Family memory foods
Warning: calories ahead.
When my husband and I were young newlyweds, his mother’s mother sat me down one long, boring day with her recipe file, and with her great enthusiasm and my attempting to look enthused, she had me copy down (by hand, kids, this was in the Olden Days) all her decades-long favorites. She wanted to pass down the wisdom of her kitchen. I chaffed in silence; I wasn’t about to tell her how much all of this represented to me what I so much didn’t want to be. I had no intention of being a stay-at-home mom. Roasted Potatoes was just not what I aspired to.
Yeah well. Live and learn. One of the hardest things I ever did was decide to stay home with my children after all. For the first few months of motherhood, I was able to work where I could take my baby with me; she wasn’t mobile yet, she slept a lot, nobody minded. But then two things happened: she started exploring the world on her hands and knees–and we moved 2000 miles and that job was over. I found, though it would have surprised me just a couple of years earlier, that I utterly could not bear to leave her, even if it meant living on my husband’s grad-student fellowship. He very much supported my decision either way, but confessed later he was relieved I’d chosen to make motherhood a do-it-yourself project. He didn’t think anyone else could do as good a job as me.
And over all these years now, one of the things I’ve learned is how much memories attach themselves, over time, to–you guessed it–various foods. Write down those recipes, give’em to your college kids so they can re-create home.
And yet. GrandmaM would totally get where I’d been coming from back in the day. She was the first woman in her small (and I do mean small) town to have a college degree. She was a teacher who married a dairy farmer who was also the town’s high school principal, and the moment she was married she was of course out of a job; the idea of a married teacher back then was unthinkable, and a teacher married to the principal! Well now!
My older daughter, who is finishing up her PhD, asked for these, and I thought, as long as I’m typing them up, might as well put them up here.
From our family to yours.
There was a recipe making the rounds years ago with a story disclaimed by Snopes, supposedly stolen from Mrs Fields by a disgruntled ex-employee; whatever, someone did a good job of reverse engineering. These make five pounds of dough–and I once had a batch at the top of the freezer, reached down later for something in the bottom of the freezer, and… Clonk.
Not-Mrs. Field’s Cookies (Clonk Cookies, perhaps?)
Cream: 2 c butter, 2c sugar, 2c brown sugar.
Add 4 eggs, 2tsp vanilla.
Mix: 5c oats that have been measured and then ground into flour, 4c flour, 1 tsp salt, 2tsp each baking powder and baking soda. (I have been known to skip the baking soda.)
Mix all together and then fold in 24 oz chocolate chips and 3 c chopped nuts.
350 degrees, 8-10 minutes for medium-sized cookies. Note that the ground oats in the dough, being a little coarser than actual oat flour, help make it easy to pry off a little frozen cookie dough with a fork and bake just one or two at a time so that you can limit your caloric exposure at any one time if you want.
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Recipe the second: this one originated from, of all things, a 1992 Mazola no-stick-spray ad. (Why, yes, I write notes with dates in my cookbooks; do you?)
Cranberry Bars
Cookie crust: set oven at 350. Grease 15×10 pan. Cut 1 c of cold butter–do not substitute, and needs to be cold–into 2 1/2 c flour. Add 1/2 c sugar and 1/2 tsp salt, by hand, not by machine. It’s more work that way, but the difference in crunch in the crust is huge. Press firmly in pan, bake 20-23 minutes or till golden. Top with filling quickly and bake again.
Filling: Beat 4 eggs, 1c corn syrup, 1 c sugar, and 3 tbl melted butter (do not substitute!) Stir in 2 c coarsely chopped fresh cranberries and 1 c coarsely chopped pecans. Pour quickly over hot crust, spreading it out.
Bake 25-30 minutes or until set. Cool completely. Refrigerate it for it to cut cleanly, if you can wait that long.
Pecan Pie variation: for filling, use 4 eggs, 1 1/2 c corn syrup, 1 1/2 c sugar, 3 tbl butter, 1 1/2 tsp vanilla, and 2 1/2 c pecans. I find it curious that it uses so much more sweetener when it doesn’t have the tartness of the cranberries in this version, but if you want a pecan pie as a cookie finger food, this is definitely the way to get it.
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I brought the cranberry bars to a get-together once and watched my friend Jim take his first bite, close his eyes in appreciation, and pronounce how if you want dessert done right you ask Alison to bring it.
I’ll share the recipe with GrandmaM when I get up there. She will laugh.
It’s a wrap
Looking down, Monday.
Looking across, today.
