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Sweets for the Sweet, Baking for Valentine’s Day

Bating Shortbread cookies izannahwalker.com

Today is baking day.  The air is filled with the scents of mace and nutmeg.  My kitchen is humming with activity as we prepare for our Valentine’s Day tea party!

Mace Shortbread Cookies izannahwalker.com

Mace Shortbread

3 cups flour

1-1/2 cups powdered sugar

1-1/2 cups butter

1/2 tsp. yeast

1/4 cup warm water

1 tsp. mace

1/2 tsp. nutmeg

*Proof yeast in warm water for 5 minutes.  Measure flour, powdered sugar, mace and nutmeg into a large mixing bowl.  Add slightly softened butter and mix until all of the butter is worked into the dry ingredients.  Pour proofed yeast/water into bowl and beat until thoroughly incorporated.  Cover bowl with a clean dry cloth and set in a warm place for 1 hour, then chill for 30 minutes.

embossing shortbread with izannah walker doll stamp izannahwalker.comRoll dough out on a well floured surface to a scant 1/4 inch thickness and cut out with heart shaped cookie cutters.  Emboss the cookies by stamping them with new, washed rubber stamps that have been dusted with flour.Izannah stamped cookie izannahwalker.com  If desired, lightly brush ground nutmeg into the stamped designs before baking.  Bake at 350 degrees for 8 – 10 minutes, until just starting to very lightly brown at the edges.  Cool completely before removing from cookie sheets.

Little Izzys add an extra helping of sweetness to these Valentine cookies.
Little Izzys add an extra helping of sweetness to these Valentine cookies.

* 18th century shortbread receipts call for the addition of barm (yeast).  I followed this tradition when I developed this recipe.  I love mace and decided to add it, along with nutmeg to the cookies (both spices are part of the seeds of the nutmeg tree).

Izannah Heart Shortbread cookies izannahwalker.com

Baking Valentine Cookies izanahwalker.com

You are cordially invited to join us tomorrow for tea.  We hope that you can come!

P.W. izannahwalker.com

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A Special Treat for a Snowy Day

Making snow ice cream.
Making snow ice cream.

Today is the perfect day to indulge in one of the forgotten pleasures of winter, snow ice cream!  During the night, while we slept, snow continued to fall from the sky, aided on it’s earthward journey by brisk winds that swirled it around tree trunks and blew it into every corner.  We awoke this morning to a world thickly frosted in a foot of snow.

12 inches

Clean unblemished snow is plentifully available every where I look…

snow!

Making snow ice cream is one of the traditions of my childhood.  Every now and then, on nostalgic snowy days, I relive a bit of my past and make it again.  I first posted the recipe two years ago, during another snowy New England winter, on my 18th Century Home Journal blog. 

Today my kitchen helper and I decided that it was high time to treat ourselves to another batch!  Here is the recipe for any of you who would like to join in.  If you aren’t living in the land of ice and snow, you can use an ice shaver that is used to make Hawaiian Ice to turn ice cubes into “snow”.

Snow Ice Cream

fresh clean snow

milk

sugar

vanilla or other flavoring*

Put in as much milk as you would like to achieve the consistency that you prefer.  The sugar and vanilla are added to suit your taste.  Stir well and eat immediately.

* We used a combination of vanilla extract and ground vanilla beans, which is why you see tiny brown flecks in the close-up photos.

snow ice cream 1snow ice cream 2

snow ice cream 3snow ice cream 4

snow ice cream5

Delicious to the very last bite!

snow ice cream 6

Time to move the creativity from the kitchen to the studio...
Time to move the creativity from the kitchen to the studio…
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Creative People

One of the very best things about being a doll maker is that I am constantly surrounded by creative people.  Doll people, both collectors and makers, are inventive, resourceful, dedicated, steadfast, and giving.  They add humor, friendship, inspiration, awe and an amazing number of grace notes to my life that I would hate to do without.

I’d like to say thank you to two of them, Vicki Leeke and Peggy Flavin.  Both of these wonderful women were members of the truly outstanding group of dollmakers who came to my Izannah Retreat in September.

Some Vicki's lovely flower and leaf leather art, made from kangaroo leather.
Some Vicki’s lovely flower and leaf leather art, made from kangaroo leather.
One of the special pins Vicki made for everyone attending the retreat.
One of the special pins Vicki made for everyone attending the retreat.
Vicki made this set of pins just for me, with photos of True Blue,one of my dolls.  One pin for me and one for True Blue!
Vicki made this set of pins just for me, with photos of True Blue, one of my dolls. One pin for me and the other  for True Blue!

Vicki was organized and kind enough to make some very special keepsakes for all of the class members and haul them all the way from Australia!  Vicki also makes lovely felt dolls, click here to take a peek at her blog.

Peggy's adorable flower fairy.
Peggy’s adorable flower fairy.

Peggy was sweet enough to send me a wonderful Christmas surprise.  She created a magical fairy to grace my Christmas tree, although truthfully I love her so much that I intend to keep her out all year round.IMG_1259

Thank you!!!

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Wishing You a Very Happy Christmas Eve!

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Wishing you all the best from our home to yours for Christmas 2012!

This large papier-mache boy was a present from my husband several Christmases ago.  He is wearing a "new" dress for Christmas that I just bought for him from Edyth O'Neill. It arrived today and I couldn't wait to try it on him.
This large papier-mache boy was a present from my husband several Christmases ago. He is wearing a “new” dress for Christmas that I just bought for him from Edyth O’Neill. It arrived today and I couldn’t wait to try it on him.

