Friday, May 10, 2013

decor: couch update

There have been two recent additions to my couch that have made a big difference.

First, I saw this beautiful old quilt in the guest room at my parents' house over Christmas. The colors coordinate really well with my orange-and-blue living room. My mom was hesitant to hand it over at first ... but ... I can be very charming.

The quilt is now living on the back of my couch. I bought my couch when I moved to D.C. five (!) years ago, and over time, the cushions have become a bit saggy. Maybe I could just add some more stuffing, but for now, the quilt is doing a good job at making the couch look neater.


Second, I now have a boatload of pillows on my couch.

I used to think I didn't want a lot of pillows on the couch for practical reasons. Tony and I share the couch when we watch TV or movies, and I thought it would get too crowded with two humans and a half dozen pillows on a small couch. So all I had on the couch were two matching floral throw pillows. Here's a photo of Jamie playing his guitar my couch before Christmas to give you an idea of what my couch used to look like. In hindsight, it looks pretty plain.


But Jen bought me this pretty ampersand pillow for Christmas, which prompted me to experiment with adding more pillows.


I brought out from storage some more pillows (which were DIY projects with fabric and stuffing from Jo-Ann Fabrics) in a mix of colors and patterns.

It looks like some place you want to curl up and read a book/take a map/watch a DVD.



But, let's be honest, that's only what my couch looks like when I know guests are coming over or when I'm going to take a picture for, say, a blog post. Most of the time the pillows end up tossed on the back of the couch to make more room, which actually makes it very cozy. The too-many-pillows problem that I was worried about hasn't turned out to be a problem at all. 


Thursday, May 9, 2013

the garden: planting tomatoes

Check out how much greenery there is in my garden, compared to just a couple of weeks ago!


Tony and I got back from a trip to see our families in Ohio about a week ago. My dad had started a bunch of veggies for his garden under a grow light this spring, and he planted some for my garden, too. Which took up pretty much the whole back seat of our car on the drive back:


There are tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, flowers, and all kinds of herbs in that box.

I thought I would write a blog post about how to plant tomatoes. This is the technique my dad taught me right after Tony and I moved into our house. My parents came down to D.C. for moving weekend, and right after the truck was unloaded, one of the first places we went was Frager's, where I bought some veggies to plant in pots, including a tomato plant. (I was really, really excited to have outdoor space.)

My dad recommends against just digging a hole in the ground and putting the tomato in. Instead, his method involves cutting off the bottom leaves, planting the roots and part of the stem in a trench, and bending the stem 90 degrees to make it grow upright. I had strong tomato plants that first year, presumably with big, healthy root bases, so I planted my tomatoes his way again last year and this year.

Here are some photos I took a few weeks ago with the Early Girl tomatoes I bought at Home Depot. (Even though my dad grew a lot of different kind of tomatoes for me this year, I wanted to make sure I had Early Girls in my garden, which is why I made the Home Depot purchase. Early Girls did really, really well for me last year, so I definitely wanted to have them in my garden.)


I took the plant out of the pot and teased the roots. Then I snipped off the bottom three leaves. That part of the plant is going to be buried, and new roots will grow from the spots that were snipped off. Here's a photo of that process, although this admittedly is not a great picture:


Next I dug a trench, instead of a hole. The root ball lays at one end of the trench. And to make this work, you have to bury the snipped-off parts of the stem, then gently shape the stem upwards 90 degrees.


As you can see, we can call her "Eileen" because while a tomato plant is relatively flexible, she's not quite standing up straight yet.


 But here she is last weekend, standing pretty straight and tall. And hopefully with a wide and strong root system, thanks to dad's planting advice.


Oh, and here is another picture from last weekend. (I also have a couple of tomatoes and a pepper plant growing in pots.) Tomato blossoms abound! And on Tuesday, I was investigating those blossoms a bit more closely and found a itty bitty green tomato peeking out!


Yay, summer!

