Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: kitchen, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 43
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: justdrawit, draw tip, journal, cooking, pen, kitchen, Add a tag
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, journal, watercolour, colour, kitchen, Add a tag
Sometimes in the morning, you are only half awake and just took your first sip of coffee, but then there's that moment that you realize you have something really pretty in front of you. So: sketch it!
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, journal, cooking, watercolour, recipe, kitchen, Add a tag
Welcome to Draw Tip Tuesday!
Today we're doing a quick food illustration - Sunny side up, or any way you like it.
Draw It Like It's Hot starts this Monday. It's $69 and will run for 4 weeks, in which you draw your way towards an illustrated recipe, to be published on www.theydrawandcook, for the world to see!
For more info follow this link.
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, journal, cooking, colour, kitchen, coloured pencils, Add a tag
It's true: I love flowers, they are a luxury item that is easy to get here in the Netherlands and they make the house feel alive, fresh and cheerful. But a bunch of carrots, or radishes, or well, any other kind of vegetable makes me just as happy, as they are so interesting to draw!
Looking forward to get more colour pencil drawings done during my upcoming online drawing course 'Just Draw It!', starting next Monday.
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, journal, cooking, kitchen, Add a tag
Ahhh... sitting down after an exhausting day to eat great fresh food, made and served by a lovely lady, was a huge treat already.
But taking out my sketchbook and drawing the deli was the best treat I could give myself. An hour of joy. With the taste of Turkish Mezze in my mouth, the sound of Turkish television in the background, and admiring glances over my shoulder from the hostess.... what else could I wish for?
More food drawing in my current workshop 'Draw It Like It's hot' now also, yay!
So check it out if you're a foodie, like me and click here to join me!
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: urban sketch, food, journal, cooking, watercolour, colour, kitchen, Add a tag
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: coloured pencils, food, journal, chocolate, cooking, watercolour, portrait, self portrait, kitchen, sweets, Add a tag
This self Portrait Project is getting out of hand, and I like it!
Doing self portraits gives me the opportunity to try out many techniques, and it gives me a lot of practice on making a portrait that looks like me (so far I haven't succeeded many times, but I'm having a lot of fun anyway)
Then, I got the question what would be the next film?
And.... another idea was born: to bring a bit of extra challenge, and to add diversity in my self portraits (it is, after all, the same face over and over again).
On my Facebook Page, people have been suggesting film titles and characters, that I could use for my film-themed selfies.
So if you have a suggestion for me... bring it on!
Blog: (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: family, Relationships, humor, parenting, funny, kitchen, marriage, Dad, husband, daughters, Learned Along the Way, Add a tag
I made a discovery amidst my family’s unfortunate new reality. Since I am not a genius, I am sure most of you already knew what I just found out. However, it solved a long-standing conundrum for me.
I’ve been doing the dishes in my domicile for about a decade. There are two reasons and both pertain to my lovely wife. First, her hands get dry and cracked sometimes after she washes dishes. It isn’t a big deal to pitch in and do something, so I figured I could help AND save money on expensive lotions. The second reason is that she said I never looked sexier than when I’m elbow deep in soap suds. If that ain’t reason enough, I don’t know what is.
We have this long running argument about the necessity of some pots, pans, and utensils to the cooking process. I believe that she has an evil plan to soil every dish we own – thus my dirty kitchen apocalypse theory. She discounts my hypothesis and doesn’t seem to care anyway. I still maintain that chocolate chip cookies shouldn’t require seventeen items to make. Yet every time I smell them cooking, I know I have seventeen new items to wash.
All of that leads to today’s brilliant finding. She had been at the hospital with our youngest for two weeks. It has been a rough stretch with me playing Mr. Mom. Thanks to the generosity of others, I have yet to cook (a fact that makes my other daughters very happy since my culinary expertise doesn’t extend past piling things on bread.) I noticed during the last few days that I didn’t have many dishes to wash at all. Bonus!
We finally got to bring our sick baby home this week and, lo and behold, within an hour the sink was full of dirty dishes. Nothing could dampen the joy of the reunion, but I admit I was slightly peaved. So I playfully confronted the offender with the revival of my dirty kitchen apocalypse theory.
My lovely wife didn’t flinch, just laughed and waved me off.
“But I haven’t washed this many dishes in two weeks,” I complained to her back as she walked away.
“You have to cook to make dishes,” she replied over her shoulder.
Ahhh, so that explains it.
And off I go to fill the sink with suds, hoping she’ll take notice.
photo credit: Mysid (Own work) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, journal, sketch, watercolour, pen, kitchen, coloured pencils, bic-pen, Add a tag
I will leave it to you to decide if they're getting any better.
