Sunday, July 26, 2015

How to do Glamping III Or...Making lists is fun to do.

This is my family's 3rd annual back-country glamping trip, and you get a glimpse of what it's like to go camping where there are zero modern comforts, except for what we pack in.  Now mind you, we pack in a LOT of modern comforts.  In fact, it's basically like staying in a luxury hotel...if a luxury hotel involves an OUTHOUSE, cooking for the crew over a fire, lots of mosquitoes, dirt, no shower and bees living in the outhouse along with the spiders.

how to plan a campout
Don't take this the wrong way, I love going on this adventure every year and I'd never pass on this camping trip.  It's an amazing experience for my kids and myself to pull the plug on the electronics and live and play simply.

The tricky thing is, it requires a lot of planning and prep work and if you're like many people, the very idea of trying to plan everything that goes into a large-scale camping trip is daunting, to say the least.  So I am sharing my experiences with you to help you know exactly what you need to bring....or pretty close as I'm sure you won't follow my menu plan to the T.  But it's easily customizable to your own needs.

I've written about how I meal plan for camping plus all kinds of other good stuff, as well.  This is what I do before every camp out to ensure I forget the least possible amount of things.  Forgetting happens and then you just Macgyver whatever you forgot.

Step 1:  Figure out what you want to eat every day for every meal.  I normally start with dinner as it usually involves the most work, and then I figure out breakfast because we have a nice breakfast every morning.  Lunch is always easy so it's a no-brainer, peanut butter, every lunch, every day.  If you are going camping with another family, decide if you are going to meal-share.  This year we decided to be in charge of all our own meals except for one.  Dutch oven potatoes (which my buddy made) to be served with campfire cheese sandwiches and dutch oven dessert (which I was in charge of).  You may want to meal share more meals than we did, but it makes things slightly more complicated. 

Decide what snacks and treats you want to bring.  It's amazing how much food you need to pack in when camping, but it's because there's usually not a store nearby to run to if you forget something or don't buy enough.   So, consider a few snacks a day for every member of your family.  Pre-packaged cheese, yogurt tubes, cookies, fruit and trail mix are all good options for snacks.

Step 2:  Make a list of what you need to buy at the grocery store and what you have already in your pantry.  If you don't need to buy it, don't.   Camping costs a startling amount of money.

camping list
My food list list.  I have everything separated into categories: What I need to buy at the grocery store, What I need to get from my pantry and My menu: every meal for every day.

Wednesday: Hot dogs roasted over the fire, veggies and dip and S'mores.
Thursday: Breakfast burritos.    Peanut butter and honey sandwiches.   Campfire cheese sandwiches and dutch oven bread pudding to go with my buddy's dutch oven potatoes....and S'mores in case bread pudding is a complete flop (it's always good to have a contingency plan).
Friday: Ham steak, biscuits and eggs.  Peanut butter and honey sandwiches.  Tin Foil dinners with diced melon and s'mores for dessert.
Saturday: Pancakes, sausage and eggs.   Peanut butter and honey sandwiches.

Step 3: Figure out what you can pre-make/assemble/freeze at home.  I freeze everything I can.  Remember, all we have are ice chests and food safety is a huge part of camping.  Nobody wants to eat something that's inadvertently spoiled, so the more items you have frozen, the better chance you have of keeping your food safe.


Step 4:  Start prepping, cooking, freezing and packaging and packing everything you can days in advance.  I have three storage boxes that are dedicated for my camping gear.  One for dishes and cookware (which are also exclusively for camping, thanks IKEA), one for food and pantry items that don't require to be kept cold and one for all the miscelaneous camping gear: matches, bug spray, newspaper, lanterns, flashlights, sunscreen, roasting sticks...   I also have two ice chests, one strictly for beverages and the other for the food.  This is because the beverage chest gets opened a lot and I don't want the food chest to be opened except when necessary to preserve coldness.
     * Put in the freezer your yogurt tubes and all candy, especially chocolate.

      * Make the filling for the breakfast burritoes: sausage, eggs and cheese (or whatever your family likes) and wrap them up in tortillas that are buttered to keep from getting soggy from the moisture in the filling and then wrap in two layers of heavy-duty foil.   Freeze.

     * Make your tinfoil dinners.  Cook your protein, par-boil your vegetables, season appropriately.  Wrap in heavy-duty tin foil, twice.    Freeze.

