Teacher Appreciation Gift idea

Last week was National Teacher Appreciation Week.  I’m one of the room parents, so I went out and bought a simple flowering plant (kids are studying plants next week) and printed up this card.

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The little faces were stamped with my pinky and ring finger.  Used washable markers to color them up.  My stamp pads are stored right now since I haven’t been  stamping too much lately, and I didn’t feel like dragging them out.

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Just a cute, simple, heartfelt card.  You can find poems all over the web, but this one was from here.

Hope everyone had a great Mother’s Day!

Martha Stewart in Chicago

Holy cow!! I met Martha Stewart!!!! *whew* I have to get the rest of this excitement over Martha out of my system.

Our Martha Stewart autographed books

I took Ollie on a little trip last Friday to Macy’s on State Street… totally last minute decision. Left the house at 10:15 a.m. for her 1 pm book signing.

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Got in line at about 12:00 pm where we were greeted by Macy’s staff with bottled water and cookies. The staff was so nice.

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We made friends with people in line… thanks to the lady from Scottsdale, AZ for taking our picture. We liked talking with the well-dressed-newspaper-reading guy, too. The Asian lady behind us in the picture had her dog, Emma, in her purse. And we talked about making homemade dog treats.

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The line started moving a bit past 1:00 pm. A voice came from beyond a corner, then applause. None of us in line could hear a thing, but oh well, we thought, they’re probably just introducing Martha. Realistically, I figured if we were still in line by 2:00, we would bail because I had to pick up our daughter at school. However, the line was moving at a good pace, and then the skies opened up… a Macy’s staff person approached me and said, “Martha asked that mothers with young children in or with strollers, and disabled people get consideration and be ushered to the head of the line. I already brought up two moms. So, go ahead, go up there and talk to the women at the head of the line, and they’ll get you in the queue.” We love Martha, don’t we? The lady in the bright yellow green sweater was apparently a main coordinator (or Martha staff) and she got us right in.

Getting ready to meet Martha

I’ve been telling people that Martha Stewart is really stunning in person. She’s a beautiful lady… she’s also a powerful woman. I wonder if I admire her more for her lifestyle-crafting-cooking inspirations or her empire building skills? She was very nice, cordial, talked with Ollie a little bit (funny pic in the gallery), asked who the crafter was in our house, what crafts I do (I could have said, “Everything!”, but only told her that I papercraft and sew). For all the things I could have said to her, I basically came up with, “Ms. Stewart, it is such a pleasure to meet you.” She said, “Why, thank you.” Then she said, “Oh, he lets you craft? You have time?” I said, “Well, I sneak in time… but really, I don’t sleep too much,” and she grinned, “Yes, we know about that.” She said, “Very nice to meet you.” to my brother.

There was an older lady whom we met after the signing who was quite upset that Martha was 12 minutes late. She said, “I gave her one demerit for every minute she was late, so that makes 12 demerits…” Wow. Okay, lady, I don’t know how you give demerits, or what they’re going to do for Martha, but I’m pretty sure she wasn’t too concerned about you.

The rest of our short visit with the lifestyle maven is captured in pictures…Ha, ha, thanks for the pictures, Patrick! Don’t know what I would’ve done if you weren’t there!

Crafting progress

It’s April 29. I don’t think I’m going to make the April 30 deadline for the projects I wrote about here, but I’m happy to say I’ve finished “prep stage 1” for the T-shirt quilt. I had way more than 9 shirts left to interface, and it definitely takes time.

T-shirt quilt squares

I brought my ironing board upstairs so I could watch old Schoolhouse Rock videos on You Tube with Ollie while I busted my tail trying to iron as fast as I could. Now I have the Adjective Song in my head. “He was a hairy bear, he was a scary bear, we made a hasty retreat from his lair… and described him with adjectives.” I love that song. Apparently, Ollie does too, he watched it about 10 times in a row.

Relive your childhood here: Classic Schoolhouse Rock – Adjective Song

The wine cork board is in disarray. I didn’t set baselines, and my rows started tilting towards the left. Voices in my head kept saying, “What would Martha (Stewart) do?” Of course, she’d start over, and so did I. I’m insane. As for the baby burp cloths, the fabric and ribbons are all cut. While Ollie took apart the couch after lunch, I ironed and pinned. I still might be able to finish sewing the burp cloths by the weekend.

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Happy Earth Day

Had a really nice time at our local Earth Day fair. Look, we took a ride around our nature center park. Made the man work with all of us in the cab! There were more activities than I thought, which was nice for the kids. We also had a great time listening to Rocket J, local band. They covered some oldies and goodies. We KNOW the drummer! So cool. He’s actually the father of my daughter’s preschool friend. Almost needless to say, Ollie rocked out big time. Air guitar and all. He wanted to stay and dance the whole time. Daisy, Abby’s friend, invited Ollie onto the stage, but I don’t think he was quite prepared for that, and politely said, “No.”

We went around and visited the various booths. Here are some highlights aside from the local garden club, soil and water conservation district, National Wildlife Federation and local park district.

