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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

I had a hankering for some chili a bit ago that didn't come from a can. I found a few recipes online that seemed to look OK, but not quite what I was looking for. Not enough hoit nor toit as Eric would say.

So I Frankensteined this meal together, and it worked (I am always surprised when things work as so many of my "brilliant" ideas are ass in the end - you see what I did there??). The buffalo and the yams were my own doing, and I had no idea if it would actually be decent. You can play around with the proportions and it will still work. I used about twice the amount of chili and jalapeno I listed below 'cos I like it spicy.













Crockpot Chili with Beans and Corn (and Yam and Buffalo and some other crap)
1 lb ground buffalo - pre cooked
1 can black beans
1 can kidney beans
1.5 c. garnet yams, cut up into bite size pieces
1 can whole tomatoes
1 cup of corn - grill or pan sear first
2 c. water
1 medium yellow onion, chopped
2 bunches chopped green onion
6 oz tomato paste
1 large fresh jalapeno pepper, chopped
juice of 1 lime
1+ TBS chili powder
1+ tsp ground cumin
1+ tsp ground mustard
1 tsp dried oregano
salt to taste

Toss everything into your crock pot and let it simmer on low while you are at work, or for 10 hours, whichever is longer. Presto. How freakin' easy is that?

I honestly don't remember what Eric had for dinner on the night(s) that I ate this. It would not be far from the truth to claim it was chicken strips from the Safeway deli though as we had to go to the store to pick up ingredients for this chili and strips are a standard buy.

Learning is an uphill battle

I am trying to teach myself how to use this polymer clay medium with only the internet and books to show me the way. I don't recommend this way of picking up a hobby. More than anything I want a mentor, or classes or SOMETHING to let me know I am on the right track. The only real input I have is from Craftster, a craft forum I have been visiting for a few years (Eric calls it Craft Porn as I sit there drooling while getting excited for hours on end).

I found a polymer clay guild in the South Bay that I am considering joining, just for the free classes. I guess beggars can't be choosers...

In any case, here is the product of a couple of weekends worth of tinkering around.

First is a dragon that I made following the steps in one of Christi Friesen's books:

I think he is awesome and I loooove the way the colors turned out, and his facial features. Pretty much everything. However, he is a face in the crowd. While my hands did it and the coloring and some decorations came from my brain, it almost feels like this is a CF piece and not somethign original that I did. Kinda like I cheated.

This next item is all from my brain, but I don't like it. There are some elements that I think are cool (the top-down koi, and the pebbles came out amazing - they look real), but I managed to make an item that wasn't my own taste. Can someone please explain how that is possible?


I posted the pictures of this vase on Craftster, and I got so much nice feedback it brought tears to my eyes (can you imagine - 1 person said they aspire to be able to make things like this, and another person said I have inspired them to try polymer clay! That is so amazing to me)
















I had a leftover flower - well, it was my crappy prototype really so I turned it into a barrette:


I had some good ideas come out of -what I consider - this failure of a project. I did some experimenting last night to see if I could accomplish what I had envisioned for part of it and I don't have the skills :( But I am going to see if I can do the project without all the elements Ii had in mind. I am waiting on a Donna Kato book right now, so maybe I will be able to figure out where I went wrong in my experimenting and I will be able to include all the parts of my idea .

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Simplicity at it's finest

I go through phases of wanting very simple foods or making complicated meals - although, according to my office mate, anything more than take-out after a day at this office should be considered complicated.

I have a couple of super simple recipes to share in this post, all of which follow under the "I'll just throw in some of this, and a touch of that" category - ie, I had no idea what I was doing but the results were scrumptious. This ended up all being one meal, but it felt more like seperate dishes that I happened to all eat at once, not a coming together of great flavors into a cohesive plate.

First up, a refreshing melon salad, which I think can do just as easily as a side dish, or breakfast, or dessert. I found some melon I had never had before, canary melon, and santa claus, along with a seedless watermelon. The rind on the santa claus was so amazing looking! Both of these melons were super sweet, and were in the honeydew family of flavor. The canary had a lovely bit of tartness to it.

For this dish, all I did was squeeze some lemon over to give counter point to the sweet, and tossed in a small handful of fresh mint. The flavor combo was just delicious!
Next, some lovely baked chicken. I could only find a ginormous package of chicken thighs at the grocery the other day. I can't even remember what my original intent was for them, but a few days went by before I said to myself, "self, you best be doing something with all of that chicken because it is going to go bad and then it will be a waste". In the end, I decided I just wanted to get it cooked and I could have chicken salad sandwich, chicken on some sort of salad, maybe throw some chicken in some pasta salad (I'm now thinking that WAS my original intent), so I needed something mellow in flavor.

What I came up with was drizzling a casserole dish with olive oil, thick slicing an onion and laying those down, and topping the onions with the thighs. I went to my garden and picked some fresh rosemary, and added it to the pile with some salt and peper. Finally, I sliced a lemon and put that on top. The whole thing was covered by foil and put in a 350 oven for 30-45 minutes.

The resulting meat was extremely moist - almost too moist with a texture close to what I would expect had I boiled it, but with loads of flavor. the real surprise was the onions. I am not normally an onion enthusiast, but this dish made me change my stance on that. THey were sweet, and creamy (?!) and delish! I ate them all - and spent the rest of the night tooting, much to Eric's delight.



The final recipe follows the same ingredient list as my veggie salad from an earlier post, but add in pasta and feta.

Simple simple, very delicious, and in reviewing the ingredients, pretty good for you to boot.

On the night where I had this colorful cacophony of food, Eric dined on Top Ramen - chicken flavor. At least it was cooked this time. Of course, that is probably because I cooked it...

The crafting bug

has definitely hit me!

I am trying out polymer clay and so far so good. Well, so far, 50% good I guess would be more accurate. My first project was a turtle. You can search this post high and low for a turtle picture and you will find it lacking. This is because no picture exists as my turtle has a wicked case of the fugs. None-the-less, it is sitting right here being unloved, but holding down the fort in "My First Project"-ville.

My second project was to attempt to make a few jewelry pieces following Christi Friesen's tips and tricks. These turned out much better and to my liking! Voila:


I am aware that I have a long way to go. But - boy howdy - this is a fun material to work with. And my love of color is being totally met. I spent about 4 hours mixing the most gorgeous yellows and oxblood palette for a jellyfish the other day ... actually that is another post altogether once the jellyfish is finished.