Twiggie Makes by Candace Grahl



Conner’s 4th Birthday Party

So my baby boy turned four last week. FOUR! How does that even happen? One minute he is this red-faced screechy little baby & the next he is my fun, smart, articulate, hilarious little man. For a few months before his birthday he kept telling me over & over that he wanted a pirate party. Just for jokes I would ask him randomly, “So Conner, you want a clown party?” or “You’ve been asking for an animal party, right?” and each time he takes a deep breath & says, “No, mom, a piiiirrrrraaaattttte party. Pirate.” Isn’t he adorable? I found a stamp set I wanted to use, gathered some paper & started planning. I definitely got into it - I mean, in the invitation I really used the term “come have a swash-buckling good time!” *insert eye roll* but it was a lot of fun, especially the cake!!

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Isn’t it awesome? Beth at Taste Selects, a local bakery took my design & ran with it. Love how it turned out! I did the red cuppies to accompany it & our good friend Ryan Portnoy came to snap the pics.

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cupcakes…..yummmmmmmm

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This is the pennant I made, which was super easy - cut out triangles, hole punched the edges, slide cotton yarn through, hang, voila - pennant. Conner loved this thing. When hubby & I were hanging it his eyes lit up & he kept asking, “Is that for me? Is that for my party?” The concept of alllllllll of this being for him was blowing his mind.

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I am such a fan of cookie favors. I highly highly recommend doing them for your next party. No annoying toys that fall out of that awkwardly small little bag, no more leaked thing of bubbles all over your car, no. Instead, you spend a fraction of the cost (even if you buy already made sugar cookies & let your kid decorate them) & your guaranteed that everyone will love & use your favors.

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These are the thank you’s that I did & while they were time-consuming they were still fun. Any excuse to nerd out with paper crafts & I am there! Piecing the squares together took the most time, but after that they came together easily.

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Overall the party was a blast. I got to see my little guy set loose with eleven of his most-loved peers & while it parted my hair quite a few times, they all had a great time.

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Happy 4th birthday my sweet Conner!!!




52 New Things: Week 4

Well, I guess it’s week 1 for me since I’m just now jumping in. I was thinking of tackling mini-posts but even those can be a little intimidating. There’s Top Ten Tuesday, Wordless Wednesday & I keep thinking I want to start a Confession Thursdays cuz Lord knows I got lots of those…

So anyways, back to 52 new things. Brandi, I don’t even know if I’m doing it right but I’m giving it a shot! One of my goals for the new year was to try a new recipe every week. I hate cooking. I love baking (love. love. love.), but hate cooking. Because of said hatred, I cook the same things over & over. I’ve got a solid dozen recipes, but we’ve been eating those over & over since hubby & I said “I do” seven years ago. Hubby loves when he comes home & dinner is on the table. Seriously, he beams - that’s the only reason I do it. That & I don’t want my children to tell their teachers that “mommy makes the best turkey, cheese & ketchup crackers ever!” So to try & make the whole thing enjoyable for everyone I am experimenting with some new dishes. This one I did last night & it was so good, but so unbelievably filling I am pretty sure I was still stuffed well into this afternoon.

It’s Warm Tortellini Salad & Roasted Tomatoes with Green Beans. The only thing different that I did was I didn’t cook the green beans with the tortellini, but instead sauteed them with extra virgin olive oil & garlic salt. It was super delicious & like I said verrrrrrry filling. Go on, give it a go!

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Hold onto your socks because they’re about to be knocked off
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If you follow me on twitter you know I am slightly obsessed with poptarts. And by slightly obsessed what I really mean is I eat them all the friggin’ day long. I hadn’t eaten one in quite a few years (because I never really liked them all that much to begin with) and bought some for Max when he was going through his picky-food-phase, literally grabbing one of everything in the breakfast foods aisle hoping something wouldn’t end up being thrown on the floor in his fit of hunger-rage.

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I decided to have one for breakfast one morning and, well, a switch was flipped and I CAN’T TURN IT OFF. I jokingly told my husband that I should make a poptart cake and then the idea was born. With some help of some of my fave twitter peeps I was encouraged to tackle this endeavor (encouraged…harrassed, what’s the difference, right?). A cake seemed too difficult but also kind of strange. I kept invisioning stacking poptarts on top of one another and then covered in icing? But then a pie could work. And not just a pie made of poptarts but a pie that tastes like one giant poptart.

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Ahhhhh yes. This could be done.