     * Make your own version of GORP:  Good Old Raisins & Peanuts.  My version involves: almonds, roasted peanuts, whatever pistachios I could find in the pantry, Reece's Pieces and raisins.
     * If you are going to make anything from scratch, assemble the dry goods in labeled zipper bags.  I made biscuits and bread pudding this trip from scratch so in one zipper bag I assembled the ingredients for the biscuits: flour, baking soda and powder, sugar and salt and then on the outside of the bag noted what else goes in, ie:  1/2 C melted butter and 1 C buttermilk.  For the bread pudding I assembled the sugar and spices that were required and marked it as bread pudding so it wouldn't get used for anything else.
     * I cut the carrots and celery for our veggies and dip.   I chose NOT to cut my melon as I felt that they could get squished.
     * Start packing all your non-perishable items.  Plates, cups, silverware, bug spray (lots of bug spray), sunscreen, flashlights, pots and pans, paper towels, toilet paper, lanterns, extra dry goods like flour and sugar, creamer and sugar for coffee, instant coffee packets, salt and pepper, vegetable oil, shortening, flour and lemon pepper (as there's a good chance I'll be frying up a batch of fresh-caught lake trout), hot chocolate mix, tea pot for making hot water for cleaning and warm beverages, matches, first aid kit, garbage bags, newspaper for starting fires, dish soap and hand washing soap.

     * Start packing fun things for the family: card games, bow and arrows, bb gun, frisbees, balls, nets to catch tadpoles and fishing gear (haha just kidding, that's the husband's job).

     * Gather up fun things for you: books, magazines and crafty stuff.

This isn't a complete list, you've got to remember your sleeping bags, pillows, blankets, tents, clothes (Make sure to pack appropriate clothes for where you are going.  We are way in the back country at about 10,000 feet above sea level, trust me, it was cold at times.  We brought lots of pants and jackets and even winter coats), tables, dutch ovens, canopies, air mattresses....or bunk bed cots if you've got 'em (best camping purchase EVER!).

Stay tuned, recipes will be coming up in future posts.  Lots of good stuff this camp out, and maybe a flop...it happens.

Hope you enjoy my pre-camping process.

Thanks for reading!

Heather

Please take a look at my previous posts on glamping:

How to do glamping

 
How to do glamping II



Sunday, June 7, 2015

Easy Berry Cream Cheese Danishes

I'm sorry to have to do this to you, but it must be done.   This easier than pie recipe has to be in your life for the bounty that is summer.  I will be making this with all manner of berries as they come into season, then the peaches and plums and after that, well, who knows.

This recipe is so quick and easy and basically no fail.  Sorry finicky pie crust, puff pastry is my new best friend.  If you happen to love cheese cake, this is your easy fix for that, as well.  It is basically the perfect dessert.  Serve it warm from the oven or let it cool, either way it's just right.




Cream Cheese Filling
8 oz cream cheese, softened
1/3 C. Granulated sugar
1 tsp Vanilla
1 egg yolk
Lemon zest of 1 lemon
Juice of 1/2 lemon

Berry Topping
1 TBL. cornstarch
1/4 C Sugar
12 oz. combination of blueberries, raspberries, blackberries

1 Sheet, thawed frozen puff pastry
1 Egg, whisked

Preheat 375 F

In mixer, combine all ingredients for cream cheese filling, mix until blended and smooth.  Scrape sides as necessary.

Combine cornstarch, 1/4 C Sugar in medium mixing bowl and 1 tsp water.  Add berries and gently stir until the cornstarch and sugar have dissolved.   Set aside.

Combine whole egg, whisked and 2 tsp water in small bowl.  Set aside.

Roll puff pastry dough into a 12 inch square (or as close as you get it) on lightly floured counter top.   Cut into 9 even squares, approximately 4" x 4", each and place these onto cookie sheet lined with parchment.

Evenly spoon the cream cheese mixtures diagonally across each puff pastry square, starting and stopping about 1/2" from corner.  There will be a bit of filling left in the bowl.  Spoon berry mixture evenly over cheese.

Pull one corner of each danish into the middle, brush with egg wash and then fold opposite corner over it, sealing by pressing gently in the middle.  Brush remaining egg wash all over dough with pastry brush.

Bake until nicely golden brown and crisp for approximately 30 minutes.  Transfer immediately to cooling racks to avoid danishes sticking to cookie sheet.

