Applesauce Drop Doughnuts

With so many friends asking for the recipe for these doughnuts, I thought I’d post it on my blog.

First, the original recipe came from AllRecipes.  I made a few modifications (like using a little whole wheat flour), and, because the sugar mixture my husband whisked together for these was so darn tasty, I added that to the recipe.

Ingredients

2 cups all-purpose flour
1/4 cup whole wheat flour
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground nutmeg
1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 cup white sugar
1/4 cup packed brown sugar
2 eggs
2 tbsp vegetable oil
1/4 cup milk
1 cup unsweetened applesauce
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
oil for frying

For the coating
1/2 cup sugar, 1 tbsp cinnamon, 1 tsp chili powder, 1/2 tsp nutmeg

Directions


Heat oil to 375F.  (We used oil in a stock pot on the stove, rather than our deep fryer.)

Sift flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt.

Cream sugars and eggs until mixture is well-combined.  Add oil and mix well.  Mix flour mixture and milk, alternating between dry ingredients and milk, ending with dry ingredients.  Blend well.  Add applesauce and vanilla.

Drop batter by even tablespoon into oil, and let fry for 2 minutes, then flip and fry for another 2 minutes to get an even brown color all around.  (The original recipe said a total of 3 minutes was needed, but I found I needed to cook them for 4 minutes to get them cooked all the way through.) Let cool on a plate with a few paper towels to soak any excess oil.

NOTE:  The doughnuts inflate once they get into the oil, so be sure to do as close to an even tablespoon each, else they will get too large and not cook through very well.

Whisk together the coating ingredients, and once the doughnuts have cooled a little, roll them in the coating mixture.

Really, you can dust them with powdered sugar, eat them without dusting them at all, or just do a simple cinnamon sugar dusting.

Enjoy!

Easy Reusable, Washable Grocery Bags

While browsing Pinterest for bag-making tutorials and ideas, I came across this link about making your own grocery bags using outdoor-weight fabric.  The first thing that caught my attention was the idea that the reusable bags purchased at stores (or received for free) that are plasticky might not be the best for groceries because they’re not washable.  Also, some of the reusable bags I had were started to come apart at the side corner seams which were sewn together using some binding outside of the seams.  And with Seattle’s recent plastic bag ban, I figured it was time to find a better option.

I also liked the idea of having a set of coordinating grocery bags instead of the various bags in various sizes I’d accumulated.  And going into Fred Meyer with Target and Trader Joe bags just felt weird.

Using the above-mentioned link as a guide, I purchased two types of material: outdoor canvas for the bottom part of the pags, and outdoor-weight (but not canvas) material for the top.  The two definitely feel different.  The top fabric feels more like the type of fabric you’d find covering patio furniture cushions while the bottom fabric is very heavy.  They matched beautifully, though, so I went for it.

The fabric I purchased was on mega-clearance at Joann’s.  Typically, outdoor fabric (at Joann’s) runs about $20/yard.  With the mega-clearance (50% off their red-tag fabric), I picked up the canvas for $4/yard, and the upper fabric for $3/yard. Be warned: some outdoor fabric is professional dry-clean recommended only. Avoid those! (Or test some of it through your washer before using it for this project.)

Material Needed (makes 5 total bags)


– 2 yards each, bottom and upper fabric (for just one, probably 1/2 yard of each would be plenty)
– coordinating canvas strapping
– coordinating thread

Tools Needed

– fabric marking tool
– pins
– heavy sewing needle (110 was what I used)
– scissors
– cutting mat
– ruler

Cutting


For each bag, you’ll need to cut:
From upper fabric: 8 1/2″ x 18 1/2″ (2)
From bottom fabric: 10 1/2″ x 18 1/2″ (2)
From strapping: 21″ length (2)

Sewing


NOTE:  Stay-stitch ALL seams.

NOTE 2:  Pre-wash all fabric!  SUPER important, so that you don’t end up with weird shrinking issues when you wash these the first time!

Sew one top to one bottom, using a 1/2″ seam allowance.  Press the seam towards the bottom, and finish the seam using a zigzag stitch close to the cut edge of the fabric.  This will attach the seam to the bottom part of the bag, and it will help reinforce the seam, minimizing tears from stress put on the seam.


Press a top double-fold hem by folding first 1/4″ and pressing, then folding again about 1 1/2″ and pressing.  Stitch close to the bottom of the hem.  Then, edge-stitch close to the top of the hem.

