Saturday, May 01, 2010

Rosie Sock Pattern, Knitcircus Summer 2010





My Rosie socks are published today, (yes, Ria, they were socks!) in Knitcircus Magazine Issue 10, Summer 2010. My favorite part of the pattern? Ribbing hidden beneath the cuff gives a snug fit.
As usual, there are some spectacular articles in there too, free for the reading, all 75 pages!.
-Great interviews with Cookie A. Susan B. Anderson and Wendy D. Johnson
-Recipes, sewing tutorials, and the things that make Knitcircus special.
-Book, yarn and tool reviews.
-and patterns.. loads and loads of patterns available, some as free downloads, all of them unique.

Here are the deets on Rosie:

Rosebuds peek through the briars in the colorfully textured cuff of these top-down socks. A cleverly fitted German heel (with garter stitch columns for close fit) and French toe make this sock something special. A small section of stranded knitting near the toe echoes the latticed design of the cuff.

Skill level: Adventurous; colorwork, sock construction
Sizes: Medium child (C)
small tween/adult (S), medium adult (M), large adult (L). Model shown in size S.
Finished measurements: 5.5”
6.5”, 7.75”, 8.75” circumference, unstretched

(photos provided by Knitcircus Magazine)

Friday, April 30, 2010

Asian What-cha-got Soup



I don't remember if Liz Troldahl coined the phrase or if I have always called this kind of recipe "What-cha-got" but basically you take what you have in the cupboard and combine it to create a dish, and depending on whether the final product is liquid, solid or somewhere in between you call it What-cha-got Soup, Casserole or Stew, respectively.
While living in Japan, many Asian staples became my staples as well, so I always have sesame oil, garlic chili paste and the like in the house.
Today's soup recipe draws heavily on some of my favorite flavors from various Asian cuisines, and even more heavily on leftovers from my salad the other day (see Salad Days post from yesterday)
1 qt chicken stock (we use Kitchen Basics exclusively because it tastes best to us and is half the sodium of other stocks with no loss of flavor)
small amounts of:
Bok Choy
Frozen Spinach
Celery
Carrot
Bell Pepper
Or whatever veg you have lying about.
Small amounts of:
Sesame Oil
Garlic
Ginger
peanut butter (about a heaping Tablespoon full)
Rice Wine Vinegar
Soy Sauce
and a good squeeze of garlic chili sauce.
1/2 can black-eyed peas, or another protein of your choice. I have also sliced up turkey cold cuts in this kind of soup and it tastes fine.

And that's it. If you have some leftover cooked rice, add that. If you have rice noodles, or other noodles, add them. I had neither, so I ate it without.

(I used a bowl I inherited from Grandpa Miller for the photo shoot... I have a weakness for exuberantly flowered china)

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Salad Days


This seems to be recipe week! I have yet another soup recipe to share tomorrow, but for today, it's all about salad. Although I make salads in the winter, there is something extra special about all the lovely fresh local produce you can get that inspires me to have a salad almost every day once spring hits.
This is what I threw together a few days ago. I didn't give exact proportions (except for the cheese) as your tastes may differ than mine. Of course you can substitute ingredients, too, but this wound up being a lovely balance of sweet and savory:

romaine lettuce
red radish
baby bell peppers (Oscar found these the other day at Hillers, they are very cunning and flavorful)
half a can of black-eyed peas
celery
carrot
1 ounce of super sharp cheddar cheese, finely crumbled.

Dressing:
2 parts Olive oil
1 part Malt vinegar
Jamaican Dread Mustard Sauce (just a wee bit, only a few drops, really)
salt and pepper

It made a huge lunch salad, and I had a happy crunching time :-}

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Hummus Recipe



Oscar just sent me an email telling me the hummus I made for him this week is the best I have ever made. I guess I should write down the recipe before I forget.