Serve a la mode with some Praline's and Cream ice cream and enjoy a sweet taste of summer.

If this happens, don't worry, it'll still taste just as good as the others....just won't be as pretty.

Happy Summer!

Heather


Thursday, April 9, 2015

De-Mystifying the Rachael/Reuben Pannini Family Supper

You can make a reuben using this technique; if you enjoy corned beef, that is.  I personally prefer the rachael which is made using roast turkey.  A more satisfying and delicious sandwich, you won't find.   This isn't so much a recipe post as it's a how-to post.
 
step by step rachael sandwich
Here's the problem with making your family a batch of rachaels for supper, you've got to be really ready to move.  There's no time for day-dreaming here.  Remember your 7 P's and you will be fine.


Before you do anything, get your ingredients out and do any prep work you can before you need it.  Drain your kraut, butter one side of all the rye bread you will be using (I like Russian rye), two slices per sandwich (that may be obvious), lay out your turkey in neat piles on a plate, however many slices you want per sandwich, I find that 3/4 pound of turkey makes four nice sandwiches for two parents and two littles.   Have your Swiss cheese sliced and ready.  Open up your Thousand Island dressing, have a knife handy for slathering your sandwiches.

Okay, prep work complete, let's get to it.  While you are cooking, make sure you have any side dishes ready to go and that your kids are setting the table and have your plates out so you can toss a toasty, warm panini down for immediately consumption.

Preheat a frying pan over medium, medium-low until nice and warm.  Have a smaller, heavy frying pan ready to do some sandwich smashing.

Now, go!


Place one slice of buttered bread in hot pan, buttered-side down.  Quickly smear Thousand Island dressing on.


Place on your neatly portioned turkey.


Smother or lightly top the turkey with kraut.  I prefer to smother, my kids prefer not to know kraut is on their sandwiches, but I still put on a light smattering of the pungent stuff for them.


Next comes a slice of Swiss cheese.  Which you will then top with another slice of bread, buttered side up.


Smash the heck out of the sandwich with a heavy frying pan.  You want to toast the sandwich and melt the cheese and make everything warm and gooey. 


Don't burn your sandwiches!!!  You will probably need to turn your burner down the more sandwiches you make.  As soon as one sandwich is toasted on both sides and lovely and golden and melty, don't just stuff your face, give it to a family member and quickly repeat the process until everyone in your family is noshing gleefully.  These cook up so quickly you won't need to wait too long before enjoying one yourself.

Rachael Sandwich how-to
Yum, yum, yum!!!  You might wonder if I want some sandwich with my kraut.  Maybe.

Thanks for reading!

Heather

 

Monday, March 23, 2015

How to do Glamping Part II

If camping ain't easy, I don't want to camp.  So I spend my off-weekends, planning how to make each successive camp-out that much easier. It starts with planning, planning and more planning.Take a page from my years of experience to make your next camp-out a breeze.

This is my second post on how to make glamping easy.  Click here for other tips and tasty recipes from the post, How to do Glamping.


The easiest way to make your camp-out easy, if you ask this mom, is to make the meals and snacks as low-pressure as possible. When the food is easy, you can spend lots more time doing the fun stuff.

First, plan what you're going to eat for each meal. I have a meeting with my fellow moms and together we decide what we are going to eat and when.  We usually plan to eat as a group a couple times during the camp-out, typically we'll each make one dinner and one breakfast for everyone.  Then on the days we aren't sharing food, we still make similar things, like hot dogs, chips and fruit on the day we get there, because, really, who wants to cook after you've just set up camp.


Tin foil dinners are always a classic if you've got a spare night. Pre-pack each pouch before you leave with the meat, rice, veggies and seasoning, freeze them and store in a zip-lock bag to avoid cross-contamination.

My number one rule about cooking while camping is to prep as much food as I can while in the comfort of my home kitchen, then pack it away in ready to go pouches.  There are a number of reasons for this rule.

1-I don't want to clean while I'm camping.  This includes (especially) washing a bunch of prep dishes.  Ugggh.
2-Cooking is much more difficult in the wild outdoors.  Cook where it's easy.  I have camped with only a very small table before.  Can you imagine trying to chop onions and peppers and make meatballs with no prep space as most of the very small table was already being used by a water jug and a myriad other things. I learned a lot after that camping trip.
3-I'd rather be having fun, than cooking.

