Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Homemade Christmas Gifts from 2013

I am definitely the type of person who loves to make gifts for people for Christmas.  Not for everybody (because that is just impossible to have the kind of time to do that) and not just to say I made something, but I try to brainstorm and come up with something special to make each year for at least somebody.  In the past I have made aprons, bags, pajamas, stuffed elephants for nieces and nephews, calendars, and other things.  This year it was primarily cookbooks and quilts (and calendars too but I didn't take any pictures of those - they were through Shutterfly).
 

I have blogged before about Tastebook and how I have been enjoying this little project (I didn't mention I was doing it for a present but that was my intention all along).  I really loved trying many new recipes and revisiting favorites.  And I felt like my photography improved throughout the process, at least with regard to food photography.  I also liked the writing process - describing the dishes or the memory associated with it. 


We gave copies to our mom's, Kayli's family, and a sister-in-law who I thought might appreciate it, but I also printed a copy for us and an extra one for Clara.  When I was a kid we used to go to these big family reunions and one year both sides of my mom's family put out family cookbooks that my mom contributed too (like the ward relief society cookbooks you sometimes see - I have those too from a couple of past wards we have been in).  My mom bought a bunch of copies of these cookbooks (they were largely sold as a fundraiser, I think) with the idea that each of her kids could have one when they grew up.  I have my copies in the cupboard and totally use them or go to them for inspiration every now and then and I love them.  So that is why I went ahead and printed one for Clara even though she is only 2 1/2.  It can just sit on her shelf until she is ready to go to college and then she can take it with her.


I really love that there was a dedication page and we were able to use one of my favorite pics from Yosemite that we took this November when we were trying to get a Christmas card pic.  This was the runner-up pic for the cards but it felt too busy for a card but perfect for the dedication page.


It really was a labor of love.  I tried a bunch of new dishes and discarded quite a few recipes as not being worthy of being included in the cookbook.  It took from early April to the first week of December to finish it and Paul helped a TON not just with being my go to taste-tester but also in editing and proofreading to catch mistakes.  I also realized (to no one's real surprise) that I was WAY heavy on the dessert category and light on the salad and main dish categories so I had to make some changes there.  Which meant cutting some favorite dessert and bread recipes (The House of Nash Cookbook, Vol. II is already in production with the recipes that didn't fit in Vol. I).  The book is 100 of our very favorite recipes, things that we have made and loved and would absolutely make again, over and over.


If you are even thinking you might want to check out Tastebook and play with it, EMAIL ME so I can send you an invite, m'kay?  Because I get credits for people who I refer and then I can get a free cookbook and I am getting close!  :)  Here are a few pics of some of the recipes inside our book so you can see what the formatting is like:




There are a few downsides to Tastebook, though.  I looked into four different recipe book publishers before deciding on Tastebook and each has its pros and cons.  So here are a couple of lists about what I learned through the process with Tastebook.

Things I do NOT love about Tastebook:

1. You can't do more than 1 photo per page.  I was hoping to do at least a couple of full page photos next to a page with a recipe or maybe a couple of "step-by-step" series for things like how to braid a challah bread but those just aren't options with Tastebook (but which ARE available with a company like Blurb).
2. You can't use your own photo for the cover.  There are something like 16 stock images on Tastebook to choose from for your cover image, but that is it.  I didn't realize this until we got the printed books but they are premade covers and then the white title square is basically just a nice label that they stick on.  It speeds up the process from printing and constructing cover bindings for every book, but still, I would like a little bit of a nicer option.
3. You can only order your book with up to 100 recipes.  I figured that was because it would only have that much space, but actually you could fit way more than that in the binding.  Probably 50 more.  You can order the additional recipes to be printed, but they print separately from the original book so the recipes don't get included in the automatically alphabetized table of contents. 
4. It is a little pricey.  Not as pricey as, say, Blurb, but still, each recipe book that I printed came to $40 (although I got 30% off of that for ordering more than 3 books, which I think was a Christmas special but I am guessing they do deals like that every now and then). 

