Girl on the Rocks

formerly known as Knit This… Knitting, spinning, crafting - it’s all here.

 

Crafts, Mice, and more December 22, 2006

Filed under: Crafty, Karrie's Current Projects — karrie @ 3:54 pm

I was luck enough to have my Ipod Tape Case chosen as a prize winner for the whiplash competition. My prizes were donated by tall poppy craft and are mostly purse making supplies, and are all fantastic.

Purse handles, magnetic snaps, ribbons and tags, and a quilt pattern

The cassette tape cozy was such a hit that I decided to make the Ipod Tape Case Redux. this one is crocheted from a VHS tape instead of knit from a cassette tape.

A VHS tape is essentially bulky weight, so it works up quickly. For inelastic materials crochet is certainly an improvement over knitting. I was motivated to craft this because of the Upcycle contest over at etsy. the contest is sponsored by the good people at Bazaar Bizaare, and some of the prizes include a free table at the Bazaar to be held at the Maker Faire this spring. I want in on that! I attended the Maker Faire last year and enjoyed all of it, including the bazaar. oh, to have my own table there….

Finally to indulge Helen a meme about how weird I am follows
(more…)

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It’s cold outside (relatively speaking) December 18, 2006

Filed under: Karrie's Current Projects, sweater — karrie @ 7:18 pm

Back home in the middle of the country, when the first ice coats the streets the local news goes crazy. They send all of their field reporters out to the salt barn for on the spot news. The salt barn is a giant shed where the city stores its supply of winter road salt. If they declare some kind of “snow emergency,” or the ice occurs close to christmas, there will be so many reporters there that you will be able to see them in the background of each others shots. I find this completely riveting. Mind you, NOTHING is happening there. The most excitement you can hope for is a shot of a plow getting a salt refill.

Today i awoke to a cold morning in the bay area. It was below 40 in my backyard, and the local news quickly made it clear that it was below 30 degrees in some of the valleys nearby. And how did they do that you ask? Through ever-fascinating live shots of frost. Yes, frost. They described a light coating of frost as a “winter wonderland.” They also showed a shot of a woman defrosting her car by spraying it with her garden hose. That one really got my attention. Lucky for her it warmed up quickly and i don’t think it had time to re-freeze completely. And the sad thing - I think it is really cold too! They have assimilated me!

The chilliness has motivated me to work a bit on the Knitpicks Emma Jacket that I planned to finish in early December.

The blob on the left is the body, knit in the round to the armpits and awaiting steeking. The sleeves are on the right with a lovely fold up ribbed cuff. i love the yarn. I think it would look great for cabled projects - a little bit of color, but not too much. I am still undecided about the pattern..

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Chestnuts roasting in a toaster oven

Filed under: non-knitting related, recipes — karrie @ 1:20 am

Some people have never eaten a roasted chestnut. Are you one of them? Because they are awesome and you need to try one. In fact, you should probably eat them as often as possible when they are season. It is one of my favorite seasonal treats (ranking right up there with egg nog).

The basic idea is to find some fresh-ish chestnuts, and roast them up in the oven on a cookie sheet. You need to cut a hole is the shell somehow to release steam and prevent the nut from blowing up. Here’s how to do it:

Picking out chestnuts
Chestnuts are a little on the expensive side, so take the time to pick through and make sure you get ones that aren’t rotten. If they smell really musty or have visible moldy spots you might want to avoid them all together. Sometimes i just buy a few and do a test bake to see if they are any good. Often they are totally moldy and disappointing, but I am glad that I didn’t buy ten bucks worth.

Preparing the nuts for roasting
The experienced heat up their ovens or toaster ovens to 425 before starting the cutting…

Chestnuts have a flat side, and a round side. The flat side will go down on the cookie sheet, and the upper side will have the steam-releasing cut on it. Get a sharp knife and get ready to do some cutting.

Cut off the pointy tip. fresh chestnuts will look white on the inside. The not-so-fresh will look brown or a fungus-y greenish color. Throw these out.

Then slice a line into the round side of the nut, making sure to go all the way through the shell to the meat. My knife was a little dull and i wanted to keep the cutting to a minimum, but i would have cut more if I had a sharp knife. It is good to also make a perpendicular cut so that you have a little cross cut. Repeat this for every chestnut you want to roast.

Roasting Chestnuts
Toaster ovens are PERFECT for roasting chestnuts. They cook much more quickly, and you aren’t heating up an entire gigantic oven for a little tray. If you took my earlier hint, yours will already be heated up to 425. Put the chestnuts flat-side down, cut-side up on a cookie sheet in the oven for 20-25 minutes.

Peeling Chestnuts

When the chestnuts are roasted, the shell curls back and you need to peel them before they cool all the way. They have a fuzzy skin layer in between the shell and the meat. If you don’t peel them while pretty warm, the skin will stick to meat in a highly undesireable manner. So peel them as soon as they are cool enough for you to handle.

when they are all peeled they look like delicious little brains

Now you can enjoy some sweet, delicious roasted chestnuts!

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Tis the season for receiving? December 7, 2006

Filed under: Crafty, Things I like — karrie @ 12:19 pm

I posted this in the things i like category so I can feel free to randomly blather on about cool things I’ve found. Bear with me, you might find something that you like.

Pincushions

I was lucky enough to have Monique send me a package for this month’s pincushion challenge swap.

The pincushion has an elastic strap so it can be worn on my wrist. I love the pink and white matching pins! I put the pincushion to work immediately.

