Sunday, November 30, 2008

Merry Christmas












I made some Christmas gift tags this morning and thought I'd share them to you. To print, right click on the image, select "Save Picture As," save the tag, then insert them into a Word document (or the software of your choice). Print them onto cardstock, cut them out, punch a hole, and use them to label all your presents. Enjoy!

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Etsy Update

I'll be back very soon with some craft ideas for the holidays (and a recipe or two). But I wanted to share an update on my Etsy store. I had a bunch of tag blankets listed on my site, but I was contacted by the Taggies company. They not only hold a trademark on their name, but they have a patent on their blankets. I had no idea. I had to take all of my tag blankets off Etsy. I feel very strongly about following the rules, but I also feel like my blankets are very different from the Taggies you find in the stores.
  • My blankets are made with solid-colored anti-pill polar fleece, minky fur, or dotted fur fabric depending on your choice. Taggies are made from patterned polar fleece such as white with yellow ducks or primary-colored squares. I have yet to find a color combination I like that they make.
  • My ribbons are a variety of textures from silky to grosgrain to lace and ric rac. Taggies are made with satin ribbon only.
  • All of my blankets are personalized with the baby's first initial. Taggies does not offer this option.
I just wanted anyone who is interested to know why my listings are gone from Etsy. But I'd be happy to take your order personally if you'd like. They are $25 each and include everything listed above. Shipping is $5, but I will waive the shipping on orders of two or more. See you soon!

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

For Your Little Turkey

I made a Thanksgiving turkey onesie for my little turkey this afternoon and wanted to show you all how to make one too. I saw the idea at one of my all-time favorite websites, The Crafty Crow. I changed it up a bit for my liking, and took pictures along the way. As always, feel free to ask questions if you have any!

1) Trace your child's hand. I have a tip for babies' hands. They are next to impossible to trace well since they're so wiggly. (Mine tried to grab the pencil the whole time!) Get their hand wet, then place it on a sheet of colored construction paper. It will leave enough of a print to trace around that leaving you free from their wiggly, tangly fingers.
2) Eat the paper - this step is totally optional
3) Gather scraps of fabrics. I have another tip. Go to your local fabric store and collect free samples of the fabrics on the big bolts. They will come in handy all the time. I have a handful of them always.
4) You'll want the piece of fabric to be a tad bit larger than your child's handprint. Since I only had tiny pieces of fabric, I pieced them together into a mini quilt (see below).
5) Position the handprint in the center of the shirt you want to embellish, and trace with a disappearing-ink fabric pen.
6) Place the fabric piece directly under the handprint (in between the front and back side of the onsie) right side facing up, and pin in place. Sorry, I didn't get any pictures of this step. But in the end, it should be a sandwich in this order from top to bottom: shirt front with the traced hand, decorative fabric facing up, shirt back.
7) Sew along the tracing lines in a coordinating-colored thread. You will be sewing through the front of the shirt as well as through the background fabric. Be careful not to catch the shirt back in the stitching.
8) When you've sewn all the way around the outline, remove the pins. Using sharp scissors (I used my tiny Fiskars scissors, and they were perfect), remove the shirt fabric from the inside of the handprint to expose the background fabric as shown below.
9) Add embellishments like legs/feet, a gobble or waddle or whatever that hanging-down thing is called, a button eye, and a beak, and you're done! A custom-made Thanksgiving shirt for your little turkey.
Happy Crafting!

The Stink is Worth it!

I'm glad the weather is beautiful right now because I've got all my sliding doors and windows open to counteract my pre-Thanksgiving cooking. =) Curious? I'm making these. They are absolutely delicious, but they bake for 2 hours, and they make your entire house smell like smoked bacon for at least a day. So if you're wanting a perfectly sinful appetizer idea, go make these. But make them well ahead of time, freeze them, and re-heat unless you'd like your house to smell like smoky bacon when your guests arrive.

Monday, November 24, 2008

New in the shop

New items posted in the Etsy shop!
Quiet Bags
Custom Tag Blankets

As always, please feel free to make any custom requests. I accept PayPal through Etsy and can list anything you need! Also, for the next 3 months I will be sending 25% of all my proceeds to Stellan Supports String of Pearls.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

The Best Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe Ever!

This recipe is cross-posted on our family blog, but I wanted to make sure it was documented here as well with the proper credit. I cannot say enough about this recipe. Since high school I have been on the quest for the perfect chocolate chip cookie recipe. I've tried countless combinations and ratios of ingredients trying to perfect the cookie. This is definitely it in my mind. I love the fact that I don't have to use my mixer, the cookies are thick and gooey, and just basically everything else about this recipe. Yum! I'll post the recipe as I follow it with the credits below:
Jaay's Best Ever Chocolate Chip Cookies

· 2 cups all-purpose flour
· 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
· 1/2 teaspoon salt
· 3/4 cup unsalted butter, melted
· 1 cup packed brown sugar
· 1/2 cup white sugar
· 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
· 1 egg
· 1 egg yolk
· 2 cups semisweet chocolate chips

Directions:
Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silpat (or grease the pan if you do not have either of these handy).

