(Not Pictured: The very proud Mama and Daddio who were jumping up and down with joy!)
Happiest Weekend to you!
(Not Pictured: The very proud Mama and Daddio who were jumping up and down with joy!)
Happiest Weekend to you!
Back when Sean’s cousin S. had her first baby and we knew it was going to be a girl, I asked her what her favorite colors were. S. told me that she really loved purples and greens, so I went fabric shopping for her little girl-to-be and picked out a bright spring green floral.
Then when her first daughter actually arrived, it was clear that this was not quite the right fabric choice for her. She just wasn’t a bright green sort of a girl. She looked so much like a blue girl to me. I abandoned the green fabric to the sewing closet and choice something else for little Eve.
Now, Eve has a sister and S. her second beautiful daughter, Sue. When we saw the first pictures of Cousin Sue, that green floral fabric came right to mind. It suits her. We only had to wait three years until she arrived on the scene to claim it.
Oliver + S’s Birthday Party Dress remains my most favorite children’s sewing pattern (you can take a look at the couple of BP Dresses that I made here and here), and that is saying a lot because there are so many second favorites. The construction of the dress is very interesting. The three-scissor rating on this pattern felt intimidating at first, but it, at least to me, did not feel much more difficult than most of Oliver + S’s two scissors. There are many steps, but each of the steps is fairly simple. If you are considering sewing one of these dresses and feeling worried about whether you have the skill set, give it a try.
Sometimes when I am sewing, I will ask the family to vote on certain details like trim fabrics or buttons. In this case, we held a vote for the button that best fit the button tab in the front. There were about 8 different buttons up for consideration, but this bright pink flower won the majority of the votes.
Genevieve was kind enough to model Sue’s dress so that we could see how it looks on a little body. We cannot wait to see Baby Sue, herself, in it! Sue, welcome to the world, Little One! We have been waiting for you a long time.
You KNOW you cannot get ready for Easter dinner without getting on your swimsuit and rash guard. Happy Weekend, Bunnies!
If you live in New York long enough, you will most likely eventually get the honor of being invited to attend a seder for Jewish Passover. Because the holiday requires that nothing is cooked with leavening, you will also almost always be offered a very traditional and very delicious dessert: coconut macaroons.
People tend to fall into two camps where coconut is concerned, it seems. Either you love it and wax poetic, or you cannot stand it and won’t even look at these macaroons. Let me just say right now that, if you do not like coconut, these are not going to be the thing for you, but if you do, like I do, and all but one of my mini-chef students do, you will live for these.
In Italy in one bakery or another, they served a macaroon-like cookie with a lovely addition: almond flour. It adds an earthiness to the macaroon that improves the texture and the taste. For our recipe, we also toasted half of the coconut to increase the nutty flavor. Yum. The coconut, itself, is half sweetened, half not. If you know that your mini-chefs are not much for desserts that are not super sweet, simply use all sweetened coconut.
In class we added cocoa powder to half of our macaroons. You can use your poetic license here though. Mini chocolate chips. Mint extract. Cardamom. Chopped dried cherries. Dried pineapple. Whatever floats your boat when paired with coconut. In fact, if you have some sort of great idea, please leave me a comment. I cannot get enough of these and would take any excuse to make them again soon.
Now then, if you are not celebrating Passover and, say, are celebrating Easter instead this weekend, you could just as easily make little nests out of these, pressing a little place in the middle of the mounds with your finger before baking them. Afterward, they would be the perfect place to nestle a Peep or a few chocolate eggs.
Last night, friends of ours came over for dinner, and we served these macaroons for dessert. At the end of the evening, while the oldest sister, 6, was putting her shoes on to leave, she made sure to ask, “How did you make those things?”. She wanted to make sure that her mom had that recipe for later. Here it is, for all the coconut-lovers everywhere: