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December 31, 2013

2013: Year in Review

2013 was a rough year. It really was.

Despite its wonderful beginning when Kevin proposed, the rest of the year was overwhelming. Through family tragedy, robbery, job loss, injury, financial problems, and a terrible flea infestation (poor kitty), we’ve stayed strong and held each other’s hands through the worst of it.

But I’d rather focus on the positive, especially going into 2014. (This summer we're gettin' hitched!)

Here are 13 GOOD things that happened in 2013:


2. I learned to ride a moped

3. Kevin’s brother and his wife had a baby boy

4. I stayed in a super adorable B&B in Alaska when my sister graduated from college

5. My mom and sister came to visit in June

6. We got the venue we wanted for our wedding

7. Kevin got a job doing park maintenance and I got to spend my lunch breaks/days off visiting him in the park

8. My dad came to Olympia and we ate fruit from the market by a lake

10. I went camping in Oregon with my college girl friends

11. Kevin created a pretty awesome wedding website for us

12. Our friend Althea took great engagement photos for the price of a burrito

13.  Kevin got us tickets to Shpongle at the Red Rocks Amphitheater for this coming May! Epic road trip ahead, amiright?!

Happy New Year!

December 27, 2013

Easy Christmas Gift: Flavored Salts

My dad is really hard to shop for. Every year when I ask him what he'd like for his birthday or Christmas, he says "Don't get me anything." Well, I don't work that way. My loved ones always get gifts, damn it!

This year, though, I told him I'd make him something, and he seemed pretty excited about this idea. This was before I'd actually thought about what I would make. 

Googling "gift ideas for dad" is pretty much useless in my case. My dad doesn't have a favorite sports team, he doesn't wear ties or cuff links. I don't have the extra cash for any super amazing techie gifts (something he'd probably appreciate. Someday, Dad, someday.) He's not a griller or a gamer, he's not a hunter or a fisherman anymore and he only occasionally drinks beer. 

Growing up in Alaska, we ate a lot of fish. Mostly salmon, sometimes halibut. Being vegan, I don't eat this anymore, but my dad is still quite carnivorous, and, although he isn't an avid cook, I thought maybe I'd encourage him to eat at home a little more if I made him something delicious to doctor up his fish dishes. 

Enter flavored salts.

Super easy to make, all you need is coarse sea salt, dried spices, a food processor or grinder and some jars. 

Lime, lemon, and orange zest ready to be mixed. 

Ingredients needed:

Citrus Rosemary Salt 
For every 1/4 cup sea salt add:

1/2 teaspoon dried lemon zest
1/2 teaspoon dried orange zest
1/2 teaspoon rosemary

Chipotle Lime Salt
For every 1/4 cup sea salt add:

1 tsp red pepper flakes
1 tsp dried lime zest
1/4 tsp smoked paprika

Lemon Garlic Salt
For every 1/4 cup sea salt add:

1/2 tsp dried lemon zest
1/2 tsp garlic powder

The jars I used held almost 3/4 cup of salt, so I tripled the recipes.

Directions:
1. Dehydrate your citrus rinds.
If you don't have a dehydrator, using a conventional oven works as well. To dehydrate the citrus rinds in an oven, preheat oven to 200. Place rinds on cookie sheet and bake for 3 hours. Turn off oven after 3 hours but leave cookie sheet in overnight.

2. Grind your spices/dried citrus.

3. Grind coarse salt if necessary before adding flavors. You want some texture, but don't need huge salt granules.

4. Stir and add to jars. Leave in jars for at least 24 hours before using. This way the flavors really saturate the salt.


Helpful hints: For approximately 3/4 cup of salt, it took almost 5 limes worth of zest. I used a carrot peeler to remove the rind from the bitter white part. 


Dehydrating citrus rinds in the oven: plan to do this the day before you're ready to make your salts.




Use a grinder or food processor to grind up rinds. Clean out grinder between rind types, so as not to mix your flavors.

 



I also ground the red pepper flakes slightly before mixing into the salt. 


 Final product: Chipotle-Lime, Citrus Rosemary, and Lemon Garlic salts


You could do a ton with making cute labels or decorating the jars, but I preferred the simplicity of these handwritten minimalist labels.


