I try to keep up on everyone's birthdays at work, so I obviously couldn't forget the bosses birthday! He wanted Funfetti, loves sprinkles! So instead of getting a box mix, I made my own Funfetti cake!
Yellow Cake Ingredients:
3/4 Cup Butter
3 Eggs
2 1/2 Cups Flour
2 1/2 tsp Baking Powder
1/2 tsp Salt
1 3/4 Cup Sugar
1 1/2 tsp Vanilla
1 3/4 Cup Milk
1.) Let Butter and Eggs stand at room temperature for 30 minutes. Grease and flour 1-9x13 baking pan
2.) Put Flour, Baking Powder and Salt into bowl/measuring cup, stir together and set aside
3.) Preheat oven to 375*
4.) Beat Butter on medium speed
5.) Gradually add Sugar until well blended
6.) Add eggs one at a time, blend well between each, then add in Vanilla
7.) Alternate adding in Flour mixture and Milk until all are gone
8.) Mix just until well blended, add sprinkles and stir by hand
9.) Pour into baking pan and spread evenly
10.) Bake approximately 30 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean
11.) Let cool completely before frosting/decorating
Use this Frosting recipe and decorate however you'd like!
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Mmmmmm, Stir-Fry
Over the years, I have changed up my stir-fry a little bit, but I think I have finally got it to where we like it.
Ingredients:
2-3 Boneless Chicken Breasts- diced and boiled
2-2 1/2 cups dry Minute rice-cooked per instructions
1 can of baby corn nuggets
1 can of sliced water chestnuts
Fresh snow peas (ends cut off, washed and cut into bite size pieces)
Matchstick carrots
Mustard Seed
Sweet Peppers- cut into bite size pieces (red, yellow, orange)
Onion-diced into reasonable pieces
1 jar of Sesame Garlic sauce (or your favorite sauce)
Directions:
1.) Get out a large fry-pan (Wok if you have one) and put in corn nuggets and water chestnuts, juice from can too. Also sprinkle in mustard seeds to your liking. Cook on medium heat to get them softened up
2.) Prepare other ingredients into bite-size pieces; Peppers, snow peas, onion. Once all these are cut into pieces, add them plus carrots into pan to cook. You should have enough liquid in the pan from the canned veggies, but if it gets dry add a little water.
3.) Dice up raw chicken, put saucepan on stove and bring to a boil. Once rolling boil, add chicken pieces. Cook until done, shouldn't take long at all. Drain chicken in strainer
4.) While chicken is cooking, make your rice per instructions. With Minute Rice, boil same amount of water as rice. Once boiling, remove from burner, add rice, stir together. The put lid on pan and let sit for 5 minutes.
5.) Once all items in Wok are cooked/tender, and liquid is mostly gone, add in chicken and rice. Mix well
6.) Add in your favorite sauce, mix together and serve!
YUMMY YUMMY!
Ingredients:
2-3 Boneless Chicken Breasts- diced and boiled
2-2 1/2 cups dry Minute rice-cooked per instructions
1 can of baby corn nuggets
1 can of sliced water chestnuts
Fresh snow peas (ends cut off, washed and cut into bite size pieces)
Matchstick carrots
Mustard Seed
Sweet Peppers- cut into bite size pieces (red, yellow, orange)
Onion-diced into reasonable pieces
1 jar of Sesame Garlic sauce (or your favorite sauce)
Directions:
1.) Get out a large fry-pan (Wok if you have one) and put in corn nuggets and water chestnuts, juice from can too. Also sprinkle in mustard seeds to your liking. Cook on medium heat to get them softened up
2.) Prepare other ingredients into bite-size pieces; Peppers, snow peas, onion. Once all these are cut into pieces, add them plus carrots into pan to cook. You should have enough liquid in the pan from the canned veggies, but if it gets dry add a little water.
3.) Dice up raw chicken, put saucepan on stove and bring to a boil. Once rolling boil, add chicken pieces. Cook until done, shouldn't take long at all. Drain chicken in strainer
4.) While chicken is cooking, make your rice per instructions. With Minute Rice, boil same amount of water as rice. Once boiling, remove from burner, add rice, stir together. The put lid on pan and let sit for 5 minutes.
