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Posts Tagged ‘Savvy Entertaining’

I realize I can find the most obscure and weird things to get excited about, but a new on-line tool has me quite excited.

The Make Room by Urban Barn allows you to enter your furniture details, your room size and come up with the perfect configuration for your room.

the make room

It’s a very helpful and useful tool  (much easier than making your husband move the couch six times while he grumbles with irritation after the fourth time you say “no, that just doesn’t work”).

It’s also a lot of fun.

Check it out and see what sorts of designs you can come up with.

She Who Needs to Not Move Any Furniture Around

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cheesecake plated

The other day I got a wild idea to try and duplicate a dessert I’d eaten while we were in Las Vegas last month.

Part of the complex, involved, slightly frightening directions included a cheesecake layer.

Deciding to actually make a cheesecake from scratch, I combed through several recipes and finally came up with this one.

It is the best home-made cheesecake to ever come out of my oven. They are usually either dry, taste weird, or just not up to snuff.

This one was perfect. Captain Cavedweller even thought so and that is saying something.

Without further ado, here’s the directions.

cheesecake ingredients

Ingredients

Blend cream cheese until smooth and creamy.

Blend cream cheese until smooth and creamy.

Add sugar and salt, blending well.

Add sugar and salt, blending well.

Add eggs, one at a time.

Add eggs, one at a time.

Add sour cream, whipping cream and vanilla, mixing well.

Add sour cream, whipping cream and vanilla, mixing well.

Place the springform in a large roasting pan or deep skillet then pour batter into springform.

Place the springform in a large roasting pan or deep skillet then pour batter into springform.

Pour water around outside edge of springform. Make sure you've wrapped the springform pan in foil to keep any water from leaking into your cheesecake batter.

Pour water around outside edge of springform. Make sure you’ve wrapped the springform pan in foil to keep any water from leaking into your cheesecake batter.

You want the water to come about an inch up the side of the pan.

You want the water to come about an inch up the side of the pan.

Bake in a 325 degree preheated oven until no longer jiggly and set. Remove and cool completely.

Bake in a 325 degree preheated oven until no longer jiggly and set. Remove and cool completely.

Cheesecake

2 (8-ounce) packages of regular cream cheese, at room temperature

2/3 cup sugar

1/4 tsp. salt

2 large eggs

1/2 cup sour cream

1/3 cup whipping cream

1 tsp. vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Place a pan large enough to hold your springform pan in the oven to warm. Put a kettle of water on the stove to boil.

Spray a 9-inch springform pan with non-stick spray and line the bottom with a round of parchment paper. Spray it with the non-stick spray as well.

Wrap a double layer (or a layer of heavy-duty foil) around the outside of your pan, making sure it comes well up the sides of the pan. You want to make sure no water can sneak in a crack and get into the springform pan.

In a large bowl, beat cream cheese until it is smooth and creamy. Add sugar and salt and mix on medium speed for about two minutes, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed. Add the eggs, one at a time, mixing after each addition. Mix in sour cream, whipping cream and vanilla until mixture is smooth.

Remove the large pan from the oven where it has been warming. Place your springform pan into the pan then pour the cheesecake batter into the springform pan. Carefully pour boiling hot water into the large pan so that it comes about an inch or so up the sides of the springform pan. (You can use a large roasting pan. I found a skillet I never use in the back of my cupboard that was just big enough to hold the springform.) Place in the oven and bake for about 45-60 minutes.  (The cheesecake should have been done in 45 minutes, but yours truly got busy writing in her next novel and lost track of the time. An hour had passed when I realized it was long past time to remove the cheesecake from the oven. It was done to perfection. )

Remove from the oven when the cheesecake is set and no longer jiggly. Remove the springform pan for the larger pan and let cool on a rack for at least an hour. When it has cooled, serve immediately or freeze for later eating pleasure.

I served this one with fresh blackberries and whipping cream but you could top it with whatever strikes your fancy, fruit, chocolate, nuts, caramel. This is a nice basic cheesecake that you can add to as you like. You will notice this cheesecake does not have a crust  – and you can certainly make it with one if you choose.

Enjoy!

She Who Likes Cheesecake Way More Than She Should

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Those who know me, know I have a thing for shoes.

My history with shoes has been a love/hate affair since I was really little.

Due to some foot problem that I can’t even recall the reason for now, my mother always took me to buy the ugliest brown shoes at the one nice shoe store in town. And I mean ugly. They were clonky and brown and plain. I hated them. If I didn’t think dire consequences would befall me if I hacked them into pieces, I would have destroyed every single pair of them. One Christmas program at school in particular sticks out in my mind. I had a beautiful new blue dress with lace trim and there I was on stage with those horrid brown shoes.

Sometime around the sixth grade either my problem went away or I refused to wear the brown shoes anymore, but my footwear selections began to look up. For my eighth grade graduation I remember getting a pair of three-inch high white wedge sandals. I thought I had hit the big-time.

For the next decade I fell in love with shoes. I had heels and boots, flats and sandals in fun colors and styles.

Then somewhere in my mid-twenties, arthritis set in an old foot injury with a vengeance and I gave up all my beautiful shoes. I took to wearing ugly support shoes in shades of black and brown. It was like a return to my childhood footwear nightmare. This went on for many years. I hated my shoes and I think they hated me right back.

One day I was browsing in a store and found a pair of shoes that practically screamed out to me to buy them. They were cute and sassy and fun, unlike anything I owned at that time. Surprisingly, they were comfortable and I had no problem wearing them.

Cute shoes reentered my world and I’ve been on a bit of a campaign to restock my closet with as many pairs as possible.

The latest addition was this pair of Red Rialtos.

red shoesThey practically jumped off the shelf and chased me around the store. Super comfortable and so cute and sassy, I absolutely love them (My shoes stay on my feet for about 12-hours a day so when I say they are comfortable, I mean they were comfortable all day!). The best part is, I just saw them on sale for only $14.99.

She Who Loves Cute Shoes

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Although I’m more than ready for spring to arrive, there is something about Winter Tablescapes that is altogether lovely.

anneliese_Bleached-Tablescape_01

Like these frosty pinecones from Kirtsy.

Love the white snapdragons with the white twigs from Stone Garden.

Love the white snapdragons with the white twigs from Stone Garden.

 

This design from DigsDigs is beautiful. The white on white tones are awesome, especially with the silver accents.

This design from DigsDigs is beautiful. The white on white tones are awesome, especially with the silver accents.

This table from Rachel A. Clingen Wedding Design is lovely, although there aren't enough layers of thermal to get me to sit outside and dine.

This table from Rachel A. Clingen Wedding Design is lovely, although there aren’t enough layers of thermal to get me to sit outside and dine.

She Who Will Not Be Having A White Out

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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