Looking up, after that; what a difference a rinsing and blocking make. (It’s just a bit greener than this in real life.)
I like it. Hey Mikey. Weekend, here we come!
Meantime, in family news, Michelle arrived home this afternoon after a week gallivanting in England. I, unfortunately, did not fit in her suitcase on the way out, but that’s okay, I had this project to get done. She came home going, Mom! Green and Black’s chocolate! They had it, like, everywhere, like Hershey’s here! (As in, how would it be?!)
A gift in return
There was a women’s social and a dinner at church tonight. Chocolate torte #3 has been dispensed with. But before I left, Richard was reminiscing with a chuckle over the time when someone at another potluck there had asked, in a bit of indignation, “Who assigned the Hydes SALAD!? I was looking forward to that torte!”
When the typecast fits, bake it.
So there I was. Brian’s grandma took me aside and told me–I wasn’t sure if she said it was all of them or just the one–but at least one grandchild, then, went to bed last night with their hat firmly kept on their head and in the morning, there it stayed.
She couldn’t begin to know how much that meant to me and that she’d told me. Moments like that keep me knitting.
Meantime, I finished the shawl for the nurse fighting cancer this afternoon, rinsed it and laid it out to dry in the round. It’s always so magical, that moment when a glob of random yarn loops transforms into its glorious self and you step back and actually, finally, after all those hours, get to see. It was such a sense of accomplishment, and its purpose so close to who I am and why I do what I do that, even though I tried, I could not get myself to settle on any new ball of yarn to start something else. Not yet.
It felt so strange to walk out the door with no knitting project. I mentioned that to Nicholas’s mom at the dinner.
She looked at me and smiled. “It’s okay to rest between projects.” I think she’s right–but note that I had to think about it awhile first.
Okay, that’s long enough. I’m home. Cast on!
T’hats who those skeins were for
I didn’t realize till afterwards that what I’d been waiting for was to see them receive them in person. I hoped each one would choose and like their own particular hat–but you never know. What is a given, though, is that kids are transparent in their emotional reactions to things and I would know if someone still needed soothing afterwards with something they liked better. I think I needed to know that. And so I’d hesitated.
Only the baby was having none of it, even when we tried playing peek-a-boo from under the wool, but he was tired and it was something unfamiliar. Tomorrow he’ll be grinning and cooing and playing happily.
So the story is this: word was that Brian’s family was here visiting grandparents for a day or two. I knew that grandparent time is precious; I knew that when there is great pain, a family gathered round in the strength of home may feel intruded upon by outsiders who simply can never quite entirely know. I hesitated for several hours–but at last, I called and asked if I might borrow a moment of their day.
They readily welcomed me on over.
I told them how, several years ago, one good deed begat another good deed till, to my delight, a surprise box full of Blue Moon Fiber Arts yarns from Tina at BMF arrived on my doorstep–and then, I told them, every time I went to go knit the Silkie, trying to honor her gift by making good use of it, that one yarn just kept telling me, No. Not yet. For nearly three years it would not let me knit it. Last year at Stitches I bought two more skeins in the “Love” colorway, and it too resisted my needles.
Until recently. Now I knew why.
So except for the first hat, before I figured out what I was doing, all the hats had a strand of Silkie; they were all individual, given that I knit in two strands, but all my hats were in the same family. (Even the non-Silkie had the other strand overlapping.) I pointed out the one hat that was completely different and described my longtime online friend Karin driving six hours round trip to finally get to meet me in person when we were in Vermont a year and a half ago; she’d wanted to knit a hat, too, for them, to convey her support. I told them how the folks at Purlescence had wanted to offer up their own goodwill towards them and wouldn’t let me pay full price on the matching yarns.
They loved them. Each child picked one while making sure the others got one they liked, too; I was impressed.
The dad lined everybody up, seated me in the center, hats on all, and I looked around and went, “What, no bunny ears?!” The kids cracked up. (While the baby tried to pull his off.)
Their second-youngest son was whittling away on a stick during most of this, as happy as a knitter with cashmere in hand, and he grinned at me with his turquoise hat on his head.
When I left, he was outside in the garden, whittling away some more, totally immersed in his creation, hat on head, totally happy. Yes. Oh, thank you, thank you! I wanted to tell him.
When he gets older and his fine motor skills mature, maybe we’ll get some really cool knitting needles from his woodworking. You never know where a moment will take someone.
May the fourth be with you!
(Ed. to add picture of newly-glazed torte. The shine dulls once they’ve been refrigerated.)
