roses

roses

Monday, December 31, 2018

Random fact about Deb: Feelings on House Plants

I love house plants. I have had them every place I have lived. Or at least attempted to. There was a while there that I couldn't keep the things alive. Then my grandmother gifted me with an unkillable plant. It's called white inch plant. That thing has not only survived extended drought periods (aka I forgot to water it for a while) but it has been slowly conquering the world. I've given cuttings of it away to pretty much everybody who will take one.

I currently have a large hanging basket with a thriving one in it. I also have one in a pot on a book shelf, one in a jar of water on a filing cabinet, and another in a pot on a window ledge in the bathroom. White inch plant is probably one of my favorite indoor house plants. My other favorite is spider plants. I have one that's been with me for twenty years now. I'm honestly not sure how it has lasted so long but it has.

My other indoor houseplant love is African violets. These are fussy little buggers and I haven't mastered the art of keeping them alive AND blooming. I keep trying, though, because they look so pretty when they're in full bloom. And it amuses me to dust my plants. My favorite African violets are the pink ones with the purple edges.

Chickpea casserole

Ingredients:
2 15 oz cans of chickpeas
1 lb bulk pork sausage
4 slices of bacon, fried crisp and crumbled
1/2 cup diced ham
1 tbsp garlic, minced
1 tsp thyme
2 tsp red pepper flakes

Step one: In a dutch oven, brown the sausage with the garlic.

Step two: Add bacon, ham, and chickpeas. Add remaining spices. Cook on medium heat, covered, for 30 minutes, stirring often.

Step three: Reduce heat to a simmer and uncover. Stir frequently.

Serve hot. This serves six people. One serving is approximately a cup and has, approximately 30 carbs.

Shoveling snow in a blizzard.

The title of this post encapsulated how I felt today. I know I got a lot of stuff done. Put together the budget for next month, got my planner ready for next year (mostly), and took care of a heap of other things. At the same time, the kitchen sink is full of dishes and I still have more stuff to do before I really get going in January.

Yesterday was a rough day for Snuggle Bug and today hasn't been much better because the little guy got over the flu just in time to get an ear infection. Thank goodness for the urgent care people being open yesterday. They were able to see him and we've got him on some antibiotics to take care of it. His ear is bothering him a bit more this evening. I'd take him back over to urgent care but they're not open right now. Since he's on antibiotics, I don't think there's much more they can do for him right now anyways. If he's not feeling better tomorrow, I will probably be taking him to see the family doctor on Wednesday just to make sure everything is ok.

Cuddle Bear has a busy Wednesday ahead of him. I'm picking him up early from school to go see Dr. C., his orthodontist. Add to this the fact that Wednesday is the first day of school after a long break, I suspect that there is going to be a lot happening there. If I can swing it, I'm going to do my best to get him back to school in time to finish out the school day. I'm not sure, though, because his school day ends an hour earlier than it did before because he's in middle school now. That makes scheduling dentist and other appointments tricky.

I am pleased to say that Beloved and both kids are over the flu. I, however, have a cold now and sound like a frog. It is exceedingly frustrating because I was going to try to do stuff but I spent a good chunk of my day Saturday in bed feeling exhausted, yesterday was almost as bad, and today I have a hellish sore throat. It was trying this morning to keep the kids from being super loud. You may have seen the commercial of the mother with a kitchen full of kids who could barely whisper and trying to get the kids ready for school.

Friday, December 28, 2018

Almond butter cookies (no sugar)

Ingredients:

2 cups no sugar added almond butter (I used chunky style.)
1 cup almond flour
1/2 cup granulated stevia for baking
2 large eggs

Mix together until uniform. Shape into walnut sized balls, place on parchment lined pan, and flatten with a fork dipped in water. (this keeps your batter from sticking to the fork.) Bake at 350 degrees F for 15 minutes.

Thursday, December 27, 2018

Thinky thoughts.

Today I have learned a few things. 

First, leaving a pizza peel sitting on the stove top is a bad idea. (It only got a little scorched from sitting too close to a burner. No fire or smoke. Still OOPSIES!) 

Second, hot glue guns are superior to fabric or craft glue for making sock puppets. This time, the eyeballs are actually staying on the puppets.

Third, my biggest bump in readership over the last few months have been when I have posted something about my attempts to make low carb food and when I have posted about crafting projects.

While this blog's goal is not to get big readership numbers, it has me thinking that I should post more about the random crap that I make on a daily basis because people seem to be interested in this. And that I should do more than just note in my notebook the recipes that I have been trying out in an attempt to make low carb desserts and other foods to help me adjust to my new normal.

