30 August 2013

Friday Funny

The guys are NOT going to believe we found a photo booth!

More links to make you smile. Or laugh. Or roll your eyes. Or turn off the computer and go outside.

Ha ha ha. (I used to have a Dell. It died.)

Vrooooooom! (Scroll down.)

fun bookmarks

I Wanna Draw Your Ha-aaa-aand

Way better than a dictionary!

Totally awesome!

Beary cute!

Oh. My. Gosh.

Not funny, but beautiful:

Man-hole covers

Jupiter in Thread

Bet this gets great mileage...

Think Pink

From QuiltCon.

Pop Culture (LOVE, LOVE, LOVE the R2D2!!!)

One last laugh...

My, how times have changed.

29 August 2013

The End of the Skein

Spare Parts Bear

I've been making bears (mostly from leftovers) since October 2008. As I tried to use up some of the worsted weight yarn I've had in storage for years, I occasionally would start a bear and run out of yarn before I finished. A lot of my yarn is so outdated, I can't match it at all anymore. I wound up with a bunch of spare parts by Christmas of 2008 and wasn't quite sure what to do with them until the Bargain Basement Bear Challenge was announced in 2009.

This was my entry (which garnered an honorable mention) in that contest, which challenged fiber artists to create a bear with only what they could find already in their stash, no new materials allowed.

My Spare Parts Bear was made from white yarn left over from a sweater I knitted right after the 2002 Olympics, inspired by the snowflake design in that year's logo. The peach and purple yarn were left over from an afghan I made in 1998. The blue was left over from a baby blanket I made in the early 1990s. The yellow was left over from hair for a doll I made in the mid-1980s. The seriously old-fashioned "ocean mist" green was left over from a vest I made in the early 1980s.

The glow-in-the-dark pony bead eyes were left over from a 1998 trip to Alaska with my kids, who fell in love with beaded Inuit T-shirts I could not afford. I bought bargain Alaska T-shirts from a discount store, cut several inches into the hem on each to form fringe and then taught my kids (and neices) how to string pony beads onto the fringe and tie a knot. The finished project was every bit as good as the expensive shirts I couldn't afford, and the beads glowed in the dark, to boot!

My Spare Parts Bear's bow is left over from when I could buy five spools of ribbon for $1. I can't even remember when I bought them, only that I bought 20 spools for $4, and I've been slowly whittling away at that collection all these years. (Yes, I still have a bit left!)

The stuffing is the orange-scented cotton found in chewable vitamin bottles.

This bear was fun to design, and I'm so glad I no longer have a completely full drawer of spare bear parts anymore!

27 August 2013

Wordless Wednesday

Hidden from View by Betty Sutton

Let's Do Lunch by Barbara Yates Beasley, second place

The Lunker by Janice M. Jones, Quilter's Treasure First Place

Detail of The Lunker by Janice M. Jones, Quilter's Treasure First Place

Detail of The Lunker by Janice M. Jones, Quilter's Treasure First Place

Ahhh! Life is a Holiday by Linda Hibbert

Pride Goes Before a Fall by Phyllis Binkley

Zach by Klonda Holt

Detail of Zach by Klonda Holt

September by Cindy Seitz-Krug

Detail of September by Cindy Seitz-Krug

Joined by a Thread by Marian Drain and Muriel Woods-Paes

Detail of Joined by a Thread by Marian Drain and Muriel Woods-Paes

Last Dance in the Arctic by Kathy McNeil

Detail of Last Dance in the Arctic by Kathy McNeil

Ancient Memories Wedding Quilt by Lynn Drennan

Detail of Ancient Memories Wedding Quilt by Lynn Drennan

Lion in Winter by Alisa Siceloff

Detail of Lion in Winter by Alisa Siceloff

Ride, Captain, Ride

the valley

Last Tuesday was scheduled to be a return to Independence Pass, where we would watch the USA Pro Cycling Challenge climb one of the passes of the Queen's Stage for the third consecutive year. Once again, The Lizard didn't know until the night before whether he would be able to get the time off.

The first year of the race, I took the entire week off. We'd planned the entire year to ride to each stop ahead of the pros. It was going to be the vacation of a lifetime. Sort of our own individual, unsupported Ride the Rockies.

As it turns out, other entrepreneurial characters came up with the very same idea, and for a (very high) price, regular everyday citizens can do exactly that in an official sponsored tour. We didn't know that then, and we can't afford those tours anyway.