*Edyth O’Neill is the author of my all time favorite rug hooking book “Rugs for My Red Cape“.  She also has a lovely blog full of beautiful photos of her home and dolls plus another site where she  sells  antique dolls and other  selected antiques.

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Back to Work

The wedding is over, I’m still alive and I’m slowly getting back to work!  I’ve survived all the hustle, bustle and excitement of the wedding, out of town company, and a multi-day family birthday celebration 🙂  I’m still dealing with having a painting and restoration duo working on the exterior of our house…    I feel like I’ve been away from my doll making for years!!!  It’s good to be back 🙂

Thank you to everyone for your good wishes!!!

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Happy May Day!

Happy May Day!
Doll for Sale · Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll · Stray Comments · Where to Shop

The Joys of Lay-Away

When I was a child, my parents gave me a modest weekly allowance.  It was designed to teach me how the save and spend money. They came up with a formula for calculating allowance rates, twenty-five cents a week starting on my fifth birthday, with a ten cent raise every year.  Saturday was allowance day 🙂

Sometimes I would spend my allowance right away, and other times I would save it in my bank, which was shaped like an upright antique wood stove.  In addition to my allowance, my grandparents would occasionally give me money that I added to my bank, along with the dimes my parents gave out for 1’s on my report card (our school used a numbered grading system instead of ABC’s, so a 1 was equivalent to an A).

Because I have always loved dolls, a large portion of my childhood savings was spent on dolls.  At first, when I was very small, I would buy tiny plastic dolls at Ben Franklin’s for a quarter.  Then came my Liddle Kiddle’s faze, where I saved up $1.79 – $2.99 to buy every different Liddle Kiddle I could find.

When I was eleven I started babysitting.  I earned 50 cents an hour.  I thought I was rich! With my new found earnings I took the plunge and opened my first lay-away account at the toy department of a local store.  For months I had been looking at all of the Madame Alexander dolls in the store.  Now I could finally buy one!  The dolls were much more expensive than any that my parents were willing to buy me for Christmas or my birthday, but I had my heart set on having a really “good” doll.  I already loved antique dolls and had I known where to buy one, I probably would have tried to purchase a china doll instead.  But eleven year olds then didn’t have all of the shopping resources that they have today, so I went with what I could buy at one of the major department stores in our town.

I would talk one parent or another into taking me to the shopping mall to make a lay-away payment every time I had $2 or $3 saved up.  I’m sure they must have gotten tired of making all of those trips, but I don’t remember them ever refusing to take me 🙂  Eventually the doll was paid for and I proudly brought her home.  Later my interest turned to clothes and shoes and I once again ventured into the land of lay-away to buy my first pair of heels.  Black patent leather Mary Jane’s with a much coveted one inch heel!

I still have my Madame Alexander doll and the Mary Jane’s and will always look back fondly on my first lay-away experiences and the joy of being able to save up and buy something special.  That is why I am  happy to offer lay-away as an option to anyone who wants to buy one of my dolls 🙂  How could I resist providing the same service to others, that allowed me to buy my first good doll?

If you would like to buy any of my dolls and place them on lay-away, just call 860-355-5709 or email me paula@asweetremembrance.com.  Lay-away is also a wonderful way to buy a custom made doll.

Other Types of Doll Making · Stray Comments

What’s a Birthday Party Without Clowns?

These are my two new 1930’s clowns.  They were a birthday surprise yesterday from my husband!  I was quite impressed with his shopping abilities 🙂  He bought them in Springfield, MO when he was on a recent trip to watch baseball and visit friends.

I love the fabrics, which are mostly novelty prints.  The clown on the left is made from a silk or rayon sock and the one on the right from yo-yos (quilting yo-yos – the little gathered circle kind, not the toy on a string).  I can tell already that they are going to be best friends with all of my vintage sock monkeys. 🙂

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Last Call for Friendship Quilt Blocks

The deadline for getting your friendship quilt blocks in the mail was 7/1.  I had meant to post a reminder several days ago, but life got in the way 🙂  So if the same thing happened to you, then you have one last chance to mail in your 3 inch doll size friendship blocks to the exchange.

Just post a comment here to let me know they are on their way and get them mailed by Wednesday 7/6!  That gives you a day to recover from the holiday weekend and a day to pack them up and mail them out.  See the full exchange rules here.  Happy quilting!!!

This Izzy is available for sale. Call or email me if you would like more information about her, or additional photos.
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Help???

My cat an I have differing opinions about what is helpful and what isn’t.  Apparently he decided that today was “Help Your Person Sew Day”.

This cat is not as much of a doll lover as some of my cats have been.  When I first started collecting dolls, I was soon forced to keep all of my antique bisque dolls safely locked behind glass doors.  It turned out the Patience, the cat I had at that time, had a fetish for mohair wigs!

Later when I started making large child size cloth dolls, Quince, another of my cats, would curl up and sleep in the laps of any of the dolls seated in a chair.  The only drawback to this cozy arrangement was that she chewed on their fingers before she went to sleep.

Ratbert isn’t at all sure that he even likes dolls.  After all, doll making uses up a lot of time that could be better spent lavishing attention on a cat!  As far as he is concerned the only good thing about doll making is all of the antique fabric.  Now that is something a cat can really love!