Crafty: Christmas Wreath

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This weekend was totally what I needed after being a major cranky-pants last week. There were mimosas at breakfast and chatting with Nicole and Megan, as well as this craft project, with a side of lounging. Weekend perfection.

Getting my craft on always puts me in a mood for the holidays…my favorite time of the year! I know it may be a little early to be busting out the Christmas decor, but when it comes to crafting, I like to be a little ahead of the game. Let’s be real, I think we all know that once Thanksgiving rolls by, December becomes one hectic month of holiday cheer.

Saturday afternoon Megan and I crafted some yarn wreaths. I decided to wrap my entire wreath form in a warm, grey yarn (which took me forever, like 2 hours!), then I glued some pom-poms on there all haphazardly and hated it. I loved the pom-poms, but they just weren’t coming together on the wreath. So, I cut off the poms and the glued yarn, re-wrapped the bald spots, and made these amazing fringe flowers (as seen on Studio Calico via Pinterest). For the flowers I used some of my scrapbook paper stockpile and hot glue instead of a tape-style adhesive. I only did this, because I didn’t want to go to the craft store just for fancy adhesive and, I always have hot glue. I wouldn’t suggest using the hot glue unless you have asbestos-coated-finger-tips like I do, or if you treasure your one-of-a-kind fingerprints…there will be some burn-age and maybe a little cursing. I also don’t have fancy fringe scissors, so I just used the regular kind and snip-snipped the paper strips. After the paper flowers were made, I played around with the placement of some small doilies with the paper flowers clustered on top before hot glueing everything on. I’m actually really pleased with how it came out and kind of want to hang it up right now!

Supplies:

wreath form (I purchased an 18in form made of particle board from Michael’s. These are way cheaper than the styrofoam ones and also more sturdy.)

yarn, in a color of your choice

scrapbook paper, cut into strips in varying widths

adhesive (or hot glue if you’re brave!)

small paper doilies

scissors (plain or fringe-cutting)

DIY: Nail Art–Half Moon Mani and a GIVEAWAY!!

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**This Giveaway Is Closed!! Still feel free to comments :D!!**

 

Hey ya’lls!

I have another nail art tutorial for you!

This one is a Half Moon mani, also known as the Reverse French (I first saw it here).

I have to tell you, people will be impressed with this mani. They will be surprised that you did it yourself. They might even remark that you are a trend setter.

That’s what the lady at the gym told me.

Yeah, I was at the gym.

I don’t really want to talk about it.

I want to talk about these nails and this dang GIVEAWAY!

Oh, yes, I said GIVEAWAY…that will be at the end of the post…

for now, it’s mani time!

To make this easy, as I don’t have the steadiest of hands when it comes to intricate painting, I used those “hole reinforcement” stickers you buy at the office supply. They work like magic and make the perfect half moon shape. I like guides and easiness…especially when the results look like this:

Pretty, right? The colors I used were: Essie-Van D’Go (base), Sonia Kashuk-Smoke&Mirrors (ring-finger bling), and Essie-Chinchilly. Below is how to do it!

Some helpful hints:

After you apply the base coat, be sure to let it dry, dry, dry. It needs to be DRY…or those little stickers will just jack everything up and make your polish peel and you will be sad. Trust me, I know.

I only used the Smoke&Mirrors color on my ring finger. It’s a thing, it’s not just me. I like it, it’s makes this already fun mani EVEN MORE FUN. Wow! if you can imagine that. Another thing you could do is the text-thumb thing, you paint your thumbs the fun metallic or glitter so that when you are texting like a maniac, your thumbs will be flashy and fancy. This too, is a thing…again, not just me.

Some tutorials tell you to wait for coat 2 (numero dos!) to dry all the way before peeling off those stickers. I didn’t do that because I thought the sticker would peel the 2nd coat off with it. This worked out for me and I was pleased.

Use a clear, quick-dry topcoat to finish it off and fill in that tiny ridge between the two colors. Smooth and shiny!

For more tips see my previous post.

Soooo pretty, so fun!

Now, that giveaway I mentioned.

I’m doing this because Joy the Baker and Tracy from Shutterbean mentioned my new found nail prowess on their podcast!

Whaaaa? Yeah, pretty much made my day.

I wanted to share the love.

Also, because I love nail goodies…

…and, most of all…because I love ya’lls, dear readers.

I really, really do.

So here’s what I gots to give:

We have 1 minty-cream green, 1 tropical turquiose, 1 glitter mini (I couldn’t find an adequate gold glitter I liked in full size…dang, dang, double dang!), and 1 salmon-y pink. I hope you like these colors as much as I do AND I hope you enter to win these sweet little laquers!

To enter ONCE, just leave me a comment telling me what your summer obsession is. It can be beauty, food, activity, fashion…whatever you are loving this summer!