Things I LOVE about Tastebook (particularly in comparison to other recipe book publishers I looked at):

1. Everything is saved online.  I can access any of my Tastebook recipes anywhere, even if I don't have the hard copy book or my own computer with  me.  This means I can also easily share and email my recipes with anybody who asks for them.  Also, theoretically I should be able to easily print additional books in the future, should I want to.
2. They have an app which means I can even access all the recipes I have added to my Tastebook account through my phone.  Like when I am in the grocery store and can't remember all the ingredients for something I had a sudden hankering for.  Or when I am visiting family and want to look up one of my recipes.
3. The spiral binding.  Tastebook was the only publisher that offered it and I LOVE when a cookbook will lay open totally flat without cracking a spine or pressing pages down.  It has the added benefit of making it so you can add or remove recipes if you want/need to down the road.
4. Overall quality is very good - it is a very professional product.  Everything formats nicely and comes out consistent and the paper, printing, and image quality is excellent. 
5. Each book comes with plastic page protector envelopes in the back so you can add loose recipes that you print off or recipe cards of whatever to your book.
6. You can pull in recipes from other sources.  My sister and a friend created Tastebook accounts and have added some recipes.  I can grab their recipes (including their pictures and everything so long as their recipes aren't set to "private") and add them to my own recipe collection and even print them to my own cookbook if I want to.  There are some major food bloggers/sites (like Epicurious and Smitten Kitchen) who post all their recipes on Tastebook so you could just create an entire cookbook of recipes you pull from other sources (pictures and all!) without doing too much work, if that sounds like what you are interested in.

Anyway, the other major gifts that I gave this year that were homemade were quilts.  I made this one for Clara from a pattern called "Meet Me At The Manor".  The pattern was from a quilting magazine that published it in four parts, and I saw the completed quilt at a quilt store and fell in love with it.  The quilt store (called Prairie Queens, here in San Jose) had collected the four magazine issues and chosen the fabrics (I wish I could take credit for the color scheme and fabric selection for this quilt because it is just beautiful) and sold the whole thing as a kit.  None of the pieces were cut out or anything - it was all just folded pieces of fabric so I did all the work of piecing it - but I feel like I have to admit that I wasn't some sort of creative genius in making this.  I don't really care though because I just love how it turned out so much and Clara is really pleased with it and talks about "her special quilt."  She saw me working on it over a few months (I mostly sew during her nap time or sometimes in the afternoon I will set her up at the kitchen table with crayons or playdough or some artsy-craftsy project and she will play while I sew next to her) so it wasn't a surprise present or anything.



I could have done a meandering swirl to quilt it myself, but after putting so much time and effort into it, I decided I wanted it quilted professionally with a vine and berries pattern that replicated the fabric I had chosen for the backing.  Here is a closer picture so you can see the detail of the quilting itself a little bit better.



I learned A TON from piecing Clara's quilt.  There are a few glaring errors that I won't point out because nobody would probably notice them but it bugs me that it wasn't perfect.  But I did my best and I feel like my sewing skills (particularly my quilting skills) grew by leaps and bounds.

So I decided to tackle the project of making a quilt for Paul.  He has asked me to make a quilt for him numerous times and I have always said no.  I didn't know if he really meant it or if he knew just went into it and honestly, I don't feel like fabric choices for a guy's quilt are as fun as fabric choices for a girl's quilt so I don't think I was all that inspired to start out with.  But after doing Clara's quilt I thought that maybe I could come up with something for Paul and create a quilt of my own design just for him.  So I chose trout, reeds, and log cabins as a recurring theme (basically going for an outdoorsy feel because I knew Paul would love that) and then added in some blocks specific to Paul - an appliqued block of Half Dome from Yosemite that I drew freehand after looking at a picture of it online, a BYU block and a U of U law block for the schools he went to (again, both appliqued from something I drew after looking at their logos online), and a banjo block.  Then I arranged them on graph paper and filled in with traditional blocks like churn dashes and stars and pinwheels, etc. 


I showed him the design to get him approval, then didn't say much more about it.  When my mom was visiting in August, I took advantage of having somebody to watch Clara for me and went to the fabric store and purchased most of the fabric (and supplemented with a little fabric I already had in my stash).  Then I pieced the whole thing in September through November while Paul was not at home so it would be a surprise.  He says that he had no idea I was working on it and he had seen what went into making Clara's quilt and how long that took me so he got choked up on Christmas morning when he opened the large box it was in, thinking it was a winter coat or something, and saw it.  It was worth all the work and hours on it to surprise him and get that reaction.