I need to figure out how to get pictures off of the camera so that I can post photos of the stuff I am making. Some things I can take pictures of while I'm just sitting in front of the camera on the laptop. Others, well, they don't lend themselves well to that process. According to theory, I can get them off of the camera as .jpeg images with a usb cable. I'm going to experiment with that this weekend. Because I really want to get more use out of this digital camera.

Easy morning egg cups. (Low carb.)

This has become a breakfast staple for me since developing diabetes. I love my silicone cupcake pan for making these. Because of two things: getting them out of the pan is easy as pie and clean up is a breeze. I have a few varieties that I make these in.

Version one: Sunny side up.

Break one egg into each compartment of a greased muffin tin (or of an ungreased silicone muffin pan). With a fork prick the yolk sack twice. Bake at 350 degrees F. for 30 minutes.

Version two: Scrambled

Crack six eggs into a bowl. Whisk together until well blended. Pour some into each compartment of a muffin tin prepared as per version one. Your compartment should be 2/3 full. Bake at 350 degrees F. for 30 minutes.

Version three: Fruited.

Prepare as per scrambled version. Add one or two berries to each compartment. Bake as for scrambled.

Version four: With Meat.

I've been using precooked bacon for this. Dice up the bacon fine. Then add it to the eggs prepared as per the scrambled version. Bake as for scrambled. If you want, you can do this with cooked breakfast sausage.

Version five: With Kale/Spinach

Again, prepare your eggs as per the scrambled version. Cut your veggies up fine. Sprinkle them in to your egg mixture and then bake as for scrambled.

The fruited and the vegetable versions add a minimal amount of carbs per egg cup. If you use black berries or blueberries, it is something like three carbs per egg cup when you put up to four berries in there.

Now, there is some genius out there who have made mini quiche with ham slices as the crust in this process. I've yet to try out that recipe. When I do, I'll post my thoughts on it and what I did to it. Because I can never leave a recipe that I enjoy alone, I just have to experiment with it.

Low carb meatloaf recipe

I know, the idea of meatloaf having lots of carbs sounds contradictory. However, when you look at the recipes and almost all of them call for bread crumbs or oatmeal, you find that it is going to have more carbs than you wanted in it. This is a pretty basic meatloaf recipe. I cut down the carbs even more by skipping the sauce on top of the meatloaf. Honestly, I can't see the appeal of meatloaf drowning in sauce.

Ingredients
1 lb ground beef
1/2 cup ground almonds
1 egg
1/4 cup tomato sauce (You can use ketchup here but it will have more carbs than plain tomato sauce.)
1/4 cup mustard

Mix all ingredients until uniform. Turn into a loaf pan and pat into shape. Cook in the oven at 350 degrees F. for 45 minutes to an hour. Insert a meat thermometer into your loaf to make sure it tests as well done for beef.

The ground almonds don't add a nutty flavor to the meatloaf. They do, however, help the meatloaf retain moisture. I'm not sure how, but it works. And my picky eaters can't tell the difference between this and the version with breadcrumbs.

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Spinning myth or reality? I don't know.

There's an old tale that says if you don't get your spinning done by Mother's Night (or Yule, depending on who is telling the story), Dame Hulda (or is it Frigga, it depends on who is telling the story) will tangle up your yarn. I tried to get all my spinning done by Mother's Night. That's the solstice evening.

I had some yarn that I hadn't plied sitting in a bowl. Wound into two neat little balls. They looked almost cute sitting in that bowl. As I was watching my eldest shovel a quarter inch of snow off of the side walk (this was before he caught the flu) out the living room window, I decided I was going to ply those two cute little balls of yarn into one cute little skein of yarn.

I had a devil of a time plying that. Corkscrews and pigtails in the yarn as I was plying it. Balls bouncing out of the bowl and rolling across the floor. It was a mess. I normally wouldn't have had this much difficulty. Still, I was there, the day after Mother's Night with a tangled skein. I suppose I should have listened to the old tales and finished that skein the day before.

Gratitude challenge!

So, I see that I have some new readers. Hi! If you blog as well, I have a challenge for you.

I challenge you to post ten things you are grateful for from this year. They don't have to be in order. They just have to be ten things that you are thankful for. Here's my ten.


  1. My husband and children.
  2. Our family and friends (who are basically family by love)
  3. My betta fish Aros
  4. A clean living room at the end of a long day
  5. Cuddle Bear making honor roll
  6. Snuggle Bug's inventive stories
  7. My writerly friends and their support
  8. My readers and their support
  9. Recipes I can have that are diabetic friendly
  10. Zoodles
What's on your ten things to be thankful for this year?

Things I learned holiday baking this year.

