Friday, 18 November 2011

PJs!


PJs! I really wanted to make PJs so I made these following this guide http://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-Sew-Your-Own-Pajama-Pants/ and some cheap red fabric.

Glad I used the cheap fabric because as comfortable as these are, I made a lot of mistakes! The waist is over twice my own waist, which makes them really comfortable but would be a waste of more expensive fabric, I made the crotch to waist too small so they fit too low on the hips, and I sewed across the elastic stopping me from threading the ribbon the whole way through... and then sewed the ribbon on the back. Anyway a couple of alterations later they were finished!
I added the heart and extra ribbon to make them a bit more interesting and a bit less santa bottoms!

If I did it again I'd sew the heart on like applique, with a short zig zag around the edges, it would have been neater and smoother.

The material is so soft and comfortable, it cost £5 a meter and I used 1.75 meters...and that was to make PJs MUCH too big so I should be able to use no more than 1.5 next time and use some more expensive fabric... to create really pretty PJ bottoms!



Cookies!




Yum yum yummy cookies! These are my FAVOURITE cookies EVER. I used chocolate cut up because it's cheaper here, so they don't look so neat.

The recipe is from Vegan With A Vegance. Not a cookbook I generally reccomend but I do like the baking recipes. These are 1/3 bigger than the book reccomends... I think it's meant to make 24 dozen and I made 18. But I like them this size... even a little bigger! I was going to coat them with chocolate but I'm not sure they need it.

Anyway they taste fantastic! Delicious.

Long time, no type!

  


Hello hello, when I haven't posted for months I always feel silly posting again. But then, if I don't, my blog will dissapear into the bloggersphere and that'd be sad... I enjoy it! So I have been busy sewing sewing sewing! Here are my wears:


 PATCHWORK APPLE: I used the template produced here: http://woolfoodmama.typepad.com/ called "patchy produce", except I used seperate fabrics for each section, and used felt for the leaves rather than fabric. REALLY simple and they look really sweet.


Mini stocking - I just loved this fabric! Really simple, and partly stuffed to give it some body, ready to hang on the tree!
Hearts hearts hearts! I actually made these in the summer at my parents house. Stuffed hearts like this are EVERYWHERE in shops, especially at christmas, but also in pretty fabrics all year around. At between £2-3 roughly per heart, you save a LOT by using spare fabric, buttons and ribbon to make your own... it takes like 15 miniutes :)




Christmas puddings... attempt one and two. Okay I wanted to make little round christmas puds... but this first is a little stingy on the icing and the second is a funny shape as the cream fabric was stiffer than the brown... and there was too much! Ahh nightmare. I've kept them, they've grown on me in their endeering miss-match way... but I'm not sure they'll make it to the tree!








Christmas dove - this one was the easiest to make, it's a little wonky in the picture but because it was felt I could tug it a little untill it was round!





















FINAL CHRISTMAS PUD! I like this one, it's simple but kind of... rustic-er looking.




















Christmas tree! Just two peices of felt cut out and sewn together with cardboard inbetween to keep it stiff, siver stitching and tiny beads (that came off an old top) tiny buttons (spare shirt buttons) and a ribbon (cut out of a tshirt) to decorate - very cheap too! Star button on top :)













So yeah! I am a complete novice sewer... I did GCSE textiles and I did VERY badly, but now armed with a sewing machine and stealing creativity from shops and blogs I have created passable crafts and am very proud of myself! If I can do it... anybody can.


Sunday, 30 October 2011

Note from me (Laura!)

To anyone who reads this blog... I want to apologise that I never write in it! I plan to change that, with broadening my blogging horizons and expanding into everything homemade, handmade or food related - my favourite hobbies - in short!

... and thankyou for reading!

Thursday, 8 September 2011

Apricot Fool

Before we get on to the fool... I want to talk cookbooks. This recipe comes from Fast Fresh and Fabulous by Rose Elliot, a cookbook newly aquired from Age UK for a mere £1, and I am stunned by it.

Everything looks delicious and tasty. The recipes cover everything - from mayonaise, victora sandwhiches and mushroom pâté en croute, and only 1/5 of the maincourses rely on substitutes - which I don't tend to use. I'm really excited to have a cookbook full of recipes I've always loved, and never thought to veganise.

On with the show... Apricot fool:


250g Organic whole dried apricots
Juice of 4 oranges
250g Silken tofu
125ml Soya cream (I'm allergic to soya cream, so I used rice milk and it worked just fine)
8 Cardamons (seeds only)
25g Pistatio nuts

(Apriots: Organic is vital here, because they're completly different to your usual apricots, as they don't have sulphur in them. They're much sweeter, stickier and brown in colour - not orange.)