Now, with right sides together, sew along the sides and bottom, using a 1/2″ seam allowance.  For the first four bags, I left this seam unfinished.  For the last bag, I used a zigzag stitch close to the cut edge to finish the seam.  Your choice.  I looked at other canvas bags I own and the inside seams weren’t finished, and the bags have held up fine so far, even after carrying my heavy sewing machine around!

NOTE:  For the sides and bottom, do NOT press and zigzag stitch to the fabric.  Just stitch along the cut edge.  I hope the pictures help explain this.

Now, stick your hand in the bag, and press the seams out at the bottom corners, folding the corner into a triangle.  I measured to the point that the folded portion measured 4″ wide, marked it, and sewed there.  This will make the boxy bottom for your bag.

(TIP:  Be sure when doing this on both sides, that the seams fold the same way.  It’s easy to forget this and end up with a seam that folds one direction on one side, and the opposite direction on the other side.)

Now, for the straps.  I measured 6 1/2″ from each side edge (cut edge, not from the seam), marked it, and placed the inside of the straps against this point.  Line up the bottom edge with the bottom edge of the hem.  Pin the straps into place.

Sew the straps into place, using an X reinforcing stitch.  I sewed back and forth across the top, turned the fabric to stitch down the outer edge, then up at a diagonal, down the other outer edge, back and forth across the bottom, then up a diagonal to finish the X.  (I hope that helps if you’re like me and want to do it without having to start and stop for every portion of the stitching.)  You should have a box with an X through it.  It’s really tough to see on here, since I used black thread on black strapping.

You can opt to trim the triangles made at the bottom, or to fold them into the bag.  I opted to fold mine in to give a little extra reinforcement on those corners.

Here’s the cool thing:  you’re done!  I kept putting these off, thinking it would take forever, then, when I got down to stitching, it went quickly!  I now have a set of 5 matching grocery bags that I love! They’re heavy-duty and look great!

Reversible Fiesta Bag!

Earlier this month, I bought a set of pre-cut fabric called a jelly roll and created both a table runner and a summer quilt for our living room, using the fabrics from that roll as my base.

As I mentioned in my post about the quilt, I had LOTS of leftover fabric from the yardage I had to buy in order to get a decent-sized quilt made. I decided to make a bag and then a couple of throw pillows with the leftovers.

Well, the bag is now done. I used the oh-so-handy Pinterest to find tutorials and pattern ideas. I had made a bag a couple of years ago in a beginners’ sewing class I took with a friend and debated using that pattern, but I honestly am not sure where the pattern went, and wanted something larger and with pockets anyway.
I debated a lot on the fabric to use for the pockets. I actually ended up making the pockets double-sided, with a solid color and matching coordinating border on one side, and a solid piece of fabric on the other, just to have options. A little silly, maybe, but I honestly spent 30+ minutes just putting fabrics on top of each other, shifting them, flipping them, folding them, debating what on earth to do for the pockets!

The end-result: reversible bag with one large outside pocket and one large inside pocket.  To make it sturdy, I used Pellon’s Craft fusible interfacing on both the inside and outside fabrics (resulting in double interfacing thickness for the completed bag) and pockets.  I used duck cloth to strengthen the handles.

Side note:  I couldn’t help but notice how bold my fabric choices have become, at least in comparison to the bag made in that class a few years ago!

Now, bring on summer!

Side one:  big, bold, fiesta style!

Side two:  fussy-cut the pocket.  I guess this side is a slightly muted fiesta.
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Three Shirred Sundresses!

Last month, I finally tried my hand at shirring to make myself a skirt.  After finishing with the skirt, I decided to try my hand at a summer dress.  I found this tutorial video that I followed with some minor modifications (made shoulder ties instead of the halter tie), and ended up making 3 dresses!

Here are the three dresses, with some lessons learned from making them.

The three finished dresses!

This was the first dress.  I used about 1 1/2 yards of cotton fabric and black elastic thread.  Lesson learned from cotton fabric:  cotton, after shirring, will kind of poof under the shirred area.  For this dress, that poofing looks fine, but others might not like the slight bubble appearance.

Next lesson learned:  don’t fret when after about 5 rows of shirring, it isn’t already shrinking as expected.  This dress didn’t shrink down from the shirring until a good couple of inches were done.

Next lesson learned (and this was actually learned from the last dress I made, making me go back to the first two and fix them):  the shoulder ties need to be more securely stitched into place than just one line of stitching long the hemline.  The ties in the long dress ended up nearly tearing out entirely, so I went back with white thread and sewed back and forth all along where the tie and the dress met up.

