Monthly Archives: June 2010

Whole Wheat Apple Muffins

I’ve been listening to Rosemary Leach reading “A Murder is Announced”, so bear with me for a little while I feel like everything should be answered with the phrase “Quite so”.

In the spirit of using up what we had in our kitchen – a quart of buttermilk that needs using & two apples that had been hiding in the crisper – I threw together some muffins this morning. Very good muffins.

Of course I got to the bit where it calls for buttermilk, and at the last minute I used a cup of cream-top Brown Cow yogurt instead. So I still have buttermilk to use, and one day left til it goes bad….but yogurt turned out to be such a good idea, I can’t make myself regret the decision.

Did you know that I spend more time making food than jewelry? Something has to be done about this. I am, after all supposed to be a jeweler.

Whole Wheat Apple Muffins:
Adapted from King Arthur Flour, via Smitten Kitchen

Yield: Who Knows? I ran out of standard muffin cup liners, and in a moment of insanity used my jumbo muffin pan, for which I did have liners, and voila! I have 8 muffins.

1/2 c. unsalted butter, at room temperature
1/2 c. granulated sugar
1/2 c. dark brown sugar, packed
1 large egg
1 c. plain yogurt – I bake with either Nancy’s or Brown Cow…mmmm.

1 c. whole wheat flour

1 c. all-purpose flour
1 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. baking soda
1/4 tsp. salt
1 Tbsp. cinnamon
2 large apples, peeled, cored, and coarsely chopped – We had Fuji, but I might try one batch with Granny Smith, when I make them again. I like my apples to be more tart, while Fuji are fairly sweet, especially baked.

Preheat the oven to 4oo°F. I line my muffin cups with paper liners when using a muffin batter with chunks of fruit – when they’re hot, it can be easier to get the muffins out in one piece when they are lined.

Combine flours, baking powder & baking soda, salt & cinnamon in a moderately large bowl.  I cream butters and sugar in my Kitchenaid; it just does the job more properly than I. Anyway, cream the butter and add the granulated sugar and 1/4 cup of the brown sugar. You’ll use the other 1/4 cup sprinkling it over the top of the muffin batter before they go in the oven. I recommend setting that 1/4 cup aside by the stove now, or else you’ll sound batty, spooning batter into cups on the stove and muttering something inaudible about “can’t forget the brown sugar”. Not that that’s what I do, mind you, but I recommend it all the same.

Cream butter, granulated sugar and 1/4 cup brown sugar until fluffy – picture below. Add the egg and beat well. At this point, remove mixer bowl from Kitchenaid and add one cup yogurt and fold in until combined. The wet ingredients will become slightly lumpy, since the cold whole milk yogurt hits the butter/sugars/egg and balls up a little. Fold in the dry ingredients – it’s going to take some elbow grease – and fold in the apple chunks very gently until just combined.

Spoon the batter into prepared muffin cups with two spoons, to scrape each other, and sprinkle the remaining 1/4 cup brown sugar on the tops. Bake for 25 minutes, until a knife inserted into the center of the muffins comes out clean. I removed them from the pan immediately and set on a large plate to cool. I fear that one of them didn’t make it longer than a couple minutes before being eaten with coffee. They are really quite good. I think the larger size is perfect – just right for one serving.

♥ Momo

Birds Acting Aloof

Boids

Etsy Birds. It’s titled “We Are Here”.

♥ Momo

Apricot Ginger Scones

Guess what I got?? I have coffee!

When I was in college, & then later living on my own, I was a regular at La Vie en Rose Bakery, downing cups of Tony’s French Roast & Apricot Ginger Scones. Now that I’ve bought myself a coffee press, & Tony’s is carried locally, I was feeling sentimental & thought I’d make myself some scones.

Apricot Ginger Scones

1 3/4 c. all-purpose flour

1/3 c. granulated sugar

1 Tbs. baking powder (Yes, you read it right. I swear.)

1/2 tsp. salt

1/4 tsp. freshly grated nutmeg

6 Tbs. (3/4 stick) cold unsalted butter, cut into cubes

2/3 c. dried apricots, chopped

1/4 c. crystallized ginger, chopped

1 egg

1/2 c. buttermilk

Preheat an oven to 425°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. (Alternative! If you discover that you have no parchment paper, and are scrambling wildly through your kitchen, freaking out about the temperature of the oven and the butter in the dough you just laid out, which ideally has to be cold when it goes into the oven!! ….you could cheat like me, and place the wedges around a glass pyrex pie dish. That baked the scones just fine, just add about five minutes to the cooking time.)

In a moderately large bowl, combine flour, sugar, baking powder, salt and nutmeg. Using a pastry blender, cut the butter into the dry ingredients, until the mixture forms coarse crumbs about the size of peas. Stir in the apricots and ginger. In a small bowl, whisk together the egg and buttermilk until blended. Add the egg mixture to the flour mixture and, using a rubber spatula, stir just until evenly moistened. The dough will be sticky.

Turn out the dough onto a floured work surface and press gently into a round roughly 8 inches in diameter. Using a sharp knife or a fancy dough cutter, cut the round into at least 6 equal wedges. I cut mine into 8 because the I like the symmetry of cutting things into quarters, then cutting dividing those in half each, until you have 8. Ask me to make six, and I’ll be able to do it to my satisfaction maybe 1 in 5 times, if it’s a good day.  Place the wedges on the prepared sheet, spacing them about 1 inch apart. Bake until the scones are golden brown, 15 to 17 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack, let cool slightly and serve warm. If you do it right, they’ll still be moist enough to eat with satisfaction when they’re cold. Makes 6-8 scones.

