Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Moms' Tea - Butterfly Garden

This past weekend, I hosted the 3rd annual "Moms' Tea" at my place - my mom and MIL come over for some appetizers and lunch, followed by tea. I always look forward to this soiree because it's fun to plan for a ladies afternoon, and the moms get to catch up. I really love to entertain, so it's perfect. I prepared goat cheese tarts, some cantaloupe and prosciutto hors d'oeuvres, a cheese platter, & some lemon and blueberry cookies. The moms brought a salad and some individual blueberry cheesecakes, as well. And - the piece d'resistance were my butterfly cupcakes. They came out great!

I had a butterfly theme for the day, and the genesis of this idea is pretty ridiculous: A couple weeks ago, I was sitting in the food court at the mall, eating my Chik-Fil-A kids meal (what can I say, I wasn't really that hungry). The meal came with a toy, which happened to be a packet of trading cards with different animals on them. I was going to give the toy to a co-worker's kid, but I'd already opened the toy bag to see what was in it. Mainly cards with creepy, crawly critters, but one card had a photo of a beautiful monarch butterfly on it. And I actually though of my Monarch Handmaiden Yarn that I'm knitting the clapotis from! I thought that I could make these monarch cupcakes and wear my clapotis for tea!

I don't know why I quite often times set these ludicrous expectations on myself! I calculated that I'd need another 20 knitting hours to finish the clapotis. There's no way I can finish it anytime soon! But..... it did motivate me to progress on it, and make the chocolate butterflies, and the menu for the tea! So it all worked out! I had a great time at tea, and I think the moms did too!

The recipe for my tart is here, along with a little butterfly poem below!

I've watched you now a full half-hour;
Self-poised upon that yellow flower
And, little Butterfly! Indeed
I know not if you sleep or feed.
How motionless! - not frozen seas
More motionless! and then
What joy awaits you, when the breeze
Hath found you out among the trees,
And calls you forth again!
~William Wordsworth, "To a Butterfly"

Monday, April 13, 2009

"Thou shalt not drop a stitch...unless knitting a clapotis"

So..... I've been working on the clapotis. I've finished the increases and am well into the body of this wrap. The pattern isn't difficult, but calls for a droppped stitch to fall and propegate to create the parallel bars between knitted columns. Yes, that's right, an intentional dropped stitch that you let run down the project. This wasn't intuitive at all, since in knitting, a run-away dropped stitch is generally the kiss of death to a project. The saving grace here is that the pattern has built in yos at the bottom of the dropped stitch row that protect the run-aways from spreading beyond the column. Plus, the knitted columns are bordered by a "K tbl" stitch that keep them intact, as well (I'm not sure if that's fashion or function, but I'm not taking any chances). Droping the stitch is kinda like watching a run spread in a pair of stockings, except this actually is intentional and has a positive outcome. A close-up of how the dropped stitch creates a ribbon-y effect is shown above.

This weekend, I knit a good amount of this clapotis while watching "The Ten Commandments". I love those religious epic movies, and this one is the grand-daddy of them all. I just realized this is a Passover movie, even though watching it is an Easter tradition for me. True, there's no mention of Christ since this is an Old Testament story, true they mention the plague PASSing OVER the blood-sealed doors, and true Moses liberates the Jews from Rameses. But I didn't put all the pieces together until discussing it with DH. Better late than never! It is a great film, and I got a lot done in those 5 hours I spent watching and working on the clapotis.
Speaking of timing - I have to say with this project, I definitely underestimated the time I'll need to finish it. I was thinking of trying to have it completed for "Moms' Tea" this weekend, but no way. Not even my sweatshop-knitting pace could crank it out that fast. The portion of the scarf that I'm on calls for 12 set of repeats, with 10 rows per set (and 107 stitches per row). Yeah, definitely delusional to think I'd have it done anytime this month. But that's ok! The yarn (Handmaiden yarn) is beautiful to work with, so it's been a pleasure to knit it. Here's where the project is now:



Sunday, April 5, 2009

A Square Deal - Lazzara's Pizza

Last week I met Jason in the city for dinner after work. Now that the days are getting longer and the weather is warming up, it feels great to walk around and be "out and about" after work. We went to Lazzara's cafe (in the Garment District of NYC) for dinner and had a wonderful meal.


Lazzara's is located one flight of steps above W. 38th street and has an easily spottable black awning. When I first walked in, the vibe didn't suggest "hoppin' pizza cafe" to me - if actually had a more of a subdued, relaxed tone - the 3 things that stick out in my mind are the rounded tin ceilings, the low lighting, and the daily specials written on chalkboards along the wall. I kept trying to imagine what the area was originally used for prior to becoming a cafe (and came to no good conclusions). So Jason and I split a pie (6 slices): half Lazzara's Special (prosciutto, sundried tomatoes, and olives) and half Alorna (mushrooms, peppers, ground been and sausage). The thin-crust, square-cut pie arrived on a plastic lunch tray (lunch trays work for me!). Although both types were very good, I think I enjoyed the Alorna better - I found it a bit more flavorful and spicy, with the sausage and mushrooms. And the priced was very reasonable - $18 for the pie. A $25 dinner out for 2 is pretty darn good.

You know... dinner in the city after work was perfect after a stressful day. We're lucky because we're just a short train ride away, so by the time Jason's done working (on an "early night") we can meet up, get dinner, and take the train back together.

The night would have been perfect if it wasn't for the train station vagrant hanging out on the platform at my departing station, who repeatedly asked me to borrow my phone (while I was on it). The inquiry itself wasn't disturbing, just how he inquired - by yelling through an open mouth full of orange cheese crackers, thereby projecting little orange cracker crumbs at my head and face as he yelled. Really, is that any way to ask some one for a favor?

Anyway, I think you'll like Lazzara's pizza. Give it a try.