In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, and salt, and set aside.

Meanwhile, melt the butter. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together melted butter, brown sugar, white sugar, vanilla, egg, and egg yolk adding each ingredient one at a time and mixing until combined. Add the dry ingredients in thirds to the wet ingredients, and mix until combined. Over mixing will lead to tough cookies.

Using a 1/4 cup cookie scoop, drop the cookie dough onto the parchment-lined baking sheet at least two inches apart. (My baking sheet only holds 8 cookies since they're so big.)

Bake at 325 for 15-17 minutes until the edges are golden brown. Let cool on the pan for 1-2 minutes, then remove to a cooling rack. (Or, as we do, you can eat them right off the pan!)

Hope you enjoy these as much as we do!

[I saw this recipe on the baby board I'm a part of. The poster had seen it on someone's blog who had seen it on a baking website. ]

Saturday, November 22, 2008

In Which I Reveal My Secrets

Lest you think I actually cook, clean, and decorate daily, I wanted to share with the Internets what we had for dinner at my husband's suggestion. We went to the grocery store, bought a rotisserie chicken, and paired it with a microwaved can of green beans and some instant mashed potatoes. Here's the recipe:

Buy a chicken, already cooked
Open a can of green beans, and heat in the microwave for 1 1/2 minutes
Follow the directions on the side of the box of potato flakes

Ha! =)

Oh, and we had Taco Bell for lunch...

Friday, November 21, 2008

Cranberry Orange Scones

I was describing this recipe to someone the other day, and they immediately dismissed it as something they could never make. This totally stumped me! If I can do it, anyone can! I have no more skill than the next guy in the kitchen, believe me! Again, this just goes back to being able to follow directions. So I was going to just post this recipe, but apparently it's intimidating to some. I want to break it down to the very basics. Please just try it. You will feel great that you accomplished something in the kitchen, your house will smell delicious, and you'll be 5 pounds heavier after eating the entire batch. =) What motivation, huh? So I've decided that I'm going to post my recipes as-is at the top of the posts then explain some of the tips below. So, if you're proficient and not lacking any kitchen skills, you can just read the top. And if you want to dive further, read on.

Cranberry Orange Scones
(adapted from the Joy of Cooking recipe)


Ingredients:


2 Cups Flour (all-purpose)
1/3 Cup Sugar (white)
1 Tablespoon Baking Powder
1/2 Teaspoon Salt
6 Tablespoons Cold, Unsalted Butter
1/2 Cup Dried Cranberries
1 Large Egg
1/2 Cup + 3 Tablespoons Heavy Cream
Zest of One Orange
Juice of 1/2 Orange
Sanding Sugar


Tools:


Baking Sheet, Ungreased
Whisk
Two Mixing Bowls
Wooden Spoon
Oven set at 425
Pastry Blender or 2 Knives
Pizza Wheel
Pastry Brush
Cooling Rack



Directions:


Preheat your oven to 425, and make sure the rack is in the center of the oven.
In a large bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Cut the cold butter into cubes, and drop into the dry ingredients mixture. Cut in with a pastry blender or 2 knives. Work the butter until the mixture resembles bread crumbs with the largest pieces of butter no larger than pea-sized. Stir in the dried cranberries.
In a separate bowl, whisk together the egg, 1/2 cup heavy cream, orange zest, and orange juice. Create a well in the center of the dry ingredients, and add the heavy cream mixture all at once. Stir with a wooden spoon just until the ingredients are moist and come together.
At this point, use your hand to knead the dough against the sides of the bowl until all of the pieces come together and the bowl is clean. Place the dough on a floured surface, and pat into an 8-inch round. Using a pizza wheel, slice the dough into 8 pie-shaped wedges. Place the wedges 1/2 inch apart on the baking sheet. Brush the tops with the remaining 3 tablespoons of heavy cream, then sprinkle them with sanding sugar to coat.
Bake at 425 degrees for approximately 12-15 minutes or until the edges are golden brown.


Break it Down:


Cutting in the butter: Basically this means to cut the butter into teeny, tiny pieces that are completely coated in the flour mixture so that when the dough bakes, there is butter spread evenly throughout. A pastry blender looks like this:
It makes the job quick and easy. If you don't have one, hold a knife in each hand, and cross-slice the dough until you've broken up all of the pieces of butter into pea-sized or smaller chunks. It is important to make sure the butter is very cold when you put it in the dry ingredients. You want your mixture to still be dry at the end. So if you're working and working and it sits at room temperature for awhile, stick it in the freezer for a few minutes before adding the wet ingredients. If your scones turn out really flat, this could be the problem.

Kneading the dough: Think play-dough on this one. Remember how the dough would sometimes break into little pieces all over the table, so you'd use the ball of dough to pick up those pieces? That's exactly the point here. Your dough will be all crumbly, and you want it to come together. So you use the warmth of your hand to smash it (yes, that's the technical term =) all back together. You don't want to over-do it, though. I'd say pressing it into the bowl 5-8 times should do it. If you over-mix, your scones will be sort-of tough and chewy instead of flaky and melt-in-your-mouth.