Sustainable, handmade paper products, such as wildflower seed notecards, memory books, gift tags, frames and custom wedding invitations at www.womancraft.net,

Soap artisan makes hand made natural Olive oil soaps, body oils and bathing essentials (www.abbeybrown.com),

Fine specialty teas promoting wellness and health at www.senteamentalmoods.com,

Books promoting diversity, creativity and discovery for children at www.readingbarefootbooks.com

An Old Toy About to Get Fixed

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Pinball anyone? This past Saturday morning, the Tiu family pinball machine was picked up for long time needed service. Eastman did all the legwork and found someone local who repairs and services these machines. Rich Huff, Midwest Pinball, was really nice and incredibly knowledgeable!

Apparently, it isn’t too difficult to find replacement parts for this generation of Bally pinball machines, a number of games use the same board set. Hopefully there wasn’t too much leaking of any old batteries inside the game, either. I believe Rich told me that there were less than 1000 of these machines made (I want to say 800-900, but I can’t remember). Because of its trucking theme, you’d find these primarily at rest stops, truck stops, bars… and a few of them made their way off route. Like to my husband’s Algonquin home in the 1980’s.

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Look, actual rolling numbers… not digital display! I’m diggin’ the short shorts on the waitress, too. A little reminiscent of Daisy Duke? This is the pinball machine head, and I didn’t take a picture of the back, but it’s all taped together. I love how Rich reacted. He said something to the affect of, “Oh, that’ll need some work…” It probably would fall apart if we took the tape off. No locks. That will all get repaired, too.

The whole repair will probably take at least 2-3 weeks. Come on over when it’s back!

Our Moto Experience: Picture-heavy post

I took Eastman out for his birthday (2/6) and being the foodie that he is, I thought he might enjoy the likes of Moto. It’s one of those interesting, posh, metropolitan restaurants you might see on tv (i.e. expensive, trendy, food looks too nice to eat?). Actually, I did see it on a review show and on Food Network, too. So, three weeks before his birthday I called and made reservations. I missed a phone call on my cell phone the day of our dinner. They were going to customize a dinner menu with his name on it. Just heard the voice mail today (almost a week after). Oops. We arrived at the restaurant to be greeted by all the wait staff, everyone dressed in black sleek suits.

You have a choice of two menus: 10-course (2 to 2-1/2 hours) or 20-course (4 to 4-1/2 hours). We chose the 10-course.  Service was impeccable and all the servers were fun to talk to.  Ambience?  Artsy, you might say.  Modern, minimalist, sort of?  Music was great.  Eastman asked about their playlist for me.  They pipe in satellite radio!  XM, lounge/chill. Love that!

What do they serve there? See for yourself. Sorry the pics are a little dark, some are slightly blurry. No flash photography, which is totally understandable. The only picture I didn’t take was of the menu which was printed with edible ink on a corn tortilla chip served with a little guacamole and salsa. It was cool! Wish I had written sooner. I’m sure I’m missing some details.

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First course: San Francisco bay scallop served tableside with this lemon dust frozen in liquid nitrogen. The server spooned out the dust from a little pot smoking over from the liquid nitrogen. Neat presentation, and it only gets weirder.

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Second course: French onion soup. Carmelized onions in a pile with an onion chip and cheese dollop. Hot soup was poured into the bowl tableside.

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Third course: Buffalo chicken flavored edible paper and quail.  The paper really tasted like chicken?! Served with homemade tabasco sauce.

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Fourth course: Breakfast!  The “egg white” was yogurt that set up, and the “yolk” was a curry custard, but it actually behaved like a yolk… we had pita toasts (shaped like mini-bread, so cute!) that you could dip into the “egg”.  We also had falafel tater tots with homemade ketchup.  Tasty!

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Here’s the birthday boy with course #5.  “Cuban cigar”.  This was one of my favorites.  A cuban sandwich shaped like a cigar and served in an ash tray!  Pulled pork wrapped with white bread wrapped with a green and edible paper to look like a cigar band… dipped in crushed black and white sesame seeds.

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Had to drink with dinner.  I started with a cocktail.  Sazerac, the quintessential New Orleans drink.  It was strrrong!  This is the Martini Library.  Drinks served in pipettes.  So pretty, and yummy.

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Course six had the biggest black beans I’ve ever seen.  You might have thought they were lumps of meat.  There was braised beef and a side of “cold” slaw, as opposed to cole slaw.  Again, there was use of liquid nitrogen to keep the slaw nice and crunchy cold.

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Course seven had to be one of the most interesting interpretations… duck “roadkill”.  They drew the center divider line with a puree, the “blood” was another sauce.  The duck, though pulled, mushed up, and completely unappetizing to look at, was really delicious!

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First Dessert!  The beach with pineapple “dust” and a fried rice noodle that looked like coral, complete with a starfish (or in Eastman’s case, a seahorse) made of fruit puree-gelatin.  All under a little paper parasol.  Cute.

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Second dessert.  This homemade caramel ice cream was soooo good!  Isn’t it cute how it looks like a crab?  It was accompanied by apple cake with souffle and apple crispies on top.

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Last dessert was very interesting with a frozen cherry that burst in your mouth and tasted like cherry coke.  And an “inside-out” pumpkin pie.  That might be my favorite dessert… The cold pumpkin outer shell contained liquid graham cracker crust.  Toasted pumpkin seeds garnished the little  pie dollop and it sat on lightly torched marshmallow meringue.  It was a nice end to a very different dinner experience.

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