I was attempting to adapt old family recipes to my new life with low carbs. I learned several things in this process.

First: You can not completely swap granulated stevia for baking 1:1 for sugar in your recipe. THE PACKAGES LIE! You have to swap out half your sugar if you're going to be using granulated stevia or your cookies will not bake properly.

Second: You can sub in a good portion of almond flour into Mom's peanut butter cookie recipe and get a better result. These things stayed moist and delightful for longer than a day. Original recipe they kinda dried out pretty fast.

Third: You can replace the oatmeal in Grandma's peanut butter no-bake cookies with coconut.

Fourth: It's not a great idea to swap the sugar for stevia 1:1 in Grandma's peanut butter no-bake cookies. They don't set up properly unless you refrigerate them. At room temperature they basically turn into piles of soft, coconut filled peanut butter fudge. Still delicious, Beloved helped me take care of the evidence.

Finally, I learned that your sense of taste is 100000% improved by getting over the flu. The first batch of peanut butter cookies was made while I still had the flu. I was sure that I had messed them up horribly because they tasted utterly tasteless. I said to myself something was wrong because they had to at least taste like peanut butter. (I didn't let the family try any of those cookies because I was so sure I had messed them up.) Then I tried the recipe again after I was over the flu and I didn't feel like I was eating cardboard with nuts in it. It had actual flavor.

Holiday cheer?

So, I have to start my story off with a bit of a preface. I had the flu recently. I just got over it in time to be ready for Yule. Well, Yule came along and the guys got a gift I did not intend to give - the flu. Christmas eve, we were lucky and the family doctor was able to see my youngest (who was living up to his nickname on here, Snuggle Bug). We thought he was the only one sick with it and started making plans to do family gathering in such a manner that he could rest and his brother could go spend time with the extended family. Then Christmas day happened. Beloved and Cuddle Bear both came down with the flu.

It was Christmas day, we knew that the family doctor wasn't going to be in office. We were pretty sure that after hours care over at the next town over wasn't going to be in office either. So, the guys toughed it out until today. Now, I called the family doctor explained the situation and he made his decision whilst on the phone with me to put them on the same stuff as Snuggle Bug. It makes sense, they've all got the flu.

Christmas eve, I went into Walmart to pick up Snuggle Bug's medicine before the pharmacy closed and the place was a zoo. I expected that and planned around things being super busy. I even managed to have enough mental fortitude to handle the crowds despite my social phobia. I expected going into Walmart on Christmas eve, there's going to be a crowd of last minute shoppers and people buying goods for holiday dinner.

It was going in to Walmart today to pick up the medicine and a few things for dinner that caught me off guard. First off, about half of the Christmas stuff was already on clearance and off the shelves. I was surprised there wasn't just a heap of stuff in a big wire bin marked down to a dollar. What was left on the shelves, I watched people getting into actual shoving matches over who got the last stupid gigantic mug with bad hot cocoa mix. I saw someone mindlessly push another person aside to get to a large bin full of chocolates and half dive into the bin to start digging around for something.

These were not children doing this. This was grown adults. I was astounded. I'm not sure what was more mind boggling. The people behaving like this or the fact that half of the stuff for Valentine's day was up already. They were still playing canned Christmas music. It made the scene more surreal. If it was all in a minor chord, I would have thought I was an extra in some badly made horror movie. Holiday cheer?

Friday, December 21, 2018

Deb's December KAL scarf

It's been really busy over the last few days but I did get some knitting in after putting the kids on the bus to school. First I worked the triangles that I did last in reverse. So, take the steps from the last KAL post and do them backwards.

Then I knit twelve rows. One for each day of yule that we'll be celebrating at my house. It would have been thirteen but I ran out of yarn.

Color change was off of a small ball of red yarn, but if you have something else 'holiday' colored, go for it. I did the classic K2P2 rib for six rows until that ball of yarn ran out.

Next color change was to black for the night sky. I knit four rows and then got bored.

So then came another color change. I knit a big triangle similar to what I did before, except I had the stockinette section in the middle and two reverse stockinette sections on either side. I worked this by starting with a purl on either end of my row and then proceeded in the usual fashion, increasing my side triangles until they met in the middle. Then I knit three rows. And that ball of yarn ran out.

I took up some yellow yarn and just knit four rows. I tried it on and found it was a length to my liking and decided I was done.

Monday, December 17, 2018

Crochet apron.

Nothing fancy here. Just make a granny square roughly wide enough to go across your lap. To make it up, turn it on a corner and sew down top corner. Thread a ribbon through to tie around your neck. Then thread small lengths of ribbon through the two corners that are at your waist. Tie them in back and viola! I'd post a picture but mine is kinda funky looking because it is nothing but scrap yarn. I started out thinking I was going to make a granny square blanket and realized I didn't have enough scrap yarn to make a full sized blanket. That's when the apron idea hit me.