♥ Momo

June Pics

Dandelion?

There’s this fancy house on the corner of our street; they try to sell it every once in a while, & bring landscaping crews in to make it nice, but the rest of the year the house is occupied by college students, and their greenery goes rather awry….{if you look at “awry” too long, it looks suspiciously unlike a real word, but it is, I checked}. The resulting overgrowth can be a little annoying to walk over because it extends past the middle of the sidewalk, but this one redeemed itself by sprouting little fluffy things. I’m a huge fan of little fluffy things. Have you seen our cat?

People were staring at me crouching on the sidewalk to get all the pictures I wanted, but I don’t care:

It was just too sweet to leave alone ♥

♥ Momo

Tachikoma + Business.

Business names! Oh, business names. What do you think about Momo Designs?

Looking forward to the gem show next week, & finishing some work with what I have to make room & also to go into the show with a better sense of what I want to make.

I’m still a nerd at heart, so sometimes you’ll have to suffer through pictures of my work with, say, a tachikoma. {Ghost in the Shell. Robot Tanks, with little-girl voices. Very cute.}

♥ Momo

Quinn’s: Capitol Hill

Quinn's!

I would beg, borrow or steal to go to Quinn’s. It’s in the neighborhood, and I walk by it all. the. time. It hurts! Everything there is great. I had a salad there once that puts every other salad in my life to shame. Warm bread with hot from the oven chicken, still juicy, with a vinagrette over baby greens. I still remember it, and unfortunately I have to, since it doesn’t seem to be on the menu anymore. Oh well, I guess that leaves their burger:

Behold!

…here is a picture of the most amazing burger I’ve ever had. I don’t say that lightly, and I’ve eaten it three times now, and every time, it’s the most amazing burger. It’s also the right size to share with the friend or relative you’ve dragged in off the street with promises of the most amazing burger they’ll ever have. I know I have a reputation for exaggeration. I get going about food, food politics, jewelry, books, cats, cat food, Apple products, the street we’re on…whatever it is, I get going and my subject inevitably begins to roll their eyes. Don’t think I don’t notice; I just try to reign it in a little…unsuccessfully.

So I have a reputation for exaggeration, with two exceptions. Those who follow me, eyes rolling, to Quinn’s, Samurai Noodle, or Licorous have the same reaction, i.e. “This is the most amazing burger I’ve ever had!” See? It’s like the most amazing steak you could imagine, with this immensely rich flavor, on a fresh-made brioche bun, with Tillamook cheese. Cheese, Gromit, cheese! Still, telling you that won’t prepare you for the fact that for the few moments I have with that burger, I want for nothing. There’s nothing missing at that moment, it’s that good. Go have one! It’s on the bar menu and the dinner menu. We were there at 5 on a Saturday, and it looks like it starts to fill up around 5:30 or so. When I”ve walked by in the later evenings, it looks like standing room only.

And I didn’t even tell you about the brown butter blondie with ice cream and bacon caramel sauce:

Bacon Caramel Sauce...oh, my.

I recommend taking three friends and tackling this, but only if you each have cameras to capture the look on all your faces as they change with every layer of flavor in this thing. I’m not kidding. There could be a Flickr stream of just the faces of all the people who have taken their first bite of this.

Go to Quinn’s! They’re always sweet, the drinks are great, the IPA I had was awesome, and the food is life-changing.

♥ Momo

On Style.

FoxFoxFox

Foxes on the brain ♥

I have to be picky about the jewelry I wear. The inevitable course of the daily conversation goes: “What do you do?”…”Oh, so did you make that ring you’re wearing?”.

There had better be a good reason after “no”, although as soon as you’ve said it, you’ve lost them. I don’t know why. Are we all so judgmental?

I like supporting other artists, & there are incredibly talented women in this industry who deserve recognition & support, so I will still wear other designer’s work. Currently, I’m a fan of Leah Dawn, who is local, & incredible. I would like to be her friend, but I have to stop coveting her work so much, because it’s putting me in an awkward position when I talk to her.

OctopusMe. I have a ring from their Etsy shop, & it was meant to be, because I wanted it for a long time, but a friend of Shawn’s received one from her boyfriend, which made me incredibly jealous. Then they broke up, she sold it to Shawn, who then gave it to me; because it was always meant to be mine. Cast from real octopus. Too cool.

For some reason wearing anything Anthropologie – jewelry or clothing buys me an automatic pass in this town. When I say “Anthro…” instead of “No, I didn’t make this”, there’s this nod of conspiratorial understanding that passes between us, like Anthropologie is some kind of speakeasy whose full name must not be spoken aloud. Weird. Not sure how comfortable I am with that. I want to be my own person, with my own style, & Anthropologie has this growing influence & recognition in Seattle, so that anything I wear might be recognized as being from Anthro. It’s fine in the short term while I work out my sartorial style & establish myself as someone to be known for style here, but it bears thought later on in the process.

The other loophole is vintage {Edwardian} jewelry Shawn buys me. I’m spoiled for choice.

 

♥ Momo

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

Flickr + Business.

Flickr is updated! Five new galleries, and I have pictures of jewelry made by me! Tell me what you think, and tell me if it’s terrible, before I try to go sell it to people.

♥ 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