Monday, March 12, 2007

Arabella's First Quilt


I made this quilt early last year for a friend's first baby, a gorgeous little girl named Arabella.

It's OUR bed and we can drool in it if we want to




Friday, January 12, 2007

Zucchini Pickles

I found a similar recipe on the web and have adapted it to my needs - which came about when I had a bumper crop of zucchini in my vegetable garden. After an unusually rainy summer, I was getting zucchinis which grew from normal size one day to about 2 kg each the next!

This pickle is like a sweet mustard pickle and I have made several batches this summer. Because the amount of zucchini you need to use up varies, I have just put down proportions of ingredients, not quantities.

1. Finely dice your zucchini and place in a large bowl or vessel, salting each layer well. Also slice up an onion or two and add. I would add an onion for each 500g - 1kg of zucchini. Cover with cold water and leave to stand for at least an hour or overnight.

2. In a large saucepan dissolve sugar in white vinegar (although I am going to experiment with malt vinegar next time). You will need equal quantities of sugar to vinegar. 1 kg of zucchini will probably need 2 cups of vinegar and 2 cups of sugar to be enough to cover the vegetables as they boil. For each cup of vinegar, add 1 tsp powdered mustard and 1 tsp tumeric.

3. Once the sugar has dissolved, add your drained zucchini and onion. The vegetables will shrink a little on cooking, but you need to ensure you have enough of the vinegar/sugar mix to cover. You can add more vinegar and sugar at this stage if you need to, just stir until the sugar is dissolved.

4. Bring to a good boil, and boil for at least 45 mins. Depending on the size of the chunks of zucchini, I have boiled for up to 1 1/2 hours to get a good consistency.

5. At the end, you may want to dissolve a tablespoon or two of cornflour in a little vinegar and add this to the pot to thicken the mixture.

6. Spoon into sterilised jars and seal.


NOTES:

* If your jars are well sterilised this will keep for months in the cupboard, indefinitely in the fridge.
* I sometimes add a generous pouring of curry powder to this recipe to get a slightly "bitier" pickle.
* This is good served with cold meats, cheese and salads!
* Mustard pickles can be made with any other vegetable you might have a bumper crop of, such as cauliflower, broccoli, cucumber. It is nice to add some red capsicum for the colour.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Oops, did I do that?


Pink Pineapples Cot Quilt


This is another quick and easy pattern from Quiltville. I liked it so much I made another much larger one in blue. I still haven't quilted this one yet. No idea who it is for either. Was just using up pink scraps.

Monday, July 10, 2006

Shelley's First Quilt


I made this quilt 2 years ago for my partner's sister's third child, Shelley. It was quickly put together from pink scraps and then beautifully quilted by my talented friend Jo. I am hopeless at quilting and eschew anything but straight lines and stippling, so Jo made a lovely heart quilting design on this one, turning a pretty boring cot quilt into something really special.

Monday, July 3, 2006

Bright Teddy Bear


I found this pattern at http://www.quilterscache.com/T/TeddyBearBlock.html and modified it a little. And don't look at the mess on the sewing (aka dining room) table! Poor bear is still unfinished. After several clean ups I have also misplaced the fabrics I was using, so I guess in one of my future clean ups I will find it and then be able to finish this quilt.