All that acrylic and open mesh makes it a poor choice to wear for cooking but it's just fine to wear while your cleaning and want to keep some of the dust off your clothes.

Menu Week of Dec. 17

Date Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Sun scrambled eggs sandwiches /
leftovers
pizza
Mon kids: school
me: oatmeal,
coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: leftovers & ramen
Me: salad
hamburgers
Tues kids: school
me: oatmeal, turkey
coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: out
Me: salad
tacos, mexican
rice, salad
Wed kids: school
me: oatmeal, nuts,
turkey
& coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: out
Me: leftovers
spaghetti &
meatballs
Thurs kids: school
me: zucchini hash
w/ eggs & toast &
coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: leftovers
Me: leftovers
gen. tso chicken
cauliflower rice
veggie sticks & dip
Fri kids: school
me: mason jar
omlette & toast &
coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: sandwiches &
chips
Me: leftovers
chicken korma
cauliflower rice
naan
kids: ez mac
Sat eggs, bacon
& fruit
leftovers / sandwiches roast chicken &
leftovers

Deb's December KAL scarf

Hi there,

It's been busy the last couple of days. But we have found the living room floor once again and made good headway on getting the kids' room straightened out. This meant one rest day from knitting and a day that I didn't get to the computer to type up what I had done.

Sunday was a no knitting day. But Saturday I did a section of triangles. My scarf divides up neatly into four groups of ten. Yours may not. If it doesn't divide evenly into groups of ten, you may choose to just knit one big triangle. I started out planning on one big triangle but realized that with my yarn, I may not have had enough to make one that big. (Turned out to be the case, I have moved onto my next ball of yarn.)

Right side R1: Purl one, knit nine. Repeat across the row. (Alternately, purl one, knit the rest of the row.)
Wrong side R2: Purl eight, knit two. Repeat across the row. (Purl everything but the last two stitches, knit those.)
R3: P3, K7, repeat across the row. (P3, K across)
R4: K6, p4, repeat across the row. (k across, p last 4 stitches)
R5: P5, K5, repeat across the row. (P5, K across the row)
R6: k4, p6, repeat across the row. (k across, p last 6 stitches)
R7: k7, p3, repeat across the row. (p7 , K across row)
R8: P8, K 2, repeat across the row. (k across, p 8)
R9: K9, p1, repeat across row. (p9, k across row)
R10: Knit row. (continue the alternating knits and purls in the progression above until you have reached entirely across your scarf).

Today, I worked a section in this stitch that I don't see in my knitting book. I worked on the right side all knit and on the wrong side K2P2. I did this for about twenty rows. Then I hit the end of my ball of multi colored yarn. I have changed colors and knit one row for each color in my scarf (9).

Friday, December 14, 2018

Crochet miser's purse.

Interweave's Spin Off and Piecework have featured at different times a knit pattern for a miser's purse. Looking at the historical patterns, I've seen them for crochet as well. I decided that for a special somebody, I was going to use some of my handspun yarn to make them one. Because I didn't have enough to make the full sized one that I saw in the Victorian pattern book, I came up with my own  pattern.

The yarn weight I used was a ply of cobweb weight wool singles with size 10 crochet thread. It basically was size 10 crochet thread. I had two rings that are one inch in diameter. If you don't have them, you could crochet a ring that sized. It needs to be able to slide along the finished product.

Chain eight with a size H hook. Work a single crochet into each stitch. At the last stitch of the row, work three single crochet. Then work a single crochet into the back of each stitch of the chain row. At the beginning of the row, work two stitches into the first chain and slip stitch into the first stitch. Chain one. (16)

Work two stitches into the first stitch of the round. Work one single crochet into each stitch of the round until at the first of the three stitch increase at the middle of the round. work an increase into that stitch. Single crochet into the next stitch. Work an increase into the next stitch. Then single crochet into every stitch until the final stitch of the round. In the final stitch, work an increase then slip stitch into the first stitch of the round. (20)

Place marker. Begin working in the round with out slip stitching together. Single crochet into each stitch around until piece is four inches long. At the marker make a treble crochet. Chain three. Skip next stitch. Treble crochet into next stitch. single crochet into next stitch and continue around. (23)

On the next round, single crochet into the first treble crochet. Skip the first chain stitch. Single crochet into the second chain stitch. Skip the third chain stitch. Single crochet into the next treble stitch. Single crochet into the next single crochet and continue thus around.

