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Monthly Archives: October 2011

Peanut Butter Hot Fudge Sauce

30 Sunday Oct 2011

Posted by createdforjoy in Cook

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Tags

cook, dessert, golden syrup, hot fudge, peanut butter

peanut butter hot fudge sundae

In honor of all the little candy bars on shelves everywhere, I thought I’d make a batch of peanut butter hot fudge sundaes — not that anyone needs an excuse to make gooey chocolate goodness. This recipe makes enough hot fudge for about a dozen generous sundaes, and nothing says “good dinner party host” like sending home a jar with guests at meal’s end (much to my children’s chagrin). It’s a little dangerous how quickly and easily this comes together. Beware: from now on, you are only ten minutes away from peanut butter fudge heaven.

Peanut Butter Hot Fudge Sauce
Makes 3 cups

8 oz. heavy cream
9 oz. semi-sweet chocolate chips (about 2 c.)
3/4 c. creamy peanut butter (I use Skippy Natural)
1/4 c. Lyle’s Golden Syrup (or light corn syrup, see recipe notes below)
pinch fine salt

Cook ingredients in a saucepan over medium-high heat, stirring often, until everything is melted and combined into a smooth, glossy sauce. Serve while still warm with vanilla or coffee ice cream. Fair warning, you will want to lick the empty bowl. (I won’t tell if you do. :)

Recipe Notes + Tips:
I first tasted golden syrup when I lived in England during high school, but I credit British cookbook author Nigella Lawson with completing my happy conversion. (The recipe above is inspired by one featured in 2007’s Nigella Express.) Golden syrup is inverted sugar syrup with similar consistency, uses, and cost to light corn syrup, but with a deliciously warm, buttery flavor. Though Lyle’s Golden Syrup has been a British staple since 1883, it is now also widely available in the U.S. I have seen it at Whole Foods, World Market, Publix, and even T.J. Maxx. It is also available online from King Arthur Flour, among others.

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Birthday Wisdom art journal

28 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by createdforjoy in Make

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art journal, birthday, make, paper craft, sense of humor, wisdom

birthday wisdom main

I made this journal for a dear friend for her birthday earlier this year. It started life as a blank, 3″-square acrylic album from Maya Road. I loved the challenge of the transparent pages and covered one side of each with 2-sided cardstock from paper designer BasicGrey.

pocket closeup

Each page has a 2″-square pocket I made from coordinating papers in a combination of prints. I sanded the edges of both the background papers and the pockets to give them a soft, worn feel, then embellished with twill tape, stickers, paper cut-outs, and stamped text and images. As you can probably tell, I love intricate papercrafting, and my favorite projects are small, detailed pieces.

tags

Inside each tiny pocket is an even tinier tag with an inspirational or humorous quote on it, and each tag is decorated with a stamped design and a loop of 1/8″-wide ribbon. This journal has a sort of “Old Lady Who Swallowed the Fly” quality to it. Altogether now: “She covered the acrylic so the papers would show, then folded the pockets to hold the tags, then sanded the pages to make them soft, then made the tags to hold the quotes that wriggled and jiggled and tickled inside her…” :)

pockets

Kurt Vonnegut wrote, “Laughter and tears are both responses to frustration and exhaustion. I myself prefer to laugh, since there is less cleaning up to do afterward.” One of the qualities I value most is a sense of humor — it’s what first attracted me to my husband; it connects me with friends across days and miles; and it gets me through times when no amount of tears would do the same.

final page

Little did I know how much the words on the final page of this journal would come to mean to me just a few months later, and they touch on the heart of what this blog is about.

detail

“My great hope is to laugh as much as I cry; to get my work done and try to love somebody and have the courage to accept the love in return.” ~ Maya Angelou

Special thanks to Charity for the wonderful photography :)

Art Saves

25 Tuesday Oct 2011

Posted by createdforjoy in Read, Think

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art, challenge, creativity, read, saves, think

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I just finished reading Art Saves: Stories, Inspiration, and Prompts Sharing the Power of Art by Jenny Doh, and it is everything the title promises. Part self-help, part how-to, the book features short biographies of twenty artists who find strength, healing, and self-expression in creating art. The artists share their guiding principles and inspirations, examples of their work, and directions/prompts for artwork modeled after their own. I found the range and variety of artists compelling, and their words carried with them a sense of community and hope that made me want to head for my studio.

In the last four years, art has played an increasingly important part in my own life, especially when it comes to processing the emotional and spiritual challenges that accompany serious, life-changing illness. Although Art Saves largely features professional artists, I certainly don’t think you need create art for a living to appreciate the sentiments these artists share. The projects are accessible, and the stories honor our creative diversity while still being sweet reminders of all we share. I am planning several projects inspired by my favorite artists in the book and will share them in the coming weeks, but I encourage you to check it out on your own.

(North Light Books, Cincinnati; published 2011; ISBN 978-1-4403-0906-9)

Sweet Orange Scones

24 Monday Oct 2011

Posted by createdforjoy in Cook

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citrus, cook, orange, scone, sweet, zest

flour mixture orange zest scone round
scone closeup

Scone purists, avert your eyes. :) This glazed scone recipe is more shortcake-pastry hybrid than anything traditionally found at a British cream tea. That said, it is also one of my favorites and a moist, delicious way to celebrate the entrance of winter citrus. I made up this recipe after I got a craving for Panera’s orange scones (off limits for me now because of food allergies), and I couldn’t be happier with the result. They’re like sunshine in your mouth.

