Saturday, August 15, 2009

Left-handed or mirror knitting

I'm about to start my first sweater, and I'm finding myself really frustrated by the knitting help available out there for people who knit like I do. One problem is that with the lack of resources and the scatteredness of the resources there are, we often have to figure out our own ways of doing things, which means we all end up doing things very differently, so what works for one left-handed knitter might not work for another. Another big problem is the way a lot of right-handed people seem to want to get involved in the discussion. This is particularly annoying when they want to tell us we lefties are doing it wrong. The way I figure, there is no right or wrong. The only thing that matters is the end product. If it came out okay, which is to say the person who made it and the person who is going to wear it are happy with it, then as far as I'm concerned, it is all good. Honestly, I find myself feeling that I understand knitting a lot better than a lot of people who've been doing it longer because a) I have to think a lot more about what I do and can't always just follow the instructions and b) I've had to figure out a lot of things by trial and error, so when I do finally get things right, I understand how they work and why.

So how do I knit? Well, I don't know all the technical terms, but I hold my yarn in my left hand and I throw my yarn with my left hand. As for the direction of my stitches, they move from the right needle to the left needle. I'm not 100% sure, but I think this amounts to knitting English style but mirrored.

Right now, I'm feeling the need to get organized with knitting, to understand it more at a fundamental level. I've set aside a journal, and when I figure stuff out, I write it down. I'm also planning on using some of the cheap yarn I inherited from Andrea to make swatches of different techniques done different ways. You see, after a personal situation recently--I hesitate to call it a tragedy because I'm physically fine, and though it happened to me, it didn't happen to me--I went a little overboard buying yarn. I've decided to wrap myself in my own warmth this winter, which means I'll be using all this yarn to make sweaters. If you know anything about knitting, you know good quality yarn--even at half-price, which is what I paid--isn't cheap. You also know that when I say I bought enough for 10 sweaters for myself, that's a lot of yarn and a lot of money, which means I'll be doing a lot of knitting, and I want to do it right since I'm going to be wearing what I make. I'm not really sure what I'll do with all this knowledge I'll be acquiring, but it seems a shame to keep it to myself, so I'll try to post some of it here. Stay tuned...

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Why a girl can't marry a CD is beyond me

I'm not going to be the first one to say this. In fact, what I'm going to say is nothing revolutionary. It's practically pedestrian, but I'm going to say it anyway. You need the new Grizzly Bear CD, Veckatimest. Really. You need it.

I resisted Grizzly Bear for forever. I'm a resister. It's part of what I do. Take Facebook, for example. I don't have an account. I'm the girl at the concert who will not clap or wave her hands or shout just because some people on stage tell me to; they have to make me want to. I can be a bit of a contrarian. It is childish, yes, and it has made me miss out on good stuff. Then again, I'm never the girl asking herself why she wasted those hours reading that crappy book or seeing that crappy movie that had all the hype. Sadly, though, the second everyone starts buzzing about something is the second I'm going to start pretending it doesn't exist. That happened with Grizzly Bear. Back when Yellow House came out, it was buzz, buzz, buzz, and I ignored it.

What made me decide to give Grizzly Bear a serious try was NPR. Yeah, NPR. I love that stuff. I've got the All Songs Considered podcast, among others, and I check out it every once in a while. I tend to store up a lot of them and then knock out 3 or 4 episodes in a Saturday afternoon. Well, on a semi-recent broadcast, which I've since deleted so don't ask me which one, they played a live Grizzly Bear track recorded at SXSW. It was stunningly gorgeous. I may even have cried a little. After that, I resolved to download the entire album from iTunes (because I only rock the legal stuff or what my friends give me from their own collections) once it became available. Unfortunately, my iTunes was acting up and wouldn't let me download anything until just last week, so I didn't get the album till then despite it's being out for nearly a month.

No exaggeration, I have listened to it multiple times everyday since I got it. I am madly in love with this CD, the entire thing. I keep finding new favorite tracks. It is simply gorgeous. Now, I'm not a music critic; I just know what I like. I cannot talk about chord progressions or production values, but I can say that this album gets inside of you. I wake up hearing it in my brain. The lyrics are simple and bare, often seeming to be sketches of lyrics more than fully formed stories or even ideas, but the way the lyrics are sung imbues them with meanings that the words on the page don't have all by themselves.