Happy birthday, John!!! Our youngest is now identical-twin terrible-twos, the big 22.
Around here, when it’s a family member’s birthday and they are not in town, we bake a cake in their honor anyway.
And it’s also a tradition that when I bake a chocolate torte, I always bake two.
Okay, so, one went to Sam yesterday, the second one, someone else has dibs on. Meaning a little bit of baking, a lot of chocolate smells, but then no torte for me. Hey, we can fix that.
On a side note, the specialty place where I’ve always bought the manufacturing cream stopped selling it in small quantities, rumor being that they got told that pouring it off into quarts and pints in-store was not kosher. But who would want an entire half-gallon of the stuff? So they discontinued it entirely.
When you have been making your signature dessert for 20 years and an essential ingredient suddenly disappears from the market, you have to do something. I sent off an email to the owner of the Milk Pail Market; I had to at least try to talk them into reconsidering.
I gather I’m not the only one who spoke up. I imagine the fact that I actually gave the man one of my chocolate tortes once didn’t hurt, and nudging his attention to the extinction of that cake, ditto. (I know, breaking my arm patting myself on the back and all that.)
Because: around Christmas there was a small handwritten sign on one of their refrigerator doors saying that due to popular demand, manufacturing cream was now back. Woohooo!
And so. I bought a half gallon (again) a few days ago. Heavy whipping cream is 32% butterfat, manufacturing cream, depending on the cow and the season, 40-42%.
‘Scuse me, the oven’s beeping… The third torte might go to the church dinner Tuesday night (renegade that I am–they said they wanted cupcakes) but that fourth one stays right here. John, we will eat a torte in your honor. Maybe not all at once. Happy Birthday!!
For those who missed it the first time, here’s the recipe with a few extra notes thrown in. If you have to use ordinary heavy cream, avoid the ones with any kind of preservatives, additives, or sugar in them.
If you have any cream left over after all this, melt more chocolate into it and, warm, it’s the best chocolate sauce, refrigerated, a ganache.
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Alison Hyde’s chocolate torte–makes two
Snap out the bottoms of two 8″ springform pans (flat bottomed preferred). Cover bottoms with foil, snap them back in, butter the sides and the foil-covered bottoms.
CAKE:
Melt 1 lb. butter, beat with 3 c. sugar, 1/4 tsp salt and 2 tsp bourbon vanilla
Add in 1/2 c. manufacturing cream, 6 egg yolks, beat till fairly light.
Add in: 1 1/3 c. cocoa that has been mixed with 1 c. flour till any lumps are smoothed out. Dutch process cocoa will give you a different flavor from that of Hershey cocoa; my favorite is Bergenfield’s Colonial Rosewood cocoa. The non-dutched cocoas are healthier and I think taste better; dutching is usually done on lower-quality cacao beans.
Beat separately till stiff: 6 egg whites and 1/4 tsp. cream of tartar. Underbeating is better than overbeating.
Fold egg whites into chocolate mixture. Put in the two pans and bake at 350 for 42-45 minutes. Center will not be solid and cracking should appear. Run a knife carefully around outer edges; cake will fall, and the top will be more even if it falls in one piece. (On the other hand, since it will become the bottom of the torte, this step is not exactly essential.)
Cool at least an hour. Loosen springform sides and remove. Put a plate on bottom of each cake and flip over. Peel off pan bottoms, then the foil. Glaze when cool.
GLAZE for two cakes:
Chop one Trader Joe’s Pound Plus Belgian bittersweet chocolate bar (500 g) and melt with 1 1/3 to 1 1/2 c. manufacturing cream. The tradeoff in the amount of cream is whether you want to sculpt it to hold deeper J-strokes (use lesser amount) or thinner, with a slightly lighter texture (use greater amount, and is as is shown in the picture.) Use a double boiler or microwave. Try not to incorporate extra air in as you stir. Also, it is important that every edge of every piece of chocolate be fully dunked down in the cream before heating or that piece of chocolate could possibly seize into a hardened, unmeltable lump with the combination of liquid and heat. You heard it here first: chocolate is very wool-like–it can, in effect, felt from that same combination of factors as wool. Unless you dunk it first.
When glazing a cake, first, I pour it into the center of the two. I quickly first scoot it towards the edges to make some of it fall down the sides in waves. Then, I make a backwards J from the center, turn the cake slightly, repeat all the way around.
Enjoy!