I was trying to not spoil the surprise in case my package has not reached its destination, but I can’t resist. I used the swap as an opportunity to try out an idea that i have had for a while. I put a fluffy top on an altoids tin so pins can go in the top and notions can be stored in the tin. I also added some fishy shrinky pins.

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Hair clips
I hit the SF Craft Mafia sale at Craft Gym last month. Wow were there some good looking goodies there. I got a T-bone steak from Sweetmeats and some hair clips from Sprout Studio. The steak is at its new home, and I am loving the barrettes.

Yarn
Did you know you can get cones of dishcloth cotton yarn from Elmore-Pisgah (Peaches and Cream) for a really great price? Abby found this out and made a big order for all of us. then we divided it up. It is a lot of cotton yarn, and the colors are beautiful.


photo from abmatic

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Adult Science Fair December 5, 2006

Filed under: non-knitting related — karrie @ 12:29 am

As you may have figured out from reading my blog, I am a geologist. Specifically, a geochemist. I use fancy machines to collect data on tiny amounts of obscure elements. Here I am cracking up while collecting some data. I was probably a little delirious in this photo since I was running a fever and working under a fan blowing air that is about 55 degrees cold. Inside the machine is a plasma. Yes, plasma, that oft neglected form of matter made of a cloud of ions. I mean, should you need a scarf for this?? ( you know what I am sayin, right sarah?)

As part of my job I attend scientific conferences, and I have been busy preparing for the hum-dinger of them all - the Fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union. Thousands (I think more than 10,000 ) of geophysicists descend on the Moscone Center. You can easily spot them as they swarm around the convention center because
1) About 30% of them forget to take of their name badges
2) they are likely the only type of conference attendees to be seen carrying Nalgene water bottles and small hiking backpacks to a professional event. If it is raining look down to see a stampede of gore-tex hiking boots, and I guarantee there are more waterproof jackets than umbrellas
3) They are 70% old white men.

This year, my presentation will be a poster. As I start to prepare it (a whole week early) it hits me that this is the adult science fair. Really. In grade school I thought that even though I would surely be a scientist, I would never make a poster and label a section of it “abstract.” But I just did. I also noticed the most awesome thing…. My outfit wil match my poster.

snap.

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Canning for one - Kumquat Marmalade December 3, 2006

Filed under: non-knitting related, recipes — karrie @ 11:45 pm

I like canning food. In fact, sometimes I think I like canning things more than i like eating them… I have quite a batch of uneaten preserves. In the past, all of my canning adventures involved many flats of berries, or pounds and pounds of beans and took all day. Now that I live in a studio apartment I just don’t have room for that kind of operation and I have said goodbye to canning at my own pad. But, I could not resist the quinces and kumquats that I found for an awesome discount in the bruised fruit section of the Berkeley Bowl. I looked at them, and immediately imagined them as jammy delicousness. I also realized that maybe canning didn’t have to be an all day project and was a perfect excuse to wear one of my new aprons…. Here is some of the stuff I figured out, and some of the ingredients I used (since I didn’t measure anything, I can’t really call it a recipe*).

I dug out my supplies

  • Canning jars, rings and new lids
  • Ikea stock pot with steamer/colander insert
  • Two saucepans
  • Jar Lifter and funnel

The stock pot is for boiling water to sterilize the jars, and is the key development for canning in a tiny kitchen. I have a standard canning pot, and it covers two burners on my little efficiency stove, and would prevent me from beign able to simmer jars, jar lids, and my jam at the same time. The stock pot is much a much smaller substitute. Since glass jars don’t do well in boiling water when sitting on the bottom of a pot, I used the insert to keep them off the bottom. Since this pot is much shallower (and smaller) than a standard canning pot, make sure that it will be deep enough to cover your jars wth water. I could only fit in shorter jelly jars.

Fill up the stock pot with water, and wait for it to boil (this takes a while). When it does, add the jars. Meanwhile, cook the fruity contents. I sliced up the kumquats (2 cups?) and added enough water to cover the fruit by about an inch in my saucepan.


I let this cook for about half an hour. Then I added a lot of sugar(2 cups?) and some lemon juice. If I wanted to not have to fret over whether my concotion would gel up like jam i could have added pectin at this point, but I decided to risk it. Plus, I think adding pectin is a little bit of a cheat. Then I let this cook for a while, until the fruit was syrupy. I put a splash of it in a cold bowl (that I stuck in the freezer when I started) and it quickly cooled and thickened. If it was still runny and syrupy, I would have cooked the fruit mixture longer. I also could have checked the temperature had I not left both (yes I own two) of my candy thermometers in a pot of oil at the thanksgiving turkey deep-fry that I attended.

To sterilize the jar lids, put them in a saucepan and heat them up, but keep it below a boil… Make sure you use NEW lids. They cannot be reused!

click through to flickr to see notes

Here is where a set of canning tools pays for itself. Use the jar lifter to fish the hot jars out of the pot, and dump out the water inside.

Stick in the funnel, and pour in the kumquats

Wipe off the rim of the jar, and add the lid and loosely screw on the ring. I had enough fruit for a little over two jars. I put the two jars back in the hot water to process. This sterilizes everything and also seals the jars. I put the leftover in another jar with a screw to plid and stuck it in the fridge for immediate consumption.

2.5 jars of jam. It is an all time low for me, but I couldn’t be happier about it.

*If you haven’t canned anything before, you will need more than this for reference. Sterilization and proper processing is very important. I recommend the Ball Canning Booklet - usually for sale near canning jars and lids.

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