Cranberry Muffins

So, I was browsing the blogs over at GetCrafty the other day and stumbled across a recipe for Cranberry Muffins and my first thought was I need to make these!

One problem though, I live in Australia which equals no fresh Cranberries that I have seen, with some internet searching, I find out that Creative Gourmet sells Frozen Cranberries, SCORE! After work yesterday, I popped into Coles (the only chain that sells them) and picked up a box and I made the gorgeous things this morning.

Cranberry Muffins
2 cups plain flour
1/2 cup white sugar
4 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
2 eggs
1/4 cup cooking oil
1/2 cup milk
1 cup cranberries–chop in food processor

Measure flour, sugar, baking powder and salt into large bowl. Stir thoroughly. Make a well in center. In a separate bowl, beat eggs until frothy. Mix in oil, milk and cranberries. Pour into well. Stir to moisten. Batter will be lumpy (may want to add a little more milk). Fill muffin tins 3/4 full. Bake in 400 degree F. (200C) oven for 20-25 minutes. Makes 24 muffins (I don’t get that many!). Brush hot cooked muffin tops with melted butter. Sprinkle with granulated sugar.
Source – Knits4Fun’s blog

I got 12 full size muffins and 8 tiny muffins. I made a few changes to the recipe and will make some more when I make them again. I used 1/4 Buttermilk and 1/4 cup milk instead of 1/2 cup milk, I also needed to add some more milk (1/4 cup ish) when I mixed them up. Half way through baking, I pushed a cranberry into the top of each muffin and once cooked, I simply glazed with milk instead of butter and sugar.

muffins

When I make them again, I plan to use wholemeal flour and add some rolled oats for extra barefoot appeal, I also plan to reduce the milk and add some cranberry juice for a bit of colour. Maybe I will go have another one now….

new focuses

so many things have happened recently but I have been so *focused* on my uni work that I haven’t had a chance to share much.

Try this Technique – A while back I was asked along with some other girls to create some challeneges for Scrapbook Creations and my first one appeared in the mag this month ๐Ÿ™‚ So any Aussie or NZ girls, you know you want to enter! There is $200 worth of Xyron to the winner! mmmm if only I could enter ๐Ÿ™‚

No more essays …. till next year, handed in my last one this morning, now I just have four exams to ahhh breeze over.

Last Thursday, I had the oppurtunity to meet Ms Ali, and gorgeous Jack and her mum ๐Ÿ™‚ I first made contact with Ali, many, many moons ago when I was needing people for an article I did for Scrapbook Creations and then somewhere along the way we started commenting in each other’s blogs etc and then last week we hooked up ๐Ÿ™‚ Such a crazy girl, she very much brought out the dork in me ๐Ÿ˜€ and well Jack is just a monkey.

And the wonderful Tracy is back scrapbooking and utterly ripping up the gallery with her new creations.

And perhaps the biggest news, is that I am now almost grown up, only one more step on the path ๐Ÿ™‚ I graduated to a real fake tooth last friday. I’ve gone from having a tooth on a retainer to a real fake tooth plate, complete with a little bit of fake gum above the tooth ๐Ÿ™‚ The new plate is so much easier to speak with as well as been smaller and lighter in my mouth ๐Ÿ™‚ and well not having a metal band always looks nicer ๐Ÿ™‚ Now I just have to wait a couple of years till I can get an implant ๐Ÿ™‚

new teeth

Yeah for dental technology!

new things

We are now half-way through our mid-semester break and so many things have happened in the last couple of days.

Visited two new scrapbooking shops near me, one of them even had FontWerks!! and the other wants me to teach!! I have no idea what to do there. What to teach etc. What do you want?

Now, I haven’t been scrap shopping much since coming home from Iceland. Maybe once or twice when there was a sale but not really shopping.
Here are some of the cute papers I picked up at shop that asked me to teach.

new papers
From left to right, the papers are: MM, Junkitz, Deja Views, Junkitz, Art Warehouse, Lil Davis, MM, Junkitz, MM, 7G and Sassafrass Lass.

Picked up at the other store some paper from Two Busy Mums and Mara-Mi ๐Ÿ™‚

Went to see Kaliope yesterday for a haircut/trim/repairing the dodgey job that was done in London. My layers are so much softer now and there is less weight in my hair now. Then she ironed it, wow! I mean I have a straightner/crimper thing that I got when I was young, it fixes the ends in a pinch but would not work/take too long to do the whole head. Wow, my hair is all straight and light, it feels really weird sort of like half of my hair is missing. Will take a photo later, it is so different.

Why is that hair-dressers always chide you when you put your hair behind your ears? It always cracks me up, any hair-dresser I have gone to, always chides me when I tuck my hair behind my ears as soon as the cut is done. Lol, can’t stand hair falling in my face.

