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Author Archives: Julia Monroe

Pastillage Tea Set decorated cake

28 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by Julia Monroe in cake decorating, crafts, food

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

cake, cake decoration, crafts, fondant, pastillage, tea set

Pastillage (pronounced PAH-stee-YAZH) is a special fondant that can be modeled like clay. It dries very quickly so you have to work fast. The advantage of pastillage over fondant is it can be rolled paper thin and the finished pieces look like porcelain. But just like porcelain, they are fragile and will shatter if dropped. I made these pieces a bit thicker so they could be safely wrapped in bubble wrap for transportation.

I made this tea set for a cake for my sister a couple years ago. The teapot, creamer and sugar dish, cups and saucers, napkins, spoons, flowers and cake stand are all made of pastillage. The finished pieces were a cooperative effort; my other sister painted the delicate flowers with food color and my mom added the gilded trim using vodka and 14k gold powder.

2 Pastillage Tea Set 2

I made the tiny sugar cubes by sawing larger sugar cubes into small pieces with a craft saw and then sanding any rough edges. The top of the cake pedestal was made from a clear plastic yogurt lid.

1 Pastillage Tea Set 1

3 Pastillage Tea Set Cake

I was not able to travel to my sister’s party but a friend shared this picture of the finished cake. My mom did a beautiful job covering the cake with a fondant tablecloth.

4 Pastillage Tea Set 3

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Japanese Treats!

26 Sunday Jan 2014

Posted by Julia Monroe in food, Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

bento box, food, Japanese candy, Japanese goodies, Japanese treats

Thank you Heather and Evan!

Our daughter and her husband sent us a big box of Japanese goodies for Christmas. There were so many unusual and tasty treats! I’ll get to those in a minute but first …
A bento box and furoshiki! How awesome! :) Bento is a boxed lunch that is a work of art in addition to being delicious. A furoshiki is a cloth to secure around the bento box. Check out Bento Bloggers and Friends for bento inspiration. The artistry with food is amazing! Seriously, you have to check Little Miss Bento, and Just Bento. Or do an image search for bento. wow. I plan on getting a book about bento and making some tasty and beautiful lunches. A furoshiki is a piece of cloth used to wrap and carry things. It’s especially useful for tying around a lunchbox. Check out Pinterest for more ideas.

So I figured out how to wrap my bento box. What a sweet way to carry a lunch.

Japanese furoshiki wrap

Japanese furoshiki wrap

1b Japanese Treats furoshiki bento wrap

1c Japanese Treats furoshiki bento wrap
The furoshiki becomes a small table cloth for the bento box when it is unwrapped.

Bento box

Bento box

2b Japanese Treats bento box opened

The bento box opened becomes a lid with three covered containers

And now for the treats!
First up… Gummies.
Wow, Japanese flavors are really delicious. The strawberry tasted just like strawberry jam, and the peach was deliciously tart peach. I didn’t taste the cola but the boys said it tasted exactly like cola.

Japanese gummy treats

Japanese gummy treats

Clockwise from the pink package: Peach, Mixed Berry, Cola, Grape, m, Lemon, Citrus.

Clockwise from the pink package: Peach, Mixed Berry, Lemon Cola, Grape, Apple Cider, Lemon, Lemon.

We really liked all of them.
Next was the strangest treat. We probably would have liked these better if we could get past our fears. Quail Eggs in a foil pouch. Really, these were real eggs, at room temperature, in a foil pouch that wasn’t vaccuum sealed. Oh my! No one got sick but we had to be really brave to try them.

Quail Eggs.

Quail Eggs.

These were delicious little snacks – mushroom-shaped cookies with caps dipped in chocolate.

Crispy little cookies shaped like mushrooms

Crispy little cookies shaped like mushrooms

5b Japanese Treats mushrooms

5c Japanese Treats mushrooms

The hard candies were delicious too. We’re not sure what the ones in the pink wrappers are but they tasted fruity and minty. They were quite a taste treat because the flavor changed as you sucked on them. The outside was minty and fruity, a little tart and then they were really sweet. But then the center was soft and …. salty! What a surprise. It was actually very very good. They were probably my favorite.

Tart mint fruit hard candies

Tart mint fruit hard candies

The Molasses Brown Sugar candies were sweet and yummy too. They were super hard and I made the mistake of trying to bite one and broke off a piece of a crown on one molar. Oops. I completely forgot I had that crown and shouldn’t bite down on hard candies. Oh dear. The candies certainly were good though.

