My kitchen, all clean!
Tag: pink
As soon as I found out about fairy bread, I was scheming about how to make it far more complicated more fun. Fortunately for me, my cousin’s second birthday was approaching.
The idea of fairy bread is simple and clever, and of course I would make some with my homemade bread. But why stop there? Why not make a special bread, a whole fairy bread loaf? The idea ruminated in my mind and as I tried to fall asleep the night before I planned to make the dough, the modifications were complete in my mind.
Fairy Princess Bread
So named because it’s not just bread for fairies, it’s not just bread for princesses, it’s bread for a princess of the fairies. Alternately, it could be the bread that fairies make for princesses.
Adapted from Soft American-Style White Bread recipe from Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes a Day.
- 3 cups lukewarm water
- 1.5 tablespoons granulated yeast (2 packets)
- 1.5 tablespoons Kosher salt
- 2 tablespoons sugar (I actually forgot the sugar, so you can safely leave it out if you like)
- .5 cups butter, melted, plus extra for brushing on the crust
- 7 cups all-purpose flour (1-2 cups could be switched out for whole wheat flour)
- .5 tsp almond extract (you could up this to a full teaspoon)
- 4-5 medium strawberries, pureed or mashed
- 20 drops neon pink food coloring (you could use red, but the drops may not be the same)
- 1 tsp honey
- Neutral-tasting oil, Pam, or butter for greasing the pan
Note: This recipe makes about twice the amount of dough you’ll need for the four mini loaves I show. My extra dough is currently sitting in the fridge(it’ll keep happily there for 7 days), and I plan to divide it in 2-4 pieces and put them in the freezer for future use. You can do the same, make more bread, or halve the recipe.
- Mix the yeast, salt, sugar, and melted butter in your stand mixer bowl, a 5-quart bowl, or a lidded food container. Add the strawberries, almond extract, and 20 drops neon pink food coloring. Stir so that color is distributed.
- Mix in the flour without kneading. I stirred a bit with a fork first, scraping the sides and turning the flour over to make sure the liquid was evenly distributing it’s color onto the flour, then used the dough hook on my stand mixer. You can also use a spoon or your hands to mix the dough the rest of the way.
- Cover loosely and allow to rest about two hours. I use a tea towel or cloth napkin and just put it over my mixing bowl, leaving it right on the stand mixer. If you used a lidded container, set the lid on loosely so it’s not airtight(unless your container has holes because it’s for bread).
Seriously, this was my most tall rising bread ever. - To make mini loaves, grease your loaf pans. Using wet or floured hands(I used wet hands here), take about a handful of dough and shape it into a ball to put in a mini loaf pan. The dough should fill the pan a little more than halfway full.
- Slash the top of the loaf. Let the dough rest for 40 minutes (1 hour and 40 minutes if the dough was refrigerated).
- Preheat oven to 350°F. Melt 1TB butter(I microwaved in a coffee cup for 15 seconds) and mix in 1 tsp honey. Brush the tops of the loaves with the honey butter and top with sprinkles.
- Bake for 30 minutes, turning halfway through. I put them on a baking sheet to make it easier. Larger or smaller loaves may need adjustments in cooking time.
- Turn them out of the loaf pans right away and let them cool on a rack or on their sides so the bottom doesn’t get soggy.
I tried out a few different things on the bread. Cream cheese, peanut butter, and butter(all with some sprinkles of course). They were all really good.
You could also try jam, cream cheese and fruit, or make little sandwiches. Another variation would be to bake the bread in muffin tins or mini muffin tins to make individual fairy bread loaves.
I ended up serving it the traditional fairy bread way; butter and sprinkles.
I think Chloe might enjoy the bread more when there’s not a party going on! Extra loaves can be frozen whole and reheated in the oven, or frozen in slices and toasted. I imagine Chloe has some pink fairy sandwiches in her future!
New Favorite Purse
I was in Nordstrom the other day, picking up a Christmas present for my dad and I browsed by the purse section. The first thing I noticed was this display of Coach Poppy bags. There was a pink and a purple one, I think two different styles and they looked great to me. I’ve been using the same purse for over a year, it’s from Target and I do like it, but it’s starting to crack and peel and wear and that sort of thing. I lost most of my old purses in an incident where they were attacked by ants and I put them outside and then it rained. So I’d really like a new one. We pretty much have no money right now so there’s no way I can get it, but this is the first time in a while I’ve seen a purse that I instantly loved.
Isn’t it pretty? It’s the Coach Poppy Glam Tote. I’d like it in the pink, please 🙂
Pink Supergirl Linux Box: Part 6
Okay, the top coat is on and dry, and I’m ready to assemble!