The point is that I'm having an intense and madly passionate love affair with this CD, but since it is a CD, I don't mind sharing the object of my love with anyone and everyone. If you are looking to buy just one new CD, get this one. As was the case with Arcade Fire, my stubbornness nearly caused me to miss the bandwagon on one of those too rare occasions where it is actually worth jumping on.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Rice Pudding Update

Well, I've tasted the rice pudding as has my friend Dr. Freud. (I wonder if she'd like that I've named her Dr. Freud...) We both concur. It's yummy. The only thing that I might've done differently was use more cardamom.

Should you decide you want to make the cardamom-rosewater version, you want to add 2 tsp. of rosewater when you add the vanilla at the end. A lot of the recipes I checked out online used significantly more. Some of them had more rice, but still. I think 2 tsp. is plenty. Oddly, the rosewater makes it seem a lot sweeter. Maybe that isn't so odd. I don't know. At any rate, I think I used only 1 tsp. of cardamom, but I'd use more if I were you. I did use some cinnamon as well because I'm a sucker for it. It added up to about ½ tsp. You could use more of that, too, if you wanted to.

Finally, a note on the brown rice. It didn't affect the taste too much, though I did add 2 tblsp. extra sugar to the orginal recipe, but I did notice that the rice grains weren't soft as with other rice once the pudding cooled. You really do bite them and chew on them. If that isn't something you mind, brown rice is healthier. It might be the only healthy thing about this dish, as a matter of fact. However, next time, I think I'll try to use white rice. Then again, this is made from rice leftovers, so it'll probably be made from whatever is in the fridge.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Food Exchanges & Leftover Rice (Pudding)

One of my many passions is cooking, especially baking. I was doing that little thing baking for a local cafe. Unfortunately, that lasted all of a week before the owner totally flaked on me. She replaced me with a man. To be fair, he probably gave her lower prices than I could since he's a professional chef and has access to wholesale and buying in all kinds of bulk, but the whole experience was awful. It definitely soured me on the cafe owner and, sadly, the cafe. I don't buy any food there anymore as my own silent form of protest. I don't care if it is yummy. I'm not eating it!

However, tonight I was making some rice pudding, and as I was doing it, I decided to call up a friend of mine. I'll call her Dr. Freud. Anyway, I didn't want to eat all the rice pudding myself. I like it okay, but making it was mostly a way to use up leftover rice and to play around with the rosewater I bought a little while ago. When I called up the good doctor, she informed me that she was making lemon coriander lentil soup, and so we decided to trade.

That got me thinking. (It takes so little.) How cool would it be if there were a group where people could come and trade homemade stuff? I love me some cupcakes, for example, and I could probably eat a dozen on my own, but I really don't want to. There is such a think as too much of a good thing. That goes for zucchini muffins and rice krispie treats and even veggie chili. After a week of eating zucchini and pepper gratin for at least one meal a day, I don't want to see it again for sometime, you know?

If only there were somewhere to meet, a group that got together once a week to trade stuff they'd made. People could show up with the food in ziploc containers or what-have-you, bring along a list of ingredients (so people with food allergies wouldn't accidentally end up in the hospital), and then the trading could begin. I'm going to talk to the Doc about this and see what she thinks. It could start out just as just her and me, and then we could grow it. I really like this plan. Aside from adding some variety to my lunch, it would have the bonus of creating a sense of community.

Anyway, enough of my musings, here's my basic rice pudding recipe. In this recipe the rice is already cooked, so it is a good way to use up leftovers. You only need a cup and half of rice. I created it as a way to use up some extra coconut rice I'd made. My man at the time insisted we needed the entire recipe of the rice. I thought we should half it. I was right. I guess that is what I get for listening to the guy whose most complicated dish was scrambled eggs.

The recipe makes about 4 servings. Tonight, I made it for the first time with brown rice, and I threw in two extra tablespoons of sugar. If the rosewater and cardamom I also threw in ends up being tasty, I'll add that variation. I used a lot less of both than some other recipes I've seen.