P.S. My dad loved these :) 

December 26, 2013

Thankful Thursday

This week I am thankful for Christmas trees decorated with found objects. 



For the stockings hung on the bookcase with care.


For impatient cats.



 For how adorable this is.



Hope everyone had a wonderful holiday season!  




December 19, 2013

Thankful Thursday

This week I am thankful for my dude, who didn't once complain about staying up with me all night Saturday as I battled a stomach virus, who rinsed out my trash can, went on a 2 a.m. Walmart run for Gatorade and saltines, rubbed my back and Googled my symptoms to make sure I didn't need to go to the hospital.

I am also thankful he didn't catch the nasty bug himself. Way to go, Kevin's immune system! You rock!


December 12, 2013

Thankful Thursday

This week I am thankful for light dustings of snow to boost my holiday spirit.


The smell of lime zest overpowering my kitchen.


Hot soup on a (very) cold day.


Borscht! 


Happy Thursday!



December 4, 2013

27 Things To Do while I'm 27

I'm a list maker. I make lists for everything. Shopping lists, planning and packing lists, daily to-dos, bucket lists, favorites lists, book lists, pro-con lists for big decisions... I love lists. I can't help it.

Anyway, today is my 27th birthday. So, naturally, I made a list.

Here are 27 things I want to do while I'm 27:

1. Go to Lovesick Expo (January 26th 2014)
2. Go to a concert
3. Try a 30 Day Challenge
4. Face a fear
5. Take a class
6. Stress less
7. Learn a new skill
8. Buy less, sew more
9. Plant a garden
10. Eat less junk
11. Exercise more
12. Marry my best friend (July 26th, 2014)
13. Honeymoon in a yurt
14. Volunteer
15. Be more social
16. Watch less TV
17. Join a protest
18. Go camping
19. Run a 5K
20. Make plans for Halloween
21. Move to a new place
22. Find a new job
23. Recognize all there is to be thankful for
24. Take more days off
25. Nurture my creativity
26. Write more letters
27. Call my grandparents more often

November 28, 2013

Thankful Thursday

Today I am thankful for this ball of fur,


for this well-groomed gentleman,


and for this colorful Thanksgiving meal.




Happy Thanksgiving! 

November 3, 2013

Halloween!

All last week was stressful, due to us cramming in Halloween between work and an important presentation that I spent every single night freaking out about. Ultimately, our Halloween costumes ended up pretty great but only our coworkers got to see them.  Because of my super-important-and-stressful presentation the next morning, Kevin and I decided to stay in and watch the Cabin in the Woods, which was the best movie we've seen in a while. It is totally not what we'd expected and we were completely satisfied with our decision to stay in afterward.

The next morning I got my presentation out of the way and, as a reward, went out and got the tattoo I've been wanting for years.
Not my first, but definitely the biggest.

 Kevin's older brother and sister-in-law were in town this weekend, so we spent some time with them, eating tons of garlic fries at Le Voyeur, realizing Olympia lacks bars that open before 4pm when all you wanna do is play some pool, and instead playing card games in the living room with the leftover Halloween candy. Good weekend indeed. I'm so happy my presentation is out of the way and I can actually focus on fun things this week, like starting my Christmas gifts and going to yoga class.

October 30, 2013

Lazy Pumpkin Weekend

I really love Fall. We got our engagement photos taken a few weeks ago and were lucky to get them done on the perfect fall day. It was brilliantly sunny and the leaves were amazing shades of gold and red. We'd even planned for rain, and ended up not needing my adorable new umbrella.




Althea Wiley http://www.thezengun.com



With Kevin's new job, our schedules have been nearly opposite. I work weekdays and he works weeknights, so when I get home, he's working, and when I'm sleeping, he gets home. The good news is we have Fridays off together, as well as part of Saturday (he gets Saturdays off, and I work my second job on Thursday and Saturday nights, and all day Sunday.) A day and a half off together is not too bad. We're luckier than many couples.  

This Friday together we mostly just cleaned the house, something that really needed to happen after two weeks of us taking turns with a nasty head cold. After a few hours of vacuuming, dishes, laundry, dusting, etc., we decided to do NOTHING ELSE and lay on the couch and marathon through Fringe on Netflix. We stopped after a few hours and Kevin made a huge batch of pasta, then we ate that while we continued our TV marathon until we both fell asleep.

