Sunday, April 29, 2012

Cheese Cake Pudding

DELICIOUS CHEESE CAKE PUDDING

-recipe-

This is an absolutely, meltingly yummy pudding my mom made up. We had an excess amount of cottage cheese, so, instead of making a whole cheesecake, she changed the recipe and made pudding instead. I would like all credit to go to her.

What do you need?

3c. cottage cheese
3/4 c sugar
1 1/4 t. vanilla extract
1 t. almond extract
1 t. lemon zest (grated lemon peel)

What to do

Simply blend all the ingredients in a food processor until it is nice and smooth. If you don't have a food processor, you can use a blender, but use small amounts because this recipe can be very thick. Make sure you keep the pudding in the refrigerator, and you can eat this just as pudding, or use it as a dip or topping. I absolutely adore this recipe, it is amazingly delicious.  

Enjoy this recipe, and have a wondrous day!

As always, feel free to leave comments, suggestions, questions, pictures of your projects, or anything else you can think of!

Friday, April 13, 2012

Coffee Yogurt

DELICIOUS COFFEE YOGURT

-recipe-

This is a recipe I figured out almost on accident. It is an absolutely delicious treat that is actually not bad for you. I make it when I am having a sweet craving, and it gives me a bit of energy as well.

What do you need?

1/2 c any type of unsweetened plain or vanilla low fat yogurt. I used Fage (pronounce fa-yah) plain low fat Greek yogurt
1 tsp sugar
A smattering of your favorite coffee grounds. I used keurig coffee pods in french vanilla.



What to do


 Scoop out about a half a cup of yogurt into a bowl. You can do more or less depending on how much you want to eat.
 Add a teaspoon of sugar and mix in.
Sprinkle some coffee grounds into the yogurt. If you have regular coffee grounds, plain yogurt, and you want a French vanilla taste, simply add a few drops of vanilla flavoring.
Mix it all up, and eat! 


I find this to be delightfully yummy with just the right flavors mixed together. It can be tweaked to be your perfect flavor, adding or taking away sugar or coffee, and changing up the brands and types of ingredients. 

Enjoy this recipe, and have a wondrous day!

As always, feel free to leave comments, suggestions, questions, pictures of your projects, or anything else you can think of!

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Plastic Yarn

PLASTIC YARN 

-yarn made of grocery bags-

This is a tutorial on how to make yarn out of plastic grocery bags so that you can knit, crochet, or weave with it. 

What do you need?

Plastic grocery bags (how many and what color is up to you and the size of what your making)
Scissors 

How to do it

 First, flatten out and smooth down the bag. Then fold it in half twice, and cut off the handles and the sealed bottom
 Next, cut strips that are about half an inch wide.
Lastly, knot the strips together one at a time like the drawing shows. Loop the end of one strip through the end of the other. Pull that end through itself, and pull it tight. 
Be careful when you pull the knots tight, because if you pull too hard you can break the strip. If a strip does rip apart, simply do a square knot to make it a loop again.
Once you have a bag stripped and tied together, you can wrap it into a ball, or wrap it around something to keep it from getting tangled.



I hope you enjoyed this simple tutorial, and have a wondrous day!

As always, feel free to leave comments, suggestions, questions, pictures of your projects, or anything else you can think of!

The Bag of All Bags

THE BAG OF ALL BAGS

-the tutorial and pattern-


Go from this...
...To this!
...To this...
This tutorial is for a bag that changes from a beach bag to a stylish purse in seconds. The best part about this bag? it's made out of shopping bags! I crocheted about 50 bags to make this versatile purse/bag, and it is actually quite easy to do! It is made out of things you can most likely find around the house, and I made it and only spent about 10 cents!
The plastic bags are a lot softer when crocheted then they would seem to be. The plastic also makes it perfect for holding wet towels and swimsuits, and makes it easy to clean after a sandy day at the beach. Plus, this is a great way to reuse those plastic bags that we all seem to get at the stores!

What do I need?

-LOTS of plastic bags (at least 50, if not more), the color is completely dependent on what you want your bag to look like
-Scissors
-Three shoe strings, nice and long (I used some extra shoe laces that came with some of my shoes)
-Three beads that can fit two shoe strings snugly inside of them (you don't want them to be loose). I used beads that I had left over from crafts, but I was one short so I had to buy one, that's where my 10 cents went
-Six beads that can fit one shoe string, these can be a bit loose on the string
-Crochet needle (I used a size K, however, you can use a different size if you want the weave to be tighter or looser) 

Plastic Yarn

To find out how to make the bags turn into yarn, click this link.