Thing I love most about this dress:  the way the flower pattern looked after shirring!

Cool flowers after shirring!

The ties need to be secured better – see how it’s already kind of pulling on the fabric?  Not great.

The second dress was made using a knit fabric rather than cotton.  You can see in the photo that the fabric drapes a bit nicer than the cotton did.

Lesson learned from this dress:  I used only 1 yard of fabric for this, folding in half and cutting for the two panels (I used 1 1/2 yards in the first dress, using the same approach of folding in half and cutting).  The shirring is definitely more snug as a result.  Next time, I’ll be using 1 1/2 yards of fabric for a more comfy fit (thinking in terms of maternity clothing, I won’t be able to wear this too comfortably during my next pregnancy).  (No, I’m not pregnant.  I just like the idea of not having to completely change wardrobes during pregnancy.)

The pink, white, black dress.

The whole dress is narrower than the purple dress, but the shirring especially.

Last is the maxi-length dress.  This is the dress that taught me to be sure to secure the shoulder ties well.  I already did that, and you can see how it isn’t pulling on the body of the dress as much as the ties on the purple dress.  I’m just glad I was able to save this before the ties completely tore out!

Another lesson learned:  this knit fabric was not as great quality as the white, black, and pink.  I could feel the difference in quality when I bought the fabric, but it was very apparent while sewing.  I had to unpick some stitching from this, and it left holes in the fabric!  It was overall more difficult to work with.  BUT I did buy the fabric on mega clearance ($6 for 1 1/2 yards!), so I’m not going to complain too much about it.  The pattern also isn’t my favorite, but, again, I wanted a longer dress, and it was $6, and it’s definitely cute and brighter for summer (or those grey days when I wish I were sunny).

Terrariums!

Last week, I had the opportunity to attend a little creativity workshop led by the creator of stephmodo, Stephanie Brubaker, for some ladies at church.  It was an awesome workshop!  She gave some easy ideas for creative storage, decorating, parties, and gifts.  I loved it because lately, I’ve been feeling this surge of creativity (thanks in HUGE part to Pinterest) and her humble attitude towards creativity (anyone can do it!) was inspiring.  As part of the workshop, we had the chance to let our own creative juices flow by making some very simple gift tags using scraps of fabric and simple manila tags, and then she showed us how to make a terrarium.

She was SO enthusiastic about terrarium-making, and it seemed SO simple, I had to try it.

My three small terrariums. Love the way the sand layered!

Here’s her post with a simple set of instructions that I referred to when building these.  My shopping list:

– 3 succulents from Home Depot
– 3 vases/bowls from Value Village
– Dark sand from little man’s sandbox
– Light sand from PetSmart
– Blue “gems” were in a drawer of miscellaneous game supplies
– Rocks were gathered from the alley by our house

The terrariums are now sitting in the kitchen/dining room on top of the shelving unit that holds our dishes (high enough to avoid little man’s curious hands).  I seem to keep killing the lovely orchids my husband buys for me (can’t figure out how to get them to rebloom after they bloom once, though I keep watering them!), so hopefully these will fare a better fate?

This plant is called Split Rock.  I think it’s my favorite! It reminds me of a Dune sandworm.
This is another cool succulent, Chocolate something.  Fuzzy, brown-tinted leaves.
Third succulent, name forgotten, but the bumps on the leaf edges make it look alien to me.  (Sorry about the flash.)
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Accidental Creativity

Sometimes, creativity can be entirely accidental.

My husband’s birthday was this last week, so I hit up my favorite party supply store (the Dollar Store) and grabbed a few decorations.  Among them was 1 helium balloon.  Yes…one balloon.  I claim duress of lots of people in line, and I didn’t want to hold up the line by making the lady blow up a bunch of balloons for me.  Besides, I was walking home with little man in the stroller and wasn’t sure how more than one helium balloon would do in the breeze-turning-wind on the way home.

The lonely balloon posed an interesting quandary…what on earth to do with it?  I tried tying it to the back of a dining chair, but that almost made the fact there was only one balloon even worse.  I tried just leaving it, but little man was grabbing it and I didn’t like the idea of him getting tangled in the string.  I had bought a banner that I hung in the window in the dining room, and while I was okay with the result, I wasn’t thrilled with it.

So, I tried tying the balloon to the banner.