Single crochet until piece is eight inches long. Bind off. Sew open end together so that it lies flat. One end will have a semi rectangular side and the opposite end will be rounded. Roll up pouch and slide rings on.

To use the miser's purse, slide both rings to one side of the hole and insert coins on one side. Then slide both rings to the opposite side of the hole, insert coins of a different denomination on the opposite side. The addition of the coins will keep the rings on the purse. To keep the coins in the purse, slide the rings until they meet their respective ends where the coins are.

Deb's December KAL scarf project.

Today was a day of knitting and rest.

Section one, stockinette for 10 rows.

Section two, calculate the largest single digit divisor for your project. (Mine was 5.) Alternate knit and purl sections of that number, like you're making ribbing for that number of rows. Then switch to make the ribbing with reversed for another set of that number of rows. (Yeah, it's basket weave or box stitch depending on how many you do. It just looks cool.)

Thursday, December 13, 2018

Deb's December KAL scarf project.

Knit 12 rows today, because you're busy and you need something simple and easy. ♥

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Research, yeah, that's what it is.

I've been working on recreating Civil War era patterns. The hood I made this week is similar to a bonnet that I saw in a Civil War era pattern book. That bonnet was knitted. I'm still not at the stage of making circular flat items or flat items that begin in the center with knitting so I knew that bonnet wasn't going to work for me as of this moment.  So, I sat down and started fiddling around with some holiday yarn. I was bored. I was sick and not up to doing a whole lot so I made this really simple hood pattern (posted down feed about two posts earlier, complete with pics).

I have also made my own 'bosom friend' based off of designs I had seen in Civil War era pattern books. Where the sparkly glittery yarn of the bonnet isn't something that would pass for a period era item, the tie-shawl most definitely would. It has the added bonus of being made from handspun wool. Now, I didn't spin the wool, my mother-in-law did. But still, it is handspun wool. Beautifully dyed in shades of brown and russet, the color of late autumn leaves on the ground.

Why am I doing this? Well, partly because I want to eventually make my own entire knitted/crochet ensemble. I have sewn my own medieval gown with some help from my auntie Adrian. That I stitched by hand. I may not have made the fabric, but we cut and pieced it together in an afternoon. In a bout of insomnia, I stitched the thing together for a full 24 hours by hand. It made for wonderful LARP costuming. I loved the characters I played wearing it. I plan on eventually playing another character where I get to wear that again.

My current LARP character is from the Victorian period. This is concurrent with the American Civil War period as best I can recall. So, when I realized I had an excuse to start making these beautiful patterns that I had been admiring for years, I whipped out my yarn and crochet hooks. I am going to eventually knit the underskirt that I've been admiring. I will also eventually figure out how to knit stockings.

My plan is to show up at spinning guild dressed in costume a few times a year. This year, it is going to be the medieval costume with one of my distaffs in hand. I haven't decided which guild meeting it is going to be, but my nerdy butt is going to be there spinning like someone from the 10th century dressed like it. And then I'm going to show up dressed as my Civil War era character, with knitting or crochet in tow. Because I think that 2019 is going to be the year I celebrate my weirdness.

Looking for suggestions.

I'm thinning out my cookbook collection to replace some of the less used ones with diabetic friendly cookbooks. James W. has already suggested the South Beach Diet cookbook. I've signed a copy out from the library and am going to record a few of the recipes in my notebook. I'm wondering if anyone has any other suggestions.

I am still working on adapting old favorite recipes to my new normal. Today, I'm going to attempt to make no bake peanut butter cookies with stevia instead of sugar and dessicated unsweetened coconut flakes instead of oatmeal. It is my hope that it will be at least as good if not better than the original. I'm still planning on doing some serious holiday baking with regular sugar. I just have to go out and buy some special for the purpose. It feels weird saying that.

I'm slowly making in roads on learning recipes using almond flour in place of white flour. The almond bread recipe tastes a lot like french toast. I've decided the next time I make it I'm adding a little vanilla extract and some stevia to the loaf so that it really does taste like the fancy version of french toast and have that as a breakfast treat. I found some zero calorie/zero carbs maple syrup replacement that actually tastes kinda good. I used it on my oatmeal the other day.

I'm not going to go full keto diet because my doctor has strongly advised me against it. But I am finding that the keto snacks help me keep my blood sugar under control. A lot of those keto snacks are things like ham rolled up around a cheese stick or pickle. But I am finding that I want things like cookies once in a while. So I'm trying out those keto cookie recipes I find online. Some have worked out ok, like the one I just posted. Others came out really badly - I am not going to post those or the link to the original recipe. For the record, the original recipe was worse than my adapted version, and both were pretty horrible.

Low carb peanut butter cookies.