5.) Once all items in Wok are cooked/tender, and liquid is mostly gone, add in chicken and rice. Mix well
6.) Add in your favorite sauce, mix together and serve!
YUMMY YUMMY!
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Ooopps!!!
As I was uploading pictures from the dessert I made tonight, I realized that I have 2 other groups of pictures that I forgot to do write-ups on! So keep an eye out for the following:
Stir-Fry
Funfetti Birthday Cake
Toffee Bars
Tata for now! Check back soon!
Stir-Fry
Funfetti Birthday Cake
Toffee Bars
Tata for now! Check back soon!
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Basement Before and After Pictures
Clean water |
Dirty water |
The tiny area that got mopped |
The floor was a giant PITA. I HAD to mop up all the red otherwise it would bleed through when I tried to paint it with concrete floor paint. Also, since I previously painted the utility area floor, I used the rest of the bucket that I had and bought a new one as well. It was pre-mixed, same exact thing, but it was 2 different colors so to speak. So even though I painted a portion of the bar area floor, I had to go back over it with the new paint because of the color.
So without further adieu, here are the before and afters:
Stairs got painted, and new stair treads |
This was behind the bar, currently nothing got put in its place, I would like to build something similar |
An angle that I didn't get a before shot of, but that cabinet has our gas meter in it |
Taking our basement from the 70's into the 2000's
My Grandmother wonders what we liked about our house when we bought it because we changed almost every room in the last 3 years. The worst offenders in terms of rooms in our house were the bathroom and the basement. We took care of the bathroom in 5 weeks, the basement....well that took about 2 years! Hahaha!
I am not too sure how to write this post because it was a lot of work, and I will probably be all over the place with the renovation. The basement was straight out of the 1970's. Red-orange carpet, wood paneling, silver-foil wallpaper and beads, omg the horror! Ok, so it wasn't that bad, wait, what am I saying, it was that bad! See for yourself!
The saving grace for this basement was the bar. I had/have visions of parties and lots of good times for this basement. I also have dreams of my husband playing all of his video games down there and making it his man-cave.
First of all, we ripped up that awful carpet going down the stairs and into the 'living' area. It was even on the door to the utility area! And the black paint, oh god, black paint! Do you know how hard it is to get rid of black paint? Hard! 2 coats of primer and 1-2 coats in certain areas of white paint. On small trim. I used A LOT of painters tape! After we ripped up the carpets, we started taking down the even more awful drop ceiling, followed by the floor tiles around the bar area.
After inspecting the wallpaper in the stairwell, it appeared that it would come off relatively easily as far as wallpaper goes. Boy did it ever! I was peeling off huge chunks! I used a putty knife to help peel so I didn't leave ripped/frayed edges. Once all the paper was off, I used some leftover paint I had from the bathroom reno to paint the walls the wallpaper had been on. It truly did brighten it right up making it look so much better. I also had been trying to decided what color to paint the basement. I was not going to mess with putting up drywall because taking down the paneling to do it would have been a huge project. I decided on a nice blue color and my vision was blue with white trim. So, I got Behr Paint and Primer in one and painted the paneling in the stairwell. I also had some chair rail left over from the living room project so I put that up between the wall and paneling transition. I was really proud of myself and couldn't wait to do the rest of the basement.
I then decided since the wallpaper came off so easily from the stairwell walls, I would try to take it off the wall behind the bar. It came off pretty good, but what I found underneath was no bueno. The hot-water line is not hooked up to the sink at the bar so if you turn on that handle, water runs out onto the floor, under the tiles and over to the wall. Yep, the drywall was moldy about 6" up. At this point, we knew the drywall had to go. We also had decided we wanted to eventually put in a cedar closet on the other side of the wall. This wall was not studded properly, it was using 2x2's instead of 2x4's. So we ripped the.whole.thing.down. This way, we get a new wall, done correctly, and can also frame in a door for future closet and easier access to storage area.
Next up was the ceiling and lighting. The ceiling was nasty drop ceiling tiles with black grid. There was also a shop light that you had to plug in to use each time and a recessed light over the bar. We ripped down the whole ceiling and all lighting fixtures and started over. My husband wasn't too sure about putting up a drop ceiling by ourselves but I managed to convince him it was our only option considering we would still need access to everything up there.
