Saturday, November 26, 2016

Friendsgiving 2016

This year we had our third Friendsgiving, a great new tradition to add to our lives.

This year was extremely easy as we made it a potluck!

DH and I made a turkey breast, gravy, cranberry sauce and salad. We had cut up vegetables, dip, cheese, crackers and DH made stuffed baked mushrooms and wine ready when folks arrived.

I made cranberry sauce with some spiced rum, vanilla, and pumpkin spice, and the salad had cucumbers, tomatoes (on the side), dried apricots, nuts, avocado.

Others brought:

  • Added 12-18-16: Here is the actual recipe:  

    At the Friendsgiving, I promised June the recipe for the glazed potatoes. So here it is:

    1 kg small firm potatoes
    1 dl sugar
    25 g butter
    1. Clean the potatoes and cook them with the peel on in lightly salted water for about 15 minutes. They must not get too soft. Peel them and let the potatoes cool off before you proceed. 
    2. Pour the sugar into the cold pan in an even layer. 
    3. Let the sugar melt WITHOUT stirring - if you do it, it might get lumps. 
    4. When the sugar has melted you add the butter. Turn up the heat and add the potatoes.
    5. cook the potatoes at medium/high heat for about 5-6 minutes. Carefully stir once in a while. 
    6. When the potatoes have an even layer of sugar, they are done. 
  • Rustic Olive Bread served with both oil and vinegar and butter.
  • Fabulous Cheese Cake with a graham butter crust
  • Special homemade sake - (made with potatoes and yeast if I understood)



We invited our son and DIL but they couldn't make it, and also some other students from DH's classes.  Bet you can tell who came from Denmark!  Such a pretty blouse.

I didn't keep track of the time of things, but it was a great evening.


Sunday, November 20, 2016

Great LA Walk

Saturday November 19, my son and I did our first Great LA Walk.

This event started 11 years ago when someone was celebrating their 10th year in LA.  Each year he plans a different route.  This year was mainly along Pico Blvd - from  around the convention center to the shore in Santa Monica.

http://www.greatlawalk.com/  and https://www.facebook.com/greatlawalk

We drove up from San Diego the night before and walked an additional 1.7 miles from the hotel to the starting point...






Lots of people in line to eat here.



Starting point for the walk.




She was part of a group that walked from LA to San Diego!













Hollywood Sign



At first we were all together, then as lunch time came each picked different places to eat.

This place had delicious shrimp and fish!



We crossed street to eat here, but didn't see any apple pie being eaten so we went to a different place - a Jewish deli and split an eclair there.  Yum!  There was a harp store across the street!






We catch sight of the ocean!

On the beach - pier in background.


After our photo we left to get the car and have dinner at a place that would split the time for the drive back.

We took the metro back to the car.  One transfer and we were almost at the hotel where we picked the car up.  (Very easy and just $1 for card and $1.75 for fare.)  Then we drove to La Mirada to have dinner at Clearman's North Woods Inn.  Called up good memories for both of us.

I had my 12th birthday at North Woods Inn.  Almost always replicate that meal and have the root beer and hot dog. Sometimes though I have the cheese bread with both types of salad (red cabbage and green with blue cheese dressing).  Always nice to de-shell the peanuts and throw the shells on the floor.  Also had my first drink in a restaurant with a boy there too!  Planters Punch = huge, sweet and delicious!  I used to take our son there on our trips to visit my Godmother so he has memories of it too!  Other places we used to stop at are:
http://twoheys.com/
https://www.yelp.com/biz/goodys-restaurant-san-gabriel (now in El Monte it seems)
https://www.knotts.com/california-marketplace/mrs-knott-s-chicken-dinner-restaurant
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Taiko-Japanese-Restaurant/121493051194475
hotel to start                                            40 min  1.7 mi  2.6 mph   3635 steps  136 cal
start loews rr break                                    1:55 min  5.4 mi  2.8 mi   11104 steps  429 cal
loews to charlies fish 7 chip lunch                       42 min  1.6 mi  2.3 mph   3478 steps  130 cal
lunch to coffee bean & tea leaf drink and rr break        46 min  2.2 mi  2.8 mi    4543 steps  173 cal
break to bike shop for gloves                             29 min  1.7 mi  3.5 mi    2951 steps  136 cal
gloves to _______                                         10 min   .5 mi  3 mph      801 steps   38 cal





Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Only The Best Way

I'm attending a weekly quilting class.