CPU! This is an Athlon XP 2800+
I RAM! I’ve got two sticks of 256mb each.
I predict that this crazy sound card snagged out of my dad’s old PC will be the bane of my existance. It’s a Creative SoundBlaster Audigy.
Channel your inner Back to the Future cast member. “Those things don’t work on water!”
Here I am with my new box!
I have successfully installed Kubuntu Linux onto my new box. I booted with System Rescue CD first to wipe the drive because it was my younger sister’s old drive and who knows what could be on there. Then I had no problem installing Kubuntu with the dvd I burned from the iso. It looks so pretty! I named the computer Comet, the name of Supergirl’s horse.
I set the new box up to use a KVM so it’s working fine sharing the keyboard and monitor with my Windows box, but I did have some trouble with the mouse, so I just have two different mice plugged in for now, and I’ll look into that later.
Here’s a screenshot for my Kubuntu desktop on my new machine. I was quite pleased with how configurable it is. I was easily able to create and use a pink fading pattern on the panel(at the bottom). I was pleasantly surprised when I pressed print screen and a little box popped up, allowing me to save the screenshot as a png!
Pink Supergirl Linux Box: Part 5
Okay, the top coat is on and dry, and I’m ready to assemble!
CPU! This is an Athlon XP 2800+
I *heart* RAM! I’ve got two sticks of 256mb each.
Snapping in the RAM that I *heart*
I predict that this crazy sound card snagged out of my dad’s old PC will be the bane of my existance. It’s a Creative SoundBlaster Audigy.
Channel your inner Back to the Future cast member. “Those things don’t work on water!”
Here I am with my new box!
I have successfully installed Kubuntu Linux onto my new box. I booted with System Rescue CD first to wipe the drive because it was my younger sister’s old drive and who knows what could be on there. Then I had no problem installing Kubuntu with the dvd I burned from the iso. It looks so pretty! I named the computer Comet, the name of Supergirl’s horse.
I set the new box up to use a KVM so it’s working fine sharing the keyboard and monitor with my Windows box, but I did have some trouble with the mouse, so I just have two different mice plugged in for now, and I’ll look into that later.
Here’s a screenshot for my Kubuntu desktop on my new machine. I was quite pleased with how configurable it is. I was easily able to create and use a pink fading pattern on the panel(at the bottom). I was pleasantly surprised when I pressed print screen and a little box popped up, allowing me to save the screenshot as a png!
Pink Supergirl Linux Box: Part 5
Okay, I think I’ve finally got it right.
I painted the top over with the light pink
I printed out a template on some card stock and cut it out. Then I stuck it to the top. I actually used a gluestick because I didn’t have any double stick tape. Actually, it worked pretty well, but if you try it make sure you get any glue residue off of the parts you want the paint to stick to. I went around it after I stuck it down with a damp paper towel.
Pink Linux Box: Part 4
So I decided that I need to do the stencil in 2 parts, so here I am doing the S part of it on the side of the case.
Stencil Ready
Stencil Sprayed
Success! not perfect, but I think it looks pretty good.
I waited for the stencil to dry and did one on the top too.
I taped it down more this time and I think I actually got a little more under the edges. I think it was the angle, though. I’m not very tall.
I think it’ll still look good once I get the border part on, though. I may also go over it with the original color to clean up some of the spots that the light pink got through.
And I did actually have to put on some sunblock to go outside and paint, because it’s 100 degrees outside on our patio.
Pink Linux Box: Part 3
here’s the second coat on my case:
the lighting’s different though, it’s cloudier today.
Okay, here’s my younger sister drawing a stencil for me. I brought out a shirt for her to use as a guide.
here it is finished, and there I am trying to cut it out
I started thinking about it too much and confused myself about where I needed to cut out so I had to stop and take a break
Pink Linux Box: Part 2
First coat of pink!
I’m going to let it dry, probably overnight, and then see if it needs another coat(it probably will, especially on the sides). Then I plan on using a glossy top coat. I’m trying to think of something good to put in the case badge spot. Any suggestions?
Pink Linux Box: Part 1
I’ve been wanting to put together a linux box for a while, and I’ve finally collected enough spare parts to do it. I decided to spice up the plain beige case I snagged from my uncle by also making this my first pink P.C.
Yes, I am a girl. 🙂
So, here’s the case I’m starting out with. Just a plain beige case, but pretty nice.
One of the main things that I was confused about was how to get the front off of my DVD drive so that I could paint it. Thanks to the helpful forum members, I figured it out without much trouble after the tip that you need to open the drive
Here are my primered components
<img src="http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/2153/370/320/IMG_1258.jpg%5B/img%5D
Next stop, pink paint!