Dinner

You can take anything camping.  Imaging how easy it would be to take tacos.  Cook your meat, cool it and stow it in a plastic zip-lock bag, then freeze it to help with spoilage.  Then when you get to your campsite, you only have to thaw it and warm it up. Pre-shred your cheese. Chop some lettuce. Pour salsa in a zip-lock bag. A baggy of jalepenos, some sour cream and tortillas. Or, even easier, make a Dorito Pie.  Buy individual bags of Doritos, toss all your taco fixings in and devour, no tortillas needed.


An easy, dutch-oven dinner is giant meatballs and veggies.  Take some ground beef, bread cubes and salt and pepper and wrap meat around a Laughing Cow cheese.  Freeze them on a cookie sheet individually and once they are solid, throw them all in a zip-lock bag.
 

Bunch of vegetables: I like potatoes, carrots and onions, a little pre-chopped garlic and already diced green onions for garnish.  Par-boil your potatoes and carrots.  Saute your onions in advance also.  Pack everything into a well-labeled zip-lock bag, everything in one giant bag, individually bagged inside the bag. I keep everything separated in their own individual bags to keep flavors from melding.

Time to eat: Make sure you have plenty of hot charcoal on the bottom of your dutch oven and plenty to go on top. Throw some oil into your dutch oven, once the oil gets hot, toss in your garlic, saute it for a minute and then throw in your meatballs.  Brown the meatballs, throw in your veggies and sauteed onions, add a can or two of cream of mushroom soup, let cook until the meatballs are cooked through and you have a nice, satisfying meal.


Rice Salad is always nice to take with because none of the ingredients will get soggy between when they are packed and when you want to eat. Pre-cook everything, the rice, the bacon, chop the pepper and olives all in advance, bag everything individually and then pack all the ingredients into a large bag. Click here for my rice salad recipe!  This is a great side dish for hot dogs or if you're just having sandwiches. And when you want to assemble the salad, everything is right there ready to go, and all that is needed is a large bowl and spoon for mixing.

Lunch


My go to lunch.  Because I want things low-fuss and I have a personal issue regarding soggy deli meat, I love the ease of peanut butter and honey tortilla roll-ups.  It means I don't have a loaf of bread to get squished and my kids and husband alike will eat these happily.


Chips. These make a good side-dish as well as an easy snack.

Breakfast

I always cook breakfast when we camp.  Do I always cook breakfast at home?  Hell, no!  Camping though, is special.


An easy way to store eggs is to crack as many as you'll need into a large-ish container with a lid. I've used a kefir bottle and it worked beautifully. It's kind of an adventure watching the egg yolks get sucked down into the bottle, you cross your fingers and hope there isn't any over-flow. Note I have labeled this bottle of kefir, eggs. 


Frozen, pre-cooked sausages. They are easy to throw on a griddle and I like having protein at breakfast.


Pre-assembled biscuit mix.  As you can see the proportions here are enough for two batches of biscuits, and yes, I bake them in one of my dutch ovens.


I drink a lot of kefir, obviously, but this kefir bottle has regular milk for my coffee and the water bottle with the initials, BM, ummmm, is butter milk for my biscuits. I could have bought a quart of milk, but I had the kefir bottle empty and felt I could polish off the gallon of milk I already had.


Ham steak.  This is so I can fry it up and serve it with my biscuits for breakfast biscuits.  Fresh biscuit with a slice of salty, smoky ham on it with a side of eggs.  Yes please!

I also always have pre-made pancake batter, butter and syrup as my kids and husband are always happy to eat pancakes while camping.


If you drink coffee or tea for breakfast bring it. I like instant coffee packets for their ease of use and cleanliness.  Don't forget the sugar and creamer if you take it. You'll also need a tea pot to boil your water.

Snacks


Whatever your kids like to eat.


Whatever your husband likes to eat.


Whatever you like to eat.  Learning lesson, the un-wrapped Reece's minis melted and became a giant mass of chocolate and peanut butter.  The M & M's and taffy worked much better as camping treats.  Bring more snacks than you think you'll need.  You're always hungry while camping.


Individually packaged cheese slices.  Genius.

Dessert

S'mores.  Every night.  These s'mores were made by sandwiching the marshmallow between an Oreo.  Yummy!

 You may be asking yourself, is all this work worth it?

Oh yeah.
Happy glamping!




