Fiber Fool

Follow the feats and foibles of a fiber fanatic.

FO: Three of Diamonds

Filed under: Knitting, Photography, Socks, Finished Objects, Knitting Patterns, Designing — Kristi at 9:49 am on Monday, February 23, 2009

Three of Diamonds on Steps

Early this fall I did a sock design for TheKnitter.com’s Luxury sock club for their November shipment. I enjoyed the design so much and had such a time photographing (took over 350 shots and purchased additional photography equipment) that I decided to knit myself a pair in easier to photograph yarn. Now the pattern is available to everyone!

DSC_8994wtmk.jpgPattern: Three of Diamonds (on Ravelry)
Designer: Myself
Needles: 2.75 mm & 2.5 mm
Yarn: Misti Alpaca’s Handpainted Sock Yarn in Shadow (dark) and Miss Babs Yummy Sock and Baby 2-Ply Fingering in Sandi’s Red Monochrome
Size: Wmn’s US9.5 (red) and Men’s US10.5 (dark)
For: Myself (red) and DH (dark)

While this pattern was one of my most challenging to grade into multiple sizes (and there are 5 adult sizes), it is a fun and relatively easy knit for those comfortable with cabling. There is a lot of stockinette or reverse stockinette to balance out the time it takes to knit the cables. I knit each sock only took one weekend of dedicated couch potatoeness. The five sizes were crucial and worth some of the hair pulling since the ribs and cables make this a great sock choice for men and I know how difficult it is to find man friendly patterns that are interesting to knit and don’t take 4 years to finish in such larger sizes. So the sizes of the pattern range from a finished sock foot circumference of 7-10 inches. With more sizes to choose from there can be leeway in gauge and still find a stitch count that produces the adult size sock you need.

Three of Diamonds with Berries

My favorite part of these socks is how the cuff ribs flow right into the diamond cables on the leg, then the ribs that exit that diamond split and half adorn the heel flap and the other half combine with those from the other side of the leg to form a third diamond cable in the gusset. Then to spice it up a bit, the gusset decreases are placed non-traditionally to follow the lines of the cabling.

Three of Diamonds Heel Details Three of Diamonds

DSC_8660wtmk.jpgBoth yarns were great to work with. The Misti Alpaca sock yarn is fantastically soft and the colors are nice short bursts with a definite main color so there were no concerns about pooling. It was not splitty or hard to cable and I ran into no knots. It was, as I stated before a photography challenge. It is hard to photograph fuzzy yarn and it is hard to photograph dark yarn - especially when photographing knitting. Combine the two and it is near impossible. The pattern does show up in that yarn in person, though alpaca yarn will never yield crisp stitch definition. I enjoyed knitting with the yarn so much that I do have some in my stash that I’m looking forward to pulling out at some time. Perhaps some Herringbone Ribs of my own?

Three of Diamonds on StairsMiss Babs Yummy yarn was fantastic to work with. Her Monochromes (semi-solids) are solid enough that they don’t fight any stitch patterning you may want to use, but there is enough variation in them to keep it interesting to knit, even with large areas of simple knit fabric. You may recall my talking about knitting with reds a while back and how I’m not much of a red person. It is true. I’m not sure why it is, but it has been that way for a long time. Sandi’s Red is my kind of red. I actually loved working with it and love opening the sock drawer and seeing them pop from amongst all my green and purple socks :-)

My New Old Kitchen Favorite…

Filed under: In the Kitchen — Kristi at 11:20 am on Monday, February 16, 2009

Pressure Cooker Mushroom and Wild Rice Soup

It all started with the Dal Mahkani recipe in our new favorite Indian cookbook - 660 Curries. That as well as some other interesting looking lentil curries require the use of a pressure cooker to speed up the cooking process. Here, at nearly 5000 ft above sea level that is helpful as our lower pressure requires dried things to cook a bit longer and that is especially true of whole lentils and beans.

I had a pressure cooker as my mom had a couple things she always made in one so that was one of the first pieces of kitchen equipment I got. But, DH is vegetarian and those recipes are not so it had been relegated to the closet/pantry in the basement under the stairs where it has lived unloved for many years.

Well, a few months ago DH unearthed it and we bought new gaskets for it at the hardware store and made Dal Mahkani. It took a bit and we still aren’t having complete success with that particular recipe, but we had success enough that it got me to wondering what else we might make in it. I mean, if we’re going to take up that much space in the limited cupboards of the kitchen with this thing we should make use of it on a more regular basis.

So, I hit Amazon for a search of pressure cooker cookbooks and discovered that not only are there a few strictly for vegetarian pressure cooking, but our public library even had the top rated one in the stacks! I’ve now had Great Vegetarian Cooking Under Pressure checked out for the maximum amount of time and we’ve tried several of the recipes in there with great success. I’ve even branched out into formulating some of my own recipes, which the books gives you some guidelines for.