I've taken several classes and workshops before, but for some reason though this class is calling out my inner-former teacher. I'm really seeing things that could/should be done differently in the class.

Although it good for the class to learn the history of the teacher, it's at least equally important for the teacher to do a needs assessment and to learn what experience the students have with quilting.  Lessons may need to be modified to meet the needs of the students.

Teachers should expect to have to do preparation for a class.  Even though they usually only get paid for the time they are in front of the class, they need to accept that they will need to devote additional time preparing the lesson.

Instead of just saying that there is only one way, the best way, presented in class.  A good teacher will also show variations.  Examples and non-examples!

The first lesson in the class was to make an X-block.  One way.  The best way.

In reality, there are so many variations to this block.  What fun it would be for the teacher to have the block prepared with different widths of strips, some the same for both parts and some different for the students to understand how she came to the conclusion that her one way is best.  To have the blocks make by slicing the square in half inserting a strip, then slicing it again and inserting the next strip, or to have an extra piece cut so there is a square in the center of the block. Putting two squares down and cutting them both at the same time, then rearranging the fabrics.  Not to mention different sizes of squares and angles for the cuts.

To press the seams in, to press the seams out, to open the seams, and to press the seams in the same direction. Perhaps showing how to make the block by sewing on paper, or even sewing raw edges down or using interfacing. (Perhaps it doesn't make any difference in the end, I'm not sure.  According to this current class teacher the best way is to press the seams toward the feature of the block, that way the feature stands out. It does look nice, but it seems to me once the block is quilted the pressing won't matter.)


Of course before setting us off to get fabrics, there is so much to be discussed.  A teacher could collect samples of many fabrics - perhaps squares or rectangles could be distributed to students.  Individually then in small groups they could arrange small collections by different criteria.  Quality of materials, colors, value, hue, tints, solid or prints, size of prints, and more.  Tricks of looking thru different lens using the camera on a phone, squinting eyes, looking from different distances and angles and touching.

It's a good idea to have students test a procedure for a block and their measurement and cutting skills, by making a testing/example block.  A teacher could make arrangements with a charity to donate fabric and the students pick from that fabric to each make a block or two before using their own fabric.  (This way the students are practicing skills and creating blocks that can be used as practice later to learn adding sashing, quilting as you go, basting, etc.)

Each student could be tasked with cutting donated fabric in different sizes, then they could pick pieces to make a block - to be made and contributed to a charity quilt.  A terrific lesson to see how to see how different fabrics change the look of a block, then a variety of sashings and borders could be shown and tested.

Class projects should be designed so they can be completed using a limited number of fabrics. Some of the students would not have any stash collected.  (It's almost unkind I think to ask students to make a class project that starts with 34 different 8 inch squares.)  I'm sure a nice project could be made with charm squares or with fewer fabrics!

I have a lot more to learn about quilting, but I'm afraid the instructor of this class so far is not really teaching. This isn't a workshop, it supposed to be an ongoing quilting class.

-=-=-=-

To be honest, the main reason I'm attending is to meet local quilters.

I have now met a few ladies who now say hello to me and text messages before or after class, so I appreciate that and hope we will become friends.  I'm perhaps really hoping eventually to be invited to join the subgroup of quilters that seem to meet at each others homes and make margaritas and dinner together - and sew too! : )

-=-=-

What ideas do you have for good class exercises?

Published 2-15-17.

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

OMG 2016 11: Bind the Charity 9 Patch Quilt

Elm Street Quilts


Front

Okay - this month I'm going to bind the charity nine-patch quilt
that has been haunting me for a month or two!


Back
Linking up to http://www.elmstreetquilts.com/2016/11/one-monthly-goal-november-goal-setting.html

Elm Street Quilts