Normally, since I don't have many days off,  I like to use my days to get things accomplished, but more often than not I stress myself out by cramming everything into one day, then ultimately end up in a corner of the living room, anxiety ridden, because I have not finished even half of what I'd set out to do. But I'm trying to get better at that. Days like this past Friday are much needed sometimes.

Saturday we planned on carving pumpkins before I had to go to work. We'd picked up two fat pumpkins at a local fruit stand in east Olympia the week before, knowing we wouldn't have time to carve them until the following weekend. Saturday morning I got up and gutted my pumpkin and set aside the seeds, but Kevin accidentally slept in too late and I had to leave before we got to his. When I got home that night, I gutted his for him, too, and washed and set out all the seeds to dry. (I really like gutting those things.)

It took 3 days/nights before we got to carving. Sunday after work I roasted my pumpkin seeds, following Angela's (of Oh She Glows) recipe, then Monday and Tuesday just kind of slipped by due to after-work shopping for Halloween props and groceries and spending my evenings prepping a presentation for Friday. After scraping out the little bit of mold that had been growing inside my poor, neglected pumpkin, Kevin stayed up until 3am on Tuesday-going-on-Wednesday, carving these babies:


It only took 11 days (from purchase to carving) to get where we are now. Not bad, right?

  

October 18, 2013

Sick Days and Paper Ghosts

This weekend I was sick again with yet another cold. It's the second one I've had in a month and bad enough that I was couch-bound for the majority of Thursday. I had to practice being content with my lack of productivity, something I am often not good at being OK with.

Kevin's new job at the book store has so far been beneficial for our bookshelves. In fact, we've had to clear off two other bookcases we'd been using for other things to prepare for what is to come.

Today we started decorating for Halloween. I had enough energy to make some paper ghosts. The blue lights are because we don't have orange lights. And also blue lights give the room a black light effect at night, which is pretty spooky and kind of awesome.



October 7, 2013

Chanterelle Hunting

Over the weekend, Kevin and I were invited to go mushroom hunting for chanterelles in a fairly secretive location. Neither of us had ever gone mushroom hunting before, even though it's something I've been wanting to do for a while. 

We arrived prepared with pocket knives, buckets and bags, and bright orange clothing (since it just so happens to be deer season.) We hiked a little ways up a few logging roads before we were told by our friends to head into the woods to start hunting. Kevin and I started on one side of the road, and our friends on the other. At first, I didn't really know what I was looking for. I knew what a chanterelle looked like, but I kept questioning every mushroom I came across, then started getting really excited over how cool ALL the mushrooms were. Eventually, we found a few clusters of what were unmistakably chanterelles, and then started finding more and more. 





After spending the afternoon hiking off-trail and getting spiders in my hair, we came home with bags and buckets full of beautiful chanterelles. Currently, in Olympia, chanterelles are $10/lb at the co-op and $13/lb at the farmer's market, but we ended up collecting over six pounds for free. 


We got them home and laid them outside on cardboard for a few hours to let the spiders and bugs run for safety somewhere other than the corners of our kitchen. Then we bundled them up in a paper bag in and left them in the fridge until the next day when we would have time to clean and cook them. 



Processing them took a while. We spent a few hours brushing the dirt and leftover grime off each mushroom, inspecting it for mold, cutting off the woody stems, and listening to Les Claypool's "Of Fungi and Foe" for good measure.



This was Kevin's favorite chanterelle of the whole batch. 


Next step was to cook them. Raw chanterelles can apparently cause tummy trouble. They also don't rehydrate well, so dehydrating them wasn't an option. I googled several ways to properly process the mushrooms and we decided on sautéing them in Earth Balance. We cut eat mushroom up into smaller pieces and cooked them for 15 minutes in the frying pan until they were swimming in their own juices. 




After the pan was 50% water, 50% mushroom, we strained it and packed the cooked mushrooms into muffin tins, where we would freeze them.


Once frozen, we'd have perfect little serving sizes for soups and whatnot. I'm thinking chanterelle and wild rice burgers.

We used some to make a vegan version of this recipe. Kevin thought it would be better as a side dish, possibly with a steak or something (tempeh steak, amiright?!) Either way, it was great with a glass of merlot.


Hope everyone had a great weekend!