I also had this quilt professionally quilted with a large, looping design that had flies for fly-fishing periodically stitched throughout.  The backing was a green and brown flannel.  I searched the internet for quilt blocks that had fish and reeds and banjos in them for inspiration but didn't find much that I liked so I basically freehanded my own while looking at pictures of actual trout and looking at Paul's banjo to make sure I was getting the details right.  They were all created using an applique technique that I had learned doing Clara's quilt.  When it came to choosing colors for the fish, I didn't even bother trying to get the right colors for a rainbow or golden trout or anything - I just used fabrics I was already using for other squares and pieced them in a way that "looked pretty" to me and I think they turned out pretty well.  If Paul has any criticism about that part, he has kept it to himself (which is probably a smart move, haha). 





Sorry for such a braggy post, but I just had to document these projects because they seriously consumed such a huge part of my free time during 2013 and I wanted to share them.  I absolutely loved making these quilts and creating the cookbooks. 

Thursday, January 2, 2014

2013 Year in Review

Overall, the first 2/3 of 2013 was rough, mostly because of a really frustrating adoption scenario that dragged on from February until August and which never fully resolved itself (since it is possible that it had been a scammer all along).  But there were lots of really amazing things and highlights that I sum up below.  And lots of day-to-day stuff that doesn't get mentioned a ton but which included lots of running at the gym, lots of playing and reading books and doing crafts and going for walks and bike rides with Clara, lots of quilting, lots of working, lots of house projects, and lots of time spent together as a family just feeling grateful that we have each other.  Clara grew SO much this year.  It is like she went from a baby to a little girl and somehow skipped so much of the toddler stage!  Here is the highlight reel though...

January

Day trip to Carmel, lots of fingerpainting and indoor play, breakfast on the wharf in Santa Cruz, healing from a failed adoption that was supposed to happen in December


February

Installing crown molding in the living room/hallways, Clara started potty training and picked it up in about 3 days, quick trip to Utah to visit Kayli and see family, lots of quilting, started emailing with a possible birth mother


March

San Francisco Zoo with the Millers (minus Jason and Paul), hiking at Pinnacles National Park, Disneyland trip with my parents courtesy of my friend Lisa's sister who got us free tickets, celebrated Easter with lots of Easter egg hunts


April

Paul's parents came for a visit, we finished "landscaping" the backyard, Adelaide (my sister Jennie's third child) was born, I started working on a recipe book that became a hugely consuming project for me during the year (and which I still need to post about)


May

Discovered the most perfect recipe for M&M cookies ever (this is totally worth noting when recapping 2013), Clara's 2nd birthday, trip to Utah to meet Adelaide and take advantage of the last time Clara will ever fly for free, Lake Tahoe trip with the Millers, celebrated our 9th anniversary with a weekend trip to Carmel


June

Celebrated Paul's 32nd birthday, trip to Huntington Lake with Paul's parents, Clara started gymnastics, lots of trips to Happy Hollow and visits to the Farmer's market, Paul started learning to play the banjo (his birthday present)


July

4th of July impromptu roadtrip through northern California and southern Oregon to see Lassen National Park and Redwoods National Park, I went to a "Favorite Things" party (so fun and I totally want to throw one sometime in the future, Clara started swimming lessons and became convinced she was a mermaid


August

Paul did a big fly-fishing trip in Montana with his dad, Clara and I did a roadtrip to Utah to surprise my mom for her birthday then dragged her back to California with us for a few days, went through a third failed adoption when the young woman who had first emailed us back in February about the baby she was carrying had a change of heart shortly before the birth


September

Apple picking with friends at an orchard in Watsonville, finished landscaping the front yard (which had turned into a months long project), sewed Halloween costumes, Clara started sleeping in a big-girl bed


October

Had a new furnace installed in our house, celebrated my 33rd birthday, went to Disneyland with Paul's parents when our annual Yosemite trip got cancelled thanks to the government shut-down, hosted our 4th annual Halloween party, went to the pumpkin patch, celebrated Halloween as WWII icons


November

Yosemite trip since we just couldn't bear the thought of going a year without visiting one of our favorite places in the world, our friends the Millers came to visit, I was able to do quite a few photo shoots for friends, Thanksgiving dinner with our friends the Fischlis and my mom and sister, lots of sneaky sewing to finish Paul's quilt for Christmas


December

Took Clara to her first ever ballet performance - the Nutcracker - which she loved, sang lots of Christmas carols and read lots of Christmas books, enjoyed a nice long trip to Utah for the holidays, and rang in 2014 with good friends in California


Here's to 2014!!

