Category Archives: Life

I Want to Learn to Felt

Love. It.

Wednesday Pounce! I have decided that I want to learn to felt wool. There are some rings at the gallery/studio fabricated from heavy gauge wire covered in felted wool in a variety of delightful colors – I want to stack them, mix them and match them, but more importantly, I want to know how they’re made and how to make my own. I think I can, I think I can…I will, I must! I have to, because I shared it on the internet, and it can never be undone.

I’ve really been enjoying Brown Cow Organic plain yogurt with crystallized honey lately. It’s replaced any cravings I might have had for candy or desserts, which is good because I’m too wiped to bake this week, but also good because it’s so much more incredible than candy. Really, you should try it!

Anyone notice that Egglands Eggs is advertising?? I feel uneasy about this, with a feeling similar to the one I get from watching the Corn Refiner’s Association commercials for HFCS…but without the outright indignation. I personally prefer organic local eggs, and the eggs I got once from a friend who raises his own (3) chickens were incredible – the color, the texture, the intense flavor – and I can’t help but notice that Egglands isn’t advertising hormone-free, cruelty free eggs, just that their eggs have more vitamins added. This sounds a lot like when Coke decided to release Coke + Vitamins….because it’s good for you now…right.

That’s your weekly dose of healthy paranoia; that’s what I get for keeping the T.V. on Iron Chef while I blog!

♥ Momo

Totoro Bird

Tonari no Totoro

I just got my Christmas present from one of my closest friends! She won my heart by drawing and sculpting cats for me when we were ten, and her work is more amazing every year ♥ She makes incredibly lifelike watercolors of real birds, and conjured the above knowing how much I love tiny fat birds and Miyazaki.

♥ Momo

Heavy

SAM

Downtown can be rough. It’s not as though it isn’t safe to walk the streets at night; the center of downtown is actually pretty nice – full of people laughing, running to a movie, a date, a show. But then you turn a corner, and there’s always one block or another that just feels different, night or day. Not clearly unsafe, but it has something ineffable about it, something that makes you straighten up and bring your eyes into focus. There’s no one laughing on this street. There’s a little more trash on the sidewalk, dark stains that might once have been the shadows of needles. There used to be a needle exchange on one of these blocks, after all. There are businesses and condos moving in now, in an attempt to assimilate these streets into the greater safety of the downtown area, and some are succeeding.

There are people who return here, looking for what they remember. I’ve seen many of them turn away to find another street. But some of them see the humor in a brightly lit boutique where they once brought their needles. An even rarer few do something about it. They bring their “good humor” into the shops, the condos, the open, clean spaces.

For the first time living here, I met one of these people, a man who came into my workplace, not as a customer, not to reminisce. He wasn’t old enough to reminisce about much at all; he had known the space back when it was a needle exchange, a place to get condoms, and he thought that it was so funny to get in my space while he told me about it. He wasn’t going to be nearly as nice as the gentleman on the bike I wrote about here. He and his friend, who immediately moved behind me and out of my range of sight came in with intention; with purpose, and directed not at just anyone who would listen, but at me. He was there to make me feel small, unsafe in the neighborhood our store is in, unsafe in the environment I make my own every week, and to feel unsafe in my own skin. He looked at me and didn’t see the person I am, but a thing, a source of amusement for him and his friend. He was crude, stupid, but dangerous. In the way that men don’t understand when I try to explain, he was not the sort of person you want knowing where you work. And here I was, at work and less than two feet from him.

What did I do? I froze. For all the things people tell you later, to call the police, to call the manager, to move out of the way of the present danger, to act. I froze, I went to a place in my head that was made the last time I didn’t feel safe and was left all alone with someone this dangerous. I did the stupid thing.

I’m disappointed; I feel like my skirts and cute shoes betrayed me; like this wouldn’t have happened if I had been wearing something else, if I were less pleasant, less cracked, less visibly vulnerable. And I’m angry. I shouldn’t be adjusting my wardrobe and attitude so I won’t be “asking for it”. It shouldn’t be my responsibility to keep men from threatening me, verbally or physically.

I’m more than disappointed. I hear stories like mine from every woman I meet – it’s that common. I carry them with me every day, and it feels heavier every time I step outside. For me, this was one more straw – too much, too heavy.

I’m looking for another street. I’m not the one to fight him over this one, and I’m not going to risk him and his friend remembering me and coming back. The cost is too high.

I promise to have better news soon! I’m thinking of making Apple Cinnamon Buckwheat Oatmeal this weekend, and I’ll post the results. With any luck, I’ll never have a post like this again. ♣

♥ Momo

Serendipitous Tea Loaf Thursday

Yummy

Had an awesome morning – up too early, talked too much too early, stumbled home, and encountered a messy kitchen! To celebrate having a clean kitchen once again, I present to you Serendipitous Orange Lemon Tea Loaf, so named because I had exactly the right ingredients for just this thing in my kitchen when the dust cleared, and for very little else….and might have replaced orange with lemon, because not only do I love lemons, but I did not have the requisite oranges in my kitchen to zest for this loaf.

Orange Lemon Tea Loaf

2/3 cup butter (softened)
1 1/4 cups sugar
2 Eggs – Exactly how many we had in our house this morning! Serendipitous!
1/2 cup Plain Yogurt – Picked up on my way home yesterday evening, before finding this recipe!
1/2 cup orange lemon juice – When life gives you lemons…make tea loaf ♥
1 Tbsp orange lemon zest
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
Glaze! (I did not have enough lemon juice for this, so I sprinkled the top of the loaf with lemon zest prior to baking – it was lovely.)
1/2 cup confectioners’ sugar
2 to 3 teaspooons orange juice

Preheat oven to 350° & grease a 9×5 loaf pan.

In a large mixing bowl, cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. (I only figured out last year that this really means medium speed for at least five minutes, to get the texture right!) Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition…or two at once if you’re like me and went a little egg-happy at this step. Add yogurt, orange lemon juice and zest. Combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt; add to creamed mixture and mix well.

Pour into greased loaf pan. Bake at 350° for 55-65 minutes or until a toothpick inserted near the center comes out clean (as per usual – you can, and I did cover loosely with foil if/when the top browns too quickly. (After about 25 mins in the oven.) Cool for 10 minutes before removing from pan to wire rack to cool completely.

Glaze! I am enthusiastic about glaze:

Combine confectioners’ sugar and orange lemon juice with a whisk. Drizzle over cooled bread, having poked holes in the top if desired.

Enjoy with Earl Grey tea with sugar and cream – because bergamot goes best with any citrus baked goods, as you well know.

…and lazy kitchen helpers, who snuck off to catch some Z’s. Naughty!

Baking Varmint

♥ Momo

Dooced

What??

 

I learned a new word today! I have not, in fact been dooced – but I think it’s an idea for all bloggers to keep in mind.

 

Daily quotes:

 

“He showed the words “chocolate cake” to a group of Americans and recorded their word associations. “Guilt” was the top response. If that strikes you as unexceptional, consider the response of French eaters to the same prompt: “celebration.” -Michael Pollan

 

“Hey did you know that a tablespoon of bacon fat only has like 113 calories? I APPROVE OF THAT.” – Bread & Honey (This post also notable for it’s use of the words “Whoopsie Doodles”.)

 

♥ Momo