Saturday, 30 March 2013

Happy bunnies eat sweet brioche!

Craft Guerrilla gals (and guys) love to bake! It's a creative outlet so it's very much a weekly happening in CG Towers... plus we are pretty greedy too!
Mostly we are kept busy with crafting but we definitely always find time to bake! It's amazingly relaxing and also you can eat what you make which isn't possible with craft...ew, woolly pompoms are not tasty!
For Easter we've decided to try to bake our own French brioche loaf. Yummy, soft, sweet and heavenly served with lots of butter and jam...the perfect Easter weekend breakfast though we advise you to eat it as often as you like and not just for Easter! Somethings should be enjoyed more then once a year!!!
Having never attempted to make brioche we began with mild trepidation though with the aide of a bread machine it was simple and super quick! There are so many myths about brioche making but after trying this recipe I can truly say, hand on heart, that it isn't that difficult. It takes a little time but all good things do so... Try it, you won't be disappointed.





For two Brioche loaves you'll need...
ingredients:
     550g flour
     125ml of milk
     2 tbsp. creme fraiche (or buttermilk)
     2 eggs, beaten
     1.5 tsp. teaspoon salt
     110g of sugar
     110g unsalted butter
     1 tablespoon rum
     1 tablespoon orange blossom
     1 tsp vanilla extract
     25g fresh yeast


Place ingredients in your bread machine in the following order: milk, creme fraiche, eggs, salt, sugar, rum, orange blossom water and vanilla extract. Cover with flour. Dissolve the yeast in a tablespoons of water and pour over the flour.
Start your machine on the dough program. All machines vary time wise so please refer to your handbook to check the timings of your dough cycle as you'll need to add the butter half way through.
Once your machine is half way through the kneading cycle add the cubed butter which should be cut in smallish cubes. Add a tablespoon at a time so the machine can kneed it into the already mixed dough.
At the end of the program, remove the dough from the machine and divide it into two.(NOTE: You can do this by hand too once the dough cycle reaches the end. If you are doing it by hand knead just so the butter is evenly marbled through the dough but don't over knead it. You should be able to still see chunks of butter in your dough.) 

Form two braids and arrange on a baking sheet covered with parchment paper. Let rise for about 2 hours. Preheat oven to 180 ° C. Brush loaves with beaten egg
Bake for about 25 minutes.
*TIP: we used two silicone loaf molds just so to keep them tidy but you can bake them straight onto a floured oven tray!

(recipe taken from:http://delicesdhelene.over-blog.com/m/article-21710631.html

 

Enjoy toasted with lashings of butter and jam and a large bowl of café au lait

Happy Easter Craft lovers!




Do Make Say Think - Horns of a Rabbit from Sean Plaice on Vimeo.

Friday, 29 March 2013

A Creative Daughter of Walthamstow



After I posted my first guest blog, I realised that I hadn’t even introduced myself; let's put it down to nerves and try again!  My name is Gill and I am an artist and maker and blogger – I blog as Paisley Pedlar and you can find me on Facebook, Twitter and on my main blog at www.paisleypedlar.wordpress.com .  For this, my second guest post I would like to introduce you to my good friend and daughter of Walthamstow – Sonia Demetriou.

Sonia grew up in Walthamstow, living in Boundary Road (although her house is no longer there.  She went to school Gamuel Road Primary School and then on to Gasgoyne Secondary and McEntee Technical School before leaving aged 16 to become an apprentice Decorated Furniture Restorer in a studio in Chelsea.  A couple of years ago Sonia shared with me the germ of an idea for writing a book about her Greek Cypriot heritage and after several visits to Cyprus and many hours toiling over her PC keyboard,  “Androulas Kitchen – Cyprus on a Plate” was published at the end of 2012.  This amazing book starts with a brief explanation about why she wanted to write it and then follows on with all kinds of fascinating facts and stories about traditional Cypriot crafts such as basketry, weaving and lace making.  Many of these traditional crafts are in serious decline, with only a few craftsmen and women still working in the traditional way to keep the crafts alive.  Fully illustrated with beautiful colour photographs the book also focuses on traditional Cypriot cookery (there is a clue in the title) and includes some delicious recipes some with Sonia’s own contemporary twist, and it is one of these that she has kindly allowed me to share with you… Revani is found all over the Middle East in different versions and Sonias version is simply to die for – cakey, sticky, orangy and almondy, YUM!

