Wednesday 25 December 2013

Christmas Fun

Merry Christmas to you all. May you enjoy a wonderful and peaceful Christmas with family and friends!
 
 
Scandinavian Christmas in Australia
 
This awesome coffee machine was a Christmas gift from our 8 year old to his dad. He made it all by himself. It brews fantastic espresso!


Remember the advent calendar from last post? Here are some additions:
 
Scandinavian Christmas in Australia
 
The sleigh ready for take off with all the friends from the Christmas workshop (Shane Bronx Advent Calendar from 2011, this one made by us in 2013)
 
 
The playpen with the cute little cat in nappy.
 
 
Mr Candy Chest of Draws and Mr Stove.
 
 
 
And true to Danish tradition we had the creamy rice and almond dessert Christmas Eve, Ris a al mande; with one large almond for one winner to find. And the very happy winner was our youngest son, who definitely did not want to eat the pig, but keep him forever! A marzipan pig made from this recipe from Mette Blomsterberg.
 
Happy holidays!
xo Sarah
 

Monday 23 December 2013

Creative Christmas



Advent Calendar
Our own invention - anxious looking snowman!


We have been busy creating a homemade Christmas. The boys Grandmother send us a "Red Barnet" (Save the Children) Christmas Advent Calendar from 2011. Each year for Christmas Danish TV shows one episode every day of December, chapter 1 to 24 of the advent calendar of the year. The profit from the sales of the calendar goes to an organisation that helps children in need around the world. Even when I grew up this was the case, so it has been happening every year for quite some time now. The shows have been very varied, lots of puppet shows, historical themes, Christmas pixies in Greenland etc. to more or less experimental TV. Nowadays there are two TV channels that shows advent calendars for kids and there is even an advent calendar for adults too!
This used to be the highlight for us kids all through December, one episode per day... and if you missed it bad luck!! Now we have DVD's, how convenient is that?! This year our kids have been watching two different ones, plus we have been doing the Christmas workshop from 2011 with Shane Bronx. We had the box that comes with this calendar send to us as mentioned above and every day we have been opening a brown envelope with instructions and materials to make a special little Christmas creature or item for the workshop of the story (even the box the calendar was sent in was used for the workshop). We watched the episodes on the internet and away into the garage the kids went.



Our garage is turned into a Christmas workshop. All the envelopes for the advent calendar are hung on the line with old wooden pegs.
 
 They have been following the instructions, cutting, gluing, arguing and been both happy and unhappy with the process. But most of all it has been great fun. In the past we have often made up stuff from recycling, so it is not all new to them. They have needed some assistance, and it has been a bit time-consuming, but in all it has been a great success. They now love playing with these new toys that they made and they have continued to invent some of their own and added them to the story. We are not finished yet, are behind schedule, so tomorrow is going to be a busy day as it is last chance to get all done before Christmas. Not sure if we will have time for Christmas dinner!
 

 
Creative Christmas Advent Calendar
To the left is the beginning of Mixit's workshop and the picture to the right is where we are at today - it is getting crowed!
 
Thank you "mormor" for sending the box and thank you Shane Bronx for giving us great stories! You are a favourite at our house!
xo Sarah


Thursday 19 December 2013

Christmas Red Flowers

Native Tree
 
I went to the nursery today and bought shrubs and trees for our garden. We need some shade from the Australian sun and very quickly please!
Have a look at these flowers that I picked from a flowering gumtree. Stunning don’t you think?! It is not yet planted in my garden, if fact it is a small tree in someone else’s garden and they want to get rid of it (!). I am pleased to act as a tree lover and save it… and plant it here – a win win situation. Except I have to get someone to actually help dig it out and move it, and that someone is not very keen. I think I will put it on my wish list for Christmas.
xo Sarah
 
Native Flowers


Sunday 15 December 2013

Gift Wrapping


DIY Paper Flower
 
 
Only 9 days to go and I am so not ready for Christmas! Today I was finally going to bake those traditional Danish vanilla rings (vaniljekranse). The dough has been waiting in the fridge for days and by now there is a high probability that they will taste more of fridge than vanilla bean! I think I will have to make new dough. My boys were not well today, so all the Christmassy preparations that I imagined we would do this Sunday as a family... in my romantic and perfect imaginary world, did not happen. Both boys are better this evening, so who really cares. We will make some time during the week for Christmas baking.
 