I think this is it for this post, it shows all the demo and some stuff put back together. The next post will have the before and after pictures. This post does no justice to the transformation. Hold tight, before and afters coming!
I am not too sure how to write this post because it was a lot of work, and I will probably be all over the place with the renovation. The basement was straight out of the 1970's. Red-orange carpet, wood paneling, silver-foil wallpaper and beads, omg the horror! Ok, so it wasn't that bad, wait, what am I saying, it was that bad! See for yourself!
The saving grace for this basement was the bar. I had/have visions of parties and lots of good times for this basement. I also have dreams of my husband playing all of his video games down there and making it his man-cave.
First of all, we ripped up that awful carpet going down the stairs and into the 'living' area. It was even on the door to the utility area! And the black paint, oh god, black paint! Do you know how hard it is to get rid of black paint? Hard! 2 coats of primer and 1-2 coats in certain areas of white paint. On small trim. I used A LOT of painters tape! After we ripped up the carpets, we started taking down the even more awful drop ceiling, followed by the floor tiles around the bar area.
After inspecting the wallpaper in the stairwell, it appeared that it would come off relatively easily as far as wallpaper goes. Boy did it ever! I was peeling off huge chunks! I used a putty knife to help peel so I didn't leave ripped/frayed edges. Once all the paper was off, I used some leftover paint I had from the bathroom reno to paint the walls the wallpaper had been on. It truly did brighten it right up making it look so much better. I also had been trying to decided what color to paint the basement. I was not going to mess with putting up drywall because taking down the paneling to do it would have been a huge project. I decided on a nice blue color and my vision was blue with white trim. So, I got Behr Paint and Primer in one and painted the paneling in the stairwell. I also had some chair rail left over from the living room project so I put that up between the wall and paneling transition. I was really proud of myself and couldn't wait to do the rest of the basement.
I then decided since the wallpaper came off so easily from the stairwell walls, I would try to take it off the wall behind the bar. It came off pretty good, but what I found underneath was no bueno. The hot-water line is not hooked up to the sink at the bar so if you turn on that handle, water runs out onto the floor, under the tiles and over to the wall. Yep, the drywall was moldy about 6" up. At this point, we knew the drywall had to go. We also had decided we wanted to eventually put in a cedar closet on the other side of the wall. This wall was not studded properly, it was using 2x2's instead of 2x4's. So we ripped the.whole.thing.down. This way, we get a new wall, done correctly, and can also frame in a door for future closet and easier access to storage area.
Standing behind bar looking at new wall (and all of our stuff) |
Backside of the new wall, standing where utility area is |
Next up was the ceiling and lighting. The ceiling was nasty drop ceiling tiles with black grid. There was also a shop light that you had to plug in to use each time and a recessed light over the bar. We ripped down the whole ceiling and all lighting fixtures and started over. My husband wasn't too sure about putting up a drop ceiling by ourselves but I managed to convince him it was our only option considering we would still need access to everything up there.
We were so proud of ourselves getting the first 2 tiles in |
Even prouder when we got the first 2 lights in and wired/working |
2 of the 4 new lights on the bar side, and 2 rows of tiles |
Got most of the grid up and lights wired and working on switches |
I think this is it for this post, it shows all the demo and some stuff put back together. The next post will have the before and after pictures. This post does no justice to the transformation. Hold tight, before and afters coming!
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Quick Check-in
Hey there to all my readers, wanted to pop in and let you know I have not forgotten about you! Been a little busy with work and school, not a lot of time for making new things. Also, the weather hasn't cleaned up it's act yet to get started with outdoor projects.
I do promise that with spring around the corner, there will be some home-wrecker posts. I have list a mile long of things that need to get done outside.
I currently have a post in the works about our basement re-model, but it's turning out to be reallllllyyyyyyy long. I might have to cut it into 2 parts.
Stay Tuned!
I do promise that with spring around the corner, there will be some home-wrecker posts. I have list a mile long of things that need to get done outside.
I currently have a post in the works about our basement re-model, but it's turning out to be reallllllyyyyyyy long. I might have to cut it into 2 parts.
Stay Tuned!
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