I made a hostess apron over the weekend and I'm not going to lie, I like the way it turned out. I know this is not something you can eat, but it's something you can definitely wear when you are serving all of the tasty things you've made! I got the idea from this and that blog but I made some modifications (aka I did it a different way, because it was easier for me to understand). This is important because I have done very little sewing in my life. The last time I sewed something I was probably 10 or 11 years old and it was a lovely sleeping bag for my beanie babies complete with a pillow and ribbon to roll up the sleeping bag and tie it for traveling purposes, of course. And these were sewn by hand.
This time I decided to go a step further and use a sewing machine and to tell you the truth, the hardest thing about this project was prepping the sewing machine (threading the bobbin was the worst), but after that it was smooth sailing.
What you'll need:
1/2 yard fabric1
1/2 yard fabric2
7x7 scrap fabric3
matching thread
from fabric1 cut a 30" x 13" piece
from fabric2 cut 2 4" wide strips (try to cut these as straight as possible, it will pay off later). if you want to be able to wrap the tie around you twice in order to tie it in the front, then cut 3 4" strips. cut each end of the strips at a 45 degree angle, then sew the ends together. in the below picture you will see how I laid 2 strips and where I would sew along the edge. Once they are sewn together, cut the ends of the strips so they are straight. Lay the connected strips flat and fold about 3/4" down from the top and iron it, then 3/4" up from the bottom and iron it.
On fabric1, fold 1/2" on all sides except the top. Sew the 2 shorter sides and then the 1 longer side, leaving the top "raw". The below picture is of me sewing one of the shorter sides.
Now for the pocket. Take fabric3, your 7x7 piece, and fold 3 of the sides over, iron them flat, then sew them just as you did fabric1 (leaving the top "raw").
Cut a 7" piece from fabric2. For my pocket I cut a 7" x 3" piece of fabric2 and folded half of it down on the front of the pocket and the other half behind the pocket and sewed it down.
Place the pocket about 7 inches from the right or left, depending on where you want the pocket. Now sew the pocket on to fabric1. Make sure you don't sew the top closed!
Now find the middle of fabric1 and the middle of the tie and pin them together. I then folded the tie fabric over the apron, like I did with the pocket, (half of it in front and half of it on the back of apron) and pinned it in place all along the fabric. Then I sewed it to seal it closed.
It was a lot of fabric to manage. And I ended up cutting some off the ends so it wouldn't be so long.
Finished! It looks really good with my orange sweatpants, right?
If you have questions, let me know! I'm sure I forgot a step!
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Monday, April 13, 2009
Easter Cookies
I made Easter egg shaped sugar cookies again this year, but with a little more experience. I also used a different sugar cookie recipe and made homemade icing.
Sugar Cookies Ingredients
1. cream shortening, butter, sugar, and vanilla.
2. add eggs, beat well.
3. Sift flour, salt, and baking powder. Stir into creamed mixture along with milk.
4. chill overnight
5. roll onto floured board into 1/4" thickness and cut into desired shapes.
6. Place on greased cookie sheet and bake at 375 degrees for 5-7 minutes. This recipe made 2 1/2 dozen egg-shaped cookies.
White Icing
Ingredients
Beat all ingredients together until stiff peaks form (8-10 minutes). To vary the consistency, add water to thin and add powdered sugar to thicken. Will ice 2 1/2 - 3 dozen cookies.
The cookies are pretty self-explanatory. It's the icing that gets complicated to use. Whenever I roll out the cookie dough, I always use a lot of flour, so that the dough does not get sticky and therefore hard to transfer to the cookie sheet.