I thought it turned out kind of nifty!  I didn’t take into account that the weight of the banner would help draw the balloon down into the window frame, and I didn’t expect the lift of the helium to make the banner curve a little more interesting.  Heck, next time, I might even buy a few more balloons and tie them along the banner.  If the line I’m in isn’t too long, that is…

Summer Quilt

This post should probably be titled “what I did with the rest of the jelly roll.”

Answer:  I made a summer quilt!

I had 10 strips of fabric left from the jelly roll, and a little left over from the table runner, so I decided to make a bright and cheery lap quilt to liven up our living room (which is currently full of dark furniture and a futon with an old blue mattress – it needs color!).

Once I sewed the last strips together and cut blocks (about 8.5″), I realized I didn’t have quite enough for a blanket.  A wall hanging, maybe, but not a blanket.

So I went back to Joann’s in hopes of finding another one of the rolls, but they were sold out.  Bummed, I went with plan B.  They had hexagons and triangles of precuts of the same fabric, so I debated between buying one or two of those and piecing other blocks, or finding coordinating fabric.

I went with coordinating fabric.  I also found yardage of some of the original fabric from the roll that I bought.  I had no pattern, really.  I was just flying by the seat of my pants on this.

Lines of very bright fabrics.  The big print is from a different line but matched PERFECTLY.
This is the lay-it-out, now-what stage of assembly.

I ended up using the solid orange between the lines of blocks. I needed something to help break up all of the prints. I also decided to use the green fabric for the first border to help tone everything down, and the white-based fabric for the outer, thicker border to pull it all together.  I really love the result.  It’s bright, fun, and summery, without being too hard on the eyes with all of the patterns involved.  I’m not sure what the backing will be for this, but it will most likely be orange, though it’s just as likely to be green or red.

And because I have so much fabric left over from this adventure, look for a handbag and throw pillows I’ll be making next!

The finished quilt top.  I LOVE how this turned out!

More finished quilt-top action.  Can’t wait for the chance to finish this at my mother-in-law’s!
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Hello Sunshine Table Runner

For the quilting novices, there is a vocabulary that might make you chuckle regarding “precuts” or pre-cut pieces of fabric that come in little packages like…jelly rolls (2.5″ strips of fabric), charm squares (5″ blocks), and layer cakes (10″ blocks).  I’ve also heard of bally pops, which seem to be 5″ strips or so, but I’m not sure.

Below, you will see my very first jelly roll purchase.  It was on clearance at Joann’s.  I usually stay away from precuts because they’re so much more expensive than just buying fabric you cut yourself.  But it’s a trade-off between someone else doing most of your work for you, or you spending time coordinating 10+ fabrics to get that “jelly roll” look, and then annoying the cutting counter personnel by asking for 1/4 yard cuts of each fabric.

At any rate, I was looking for a project to do for my mother for Mother’s Day this year, and didn’t see anything that screamed “pick me!” until seeing this.  I loved the spring/summer feel to the fabrics, and finding an orange to coordinate was super easy.

orange themed fabric jelly roll

After playing with the order to sew the fabrics in, I originally decided to do two sets of 5 rows each. I was using a pattern in which the rows are sewn together, then cut into lengths, then sewn off-set by one row each length. Unpick a few on each end to create points, and add a border, batting, and backing for a quick table runner.

the first set of 5 rows sewn together
The original first set of 5 strips sewn together.
second set of 5 rows sewn together
The original second set of 5 strips together.

I ended up sewing both of the chunks together to have all 10 rows, because the 5 rows was going to end up making for a very skinny table runner.  I cut this into 2.5″ strips, and then aligned them so that the finished piece would be 7 blocks wide (I picked 3 blocks from each row).  This was pretty time-consuming, as I was trying to get a randomized look, and had to keep adjusting everything to avoid having the same squares right next to each other.  But the end result was worth it.

using interfacing for the first time

I decided to use fusible interfacing for this project, something I haven’t done before, to give the center some weight and stability. It made sewing the borders a DREAM. No fussing with every stitch line or having the edges stretch or warp in any way! LOVED it. I will be using this trick again!

back of the runner with interfacing
The interfacing on the back of the center portion of the runner.  This was so great to work with!
main portion of the table runner
Main portion of the finished top of the table runner.
one pointed end of the table runner
One end of the runner – I really like the pattern for this.

Once I get a photo of the finished product, I’ll add it to this post.  I used a yellow fabric for the backing and binding, which just completed the sunshine feel to this table runner.