1 can chick peas, drained
2 cloves (not the whole cluster, just the cloves) roasted elephant garlic, or 5-6 cloves regular garlic
1 red bell pepper, roasted
1 tsp sesame oil
1 tsp lemon juice
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 tsp Tabasco brand Chipotle sauce
1/8-1/4 tsp Jamaican Dread mustard sauce (or another very hot sauce)

First roast the pepper and garlic. I clean them, brush them lightly with olive oil and roast them on medium (350 deg f.) until they look soft and shiny.
Drain the chickpeas, reserving the juice just in case the hummus is too thick for your taste.
Put everything into the food processor (or use a big mortar and pestle if you prefer)
and blend until smooth. add a little of the reserved juice if the hummus seems too thick for you.

Oscar likes his with crudités and pita bread, or corn chips.
I like to make enough roasted pepper and garlic for several batches and put them in the freezer for later use. It keeps better if you make a smooth paste from them before freezing.
Unlike the photo above, the hummus is a lovely terracotta shade.
(I didn't take any photos of MY hummus, so this is a photo of hummus from a royalty free site)

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Pattern to be Published Saturday


I have a new pattern in the upcoming Knit Circus Magazine, due out on Saturday.
This is the only hint I can give (don't want to ruin the surprise!)


Monday, April 26, 2010

The Withig Project - Scarf

I am working on a three pattern collection, based on an antique stitch pattern.
The photo is a (pre-blocking) preview of the first of these patterns, a long cotton summer scarf. I'm thinking about adding some fringe, and perhaps a few beads but I haven't decided yet.
I received yarn support from Knit Picks (blessings rain upon their heads) in their new line of simply cotton heathers, and I am in love with this yarn. It is butter soft, and although it may be hard to tell from my photo, the heathers create a subtle depth to the color, adding a glow, not quite a sheen to it.
This particular shade is Carnelian Heather. I have other colors for the remaining two patterns in this series.





Sunday, April 25, 2010

Family Time

Oscar, Tommy, Amanda Sean and I went out to dinner at Yotsuba last night. Sean and I had a lot of fun playing. Sean is 18 months old. Look at how he is holding the pen!
We were also playing with chopsticks, and his dexterity is pretty amazing.
I know, I'm just a touch prejudiced as his godmother, but I think he's a pretty terrific kid :-}






Friday, April 23, 2010

Three at a Time


There have been some very interesting guesses! Some of them were right!
The yarn I will be using for the finished item is Zauberball by Schoppel-wolle in Stonewashed.
It has the slow color changes I love, in a fairly subdued (for me) denim blue color. The color ranges from palest faded blue jeans to deep almost-black navy.
I am working on two other projects as well, one is in a deep red, the other in teal. I am just past the half way point on each.
The image above is another sneaky photo, a swatch I made for the red project.
The teal project is a hat and scarf for my Farrow Rib set, that will be listed with Knit Picks when it is finished. The hat is done, the scarf JUST over half done. I like a good long scarf.
The yarn is a yummiliscious color called Aegean in Knit Picks Gloss HW
If I had focused on one object at a time, I would be done with one and partway with the next, but I really need to switch between needle sizes and even yarn-flexibility to keep my hands going longer. The red is cotton on #4s, the Zauberball is crochet on a G hook, and the teal is Aran weight yarn knit on #8's (or were they 9's? ).
This week I had to take a day off knitting when my right shoulder seized up and my upper arm felt like I had been lifting weights all day, instead of just a knitting needle. I wonder if the high muscular pain levels of fibromyalgia have anything in common with the lactic acid build up athletes get in their muscles? It feels identical to the way I felt the day after rock climbing, in my well-spent youth.



Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Sneaky Hints That Tell You Nearly Nought




Here are a few pictorial hints, that won't really tell you much about what I'm working on (I've changed the yarn, for one thing, as well as the shape)

