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corn relish

Isn’t that beautiful?!

Seeing the results of my preserving labor is always rewarding. I make holiday gifts for my board of directors every year. This year I had lots of cukes given to me so I made some frozen sweet pickles, and decided the other half of their gift would be corn relish. I’ve never made it before and found many recipes – all different, of course. So I rather made up my own.

The first batch, which resulted in 14 half-pints, was much more vinegary than I had in mind, so I sweetened it up for the second batch, which made 8 pints. The first batch also had more total liquid than I wanted. So here’s the recipe I ended up with for the second batch.

about 9 cups fresh corn
1 chopped vidalia onion
1 chopped red bell pepper
1 chopped green bell pepper
1 chopped large tomato, peeled & seeded
1/2 chopped cucumber, peeled
2 cups vinegar (could have been a touch more)
2 cups sugar
1 Tablespoon each celery seed, mustard seed, turmeric, & salt
4 teaspoons dry mustard (might have used more if I had it)

Cook the corn & remove from cob. Scrape cob with spoon to collect all the juices. Mix all ingredients, bring to boil. Simmer 20 minutes. Pack hot, into hot jars & process in hot water bath 15 minutes.

Yum!

More Progress

After weaving and finishing those 11 scarves I went off to do a show. It’s one that I love doing – the crowd is always so interesting and so supportive, the volunteers are helpful, and I get to work with my sister.

This year was no exception – Buffalo turned out for the Elmwood Avenue Festival of the Arts and appreciated the work of the artists and crafters who were there. It was again a very good show for me.

I came home, went back to work at my paycheck job, and again set to weaving, this time in rayon chenille since my next show is in October. I do love the finished product, and the actual weaving is quick, but oh, beaming that warp! I blissfully forget from year to year just how tedious and time consuming beaming rayon chenille is. It takes MUCH longer than beaming any other fiber I work with. Still, worth the effort to me.

On this four-day weekend I got two warps of three scarves each on and off the loom. Pretty good progress, if I do say so myself. Didn’t vacuum, but I did do some shopping & cooking, plus some other high-priority tasks.

One of them was taking a trip back to Angelica because my community weaving project was finally hung! I think it looks great out in front of Stacy’s pottery studio.
weaving is hung

When I did this project back in late July, no one anticipated it would take this long to get it in it’s sort of permanent location. I say sort of permanent, since none of us have a clue how long the weaving will last, and how much damage weather will wreak, particularly in the loosely woven areas.

I think it’s pretty amazing how different it looks from the front, with the building behind it, and from the back, standing on the door stoop with the sky behind it.

weaving from the back

I think it’s also cool just looking up at it.
looking up at the weaving

After taking these shots I went to the farmer’s market and bought the biggest cauliflower I’ve ever seen – for only $3.00! I came home and made a terrific cauliflower curry from the first Moosewood Cookbook. YUM!

4 days, 11 scarves

I can tell when I’m getting really close to a show ‘cuz the ‘I’m not ready’ frenzy hits. The fact that I’ve been sitting on my butt perhaps compounded it a bit this time.

Anyway, in a four-day weekend I wound 3 warps, beamed them, and wove them off for a total of 11 scarves. Then in the evenings after work I fringed and wet finished them, doing the hard press and tagging them on Thursday evening finishing just moments before Project Runway started. It’s one of the very few shows I make it a point to watch.

Friday morning I had plenty of tasks to do – like vacuuming and washing the dishes – before I could pack up the rental van and get in the car & head to a show. Unfortunately, downloading a photo and writing a blog post fell off the list, so you don’t get any pictures with this one. Not even one of my latest rigid heddle oops.

When I was working away frantically on Thursday I didn’t think I’d get everything done that needed to be completed, and figured I’d never have time to warp the rigid heddle loom to bring with me. Since I did get everything essential, business-wise, done on Thursday, I beamed an already-wound warp on the RH loom on Friday morning. This was a to be a 5/2 pearl cotton warp, sett at 15EPI using two 10dent heddles. I hadn’t done this before but figured I’d just follow the directions in Betty Davenport’s book. No problem.