Back to scrapping, have done 2 layouts and half way through another one, just playing and haveing fun. Had the rest of my Iceland photos printed off yesterday for the book I am working on, sort of more a portfolio than a scrap book. One matted photo per page with the shooting details and notes about the shot. Simple yet very classy ๐Ÿ™‚

weekend away

Well here is my review of the weekend, I could add so much more in many areas but have tried to keep it short and sweet but it is long, long, long, I wish I could write my essays in the time it took me to do this ๐Ÿ™‚

If you don’t want to read what I wrote you can go straight here to the photos, but it may not all make sense just looking at the photos.

Friday the 23rd.
Mid-Friday Arvo, Mum and I headed off with a car packed full of supplies, my bag of library books from my last essay plus my essay to hand in at Uni. Joined the Friday afternoon traffic heading west as people left their jobs in Brisbane to make the drive to Ipswich. We by no means took the most direct route to Urbenville, with all the stopping we took to either take photos (Helen) or explore things (Mum) we arrived in Urbenville round 7pm, 3.5 hours after we left uni. We had planned to have a pub meal at the Urbenville Pub but they didn’t serve meals and we were directed to the Bowls Club which we did. Side note, we were so very much south of the border with all the Tooheys ads around the place. Mum and I both got Lasagne with Chips and Salad or Veg for the grand price of $7.50, yep nothing like a counter meal ๐Ÿ™‚

Headed to the campsite, hooked up with the other NPAQ Members and I had fun taking photos of the clover that carpeted the campsite, in the dark, using my headlight to light them up.

Saturday the 24th.
Dropped Mum off near Edinburgh Castle and I started a day of exploring, I had decided not to go on the walk so I would be in fine condition for the day we had planned for Sunday, a wise decision as it was a rough trip and two of the party stopped part way into the walk. I meandered down the road from Edinburgh Castle back to Urbenville, stopping along the way when I saw something interesting. Drove over to Tooloom Falls, which had very little water flowing over them. After seeing various fruit trees in blossom alongside the road on Friday night, I was on a quest to find some in day light. On the way out from the falls, I passed an old quite collapsed house with a grove of trees near it, so I loaded up with my gear and went off to explore these trees. Oh the smell and the bees buzzing round ๐Ÿ™‚ Continued on the road to Legume, a village that has seen better days for sure where I filled up with petrol, had lunch and a little look round before turning back on the road to go back to some fruit blossoms I had seen on Friday night.

Then back to the campsite with the goodies I had collected through the day which I knew would make fine specimens for my home-made macro lens (two lenses taped with gaffer tape together so that the fronts are together, for ultra magnification but very very limited depth of field). I set up my tripod and camera outfit over a table in the shade of a tree and got to work, in the space of two hours I only took about 20 images as each one required checking and re-checking the tripod height as it was controlling the focus. Had a blast ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚

Was visited by two Jehovah’s Witnesses, who believe it is their duty to come round to the campsite spreading the word that the end is coming.

Knowing what they wanted to hear, I fed them some lies to send them on their way. I said I was an Anglican knowing full well that they would be intent on talking to me if I told them the truth and said I am an atheist. They wanted to know if I was raised as an Anglican, I said nope I came to the church myself. Then they sprouted on about how the stuff I was photographing was the work of god. mmm right on guys and they left after I refused to accept their literature and they read me some scripture. What an experience ๐Ÿ™‚

Mum and the rest of the lot came back, we packed up and made the trip to Barney Lodge where we would spend Saturday night in preparation for our walk on Sunday. On the road there Mum spotted a native hibiscus (Hibiscus heterophyllus), until then I did not know we had native hibiscuses, learning something new the entire trip.

Now it has to be said that most bushwalkers have a favoured area to walk, without a doubt for Mum that area is Mt Barney, she has been on various parts of that mountain and surrounds more times than can be counted on the fingers. When we reached the lodge in the fast approaching dark, Mum was greeted by name by the owner from about 10m away. Oh Mother!

After dinner and setting up the tent, we headed back along the road to a spot where I could take could photos of star trails. This following section is called Helen’s guide on how not to take star trail photos.

  • If you can’t see through the view finder because of how dark it is um make sure the lens cap is off! Good one Helen only after a series of test exposures where I knew that I should be getting stars recorded did I check to see if the lens cap was off!
  • Make sure you have a new battery in the camera, in the afternoon I had noticed that my battery was showing as low, I didn’t change it though, so of course halfway through my last and longest exposure for which I had finally got the composition right to have a silhouette of Mt Barney, my battery died ๐Ÿ™ good job Helen
  • Went back to camp and I set my tripod up there with a fresh battery in and went to bed, setting my alarm for an hour later. This time the photo was all ok

    Sunday the 26th.
    A day with a single purpose to get to the junction of Barney and Ballow Ck to see a rather large King Orchid in flower.

    Headed off to the Upper Portals entrance to Mt Barney Nat park, which required serious AWD action from the Subaru. Mum let me drive both in and out. Serious driving ๐Ÿ™‚ We passed a sedan about 1/4 of the way up the 4wd track which could not make it any further, Mum said to me if we pass those people we will offer them a lift, perhaps 2/3 of the way up we pass two guys walking on the road, we stop to offer them a lift, they decline. They really must have had a mob of roos loose in the top paddock. It was hot, they had a steep climb ahead of them, before they even started their walk for the day, and they said they needed the exercise! Right, probably didn’t want to seem weak accepting a lift from two women.