Gigi’s Sam
Saturday March 06th 2010, 9:23 pm
Filed under:
Friends
The Minions of the Pointy Sticks were laughing and knitting when Gigi pulled out her cellphone for me and called her son. Just to make sure he was home. (Try to make sure he doesn’t leave!)
And then I excused myself, got back on the freeway, and headed toward their house.
Maybe I’ll embarrass him if I tell on him that he was vacuuming and didn’t hear the doorbell. (I hear he’s already spoken for in the has-parents department, sorry, you can’t have him.) So I knocked hard.
Sam opened the door to a chocolate torte being offered up. He’d mentioned last week, out of my earshot, how much he’d wished for “the best chocolate cake I have ever eaten in my life before or since,” after I’d made him one for his pushing my chair at Stitches five years ago, and by his sister’s indignantly-teasing reaction I knew I had to hear that one and made him repeat it.
I tell you, that wish was definitely my command. That’s an easy one.
Standing in his doorway tonight, he told me how much I’d turned his day around five years ago; I told him how much he’d turned mine around too, oh my goodness most definitely, and I thanked him again for last Saturday.
Any time.
Any time back atcha.
Go Sam!
Saturday March 06th 2010, 12:36 am
Filed under:
Family
Okay, if I titled this “Driving the Belt-way” that might be too much of an insider joke from someone who grew up near DC and whose older daughter did an internship at NIH there.
We don’t own a TV. We do, clearly, have a computer. I spent about three and a half hours today smiling wryly at the difference as every now and then the screen would go blank and I’d have to tap the keyboard or mouse, putting down my knitting a moment to keep the picture going.
It’s been a dozen years since some of my kids started tae kwon do lessons at the local Y, a gift to the community one night a week from a local fellow. Sam was always the most serious about it.
Which is how, with the wonder of streaming, I came to watch my little girl break every single board on the first try with her foot or her fist, then bowing and being bowed to as they presented her with her own, for real, much-worked-towards black belt.
She did it! Go Sam!
Season’s green-ings
(Time to go wind that second hank of suri.)
Last January
, Richard ran into our old friend C. at Stanford Hospital; she works there as a nurse. Her kids and ours grew up together, we’ve known each other for ages, and she greeted him joyfully.
And then she stopped suddenly and asked–Wait–does this mean Alison’s in here?
That shawl project I mentioned yesterday?
I bought the hand-dyed Cherry Tree Hill suri laceweight at the DBNY sale. When it came, it was wiry in the hands and very thin and I knew it would never get knit by itself.
So I went looking for something to tame it and add weight to it. I found two blue laceweights in my stash, one dyed by me, one dyed by Lisa Souza, that I knew would look stunning with it.
But I also had some 20/20/60 cashmere/silk/superfine merino in Verdoso from Colourmart that matched the fairly small bit of green in that suri. I’d already hanked, scoured, and balled it up, which you have to do with mill-oiled cones; it was in the color of life growing upwards in the spring anew. It was so soft now and it was ready to go.
I liked the blue. I preferred the blue. I wanted to do the blue.
But the green said, simply, No. Me.
We argued with each other for a few days.
No, the green flat-out declared, I said me, and that, honey, is that.
Rargh.
And so I got started, and as I got the yoke worked on, I thought, you know, I think I’d still like that blue better–maybe I should just frog this so I could prove to that yarn that I do know better than it does, thankyouverymuch.
Green it was. I tried to get as much done as possible before Stitches, and then, like I say, my hands had to rest for days after wheeling around there.
It was such a relief to be able to get back to work. I put a fair amount of time into it yesterday and today, feeling like this needed to be ready–if for no other reason than that then I could dive into the fun new stuff.
And yet. I’ve learned time and again that when something is that insistent, there’s always a good reason for it.
Maybe I shouldn’t blog the whole thing yet, just wait for the day I go to give it, while probably wearing a different one to offer to trade, because, you see, this insecure part of me always wants to whine, But what if she doesn’t *like* it?
And yet.
I had a doctor’s appointment yesterday and the nurse there exclaimed, Oooh, that’s *pretty*!
That helped more than she could know, and then, today, all the more.
The mail came this afternoon while I was knitting away. A letter. It was from C. She was throwing a party, bringing old friends together as she tries to do about once a year–and this time also hoping to raise money for breast cancer research.
For the sake of a young co-worker of hers. A single mom with breast cancer.
Who is a nurse at Stanford.
In a department I was in last January.
I had two nurses by that first name. They saw me near death’s door. I am well now. For all their hard work and their caring, I am where I am now. I owe them all so much.
“Wear green!” said the invitation.