At the very last minute, The Lizard found out he could take only one day off the whole week, but he was given a choice. So we spent the night at the foot of Cottonwood Pass then rode our bikes to the top of the pass the next morning to watch the first climb of the first-ever Queen's Stage, which also featured Independence Pass. Hundreds of others did the very same thing. It was one of the most exciting cycling days of my life, and it still gives me chills just remembering it.

Are we having fun yet?

Last year, we'd planned to independently ride from town to town once again, letting the tour follow us, but I'd seriously injured my back in a March cycling mishap, and the day of the Queen's Stage was my first ride back on the bike after the doctor ordered me to stay out of the saddle all summer long. (I didn't figure out I'd injured my back until after Ride the Rockies, so I did finish that week-long ride, in spite of pain and suffering.) We spent the night at Twin Lakes, and I rode less than a mile up Independence Pass the next day to see Tommy D's motivational climb that went on to win the stage.

We also spent many hours standing at a corner in downtown Denver on a blistering hot day that weekend to watch the individual time trial. My back did not forgive me for several weeks.

a real broom wagon

This year, I feel the best I've felt in many years. I can ride. I can take time off. I'm not as thrilled by professional cyclists as I was in years past, but I did look forward to the Queen's Stage. It feels like a family tradition. I know how difficult both Independence Pass and Cottonwood Pass are because I've ridden each of them multiple times, but never together on the same day. Whether these guys are doping or not, those are still difficult mountains to climb, and the air is thin. When you're huffing and puffing, air is non-existent. I wanted to see my favorite cyclists take on the very same mountains that challenge me, and I wanted to see them do well. In person. I wanted to see the strain on their faces and the dusty sweat on their skin.

Alas, The Lizard was not able to take even one day off this year. I didn't want to drive to Buena Vista by myself, and it didn't even seem fun without him, especially now that I'm not so star-struck.

Taylor Phinney

And besides, the Queen's Stage has been Independence Pass and Cottonwood Pass. The route to Cottonwood Pass is closed this year due to much-needed reconstruction. This year, it's not called the Queen's Stage. It's Independence Pass and Hoosier Pass in a day. Still formidable, but just not the same. (Phil Ligget gave Hoosier the French pronunciation during coverage of the stage; that was a hoot.) Cottonwood is dirt on one side. Hoosier is paved the whole way. It is fun to be unpredictable and do new things, but Cottonwood Pass offers something no other pro road race does. It feels backwoodsy, I guess, and that is one of the things I love about it.

So I spent the day doing things I haven't had time to do for a long time instead. I could have given up the vacation time and worked, just like The Lizard. But I've spent so much of the last two months retouching photos when I wasn't working, I decided I deserve some me time.

Three solar dye pots are nearly ready, and I wouldn't allow myself to hank yarn for dyeing until all my retouching was done. I finished my retouching the weekend before the USA Pro Cycling Challenge. On my day off, I rewarded myself by hanking nine full skeins of cotton yarn and 12 mini skeins. Now comes the fun part!

One Week of Solar Soak; sumac, tannin and past-prime curly dock

On my day off, I gathered wild sunflowers for yet another dye pot, and oh, my, is the color in the jar amazing! I can't even imagine what it's going to look like on the yarn.

Smashed Sunflower Dye Pot

I hadn't taken my sewing machine out of the plastic bag it came in after servicing in June, and it missed me as much as I missed it. It's still in the bag now, but I finished cutting out nine leaf squares in each of four colors for my WIP Leaf Me Alone quilt. Next I must cut the two-inch strips from various leftovers, and then that sewing machine is going to get fired up.

As Jean-Luc Picard would say, "Make it Sew!"

Squares Galore

Bagged

We had planned to drive to Fort Collins on Saturday to watch the 6th stage of the race from one of The Lizard's favorite road bike climbs in all of Colorado. He attended college in Fort Collins and rode the Horsetooth circuit often, developing the speed and power than makes him so good on the bike now.

At the last minute, we decided to stay home and ride instead, then watch what we could of the stage on the laptop at our local grocery store. It would be less expensive that way, we'd get to see more than 20 seconds of the race, and we'd get to ride, my second ride since the MS-150 in June.

This was our first time ever watching streaming video on the internet, and I've got to say, it was just as exciting as being there in past years, partially because we got to see most of the race, but also because most of the segment we got to watch is the very same route for the MS-150!!! We got to see these guys in what feels very much like "our" backyard!