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It only took three attempts (and quite frankly I’m surprised it only took three) but I am now proud to share with you all - friends, fans, people who just want the recipe and will never return to this blog again - I give you the poptart pie. Enjoy!

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Brown Sugar and Cinnamon Poptart Pie: Beta

Now, I have to say it’s in beta since I feel like it could use a little more tweaking, but that will be done on my own time. For now, it is still delicious and I must share the love. Oh, and it’s so easy!

1 cup brown sugar
1 tbsp flour
1 1/2 tsp cinnamon
2 tbsp corn syrup
3 tbsp butter, melted
2 ready made pie crusts (you could opt to make your own but why?)

1) Preheat oven to 350.

2) In medium bowl whisk sugar, cinnamon and flour. Mix in butter and corn syrup until all ingredients are blended. Pour into prepared pie crust, smoothing over entire crust and then cover with remaining pie crust. Poke holes in the top with a fork, toothpicks or a knife.

3) Bake 30 minutes. Remove from oven and let cool completely

Maple Frosting

This is optional but why not go all the way. What’s a plain poptart? Not very good, that’s what!

2 cups confectioners sugar
1/2 tsp maple flavoring
2 tsp water

Combine all ingredients into a runny paste (you can add a smidge more water if it’s too thick or a little more sugar if it’s too runny). Pour over cooled pie and let set.

*For the icing, you don’t need to pour all the icing if you’re not a big fan, it’s totally your preference. I liked it with more, hubby said it would’ve been just as good with less, so he could taste more of the pie filling. Also the pie is better the next day, so make it the night before and indeed have it for breakfast. Or lunch. Or all day. I am not here to judge.

And for my next trick: A Frosted Strawberry Poptart Pie. Hold on tight, my friends, I think we have opened Pandora’s box.




A little lasagna for your Tuesday
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I don’t like to cook. Repeat: do not like to cook. I love to bake - sugary, gooey, drippy desserts and breads I can whip up all the day long, but cooking…eh. The only reason that I try to have dinner on the table most nights of the week is because my husband likes when I do and I like to keep him happy most of the time. For moms of small kids you know this can be an impossible feat. I’m in the process of adding a link to my site where I post my tried-and-true quick, easy and cheap recipes for us busy gals, so when it’s done I’ll let you know. However here is one of my new faves that I must share.

I’ve recently lost thirty-five pounds and have bypassed clothes I wore pre-three-year-old and am rounding the corner to clothes I haven’t worn since college ten years ago. I am beyond giddy. Many people ask the same questions, “How did you do it?” and “What diet plan are you using?” and I would always say, “I’m just trying to move more than I eat.” And that is the honest truth. Nothing magical there, just good old-fashioned will power, self-control and making wiser choices. So it’s no coincidence that the TV show I am loving right now is Lifetime’s Cook Yourself Thin. Have you seen it? Love it and love Harry, she’s my favorite on the show. The premise is you can eat the same foods, make smart substitutions in the recipe and drop a dress size in six weeks. I am always skeptical of “low fat” meals since 1) your body needs fat and I think these lower-fat versions take out too much and 2) it usually skimps on flavor. However I’ve made a few recipes from this show and each one has been de. lish. And I can’t wait to get my hands on this one - french toast…so good…mmmmm…*drool* Where was I? Oh right. My favorite so far is the Spinach and Mushroom Veggie Lasagna, which I have the recipe below. I do no like mushrooms so I subbed zucchini and squash. This is a great summer alternative to a classic dish that doesn’t leave you feeling stuffed and heavy (no pun intended) but is so incredibly delicious. Enjoy!

Spinach and Mushroom Veggie Lasagna

2 tablespoons olive oil
1 1/2 pounds cremini and/or shiitake mushrooms, sliced (or sub zucchini and squash)
1 tsp dried thyme
Kosher salt
1 15-ounce container part-skim ricotta
3/4 cup skim milk
2 eggs, lightly beaten
3 cups shredded, part-skim mozzarella cheese, divided evenly
3/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1 10-ounce box frozen chopped spinach, defrosted and drained
1/3 cup chopped fresh basil, plus more to garnish (or 1 tsp. dried basil)
1 tsp dried oregano
black pepper
5 cups tomato sauce
12 sheets no-cook lasagna noodles
Nonstick cooking spray

1. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.

2. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the mushrooms (or zucchini/squash) and thyme and season with salt. Cook until softened, about 10 to 12 minutes.