To enter TWICE, you can just tweet about this post with a link back to it! Be sure to mention me in it @cindyishungry…so I know ya did it and I can count you twice!

To enter yet another, and possibly THIRD time, ”LIKE” Hungry Girl Por Vida on Facebook. If you already “like” me, then just post about this giveaway on your wall :D And come back here to let me know you did…I want to make sure to count you!

This giveaway will close Wednesday, August 3rd at MIDNIGHT. I will not count you if you enter after that, so get on it!

Also, if you enter as ANONYMOUS, I won’t know who you are or how to contact you…so make sure you fill in the comment form with your email :D

Yay! I hope you all like this mani AND giveaway!

For all my baking obsessed pals…I gathering stuff for another giveaway for ya’lls…soon!

***Just a little disclaimer…Essie, Sonia Kashuk, Orly, and SinfulColors don’t know me. All opinions are mine and all purchases were made by me w/ my own dolla bills ya’ll. 

DIY Nail Art: Sponged Glitter Tips

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This is another DIY nail art post. Ignore it if you hate it, read on if you don’t :) I will be back with a delightful brownie recipe tomorrow!

ESSIE Lapis of Luxury + OPI Dazzled by Gold

I think it is fair to say that I’m obsessed with nail polish this summer.

It’s also fair to say that I am also obsessed with glitter…all the time. Ask Sean, he’ll tell you all about it.

So it’s no surprise that my current favorite mani is this one, a sponged on glittered-tip application.

AMERICAN APPAREL Summer Peach + OPI Dazzled by Gold

I LOVE it, love it. Just can’t get enough…for real. I’ve rocked this look on my nails for the last couple of weeks and I don’t see it going anywhere soon.

Here is how to do it:

*Paint on 2 coats of your color of choice on CLEAN and DRY nails. Allow base color to dry completely.

*Dot a small amount of glitter polish onto a scrap of paper (I used a Post-It). Use a small amount so it doesn’t dry out, thus wasting precious glitter polish.

*Using a small piece of make-up sponge, dab glitter polish onto tip of nail. Continue to dab onto tips–heavier at the very tip of the nail to create a gradient look–until the very tip is completely covered in glitter.  This layer will dry fairly quickly.

*Finish with a coat of quick-dry top-coat of your choice. This will allow your freshly polished nails to last longer. Clean-up skin around your nail with a remover-soaked q-tip.

AMERICAN APPAREL L’esprit + OPI Sparkle-icious

To ensure that my polish is smooth and sticks to my nails for days, here are some tips I’ve learned:

Roll your polish between two palms instead of shaking. Shaking your polish bottles causes air bubbles to form on your nail surface–thus ruining the smooth effect that I so covet when painting my nails.

Remove all previous polish from nails before beginning. Filing and buffing is a good idea too, but usually I just can’t be bothered. Also, push back those cuticles!

Use a special base coat formula if so inclined, but more importantly start with CLEAN and DRY nails. Oily or greasy nails will just make the inevitable chipping (and even the dreaded peeling) happen more quickly.

Layer 2 coats of polish to get a saturated look. Keep in mind, some polishes are more opaque than others. A sheer formula will still be sheer after two coats. I also think thinner coats are better than thicker–in my experience thicker coats mean more chipping.

When using a Q-tip for clean up, I soak it in remover and then roll the q-tip between my fingers to make sure there isn’t any stray cotton that will drag and possibly ruin my fresh mani.

Be patient! Don’t start a multi-step mani if you have to be doing something with your hands in 10 minutes. I like to give myself at least 30 minutes, if not an hour. I usually do my nails right before I go to bed, when I have something awesome saved on my DVR. If I do this, I forgo the q-tip clean-up and just clean it off in the shower–the scrubbing action of washing my hair usually gets it all off effectively!

**I am not a professional manicurist or beauty expert! I’m just a girl with an obsession with all things pretty and I like DIY. The original technique for sponging was seen on YouTube here (she also has lots of marble nail tutorials. FUN!). 

***I am not a paid sponsor of OPI, Out the Door, Essie, or American Apparel. All of the polishes and products I use are purchased by me. All opinions are my own. 

 

 

Random Things: DIY Nail Art

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Hey y’alls. This post is a lot different than most, as it doesn’t contain something edible. It’s just a little DIY nail art technique I saw on Pinterest (are you addicted, like me?).

Yeah, I said “y’alls” and “nail art”. In my head both sound like “ya’llz, nailz artz!”