Instead of the team name and sponsors plastered all over the jersey, Novo Nordisk puts its money where its mouth is, proclaiming loudly, Changing Diabetes.

Shut up Legs!

Jens Voigt

Steep Horsetooth Climb
Sue, recognize this climb?

26 August 2013

Snowflake Monday

A Snowflake for Lisa

Back in June, I hosted an ice cream social at my work to raise money for the Colorado-Wyoming Chapter of the Multiple Sclerosis Society. We needed to bring The Lizard's donations up to the required amount prior to this year's MS-150 at the end of June. I bribed my co-workers with a second ice cream social later in the summer if they could push my husband up and over the required donation amount.

They did.

Last week I staged the second ice cream social. (So far, the second ice cream social has raised $162, with donations still trickling in. The first ice cream social raised a total of $435.) Little did I know when I scheduled the second social in advance, it would fall the day before the funeral for The Lizard's cousin who bravely and valiantly fought multiple sclerosis for several years. She leaves behind a husband and two young daughters. She was 38.

We are dedicating the rest of this year's fund-raising to the precious memory of Lisa.

You may do whatever you'd like with snowflakes you make from this pattern, but you may not sell or republish the pattern. Thanks, and enjoy!

Finished Size: 4 inches from point to point
Materials: Size 10 crochet thread, size 7 crochet hook, empty pizza box, wax paper or plastic wrap, cellophane tape, water soluble school glue or desired stiffener, water, glitter, small container for glue/water mixture, paintbrush, stick pins that won't be used later for sewing, clear thread or fishing line

A Snowflake for Lisa Instructions

Make magic ring.

Round 1: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), 1 dc in ring, * ch 3, 2 dc in ring; repeat from * 5 times; ch 1, 1 dc in 2nd ch of starting ch 2 to form 6th ch 3 sp of Round. Pull magic circle tight, but leave opening big enough to allow stitches inside it to lay flat.

Round 2: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), 1 sc in same sp, * 1 sc in next ch 3 sp, 1 dc in same sp, ch 3, 1 dc in same sp, 1 sc in same sp; repeat from * 4 times; 1 sc in next sp, 1 dc in same sp, ch 1, 1dc in 2nd ch of starting ch 2.

Round 3: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), 2 dc in same sp, * ch 5, 3 dc in next ch 3 sp, ch 3, 3 dc in same sp; repeat from * 4 times; ch 5, 3 dc in next sp, ch 1, 1 dc in 2nd ch of starting ch 2.

Round 4: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), * 3 dc in next ch 5 sp, ch 3, 3 dc in same sp, 1 dc in next ch 3 sp, ch 5, 1 dc in same sp; repeat from * 5 times, omitting last dc and ch 5 of final repeat; ch 2, 1 tr in 2nd ch of starting ch 2 to form 6th ch 5 sp of Round.
If you're not reading this pattern on Snowcatcher, you're not reading the designer's blog. Please go here to see the original.

Round 5: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), 4 dc in same sp, * ch 5, 1 sc in next ch 3 sp, ch 8, 1 sc in same sp, ch 5, 5 dc in next ch 5 sp, ch 3, sl st in 3rd ch from hook (picot made), 5 dc in same sp; repeat from * 5times, omitting last 5 dc of final repeat; sl st in 2nd ch of starting ch 2; bind off. Weave in ends.

Finish: Tape wax paper or plastic wrap to top of empty pizza box. Pin snowflake to box on top of wax paper or plastic wrap.

If using glue, mix a few drops of water with a teaspoon of glue in small washable container. Paint snowflake with glue mixture or desired stiffener. Sprinkle lightly with glitter. Wash paintbrush and container thoroughly. Allow snowflake to dry at least 24 hours. Remove pins. Gently peel snowflake from wax paper or plastic wrap. Attach 10-inch clear thread to one spoke, weaving in end. Wrap fishing line around tree branch (or tape to ceiling or any overhead surface) and watch the snowflake twirl freely whenever you walk by! Snowflake also may be taped to window or tied to doorknob or cabinet handle.

23 August 2013

Friday Fun

Ole Salomonsen's work is amazing.

POLAR SPIRITS from Ole C. Salomonsen on Vimeo.

This is my third short-film about the northern lights. This year some epic displays has been on the sky, and for the first time I have included real-time recordings.

The video is shot using stills and assembled together for best possible resolution and dynamic range. In this video however, for the first time, I have also chosen to include some real-time video footage. This is to better show how furiously fast and beautiful the polar spirits can dance! The two sequences which are shot in real-time (in the middle of the video) could never have been recreated using still photos, regardless what camera you are using.