3. In a medium bowl, combine the ricotta, milk and eggs, and stir. Add 1 cup of mozzarella, Parmesan, spinach, basil and oregano; season with salt and pepper and stir to incorporate.

4. Spread 1 cup of tomato sauce in the bottom of a 9-x-13-x-2-inch pan. Layer 4 sheets of lasagna on top, slightly overlapping. Spread half the ricotta mixture on the noodles, and cover with half the mushroom mixture. Top with 1 1/2 cups tomato sauce. Repeat with 4 sheets of lasagna pasta, remaining ricotta mixture, remaining mushrooms and 1 1/2 cups tomato sauce. Cover with the remaining 4 sheets of lasagna, the remaining cup of tomato sauce and the remaining mozzarella cheese.

5. Lightly coat a sheet of aluminum foil with nonstick spray and cover the uncooked lasagna, spray-side down. Bake at 375 degrees, covered, until bubbly, about 45 minutes. Remove foil from lasagna and increase the oven temperature to 450 degrees. Cook until cheese browns, about 12 minutes. Remove from the oven and let stand for 15 minutes before cutting.




Sconey Scone Scones

Things here are tooting along nicely. We spent last week in the Smoky Mountains with my in-laws and I have come to a rather harsh reality that vacation is not vacation when you have two little ones to tend to. It’s just being away from home without the comforts of home. But we did have a wonderful time with the grandparents, uncle, aunt and cousins and of course just getting away is always nice.

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Now we’re back and jumped into the Easter weekend with both feet. I’ve recently taken up baking again (having a baby while also having a busy toddler side-lined just about everything for a few months there) and forgot just how much I love it. Mixing and stirring, cutting, shaping, all with very defined rules and structure. It totally gets me and my need to have rules. If I wasn’t such a tomboy I think I could completely embrace etiquette in every facet of my life. Conner loves to bake with me and sits up on the stools and watches me and we talk about what I’m doing, why I’m adding *this* and why he can’t stick his finger in *that*.

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He loves to watch things go into the oven looking one way and come out looking completely different. His favorite thing, hands down, is decorating cookies. It’s very simple - I bake them, slather on the icing and he meticulously places the sprinkles. And he is so hyper-focused on this task, it cracks me up. He will calculate where everything will go and his expression will look like this is more of a chore than something of fun. Yet when each cookie is covered and done and ready to be eaten, he will look up with those big blue eyes of his smiling and say, “That was so much fun! I want to do it again!”

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I’ve also been experimenting with scones lately. I’m not that big on scones since I love biscuits - big, buttery ones - and I love super-sweet pastries. I don’t like the in between. But I found a recipe for blueberry-lemon scones, so I thought I would give a crack at it.

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I don’t know much about baking scones but one thing I’ve read over and over is not to overwork the dough, which is great because that makes it much easier. The only part that I did not enjoy was grating frozen butter. That is not as easy as it sounds. However, it makes them very moist since it spreads the butter evenly across the dough. You can also replace the blueberries for cranberries and orange for lemon and those are delicious as well. Anyways here’s the recipe and enjoy!

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Blueberry-Lemon Scones

2 c. all-purpose flour
1/3 c. sugar (reserving 1 tsp)
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
8 tbsp unsalted butter, frozen
1/2 c. dried blueberries
1 tbsp lemon zest (from the rind)
1/2 c. sour cream
1 large egg

Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position and preheat oven to 400 degrees.

In a medium bowl, mix flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Grate butter into flour mixture on the large holes of a box grater; use your fingers to work in butter (mixture should resemble coarse meal), then stir in blueberries and lemon zest.

In a small bowl, whisk sour cream and egg until smooth. Using a fork, stir sour cream mixture into flour mixture until large dough clumps form. Use your hands to press the dough against the bowl into a ball. (The dough will be sticky in places, and there may not seem to be enough liquid at first, but as you press, the dough will come together.)

Place on a lightly floured surface and pat into an 8-inch circle about 3/4″ thick and sprinkle with 1 tsp of sugar. Use a sharp knife to cut into 8 triangles; place on a cookie sheet about 1 inch apart. Bake until golden, about 15 to 17 minutes. Cool for 5 minutes and serve warm or at room temperature.




A blog by Candace Grahl

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All content (including text, photographs, and design work) is © Candace Grahl. My original artwork is for personal inspiration only and may not be copied for publication, contest submission or resale. If you would like to use any of my content, please drop me an email at candacegrahl@gmail.com to obtain permission. Thanks so much!

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