Monday, April 19, 2010

Learning through Process

This has been an interesting few weeks for me, designer-wise. I learned a great deal, both about myself and about designing.
I am an instinctive crocheter. I learned the basic stitches long ago, and followed patterns, at least the beginning of them, for a while. By the time I was 12, I was using free crochet (long before the term was likely invented) to create 3-dimensional unicorns, dragons, pillows.. anything I wanted to, really. I never wrote any notes about those patterns, never tried to record the directions in any way. I don't even have photographs of them, as to me, they were not that special. I thought everyone did that sort of thing.
Knitting was entirely different. I learned to knit at least 4 times, the first two, just garter stitch, the third in order to make a sweater in Japan (following directions written in Japanese, I seldom shy from a challenge) the final time I learned, I added to the basic knowledge of knitting stockinette and kept on adding to it first from my sis-in-love, then from online and book sources, mostly.
When I began to write knitting patterns, I was drawing on knowledge gained from helping my sister in law test her patterns. It was a very good way to learn, as her patterns are of high quality and explain things clearly. I have been a teacher, and writing a knitting pattern draws on that ability as well, for me. As I was relatively new to knitting (compared to crochet) it was (relatively) easy to place the techniques and patterns into words explicitly and concisely.
I decided a while back to write a crochet pattern, for a shawl.
As I often did when I crocheted as a kid, I just leapt off and began, except that I wrote down what I did as I did it this time. and the next time.. and the time after that. Six times I've tried. The first attempts were too long as compared to the width, the others didn't have a good smooth simple way to increase, etc... The seventh seems to be working out, so far. My pal Lynx has been with me every step of the way, telling me how beautiful it was going to be, making key suggestions, just being there to listen when I failed. Thank you Lynx!
In retrospect, if I had approached writing the crochet pattern the same way I do knitting patterns once or twice would have done it. If I had drawn a sketch of the stitch pattern, a basic ratio of height to length, and translated that into the form I was trying to achieve, I would have realized what adjustments needed to be made without all those failed attempts.
Believe me when I say the next crochet pattern will be approached very differently than this one!
The final shawl pattern will be worth it, I think. It looks lovely so far, and matches what I saw in my mind's eye when I began, but it would have been just as lovely if I had figured it out within a few attempts instead of seven!
I don't regret the time spent, really, as perhaps it was the only way I would have learned these particular lessons in design.
I have a tendency to learn best by miring myself in brambles and having to figure a way out.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Ebaying at the Moon

We have more items up for auction on Ebay this week; many books on the craft of writing, many books on Paganism, and perhaps the jewel of the collection: The complete series of The Secrets of Isis on DVD. Most items start at 99 cents.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Big Sunshiny Love


Oscar brought home more posies from a shopping expedition.
I love my guy!

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Yaaarn!



Knit Picks has a new line of Spring yarns called tonals. (top photo)
My order of fingering-weight yarn arrived yesterday (bottom photo):
Deep Waters (blue), Kindling (brown) and Canopy (green).
The colors are gorgeous, and they have the same colors in the merino lace-weight!


Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Cloud!

Thanks to Kym for linking this site in her blog. Here's the cloud created from the Otterwise Blog.



Monday, April 12, 2010

Mary Jane Lamond and Knitting

I am having a very enjoyable day. Other than a lingering faint fatigue, I think the cold has finally gone. I am spending most of today working on a new pattern based on a night cap from the 1800s. This is a pattern it took me months and months to wrestle into modern terms. I started back when I was less experienced and it took me quite some time to realize there were two lines of instruction missing, and more time to figure out what they should be. Still, the pattern is unique in my experience, not too lacy, not too textured, perfect for Spring and Autumn, worth sticking with. I finally came up with ideas to use it a few weeks ago.
Saturday I received a HUGE box of yarn support from Knit Picks based on a swatch of the pattern and the idea I had for a three-pattern collection (might expand it if I can figure out mitts). Bless Knit Picks!
Because the pattern is only a little complex to work out, and consists only of basic stitches I can listen to music while I work (pausing if I get to an intricate bit that needs re-counting).
I rediscovered my Mary Jane Lamond cd Lan Duil. As it is in Gaelic (which I don't speak), it impinges less on my concentration, almost like listening to celtic chant. I love her voice, and I love this music. It is perfect for knitting today.
On another of her albums, Suas E! she has a traditional spinning song, 'Òran Snìomh' .
"Spinning songs (used to accompany the spinning of wool) are no longer commonly sung. As the industrial age encroached on Cape Breton, this tradition along with many others retreated. This song is based on the singing of the late Lachlann Dhòmhnaill Nìll (Lauchie Dan N. MacLellan) of Broad Cove, Inverness County."
(link is to lyrics)

Here is a youtube video of her music you might enjoy:

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Sleeeeep.....