Shana’s Creamy Rice Pudding

1½ cups cooked rice (plain or coconut rice)
1 egg
6 Tbsp. sugar
1 cup heavy cream
1¾ cups milk
1 tsp. vanilla extract
cinnamon to taste (skip this if using coconut rice)

1. In medium sauce pan, whisk egg. Add remaining ingredients, except vanilla and cinnamon, and whisk thoroughly. Let this mixture stand for 5 minutes.
2. While stirring constantly, cook mixture on medium heat for 40-50 minutes until it thickens.
3. Remove from heat. Add vanilla and cinnamon (if using) and stir to mix. Ladle the pudding into desert cups and allow to cool for 20 minutes.
4. Chill pudding in the refrigerator until you are ready to eat it.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Zucchini Bread/Muffins with Oomph!

I'm getting ready to maybe start this baking venture as a way to get a little extra cash now that my hours at work have been cut (and perhaps as a way to attract the attention of a man or two), and I've been testing out recipes like crazy lately. One of the recipes I've been working on is this one for zucchini bread. On the first go around, everyone loved it. Lots of crazy people preferred it to my applesauce cake and my cranberry-orange bread. My friends and co-workers are apparently all nutters because I was totally unsatisfied. It had too much ginger, wasn't sweet enough, had an usatisfying texture, and didn't have enough oomph. I made it as a loaf and was having a hard time getting it to cook all the way through without getting overcooked on the outside. I was really disappointed in it, to be frank.

Last night, however, I did it. I don't want to say it is perfect, but it is so, so much better. My initial recipe was something I'd only make for others and not really eat myself. I'd defintely nosh on this iteration, though. This first important change from my first recipe was making muffins instead of a loaf. Obviously, the cooking time is shorter, so there isn't the problem with over-browning or drying out that I was running into before. I also cut the ginger and added more cinnamon. I'm a huge fan of cinnamon, and I tend to use more than a recipe calls for. I think it is hard to have too much of it. Finally--and, I think, importantly--I added a tablespoon of buttermilk. I pretty much think buttermilk has magic properties in baked goods. I don't fully understand them, but I am sure they are magic. My chocolate cake recipe, for example, has buttermilk, and it is amazing.

So here it is, my zucchini bread recipe. I think it has a lot going for it, and though I rarely follow recipes as they are written, you might try it with this one at least once.

Zucchini Bread/Muffins

2 cups + 2 tbsp. flour
1 ½ tsp. baking soda
½ tsp. salt
1 ½ tsp. cinnamon
¼ tsp. nutmeg
¼ tsp. ginger
⅛ tsp. allspice
¼ cup canola oil
¼ cup melted butter
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
1tsp. vanilla
1 to 1½ cups grated zucchini (1 small to medium zucchini)
½ tsp finely grated lemon rind
1 tbsp. buttermilk
½ cup nuts (I skip these if the muffins are for me; otherwise, walnuts work great.)

1. Preheat oven to 350ยบ. Grease a standard loaf pan with butter or shortening or line muffin pan with muffin liners. Whisk together flour, baking soda, salt, and spices. In a separate bowl, beat the butter, sugar, and eggs for two minutes with an electric mixer at medium speed. Add the vanilla, and then add the zucchini, lemon rind, and buttermilk and mix for an additional 30 seconds.

2. Using a large rubber spatula, stir in the flour mixture. Mix until just combined. Don’t overmix. Pour into the prepared loaf pan and bake for 60+ minutes or pour into muffin liners and bake for 20 minutes or until the top springs back when lightly touched and a cake tester inserted in the middle comes out clean. Let cool in the pan on a wire rack for 10 minutes before turning the bread or muffins out to cool completely on the wire rack.

Makes 1 loaf or 16 muffins.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

My Pretty Purple Hat

I made my very first hat. Yippee! I've been knitting for a few months now, and I've made lots of scarves. This, however, was my very first project knitting in the round or using double-pointed needles. It was a little tough at first, but I got the hang of it, and I'm so happy I did.

I used a pattern I found on Ravelry.com, a knitting myspace thing. It's pretty cool. Anyway, the pattern was so cute that I had to make it, but it wasn't perfect. There were a few things that needed changing. You can decide for yourself what to do. You can get the original pattern and check it out for yourself, or you can follow my instructions below. I used Rachel's pattern as a template and just added my changes. However, she is the brains behind this operation. I only get credit for moving some numbers around.