Blog: Beth Kephart Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Susan Schilling, TAYSHAS, Blake Nelson, Dana Reinhardt, kitchen, Nina LaCour, Andrew Smith, Add a tag
In San Antonio, on the TAYSHAS panel, Susan Schilling asked what we do when we are not writing.
We are, in our own ways, living.
Nina LaCour remakes whole rooms, top to bottom. Dana Reinhardt pursues the immediate results—the appreciable outcomes—of cooking. Andrew Smith has not, in fifteen years, missed a day of running—wherever he is, wherever he goes, he heads out into the weather. Blake Nelson learns as much as he can (in sometimes funny ways) about people.
When I am not writing (and most of the time, I am not writing), I do many things that I am not particularly good at. Building objects out of clay. Raising seedlings into buds. Dancing the tango with my husband. And, also, sometimes all-consumingly, turning my nearly 100-year-old house into a home.
This past November, I began a quest to refinish my kitchen. To replace the broken things. To up the ante on the colors. To generate new light and life. It was a fraught proposition from the get-go—famously horrific weather, disappointing contractors, a leaking roof, delays, unforeseen expenses.
This morning she stands. Whole at last, complete.
I am, when I am not writing, living.
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: journal, cooking, watercolour, recipe, colour, kitchen, commissioned work, Add a tag
Procrastination. The word alone is intruiging to me. I can hardly pronounce it correctly, and still, I know very well how to do it. Procrastinating I mean, not the pronouncing.
I know nobody who doesn't procrastinate.
Nobody. I think people who claim they never procrastinate on anything, are not being honest.
I think stopping by at the procrastination station is perfectly normal and healthy. Or well, at least I tell myself. I just did a very, very good job on folding the laundry. Instead of uploading stuff for one of my upcoming online classes. In fact, this blogpost is partly procrastination.
The upside: procrastinating on one thing, sometimes leads to something good on something else that you may loath doing if that's all you need to do: doing the dishes, painting a wall, rearrange your living room interior, do grocery shopping, scrubbing the bathroom floor.... Other times it's just sort of paralyzing, and you're spending way too much time browsing through Facebook feed, Instagram art or get buried deeper and deeper into Pinterest.
Now here's the kind of 'productive procrastination' that I really like: making a drawing while putting off doing a drawing. I was working on an illustration that I promised to make for a friend. She's getting married, and we wanted to give her something personal during her bachelorette day. Once I started working on the illustrated cocktail recipe for her, it felt great to be making something personal, but before starting, it just looked like a big mountain to climb, an assignment for which I actually really didn't have any time in my schedule.
Once I planned some after-dinner drawing time, I did some doodling and sketching, but then got so intrigued by drawing orange peels.... this is what happened:
That's what I mean: a fun result of procrastination behaviour, right?
In the end, I managed to finish my sketches and make an illustration. During a round of cocktails (of course!) we gave it to the bride-to be and she's very happy with it! She will hang it on the kitchen wall.
On April 28, my 4-week online workshop 'Draw It Like It's Hot' starts.
I wil show how to make stuff like the above, and much more!
It'll be great fun to work towards the final assignment along with your classmates: creating an illustrated recipe that will be published on the website theydrawandcook.com!
It's only $69 to enroll, so what are you waiting for?
Click here to read more and join.
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, travel, journal, watercolour, pen, kitchen, bic-pen, Add a tag
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: sketch, watercolour, pen, recipe, kitchen, journal, Add a tag
Yum.
Blog: Secret Seed Society (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children, kids, fun, Recipes, cooking, recipe, play, kitchen, pancakes, seed, pancake day, vegetable, Shrove Tuesday, Seed Agent News, veg, Cooking Missions, Add a tag
Today is Pancake Day! Also called Fat Tuesday or Shrove Tuesday if you take part in Lent. It’s traditionally a day to eat up all sorts of yummy things in your house that you are promising not to eat during Lent, like chocolate. It’s a long month if you’re giving up your junkiest habit so first of all you need to eat a shed-load of pancakes.
It’s strange people MAKE and EAT pancakes only one day a year.
HOW ODD?! Why only eat such a great food one day out of 365? We must change this silliness once and for all.
But how? …Time for a Seed Agent Mission.
WHAT IF?! We rename pancakes Flippers! Every time we make a pancake we call it a Flipper. Everytime we eat a pancake we call it Flipper. Everytime we see a pancake we call it a Flipper. Soon the world will call pancakes – Flippers!! And then we can eat Flippers ALL year round, and not just on Fat Tuesday.
There’s nothing that can’t be used to fill a flipper, sweet or savoury, hot or cold, the choice is yours Seed Agents! Try some veg-flippers! “Move along old-school lemon and sugar”, “Bye-bye gooey joys of chocolate”, “Hello pongy cheese, spinach and mushrooms!”