Sweet Orange Scones
Makes 12 scones

For scones:
3 1/4 c. all-purpose flour (I prefer King Arthur Flour)
4 tsp. baking powder
3/4 tsp. fine salt
1/2 c. granulated sugar
zest of 1 orange, finely chopped
1/2 c. unsalted butter (one stick), softened
1 egg
1 tsp. real vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste (I am a vanilla bean paste devotee)
1 tsp. almond extract
1 c. buttermilk (or for quick sour milk replacement, see below)

Oven 400F (375F for dark-coated pan)
In medium mixing bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, salt, sugar, and zest. Rub in butter with your fingers until mixture is soft and crumbly. I love the buttery orange scent at this stage.

In small mixing bowl, whisk together egg, vanilla and almond extracts, and buttermilk/sour milk. Add to dry mixture and mix well until combined into a sticky dough. (You may need to add an extra 1/4 c. flour if it’s very humid.) Spread dough into a lightly greased 9″-round cake pan. Bake 30-33 minutes, until golden brown and tester in center comes out clean. Cool five minutes, then turn out on to rack and flip again so it’s right-side up. While cooling, make glaze.

For glaze:
juice of 1/2 lemon
juice of 1 orange
zest of 1/2 orange, finely chopped
1/2 tsp. real vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste
1/4 tsp. almond extract
2 c. powdered sugar, sifted

Whisk together juices, zest, and extracts, then add powdered sugar. Whisk until smooth. Place cooled scone round on plate and cut into twelve wedges. Pour over glaze and refrigerate at least 1/2 hour before serving — this gives the glaze time to thicken and soak in to the edges of the scones… yum. If you use all the glaze, there will be a puddle on the plate that will sweeten the bottoms of the scones as well. I don’t see that as a problem, but to each her own. :) These just cry out for a glass of cold milk or a cup of hot Earl Gray tea.

*Quick sour milk: if you don’t have buttermilk on hand, as is often the case for me, you can substitute homemade sour milk. Just put the juice of a lemon or 1 tbsp. vinegar in a liquid measuring cup and add milk until it totals one cup. Stir briefly and let sit 1-2 minutes before using.

Recipe Notes + Tips:
It’s a little extra work to make fresh zest and juice, but it’s worth it. No matter the quality of your favorite commercial orange juice, it cannot compare to fresh-squeezed. Full disclosure: I never squeeze a dozen oranges before I have a glass of OJ with breakfast, I pour it out of a plastic container just like everyone else. But this recipe wouldn’t be the same without the fresh juice.

There is also no replacement for fresh citrus zest. Be sure to zest only the peel, not the bitter white pith. If you don’t have a citrus zester, you can use the smallest holes on your cheese grater; just scrape the inside of the grater with a silicone spatula when you’re done to get all of it.

I am an unashamed citrus zest hoarder — my family thinks nothing of finding naked fruit in the fridge, pre-zested and clothed only in plastic wrap. It makes me happy to know there are little bags of chopped lemon and orange peel in my freezer, waiting to be added to compound butter, roast chicken, soup, and stock. I say take comfort wherever you can get it. :)

Just the beginning…

21 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by createdforjoy in Make

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beginning, butterfly, Chinese takeout box, make, paint, transformation, watercolor

butterflymain butterflybacks
closeup
chrysalis

I recently got this piece back from the gallery exhibit where it’s lived for the better part of a year, and it feels like reconnecting with an old friend. I think every piece of art captures a place in time, a version of the artist and her thoughts and feelings. Regardless of whether art is intentionally autobiographical, it is inherently personal. In this case, it’s both.

This artwork was inspired by a challenge from Brevard Art Museum to transform an ordinary white Chinese take-out box into a piece of art. At the time, I was just beginning to understand that serious illness had changed me, but also that those changes could lead to something beautiful. The butterflies are watercolor versions of the blue morpho taking off in flight. The lettering on the back of each butterfly reads What the caterpillar perceives as the end, to the butterfly is just the beginning.

The take-out box is covered in handmade silk paper and silk fibers, and the stem is made of paper-wrapped wire and beads. The inside of the “chrysalis” is layered with ecru raw silk rods and glass seed beads in shades of purple and green. This piece uses a lot of my favorite media — paper, textiles, glass beads, and watercolor — and speaks to a lot of what art means to me.

Optimism

20 Thursday Oct 2011

Posted by createdforjoy in Read, Think

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Helen Keller, optimism, read, think

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I’ve been reading The World I Live In + Optimism: A Collection of Essays by Helen Keller. Her writing is powerfully frank and fiery, but also remarkably humble and full of wonder. One of my favorite passages is from Part One of her Optimism essays, “Optimism Within,” which reads:

Most people measure their happiness in terms of physical pleasure and material possession. Could they win some visible goal which they have set on the horizon, how happy they would be! Lacking this gift or that circumstance, they would be miserable! If happiness is to be so measured, I who cannot hear or see have every reason to sit in a corner with folded hands and weep. If I am happy in spite of my deprivations, if my happiness is so deep that it is a faith, so thoughtful that it becomes a philosophy of life, — if, in short, I am an optimist, my testimony to the creed of optimism is worth hearing. As sinners stand up in meeting and testify to the goodness of God, so one who is called afflicted may rise up in gladness of conviction and testify to the goodness of life.

Can I get an amen?! :)

(Dover Publications, New York; originally published 1903 + 1908, new edition 2009; ISBN 978-0-486-47367-3)

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