Revani tis Sonias
125g unsalted butter
60g caster sugar
2 eggs
75g rice flour
100g plain flour
50g ground almonds
Juice of 1 large orange (or 2 small ones)
1 teaspoon baking powder
A few drops of almond essence
Handful of blanched almonds for the top
Syrup
Juice of 1 large orange (or 2 small ones)
100g caster sugar

·         Pre heat the oven to 180°C, Gas Mark 4
·         Grease a 10cmx20cm non stick baking tin (I also lined mine with greaseproof paper)
·         Sift the flour, rice flour and baking powder in to a bowl
·         Mix butter (softened) with the sugar until creamy in a separate bowl
·         Add the almond essence
·         In another bowl whisk the eggs together
·         Gradually add the egg mix to the butter and sugar, and add in the flour mixture
·         Mix together the orange juice and ground almonds and add to the rest of the cake mixture.  The consistency should be like a soft batter, if it is a little stiff add a few drops of milk.
·         Pour the mixture into the baking tin, sprinkle the blanched almonds on top and bake in the centre of the oven for 45 to 50 minutes until it is cooked in the middle.
·         While the cake is baking, place the orange juice and sugar in a pan and heat until the sugar is dissolved and thickened.
·         When the cake is cooked, remove it from the oven and pierce the top with a skewer or knitting needle and pour the orange syrup over the cake and allow to cool in the baking tin.
·         Once cool, turn out on to a cooling rack and enjoy!
This cake is delicious, it is light but has a lovely cakey consistency and the sticky orangy flavour is really refreshing as well as satisfying.


Delicious Revani (tis Sonias)


You can find out more about Sonias book, “Androulas Kitchen –Cyprus on a Plate” at http://androulaskitchen.wordpress.com and on her Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/cyprusonaplate .  The book is available to buy direct from Sonia or from Amazon.

Friday, 22 March 2013

Friday's CRAFT CRUSH...

Kim Baise is this week's CRAFT CRUSH!
We love trawling through blogs and quite by accident we stumbled across her amazing work!
Personally I have quite a thing for mobiles so her beautiful work is right up my street! Jikits is her hand made company and we think she is a very crafty and cleaver gal! Not only is she a crafty super star but she's also an illustrator, a mum and from the look of things a very busy maker too!

geometric shapes mobile...we love these so much!!!


Kim graduated from NYU where she studied printmaking and sculpture. Now living in Los Angeles with her  husband who is a musician and their three young children.


Cacti mobile...
Howdy partner!

With a love for bright colors and bold shapes, paintings and collages, crochet and embroidery, Picasso, Warhol, the 50's and 60's her work is both magical and a little bit of what I imagine to be the contents of her dreams and imagination! I quite love the Warhol/Velvet Underground reference in her mobile pictured below...can you spot it?

Custom made mobiles can be ordered via Kim's Etsy shop.


If you'd like to know more about Kim and her work please visit her blog:
www.jikits.blogspot.com 

Or if you'd like to purchase any of her pieces she also has an Etsy shop:
www.etsy.com/shop/jikits


*Kim's work reminds us of  hazy Californian dream sequences filled with swirling neon lights and heavily incensed summer nights. We're sipping on a large Jack & Coke while skipping down Hollywood Boulevard with The GTO's... and we are so free that we feel like we're flying!*



Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Something for the weekend...

Even though the weather's not playing fair we're feeling pretty spring like. It's late March and we're fed up of grey. It seems to be enveloping everything around us so I think it's high time we brought some colour indoors!

This cute tutorial shows you just how you can make your very own pretty flowers even if the weather's not helping us by bringing budding blooms to our gardens... so there mother nature this weekend we are making our own!

tutorial  via: http://www.surprisediy.com/diy-645.html

Tuesday, 19 March 2013

Hi to everyone!

Hi to everyone!
This is my first post as a guest blogger with East London Craft Guerrilla and I'm just a tiny bit nervous!  What to write about has been on my mind and for this first post I have decided to write about how I came across ELCG.