To make the icing process a little easier, I covered my kitchen counter in wax paper and taped it down. This way I had plenty of room to spread out the cookies. After letting the cookies cool, I began the tedious process of icing them. As you can see in the below picture, I drew a border around the egg with a #3 icing tip. This can get frustrating, because sometimes the border is not straight or there are breaks in it. Just take your time and make sure it is a complete circle, otherwise when you ice the middle the icing will leak out. Also in this picture, there are eggs that are have already been filled-in with white icing. To do this, put a couple of scoops of icing in a small bowl or cup and gradually add small amounts of water to it until it is runny, constantly stirring it. Then transfer the icing to a plastic bag and cut a small hole in the corner of the bag. Squeeze the icing on to the cookies, making sure to stay in the lines. I squeeze some on about 5 cookies then take a tooth pick and spread it around evenly. I also use the tooth pick to pop some of the air bubbles that form. Let these dry for 1 hour before starting on the details.
Sugar Cookies Ingredients
- 1/2 cup shortening
- 1/2 cup butter, softened
- 1 1/3 cups sugar
- 3 teaspoons vanilla
- 2 eggs
- 3 cups sifted flour
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 teaspoon baking powder
- 2 tablespoons milk
1. cream shortening, butter, sugar, and vanilla.
2. add eggs, beat well.
3. Sift flour, salt, and baking powder. Stir into creamed mixture along with milk.
4. chill overnight
5. roll onto floured board into 1/4" thickness and cut into desired shapes.
6. Place on greased cookie sheet and bake at 375 degrees for 5-7 minutes. This recipe made 2 1/2 dozen egg-shaped cookies.
White Icing
Ingredients
- 3 tablespoons meringue powder
- 4 cups (1 lb.) powdered sugar
- 6 tablespoons water
- 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract (use clear if you want pure white icing)
- 1/2 teaspoon almond extract
Beat all ingredients together until stiff peaks form (8-10 minutes). To vary the consistency, add water to thin and add powdered sugar to thicken. Will ice 2 1/2 - 3 dozen cookies.
The cookies are pretty self-explanatory. It's the icing that gets complicated to use. Whenever I roll out the cookie dough, I always use a lot of flour, so that the dough does not get sticky and therefore hard to transfer to the cookie sheet.
To make the icing process a little easier, I covered my kitchen counter in wax paper and taped it down. This way I had plenty of room to spread out the cookies. After letting the cookies cool, I began the tedious process of icing them. As you can see in the below picture, I drew a border around the egg with a #3 icing tip. This can get frustrating, because sometimes the border is not straight or there are breaks in it. Just take your time and make sure it is a complete circle, otherwise when you ice the middle the icing will leak out. Also in this picture, there are eggs that are have already been filled-in with white icing. To do this, put a couple of scoops of icing in a small bowl or cup and gradually add small amounts of water to it until it is runny, constantly stirring it. Then transfer the icing to a plastic bag and cut a small hole in the corner of the bag. Squeeze the icing on to the cookies, making sure to stay in the lines. I squeeze some on about 5 cookies then take a tooth pick and spread it around evenly. I also use the tooth pick to pop some of the air bubbles that form. Let these dry for 1 hour before starting on the details.
Labels:
Cookies,
Holiday Desserts
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Broiled Tilapia Parmesan

For dinner this week I broiled some tilapia fillets with a Parmesan sauce. Also served was wild rice, mixed vegetables, and Sister Shubert rolls (we recently discovered the larger ones, so good)!
I found the recipe for the tilapia at allrecipes.com
Ingredients
1. pre-heat ovens broiler, grease broiling pan
2. in a small bowl, mix together parmesan cheese, butter, mayo, lemon juice. Season with dried basil, black pepper, onion power, and celery salt.
3. sprinkle tilapia with salt and pepper
4. arrange fillets in a single layer on the broiling pan. Broil on top shelf of oven. Broil on side 1 for 2 minutes. Broil on side 2 for 2 minutes.
5. take fillets out of the oven and cover side 1 with parmesan spread. put back in the oven for 4 minutes, or until the topping is browned.