To substantiate the feeling and sense of the different aurora shapes and speeds I did get a special musical soundtrack composed by composer Peter Nanasi. In my opinion the music is just fantastically beautiful and I recommend you watching the video on a large screen as well with proper audio gear connected. Peter is just fantastic talented, and very professional to work with. Thank you Peter for your hard work.

Most sequences have been shot in arctic northern Norway, close to the city of Tromsø. One sequence is from Finland and one from Sweden.The city sequences you see are shot in and over Tromsø, which in Norway often is referred to as “the northern lights city”.

BTW! This year the coast of northern Norway was overwhelmed with humpback whales, which are absolutely magnificent and beautiful creatures. While watching the auroras and shooting the opening sequence of this video I could hear the whales breaching and blowing air in the fjord. It was an absolutely magic experience. Sadly the whales never came close enough to do a really good shot of the whales under the auroras, but If you watch closely on the opening sequence you can actually see the whales breaching a few times a bit out in the fjord.

22 August 2013

What Makes You Beautiful

What Makes You Beautiful

Six weeks late, we finally staged our girls camp awards ceremony. The girls all made awards for each other. Every participant received an award based on her personality, and believe it or not, the girls all focused on the positive aspects of their co-campers.

No fires were allowed at camp due to the high fire danger. We had to teach the girls how to build a fire without matches in a parking lot in the big city instead of in the mountains.

One of the camp leaders brought a fire pit to the awards ceremony. I made a fire without matches. Using crumpled red, orange and yellow construction paper. We didn't have to contend with campfire smoke, ha ha!

fire pit

One of the leaders made baked s'mores. Who can resist?!?

I had made color-coded bandanas for each of the girls. There was one extra. All the girls autographed it for one of the camp organizers who was unable to attend but who did all the administrative stuff so I didn't have to. She took care of all the forms, requirements, registrations, fees, insurance and transportation details so I could focus on teaching first aid, wilderness survival, preparation, nutrition, hydration, crafts and Leave No Trace.

We watched a movie I put together with some of the photos I shot of the girls during camp activities. The camp theme, "What Makes You Beautiful," was featured as one of the background songs. Disney songs also were used, because the girls sang motivational tunes from Aladdin, Little Mermaid and Mulan all through camp.


The camp theme wasn't about make-up, fashion trends, jewelry, complexion or weight. What makes you, or anyone, beautiful is what's inside. Helping others, being kind and empathetic, doing your best, smiling often... these are things that emote true beauty, and that's what we tried to teach the girls.

Wonder Woman

And then, biggest surprise of all, I received an award, too. !!! I think this is going to hang in my spare bedroom for as long as the candy doesn't melt!

my award

20 August 2013

Wordless Wednesday

cosmos

daisies

not mine, but I wish

pretty in pink

follow the sun

radiant mystery flowers

be different

lunchtime

Baby, What a Big Surprise

Feeling Smug

my website the way it's looked for years

This is what my SmugMug photography website has looked like for the past five or so years. LOTS of scrolling. Customizations took a long time, and I was never able to fully customize my site to what I could see in my head because I just don't speak Java that well. But I was happy with how my website looked and how it was organized.

my website the way it looks now

This is what my SmugMug website looks like now. No more miles of scrolling! (At least not on the front page.)

SmugMug recently upgraded in a big way. I had to migrate all my galleries to the new and improved SmugMug site (and trust that everything would make the move) (and smack dab in the middle of retouching 700 wedding shots and 100 senior portraits, to boot). Full customization is possible now (although not via Internet Exploder!!!) if gallery owners are willing to tinker. Customization supposedly is much faster and easier. I'm willing to tinker, but I don't always have adequate or easily available internet access. Or choice of browsers. Grrr.

Considering I must spend hours with our laptop at a coffee shop, grocery store, library, bookstore or hotel to fully customize (or upload photos, or post to my blog, or just about anything I want to do on the internet), I wouldn't say the new SmugMug is necessarily faster or easier to customize. No more Java, easier CSS, but I'm still learning a new language. Yet I'm slowly working through the bugs and learning the new system. I still have work to do, and one day I hope to build my own theme instead of using a template SmugMug theme, but for right now, I think I like what I've done so far.