Have a go at making your own flippers here and experiment eating them with different fillings. Discover which one you like best!
Add a CommentBlog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, journal, kitchen, they draw and cook, Add a tag
By Tina Johnson |
By Cathy Levesque |
By Kaiva Narbute |
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, watercolour, pen, recipe, colour, kitchen, Add a tag
'Insalata di Arance'.
I remember reading this on the menu of a terriffic restaurant in Palermo in Sicily. It was a hot summer day and I was about to order a copious lunch involving fresh fish and pasta. As a side dish, 'orange salad', sounded refreshing and sweet.
This was the culinary discovery of the decade for me. The juicy orange slices were simply tossed onto a plate, a generous amount of olive oil poured over it, and sprinkled with course sea salt and chilli flakes. Quite a surprise and sensational for the taste buds! Since then, I've prepared it many times and enjoy eating it immensely, both because of the memory and the fabulous taste.
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, sketch, watercolour, pen, recipe, colour, kitchen, Add a tag
It's a cliché, and I am guilty of using it a lot: simplicity is key.
It's just true. Sometimes, all you need is just a few things to make something really good.
Like when cooking, make sure your main ingredients are of great quality, you can't really go wrong. It's a fact that pumpkin and feta cheese just love each other and they will feast on your plate on a bed of lettuce.
It starts March 3
Blog: Koosje Koene (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: food, watercolour, pen, kitchen, Add a tag
Hmmmyum... this is a great quiche for parties, and whenever I make a large batch, I make sure to cut some pieces off and throw them in the freezer. They're great for a quick dinner!
Put the dough on the bottom of a oven dish, spread a layer of grated cheese over it, then arrange the tomato slices next to each other, covering the layer of cheese. Chop quite some fresh basil and sprinkle it over the dish. Mix a few eggs with some pepper (you don't need salt -the cheese is salt enough!), chopped garlic and finely chopped onion and poor it over the dish. Make sure it divides well. then top it off with a nice layer of grated cheese and put this in the oven for about 45 minutes, until the cheese is goldenbrown.
If you can, leave it to cool and eat it the next day - it will taste even better! (cold or warm)
Blog: Hazel Mitchell (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: kitchen, little girl, canaries, cage, Hazel Mitchell, sketch for today, how to draw fast, illustration, girl, birds, photoshop, baking, cooking, cake, Bird seed, digital art, Add a tag
Blog: A Year of Reading (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: poetry, baking, cake, kitchen, Poetry Month 2012, Add a tag
BIRTHDAY CAKE
Measuring Spoons
Our advice?
Be precise.
Kitchen Aid
I stand…
I mix, blend,
whip, stir, knead…
at your command.
Cake Pans
We’re fickle.
Three layers stick
whenever we pick.
Violets on the Windowsill
We choose
purple for our blooms.
You make the air go blue
because of what the pans decided to do.
Table
Come sit.
Unwind.
Write a bit.
Find
the humor in all of it.
Be resigned,
start again. Don’t quit.
© Mary Lee Hahn, 2012
Poem #8, National Poetry Month 2012
Cathy, at Merely Day By Day, is joining me in a poem a day this month. Other daily poem writers include Amy at The Poem Farm, Linda at TeacherDance, Donna at Mainely Write, Laura at Writing the World for Kids (daily haiku), Liz at Liz in Ink (daily haiku), Sara at Read Write Believe (daily haiku)...and YOU?
Blog: Ginger Pixels (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ginger Nielson, Winston the Wonderhound, castle, winston, kitchen, chapter 8, Add a tag
Once again Winston and Roxxanne have met a challenge. You can find them in the Castle kitchen today along with a most angry Queen Mellameen.
Blog: Needle Book (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: kitchen, decorating, corners of my home, Add a tag
Now that the house is sunnier I've been feeling more motivated to do lots of little decorating projects. My decorating budget is still non-existent, so stay posted for lots of easy changes you can do that cost next to nothing. Most of these involved things I had lying around already, so it helps if you already have things like leftover paint from other projects etc.
The first thing I've done is add more shelving in our kitchen. The wall over our table was completely bare. When we moved into our house there was some wood left behind in the garage and I had found three more planks just like the ones I used to make shelves in the studio.
All I did was a quick sand before priming and painting. So they are still a little bumpy but I like that look. These were installed with some inexpensive brackets from IKEA.
Originally I had planned to just put a bunch of stuff that was cluttering up our countertops on the shelves, but after I'd added a couple of ceramic pieces, I ended up gathering up the ones I had in the studio as well to have them all gathered in one place.
The bottom shelf is the more utilitarian shelf, with the regularly used salt and pepper, butter dish, napkins and coasters. We do use the ceramic planters to store things like garlic cloves but really I just think they look pretty..
