Showing posts with label pumpkin bread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pumpkin bread. Show all posts

Monday, October 23, 2023

tangled webs

 Lots to see this time of year, and not just kitten cuteness.

Even before the leaves started changing, they were thinning out, leaving space for dramatic rays of sun to burst through.

But now we've got real change!  Just a few days ago, our hiking trail was barely touched with color...


...and now the trees around are property are fully ablaze!






Because it's been so warm, there are still plenty of insects around.  Hornets still active in their nests...


...and I'm seeing lots of spiders around.  Look away if you're spider-averse!

spiny-backed orb weaver

tiny crab spider on celosia

bright-eyed daring jumping spider

They leave their prey wound up in webs around the porch, like tiny mummies...pretty appropriate for the season.  


I was so inspired that I bought a couple yards of spider web fabric to make a skirt for next fall. No spiders, but lots of insects caught in the sticky strands...reminds me so much of late autumn!


We might have a frost next week, and we'll lose the spiders until next spring.  Well, except for the chipboard spider that I've taped to the inside of a living room lamp.  That guy will probably be around until December!  :)


We've been checking the trail cams and getting lots of deer...raccoons...possums...and, of course, our chogs.


We have SO MANY tracks in the snow here...it will be exciting to see to whom they belong!


Snow seems pretty far away, though.  It's been so mild, and it will be close to 80 this week. Unbelievably, the flower garden is rallying and putting on a lot of new growth! 
 
new yarrow getting ready to bloom

only a few dead patches of bachelor buttons

So lots of bouquets...more baking...

healthy pumpkin bread recipe from Well Plated

...and as usual, more kittens.



Blue skies, moderate temperatures, beautiful colors...have a great week!





Monday, January 23, 2017

The Quilt I Built

January showers bring January flowers...at least in South Carolina!


The camellia trees are in their element, absolutely dripping with flowers.  The smaller shrubs will be coming into flower in the next month, and we're about due for Lenten Roses, too.  I can't wait! 

Tabitha loves a rainy day.


I went outside with my camera last week despite the drizzle, and it seems that it was 'fowl' weather, indeed!  A flock of turkeys was feeding in the side yard.  I startled a big heron at the pond's edge, and also a few ducks...


...and "our" goz!  A group of ten...the original eight plus the two parents.  I expect that the flock will separate soon.


They're already acting a little testy, constantly chasing each other around aggressively.


Breeding season begins in February, and then...babies!!!

Part of my master organization plan is to do some things that I've been meaning to do for years but never took the time to do.  Last week I scheduled in time to make some household products with essential oils.  I made a general household cleaner, window cleaning spray, conditioner, shave gel, and a shower spray for the tiles. 


The real winners are the general cleaner and the window cleaner.  I have always cleaned with either vinegar or bleach.  I added some water, essential oils, and dish soap to the vinegar.  It doesn't clean any better than just plain vinegar, but it sure smells good!  The window cleaner (with vinegar and witch hazel) works and smells great.  The conditioner (basically water, apple cider vinegar, and essential oils) was kind of a bust.  I've used vinegar on my hair for a long time, and the essential oils added to the vinegar/water mixture are all but overwhelmed by the vinegar smell. And the shave gel...sigh.  I know you can get a bottle of aloe vera at the dollar store for a buck, but I read that the stabilizers and thickening agents used there weren't great for your body.  I ordered cold-pressed organic aloe vera gel ($12) and, with olive oil and essential oils, made the most expensive shave gel ever.  It makes my skin soft but it's runny, so it's hard to shave with.  I think I'll go back to the spray stuff after this. 

I tried a new recipe this week, since I had some leftover pumpkin puree.  I have a great pumpkin bread recipe, but I was intrigued by a recipe that uses raw honey instead of sugar, and Greek yogurt instead of oil/butter (I left out the optional millet).  I didn't expect much, but whoa! 


It was just as good as my regular pumpkin bread recipe.  The regular recipe is 400 calories a slice, and this is just 200 calories a slice.  I highly, highly recommend it! 

This was a great week for finishing projects.  I finished my crewel work, sewing anemone flowers onto some blue linen fabric, and made it into a pillow.


I'm pretty pleased with it and ready to move on to the next crewel project!

I also...drum roll...finished my quilt!!


