Monthly Archives: April 2014

BakeOver MakeOver Merit Badge, Intermediate Level

The adorable, always humorous MBA Jane is my way of honoring our Sisterhood Merit Badge program, now with 5,843 dues-paying members who have earned an amazing number of merit badges so far—8,286 total! Take it away, MBA Jane!!! MJ

Wondering who I am? I’m Merit Badge Awardee Jane (MBA Jane for short). In my former life   

For this week’s Farm Kitchen/BakeOver MakeOver Intermediate Level Merit Badge, I was nervously pacing the length of my kitchen.

Back and forth.

Back and forth.

Forth and back.

To and fro.

Fro and to.

Forth and fro.

Etc, etc.

The source of my anxiety was this: Coming up with two new recipes/ideas for BakeOvers and then presenting them to YOU. Now I’m a creative gal, certainly, but sometimes my kitchen experiments become kitchen disasters right before my terrified eyes. Not wanting to poison anyone, I took my time with these delectable, delicious, divine, and distinctly different makeovers. Drum roll, please.

Biscuits & Gravy (BakeOver Style)

Preheat oven to 400°F. In your most favorite cast-iron skillet, brown up 1 pound of organic breakfast sausage. (Mr. Wonderful and I really like the spicy variety. It adds some kick. And also some romance, due to the spicy lips.) Drain any excess grease. Add 3–4 T flour; stir for about 2 minutes. Slowly add 1 cup half-n-half and 1 1/2 cups milk. Heat until thickened. Season. (I like lots of pepper. Again, spicy lips make for excellent smooching.) Layer biscuits made with Organic Budget Mix® All-Purpose Original Baking Mix on top. Bake at 400°F until bubbly and brown, about 20–25 minutes.

Pile on plates.

Eat happily.

Smooch.

Honey Fig Crostatas (tarts)

On a lightly floured surface, roll out a Organic Budget Mix® All-Purpose Original Baking Mix BakeOver crust to 1/8″ thick. Cut out eight 5″ rounds, rerolling the scraps if necessary; transfer to a parchment paper–lined baking sheet and refrigerate for 30 minutes.

In a bowl, toss 1 lb of green and purple figs, cut into wedges, with 3 t honey, 1 t fresh lemon juice, 1 t fresh thyme leaves, and a pinch of salt. Arrange the figs on the dough rounds, leaving 1/2″ border all around. Fold the edges over the figs and brush the dough with an egg wash. Chill for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, preheat oven to 375°F. Bake crostatas for 35 minutes, rotating halfway through baking, until crusts are golden. Let stand for 10 minutes.

Gently toss another 1/2 lb figs, cut into wedges, with 2 t honey. Transfer crostatas to plates, top with the figs and another 1 t fresh thyme leaves, and serve.

If you don’t have figs (or don’t like them), try using apricots or plums. Crostatas are are fun and easy, and they have endless varieties. Plus, you’ll really feel fancy—even when they drip hot juice down your chin because you can’t wait an appropriate time for them to cool off before devouring.

Or is that just me?

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Bee the Change

Wasn’t it Gandhi who said, “Be the change you want to see in the world.”?

Well, in the case of Canadian artist Aganetha Dyck, perhaps it might be more apt to say, “Bee the change.”

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Photo by Erik Hooymans via Wikimedia Commons

In 1991, Aganetha forged a fascinating collaboration with honeybees in order to create works of art.

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Photo by Peter Dyck via Aganethdyck.ca

Beyond encouraging focus on the crisis of colony collapse, she also had a more intimate intention—drawing humankind’s attention to the miraculous and fruitful relationship that exists right beneath our noses.

“I am interested in the small, in the really tiny of the world,” she has explained. “We’re going so fast, because we have so many people to feed and house, and so we just bulldoze ahead. It’s the simplest things that already exist and work so hard for us that I think we’re kind of ignoring.”

One of Aganetha’s most charming series is called Masked Ball, which features delicate porcelain figures in formal finery that have been further adorned by bees.

Embedded in hives for up to six years, these figurines are transformed by coifs, ruffles, and veritable auras of golden beeswax, crafted by the bees themselves.