Soak the apricots in orange juice overnight. Then process them to a paste (with the juice they've soaked in).
Add to a blender with the tofu, cream or milk and cardamon.
Blend untill smooth and creamy. Spoon into glasses and sprinkle with pistatios. Store in the fridge.

Fools are really puddings, but since the recipe is both delicious and healthy, I ate mine in a bowl for breakfast. Fantastic! The recipe is VERY quick to make, literally less than five miniutes, but since it uses a food processor and a blender there was a lot of washing up. The recipe makes loads, and is very sweet and tasty. Highly HIGHLY reccomended!



Monday, 5 September 2011

Banana Bread


Banana bread:
200g flour
2tbsp gram flour
2 1/4 tsp baking powder
1/2 - 1 tsp salt
3/4 tsp cinnamon
3/4 tsp ground ginger
4tbsp oats
75g dairy free margerine
115g sugar
3tsp lemon rind
3 ripe bananas

Mix the first 6 ingrediants together
Beat the remaining four ingrediants together, and add to the original mixture quickly
Spoon into a loaf tin and cook at 170c for 50miniutes

I love this recipe, perfect for when you need to use up over-ripe bananas. The riper the better! You can use wholemeal or plain flour, plain rises better, but wholemeal is healthier and doesn't make a lot of difference - just a slightly denser texture.
The result is very moist, tasty but not too sweet.
You can let it cool, and ice it... or devour warm out of the oven! Best served with a steaming cup of coffee!

Sunday, 4 September 2011

Rustic sundried tomato bread

 Okay... so she isn't a looker!  But trust me, it's more than made up for in scrumptiousness!

This was actually made by myself and my boyfriend, and although could do with some asthetic tweeking, is sooo delicious! I also added the tomato puree a bit late (I forgot about it!) so it's not completely mixed in, as you can see from the photos.

Sundried tomato bread:

- 500g white bread flour
- 10g salt
- 7g quick yeast
- 2-3 tbsp itallian seasoning
- 2 heaped tbsp tomato puree
- 250ml warm water
- packet of sun-blushed tomatos in olive oil

Mix the flour, salt, itallian seasoning and yeast together. Put into the food processor, using the dough hook, pur in the water and tomato puree and mix untill springy. (Or, of course, mix together in a bowl and knead by hand!)

Remove from the processor, place into a bowl with cling-film over the top. Leave in a warm place to rise for an hour, or untill doubled in size.
Knock back the dough, and add in the sundried tomatos and if desired the oil.

SIDE NOTE: I found the oil gave my bread an uneven texture due to it adding so much moisture, which isn't a bad thing, but it's less of a loaf and more of an itallian-style bread. (See left for what I mean).

Put into a greased and floured loaf-tin, cover with a plastic bag (to allow room to rise) and leave in a warm place to prove for a further 20miniutes.

Warm the oven to 240c.

Place bread in the oven for 8 miniutes, then open the oven door untill the oven cools to 190c. Close the oven door, and bake at 190c for 30 more miniutes.

Friday, 2 September 2011

Chocolate Digestive Biscuits

Recipe I used, which was adapted from one from vegetarian living:

Chocolate digestive biscuits:

65g white flour
195g wholemeal flour
50g sugar
1tsp salt
1tsp baking powder
50g cocoa powder
55g vitalite margarine (or other dairy-free margarine)
2tbsp golden syrup
1tbsp treacle
1 tsp vanilla extract
90ml water

- Mix the flour, sugar, salt, baking powder and cocoa powder.
- Mix in the margarine.
- Mix syrups, water and vanilla extract together and add slowly to the mixture until it forms a dough.
- Chill dough in the fridge for 1 hour.
- Roll the dough out (as thin as possible!), cut into shapes, and bake for 12-15miniutes.
- Ice!

Although in reality I baked for about 25miniutes, as the recipe said "until crispy" and like a fool I listened. I should have known better! Biscuits that are crispy in the oven are BURNT, they harden as they cool.


I salvaged them before they tasted burnt, but they're definitely too hard. I also think they could do with at least twice the sugar, because icing or no icing, I like my biscuits sweeeet! Still, with a tea or coffee they'll do just fine for my bf and me :)

I did enjoy icing though. I used colour paste instead of food colouring and I much prefer it. I mix it with the water before adding it to the sugar and it gives a consistent colour that you can tweak easily. Colour pastes are a little more expensive, but well worth it as they'll last for ages.