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Lessons in Machine Quilting

So, Mother’s Day 2012, I decided to make a table runner for my mom (post coming soon) and a John Deere themed wall hanging for my mother-in-law.

I don’t have photos of the completed projects for either thing yet, but I did take photos mid-way through my wall hanging creating to illustrate a quick lesson I learned about machine quilting and color-matching.

As you can tell in the photos, I was using the traditional John Deere colors of dark green and sunny yellow.  This presented an interesting dilemma for the quilting.  My mother-in-law has taught me that when machine quilting, you don’t want to overpower the quilt with a contrasting thread.  Instead, you want the quilting to blend in with the fabric.  Because the strips for the blocks on this wall hanging were about 2″ wide each, and alternated, I could either have used yellow thread on the yellow strips and green on the green, or use one color throughout.  I decided to try a little bit of contrast and use yellow throughout.

Bad idea.

The first block, I did a stipple design (looks like puzzle pieces).  The result was a little jarring, so I tried a different design on the second block – loops and stars.  The result wasn’t as bad, but it certainly wasn’t good, either.

Stippled.  Massive yellow thread overload!

Loops and stars. Not as bad as stippled, but still not good, either.

I stopped after the second block, consulted with the hubby who agreed it was a little overkill, and decided to leave the fabric immediately around each block’s center unquilted for the rest of the wall hanging.  That left the two already quilted blocks to deal with.  The only thing to do when stitching goes badly is…unpick the stitching. And HUGE thank you goes to my husband who spent a few hours doing just that for me!

Lesson learned:  Sometimes, a little quilting is all you need.  

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Tutorial: The 1-yard Skirt

The finished skirt!

The Shirt Skirt tutorial provided on Instructables was my inspiration for this project. Rather than purchase a t-shirt for it, though, I thought I’d try my hand at creating the skirt using cotton fabric. One of the stores nearby was having a large sale last week, so I purchased a yard of fabric for about $5, hoping it would be enough. Considering I was going from a tutorial that used knit to using cotton, I knew things would turn out a little differently.

I pre-washed my fabric, mainly so that once I wore and washed this, it wouldn’t end up too small for me! (It’s happened before.)

Using elastic thread, the fabric naturally shirs as you sew.  I was nervous about this, because I had cut the material wider than in the tutorial I was working from, and didn’t know how the material I was using would react.  Thankfully, it worked out beautifully! 

I LOVE the result!  I’ve typically only made skirts from stretchy knits before, since I don’t have to be too accurate with measurements, and love the fact that I can gain or lose weight and have the skirt fit me fine throughout!  But this project opened up a whole new world for me!

Here’s my tutorial for making this skirt with a yard of cotton fabric.  Next time I make one, I’ll take more pictures than just the finished result!  (I was nervous about this, so I didn’t take pictures along the way in case it didn’t work out. Silly Z.)

Tools:

Elastic bobbin thread
Regular thread for top thread (use a matching color or contrast for your fabric)
Scissors
Ruler/measuring tape
Iron
1 yard cotton fabric

1.  Fold the material in half, selvages on bottom, cut (and now frayed from the washing process) portions on the sides.  Cut 28 1/2″ long, and then cut along the fold at the top.  Since most fabric is about 45″ wide, this leaves you with 2 rectangles about 28 1/2″ long by 22 1/2″ wide. 

2.  Press a 1/2″ seam along the bottom, folding twice for a nice hem.  NOTE:  I left the selvages on, so the selvage ended up being folded up into the hem. 

3.  Press a 1/8″ seam along the top, folding twice for the top hem.

4.  Sew both top and bottom hems on both pieces of fabric.

5.  With fabric right sides together, sew along the sides, allowing about a 1/2″ seam.  You should now have a nice tube about 55″ in circumference.

6.  Wind an empty bobbin with elastic thread and load the bobbin.

7.  Starting about 1/8″ from the top hem seam, start sewing on the right side of the fabric, so that the elastic stays on the wrong side of the fabric.  (I did this wrong for my first line of stitching.)  I secured each line of stitching with a little backstitching; keeping the elastic thread on the inside of the skirt makes for a cleaner look on the outside.  Go all the way around the skirt.

8.  Stitch another line about 1/4″ from the first, securing at the end of each line.  Continue stitching until you’ve completed 8 lines.

9.  If desired, press the stitched area.  This will shrink the stitching just a little more.

10.  Wear your new skirt!