Monday, March 16, 2015

My Mama's Lemon Pistachio Biscotti

Does your mother make biscotti?  Mine does and it is so good.  It's so tasty that when The Mister and I were on a date a couple Saturday's ago, we wandered into a coffee shop and he spotted their biscotti offerings and immediately asked if I'd make him some.


Now, if you've ever had to shell 1 cup of pistachios, you might understand my slight hesitation before joyously agreeing to make them.  Then, later that week, I may have mocked my beloved husband's childhood fear: clowns under the bed, demonic trees and pink sludge...and so, needing to repent for my cruelty, promptly made them as an, I'm sorry, my dear, clowns really are scary and I'll look under the bed to make sure there isn't one trying to drag you under every night for a month and I apologize a thousand times for teasing you.


p.s. shelling a cup of pistachios really isn't that bad.  Just get comfy and know the tips of your fingers might feel it a bit after you're done.


The reward though, is epic.  The sassy tang of lemon, the salty crunch of pistachios and the sweet smoothness of the white chocolate harmonize into a glorious song on your taste buds.  Seriously yum.


If you don't know much about biscotti, I'll give you a tiny lesson. In Italian it means twice baked.  K, I am going to break it down for you. Bi=2 and scotti=cooked...ummmmm...yup, I'm going to go out on a limb here and say scotti is cooked, so there's your Italian lesson for the day.  :)


Enough Italian.  To the cookies!

Lemon Pistachio Biscotti
1/3 C. Salted butter, softened
2/3 C. Sugar
2 tsp. Baking Powder
1/2 tsp. Kosher Salt
2 eggs
2 tsp. Vanilla
2 C. Flour
Lemon zest from 2 lemons
1 C. Shelled, salted pistachios, coarsely chopped.
1 C. white chocolate chips, melted

Preheat oven to 375 F.

In large mixer, combine the butter, sugar and baking powder and beat on high until creamed.  Add the eggs and vanilla and mix until smooth. Scrape sides as necessary.

Reduce mixer speed to low and add flour 1 cup at a time.  Do not over-tax your mixer, if it can't take the  workload, mix by hand.  Add the lemon zest and pistachios and mix until just combined.

Place parchment paper on cookie sheet and divide dough into 3 equal piles.  Shape each of these into an 8 inch roll.  Place rolls 3 inches apart and flatten until they are approximately 2.5 inches wide.

Bake for about 20 minutes until they are golden and the tops are just cracked.  Cool for 15 minutes until you can handle them without burning yourself.

Reduce heat to 325 F.

Using a sharp serrated knife, cut into 1/2 inch slices and place the cut-side down on the same cookie sheet and bake for 8 minutes.  Turn over each cookie and bake for another 8 to 10 minutes until dry and crisp.  Let cool completely.

Dip bottom of each biscotti in melted white chocolate and place, chocolate side down, on clean piece of parchment. Drizzle tops of cookies with additional melted chocolate, led solidify and eat to your heart's content.


The best breakfast imaginable, a cup of coffee and a couple biscotti.  Yes, please.

Mom, can I try a biscotti?  I love pistachios.
Sure, give them a try.

Ohhhh, these taste good.
I'm glad you like them.

Can I have another one?
Nope, one's enough, besides, Mommy has to have a couple for breakfast tomorrow.

I hope you make these and enjoy them as much as my family.

Thanks for reading!

Heather






Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Pot Sticker Stir-Fry and Fried Rice Dinner

The hardest part about making a stir-fry from scratch for dinner, is getting the timing right.  It's so easy to get overwhelmed if you don't have a game plan and prep accordingly.  I'm going to lay out the process, step by step, so you can have a tasty, healthy feast to present to your family, with everything done at about the same time. 

I can't say anything but YUM about my pot sticker stir-fry with fried rice dinner.  The really great thing about this meal, is that it's customizable.  Go with produce that's in season: cabbage in winter, asparagus in spring and squashes in summer.  If you don't have ham for the fried rice, toss in some turkey bacon like me, or go vegetarian.  It's all good.

Get ready, while it's not difficult, there's a lot of steps to get everything just right and at the table at the same time.  You must allocate at least an hour to cook.  Part of this time is for the rice, since I'm never on top of things enough to make the rice a day ahead.  If you are completely awesome, go ahead and pre-cook the rice.  This will save you some time, but remember, you still have to allow time to prep the rest of the ingredients.