I found the recipe for the tilapia at allrecipes.com
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup Parmesan cheese
- 1/4 cup butter, softened
- 3 tablespoons mayo
- 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- 1/4 teaspoon dried basil
- 1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
- 1/8 teaspoon onion powder
- 1/8 teaspoon celery salt
- 5 tilapia fillets
1. pre-heat ovens broiler, grease broiling pan
2. in a small bowl, mix together parmesan cheese, butter, mayo, lemon juice. Season with dried basil, black pepper, onion power, and celery salt.
3. sprinkle tilapia with salt and pepper
4. arrange fillets in a single layer on the broiling pan. Broil on top shelf of oven. Broil on side 1 for 2 minutes. Broil on side 2 for 2 minutes.
5. take fillets out of the oven and cover side 1 with parmesan spread. put back in the oven for 4 minutes, or until the topping is browned.
Labels:
Dinners,
Menu Ideas
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Beer Can Chicken
While camping over the weekend, we made a beer can chicken for dinner with potatoes and asparagus (a camping favorite). We also grilled a steak for fun. To grill the chicken, we used the tailgate grill. For seasonings, we used the basics: seasoned salt, pepper, garlic powder, paprika, salt, and anything else we could find. Basically you can't really go wrong when seasoning a chicken (well you can go wrong, but not if you're smart about it). Ben's favorite part about beer can chicken is being in charge of "emptying" half of the beer can. You can do this however you want to. Ben chooses to drink the beer, but you can just pour it out if you like.
You need a little less than half of the beer remaining before you stick it in the chicken. Arrange the chicken on the grill grate so that it will stand up by itself. The total cooking time for the chicken is one hour over medium heat. Don't turn up the heat too high, because the skin will burn before the chicken gets cooked. Rotate the chicken about every 15-20 minutes.
To fix the potatoes and asparagus, put butter, seasoned salt, pepper, and garlic and wrapped them in separate aluminum foil packages and placed them on the fire (pictured above). Put the potatoes on about 15 minutes after you start the chicken, because they take a while to cook. Rotate them over the fire a few times and poke them with a fork to check on their softness. Put the asparagus on the fire about 15 minutes before the chicken is done.
The steak was seasoned with Montreal steak seasoning. I think it had a little kick to it, but I don't like spicy things at all, so a normal person probably wouldn't notice.
This picture doesn't show the potatoes, because they were not ready yet. Yum! The only thing missing was S'mores for dessert!
Labels:
Camping Food,
Dinners
Monday, April 6, 2009
Camping Trip Breakfast of Champions
We went camping and fishing this weekend in North Arkansas. Unfortunately, the generators were running and it was extremely hard to wade and fish in the water, which I contribute to the number of fish I didn't catch. Regardless of the lack of fish, we still prepared a delicious breakfast and dinner! To anyone that likes to camp, I suggest you invest in one of these. They are very handy and fold up nicely for packing purposes (Ben found his at Academy Sports, but Wal-Mart carries them, too).
For breakfast, we made eggs, bacon, and hashbrowns with cheese. We cooked the bacon first so that we could use the leftover grease for the eggs and hashbrowns (it makes them extra tasty).

For breakfast, we made eggs, bacon, and hashbrowns with cheese. We cooked the bacon first so that we could use the leftover grease for the eggs and hashbrowns (it makes them extra tasty).

In order to keep everything warm while we were cooking, we fired up the tailgate grill and put aluminum foil on the grate and placed the food on top. The tailgate grill is awesome. It's your basic gas grill, except there's s special part that attaches to the trailer hitch and the bottom of the grill. Great investment for camping and football games. The hashbrowns definitely took the longest, but they normally take longer to cook on a normal stove, so just plan accordingly. To top the hashbrowns off, we put American cheese on them (yes, just like at Waffle House).
Labels:
Camping Food
Friday, April 3, 2009
Tilapia Po'Boy
WARNING: THESE PO'BOYS ARE VERY MESSY. DRIPPING WILL OCCUR. IF YOU ARE WEARING A WHITE SHIRT, IT MIGHT BE WISE TO PUT ON A BIB.