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Photo from the Masked Ball series via Aganethdyck.ca

These pieces are not only a curious pleasure to the eye; they also represent a metaphor of the interconnectedness between species.

As blogger Artisword elegantly states, “The Masked Ball functions to highlight the productive aspect of the human-bee relationship, illustrating its mutually creative potential by exhibiting the product of combined interspecies work. The finished pieces are graceful, for the bees often follow and extend the curves of each sculpture with their wax, in a sense continuing and expanding upon the work of the original human sculptor. The manner in which beeswax adorns these small human figurines is both decorative and protective, and creates the most literal metaphor of an idealized human-bee relationship. The bees swarm these delicate human figurines not to attack or destroy them, but to build upon, protect, and beautify them.”

Aganetha employs specially designed hives that allow her to introduce an object without disrupting the colony. She removes the “sculpture” after it is sufficiently covered with lacy honeycomb, a process that can take anywhere from a few weeks to years.

Never mind that she has been diagnosed with a bee allergy …

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Photo of Aganetha Dyck by Peter Dyck and William Eakin via Aganethdyck.ca

The Masked Ball series and a selection of Aganetha’s other works can be seen at the Ottawa School of Art through April 13, 2014 in an exhibition entitled Honeybee Alterations.

If you can’t make it to Ottowa, enjoy a virtual tour of the artist’s work here:

 

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Hear Ye!

Welcome New Sisters! (click for current roster)

Merit Badge Awardees (click for latest awards)

My featured Merit Badge Awardee of the Week is … Jennifer Prior!!!

Jennifer Prior (#5297) has received a certificate of achievement in Stitching & Crafting for earning an Intermediate Level Knitting Merit Badge!

“Okay, so I have already become an addict. My friend taught me how to make clog slippers that are felted. At one point, I was knitting with three needles at one time! The slippers were huge when finished, but after felting, they fit like a dream. I actually met with a few friends to work on these. We knit together on three different nights for several hours.

Slippers(1)This project was such fun, I made another pair in a different color. Now my mom wants me to make a pair for her. I’ve attached photos. They are so cute; they look like little teddy-bear feet. I am so crazy about knitting now and have since made numerous dishcloths in varying patterns. Wow, knitted dishcloths work so much better than sponges and I even use one for washing my face now.”

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Mountain Rose Herbs Pin Party

Our friends at Mountain Rose Herbs are hosting a Grand Giveaway called

“My Herbal Spring Pin Party.”

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Photo by Dwight Sipler via Wikimedia Commons

If you’ve never participated in a Pinterest pin party, this is a perfect place to start! It’s not only easy-as-pie, it’s a whole lot of fun—and you may win an Herbal Facial Kit, Tea-To-Go Glass Infusers with Hibiscus High Tea, or a $50 gift certificate to buy a gaggle of goodies at Mountain Rose Herbs.

Here’s the lowdown:

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Image courtesy of MountainRoseBlog.com

Three winners will be chosen at random and announced on April 7.

Good luck, and happy herbal pinning!

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Get Out a Hankie

Oh, my …

Before you go any further, grab a hankie.

Really.

Otherwise, happy tears will be pooling into your lap after watching this video.

Are you ready? Hankie in hand?

 

As you might imagine from watching adorable Emily James caress her flowing pre-cut locks, her favorite princess is Rapunzel.

Hair is serious business to this 3-year-old.

But, “serious” took on a whole new meaning when Emily decided to cut her hair and donate it to kids who’ve lost their hair to cancer.

Emily’s mom, Amy, had donated her own hair in high school and thought it would be a win-win way to tame Emily’s unruly locks (if you’ve ever tackled a little girl’s tangles, you know how trying it can be!).

“We hope to instill an attitude of giving to all of our kids,” Amy James told Today.com. “We want them to realize that everything we have is a blessing from God and it’s really important to give to others when we can.”

Emily agreed to let her Uncle Matt, a stylist, cut her hair—on one condition.

Her Rapunzel doll had to be shorn too, too.

Done deal!

Following the haircut, both Emily and her mom (and, presumably, Rapunzel) reported that they were enjoying the low-maintenance style and felt happy about sending six inches of lovely locks to the Canadian Cancer Society, where they are destined to become a wig for a pediatric cancer patient.

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