This recipe makes a half dozen medium sized or a dozen SMALL cookies.

1 cup chunky peanut butter (low/no sugar added preferred)
1 cup granulated stevia (or other sugar replacement, like Splenda for baking)
1 large egg

Cream together the peanut butter and the stevia. Add egg and mix well. With damp hands, roll into walnut sized (or hazel nut sized) balls. Place on parchment lined cookie sheet and with a damp fork press flat. Bake at 350 deg F for 15 minutes. Check if your cookies are small after 10 minutes, they should be golden and look dry on top.

It didn't pass the kid's test for yummy but it did pass Beloved's. So, I've got cookies I can make for him and I that are low carb and actually kinda tasty.

Deb's December KAL scarf project.

I was sleeping a lot yesterday. When I was awake I did get some knitting in. But I'll be honest, I was pretty brain fried. That meant six rows of knit stitch and then six rows of purl stitch, basically 12 rows of garter stitch. Today, I did seed stitch for six rows and got bored. So I did another six rows of stockinette. Seed stitch looks kinda nice but it got boring pretty fast. I'd do better if I didn't have to look at what I was doing, I'm sure. But I can't knit blind yet. I'm thinking about doing a cable of some kind next, because I'm getting to the light colored portion of the colorway. You can't see cables very well on dark colored yarn. I'll let you know what I decide on tomorrow.

Monday, December 10, 2018

Crochet square pillow cover.

Make a granny square double the size of your pillow. Sew into an envelope shape. Place pillow form inside. Secure remaining flap with a button.


I have made this, it is ok. It isn't working so well with the rectangular pillow I have. I'm going to get a square pillow form and use that next. I have a pile of small granny squares I am going to sew together into a rectangular pillow cover for that one. Just make a square twice the size of your pillow. Fold it in half and sew up the narrow ends. Slip your pillow form into the 'envelope' and then secure the open end with buttons or sew shut.

Crochet hood pattern.

Using sport weight yarn and size h hook, chain three.

Make twelve double crochet stitches into the first loop of the chain. Slip stitch to third chain stitch at beginning of round. Chain three. (12)

Use double crochet stitches for the remainder of pattern. Increase in every stitch. Slip stitch to beginning of round. Chain three. (24)

Increase in first stitch. Double crochet (DC). *Increase in next stitch. Double crochet in next stitch.* Repeat * for remaining stitches. End on double crochet. Slip stitch to beginning of round. Chain three. (36)

Increase in first stitch. DC into next two stitches. *Increase in next stitch. DC into next two stitches.* Repeat * for remaining stitches. End on double crochet. Slip stitch to beginning of round. Chain three. (48)

Increase in first stitch. DC into next three stitches. *Increase in next stitch. DC into next three stitches.* Repeat for remaining stitches. End on DC. Slip stitch to beginning of round. Chain three. (60)

Stop working in rounds now. DC into each stitch. DO NOT SLIP STITCH TO BEGINNING OF ROW. Chain 3, turn.

Increase 1 DC in turning chain. DC into each stitch. At final stitch of row, work increase. Chain three, turn. (62)

Increase 1 DC in turning chain. DC into each stitch. At final stitch of row, work increase. Chain three, turn. (64)

Repeat above row until row is 80 stitches. Bind off. Add ties or button to secure flaps beneath chin.

Side view

Front view

Rear view

Deb's December KAL scarf project.

So, I'm feeling awful enough that I cancelled the kid's dentist appointment so I wasn't patient zero for an influenza outbreak in Pittsford. I like those people at that office too much to subject them to this.

(Pittsford Pediatric Dentistry are awesome and work really well with kids who have all kinds of things going on in their lives. They even have therapy dogs come in on a bi-weekly basis to help the kiddos out. I admit, however, I feel old looking at the games they have for the kids to play and saying 'hey, I played that when I was your age.' but the controllers for Pacman are styled like the x-box controllers so I can't really show the boys how to play it. I'm sure they'll figure it out, though.)

After my nap, I got some lunch and did some knitting. I took the smallest non zero digit of my age and used that for the basis of a rib pattern. Then I rolled a die to see how many rows I was going to work. Turned out to be a 4x4 rib for 6 rows. To finish out the block of ten rows for today, I am doing broken stockinette stitch for four rows.

I think I'm near the halfway point of the ball of yarn. That means I should be getting close to half done with this scarf. It is coming out a bit shorter than I anticipated. So I am likely going to start using scrap yarn when I finish up this ball. I want it long enough to wrap comfortably around my neck and wide enough to cover my face little bit too. This has been a struggle for me in making scarves. They either come out wide enough and too short or long enough but not wide enough. This is what I get for not making gauge swatches.

