In the meantime, we've been getting the house ready for the holidays. It is a lot easier without a wedding at home the same week!
Three generations, tablescaping together
"Ponder well on this point: the pleasant hours of our life are all connected by a more or less tangible link, with some memory of the table."
- Charles Pierre Monselet, French author (1825-1888).
Entertaining
Visitors, Welcome!
Follow us for Tips, Recipes, and Fun!
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Sans Souci at Christmas
So... The stockings progressed until I realized the fabric was too short to finish the pattern. I am changing the pattern so I can finish them, and they'll be ready for Christmas 2014!
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Stockings!
For years, I have wanted to make cross-stitched stockings. I am finally doing it. Hopefully the end product will look like this:
I plan to back it in this candystripe fabric and line it with white.
I know I started late. But the first 8 hours has only yielded this much!
I am really excited, though! My youngest daughter, Ava, is very craft-oriented. She has decided to cross-stitch ornaments for her teachers.
Will keep you posted on the progress!
Andrea, Steve, & Family
Sharing at:
Monday, December 2, 2013
Curried Fruit
1/2 c. butter
1 c. light brown sugar
2 tsp. curry powder
canned fruit: halved pears, peaches, pineapple slices, maraschino cherries
fresh fruit (optional): prunes, plums, or apples
Drain and dry fruit as much as possible. Heat butter, sugar, and curry. Arrange fruit in baking dish and cover with butter mixture. Bake 45 minutes at 350 degrees.
Delicious!
Sharing at:
Friday, November 29, 2013
A Thanksgiving to Be Thankful For
Our home has become the gathering place now every Thanksgiving - and we love it. I have to say, we were more ambitious than last year, but somehow, the prep work, cooking, and cleaning were much easier. When your helper actually lives in the same house, it makes for much more effective teamwork.
Being a "Southern" family, our traditional foods are things like turkey, ham, dressing/stuffing, sweet potato casserole, pistachio-gelatin salad (with marshmallows and pecans), roasted potatoes or mashed potatoes, copper carrots, green beans, etc. That being said, we did something a little different this year. I decided to change the recipes a little and then make some very traditional dishes that even predate the era of "company chicken" and the "Seven Layer Salad." Everyone who asked what they could bring was assigned a dessert except for my aunt. I asked her to find good (not soupy) Brunswick stew. And she delivered!
Green beans, creamed mushrooms with lemon and tarragon, Steve's maple amaretto agave carrots, and black-eyed peas
Brunswick stew, broccoli salad, curried fruit, and a ginger beer and lime gelatin fruit salad
Turkey, cured and baked hams, three sauces, and gravy
Steve's delicious lemon turkey
Green bean casserole - but made with all fresh ingredients - no cans were opened for this dish
Sweet potatoes in a shallot and white wine sauce with bacon and parsley
Traditional broccoli salad
From scratch cranberry sauce with not much sugar - red grapes add the sweetness
Four cheese mac-n-cheese, sharp cheddar, Gruyère, parmesan, and Fontina - with a hint of nutmeg
My favorite dish - cornbread dressing with sausage, apple, pear, raisins and walnuts. Holy cow, this was good!
Corn pudding
Desserts brought included a caramel cake, traditional pecan pie, brownies, and sugared cereal like White Trash, but with chocolate. YUMMY!
So this year, seating 16 in the dining room, breakfast nook, and library, I went with Royal Stafford's black toile Blacksmith's Forge in the dining room and Churchill Blue Willow in the nook and library:
I used Mikasa Richelieu iced beverage glasses everywhere and all manner of sterling patterns, depending on purpose and location. Sir Christopher by Wallace framed the settings in the dining room and nook. Old Master by Towle complemented the lower key space of the library. Both were using for serving dishes, and they were augmented by pieces in Francis I by Reed & Barton, Apollo by Alvin, Old Atlanta by Wallace, and Imperial Queen by Whiting.
My breakfast today included a piece of the sausage-fruit dressing and curried fruit.
Will share recipes in subsequent posts! They are worth it! I lucked out with my choices, and even though it's only one day later, the leftovers are almost gone!
Andrea, Steve, and family
Sharing at:
Labels:
Alvin,
Black,
Blue,
Blue Willow,
Churchill,
Family,
Flatware,
Meakin,
Mikasa,
Recipe,
Recipes,
Reed and Barton,
Royal Stafford,
Silver,
Toile,
Towle,
Transferware,
Wallace
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Lijit Search Wijit
Search Tablescape Times Three
Featured on:
Networked Blogs
Blogs We Follow
-
-
Pinks10 years ago
-
Fiesta - Made In America10 years ago