Oh, honey, and bring it, too. I shall bring it, too. And I will tell that young mom that that green cashmere blend knew what it was doing.
And she will see me healthy. I will take the colors of growth and new life with the first bluebell flowers of spring sprinkled here and there, and wrap them around her shoulders from all my heart.
No longer tied up in nots
Thursday March 04th 2010, 12:06 am
Filed under:
Friends,
Knit
Hey, KarenL, remember helping me tie this quilt in high school with the frame set up in your living room? Simon and Garfunkel playing in the background: Wednesday Morning 3 A.M., and I forget what the other album was.
Michelle’s comment about peacock tails got me reaching for peacock colors afterwards. I knew I was about to go off to Stitches, about to go buy gloriously gorgeous new yarns, but I just couldn’t have a day without a project!
Yeah, well. I way overdid it with my hands on that chair Friday. (Thank you, Sam, so much for taking it over on Saturday!) I simply had to wait, with all that lovely yarn staring at me, not that I wanted to confess that to the blog. Not Going To Happen Right Now. No Knitting Allowed. Heal.
Today was dark and stormy, the kind of day for curling up with a good yarn; I was doing better and gave it a go.
I’m actually glad now that I have something in my way that will take me a good dozen hours to finish up: time to be creative in while keeping my mind open to what the first of the new wants to be when it grows up. I knit so much and with so many yarns: they come, they go, it’s on to the next. But, unlike some skeins, I don’t want to just play with these from Lisa, Dianne, and Melinda–I want them each to be in the perfect design from the get-go. They’re just too pretty not to be.
Knitting time. Thinking time. It’s all good.
(Oh, and yes, I found our certificate from when we tied the knot. Phew!)
Unbelievable
So the hubby comes home tonight and opens his mail.
And now we know the details.
To all those who think employer-based healthcare plans are the pure and only true path to medicine? Given my medical history, insurance is a subject close to home here. Are you sitting down?
My husband and I are celebrating our 30th anniversary this summer. Thirty years ago, with both of us having grandfathers on the political scene in DC for decades, they knew everybody, they had us invite everybody to the reception, we sent out 500 invitations and 500 people actually showed up! We were standing in that receiving line for three and a half solid hours with no breaks in the flow of humanity, most of whom my new husband and I didn’t know, all these people taking the time out of their lives to come shake our hands and wish us well.
We solemnly promised our own children we would never do that to them.
I guess one could say now that we had a lot of witnesses, having no idea we might someday need them. (One thank-you note, on the other hand, was returned two months after the wedding as “recipient deceased.” That was fast. We might be in trouble here.)
My husband’s employer, a Fortune 500 company, now says we must produce our marriage certificate, and fast, or they are cutting off my medical insurance on the assumption of fraud. They are doing this to everybody. We claim John is our son? We’d better produce the birth certificate and prove it, and his school transcript, too. We have to order the license or the birth certificate from the states they happened in? Oh, those states are furloughing workers and are weeks or even, in California’s case, months behind on all paperwork? So sad too bad, you’re out.
It took California over ten weeks to process my auto registration payment, and that’s when they were in effect getting paid money by me to do so, and not just some nominal fee. Okay, yes, we have the kid’s birth certificate, but not his transcript. And what of all the people who don’t have a copy on hand for their kids? Or of their marriage certificate?
I so much want to ask the CEO, whose own insurance, I am sure, is in no way imperiled: exactly what kind of corporate culture do they think they’re trying for here? Are they familiar with the term meta-message? Could you shake each employee’s hand, look them in the eye, and convince them you were wishing them and their families…well?
One skein at a time
Monday March 01st 2010, 9:47 pm
Filed under:
Knit

I’ve stalled out. Too many choices. (Embiggen for full effect.) Too much that wants to be knit all at once, right now! (This is Saturday’s Creatively Dyed haul, minus the duplicate skeins. In order: Waterfalls Hang laceweight, Steele sockweight in Tull, Spanish, and Jasmine, and Waterfalls laceweight Elegant.)
There’s only one thing to do: *Make a choice, set the rest aside and put it out of sight. Knit the first project, bring out all the beautiful skeins, repeat from * as needed.
It’s a wonderful problem to have. Even the Roomba got carried away by the yarnly possibilities and stalled out. (Hey, you, gimme back my bobbin, where’d you get that.)
That reminds me, the squirrels? This round went to me.
Foiled!