The worst of the cold is over, I think, leaving behind the desire to nap all day. Almost the only time I take naps is when I am sick. Even when I was a kid I hated nap time. There was too much I would rather be doing.
I woke at 8 a.m., got up and tried a new version of the crocheted shawl, read more of the next book to review, and became overwhelmingly sleepy at 9:30, went back to cuddle with Oscar and fell asleep, woke up at 10:30, and I have been fighting the desire for a nap since about noon. I think I will give in, and go to sleeeeeep for awhile. I guess I should take the advice I so often hand out, and listen to my body.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Another Soup (Search) Day

This cold is being a real stubborn set of symptoms. I'd suspect allergies except for the fever, sore throat and cough (and aches and brain fog and etc.. ad nauseum (and 'add nausea').
It is frustrating, I had just written Wednesday to Mindy at Freshfiction saying I would be sending in several reviews this week, but only managed to finish one (and a half, but that doesn't count).
I am also struggling to design a crocheted shawl. I have often sat down, crocheted whatever I wanted, then used it, but other than a simple afghan square, this is the first actual crochet pattern I've tried to write down to tell someone else how to make something. I am on the 3rd (or 4th) attempt, and I know I have at least one, possibly two more attempts to go before I will be satisfied with the shaping. I have learned it doesn't save any time to try and work on anything logical while I feel crappy, though, it just needs to be re-done.
It is however a very good day for watching Batman and knitting a very simple scarf. I need to keep going for at least one more skien of yarn before I can send it in to Knit Picks. :-}
On a more positive note, the sun is brilliant today, and the yard has lost the last of the winter taupes. The green seems to be shouting, it is so vivid, and the redbuds are like tiny bubbles of joy. The temperature is still a bit nipply (as Oscar likes to say) but the sun is so bright I prefer to throw on a lap blanket and shawl and keep the window open just a bit.
So, today would be another good soup day.
On a whim, I did a Google search asking for the best soup in the world. There were about 71,600,000 results. So I switched to "best soup in the world" recipe and got a more manageable 5,250.
Out of those, one of them leapt out at me. Well, not literally, but for some reason my eyes skimmed down until they saw Harira, (a soup often served during Ramadan) It looks like a stunningly good chicken soup recipe(although you may also use beef or turkey) with lentils veggies and saffron. It also calls for lemon and tomato (allergy alert), so I skimmed on.
Then I clicked on Soto Bandung; a Spicy Soup Bandung Style, an Indonesian recipe. Also yummy looking with beef and radish, and pepper, but it required me to fry soybeans, which I am not up to most days.
The Columbian Plantain Soup sounds great too, but would require a trip to Hiller's (my favorite store in town) as I think bananas would be too sweet.
Then I saw it. It was part of a'best soup' discussion on roadfood.com .
A name I could not resist looking into; Cullen Skink, a Scottish delicacy. A quick and hefty search found a recipe on one of my favorite sites, Rampant Scotland.com.
Hmm Haddock, potatoes, cream, onion... yep, I'll make this for myself some day (wonder if I could use tilapia?) but it is too dairy-heavy for me today (dairy and colds do not mix) and way too dairy heavy for Oscar any day, and he doesn't like fish very much, either. Still, It does sound lovely when I'm feeling better.
I had a good time searching among all the recipes, what a huge variety! I feel like I went on a mini vacation, and it was calorie free, as well.
I think I'll just make more of my old stand by, chicken broth with good stuff in it.
(photo above is of one of my favorite flowers int eh garden right now, dotted violet)

