The Squint Eye triumphs again

Published on Thursday April 15th, 2010

I’ve lost my heart to a new sock pattern and a new sock yarn. I ran across christhalinette’s take on Beate Zäch’s charming Bluemchen pattern on Ravelry and thought, “How whimsical!” Then I looked more closely. How exactly were those flowers constructed? Wait, are those decreases between the petals? Am I seeing little gussets in unusual places?

Bluemchen_toe

Sure enough, the pattern begins with a little stranded hexagon… and then another coupled to it, and then some funny little earflap pieces… and pretty soon you have something that really does look like part of a sock foot. A sock foot with genius reinforcement in just the places a sock foot needs it. There is a lot more sewing involved than in a regular sock, but I found it so engaging to watch a sock form emerging that I hardly noticed the extra labor.

As you can see, I totally copied the color scheme from that first pair I fell for. I already knew I wanted to buy something with long color changes for the flowers; I went hunting in my stash for a solid, pale base yarn and came up with a nice gray ball of Satakieli the color of gull wings. I took it with me to the shop and began to fret when I couldn’t find just what I’d imagined — a floral colorway that wouldn’t look too juvenile or too Vegas. Finally I settled on a ball of Noro in the lyrically named S185 C colorway. I’d had my eye on this one as my favorite of their offerings anyway, and I figured the remnants could go toward the ducky vertical-striped garter baby sweaters in my queue. It looked okay with the gray Satakieli, but it didn’t really sing. So just for kicks I tried one of my favorite yarn-browsing techniques: the Squint Eye. I held up the Noro at arm’s length, squinted one eye at it like a nearsighted pirate ogling a buxom barmaid, and slowly passed it in front of the wall of sock yarn to see if anything hanging there would give it that razzle dazzle that happens when two colors were meant to be together. (I imagine the performance of the Squint Eye looks mighty peculiar except to veteran yarn-buyers. Go on, I’ll bet you use it too.)

And there it was. The magic glow. And it was coming from something that looked suspiciously like plain, unbleached wool.

I quickly restored my face to its normal configuration so I could investigate. The magic was coming from the section of the wall housing the offerings from A Verb for Keeping Warm. No surprise there — Kristine Vejar is a visionary. I love her India-inflected color sense, and also her commitment to natural dyes and to farmers and mills in the U.S. and Canada. But what was this peculiar magic skein of Creating that didn’t look like it had been dyed at all? The color was called “citron.” I carried it over to the window to see it in what was left of the natural light. It still just looked like cream, but the Noro was crazy about it, practically slavering around its skirts. So I shrugged and had them put it on the swift for me.

The next morning I kept giving that unassuming ball little sideways glances as I cast on and began my first hexagon. Wait, was that a blush of pink grapefruit I spied? A hint of lemongrass? It was! This yarn may not perform to strangers the way its AVFKW brethren do, but Kristine really is a genius. It’s as if she stirred a single one of these into that pot of fresh cream:

pinktulip

(Just the tulip. Not the invasive wild geranium I need to rip out of every corner in the garden… again.) And not that you can really see it when I take photographs at 6pm after work. You’ll have to take my word for it until I can get proper pictures in proper daylight.

Bluemchen_foot

The first sock is finished, and so is the first hexagon of the second sock. Can I somehow have both socks blocked by Monday? My birthday girl may have to open a gift containing just one sock, with the second to follow later in the week. Gifting one dry sock would be better than two damp ones, right? Wet socks, even handknit ones with really pretty flowers, don’t exactly say I love you and I’m going to miss you so much when you move to Maine.

A zombie ate my content

Published on Monday April 12th, 2010

I had all these projects I was going to work on this weekend, all these pictures I was going to take to share with you here. I’m sewing a simple linen dress from this tutorial; I’m knitting these crazy awesome socks in a mad dash for a friend’s birthday; I’m mocking up a quilt block to practice piecing circles (sounds nuts, right?); I have two sweet Oliver + S patterns I’m excited to try. I did finish the neckline on the dress and got as far as the heel of the first sock, and then the zombies happened.

Actually, I was the zombie.

I just completely ran out of steam on Sunday morning and had to give over the entire afternoon to a nap, accomplishing nothing but a little feeble vacuuming. I dragged myself through an evening of marimba practice and grocery shopping and arrived home even more living-dead. Apparently Minnow is making some demands on my body right now and I just need to watch how I extend my energy. (Oh, and I was wrong about how big it is — I was reading my little journal again and apparently the baby had gained 100g, bringing its total weight to more than a pound! Which sounds like a lot until I remember it’s only got four months to put on at least five more… no wonder I need more sleep.)

Anyway, no fun photos and not as much progress as I’d hoped in any department. Except for that part where I’ve increased the size of my offspring by a skein of sock yarn in the last couple of weeks.

Cheese puffs!