Molasses and brown sugar hard candies

Molasses and brown sugar hard candies

The Pretz Sticks were just like Pocky only savory. They sure didn’t last long.

Pretz Sticks

Pretz Sticks – the ones on the left tasted like beef soup and the ones on the right were like pizza. Yum!

The crispy shrimp sticks were really good too. The texture was light and airy and crispy and the flavor was very subtle. The bag didn’t even smell fishy when we opened it. The illustration on the back of the bag was so cute and we wished we could read Japanese.

9a Japanese Treats shrimp crispy sticks

The back of the crispy shrimp sticks bag.

The back of the crispy shrimp sticks bag.

The last treat took courage to try too – squid jerky. It was shredded squid meat, dried and chewy like beef jerky.

Dried shredded squid

Dried shredded squid

The texture was exactly what it looks like, stringy and chewy, and the taste was surprisingly good, not fishy at all.
10b Japanese Treats squid jerky

In fact, after eating some, I decided that I liked this better than beef jerky. Eating beef jerky is like chewing salty cardboard to me, it becomes an inedible fibrous lump. I still enjoy Slim Jims but this dried squid takes its place as my favorite salty chew.

After opening all the treats, I decided to display some bento-style in the new box.

Japanese treats in a bento box.

Japanese treats in a bento box.

Top to bottom: Dried squid, Pretz Sticks, Shrimp Puffs.

Top to bottom: Dried squid, Pretz Sticks, Shrimp Puffs.

I don’t have a photo of the chestnut package or crispy nori-wrapped treats. The nori-wrapped treats were so good! They came with peanuts and were delicious eaten together.

Quail eggs on the upper left, preserved chestnuts at upper right, crispy nori-wrapped snacks with peanuts.

Quail eggs on the upper left, preserved chestnuts at upper right, crispy nori-wrapped snacks with peanuts.

Last are some sweets.
The Mango Twix were super good. Yum! I’d like more of those.

Japanese sweets - Mango Twix, mushroom-shaped cookies with chocolate tops, molasses brown sugar hard candy and plum mint hard candy

Japanese sweets – Mango Twix, mushroom-shaped cookies with chocolate tops, molasses brown sugar hard candy and mint hard candy

It was so fun tasting all these treats. I’m hoping to take a trip to Japan later this year and look forward to more tasting adventures.

Thank you again, Heather!

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Wishing for snow…

23 Thursday Jan 2014

Tags

nature, photography, snow

Wishing for snow.

Wishing for snow.

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Posted by Julia Monroe | Filed under nature, photography

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When a bird needs a little help….

22 Wednesday Jan 2014

Posted by Julia Monroe in God, Inspirational, nature, Scripture, Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

bird, bird photography, God, inspirational, nature, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, scripture

As soon as my son and I heard the thunk, we both said “Was that a bird?”
It was. A tiny Ruby-crowned Kinglet had flown into the sliding glass door and lay on the deck.
What do we do? What can we do?
While we watched, the little bird got to his feet. But he was not well.

The tiny bird sat stunned on the deck.

The tiny bird sat stunned on the deck.

He wobbled around a bit and panted hard.
2 Ruby crowned Kinglet
Finally, he fluffed up all his feathers and tucked his head in and made himself into a tiny feathered ball.

The Ruby-crowned Kinglet fluffed up his feathers and curled into a little ball.

The Ruby-crowned Kinglet fluffed up his feathers and curled into a little ball.

His breath came in shudders and heaves. We watched in distress.

The tiny Kinglet shuddered so hard I feared he was dying.

The tiny Kinglet shuddered so hard I feared he was dying.

It was so cold outside. Would he be ok? We were very glad the cats were inside!  Cats love birds so of course Matey purred with glee and wouldn’t take her eyes off the little bird through the glass. We finally put Matey in the basement out of annoyance of her and respect for the bird. He kept his head tucked in, shuddering and quaking and I kept expecting the little feathered ball to fall over.

Alone yet not alone.

Alone yet not alone.

We looked up info on what to do. The advice was to carefully lift the bird into a box lined with a towel and wait. So that’s what we did. My son lifted the little feathered ball and placed it in the box, then backed into the house and slid the glass door shut. The bird stood up and balanced and revived in the warm towel-lined box. Then we waited, watching his every move.

The tiny Kinglet stood up and we got a glimpse of his beautiful ruby crown.

The tiny Kinglet stood up and we got a glimpse of his beautiful ruby crown.

The little Kinglet looked around for a couple minutes and without even testing his wings, suddenly flew away.

