Monday, 21 November 2011

The Nancy comes out of the closet!

This fancy Nancy dresser is not what she seems!



For decades she gave the illusion she was oak. A masculine dark grain - She fooled us all into thinking she was something she wasn't. It was all in the makeup she was wearing. When I stripped her makeup off, I found out Nancy was actually not oak at all! All this time! For many years I spoke to her like she was oak, and I cared for her as I would for an oak dresser. Well, she has come out of the closet now, and we all accept her for what she is - birch!


To celebrate her liberation, I gave her a new look. A feminine soft look, with just a hint of masculine, to remind her what she once was.

She seems to have a natural glow!

She can't seem to stop smiling now! 

 Her curves seem more curvey!




Don't judge me, but I am in love with Nancy!!



Sharing her beauty to the blog world here:
Momma Hens CoopMod Vintage Life

vif187 shabby creek cottage

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

The "Bobbi-Jo"




I wasn't sure what I was going to do with this piece. 
At one time it was a vanity, then someone added a homemade top on it. 
I am not to sure if i will keep this top on it forever, but it will do for now. 
I just find that the shape of the top, doesn't "fit" the shape of the rest of it. 
I knew I was going to paint "Bobbi-Jo", but was unsure what color, or whether or not to distress it. 
I accidentally purposely ended up chose to layer paint colors, distress, crackle, add more paint, and do more distressing & add dark wax. 
I actually didn't know when to quit!  It is quite French!  (Afterall, I am Canadian)
I added my favourite jewels, "glass knobs" & "voila!"  
Repondre a "Bobbi-Jo".










I am a LiNkY PaRtY AnImAl:

Monday, 7 November 2011

Cabbage Rolls for a crowd!

Every fall, I look forward to cooking, and freezing comfort food.  Like a bear, preparing to hibernate for the winter, I spend days filling the cupboard with preserves, and the freezer with quick meals.  I try to use the vegetables that are in season.  I don't have much of a garden, so I buy from the farmers markets, beg for donations from my parents & In-Laws gardens, and buy in bulk from the grocery store when it is plentiful and cheap.  From this (& some help from the Ukrainians) was born.......
"Cabbage Roll Season"
This recipe has evolved from the many restaurants I have worked in, and from the recipe books from Churches.  I have combined the best ingredients, with the best recipes I could find to make my own version.  It is time consuming, so I try to do it over a couple of days. 
Serve with a "dallop" of sour cream.

DAY 1

Go grocery shopping - I wait until I can get the cabbage for $0.99/each

INGREDIENTS

5 heads of cabbage
2 - 2.5 lbs of ground beef
2 - 2.5 lbs of ground pork
package of white rice - (parboiled is fine, but not minute rice) - enough to make 8 cups of cooked rice
4 medium onions
4 stalks of celery
1 green pepper
4 cloves of garlic
1/3 cup parsley

SAUCE
3 cloves of garlic
1/4 cup worcestershire sauce
8 tins of tomato soup
1/4 cup of brown sugar
1.5 cups of ketchup - diluted with 1.5 cups of water
1/4 cup of dried onion flakes
1/3 cups butter

DAY 2

Prepare! - Chop, dice, cook!

Cook the rice as per directions.  8 cups of cooked rice is needed
(For chopping I use my "Slap Chop")
Finely chop onions
Finely chop celery
Finely chop green pepper
Mince garlic

Refrigerate all vegetables and rice and continue the next day

DAY 3

Cut the core out of the cabbage.  Fill a large pot half full of water and bring to a boil.  Put 1 whole cabbage in the pot, and make sure it is not touching the bottom.  Boil cabbage, and continually peel off the outer layers of cabbage leaves as they soften.  Do each cabbage separately.  When the leaves are cooled, use a paring knife to thin the thick meaty spines, to make them easier to roll. Save the smaller core parts of the cabbage, by partly cooking, and freezing to make  stews and casseroles.

Meat Mixture:  In a large bowl, mix together the uncooked meat, rice, 2/3ds of the chopped onion, green pepper, celery, 1 tsp. salt, 1 tsp. pepper, 3 tsp. minced garlic & parsley.  Set aside.

Sauce:  In a pot or large bowl, mix the tomato soup, with 8 tins of water, and all of the rest of the sauce ingredients.  Mix well. 

**Take 4 cups of the sauce mix and add to the meat/rice and mix it in.

Next take about a palm full of the mixture of meat and put a "log" shape in the center of each cabbage leaf and roll similar to rolling a soft taco.  The amount depends on the size of the cabbage leaf.  leave ample room so the meat will not "ooze" out. 


Put in the roaster tight in 2 long rows, leaving room in between the rows for some juice.  I can fit 12 large cabbage rolls in each row, 24 in each layer.  I can fit 48 in my roaster.  The leftover cabbage rolls i cook in the oven in a 9"x13" baking dish.  Spoon 2 ladles of sauce over each row of cabbage rolls to keep them hydrated while cooking.  Cook for 2.5 hours on  375.