Anyway, how I did it. I used:

Essie basecoat (not pictured)

2 coats of Essie Blanc

A straigntened out bobby pin (if you’re fancy you can use a dotting tool)

OPI Black Onyx

Essie Mint Candy Apple

E.L.F Mango Madness

INM Out-the-Door top coat (my very fave top-coat EVAR…that’s why I have the big girl bottle)

For the dots I dropped little bits of nail color onto a post it and dipped the end of the bobby pin in the color, then dotted my nail in a random pattern. I did one hand at a time and one color at a time, before moving on to the next. I wiped the end of the pin off between colors with a little bit of remover soaked cotton. I let the dots dry a bit before applying the top coat. That was it, not rocket science…or baking science for that matter.

Other than my messy cuticles (it will most definitely come off the skin surrounding the nail after I do some dishes or wash my hair…this has been my experience!), I’m pretty pleased with the results! I have been obsessed with all of the creamy colors that are out this season…so, you may see more of this nail goodness.

I hope y’allz don’t mind.

Recipes + Feature on Hey Gorgeous

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Okay, so here is the little DIY desserts table I have been mentioning and hiding from you all for the last week. I contacted the lovely and all too sweet Rhiannon a few weeks ago asking her if she would like me to do a feature for her lovely wedding inspiration blog Hey Gorgeous. All she wanted was something pretty and pink…I can totally do pretty + pink. So, I came up with the little DIY, pink and white inspired table you see here. I hope you like!

Recipes are below and lots more photos can be found over at Hey Gorgeous.

 

Strawberry Milk Panna Cotta

Strawberry Syrup

This makes extra syrup. It’s great on ice cream, great yogurt, or stirred into milk for an old-school treat!

adapted from the Kitchn

1 lb strawberries, hulled and roughly chopped

1 cup sugar

1 cup water

Place berries, sugar, and water in a large saucepan. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to maintain a low boil and simmer for 10 minutes until reduced and slightly thickened. Using an immersion blender or regular blender, pulse until mixture is smooth. Strain through a fine mesh sieve into a large jar and cool before covering and refrigerating.

 

Panna Cotta

I find this ratio of gelatin to liquid to be favorable, just firm enough to hold everything together. Makes 8-10 individual ramekin portions (I think mine hold about 4 oz).

2 cups half and half

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

2 tablespoons sugar

1/2 cup strawberry syrup

2 teaspoons gelatin

2 tablespoons water

Sprinkle gelatin over water in a small bowl. Set aside to soften, about 5 minutes.

Place half and half, vanilla, and sugar in a medium saucepan. Heat until sugar has dissolved and just before mixture comes to a boil. Remove from heat and stir in softened gelatin until completely dissolved. Stir in strawberry syrup.

To assemble, I spooned about 2 tablespoons of syrup into the bottom of glass ramekins and placed the vessels in the freezer to create the layered look. Freezing the syrup just allowed for me to keep the layers separate and pretty. Once the syrup was frozen, I was free to pour in the panna cotta mixture. Allow to set in the refrigerator for at least 4 hours, covered well for up to 4 days.

 

Strawberry Cream Cake

Vanilla Cake

Adapted from Sky High: Irresistible Triple Layer Cakes

This is a halved version of my favorite vanilla cake. This recipe makes 2, 6-inch round cakes.

In this recipe you will beat the flour with the other ingredients until light and fluffy. This may seem counterintuitive to a lot of bakers, but it works for this cake. The texture is still light with a wonderfully tender crumb.

2 large eggs

1 large egg yolk

1 teaspoon vanilla extract, or 1/2 vanilla bean–seeded

1/2 cup + 2 tablespoons buttermilk

1 1/2 cups cake flour

1 cup sugar

2 1/4 teaspoons baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

1 stick unsalted  butter, at room temperature

Preheat the oven to 350F. Line the bottoms of two 6×2 inch round cakes pans with parchment, butter pans and parchment well.

Place eggs and yolk small bowl. Add vanilla and mix well.

Combine flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer. Whisk well to combine. Add butter and buttermilk to dry ingredients and blend well with mixer on low. Raise the mixer speed to medium and beat until light and fluffy, about 2 minutes.

Add the egg mixture in 3 additions, scraping the bowl well after each addition. Divide batter among the prepared pans.

Bake cakes for 25-30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of cakes comes out clean. Let the layers cool in the pans for 10 minutes (the cakes should pull away from the sides of the pan as it cools), then carefully invert onto wire racks to cool completely.

Once cooled completely, cut each cake in half, into layers using a sharp serrated knife. NOTE: I only used 3 of the 4 layers. I saved the 4th, in the freezer, for another use.

Strawberry Filling

1 cup strawberries, hulled and roughly chopped

1/4 cup strawberry jam, melted in the microwave for about 30 seconds

Mix together jam and berries in a medium bowl to coat.