19 August 2013

Snowflake Monday

Snowball Makings

I made a LOT of snowflakes on the train after girls camp in June. I've learned the hard way to make the snowflakes when the ideas come. The ideas might not be around anymore if I wait until I have enough time.

Unfortunately, most of my non-work computer time has been devoted to photo retouching since then, so I didn't have time to write the patterns.

A Week's Work

One packed commute I decided to write one of the patterns on my phone, since there wasn't room for elbow movement required in my typical crochet workout routine. My light rail commute is about 40-45 minutes on a normal day. I wrote a pattern in one commute. I was so excited to have completed my goal!

That night I got home to begin retouching yet more photos but decided to download the snowflake pattern first. But it was nowhere to be found. I had saved it after every round, but not a trace existed anywhere. The pattern I'd written was gone. And still is. I may have to name that snowflake Disappointment or even Whiner when I do finally sit down to write it again.

There are pockets of no signal along my commute route. Obviously. I'd run into problems before when trying to make phone calls or respond to emails. But I've never lost my notes, which are connected to my email address, in all the three years I've had an iPhone. Even when I upgraded earlier this year from an iPhone 3 to an iPhone 4, I lost all my contacts and all my saved phone numbers, but snowflake patterns and Ride the Rockies journals I'd written back in 2010 and 2011 were all still there.

mobile pattern writing

Needless to say, it took me a while to trust the notes feature on my phone again. But stubborn determination finally did kick in, and last week I attempted to write a snowflake pattern aboard the train once again. Instead of saving the pattern every round this time, I emailed it to myself every round, and then I checked to make sure my email actually arrived before beginning the next round.

About two minutes before the end of my morning commute, I completed an eight-round snowflake!!!!!!!! Yippee!!!!!!!! Yes, that's eight exclamation points, one for each round, count 'em! I had a total of seven partial and one full snowflake patterns in my email, too! It worked!

I've been working on computers at work now for about... gosh, I had to count... 32 years, and I've had a computer at home for about 19 years now. One of the first things I learned, both at work and at home, from Day 1, was save, save, save, and then save again. Even at work where we had document management systems that supposedly automatically backed up all documents every three to five minutes, I learned the hard way to always make a spare copy and keep it in a separate location. Before partitioned hard drives, that meant printing out a hard copy every once in a while, and typing it in again when a work system went down and whatever I'd been working on didn't come back up with the system. At least I had something to work with to do my job all over again.

I can't imagine what it must have been like to write patterns on a regular typewriter, or worse, with pencil and paper, back before electronic technology.

I used to get blisters on my writing fingers (gripping my pen way too tight) from writing books or poetry or writing in my journal when I used pen and paper for longer than about an hour at a time. I could never, ever get the lower-case A or the semi-colon to show up on carbon copies when using a typewriter because my pinkies have always been weaklings. At my first newspaper, before computers, we used to count the number of characters and spaces on each line of text, and then type them out again using our numbering system to justify columns, meaning making news stories even on both sides. Remember ticker tape?!? Yes, I worked at a newspaper that used a ticker tape system, too.

how to

I even remember balancing the phone between my ear and shoulder while I tried to type as fast as our Washington correspondents could dictate because long-distance then was charged per minute, and the correspondents had a lot of newspapers to which they had to relay stories on a daily basis.

To me, writing patterns takes MUCH more concentration than writing stories, journals or novels, and I am so thankful I didn't have to learn to do it the old way! (Although I might be better at diagramming if I had, right???)

And I'm grateful this old dog CAN learn new tricks and figure out a way to back up snowflake patterns written on a phone on a fast-moving train in pockets of low or no signal!

See if you can figure out the connection to today's snowflake pattern name. Besides all these memories making me very hungry...

appleflake

You may do whatever you'd like with snowflakes you make from this pattern, but you may not sell or republish the pattern. Thanks, and enjoy!

Mele al Forno Ripiene Snowflake

Finished Size: 6 inches from point to point
Materials: Size 10 crochet thread, size 7 crochet hook, empty pizza box, wax paper or plastic wrap, cellophane tape, water soluble school glue or desired stiffener, water, glitter, small container for glue/water mixture, paintbrush, stick pins that won't be used later for sewing, clear thread or fishing line

Mele al Forno Ripiene Snowflake Instructions

Make magic ring.

Round 1: Ch 2 (counts as 1dc), 11 dc in ring, sl st in 2nd ch of starting ch 2. Pull magic circle tight, but leave opening big enough to allow stitches inside it to lay flat.