Friday, April 09, 2010

Virtual Soup- Roasted Cauliflower with Caramelized Onions and Gorgonzola


Lynn M mentioned she'd like some soup sometime. It has turned frigid and damp with a wind full of teeth here today, soup sounds pretty darned good to me, too. I don't feel like making much beyond "boil some broth and stick some stuff in it" (I have a cold) but I started searching online, hoping to find some sort of website where I could brew virtual soup to send to friends.
I haven't found such a site (yet.. maybe I'll build one with Oscar sometime) but I DID find an excellent soup recipe to share today.
It comes from Ms Adventures in Italy, (as does the photo I totally skyped). Since Oscar can't have two of the main ingredients, when I make my version it will be quite different, and less decadent, but for today, for us, here is (directly copied from the website):
"ROASTED CAULIFLOWER SOUP WITH GORGONZOLA AND CARAMELIZED ONIONS
Note: My version of this “soup” is more of a vellutata (velvet-like) in that it’s quite dense. You can play with the density by adding more milk and broth to your taste.
1 head cauliflower
1 white or yellow onion
100g gorgonzola cheese
Vegetable or chicken broth, hot (about 2 cups)
1 cup whole milk
1 T. brown/cane sugar (or white, if you prefer)
Olive oil
-Cut cauliflower head into chunks and arrange on a cookie sheet/baking tray. Drizzle olive oil and sprinkle salt/pepper/hot pepper or other spices as desired. Roast under the broiler for 20-30 minutes, checking continually that they aren’t burning and turning the pieces at least once during cooking.
While roasted cauliflower is roasting, slice the onion into rings and start to saute with a little olive oil. After 10 minutes, add the brown/cane sugar. Cook on medium-low heat for another 15-20 minutes.
After cauliflower has cooled (enough to handle), in a large bowl or pot, blend in broth with a wand blender and add some of the milk. Taste and add more broth/milk for the consistency you desire. It’s ok if the taste isn’t as strong as you’d like, remember that the onions and gorgonzola will add a lot of flavor.
Ladle the hot soup into bowls, and top with some of the caramelized onions and gorgonzola cut into small chunks."

All together now. Yummmmmmmmmmm......

At the bottom of the blog post she also listed more soups I want to try sometime:
and
Spicy Pumpkin Soup at Simple Recipes

Thursday, April 08, 2010

Dah WINNAHS!!!

How it worked: The first thing I did was establish who had how many entries, then I assigned a number for each entry (there were 70 total entries!!).
After I found out which 7 people won (there were 7 prizes) I then had mini drawings if more than one of the people wanted one of the prizes. (There was a lot of competition for the yarn, as you can imagine, even among just the 7 winners!)
Because no one wanted the crochet tools, they were retired from the field.
If people liked both the yarn and the patterns, but didn't win the yarn, I increased the number of 'pattern prizes' so they won something they wanted. PDFs are good that way LOL.
In no particular order, here are the winners and the prizes they won! If I don't have contact information for one of the winners, and they do not contact me within one week from today, I will choose another winner from the pool of 70 entries next Friday. (minus those who have already won, of course).
Winners, please contact me at ottergal AT comcast DOT net to give me your mailing information.

Congratulations to:
Vertigo1414 who won the Loch Desk Monster!! (I don't have an email for you hon, please write me at the email address above to tell me where to mail your Nessie :-} )
LynnM who won the Yarn!!
Leslie (Gall.) who won the Book!!
Lynx who won the Tarot Reading!!
Rozewolf, who won the Barenaked Ladies CD!!
and
Joanne M. and Ria who each won 5 patterns of their choice from Otterwise.com!!
Joanne, Ria, please send me an email listing the 5 patterns you would like to have :-}
Thanks everyone for making this a terrific week!

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Wonderful Week

This has been a wonderful gift of a week for me. So many of you commented positively on my blog, and what I write here. I feel very valued, and loved, and warmed from the inside out.
Sometimes I have wondered if I have been a little too blunt/honest/raw about my reality. After this week, I don't think I will ever wonder again. Thank you, thank you all from the very soles of my feet for reading my words. Knowing you are out there listening means the world to me.
Tomorrow when I get up I will pull the names of the prize winners, and get them listed here.
The prizes up for grabs are (in no particular order):
-Barenaked Ladies' brand new cd All in Good Time
-Five patterns of your choice from Otterwise Designs
-The Loch Desk Monster, a wee bit o' Scotland in your office
-2 skeins of hand-painted soy silk yarn
-a collection of crochet-based tools
-Elements of Style by Rosemary Hill
-A tarot card reading.
You have until midnight tonight to leave a comment here, or email me at ottergal AT comcast DOT net with which prize you like the most, and for two entries, mention something you like or don't like about otterwise.com
I wish I had enough prizes for everyone to feel as I do this week, that I won a million hugs.