Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 June 2008

Rhubarb Tarte fine

This is the easiest baking you can imagine. The recipe is here . The website belongs to my favourite TV program in Swedish, Strömsö. It is all about crafting and cooking and gardening and building and decorating, and it mostly happens in a real house where these nice people are crafting and decorating and so on. Anyway, all you need is this ready made puff pastry (I hope this is the correct term. I saw it today on blog with the same kind of positive crafty energy as Strömsö, Meet me at Mike's, in Pip's Sunday lunch recipe, and the picture looked like the stuff I mean); and some rhubarb and lots of fine ground sugar. Roll the pastry sheets a little thinner, slice the rhubarb lengthwise and spread on the pastry sheets, leaving a narrow edge uncovered on all sides. Then sprinkle a sufficient amount of sugar on top. Bake in 225 degrees C until they look fine, 15 - 20 minutes. Serve with (home made) vanilla sauce or with ice cream.





I think I will try this later with apple slices and cinnamon.

Monday, 10 March 2008

Sunday lunch recipe

The weekend has gone and I haven't done anything sewing-related. I have been cleaning and washing and cooking instead, and now I feel full of sewing energy again. I even cooked so much for our big family dinner on Sunday that I don't need to make lunch today, just warm up the rest of our yesterday's merimiespihvi. This is one of my favourites, my mother used to make it often for Sundays in winter when we were a big family. It is made of sliced (raw) potatoes, beef (slices fried in a pan), and fried onion rings and a couple of carrots sliced as well, for colour. The incredients are layered in a ceramic pot, starting with potatoes. Top layer is also potato slices. Add some bay leaves and peppers, a little salt on each potato layer. Then add a strong broth, almost reaching the top. Put it in the oven for 2 hours or more, 180 degrees C. Put a lid on the pot when the potatoes start getting brown. Yum! Serve with pickled cucumbers, red beet and lingonberry jam. For 1 kg of beef I would use 10-14 average size potatoes, one carrot and two big onions.


As I was so busy cleaning, I also needed to put something on the table after taking all my tactile book stuff (Yes, it has occupied our big dining table this long. We eat in the kitchen.) and my ironing to the bedroom. I chose this little runner I made a couple of years ago for Easter, which is this year very early, next week.





I'm experiencing serious difficulties with uploading the photos. I'll go and put some new laundry in the washing machine and hang the first load, and try again.








Yes, a break is always good. Five attempts before going to the cellar, and now on first attempt the pictures are here. This Easter flower is made with the paper-piecing method, where the patchwork is sewn with a paper pattern on the reverse, along the lines. This makes it easy to make small details correct and all blocks alike.