Strawberry Whipped Buttercream

Adapted from Organic and Chic

2 sticks unsalted butter, room temp

1 cup sugar

1 cup whole milk

1/4 cup all purpose flour, sifted

1 1/2 tablespoons vanilla extract

1/4 cup of strawberry syrup (reserved from panna cottas) or strawberry jam

pinch of salt

Prepare an ice bath in a medium to large mixing bowl.

In a small saucepan, combine 1/4 cup of the milk with the vanilla, salt, and flour. Whisk until there are no lumps. Over medium heat, slowly whisk in the rest of the milk until smooth, whisking constantly, until mixture comes to a low boil. Reduce heat and continue to whisk until mixture thickens.

Immediately remove from heat and keep stirring. Place the pan in prepared ice bath and stir until cooled to about room temperature. Set aside.

Cream butter in the bowl of a stand mixer for 2-5 minutes. Add sugar and beat until fluffily, scraping down sides as needed, 5-7 minutes. Add strawberry syrup or jam and mix to combine. With the mixer on low, slowly add the milk mixture. Increase speed to medium and beat until light and fluffily, 3-5 minutes.

To Assemble cake, place one layer on cake stand or board and spread a thin layer of frosting over the top. Pipe a ring of frosting around the outer edge of the layer, creating a dam. Spoon filling into the center of the piped ring and spread evenly. Place the next layer over the top and repeat, leaving the final layer unfrosted and unfilled.

Scoop about 1/4 of the frosting on the top of the cake and spread it down thinly toward the edge and over the sides until the whole cake is coated in a very thin, crumby looking layer. This is the crumb coat and will ensure that the cake will have a lovely, crumb-free coating of frosting.

Next, pile nearly all of the remaining frosting onto the top of the cake (save some for piping the star-tip decoration), and spread the frosting from the center and down the sides, covering the cake with a thick, even layer of frosting. I use a bench scraper and a turntable to get the sides of the cake smooth. I have done this with out the turn table, just on a cake stand, turning it as I went, but I do think the bench scraper is useful…plus they cost less than a dollar at a restaurant supply.

Using a piping bag fitted with a medium star tip (I used a Wilton #21), pipe small stars along the base of the cake and in rings around the top of the cake.

For a great tutorial on cake frosting, see this :http://whisk-kid.blogspot.com/2011/02/how-to-frost-cake.html

Pavlovas

This recipe is adapted from Simply Recipes

I like to serve these with unsweetened whipped cream, as the berries and meringues are plenty sweet.

Makes about 1 dozen, individual meringues.

1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract

2 teaspoons white vinegar (I used champagne)

1 1/2 tablespoons cornstarch

1 1/2 cups  sugar

6 room temperature egg whites

pinch of salt

sanding sugar for sprinkling

For Cream and Berries

1 1/2 cups heavy cream

1 lb. strawberries and raspberries

1/2 cup sugar

 

Preheat oven to 250F. Line 2 sheet pans with silicone baking mats or parchment.

Place egg whites in a large stainless steel bowl, along with vinegar and salt. Beat with an electric mixer on slow/medium until foamy.

In a medium bowl whisk together sugar and cornstarch. Increase speed to medium/high and add sugar in a gradual stream until completely incorporated. Add vanilla and beat until whites are glossy and firm, but not dry.

Pipe or spoon meringue onto baking sheets, creating a well in the center of each and sprinkle edges with sanding sugar. Bake for 50-60 minutes. The meringues are done when they are still pale, but dry the the touch. The interiors should be chewy, like a marshmallow.

Place berries (whole raspberries and quartered strawberries) in a bowl and toss with sugar. Allow to rest for at least 3o minutes so the sugar can leach out some of the berries juices.

Place cream in the bowl of a food processor and process until desired thickness is reached.

Top meringues with macerated berries and whipped cream.

 

 

 

Pretty Picture

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Hey all! It’s been over a week since I last posted…I’m here, I promise. I’ve been doing a little side work with a photography friend, as well as baking and snapping pictures for another lovely blog of the wedding variety, Hey Gorgeous. I’ve been emailing back and forth with Rhiannon (my new favorite friend and cheerleader) to come up with a little DIY desserts feature. This is just a little sneak peak of what’s to come!

 

saved.

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so, nothing today. sorry pals.

i do have this little craft project i was working on pre-holidays. i’m a pretty capable rubber-stamper and i have a gang load of craft supplies,  so i decided i would make our save-the-dates.

ha! little did i know that it would take me many, many days to complete…but, i did and they are pretty darn cute if i say so myself.

i happened to find pre-cut craft paper cards with envelopes, though i did have to further cut down the cards to work with the punch set i was using.

i also used:
martha stewart punch set (like this, but different)
a variety of rubber stamps from my collection
a clear ink pad for embossing (i like versamark brand)
white embossing powder