Category Archives: Photos

Tuesday Fun

I had a bit of good luck this week, being the beneficiary of some very generous people with tools and supplies to spare, and who helped make my little studio properly useful. I’m still sorting through all of the amazing tools! {Budgets and tools seem to be on speaking terms, but they have very little in common.}

Anything I can’t use or don’t use for my processes I’m donating to friends who need them. Share the love.

Some pictures from around my bench:

The wait for the Molly Moon Ginger ice cream is over! It really is my week.

♥ Momo

Zucchini Spice Muffins.

Zucchini muffins! This weekend was beautiful; it was warm, & sunny. I’ve been so fixated on making zucchini bread that our kitchen was decidedly lacking the base materials for anything else. So I made zucchini muffins.

At first I was a little disappointed. This just is a different type of batter than the first recipe, which was moist and gooey, and devoured within an hour of leaving the oven. For this recipe, I reduced the cardamom by 75%; it turns out that’s what made the last loaf taste like an Autumn-themed candle. 

The addition of almond meal makes this recipe dryer, but the moisture it had held nicely into the next day. I realized that even though the last loaf was a big crowd pleaser, this one makes a great healthy-ish snack: there’s no butter, limited sugar, and the almond meal is pretty good for you on its own, even if it weren’t taking the place of some of the refined white flour. It would be nice to have a recipe I could make for people who wouldn’t then spend the afternoon complaining that I’m an evil disabler of diets. Because the only thing I dislike more then hearing about your diet is hearing about how it’s my fault you’re failing at it. I’m not going to pretend anymore. 

Healthy {kind-of} Zucchini Muffins:

1 c. Sugar

3 Eggs

3/4 c. Sunflower Oil

1 tsp Vanilla Extract

1/2 c. Finely Chopped Walnuts (Optional)

1/2 c. Almond Meal

2 c. Grated Zucchini

1/2 tsp Ground Cardamom (Reduced from 1 tsp)

1/2 tsp Ground Allspice

1 tsp Ground Cinnamon

Pinch ground cloves (I had no cloves!)

1/2 tsp baking soda

1 1/2 c. self-raising flour

1/2 c. plain flour

Turbinado sugar, for top.

Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease a 9″ springform pan, dusting with flour. I sprinkle a little flour on the center and the sides, then smack it around to even out the distribution. (In the second case, I actually made muffins; paper liners in a non-stick pan.)

In a Kitchenaid with the whisk attachment, combine sunflower oil, sugar, eggs and vanilla until thick. I removed the bowl after the mixer did most of the work , because sometimes I feel like the mixer alone doesn’t whisk enough air into the liquids.

With a spoon, fold in almond meal, zucchini and spices. To make sure the spices are evenly distributed, I mix them together in their own small bowl before adding. Combine baking soda and flours, then sift over liquid mixture and fold in.

Pour into lined/buttered muffin pan and sprinkle Turbinado sugar over top of muffins. Bake 15-20 minutes, for muffins, or 45-50 minutes for a nonstick cake pan. Check with a sharp knife – they’re done when it comes out clean.

Cool in pan for 20 minutes, then turn onto a wire rack and cool completely.

While they’re in the oven, don’t forget to do the dishes and eat some blueberries. (If you neglected to buy blueberries, shame on you.)

Serve warm with butter – I liked them the next day with butter & blackberry jam!

♥ Momo

Flickr

Bee Butt!

I have a photostream up on Flickr, for easy access to the proof that I was off adventuring when I haven’t been blogging!

I got the first batch of photos up from our escapades on Mother’s Day, as well as photos from food around CH. More to come, as I make the transition to my new computer: MacBook Pro! My birthday this year rocked.

Bunny Balloon!

Something cute before bed ♦

♥ Momo

Migi

My fuzzy assistant!

I’m adding Toulouse Petit to my restaurant list; check out the food photos on Urban Spoon!

♥ Momo

Cafe Presse & Capitol Hill

Cafe Presse is great. Open at 7 a.m., serving food til 2 a.m., always delicious, sometimes not so fast with the service, but it’s a good thing. In my experience, the slow service is usually after the food has come, and while we are engrossed in conversation about how great that food was.

We also had bread pudding with caramel sauce…and apple up-side-down cake, with a vanilla bean cream sauce, but they were both gone by the time I realized there was no evidence…then I realized that there was no evidence!

I love the atmosphere at Presse; the front of the house is dominated by an enormous bar, and a wall of tables for two, lit by floor to ceiling windows covering the entrance, and I’m pretty certain that there are skylights. The back room is just past the kitchen, and much darker, lit sparsely by dozens of well placed tea lights in the evening. The little touches are nice too; small bright bottles of salt, pepper and mustard at each table, with a fresh dish of peanuts brought to your table as you sit down. The bread is perfect in its simplicity: chewy, dense baguettes with a little bit of a sour bite to them to break up and eat with butter while you wait for the main meal. (Or if you’re having soup, you horde it and ask for more.)

Post-dinner cuddles:

♥ Momo

Spudnuts!

Trout Apples!

I’m up this morning drinking Yorkshire Gold and eating a Spudnut doughnut with cantaloupe in Eastern Washington and stalking Etsy. What could be better?♣

♣ Things that might be better: sipping coffee and eating a macadamia nut sticky bun on Kauai; Sipping coffee and breaking off fresh pieces of baguette while sitting on a bench near the Eiffel Tower; the triumphant feeling of making perfect English scones for the first time, for starters – but I’ll take this.

Yesterday was spent running all over the Tri City area looking for a terra cotta garden pot, to be used to cook a fancy roast. My camera battery has died, but I’ll see about posting pics of the final results. In the course of our impromptu tour of every garden nursery in Eastern Washington, I got some pretty nice pics of pretty plants, and my all time favorite, the pussy willow:

Soft!

My parents used to buy these when I got a splinter, which is so much easier to remove from a six year old who’s preoccupied with the botanical equivalent of a new kitten. I wish we could keep them around the house, especially since they keep better than a vase full of flowers, but Migi loves them too. She loves them the way Simpkin loved the same little fat mice as the Tailor of Glouster, with clearly mischievous intentions. So no bundles of pussy willows for me today!

I have a few recipes up my sleeve for either my time here or this weekend when I’m back at home – Zucchini loaf should be first up; I’m really looking forward to it!

♥ Momo

Hajime.

Totoro!

Totoro!

 

“Over the years I have developed a picture of what a human being living humanely is like. She is a person who understands, values and develops her body, finding it beautiful and useful; a person who is real and is willing to take risks, to be creative, to manifest competence, to change when the situation calls for it, and to find ways to accommodate to what is new and different, keeping that part of the old that is still useful and discarding what is not.”

-Virginia Satir 1916-1988

First post!

I’m a 25-year old full time artist working on a jewelry portfolio/skills, part time retail associate, & gleefully former office drone. I love baking, but I’m approaching cooking with some trepidation – poaching eggs is at the top of my must-do-but-keep putting-off list.

This is my first blog; I hope to fill it with recipes & photographs of my wanderings & work.

About me as a baker: I’m a total food geek, a self-confessed sugar junkie, and an organic-obsessive compulsive. 

My pseudonym comes from Michael Ende’s Momo, also known as The Grey Gentlemen published 1973. The German title fully translates to Momo, or the strange story of the time-thieves and the child who brought the stolen time back to the people

 

Momo!

 

♥Momo