HAH! Took me three tries to get the first heddle threaded correctly, then I HAD to leave. Ok, I got it figured out, I’ll thread the second heddle at my sister’s.

DOUBLE HAH! Again, three tries to figure it out. (I believe the directions are a little bit wrong.)

Got it all threaded, tied on – oops, lots of sticky threads. Re-tie much more carefully, try again, nope, still a terrible shed with lots of threads not moving well. Get some pickup sticks behind the heddle and see if you can lift sheds that way – works for one, but not for two. Untie. Unthread heddle two and remove it. Unthread heddle one and re-thread to just 10 EPI – one thread in each hole and slot. Cut off lots of dangling threads.

I know that 10 ends per inch will be way to loose to be a useable fabric when I’m done, but at least I will be able to demonstrate weaving in a way that won’t make me crazy and will interest the people who might be watching. Having all those ‘extra’ threads hanging off the end of the loom that will need to be cut periodically will also give me a chance to explain about the time it takes to plan, to thread, to correct, to try, so that people can perhaps begin to understand that when they watch me throw the shuttle it’s just one small part of the weaving process.

Off to set up now for two full, glorious days!

Nothing doing

My sales have been slower than usual so far this year. That’s both the bad news and the good news. Good because it’s given me breathing room, time and space to take slow down.

So what have I been doing for the past several weeks? I’d like to report that my garden is weeded, or that I’ve been doing a lot of reading, or that I’ve taken a vacation. I’d like to, but it’s not true. I haven’t spent time doing any of those things. I wish I knew what I have been doing, but I think it’s mostly just been wasting time, doing not much of anything.

I like to say to myself that I’ve been listening to my body when I’ve taken a nap, or sat on my porch with a cup of tea, or simply vegged out in front of TV. I like to say it, but it may well be just a bunch of rationalization. You know that old saying, “If you want something done, give it to a busy person.” That’s how I feel. Not busy. Not productive, not benefiting anyone or anything. This must end.

I have woven a few dozen bookmarks and a few tencel lace scarves.
bookmarks

And tried things with a few other pieces, some successful, some not.

I also helped out a woman in our Guild. Shew wanted to learn to weave, signed up for one of our weaving workshops, and got a table loom warped. She wove a sample header and the first few inches of a scarf. Then she got sick and missed two days of the workshop, followed by a move out of state. So she was looking for someone to weave the rest of the scarf for her. I jumped on it and offered immediately. It felt good to be able to help someone.

She had used a 4H table loom the Guild owns, one I’ve used before. So I knew enough to know I really don’t like this little loom. It has a very small shed (the space you throw the shuttle through) and about 1″ of a ‘sweet spot’ for weaving before you have to advance the warp. Even then, the design of the loom is such that the reed pretty much never hits the fell line at right angles. In weaving, these are not good things. But hey, it was just one scarf.

The warp was a light gray, and she was weaving a basket weave pattern alternating blueberry and lemongrass. I liked the two weft colors, but the gray warp seemed a bit too overwhelming for my taste. No problem, it wasn’t for me.

The challenge of this scarf was matching someone else’s beat and selvedges. This was substantially harder than I thought. The newbie weaver had a VERY light beat; I tend to have a light beat, too, so this wasn’t too hard to achieve.

Tammy's rayon scarf

Her selvedges, remarkably straight and consistent for a new weaver, were interesting in that there was next to no draw in. That was not easy to achieve. Or maintain. The weaving was remarkably slow for a rayon scarf, but I got it done and got it mailed off. The woman is thrilled and I’m happy about that. After all, who doesn’t want to feel useful?

The Most Amazing Loom

I just saw a photo of the most amazing loom ever! I rarely do this, but must share it with my readers.

gorgeous loom

Someone in NH is selling this loom on CraigsList. A woodworker & weaver should jump on this!

I know I’ve never seen a loom this beautiful.