This week, Ben made tilapia po'boys which were amazing!!! Each sandwich had its own tilapia filet, topped with whatever you want (this is a very large sandwich and I would only try to eat the whole thing if you're really hungry). Season the tilapia however you like (lemon, salt, pepper, garlic, etc). Then cook the tilapia in a skillet, rather than broiling in the oven.
The first two pictures are of Ben's po'boy. He put more interesting things on his. I'm more of a plain jane, turkey-cheese-mustard type. The spread on the right side of the bread was 1 cup mayo, 4 oz. dill relish, and hot sauce to taste. He only put the spread on one side of the bread, but you may put it on both, just double the recipe.
The first two pictures are of Ben's po'boy. He put more interesting things on his. I'm more of a plain jane, turkey-cheese-mustard type. The spread on the right side of the bread was 1 cup mayo, 4 oz. dill relish, and hot sauce to taste. He only put the spread on one side of the bread, but you may put it on both, just double the recipe.
Labels:
Dinners,
Menu Ideas
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Whole Grain Pasta with Garbanzo Beans
This recipe makes more servings than the recipe says (about 6-8 depending on size), which is a good thing (I love leftovers). It's from Food Network's website and Ben found it one day and we decided to try it out last week. We made a few tweaks to the original recipe (which of course made it better, right?). Instead of using chickpeas, we used garbanzo beans and we doubled the amount so that the dish would be extra hardy. And instead of using escarole (because we couldn't find it in the grocery store) we use arugula. Not much of a difference there. Anyways, here's the recipe!
Whole Grain Pasta with Chickpeas
Ingredients
1. cook the pasta according to the package directions; add the arugula during the last 2 minutes, cover and do not stir.
2. Remove arugula with tongs; set aside. Drain the pasta, reserving 1/2 cup cooking liquid.
3. If you are using capers, heat 1 tablespoon EVOO in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the capers and fry until crisp, about 2 minutes. Transfer to a paper-towel-lined plate.
4. Add the remaining 3 tablespoons of oil to the skillet. Cook the garlic, parsley, and red pepper flakes until the garlic toast slightly, 1 minute.
5. Add tomatoes, garbanzo beans, a pinch of salt and the bay leaves. Cook until the garbanzo beans soften a little, about 6 minutes.
6. Add the arugula and cook until the sauce thickens slightly, about 4 minutes. Remove and discard bay leaves.
7. Add the cooked pasta to the skillet and toss with the sauce. Stir in the cheese and top with fried capers
Whole Grain Pasta with Chickpeas
Ingredients
- 2 cups whole grain penne
- 1 head arugula, roughly chopped
- 4 tablespoons EVOO, plus more to taste
- 1/4 cup capers, drained and patted dry
- 5 cloves garlic, sliced
- 1/2 cup roughly chopped fresh parsley
- 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes
- 1 28 oz. can whole peeled tomatoes, crushed slightly
- liquid reserved
- 2 15 oz. cans garbanzo beans, drained, rinsed and patted dry
- Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper
- 2 bay leaves
- 1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese, plus more for garnish
1. cook the pasta according to the package directions; add the arugula during the last 2 minutes, cover and do not stir.
2. Remove arugula with tongs; set aside. Drain the pasta, reserving 1/2 cup cooking liquid.
3. If you are using capers, heat 1 tablespoon EVOO in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the capers and fry until crisp, about 2 minutes. Transfer to a paper-towel-lined plate.
4. Add the remaining 3 tablespoons of oil to the skillet. Cook the garlic, parsley, and red pepper flakes until the garlic toast slightly, 1 minute.
5. Add tomatoes, garbanzo beans, a pinch of salt and the bay leaves. Cook until the garbanzo beans soften a little, about 6 minutes.
6. Add the arugula and cook until the sauce thickens slightly, about 4 minutes. Remove and discard bay leaves.
7. Add the cooked pasta to the skillet and toss with the sauce. Stir in the cheese and top with fried capers
Labels:
Dinners,
Menu Ideas
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