Crocheting

I did not follow a pattern for this bag, but I will try and do my best to explain how I crocheted it. Keep in mind that I was using the double stitch for the entire bag except for parts on the strap and unless I was using the chain stitch. After connecting, I chain 2 to reach the double stitch height, then double stitch in the same hole I connected to.  
Start with a slip knot on your needle
Chain 6, connect (con) so you make a loop
1. Chain 2, double stitch (ds) 9, con
2. Chain 2, Increase (inc) every stitch, con
3. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 1] (These brackets [] meant to continue this pattern all the way around), con
4. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 1], con
5. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 2], con
6. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 3], con
7. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 5], con
8. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 10], con
9. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 22], con
If you are following my exact pattern, I switched to brown bags at row 10
10. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 10], con
11. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 20], con
12. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 20], con
Switch back to white
13. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 20], con
14. Chain 2, [inc 1, single 20], con
15. Chain 2, [single], con
16. Chain 2, [single], con
17. Chain 2, [single], con
Switch back to brown for 3 rows, then back to white for 5 rows. I did not increase any more stitches after row 14.
You can make this bag as tall as you like (think beach bag for height), but if you are following me exactly I did 52 rows altogether. There were 6 sections of brown and 6 sections of white (counting the bottom circle, but not counting the strap).

Here is the pattern for the strap.
1. Single stitch (ss) 1, double stitch (ds) 23, ss 1
2. Chain 1, skip, ss 1, ds 19, skip, ss 1
3. Chain 1, skip, ss 1, ds 19, skip, ss 1
Continue this pattern until row 9
9. Chain 2, skip, ds 10
10. Chain 2, ds 10
11. Chain 2, ds 10
Continue this until you are halfway to the length you want your strap to be, then repeat the pattern, starting on the opposite side from the first time you did it. When you get the length you want, connect the straps by single stitching them together.

The Shoe Laces

Now onto the drawstring and the converter strings. The drawstring is simple enough, just weave one string all the way around the top of the bag. Then, slide the big bead onto both strings, the little beads onto each string, and tie a knot at the ends.
This is the front and top views of
the drawstring in the bag
Beads on the
Shoe lace



If you only want a beach bag, you can stop now. You're done! However, if you would like to have the beach bag be able to convert to a purse, continue on.









Converter Strings

These are a bit more complicated, so I'm going to have drawings to try and help it be as easy as possible. First, decide how big you want your bag. Once you have figured this out, continue on.

In this drawing, the shoe string is the red line, and the green line is where the shoe string loops into the bag. The black circle is the actual bottom of the bag, and the blue line is where you want your purse to end. 
Here is an upright picture. The dotted lines are on the strings on the other side of the bag.















Bottom of bag
Repeat on the other side with the second shoe string. Make sure that you loop through where the gold circle is so that the two sides are crisscrossing.
Side view of bag










Finally, do the same process as you did with the drawstring to add the big and little beads to the ends of both shoe strings.




Making the Bag Work

Bottom of bag
To change the beach bag to a purse, tuck the bottom of the bag inside the purse, and pull the ends of both shoe laces until the sides are touching. Slide the big beads up to keep it tight.
HINT: I found that the dangling drawstrings were really annoying, so I tied them all together in a bow (see the purse picture).


Whew! After all of that work, you have a bag that is almost 100% recycled, and (unless you had to buy some of the supplies) 100% free. The plastic bags are really strong, and I use this purse all the time. I hope you enjoy this tutorial and have a wondrous day!

As always, feel free to leave comments, suggestions, questions, pictures of your projects, or anything else you can think of!

String for the Birds

STRING FOR THE BIRDS

-Tutorial-

Today is a warm, spring day, lightly breezy with just a touch of crispness to the air. This is a day that the robins and the blue jays will be poking their beaks around trying to find material for their nests. So, I thought I would help them out.
What do you need?
Lots of colorful scraps of fabric, string or yarn

 I had this ball of string left over from my Rag Doll hair look, because when I stripped the cloth, lots of little strings were left over.
What do you do?
Simply pull apart your string, or cut your scraps of cloth into reasonable sizes (think about a bird having to carry it).
 Next, go outside and spread them around. I put mine in a tree in my back yard, because I didn't want the strings to jam up the mower if they were in the grass.
 As you can see, it was a bit breezy, but hopefully the motion and colors will catch a bird's eye.
  The last step is to walk away and let the birds come and use your scraps as their new furnishings!



I hope you enjoyed this, and have a wondrous day!

As always, feel free to leave comments, suggestions, questions, pictures of your projects, or anything else you can think of!