Sunday, December 09, 2018

Deb's December KAL scarf project.

After the last few days, I've been still feeling under the weather but forgetting to post what I've done thus far.

After the garter stitch, I knit six rows of 1x1 ribbing and then six rows of moss stitch. (I originally planned on 12 rows of moss stitch but screwed up at first and couldn't figure out why.)

After the moss stitch, I did twelve rows of slip stitch color stripes. I used white yarn with my rainbow varigated main color.

I then knit ten rows in the main color.

Tomorrow, I'll post what I wind up doing while I'm waiting at Cuddle Bear's dentist appointment.

Friday, December 07, 2018

I'm a little angry.

So I went on a rant. I'm sick with the flu. I'm tired. But I am so angry that I can't sleep. I'm so angry that I feel extra nauseated. I am going to try to get some rest. But, if you want to see my thoughts on the recent attempt to recreate the Satanic Panic as a Lokean panic, the place of transgender people in Filianism/Déanism, or whatever the hell else I went off about (I'm sure there was one more thing I just can't remember it), click the link. The language is strongly worded, vulgar even. Absolutely not safe for children.

Thursday, December 06, 2018

Get your ham at Aldi's.

Right now, they've got some pretty good ham stocked. Not all of them are huge. I picked up one and made it for dinner last night. Nice and flavorful with out having to have some kind of glaze added to it. There's a good amount left over from last night that I'm probably going to throw into a pot of lentil soup tonight. The Aldi's near me also has boneless turkey breasts. I'm sticking that on the shopping list next week, because I don't want to commit to an enormous turkey for four people. Boneless turkey breasts can be cut up and used a whole bunch of ways. We still get the goodness of turkey with out 50000 days of eating turkey.

But, back to the ham, the smoked carving ham is really excellent. I didn't cook it quite as how the package directed which I think it why it was a little tough to carve. But I am completely going to do that again when I have the opportunity.

Deb's December KAL Scarf Project.

Today, we're just going to be lazy and do garter stitch until we get bored with it. I don't know about the rest of you, but it looks like I've caught a virus and this constant headache is making math harder than usual. Interesting tidbit about this self striping yarn I'm using, when I hit a color change point, the color of the yarn changes. The color runs are pretty long.

Wednesday, December 05, 2018

Holiday complications.

I'm coming down the home stretch of getting projects done. I'm now at the point where I have to sew up the binding on one blanket. Aside from that, I have to do my holiday baking. There's a short list of things to buy for the 12 days of Yule I'm going to do with the kids again this year. I'm going to start Christmas day. They get their big present then. After that it will be little things like sweets and matchbox cars or something similar. It's not going to be thirteen matchbox cars or whatever.

I'm going to have some challenges this year in finding things that are both useful and still holiday related. I'm thinking about the stocking stuffers like pencils and fancy erasers. The boys are still working on sketchbooks and Doug's sort of journaling. I'm also going to be giving them a few joint gifts. The complication here is the fact that we're trying to get things out of the house that we don't need. Buying a bunch of random dollar store toys is just going to make more of a mess. So I'm thinking about things like a package of socks (because they go through socks like nobody's business) as a gag gift one day, new mittens and other small but practical things.

I'm also going to crochet them their own snowflakes. I will also take some of the gobs of white yarn I have and make 'snowballs' for them to fool around with. Basically large pompoms that they can mess around with in the house. I'm just stumped on what else to do. I'm leaning towards cookies.

Menu for Week of 12/2/18

Date Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Sun scrambled eggs sandwiches /
leftovers
pizza
Mon kids: school
me: oatmeal,
coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: leftovers & ramen
Me: salad
peanut noodles
Tues kids: school
me: oatmeal, turkey
coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: out
Me: salad
spaghetti &
meatballs /
ez-mac for kids
Wed kids: school
me: oatmeal, nuts,
turkey
& coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: out
Me: leftovers
ham, mashed
potatoes/mashed
cauliflower &
salad
Thurs kids: school
me: zucchini hash
w/ eggs & toast &
coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: leftovers
Me: leftovers
gen. tso chicken
cauliflower rice
veggie sticks & dip
Fri kids: school
me: mason jar
omlette & toast &
coffee
Kids: school
Hubby: sandwiches &
chips
Me: leftovers
chicken korma
cauliflower rice
naan
kids: ez mac
Sat eggs, bacon
& fruit
leftovers / sandwiches roast chicken &
leftovers

Deb's December Knit Along Scarf Project.

Day 1: Cast on the same number of stitches as your age. Knit the same number of rows as in your household.