Sanding your scones: The point of brushing the tops of the scones with heavy cream is to develop a rich, golden-brown, crunchy crust on top. If you don't have a pastry brush (and I'd highly recommend a silicone brush if you want to pick one up - this helps to avoid the bristles falling out on top of your scones - yuck!), you can simply spoon some heavy cream over the top and use the back of the spoon to spread it evenly. You can skip the sanding sugar altogether, but I love the extra sweetness and crunch it gives the scones. Sanding sugar is sold in the baking aisle (I found it at our Neighborhood WalMart grocery store, so I'm sure they sell it just about anywhere) where the rest of the sprinkles and colored sugars are sold. I always have the clear sanding sugar on-hand because it's more versatile. But you could use any color you like. The heavy cream will help the sanding sugar stick nicely.

The baking process: When you put the scones in the oven, you can pretty much leave them alone. Opening the oven often to check on them will make the temperature vary way too much. Check them at 12 minutes. If they aren't beginning to turn golden around the edges, set the timer for 2 more minutes. All ovens vary, so it may be closer to 15 minutes for you. Mine were perfect after 13. When they look like the picture at the top, pull the baking sheet out of the oven, and let it sit for a minute or two. Then, using a pancake-turner, gently lift them off the baking sheet and onto a cooling rack. Of course, you can just eat them right off the baking sheet as well. But the consistency should be solid enough for you to put them in a basket once they're cool without them falling apart.

Variations: I used the cranberries and orange zest to mimic my favorite scones at Starbucks and since they are seasonally-appropriate (and I thought these were leagues above Starbucks' scones). But you can change it up any way you'd like. Instead of cranberry orange, why not substitute white chocolate chips and raspberries, lemon zest and macadamia nuts, or milk chocolate chips and almonds? This is the perfect basic scone recipe to adapt to your taste.

Alright, I hope you enjoy these. They really aren't as complicated as all of these instructions imply. But I wanted to give you the baking basics because I'm sure they'll be used in future recipes. Please let me know if you have any questions, and also leave a comment if you make these. I'd love to hear about all the flavor combinations you try!


[Try pairing these scones with this recipe for a perfect Autumn combination. This was the menu for a coffee I hosted this week, and it was a huge hit.]

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Let's start at the very beginning...


I have a post already started for tomorrow that is incredibly yummy and a must-try. But Jenny gave a great idea for a blog header how-to. I want to start by saying very clearly that I am no expert AT ALL in this area. I do not know HTML from WXYZ. =) But dear friends and sisters have taught me all I know, so my expertise is simply in following directions and being a copycat.

Do you know about Scrapblog? If not, don't say I didn't warn you that it's totally addictive. Scrapblog is an online, digital scrapbooking service that is 100% free. Visiting and setting up an account are the first steps. When you have an account, click the Create a New Scrapblog button to begin. From there, you can add all sorts of page elements like backgrounds, personal pictures, stickers, etc. To choose potential elements, just click on the button in the left-hand column, then click to add stickers, backgrounds, etc. When I started using Scrapblog, the amount of backgrounds and stickers was manageable to where I could actually scroll through them all to choose. I'd suggest you do a search to narrow down your choices. For example, if you want header with blue elements, do a search for 'blue.' I'm not impressed by their tags for their elements (when you search for something like 'dots' very few stickers are found even though they have countless stickers with dots), but it at least gets you started.

So play around with the system, design your header, then save your work. It will ask you if you want to publish your scrapblog. Click 'yes.' You do not have to choose to share your page, but it must be published in order for you to upload it to the blog. When it is published, go to File:Export as jpeg. It will bring up a dialog box with the pages of your scrapblog. Click 'download' underneath the page you want, then choose to save it. Remember where you saved it on your computer!

To make it your blog header, go into your layout section for your blog. Click to edit your header. Your blog title will appear followed by the description then image. Browse your computer for your scrapblog header. Then, make sure you click both the 'Instead of title and description' and the 'Shrink to Fit' buttons. Click save, then check your blog, and you're done!

I wrote this post quickly and off the top of my (tired, mommy-ified, decaffeinated, and non-showered) head, so it is very likely that I accidentally skipped a step. So try it out, and please feel free to ask questions. I'll do my best to help.

Happy Header-Making!!

Tiny Tidbits

Welcome to Tiny Tidbits. I have been compiling tons of ideas from other websites (to which I will ALWAYS give credit), easy and quick recipe ideas, and fun crafts that I have scattered all over the place. This will be my place to post and organize my thoughts and ideas. And if others are inspired along the way, great! I'm going to post tutorials, recipes, links, and quotes. If you ever see something on my blog or in my pictures that you'd like to know how to make, please feel free to ask, and I'll do my best to answer your questions. Also, if you have a great idea for a post, craft, meal, etc. by all means, please share!

Thanks for stopping in, and you're welcome back anytime.