night for dinner I decided to try something different.  Meatloaf is truly a double-duty meal at our house and I plan for leftovers.

 I sliced up the meatloaf rather thin……

And put it on rye bread with swiss cheese slices.  I added a bit of dijon mustard – just a little – for a bit of zing to the flavor.

And then I grilled them in my cast iron skillet.  If you are a Pioneer Woman fan, you must have a cast iron skillet.  It’s a requirement.  Doesn’t that melting cheese just look yummy?

Here it is in all its yummy goodness.  It was sort of like a patty melt without the onions (although there were onions in the meatloaf.)  And some grilled onions on the sandwich would have been good too, now that I think about it.  Next time…..

And this was dessert.  Oh, man.  I had some strawberries that needed to be eaten.  And leftover fudge sauce from the Brownies a la mode we had at Suz’ last week.  That recipe is here.  It’s yummy no matter what you pour it over.  And easy, peazy!  And actually the above picture was Dear Hubby’s dessert………

This one was mine.  I like a little strawberries with my chocolate.  In case you can’t tell, mine was swimming in fudge sauce.  Decadent.  But oh, so yummy.

Here’s the ingredients list for the meatloaf:

1 1/2 lbs ground beef
Italian breadcrumbs – an overflowing handful
one small onion – chopped
2 cloves garlic – chopped
Montreal (or Canadian) Steak seasoning – a palmful (approximately a generous tsp)
chili powder – a palmful (see above)
1 egg
2 Tbsp tomato paste – don’t forget this!
1/2 green pepper, chopped (optional for Sally)
1 carrot, chopped fine
1 Tbsp Worcestershire sauce
2 tsp liquid smoke
Salt & pepper

Mix all together, divide into 4 loaves and bake at 400 degrees for 30-35 minutes.  Or if you prefer one big loaf, you’ll need to bake it for about an hour or so.

And now you have just read the longest meatloaf recipe in the history of mankind.  Amen.
Hugs,
Barb

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A Special Display of Quilts!

I was up and down on a ladder yesterday….. hanging quilts at the shop for a special JSS Display.  The things I do for my Bee friends!  Well, at least I got some good exercise.  And I have all of you to thank for that.  But forget about my exercise – the quilts are marvelous!  And you need to see the pictures.

 

This sign explains the display so I don’t have to.  And since I typed the sign today, I’m really the one explaining it to you in the first place.  So I don’t need to explain further here.  Because the sign is self-explanatory.  Well, you get the idea.  No further explanation necessary.  Wonder how many words I can come up with in one paragraph using the root “explain?”  I guess I’ll quit because I think I’ve used them all – On with the show!

These three were made by Pam, Sue G and Judy L.  All very different, but all using at least a little of the same fabric.  Fun!

This one is Sue H’s.  A wonky Magic 9 Patch.  Wonky, wonky, wonky!  But very cute.

Karen made a bag using a cool circle technique. 

And this quilt, made by yours truly, uses the same technique only with much larger circles!  I used the challenge fabric to make this class sample so that I could kill two birds with one stone.  Since you already understand about my problem with procrastination and deadlines, you can see why I would need to make my projects double duty.  (See previous posts re: quilt projects and progress.)  If I’m going to procrastinate, I might as well do it smartly!

These were done by Lani, Kay, Linda & Janna.  This is not my niece, Janna, lest you get confused and think she could make her own T-shirt quilt.  A different Janna.  Just to be clear.  I wouldn’t want anyone to be confused.  And yes, Linda did just sew handles on her one yard of fabric and a seam up the side and turn it into a big Santa bag.  But she filled that bag with goodies for the Christmas party and we all forgave her that she didn’t make a prize-winning quilt, but rather a prize-giving bag.  And we all got the prizes!  This group is all about prizes.

These two pretty quilts were made by Connie and Judy R.  Judy probably already has finished her quilt for the 2010 challenge.  She’s always the first one finished.  I need to hang around her more so some of that character trait might rub off on me.  But it probably wouldn’t work anyway.  I’m hopeless when it comes to finishing things early.  I try, really I do.  Help, Judy!

This is Madelyn’s quilt.  I think it is quite stunning!  And she probably finished way early too…… you’d think this would rub off on me, wouldn’t you?

 

And this is Sally’s quilt.  She made up all these little aprons in her head.  She is very talented.  I’m hoping some of that rubs off on me too.  Many of us encouraged her to make patterns from this quilt.  We now have those patterns for sale in the shop.  I think you could say I nagged her into it.  She gave in so that I would stop bothering her about them.  You will thank me when you see them.  And Sally will thank me when she sells millions of them to all my blog friends who first heard about them here.  I think she will owe me a commission, don’t you think?  You can contact her at cloudpatch@sbcglobal.net – be sure to tell her you heard about it here first!

By the way – the only challenge fabric that Sally used was for the binding.  Nowhere else in the whole quilt.  She’s a rebel, that Sally girl…..

Enjoy the display!  And come see it in person if you’re in the area.  Quilter’s Dream in Colleyville, Texas.  Quilts are always so much better in person.  (And you can pick up one of Sally’s patterns while you’re there.)
Hugs,
Barb

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