I freeze most of my cabbage rolls in different size freezer bags, for easy dinners, and potlucks. 
While the rolls are cooking, I spoon the extra mixture of sauce into labelled bags and freeze them separately from the cabbage rolls.  This is so the cabbage rolls will not get soggy. 




Like a sausage I am linking up here:

Thursday, 3 November 2011

Slow Cooker Beef Burgundy

So Easy, that the first time we had it, my Husband made it!  And it was fabulous!

Beef Burgundy

2 pounds Beef Roast, cut into 1" cubes
1/2 tsp Salt
1/2 tsp fresh Ground Pepper
2 Tbsp Cooking Oil
5 medium Carrots, sliced 3/8" thick
1 can sliced Green Beans
2 medium Onions, cut ino large chunks
1 pkg. of fresh sliced mushrooms
2 cloves of Garlic, minced
2 cups Beef Broth
1.5 cups Burgundy Wine
2 Tbsp Red Hot Sauce
4 slices of Bacon, cooked crisp & crumbled

Sprinkle salt & pepper on meat and cook in the hot oil until brown.  Drain Fat. 
Place meat in slow cooker.
Dump everything except the bacon in a large slow cooker, and stir. 
Cook on low for 10-12 hours, or High for 5-6 hours.
Serve on a bed of egg noodles, and sprinkle each serving with crumbled bacon.



Thursday, 13 October 2011

Outhouse Green

I went to a yard sale, late in the day.  I wasn't looking for a dresser, and was avoiding any BIG purchases.  You see, I can see my DH is getting annoyed with moving furniture, and the overload of the house...even when it is temporary.  We do not have a workshop for me to work on my pieces, so they are usually stuck in any available corner of the house, until I sell it.  Which, isn't always right away.  Anywho...the lady had 2 dressers, and I decided to buy one of them for $10.  Afterall, it was only $10.  What was I supposed to do?  Leave it there?  The other one was also $10, but I held back and only bought 1 of them.  I went home to get the truck,  returned to pick up my 1 dresser, & the lady said I MUST take the other one....for FREE!  Well, now I was in a pickle...I proceeded to take her offer, and loaded 2 dressers up on the truck, for a total of $10.  My DH is going to KILL me!!  lol - But, He'll get over it....eventually!


Before


After







I painted the handles with Brushed Nickel, and the outside of the dresser with a very light grey, and the inside green "oops" paint. 

Enter my friend, "C".  My friend "C"came to visit, and I was showing off my latest project to her.  She saw the inside, and chuckled.  I begged her to tell me what the chuckle was for, and she finally revealed why she had chuckled.  She used to work for the Ministry of Natural Resources, at a Provincial Park.  She was assigned to paint the inside of all of the outhouses.  It was a standard color for decades throughout Ontario...."Outhouse Green".  The exact green that I had painted the inside of the dresser.  I didn't notice until she brought it up...and then realized she was right.  It is "Outhouse Green".  That Gawd-awful green of the outhouses that were so disgusting, and stinky, nobody used them unless it was an emergency!






Thursday, 6 October 2011

Fresh Salsa

I went Salsa Dancing the other night....so I was in the mood to make some!  We love fresh salsa!  I try to make enough to give away in baskets for Christmas presents. 

Here is my (not so) secret recipe:

14 cups of prepared (peeled & chopped) tomatoes, 3 cups chopped onions, 1.5 cups of chopped hot peppers, 1 cup of green bell peppers


1.5 cups of vinegar, 3 Tbsp. salt, 2 Tbsp garlic,
2 cans tomatoe paste, 1 cup cillantro or parsley, 1 tsp cumin
Mix all together in pot, simmer gently for a half hour.


Pour into jars & process in a canner for 20 minutes.



My batch made 46 cups!!


Wednesday, 21 September 2011

How to add $1000 value to your house for only $12

Where have I been?  What have I been doing?

Don't worry, I have NOT forgotten about you out there in blog world!  I have been a little distracted...with sumer...but I do have a few projects to share.  I didn't sit around sunbathing ALL summer!  lol 

One project I finished was the painting of my exterior doors...finally!   I paid $12 for 1 quart of Rustoleum Satin Black paint, and finished several coats to 3 doors in 3 days. 

I think the classic black added so much to the house!

Here are the before pictures.  I painted the doors a few years ago, they were supposed to be dark espresso brown, but were a reddish brown chocolate.  Hated them right from the start, but had to live with them for a while. 




Sorry about the snow picture - I had to find old ones because I forgot to take a before picture. 

Here is the after:





NEXT - QUESTION - I am thinking about changing the color of the siding on the front porch when we put the new windows in.  What color should it be?  Remember...it is a 100 year old house.