Day 2: Stockinette stitch the same number of rows as years of your oldest friendship/relationship

Day 3: Change color. Reverse stockinette stitch the same number of rows as holiday items you have up for decorations. (You don't have to count all the ornaments on the tree unless you want to.)

Day 4: Basket weave stitch ( https://www.dummies.com/crafts/knitting/designs-patterns/how-to-knit-basketweave-stitch/ ) for as many rows until you get bored of it.

Day 5: Change color. Reverse stockinette stitch for the same number of chairs in your house.


I'll add more to this over the next several days. I'm currently working on day two, day three is going to be one row. Then I'm going to do two repeats of basket weave stitch before I'm on to today's stitching.

Theoretically, I'll have a scarf by the end of this. I am cheating on the color changing because my yarn is self striping. I think I have enough in the ball to get a whole scarf out of it. If not, I'll start using up my yarn hoard. Red Heart SuperSaver has this awesome colorway called favorite stripes. I used it for my Pride scarf that I made this summer. I loved the way it worked up as Tunisian crochet, so I had to give knitting it a shot. And because the colors change, I'm not getting too bored with the stockinette section.

Saturday, December 01, 2018

Thoughts on NaBloPoMo & NaNoWriMo 2018

I think that I spent more time trying to solve problems than I did writing. I think that I also spent more time focused on trying to make time to write than I did writing this year. Having a break from school in the middle of the month didn't help me this year but starting early in October did. I am pleased with the amount of work I have gotten done on the book writing side of things. I'm not as pleased with the blogging situation.

I have gotten a bit better about blogging more regularly but it is still a challenge. Note the flurry of posts in an attempt to make post count on several days. I think solving that is going to be hard because my schedule over the next month is pretty busy. I have holiday crafting to finish up. I have holiday baking to do. I also have some written projects to finish up over the month. My goal is to start 2019 with all of my ongoing projects as of this moment finished.

That means finishing up book seven of the Umbrel Chronicles. That means finishing up the ritual book I am at the beginning of writing. And there is the business of getting books three and four up on KDP after I finish making sense of the way their merger with CreateSpace worked out. I think I have everything done correctly. I'm just not sure. I am considering finding ways to semi-automate the blog writing process. I have a lot of work on my other blogs that I want to back up. That is a project for next year (and probably a new couple of thumbdrives).

I would have hit 30 posts of stupid shit yesterday but I went out to LARP in Buffalo with some good friends of mine. It's a fun game where I get to dress up and pretend to be a monster and do horrible things to horrible people. We all regularly do things like break the fourth wall and drop awful puns. Staying in character is challenging.  It's a fun group.

My character is named Angela. She is a poet from the Victorian period. I have almost everything I need to dress up in Victorian period dress. I am probably going to acquire a few props to make the character a bit more rounded out costume wise. With my short hair, I keep my head covered. She is dressed in full mourning dress because vampires are goth as fuck. She has acquired a 'cane' which is going to be a regular prop as well as a reason why I have my cane with me in character. The character's cane right now is a length of rebar. She's going to be negotiating with another character the price of having a metal cane of similar weight and such made.

I'll try to find away to get a picture of myself in full costume before I head out next session (which is at the end of this month). Beloved gets a chuckle out of my ribbon garters to hold up my knee socks. Since I lost weight, the knee socks don't stay up quite right. So, I asked myself what did they do before elastic socks. Garters was the first thing that came to mind. I'm going to actually knit myself a pair based off of the Victorian era pattern in Goodey's book that's been uploaded.  I've started making Victorian era crochet patterns. I am rather pleased with how the shawls have worked out.

When I go to spinning guild, I'll be bringing the brown 'bosom friend' that I made with yarn from my mother-in-law's spinning. It came out fantastically and is a period accurate work, even though the pattern was of my own design. It is a nice and cozy wool shawl that wraps around and ties at the back, leaving my arms free to do things aside from hold the shawl closed and I don't need pins. I'm also going to bring the two shoeboxes worth of washcloths that I have made in the hopes that someone will buy some of them.

Mitered square washcloth - crochet

Chain two.

Three single crochet into first chain. Chain one.

One single crochet into each of first two stitches. Three single crochet into third stitch. One single crochet into each of next stitches. Chain one.

One single crochet into each of first three stitches. Three single crochet into fourth stitch. One single crochet into each of next stitches until end of row. Chain one.

One single crochet into each of first four stitches. Three single crochet into fifth stitch. One single crochet into each of next stitches until end of row.

One single crochet into each of stitches until middle of row. At middle of row, three single crochet into that stitch. Single crochet into each stitch until end of row. Chain one.

Repeat above row until of desired size. Bind off after final stitch of final row and weave in ends.