Ingredients for Stir-Fry
1/2 onion, diced
pile of carrots, sliced into matchsticks (these are always in season)
Vegetables, a whole bunch of them: Mushrooms, Zucchini, Asparagus, Summer Squash, Broccoli, Cabbage,  Bean Sprouts, water chestnuts...sliced and chopped as appropriate (for my stir-fry, as it is March, I used a combo of winter veggies and early spring veggies: red cabbage, carrots, asparagus, bean sprouts and water chestnuts) but you can use whatever you like!
Veg. Oil
Terriyaki or Stir-Fry sauce of your choice
salt
Frozen Pot stickers 

Ingredients for Fried Rice
Rice, about 1.5 cups, uncooked
1/2 package of  frozen peas and carrots
other 1/2 onion, diced (see above)
2 eggs, whipped
Soy Sauce, to taste
Sesame Oil, to taste


Step1: Cook Rice according to directions.

Step 2: While the rice is cooking, cut all your vegetables!  I like to segregate them onto plates according to how long it takes to cook as you will add them to the frying pan in the proper order. Carrots, cabbage, broccoli and onions etc...need to be cooked first.  Asparagus, zucchini, muchrooms and bean sprouts etc... need to go in last. Cut as much as you feel your family will eat.  I cut plenty as I wanted enough for left-overs the next day. Set aside until needed.

Step 3:  Whisk your eggs and add a couple TBL soy sauce.  Set aside until needed.

Step 4: Dice up protein.  Ham, turkey bacon or don't if you're not going to use it.  Set aside until needed.

Step 5: Get out two frying pans.  One for your stir-fry and one for your pot stickers.  Prepare pot stickers according to directions.  And at the same time, add a couple TBL veg oil to the other, heat over medium and add 1/2 diced onion.  Saute until softened.  This will take about 8 minutes.

Step 6: Continue to cook pot stickers according to directions.  Turn on oven to 200 F. At the same time, as long as your onions are softened, add all the longer-cooking vegetables to your stir-fry pan, increase heat to about medium-high.  Season lightly with salt. To encourage faster cooking, you can throw aluminum foil over them.

Watch your pot stickers, as once they are done you will remove them to an oven safe plate and put them in your oven until the rest of your meal is complete. 
 
 Step 7: After your pot stickers are done cooking and staying warm in the oven, continue cooking your stir-fry vegetables, stirring regularly.  At the same time, using the same frying pan as the pot stickers were cooking in (wash it if it needs it), add 2 TBL veg oil and heat over medium.  Add remaining diced onion.  It's fried rice time!  Cook until softened.  Watch your stir-fry vegetables.  They should be slightly softened.

Step 8: Here is where I failed you on pictures, saute your fried rice protein (ham or turkey bacon if you're me) with the onion.  At the same time, add the quicker-cooking vegetables to your stir-fry pan.  Then add the frozen peas and carrots to your fried rice pan.  Stir both pans regularly.

 Step 9:  Turn heat down to about medium, medium-low. Add your whisked eggs and soy sauce mixture to your fried rice pan.  Try and keep them slightly segregated from the rice mixture (it will be impossible to keep them completely separated). Once the eggs begin to cook, mix them in with the rice and them let fully cook.  Taste.  I almost always think my fried rice needs a bit more soy sauce.  Add a few dashes of sesame oil. Season to taste.

Step 10: Keep checking on your stir-fry.  Once the vegetables are nicely cooked, not over done with just a touch of bite to them, add your sauce of choice.

Step 11: Plate and devour!  Scoop a bit of rice, some stir-fry and top with your warm pot stickers (you can include the pot-sticker sauce as a condiment if you wish).

Nom, nom, nom. 

See, that wasn't too difficult and your family enjoyed a healthy, flavorful meal and all it took was a little careful timing on your part.

Thanks for reading!

Heather

 


Thursday, February 19, 2015

Hi. Remember me?

No excuses.  Life sometimes gets in the way of blogging.  That being said, here's my latest creation.

I like it.  A lot. 

appliqued fox pillow
It's a little, fox pillow.

A girl fox, as my Youngest would insist you notice. 

Because, clearly girls are better than boys. 

I machine appliqued it, using black thread to help it stand out from the bold turquoise back.

Threw on some fabric from my favorite new design house, Cotton And Steel (they're some pretty cool chicks over there).  And called it good.

Hope you like it, too.  My daughters are both fighting over who gets it.  Luckily their mama is a genius and is planning on making #2 tonight.

Thanks for reading!

Heather
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