Thursday, January 10, 2008

Three posts in one day... the sky must be falling...

Just because I cooked last night for the first time in a while, I decided I'd share the recipe.  I got this from my friend J when we lived together for a summer a few years back.

Honey Mustard Chicken Pitas

2 large or 3 medium boneless chicken breasts
olive oil
1 large red bell pepper
a few tablespoons of brown French mustard
a few tablespoons of honey
pita bread
sharp Cheddar cheese, sliced

Trim fat and gristle and dice chicken into 3/4 or 1 inch cubes.

Saute chicken in a tablespoon or so of olive oil (in batches if the pan gets too crowded) until cooked through.

Add a large dollop of mustard and one of honey.  Stir into the chicken.  The mustard should thicken up the pan juices; if still runny then either cook down the sauce or add more mustard and honey to taste.

Seed and dice the bell pepper into 3/4 or 1 inch pieces.  Add to the chicken and cook until heated through but not soggy.

Cut a pita round in half, open up one half and line with 1-2 slices of sharp Cheddar cheese.  Spoon in chicken mixture.  Eat.  Repeat until it's time for dessert.

Frogging... I hate it.

I'm not a big fan of frogging.  If I can find a way to fix the mistake or gloss over it, I will.  I'm very good at dropping stitches in knitting to fix problems rows back (try fixing a miscrossed 6-stitch cable two crosses back sometime... it's quite exhilarating when you succeed).

I've messed up this part of the lion towel before, and I just bought more yarn and made the towel part too big.  But when I considered the problems:

  • Not increasing enough, so the towel would be too long,
  • Not having a lot of yarn, and not wanting to buy too much, again...
  • and a very odd and abrupt transition between two dye lots of yarn,

I decided to be "fearless" and redo the whole sucker.  This time I'm taking the offending differently-colored ball and alternating every two rows between the darker and lighter shades.

beginningtake2
My re-started towel bottom point.

This time I've double-checked my stitch counts while the numbers are still small and I'm ignoring the fact that it looks wrong and bad (fan-shaped, not triangular -- must have faith, must have faith...).  Now for some more endurance crocheting.

Grr... from the frog pond.

Someday, I will learn to count properly.  In the meantime, I'll continue to do 88 rows of single crochet, increasing only 1 stitch per row rather than the 2 I'm supposed to... and continue to visit the frog pond.

Since I had to grab my swift anyways, I realized I'd never posted about it, so instead of ripping I took pictures.

Inspired by Crafty Diversions' instructions.

wholeswift
My swift.  Homemade for about $20 and a few hours.

 centerswiftcenterswiftvert
The swift consists of two hardwood 1x2's, mitered in the center, sitting on a purchased lazy susan.  I used a long eye bolt, the eye to tie the end of the yarn to when necessary, the length so I can fold the two arms together without unscrewing the whole thing.

swiftsupport
I use 4 bolts sitting in holed drilled through the arms to keep the wood parts from sliding off the lazy susan.

swiftholes
swiftside
Four dowels hold the yarn.  They fit into holes drilled about halfway through the arms.

Sigh.  Back to ripping.

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Christmas 2007

A rundown of my Christmas knitting projects:

Grandma's Fingerless Mitts
finished
I wanted to make something my grandmother could wear to keep her hands and wrists warm inside in the winter.  These fingerless mitts keep the fingers free while covering pulse points and the wrist joint.
Yarn: Colinette Cadenza (a DK weight superwash merino wool)
Needles: US4/3.5mm DPNs
Pattern: Rose's Wrist Warmers

Florida Clapotis
donecloseup
Clapotis is a pretty popular scarf pattern, using dropped stitches to create an open texture.  I knit one for my grandmother in Florida in a cotton/linen/rayon textured yarn so it wouldn't be too warm (I hope).... She did say that it wasn't big or warm enough for her when it reached 32° in early January.
Yarn: Lang Oasis
Needles: US9/5.5 mm circular
Pattern: Clapotis

Green Hatmione/Hermittens
mittsandhat
Inspired by knitwear in the Harry Potter movies (specifically, a hat worn by Hermione in Prisoner of Azkaban).  I made a set for myself, and decided to make another set for my mother-in-law.
Yarn: Berroco Ultra Alpaca
Needles: For hat, US7/4.5mm circ, US6/4.0mm DPNs
   For mittens, US6/4.0mm, US5/3.75mm DPNs
Pattern: Hatmione, Hermittens (also in Charmed Knits)

 Palindrome Scarf
earlyblurry
Usually cables look good on one side of the fabric and bad on the other.  This scarf pattern creates a fabric with no wrong side; the cables are wide cables over ribbing.  I chose an acrylic yarn so it could be machine washed and dried, and a bright red so my father-in-law could wear it to Cornell hockey games.
Yarn: Red Heart Soft Yarn
Needles: US7/4.5mm circ
Pattern: Palindrome

 Ice Queen I/II
sheepfolded
In early December, the new Knitty came out with a one-skein pattern that looked perfect as gifts for my mother and my friend N.  Kidsilk Haze is not a cheap yarn, but only one skein is quite doable, and I'd never tried beading in my knitting before.
Yarn: Rowan Kidsilk Haze (mohair & silk)
Needles: US5/3.75mm, US8/5.0mm circ
Pattern: Ice Queen

 Mitered Tote Bag
finishedHanging
I wanted to try a new technique: mitered squares.  This pattern was in a magazine I picked up on a whim.  Given to N's daughter A.
Yarn: Cascade Sierra (cotton & wool)
Needles: US7/4.5mm circ, US6/4.0mm DPNs
Pattern: Mighty Mitered Bag (in Creative Knitting Nov 2007)

Red Festive Top
redBack
When I got tired of knitting all these gifts, I worked on this crochet project for myself.  I planned on wearing it to church on Christmas Eve, and succeeded!
Yarn: Patons Brilliant
Hook: US I/5.5mm
Pattern: Crochet Festive Top

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Once again, a failure to blog

Sigh.  Trying again to keep up with this blog.

Holiday projects for gifts dominated the last few months of 2007, which means that I didn't want to post in case I spoiled surprises for any of my family that might read this blog (I know you're out there, Mom!)

I've also been playing with my Ravelry account, which recently gave me the ability to show you progress bars that update themselves based on information in that database (see to the right ---->).  Ravelry is an online project notebook & social networking site, currently in beta, and the progress bar widgets are even more beta than that, so I had to do a lot of my own futzing around, learning a little bit about javascript and css, to get them to look halfway decent.  They are still a work in progress, but I'm satisfied for right now.

So, crafting updates, in reverse chronological order, since that's how my mind works... for Christmas my dear hubby got me a set of interchangeable knitting needles.  I love them for their sharp points and slick finish.  My first project on my new needles was started and completed while I was traveling for the holidays: the Blue Jeans Shawl.

blocked 

Pattern link.

Uses one skein of lace weight yarn (only about 2 yards unknit!).  It's still drying from my blocking tonight, so I don't know how much of me I can fit under it, but it should be nice for cool summer evenings.

I'm also currently working on a tank top for the summer and I just started a hooded baby towel for my brother- and sister-in-law.

I'll post about the gifts I made tomorrow or so, since I'm heading to bed now.