As you can imagine, a lot of the recipes revolve around cooking legumes and grains. There are soups and stews of many varieties, as well as salads and even desserts in this cookbook. Mostly I’ve been trying the soup recipes. In the winter I love a hearty soup with some home baked bread for lunch or dinner and using the pressure cooker makes it quite a bit quicker. But, don’t trust the tag line of the cookbook that you’ll have “two-hour taste in ten minutes.” For us, it usually takes about an hour to make a recipe, including the prep and getting the pressure cooker up to full pressure. But much of that time is not hands on. You want to be in the vicinity of the pressure cooker so you can hear if anything is going wrong, but you can be reading or knitting while it cooks. The ten minutes probably applies pretty truthfully to the hands-on portion of most of the recipes. The recipes we’ve made from it have been quite good, though I have to confess to adding some more spices to most of those we tried.

What sold me most on this cookbook though is the endpapers. Both the front and back cover fly leafs have tables of cooking times and yields for 1 cup of various grains and beans. I was constantly referring to it. Having it in such a convenient location is fantastic. There is no need to leave a permanent bookmark in place and I can quickly find the information I need. Having renewed my checkout so many times and using the book quite regularly for at least reference we decided it was one worth adding to our shelves (yes, plural) of cookbooks.

An added bonus of this cookbook is that the food made from the recipes is quite economical - especially if you buy your legumes, grains, and spices in bulk from a food co-op. For meaty dishes in the pressure cooker you can often get away with lower cost cuts of meat too, or make your own lower sodium or salt-free broths. Even if you do not already own a pressure cooker you would likely make back the cost of buying one in savings on your grocery bill in relatively short order.

The photo at the top of this post is my own pressure cooker creation which I’ll share for those of you with unloved pressure cookers.

Kristi’s Pressure Cooker Wild Rice & Mushroom Soup

  • 2/3 C Wild Rice
  • 2/3 C Brown Long Grain Rice
  • 1 Onion, chopped
  • 1 Carrot, quartered lengthwise and sliced
  • 2 Cloves Garlic, minced
  • 8 oz Button Mushrooms, quartered
  • 1/2 oz Dried Shitake Mushrooms, reconstituted and chopped
  • 2 T Vegetable Oil of Choice
  • 1/2 t ea of dried Sage Leaves, Marjoram and ground Savory
  • 1 t dried Rosemary
  • 1 1/2 t Organic Mushroom Better Than Bullion
  • 4 1/2 C Boiling Water
  • 1 C Milk

Directions:

  1. Rinse rice until water is clear, then sautee in oil over medium heat. Add onion and sautee for about 3 more minutes, then add carrots and fresh mushrooms for an additional 3 minutes.
  2. Add boiling water, Better Than Bullion and remaining ingredients except milk. Close and lock the pressure cooker and turn heat up to high.
  3. When full pressure is reached, turn heat down to medium low (just enough to maintain pressure) and start timer for 20-24 minutes.
  4. When timer goes off, quickly release the pressure by running cold water over the pressure cooker, then open carefully.
  5. Add milk and salt and pepper to taste and let sit on the warm burner until milk has come up to temperature.

I like to serve it with some warm whole grain bread and some raw vegetables on the side. To punch up the nutrition you could also put some baby spinach leaves in the bowl and let the soup slightly cook them. It’ll add some additional color as well.

This version is vegetarian, but you could easily add a ham bone or some chicken to it as well. I’m sure the author’s non-vegetarian version of this cookbook which is being rereleased later this year, Cooking Under Pressure (20th Anniversary Edition) is as good as the one we bought. Being rerelased 20 years later is generally a good sign of a quality cookbook.

We’re On Facebook Now!

Filed under: Knitting Patterns — Kristi at 6:41 pm on Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Designedly, Kristi is now on Facebook!

It’s official, Designedly, Kristi has it’s own page on Facebook so you can become a fan and get pattern release and class updates on Facebook. You can also share photos of any of my patterns (self-published or in magazine or books), ask questions, and just chat with others who knit my designs.

To celebrate I’ll be announcing a new pattern release there soon. It’ll be announced there about a week earlier than here on the blog or on Ravelry, so don’t miss out!

An Unexpected Guest

Filed under: Fibery Friends, Felting — Kristi at 6:11 pm on Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Llama @ Nanytutu's

Last Friday I ventured up to Wellington in search of more needles (do you ever get to the point where you have all the needles you might need?) and some of the gals I knit with on Mondays were going to be there knitting so got my needles and stayed a while. I did more number crunching than actual knitting, but it is nice to get out of the house and into public once in a while :-)

While I was there we had a visitor to Nanytutu’s - a llama! I’m afraid I don’t really know the whole story, but I think there were 3 or 4 the woman picked up from a rescue. She’s a friend of Nancy’s and brought him by to say hi. That’s Nancy in the photo with him. He’s a younger one, I think this spring will be his first shearing if I heard the new owner right.

One might think it extremely odd to have an llama show up out of the blue for a visit, but for Nanytutu’s that isn’t terribly odd. Not too long ago a woman lost a bet about being able to train a chicken and had to knit a cape for the chicken. She didn’t even know how to knit! So, Nancy taught her and helped her design a cape for him and he even wore it in a city parade, LOL!

Felted Flower Pins

Last week we also celebrated January birthdays at Sheila’s house once again. This time we took felt and turned it into pins. I didn’t get to photograph all of them, but there was a stunning variety produced by the talented gals who got together that day. I have to say mine paled in comparison to everyone else, but I hadn’t planned on taking part either. I was kind of concentrating on trying to wrap up another pattern.