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

recipe: tony's dump cake

There is precisely one dessert recipe that Tony knows how to make. And for years now, whenever he's called upon to bring a dessert to a dinner party or potluck, he turns to his trusty dump cake. Easy and tasty. So last Friday, when our neighbor invited Tony over for a man night with a group of guys (complete with steaks and whiskey), Tony volunteered to bring the dessert.


This recipe is simple. There are four ingredients, all of which can be kept in the pantry and fridge or freezer, ready for last-minute dump cake emergencies. Crushed pineapple. Cherry pie filling. Yellow cake mix. Butter. And as the name implies, you just dump it all into a pan and bake it.


(I should note that we only had pineapple chunks at our house, so Tony used a potato masher to break the chunks up. It's easiest just to buy the right stuff, though.)

Tony's Dump Cake

  • 1 can crushed pineapple with juice
  • 1 can cherry pie filling
  • 1 box yellow cake mix
  • 2 sticks butter

In a 9-by-13-inch baking dish, pour crushed pineapple. Spread cherry pie filling on top. Spread yellow cake mix over the fruit. Top with pats of butter.

Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

recipe: grilled mac and cheese with french fried onions

When my parents gave Tony and me our grill for Christmas, they mentioned that you can grill pretty much anything that you can bake in the oven. That could come in handy when it's 95 degrees this summer, and turning on the oven isn't an option. Just imagine -- chocolate chip cookies and enchiladas in July! Or apple pie and homemade pizza in August!

The weather hasn't been hot enough here yet to necessitate major grilling experiments, although Tony and I have had started dabbling with different recipes. We've made grilled pizza a few times, but I think I'm still searching for the best grilled pizza recipe. And over the weekend, we tried grilled mac and cheese, which turned out to be fantastic. This recipe is ready for prime time.


The recipe is going to look verrrrry familiar if you remember the baked macaroni and cheese recipe I posted last fall. One key difference: Tony requested I put French's French fried onions on his. He says it took the dish to a whole new level.


Also, you can see that we grilled the mac and cheese in two separate pans. I've been pretty sensitive to dairy lately, so I couldn't use real cheese in mine. So instead of using one 9-inch square casserole dish, we used two 8-by-4-inch loaf pans. I put real cheese in Tony's pan and Daiya soy "cheese" in mine.

That said, I'll give you the recipe assuming you're using just one baking dish, using real cheese in the whole thing and spreading onions over the entire casserole.


Macaroni and Cheese
Adapted from James Beard's American Cookery

  • 2 cups macaroni (or medium shells)
  • 3 tablespoons butter
  • 3 tablespoons flour
  • 1 1/2 cups milk (or soy milk)
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 3 splashes of Tabasco
  • 2 cups shredded cheddar cheese
  • 1 cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese (or mozzarella, which is what we had in the fridge)
  • generous amount of breadcrumbs
  • four handfuls French fried onions
Butter a 2-quart baking dish. (We used disposable foil dishes for easy cleanup.)

Boil noodles for the minimum cooking time. My box called for 10-12 minutes, and I boiled for 10 minutes. Drain.

For the white sauce, melt butter in a saucepan. Add flour and cook for a few minutes. Meanwhile, in a separate saucepan, heat milk to the boiling point. Add milk to the butter-flour mixture. Add salt and Tabasco. Sauce will start to thicken. Cook on medium-low, stirring constantly, for 5 minutes.

In the prepared baking dish, add half of the macaroni, spread half of the white sauce, and add half of the cheese. Then add the rest of the macaroni, the rest of the white sauce, and then the rest of the cheese. Top with a generous amount of breadcrumbs. You can make your own breadcrumbs, but I used store-bought Italian-seasoned crumbs. Crush four handfuls of French fried onions in your hands and spread over top of casserole.

Pre-heat grill to 350-400 degrees (medium-low). Grill for 25 minutes or until breadcrumbs are crispy brown.