 
Anyway I do have some pictures of gift wrapping that I have done. Maybe this could inspire you when you are to wrap all those lovely Christmas presents? The petals are made from circles punched out of colourful magazines with at punch machine (bought from a scrapbooking shop). Very easy to do, you only require a glue gun and a button for the centre.
Punch out 10 circles, fold 9 into your petal shape and glue them all onto your 10th circle, finish off with a button. I also glue a little loop from paper on the back, so I can put my gift ribbon through.
 
xo Sarah
 

DIY Paper Flower

Monday 9 December 2013

Lucky Find - Cross Stitch

Geometrical Cross Stitch



Take a look at this treasure that I found in an OP Shop. Isn’t it amazing? The colour scheme is so playful and daring, the stitch perfect.  I have put it on my wall until I make a decision on what to do with it, embellish a bag, part of a cushion… or simply just decorate my wall as is? The piece is only 30x20 cm.
In the past I have embroidered on top of embroidery that I have found in second hand shops, but not this one, it is too special. Any ideas?
xo Sarah

Geometrical Cross Stitch
 

Thursday 5 December 2013

White and Wholemeal Spelt - Daily Bread #4

Sour Dough Baking
The criss-cross pattern on this sour dough spelt bread looks so authentic "French bakery" - it happened all by itself, not my doing at all.

 
Baking bread is an amazing process, so intense for all of our senses: See the magic happen when you mix a few basic ingredients, smell the goodness when it bakes in your oven, taste the goodness when it is done, feel the texture and heaviness of healthy bread, hear your family's happy comments when they bite into it! Ok, that is a bit sought I know, but I really enjoy baking, it is kind of therapeutic for me. And I have found a way to manage both home baked and a job: by mixing the dough the night before and baking early morning, I can still get kids ready for school, myself off to work etc. So I do not mind being a "Spelt-Mum"; a term used in Denmark for well-to-do mums in a particular part of Copenhagen, that have gone on board the organic and home made in a crusade like way (or so the critics say). Except for the well-to-do, I think that "Spelt-Mum"actually depicts me to some degree. I value homemade and organics highly and will go out of my way to get my hands on these things especially when I see people being passionate about what they produce.
What do you like about baking?
 
 
Sour Dough Baking
 
I had it in a proving basket overnight. I turned it out on the table to prove a bit longer and it started to crack up making the interesting pattern.
 
 
 
Sour Dough Baking

Tasted good too!

xo Sarah

Tuesday 3 December 2013

Christmas Pixies and Calendar Candle

Scandinavian Christmas in Australia
 Little Christmas pixie sweeping and his wife in a pillar box hat. My youngest boy made these two cuties last year when he was 6 years old.

 
When Decembers hits we clear out a shelf and set up our Christmas pixie village. It is not really linked to the Christmas Story as such, but it is fun and very creative. My boys and I have made most of the things out of recycled materials such as milk cartons, bottles, buttons etc. and of course artificial snow. When we unpacked it all from last year, some of the pieces had fallen apart or were squashed. That is not a bad thing; it only means we need to create some new Christmas items for our village. Here is what we have and let’s see what the boys come up with in the coming weeks?


Scandinavian Christmas in Australia
We put artificial candles into the houses so they light up at night.

 
Scandinavian Christmas in Australia
Skiing snow man is the latest addition.
 
 
 
Scandinavian Christmas in Australia
 

Another Danish tradition that we love is the Calendar Candle (kalenderlys). It is a countdown to Christmas Eve and we light it every night, as we watch an episode of the Danish Christmas Calendar for Children, all sent to us from the children’s Grandmother – Thank you Herdis!
xo Sarah

 
 

Monday 2 December 2013

First of December and Snow in Australia

Australian Christmas
Frangipani Snow - it has a beautiful scent.


It is December and my family and I have begun all the traditional Danish Christmas preparations - now under warmer conditions. On the first of December as we were putting up Christmas decorations I looked out the window and could almost convince myself that I saw snow – blue skies and 25 degrees… yeah right! I took this photo and if you concentrate really hard and squint your eyes a bit it almost looks like patches of snow; a white cover of Frangipani flowers on the deck around the pool. December makes me really homesick; longing for my family in Denmark and the cold!
 
ox Sarah
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