Then at the bottom I added hooks for my collection of tea cups. What can I say I love granny decor whether it's chic or not!
Blog: Needle Book (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: home, kitchen, decorating, Add a tag
So lately we've been doing lots of work on the house, mainly painting, and I've been trying out some new colours. When it came to the kitchen I wanted something very light. Our old kitchen had sliding doors out to the garden, as well as a large window and it was very bright. The new kitchen has a large window but only a single back door with a small window in it.
I liked the grey we used for the old kitchen, Benjamin Moore Titanium, but I wanted something that would work well with the blue in our living room. So I picked a very pale, bluish/greenish Benjamin Moore colour called Dewdrop. It has a sort of beach glass colour to it, but it's so pale it almost looks white. If you compare it to the trim you can see the colour. In the end I'm happy with it, it's subtle but my second choice was just a classic white kitchen so this has the same effect while having a hint of pretty colour.
I wasn't planning to paint at all, the previous colour was a pale sandy-beige that was fine, but after doing the electrical work the walls were full of holes that we had to patch. Now I'm happy I did paint it as I love the way the kitchen feels now - more bright and airy, and it also feels more like ours. As you can see above, it's not much of a change but I like it!
When it does come time to renovate I'm not sure if we'll keep the original cabinets, probably we will but update the doors. I like the way they extend right up to the ceiling. The kitchen has a sort of 50s charm, but we could use more drawers and general storage. We would like to update the counter top, faucet, sink and add a tile backsplash. I do like the wood floor and it's larger than the galley kitchen we had before. Do I miss the renovated kitchen in our last house? I certainly do, but I still love our new house so it's ok!
Blog: DIANE SMITH: Illo Talk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Santa Barbara, Jesusita Fire, drawing, painting, baby, kitchen, Add a tag
Blog: Needle Book (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: kitchen, renovation, bathroom, tiling, Add a tag
So today I started on tiling our backsplashes. First the bathroom as there aren't any outlets to worry about and it's a small area to do.
Tip: if you put some moisturizer on your hands before doing this kind of work it's easier to clean them afterwards
This kind of tiling is quite easy and so I'll mention how I did it in case it's helpful to anyone. First I placed the tiles where they would go to see how I should space them as I wasn't going to try to cut any of the tiny glass mosaic tiles.
After you spread on the adhesive, you drag the trowel over it at a 45 degree angle. What you are doing is making the adhesive all the same height. It's better to go a bit over the borders of where the tiles will be placed because you can clean up any excess adhesive with a damp cloth. If there weren't enough adhesive at the edges the tiles might not adhere properly.
Don't rush, the adhesive doesn't dry quickly so you have at least 30 minutes to futz around and be as much of a perfectionist as you want to be. Or make mistakes. Or have trouble getting behind the faucet and find you're getting a bit fractious.
Then at this stage I used a long wide quilting ruler (choose whatever you like) to press on the tiles and make sure they were even. Some excess adhesive might squeeze out but it's easy to wipe up. Pay attention to the ones on the corners and make sure they're straight.
The bathroom backsplash is almost done! Just need to let it dry 24 hours then do the grouting. If you want to see that step let me know because otherwise I might think I'm boring you with all this.
Then I did it all over again in the kitchen. It's a bit brighter in there so you can see the colour better.Unfortunately I opened the box of tiles to start on the other side and discovered they were all dark smoky grey. So now I have to wait before finishing the kitchen...
I guess when I show that I could talk a bit about outlets... the only thing that really makes it tricky. So I think this is going well, but before trying it yourself you might want to wait and see how it turns out in the end - and remember I'm not an expert!!
View Next 17 Posts
Reblogged this on alexa902.
Another post that made me laugh out loud. You truly are an inspiration. :)
Thank you Skye. That is very kind.
your wife is brilliant, and i am so happy your girl is home and this is so funny )
Your family life with all of its drudgery marches on. How great is that???? 😃😃😃
Fyi get a dishwasher.
I am sure you are appreciated more than you know. My son’s main house chore growing up was washing pots and pans. His sister loaded the dishwasher. One night I came home from work and could not find a pot or pan top cook in. Nobody knew what happened to them. Then I found a mound of fresh dirt in the back yard the next day. Yes. My son had buried them all to keep from washing them. Seems like an awful lot of work he went through, but I think he thought he would only have to do it once.
Ha. That’s funny. Sometimes it is t the amount of work, it is the type of work.
Thank you, it is good to have her home. Even for just a little while.
We have one that runs all the time. I just do the pots, pans and such. As I say, there is a lot to do with her goal…
Mark – a lovely guffaw going on here! Thank you :-)
I have noticed a definite link between people who cook but don’t wash up and the amount of pots and utensils used. My sister in law has the same trait but she is a great cook, so the washing up is worth it.