    Made it up to car park and started the walk to the junction, down a very, very steep and washed out 4wd track that our Subaru would not stand a chance on. Made it up to where the track met Barney Ck in about 55mins, then started the creek bashing up to the junction which took us about 2.5hrs of hopping rock to rock, ploughing though Mist Weed (Ageratina riparia) an utter pest, testing each footing to make sure that there was rock below the weed and not water which could have led to a very wet person. I spotted some Ironbark Orchids (Dendrobium aemulum) and various other plants.

    Made it to the King Orchid (Dendrobium speciosum) with no real mishaps, took the shoes off, put the socks in the sun to dry out and had a nice leisurely lunch, too some photos and explored a bit. This orchid is no ordinary king orchid, this one should be called the Emperor! It has at least seventy(70)! flower stalks each with gosh knows how many flowers on each, it was huge! It was not fully in bloom yet though ๐Ÿ™ but I was so not coming back next week to check on the progress!

    On the way back we cut across two of the bends in the creek by going up and over the ridges, took 1hr off the time this way and found more interesting plants as well in addition to passing the dead koala that Mum had passed 10 days earlier when she was in this area. When we got back to where the 4wd track meets the creek, we had not waited long when the two guys from this morning appeared from the main part of their walk, they then planned to go round the ridges back to the car park. Man, they really did have a mob of roos in the top paddock, unless they were going to power on full boar, they would have been hard-pressed getting back to their car before dark. On the walk out I found an unknown fruit tree in blossom ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚ just made the day better for me. Stopped in Boonah for arvo tea and made the trip back home.

    Didn’t take many photos of the walk as most of the time I was too exhausted that once I stood still there was no way I could hold the camera still enough. I am fit enough for the exercise I do but not for the stuff Mum does and my calves are so feeling it today.

    All up 620km of driving of which I would say at least 3/4 of that was done by me. Here is a link to a selection of photos from the weekend.

    Injury Count.
    Helen – 3 possibly 4 ticks, one leech, one wet foot.
    Mum – 2 ticks
    Helen & Mum – plenty of scratches.

    Glacier Boy

    Well I went to see one of my lecturers today, after not been happy with the mark I had received for an essay (65/100). When I first walked in he said he had already decided to push it up to 68/100 as he felt that he probably marked me harder than others, after chatting with him some more about my essay he bumped it up to 70/100. Yehaw!

    Busy in the midst of starting another essay on possible effects of terrorism on the economies of states in East Asia and finishing off a quilt for my nephew Jรƒยถkull or if you want to be pedantic, my half-sister’s step son. My family tree is a tree with branches all over the place ๐Ÿ™‚

    When I first went to Iceland at the end of 2002, the quilts that Mum had made for her step-grandchildren were proudly covering every bed, when I got home I said to Mum, you should make quilts for the step-step grandkids as well. She said I will make two; you can make the other two. So Mum has made one for Toti’s eldest step-child, Anna Rรƒยบn and has the fabric for the other one for Stefan. I was delegated to make quilts for Herdis’s step-kids, the first one was sent off for her eldest step-son, Krissi after last yearรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs show and now I am in the final stages of the quilt for her other step-son, Jรƒยถkull or as we call him “Little Glacier Boy” as Jรƒยถkull means glacier in Icelandic for this yearรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs show.

    When it came to naming the quilt for the competition, I expanded on Jรƒยถkullรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs name and titled the quilt “Magical Powers for Glacier Boy” and in the comment section said a little bit about Jรƒยถkull and how he is Iceland’s answer to Superman ๐Ÿ™‚ Depending on which banner you get when you load my blog, you may have seen Jรƒยถkull showing off his magical powers lifting rocks to make a dam. Dam Builders

    Well enough with all the chatter, here is the quilt, tonight I sewed the blue borders on to the quilt top and tomorrow, Mum and I are going shopping for the backing fabric

    Glacier Boy

    yehaw

    After way too many weeks of me giving Mum most of my paycheck and then fairly often having to get money back off her I now own my 350D

    Yehaw! Now since she is all mine, I have to come up with a name. Olga the second is what comes to mind at the moment in memory of my basoon from high school. Any other ideas???

    This of course means that I can start pouring money into glass and other sorts. I don’t think I yet want a telephoto zoom as most of my images are at wide angle end of my lenses. I am currently tossing up between a Pelang 8mm Fisheye or a Zenitar 16mm Fisheye. Both are Eastern European made lenses that get rave reviews, when paired with the 1.6x crop loose a bit of the fishiness but still work very well. Oh which one to get?

    I am also quite piqued by the Canon 100m 2.8 Macro, it would serve two purposes for me; providing a bit extra reach than the 24-85mm gives me at the moment as well as the macro aspect.

    Choices, choices, choices.