Monday March 01st 2010, 12:07 am
Filed under:
Wildlife
Two days away from my usual spot and it was a squirrel war on my previously-rodent-free birdfeeder. And they are emphatically copycats: if one does it, each one in the vicinity has to try, just like little kids: Well, but HE got to, so why can’t *I*?
Yo? Did you see your littermate hit the ground running from up there when I opened the door? It couldn’t have been fun.
So today one was keeping an eye on me, judging to see if I might walk away out of sight so it could have a go at that awning pole and then go leaping across to the food from there. Like I didn’t know exactly what it was thinking–I’ve seen them do a “Mother May I” game, running a few feet forward if I turn my head away, freezing if I turn back to see. They charm me so, the little toddlers.
What he didn’t realize was the neighbor’s cat was watching him intently from halfway across the grass. Not stalking him; more like it was watching the wing-and-foot show and noting where future snackage was to be found should the need arise.
I opened the door and squirrel, birds, and cat fled to safety.
Those black squirrels’ preoccupation with me and that feeder was Darwinizing them. I took some aluminum foil. I taped a short length of it to the pole opposite the feeder–nothing harmful in any way, but nothing for agile little feet to pitch their in-tent from either.
Went off to church. Came home to find crinkled foil, still holding–someone must have tried from below–and a little black squirrel sitting among my amaryllises on the picnic table, staring longingly up, wondering if maybe, just maybe, he could make the leap from over that-a-way. All that lovely, lovely millet and sunflower seeds.
Not a chance. (So far.)
Post-Stitches haze
Saturday February 27th 2010, 11:28 pm
Filed under:
Friends,
Knit
I’ve been staring at this blank page. Where to start.
(Maybe if the yarn weren’t all in hanks. But it is. And I am too tired to wind it up into balls.)
But still. All these glorious, glorious yarns and colors. And a thank you to Dianne’s husband for running out to their truck for my Waterfalls Elegant hank from their stock. Where to start.
I tell you, it’s going to be a very fun year.
I got to see Lisa and Rod, so dear to me for so many years, and Sheila. Dianne. The folks at Blue Moon. Karen at Royale Hare, Melinda and Tess at Tess. I got to meet the folks at Malabrigo: to my surprise, I found myself in a conversation in French at one point, but we all spoke yarn. And I got to see so many, many friends who were simply walking around trying to take it all in, too.
To Jasmin’s brother Sam, who pushed me today, sparing my hands and arms for knitting, Michelle and I plan to get that manufacturing cream on Monday–you earned that chocolate torte! (Recipe in comments, actual cake forthcoming.) Thank you!
And I have now held an actual vicuna-blend hank of hand-dyed gorgeousness, 15% vicuna and still in the qiviut-ic stratosphere. Which is a good thing. Pay those South American ranchers well. Shear a wild vicuna, save a vicuna by making it worthless to poachers, save a species–well done, Peru!
And someday I will afford some and knit some. (No, new skeins, that wasn’t a sheep shot.)
Stitches, day one
Friday February 26th 2010, 11:24 pm
Filed under:
Knit
(Knitting needles as models have limitations. They’re always trying to make a point.)
“You know nobody’s going to see my shawl. They’re just going to look at that hat,” I told Michelle.
Truer words… I was planning on taking it off after I no longer needed it for warmth nor to keep my slightly damp hair away from my hearing aids. But on it stayed, because all day long I had people stopping me and wanting to comment about what was on my head and I do have this ego thing going on.
Had I designed it? Where could they get the pattern? It was a doodle?! One told me, “I’m a piano teacher!” I laughed over the ignored Tara pattern and got told by one knitter, “There are a lot of shawls. There is only ONE piano hat!”
Well, no, actually, there are two. But I rather doubt the surgeon who got the other one minds.
Yarn: merino laceweight single ply in a base like Malabrigo’s, from Tess Designer Yarns; blackbewwie sock!merino, very soft and just the thing for shawls, sapphire baby alpaca laceweight, and Lake Superior silk from Lisa Souza. And no, that’s not all; Dianne at Creatively Dyed and I had a delightful time together. Uh, yeah. She would confirm that. Definitely.
Stitches tomorrow!
Thursday February 25th 2010, 11:21 pm
Filed under:
Life
Having rather un-chair-itable thoughts at certain battery packs that cost $150 a whack and then don’t recharge, because it’s a use-it-or-lose-it and I didn’t try to since…um, Stitches… (Wait, that would be TWO years ago, Sam was pushing me last year ten days out of Stanford. Right. Okay, then. Never mind.)
Back to the manual one. At least I’ve finally got a much-needed new cover for thisssss old thing.