We were so glad the bird was ok! There’s not much you can do for a bird that crashes into a window and sometimes the bird will be stunned for hours. The little Kinglet was on the deck for barely 20 minutes in all.

I was glad the cats were indoors and shut in the basement.
I was glad we were able to look up info online.
It was good that we had a box and a towel to help warm the stunned bird.
And though we couldn’t do much to help, we hovered over it with concern.

Then I remembered what Jesus said.
“For this reason I say to you, do not be worried about your life, as to what you will eat or what you will drink; nor for your body, as to what you will put on. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air, that they do not sow, nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not worth much more than they?”

If God cares so much for tiny birds that he made sure we kept the cats locked up and provided a warm towel, surely he will hover over us when we are curled up and in need of care.

Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you.
I Peter 5:7

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The dining room forest

11 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by Julia Monroe in Christmas, home decor

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

bottle brush trees, Christmas decor, Christmas decorations, Christmas trees, the dining room table

After they graced the tops of cabinets, and before they got put in a large box in the attic, the tall alpine trees became a forest on the dining room table.

1 Bottle Brush tree forest
2 Bottle Brush tree forest

I usually do a better job on the lights but I'm a little shaky standing on a chair this year. Even so, the trees looked lovely against the new cream colored walls.

I usually do a better job on the lights but I’m a little shaky standing on a chair this year. Even so, the trees looked lovely against the new cream colored walls.


4 Bottle Brush tree forest
5 Bottle Brush tree forest
6 Bottle Brush tree forest
7 Bottle Brush tree forest
8 Bottle Brush tree forest
I adore trees, real and not real. If I didn’t need this table so much, I wouldn’t mind leaving the trees there all year. I know my granddaughter would have loved playing with little dolls in the forest. Next year, I will get the trees out a week before we decorate, just so the dolls can play hide & seek in the dining room forest.

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BFN Day – To the Third Neighbor I gave Sourdough Grain Bread

07 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by Julia Monroe in baking, Baking for Neighbors, BFN, community, food, recipe

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Baking for Neighbors, BFN, bread, bread machine, bread machine recipe, food, recipe, sourdough, Sourdough Grain Bread, sourdough starter

I was determined to get in a third Baking For Neighbors day, despite the cold, the rain, the busy holiday and especially my pain.
So I set my will and did it before anything could stop me.
I took Sourdough Grain Bread, a beautiful crackly-topped loaf, hot from my oven to the third neighbor.

Sourdough Grain Bread

Sourdough Grain Bread

The process is simple but time consuming. It takes 1 hour 50 minutes to make the dough in the bread machine, another 45 to raise and another 50 minutes to bake, plus other minutes for prep. So to make this bread, I have to start the loaf 4 hours before giving or serving. It’s an amazing bread and well worth the effort.

I made up this recipe. It took trial and error to get the texture just right. The crust is awesome, crisp and crackly. The interior is the perfect combination of hearty and soft and makes great slices for sandwiches or french toast. It keeps very well too and is good even two days after baking, although the crust will be more chewy than crisp at that point.

There are two specialty items needed to make the bread – a good sourdough starter and a baking cloche. These are explained further down this post.

The recipe:
SOURDOUGH GRAIN BREAD
1 cup water
1/4 cup good aged sourdough starter
2 tsp yeast
1/2 Tablespoon honey
2 1/2 cup bread flour
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
1/2 cup oatmeal
1 1/4 tsp salt
2 Tablespoons olive oil

The process:
Place all ingredients in the order listed in a bread machine.
I use a sourdough starter from King Arthur Flour. I can’t remember when we got it, perhaps 4 years ago? 5? It stays in a stoneware crock in the refrigerator door all the time. It’s an excellent starter. I’ve forgotten to feed it for over 10 months but it stays great, even with neglect.