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

A few more resolutions...

I already posted about my major and "real" resolutions back here, but I have been thinking of a few more.  This list is more my "yeah right, of course I'm not going to be able to stick to all of these and probably won't even give it more of a half-hearted effort but I might as well put it out there because one of these years maybe one or two of these resolutions will stick" kind of list.

- Never go to bed with dirty dishes in the sink
- Make the bed every day (this is kind of a freebie "goal" because I am really good at this one and maybe only miss a few days here and there during the year anyway)
- Fold laundry and put it away the day I wash it all
- Expand my repertoire of vegetarian meal options
- Go on a real trip somewhere (pretty much needs to involve air travel to qualify)
- Floss every day
- Go through our food storage/emergency supplies and update and inventory everything
- Read all the conference talks from each General Conference
- Go to the beach a lot more during the summer
- Do more photo shoots with Clara (I feel like I take lots of pictures but I'm not capturing things the way I used to and I miss that - this may sound totally crazy to anybody who reads this blog and feels like it is always flooded with photos of her)
- Try new restaurants
- Prepare my Sunday School lessons for Gospel Doctrine more in advance than day of (shouldn't be too hard to keep this one since our church is moving to a 9:00 a.m. meeting time so I won't have the morning to prepare like I have this past year)
- Work on Family History (I may just count increased journaling on my part as fulfilling this but I would love to do more)
- Read classic literature (I already have reading goals for the year but I have a tendency to read just the overtly "fun" stuff and I feel like I am missing substance that I know I love but have been too lazy to get back to)
- Grow a garden
- Give Paul more foot massages because I know he loves them or alternatively (and maybe preferably or additionally) go get pedicures with him every now and then
- Take family photos (even if it is just using the tripod, I like having pictures of us as a family that are up to date and to compare to previous ones.  But I would love to have a professional take some for us.)
- Take Clara to the zoo, the aquarium, the discovery center, and a museum
- Be a better friend
- Do my visiting teaching every month
- Read the Ensign each month
- Use all 20+ tiny tubes of sample toothpaste that have somehow collected in the medicine cabinet before buying any more full-size tubes
- Comment on blogs more regularly

I think that list is more than sufficient for now.  I feel like I am forgetting some that have been on my mind the past few days but I can always add those later.  Like I said, I'm not totally serious about holding myself accountable to any of the above, but I would love to be able to improve on or do at least some of the above to a better extent than 2013. 

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Christmas Extras

On December 27th, we drove up to Salt Lake with Clara and Paul's parents to visit temple square.  More to see the temple than the lights, which was good since it was FREEZING (I didn't already mention this - it was 69 the day we left California for Utah and it was 18 degrees when we drove in that night.  At one point during the week we were there is was 4 degrees.  And it "warmed up" to the high 20s partway through the week.  I was a popsicle the whole time.). 
 
Anyway, the 27th is the anniversary of the day that we were sealed as a forever family in the temple so we have been able to commemorate that special day the past two years with Clara and we really love this tradition.  Afterwards we walked around the indoor portion of the City Creek Center and went out to eat at Bombay House (the service was horrible but the food was amazing).
 

 
I snuck this video of my dad on Christmas morning while we were waiting for the other girls to wake up (Adelaide was up first, bless her heart.  A niece just like me.)  He didn't realize I was videoing him which is why I sound all quiet when I asked him to retell a story he had told us the night before about one of his earliest Christmas memories.  I love that I captured this story and hope I can get many  more like it from him and my mom and my siblings, especially now that I have my new audio equipment for the camera.
 


Paul and I wanted to go to BYU with Clara since it has been a while since we have had a chance to visit campus so a couple days after Christmas we headed out in the morning after breakfast.  First stop was the law building where Clara ran wild through the carrels, which really do look like a giant maze.  I got all nostalgic there (and I'm not even being sarcastic - I love, love, loved going to law school). 