Published on Thursday April 8th, 2010

We had Easter dinner with two sets of neighbors and my job was to bring a light appetizer. I thought I’d try something totally new to me, so I reached for my copy of Chocolate & Zucchini by Clotilde Dusoulier to look for something quick, light, and vegetarian. Mmmm, cheese puffs with cumin. Sold. After my handsome husband had procured whole cumin seeds and gruyere from the grocery store, I had all the necessities at the ready:

gougeres_ingredients

(not pictured: four eggs)

I love it when recipes have so few ingredients. Flour, cheese, butter, eggs, salt, pepper, cumin. I followed Clotilde’s advice and prepped them all in advance so I could go lickety-split through the assembly. The part that frightened me was that after you’ve simmered the butter and salt in a cup of  water, you dump in the flour all at once and stir it until it forms a smooth ball that pulls away from the side. I feared lumpy flour, you see. I am spectacularly bad at whisking up things like bechamel and always manage to produce warty batters full of flour clods. But I did just as Clotilde said and in no time I had a smooth and intriguingly rubbery dough ball that pulled away from the sides of the saucepan. You let this cool for a few minutes and then start stirring in the eggs, one at a time. Again my skepticism rose. Egg the first could not be persuaded to integrate into my lovely dough ball and simply coated the pan with its slime. Egg the second didn’t behave any better, and by egg the third I had chunks of dough floating in slippery goo. But when I added egg the fourth it all magically came together. Hooray! I stirred in cumin and pepper, folded in my grated cheese, and realized that fitting in a dog walk and a few other afternoon chores really had derailed my schedule and I didn’t have half an hour to chill the mixture. So I took my husband’s advice to toss the saucepan into the chest freezer in the basement and hoped for the best for 15 minutes. Then I plopped spoonfuls onto a parchment-lined cookie sheet, slipped it into the oven, and sent my husband over to the neighbors’ to open a bottle of wine and represent for the family while I monitored the baking. Fortunately Clotilde mentions that in France it’s polite to show up for dinner parties at least 15 minutes late, in order to allow one’s hosts time to finish their own behind-schedule preparations. Such a sensible policy. I grabbed my knitting and peered anxiously through the oven glass to see if the puffs were rising despite their inadequate chilling.

gougeres

They were. I ever so patiently left them in the oven with the heat off and the door cracked open for the recommended five minutes so as not to deflate them by a sudden temperature change, then I tucked them into a tea towel and dashed through the rain and between the garages to Frank and Becky’s house. I was 25 minutes late, but the gougeres were worth the delay: golden and crispy on the outside, just faintly gooey with warm cheese in the middle and a perfectly addictive prick of spice from the cumin.

In other news, my pregnancy journal tells me the Minnow is now about 7.5 inches long and weighs 100 grams. It’s a skein of sock yarn! (Oddly, the journal’s author didn’t think this would be a useful comparison for most readers.)

Cinnamon Toast

Published on Saturday April 3rd, 2010

Wow, you guys love babies! We so appreciate all your congratulations — it’s remarkable to think that Minnow already has well-wishers from Australia to the Netherlands. Makes me feel all warm and fuzzy, y’all.

The queue of woolen garments to make for my little one wraps around the block, as you can imagine. But if all goes well, I’ll be bringing him or her home in the early or middle part of August. Just for fun, I looked up some recent August temperatures for Portland. Last year it was 95 degrees on 1 August. The year before that we hit 96 on 5 August. The 11th itself hasn’t been too bad recently: 82 degrees at most, so if the kid comes right on time we should be okay. But the 15th two years ago reached 100 degrees. In sum, wool probably won’t be the fiber of choice for a coming home outfit. So in an atypical move, I purchased some cotton-blend yarn: Kollage Luscious. I’m going to cast on Brandy Fortune’s Milk Infant Top and make some matching stripey pants or longies (we’ll see how the yarn holds out… it was on clearance so I won’t be getting more). I love the white and green of the original, but I only had two colors to choose from — luckily they go together and remind me of cinnamon toast.

CinnamonToast

(I need to try again at making the actual cinnamon toast. This uber-healthy bread we’ve got right now is too dense and I didn’t apply the prodigious amounts of butter that would have been necessary for really pleasing toast. Also I think the cinnamon toast of my childhood may have been made with cinnamon sugar, not just straight cinnamon.)

By rights I should be getting loads of knitting time during the many, many Holy Week services we have to sing, but alas, I’ve been moved back to the front row in full view of the congregation so I’m not allowed. Tonight alone I could have knit through three baptisms as well as the lengthy sermon. Well, maybe not the baptisms… we were still holding lit candles at that point. Turning the pages of my music without setting fire to them, the sleeves of my robe, or another soprano’s hair is challenging enough; knitting while holding a candle might really go beyond what’s possible. Instead I’ve had to amuse myself by choosing names for my child among the composers in the hymnal. How does Horatius Bonar strike you for a boy? No?

Anyway, now to bed. The first call for the choir tomorrow morning is at 7:30, and I might need to make another attempt at cinnamon toast beforehand so I can stay upright. Happy Easter if you celebrate it.

P.S. I think Minnow may be developing a fondness for the communion sherry during all these extra services.