Looks as if we’ll have a
white Christmas here in the Twin Cities.
There’s about six inches of snow on the ground. It’s light, fluffy stuff, easy to shovel and
plow. But it’s very cold outside (in the single digits), so I’m
not going out in it except to walk from my car to someone’s front door and back
again. It clings to tree branches and
drapes picturesquely on evergreen branches, very pretty to look at - out our
windows.
The Remicade infusion I had
last week is working well, my joints are hardly complaining at all.
Our friend Ann had a birthday
the second of December so we took her out for supper at a new restaurant in the
shadow of the new Vikings stadium. The
restaurant is called Erik the Red after a famous Viking, and the food reflects
that heritage. One offering as an
appetizer is marrow bone. I’ve heard
about marrow and read about marrow in old books, touted as wonderfully
nutritious, but I’d never had a chance to taste it or even see it in
person. So I offered to share an order
of it with Ann. It’s the femur of a cow
(or steer) split lengthwise and roasted, and the marrow comes still resting in
the two halves of the bone. The texture
is sort of like the fat on a good steak, only smoother and maybe a little
softer. It’s light in color. And it’s very delicious, very rich. I can imagine it flavoring a soup or
stew, but just by itself it’s very good.
I’m working on a big
needlepoint Christmas stocking – or rather I was, but I’ve set it aside for a
much smaller project. A few years back I
was in Stitchville USA,
a really excellent needlework store, and back in a corner they have a
deep-discount selection of patterns, kits and stuff. I found this wooden frame seventeen inches long by seven
inches high. A pattern of holly is painted on one corner and
attached to the other side is an old-fashioned jumping jack shaped like a very
leggy Santa Claus. The string and knob
were attached to it, but pulling the knob didn’t make Santa’s arms and legs
leap – it was broken somehow. The price
was ridiculously low so I bought it, thinking to find a Christmas pattern that
would fit inside its dimensions. But I
didn’t find anything I liked and the frame ended up in the mess of canvas bags,
half-begun projects, and needlepoint stretchers behind an overstuffed chair in
my office. But I got it out a month ago
and brought it to Nancy
at The Club Room, the needlework shop we gather in once a week to talk and
stitch. She painted the word MERRY on a
piece of canvas that just fit inside the frame.
It nearly ended up back behind the chair, because I was focused on the stocking, which is coming along beautifully, but Ellen took custody of it
and fixed the jumping jack (she can fix anything), and that inspired me to begin stitching over the MERRY with Kreinik’s red metallic. You
can see that I’ve got the Y and most of one R finished, and a corner of the
base covered with ivory wool. I may take
out the ivory wool because I kind of like the texture of the naked canvas. The word MERRY suits the Santa perfectly.
Meanwhile, I’ve got a new
idea for Tying the Knot and will have to go back and re-write a hunk of it,
making a different innocent person the suspect my sleuth will work to
clear. So it’s working, but slowly,
s-l-o-w-l-y.
4 comments:
I like your Merry! And good luck with the snow.
It's interesting how every single year here in Minnesota we get a season of snow and ice and bitter cold, and every single year everyone with a car has to learn all over again how to drive in it. But it doesn't take long, thank goodness, to remember to start off slowly, keep a goodly distance between your front end and the back end of the car/truck/semi ahead of you, and begin braking early and gently when an intersection comes in sight.
Nice post.
It's the same thing about L.A. drivers and rain.
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