It all started with some research I was doing for an artwork I was making as part of a group exhibition.  The theme for the exhibition was 'Response' and each member of the group (there are 10 of us) had bought an item costing less than £5 which we then swapped at random between ourselves; this object was then to act as a catalyst for the creation of a new piece (or pieces) of art.  I was given an Indian silk painting showing Rama and Sita dancing.  Actually, finding out who the figures in the painting were was not that straightforward but my good friend Sophriona and her lovely Mum came to my rescue and not only identified the figures in the painting but also told me the story of Rama and Sita.  I became quite fixated with all sorts of ideas about obsessive love and romance generally; and while I was researching Love Tokens I came across the embroidered cards given by women to their sweethearts in the First World War.  These would be sent out to the men who would then stitch something else into the card and send it back as proof that they were still alive.  Then I came across the ELCG blogspot and the call out for 'Lencinhos dos namorados' and suddenly it all made sense!

I simply HAD to make a hanky for this project, but... disaster.... the only hankies in our house were some scruffy ones that belong to my husband, probably not quite the right look!  After scouring charity shops to no avail - when I asked if they had any hankies in one, the old lady behind the counter offered me a tissue! I eventually found two dainty ladies hankies in a local flea market. Perfect!  Now the problem was what to embroider on them and also (and possibly an even bigger problem) could I actually make an embroidery - I have no experience to speak of in hand embroidery and only a limited amount of experience with machine embroidery; but nothing ventured, nothing gained...plough on regardless!

The final result is two dainty vintage ladies hankies much stiffened by the addition of the embroidery motifs - not sure they'd be any good for nose-blowing or tear dabbing now, but they are OK, and for an embroidery newbie I'm quite chuffed with them.  In fact I have become so keen on hand embroidery that I've even signed up for a City and Guilds course to learn how to do it properly!






And what happened about the art work that started it all off?  I ended up with making a pencil drawing which I then scanned and printed digitally before stitching it to a screen printed background of stylised wisteria leaves using hand and machine embroidery.  It is called Wisteria Kiss and captures the moment of anticipation of that first kiss.





So that's it, my first post for ELCG.  Over the next few weeks I'll be making a couple more, sharing stuff about crafty things and people I know.  You can find out more about me on Facebook (www.facebook.com/paisleypedlar)

Friday, 15 March 2013

Friday's Craft Crush...

This is a total CRAFT CRUSH!!! I love hand made felt plushies and these are super cute...well they are beyond cute... they are actually quite lovely and that's maybe because they have a definite quirky vintage edge to them.

a little bird in a bonnet

a lovely little fox

oh dear...what a cute deer!

Skunkboy is the brain child of Katie a mid-western dwelling mother of two. Our American cousin makes the most amazing creatures and we hope you love them as much as we do too! Go check her out!

For further plushies visit the Skunkboy shop: http://skunkboycreatures.bigcartel.com/





Thursday, 14 March 2013

Deadline extended for our project...

Calling all crafters ...you still have time to participate in the "Lençinhos dos namorados" project as the deadline has now been extended!!! We did say they had to be received by the end May 2013 though things have slightly changed due to unforeseen circumstances.
Initially we were going to exhibit the embroidered art works in this year's E17 Art trail alas it's now been changed to a bi-annual event. In a way it's a shame that we won't have the Art Trail every year but on this occasion it also means that you have more time to finish anything off or if you thought you were too late to begin now...then think again!

So get stitching and suffice to say that if you have finished your piece you can send it to us as we'd love to begin cataloging and photographing pieces for our promo and to show potential sponsors the calibre of the work which we've received already!

Huge "lençinho" exhibited outdoors in the Alexandre Pomar museum of folk art Portugal...could they be our host?


I'm so excited about it and potentially this exhibition will tour a few places in Europe so...keep them peepers peeled as I'll be announcing any developments as they happen.

Mainly women embroidered these love tokens to offer to their men...often these women were illiterate hence the typo's which are both humourous and sweet!


New deadline to be announced asap as it'll be dependent on the new Art Trail date. There's talk that it'll be in summer now so let's see what they announce then we'll let you know. For further info and criteria please get in touch via email: craftguerrilla@yahoo.com

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an example of the typical bright, jolly and niave embroidery that makes this folk art form a huge part of the Portuguese culture and mindset...