Robin’s Egg Blue Hat By Rachel Iufer

Approximate finished circumference:18 inches (My head is 21 inches, and the hat is fine.)

Gauge:
16 sts to 4 inches, 24 rows to 4 inches in stockinette
14 sts to 4 inches, 28 rows to 4 inches in seed stitch

Materials:
Misti Alpaca Chunky, less than one skein (108 yds)
US 10 (6.0mm) straights and double pointed needles (The way I knit, I used size 9 to get the gauge.)
1 Button: 1 5/8 to 2 inch diameter
Tapestry needle to weave in ends

Terms:
K2tog: knit two stitches together as one
Seed stitch: k1, p1 to end. On next, and following rows, knit into the purl stitches and purl into the knit stitches.
Kf/b: knit into the front of the stitch, leave it on the left needle then knit into the back of the stitch. One stitch increased.

Pattern:
*With straight needles, cast on 75 stitches
*Work 3 rows seed stitch, slip the last stitch purlwise on even rows throughout the hat band.
*Increase rows:
Rw 1: k1, kf/b, continue in seed stitch
Rw 2: seed stitch
Rep row 1 and 2, two times more (3 stitches increased)
*Decrease rows:
Rw 1: k1, k2tog, continue in seed stitch
Rw 2: seed stitch
Rep row 1 and 2, two times more (3 stitches decreased)
*Knit two more rows seed stitch.
*Next row: bind off 12 stitches, knit to the end of the row and join in the round on double pointed needles (63 stitches total)
*Work in the round in stockinette stitch until the hat measures 5-5.5 inches in total.
*Begin decreases:
Rw 1: *knit 7, k2tog* rep form. k to end (56 stitches)
Rw 2: k all stitches
Rw 3: *knit 6, k2tog* rep form. k to end (49 stitches)
Rw 4: k all stitches
Rw 5: *knit 5, k2tog* rep form. k to end (42 stitches)
Rw 6: k all stitches
Rw 7: *knit 4, k2tog* rep form. k to end (35 stitches)
Rw 8: k all stitches
Rw 9: *knit 3, k2tog* rep form. k to end (28 stitches)
Rw 10: k all stitches
Rw 11: *knit 2, k2tog* rep form. k to end (21 stitches)
Rw 12: k all stitches
Rw 13: *knit 1, k2tog* rep form. k to end (14 stiches)
Rw 14: *k2tog* to end (7 stitches)
*Cut yarn, thread tail through the remaining loops and secure.
*Tack down the flap to the base of the hat and sew on a button. Weave in all ends.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

What this is and what it isn't

I've been toying with the idea of keeping a blog for some time, but I'm not comfortable with the thought that I might go on and on about myself and that other people might read it or want to. More than once I've said to friends that blogging requires a certain level of narcissism that I'm uncomfortable with. Of course, that is a gross generalization, and not all bloggers are narcissists. Some, however, are, and I'm going to try to avoid being that kind.

The people who do avoid the narcissism have a point or subject, and they share useful information or the kind of opinions that can help a reader come to a decision. There are a few blogs I read regularly or semi-regularly and like and admire. Mostly, they are written by people I know or have at least met. Not surprisingly, the three that come to mind are about music, one of my passions.

What I want to do in this blog is share information, and while my life will creep in from time to time, I want to focus my attention on giving whomever reads this thing something useful. My topics are going to be my passions--the reading and writing of the title, but also music, movies, cooking, and knitting. I wouldn't say I am an expert on any of these things. Hell, I wouldn't say I'm an expert on anything. However, all of them are things I'm curious and passionate about and engaged in on a near daily basis in some way or another.

In this blog, you'll be able to find my reviews of books, movies, CDs, and concerts. You'll see my raves and rants about various things. I'll pass on recipes and patterns. I'll probably also recommend restaurants or stores in my area that I cannot imagine living without. What I hope you won't find here is me complaining about my job or my love life or that person on the subway or PATH who thinks his or her big bottom and bad eating habits entitles him or her to take up the space of two or three people. However, though I am quite adept at making rules, I'm not always great about following them. Besides, although categories and boxes can be helpful when it comes to organization, most things and certainly people aren't readily contained within them.