This may be a bit of a sloppy post as we've been making chutney over the last four days. Mr T does all the prep and I do the clearing up. The fruits, spices and vinegar are left to soak for 24 hours and then it is simmered for hours and hours until it is thick and sticky. It is easier than jam as there is no setting point, but you simmer it until 'dropping' consistency or when you can see the bottom of the pan when you stir it, like parting the red sea. We both take it in turns to stir it and it is my job to do the bottling. But I must say Mr T does the hard graft - peeling all those onions!! Unfortunately our fruit trees let us down this year, no pears or plums, although we have got apples. We love the pear and plum chutneys so much and our friends do to, that we went out and bought some. We also had to supplement our home-grown shallots, as we are great pickled onion eaters too. However we have lots of beetroot growing and they are next for the pickling process.
14 jars of chutney plus a couple of small ones, plus eight jars of pickled onions of various sizes.
I have reproduced the drawings with some free motion machining on some scrap strips of felt, as they are stable enough to stitch on without stretching.
Below is some pieced strips of my fabric with some tracings of the plants which I want to sew onto some cotton organza I dyed and layer up - not sure yet, don't hold your breath.
Here's another sketchbook page.
I also have decided to join The Sketchbook Challenge which offers a theme each month and the opportunity to post your contribution on their Flickr site. I thought this would also give me a bit of a kick start. There is no pressure, and the whole thing is up to you. This month's theme is ''Pattern'. I have a Gustav Klimt calendar in my kitchen which has some beautiful landscapes as well as his more decorative ladies. I love looking at the patterns, but hand't really looked that closely, so I thought I would take a Klimt theme for a page in my journal. I shall write over the pale section eventually.
Finally, last weekend I work on my next bit of piecing for C&G. This task was to stitch a Courthouse block using a template to stitch on. This was much easier than trying to piece together the triangles,
I just stitched this smaller sample without a template, hence the narrow strip, but included some prairie points.
Below is my course piece, I think the block using straight strips is called rail fence and is usually made with contrasting fabrics,mine is some of my hand printed fabric with organza prairie points.
It has been a glorious week weather wise, I do hope you have been able to make the most of it.
Wishing you the best for the week to come,
Jill
6 comments:
I wish I had some of that chutney. Mr M doesn't eat the stuff so I rarely make any myself! Your craft work both stitching and drawing all looks wonderful. You've certainly been most productive lately!!
Mmmmmm!!! Your chutney looks delicious. You're making my mouth water.
I really like your felt strips with the machine stitched seed heads.
I love preserving too. It's a bit like the Amish isn't it? Setting yourself up for winter with pickles and jams and then making a quilt!! You need a bonnet!
There is something sooooo satisfying about a load of jars all lined up after a jamming/pickling session, isn't there? Not that there has been much here: zilch in terms of fruit. No plums, damsons, greengages etc and just a few measly apples on the trees. Better luck next year hopefully. Well done you for joining the sketchbook challenge, I shall look forward to watching what comes from it.
I admire your energy! Such a hive of creativity! We have just spend some wonderfully warm days in Scotland. A few photos was as far as I got!
I think everyone's harvest has let them down this year Jill.
Lots of people seem to have
'supplemented' their crop with supplies from the shops.I am not one for making preserves but I love using our fruit in cakes and crumbles. Sadly, this year, for the first time in ten years, our plum tree failed giving us just one plum! Not a lot you can do with that. Keep us up to date with the Sketchbook Challenge. That sounds intriguing.
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