Sourdough starter

Sourdough starter

3 Sourdough Grain Bread
Use the standard dough setting to make dough. We use a Zojirushi Bread Machine that takes 1 hour 50 minutes to make the dough on a standard setting. We’ve had this machine for over six years and use it three or four times a week. Best bread machine we’ve ever had!
4 Sourdough Grain Bread
When the machine beeps at the end of the cycle, the dough is ready. It fills the bread machine pan.
5 Sourdough Grain Bread
The dough is smooth on top but rough on the bottom when it is turned out of the pan.
6 Sourdough Grain Bread
I fold it over a couple times on a floured surface.
7 Sourdough Grain Bread
Cornmeal is sprinkled in the bottom of the cloche and then the smooth, floured ball of dough is placed in the center of the cloche. There are a variety of cloches available for bread baking. I picked this one for the size and good reviews. You’re not supposed to soak it before using or it may crack in the oven. It is to be used dry. After baking the bread, all I have to do is wipe out any remaining dry corn meal with a paper towel and the cloche is ready for another loaf.
8 Sourdough Grain Bread
The cloche lid is placed on top.
9 Sourdough Grain Bread
The cloche is placed in a cold oven and the oven door shut.
I turn on the oven light to provide a small amount of warmth in the oven and set the timer for 45 minutes for the dough to raise.
10 Sourdough Grain Bread
And then… without opening the cloche or removing it from the oven, I turn the oven to 400 degrees.
That is right, the cloche goes from raising the dough in the oven, straight to baking in the oven and the cloche is never moved! As the dough is baked, it makes steam inside the cloche, emulating a professional steam-injected oven. That’s what makes the crust so amazing!

I watch the oven temp and as soon as it reaches 400 degrees, set the timer to bake the bread for 40 minutes.
When the timer goes off at 40 minutes, the cloche lid is removed from the oven and the bread continues to bake for 10 more minutes to crisp the crust.
Here is a finished loaf.
11 Sourdough Grain Bread
My favorite way to enjoy the bread is hot, with butter and honey and cinnamon powder straight from the spice jar.
12 Sourdough Grain Bread
I’ve made mistakes with this dough, forgetting it was in the bread machine, raising it too long, forgetting to set the timer when the oven reached temperature, and still the bread turns out. Here is a loaf where I did everything wrong. I love the cragginess of the crust.
13 Sourdough Grain Bread
Here is the loaf torn open, steam arising.
14 Sourdough Grain Bread
I don’t have a photo of the loaf I took to Neighbor 3. My back hurt so bad that night that I didn’t want to carry a camera. As soon as the loaf came out of the oven, I wrapped it in paper towels and then foil and walked down the street. Neighbor 3 came to the door in a wheel chair and I handed him the still-hot loaf. He held the warm bundle as he thanked me. I was so very glad I went to the effort to take the loaf to my third neighbor. May he and his household be blessed!

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Snowflake in the window

03 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by Julia Monroe in All Sparkled Up, art, crafts, nature, photography, sparkling, sunlight, water

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

All Sparkled Up, condensation, crafts, drops, paper snowflakes, photography, snow, snowflakes, sparkling, sunlight, water, window

1 Snowflakes in the window
We’re hoping for real snow. But snowflakes cut from rice paper will do for now.
2 Snowflakes in the window3 Snowflakes in the window
4 Snowflakes in the window
5 Snowflakes in the window
6 Snowflakes in the window
7 Snowflakes in the window
8 Snowflakes in the window

And this is my 200th blog post!

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He learned how to play the vuvuzela!

01 Wednesday Jan 2014

Posted by Julia Monroe in family, grandkids, New Years

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Tags

2014, grandkids, New Year's, photo

It was a memorable New Year, 2014 was.

Little brother blasts the vuvuzela for the first time.

My grandson blasts the vuvuzela for the first time.


Happy New Year!

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Happy New Year 2014!

31 Tuesday Dec 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in All Sparkled Up, crafts, family, New Years, sparkling

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

2014, craft idea, crafts, family, homemade party hats, Japan, New Year's Eve

We got THE coolest package from Japan from our daughter yesterday. She and her husband sent us a whole box of crazy cool treats! We’re going to try them tonight. We’re a fairly adventurous family but I’m going to need some bravery tasting dried squid meat, eggplant hard candy and beef & zucchini chips! My guess? Delicious! I’ll let you know.

The evening will be simple – playing card or board games and listening to neighborhood fireworks at midnight. Food will be homemade baguette toasts with hummus and cheeses and a veggie tray. Also those awesome Japanese treats. And we’re going to make party hats from old rolls of Christmas wrapping paper, with a prize going to first and runner up designs.
25 Awesome Party Hats
Party Hats DIY
Homemade Hats
DIY Party Hats
That ought to be silly fun and I’ll be getting rid of excess old wrapping paper too. Reduce & reuse ftw!

Happy New Year to you all!

A tiered server is piled with treats from Japan. We didn't have confetti so I quickly snipped a handful of used Christmas ribbon to make some.

A tiered server is piled with treats from Japan. We didn’t have confetti so I quickly snipped a handful of used Christmas ribbon to make some.

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Merry Christmas!

26 Thursday Dec 2013

Tags

Christmas, Christmas tree, grandkids, photo

Christmas 2013

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Posted by Julia Monroe | Filed under Christmas, family, grandkids, Uncategorized

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