Round 2: 1 sc in same ch, 1 sc in next dc, * ch 8, 1 sc in each of next 2 dc; repeat from * 4 times; ch 4, 1 dtr in starting sc to form 6th ch 8 sp of Round.

Round 3: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), 4 dc in same sp, * 5 dc in next ch 8 sp, ch 3, 5 dc in same sp; repeat from * 4 times; 5 dc in next sp, ch 1, 1 dc in 2nd ch of starting ch 2 to form 6th ch 3 sp.

Round 4: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), 3 dc in same sp, * 1 dc in gap between next 2 5/dc groups, 4 dc in next ch 3 sp, ch 3, 4 dc on same sp; repeat from * 4 times; 1 dc in gap between next 2 5/dc groups, 4 dc in next sp, ch 1, 1 dc in 2nd ch of starting ch 2.

Round 5: Ch 2, 2 dc in same sp, * ch 2, sk next 3 dc, 3 dc in next dc, ch 2, 3 dc in next ch 3 sp, ch 3, 3 dc in same sp; repeat form * 4 times; ch 2, sk next 3 dc, 3 dc in next dc, ch 2, 2 dc in next sp, ch 1, 1 dc in 2nd ch of starting ch 2.

Round 6: Ch 2, 1 dc in same sp, * ch 2, 5 dc in middle dc of next 3/dc group, ch 2, 2 dc in next ch 3 sp, ch 3, 2 dc in same sp; repeat form * 4 times; ch 2, 5 dc in middle dc of next 3/dc group, ch 2, 2 dc in next sp, ch 1, 1 dc in 2nd ch of starting ch 2.
If you're not reading this pattern on Snowcatcher, you're not reading the designer's blog. Please go here to see the original.

Round 7: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), * ch 5, 7 dc in middle dc of next 5/dc group, ch 5, 1 dc in next ch 3 sp, ch 3, 1 dc in same sp; repeat from * 4 times; ch 5, 7 dc in middle dc of next 5/dc group, ch 5, 1 dc in next sp, ch 1, 1 dc in 2nd ch of starting ch 7.

Round 8: Ch 2 (counts as 1 dc), * ch 5, 9 dc in middle dc of next 7 dc group, ch 5, 1 dc in next ch 3 sp, ch 3, [1 dc] in same sp, ch 3, 1 dc in 3rd ch from hook (dc picot made), ch 6, 1 sc in 5th ch from hook, ch 8, sl st in sc, ch 6, sl st in sc (tri-picot made), ch 4, 1 dc in 3rd ch from hook (dc picot made), 1 dc in same ch 3 sp as [1 dc], ch 3, 1 dc in same sp; repeat from * 5 times, omitting last 2 dc and ch 3 of final repeat; sl st in 2nd ch of starting ch 5; bind off. Weave in ends.

Finish: Tape wax paper or plastic wrap to top of empty pizza box. Pin snowflake to box on top of wax paper or plastic wrap.

If using glue, mix a few drops of water with a teaspoon of glue in small washable container. Paint snowflake with glue mixture or desired stiffener. Sprinkle lightly with glitter. Wash paintbrush and container thoroughly. Allow snowflake to dry at least 24 hours. Remove pins. Gently peel snowflake from wax paper or plastic wrap. Attach 10-inch clear thread to one spoke, weaving in end. Wrap fishing line around tree branch (or tape to ceiling or any overhead surface) and watch the snowflake twirl freely whenever you walk by! Snowflake also may be taped to window or tied to doorknob or cabinet handle.

Pre-Stuff

Pre-Bake

Mele al Forno Ripiene

Stuffed Baked Apples for Two

Ingredients:

2 apples, cored
1 graham cracker, crushed and pulverized
1/4 cup quick-cooking oatmeal, uncooked
1/4 cup cooked brown rice and quinoa
1 tsp brown sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1/4 tsp cloves
pure maple syrup

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Make slits in apples to prevent skin from bursting during baking. I made snowflake designs, of course. Mix graham cracker, oatmeal, rice, quinoa, brown sugar, cinnamon, ginger and cloves in small bowl. Add just enough maple syrup to help ingredients adhere. Tightly stuff apples and place on foil-covered cookie or pizza sheet. Mound more stuffing on top. Bake for 30 minutes. If desired, serve immediately after removing from oven with a scoop of vanilla caramel ice cream on top - on snowflake plates, of course. Refrigerate any leftover stuffing in an airtight container to use again on your next cored apples.

Topped
Related Posts with Thumbnails