It was a great milestone for me, finishing this quilt.  I'd always had a desire to learn how to quilt, but I didn't even know how to sew.  I had to take local classes, and online classes, and watch Youtube videos, and make a LOT of mistakes (I didn't even understand what seam allowance was on my first practice quilt!).  I had to learn that a quilt isn't sewn in a day.  It's a process.  I had to snatch 15 and 30 minutes when I could.  I had to recognize that a quilt will never be perfect.  There will always be wonky seams and squares that don't match up as they should.  I'm a perfectionist and it's hard for me to continue working on what I consider to be a flawed product.  But many flawed products helped me to end up with a pretty pleasing first quilt!  

It took me a while to sew the binding (edge fabric) on.  I used clear nylon thread so that the sewing won't show through.  It's very soft, very cozy, and just the right size for cuddling on the couch!  Now if only we could get some cooler weather here so I can actually use it! 

Monday, November 7, 2011

Pumpkin Bread...Sugar, Spice, and Everything Nice!

The bees around here are starting to react to the cold weather. I don't see many honey bees at the remaining flowers now, but this little fellow clutched our screen window for two days before expiring.

On cold mornings, the carpenter bees are drowsy beneath the marigold petals until very late indeed. They seem indifferent to handling if you're inclined to pick one up, but I don't like to bother them.

The late autumn plants, like my blackberry lilies, are going to seed. Their leathery pods are starting to split...

...to reveal the shiny, pearl-like black seeds within.

The neighborhood squirrels have been busy, too, with last-minute preparations. This one inspects a mulched bed...

...before bounding off into my marigolds.

I found a cabbage looper (Trichoplusia ni) on one of my indoor plants.

He twisted and turned in typical looper manner (body contortions, like an inch worm), looking for a safe place...

...before grasping the petals that would give him safe passage. They love chrysanthemums.

The beautiful ginkgo tree across the street is at its yearly peak, in our opinion. We have three horizontal windows above our bed, and we love to look at it in the morning, when the early morning sun hits the leaves.

Our lilac bushes have taken on a lovely gold tone, too. They're one of my favorite fall leaves.

I frequently bring them in for our enjoyment.

I love to bring the outside in. I've got my little pottery dishes around, filled with acorns, seeds, and leaves.

I recently made a fall display for our dining room table. I set these fir seeds out on a bed of moss...

...with dried berries and leaves...

...and a fall pumpkin or two.

I stacked everything on a glass cake stand. A miniature fall landscape!

I love to have fall displays like this. It's so cheerful!

I recently finished a knitting project that I've been working on, off and on (mostly off!), for the past two years. It's a blanket, knit with Cascade 220 (100% wool), in a heathery oatmeal color. The throw is ruched, which means that I knitted a straight stretch of stockinette, then did a row of increases, more stockinette, and a row of decreases. The 'ruched' section blouses out as a result.

I felt like the finished blanket was a bit bland.

I decided to knit some white wool "X"s across every other row of stockinette. I prefer it this way, I think!

You can really see the ruching when the blanket is folded.

It's a nice couch throw, perfect for chilly nights. Having said that, I don't think I'll ever knit a blanket again...what a job!

It's fall, and 'tis the season for pumpkin. After much searching, baking, and recipe tweaking, I've come up with a pumpkin bread recipe that meets my stringent requirements: moist, spicy, flavorful, and soft. It's absolutely wonderful and, topped with a yummy cream cheese frosting, a must-bake around here in the fall and winter months.

Perfect Pumpkin Bread
Adapted from allrecipes.com
Makes two loaves


Ingredients
1 15 ounce can of pumpkin puree
4 eggs
1 cup vegetable oil
2/3 cup water
2 cups white sugar
1 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 1/2 cups white flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
3/4 teaspoon cloves
1/2 teaspoon ginger

Directions
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour two loaf pans. In one bowl, mix together the pumpkin puree, eggs, oil, water, and sugars until blended. In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, salt, and spices. Fold the dry ingredients into the pumpkin puree mixture and combine until just blended. Split batter between two loaf pans and bake until golden brown, around 50 minutes.

This bread is SO MOIST.

If you'd like, you can lighten it up by reducing the sugar to two cups and swapping 1/2 cup applesauce for the oil. You won't miss it!

I top this bread with my familiar cream cheese frosting: a dollop of cream cheese, a dash of vanilla, a mound of powdered sugar, and a dribble of milk, all whisked together with a few shakes of pumpkin pie spice.

Give it a try...you won't be disappointed!

Have a great week!