Then it was on to the Wilkinson Center where Clara was afraid of the cougars in the entrance at first.  I won't lie - we are totally going to do whatever it takes to convince her to go to school at mom and dad's alma mater.  I may be a little heartbroken if it doesn't happen.  (Is that putting too much pressure on her?  Probably.  Sorry, sweetie.  I'll be proud of you wherever you choose to go to school.  But "go cougars!" is all I'm saying.)

 
Paul was pretty much beside himself over the fact that a Chick-Fil-A has been installed in the CougarEat.  We totally had lunch here and even though eating Chick-Fil-A on campus was a new experience, eating in the Wilk brought back SOOOO many memories.  I started at BYU when I was 17 years old, after all, and more than any place in the world, BYU campus feels like home to me.  Isn't that weird? 
 

We spent some time in the BYU bookstore where I found some awesome kid books about adoption (love adding to our adoption library - I should post about those some time) as well as a couple of kids books for Clara that are perfect for church (one about Jesus and one about the Holy Ghost). 

After that we went to the Harold B. Lee Library (the HBLL) and explored.  Paul and I used to study together here as undergrads when we were dating.  We would go there together and then I would make him leave my alone so I could focus and I would go find a secret corner and hide from him because otherwise he would try to distract me constantly.  We laughed about that while we were walking around.


On the 4th floor of the HBLL there is a kids section and an awesome mural depicting characters from fairy tales, nursery rhymes, and other fiction.  We sat on the floor there with Clara and played "I Spy" for a while, which she loved. 


Then we wandered over to the Eyring Science Center where the Pendulum Court Café is during the semester (it is a food nutrition lab that serves lunch for part of the semester and it is seriously my favorite place to eat on campus when it is open).  We showed Clara the dinosaurs and crystal exhibit and played with the hands-on science experiments in the atrium that teach about vortexes, density of different materials, and magnets.  We really made a day of our little BYU trip and I was glad that there was so much to keep Clara entertained the whole time and I still have a bunch more ideas of places to take her for future visits.



Our friends, the Liebers, bailed on us and moved from San Jose to Highland, UT earlier this year and built a beautiful new home.  Clara and Claire were buddies so it was fun to see them play together while we caught up with Peter and Melanie.  Clara was really enraptured with the toy curling iron, blow dryer, and brush set that Claire got for Christmas so I am on the hunt for an inexpensive set.  Melanie said she got it at the dollar section at Target but I couldn't find one at ours so if anybody happens to stumble across one, let me know, okay?


Oh, and here is a video of Clara caroling during December.  I filmed whatever snatches I could whenever she started singing and this is the best I ended up with.  She knows quite a few songs now though and I never could catch her singing "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town". 


 
This has nothing to do with Christmas, but it was filmed in December so I am posting it here too.  I love watching Clara and Paul play together.  Swordfight is one of Clara's absolute favorite games.  Listen closely at the end where Paul's sword breaks.  Clara says "oh dear" which is one of my very favorite phrases of hers.



And finally, just to prove that everything isn't always all hunky-dory for us (which I know the past few posts have probably seemed like), here is a video of Clara throwing a tantrum on December 8th when I was trying to get her to sing Happy Birthday to her cousin, Emma. 
 

Casebolt Family Picture 2013

This is the first family picture of all of us (including all the little girls) ever.  It isn't perfect, but at least we are all together.  From left to right, Lily (2 1/2), Ry (34), Jennie (28), Adelaide (7 months), Ryan (35), Emma (4), Jessica (24 at the time of the photo but her birthday was just five days later), Grandpa Russ (probably doesn't want me to say), Grandma Cece (same but they were both born in '51), Seth (31), Amy (33), Clara (2 1/2), Paul (32).
 
 
I took just a few of the cousins on Sunday after church and these are the best we got.  After church is a REALLY hard time to take photos.  Don't they all look so darling in their Christmas finery though?
 


And one of Jennie's family.  I wanted to try to get one of me, Paul, and Clara, but yeah, that didn't happen.  Oh well.


We didn't take a family picture with Paul's family this year, which I am bummed about.  John and his family were gone and Bobby wasn't around a lot of the time so it just didn't happen.  Hopefully we will all be in the same place next year.