Showing posts with label oriental. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oriental. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Recipe: Oriental Honey Mustard Dressing


I received a recipe once for a similar dressing, but it made only a small amount.  This is so delicious that I needed to tweak it and make a big batch.  I adjusted amounts so that it is easy to measure one ingredient at a time into a 2 cup measuring cup and just keep adding more ingredients into the same measuring cup--saves dishes.


ORIENTAL HONEY MUSTARD DRESSING

3/4 cup mayonnaise
1/4 cup grey poupon dijon mustard
2/3 cup honey
1/3 cup white vinegar
1/2 tsp toasted seasame oil

Using a 2 cup measuring cup or larger, add ingredients in one on top of the other keeping track of measurements.  Mix with a spoon and then using a fine seive, strain into a 1 quart jar using the spoon to press through the mesh to make a creamy dressing.  Cover and refrigerate for up to a week.

Serve over your favorite salad.  We like to make an oriental fried chicken salad by baking prepared crispy chicken strips and cutting them into pieces (I like Tyson brand) and serving over romaine lettuce with thinly sliced red cabbage, carrots, green oinions, sliced almonds and crispy chow main noodles.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

How To: Make a window fan shade




My son has one of those half moon shaped windows in his room. Custom blinds for these things are very expensive. The best option I found was something called a Redi Shade you can buy at Lowes or other places for 20 something dollars and cut to size, but it comes in basic white and needs to be stuck down with velcro. This window is better uncovered in winter so that light and warmth come into the room, but in summer the sun just beats in due to a western exposure. I wanted something I can remove in winter and replace in summer without dealing with adhesive velcro strips.



This window is 22 inches high and 46 inches wide so it's not a perfect semi-circle. And the arch is something like 6 ft so I knew I needed a long piece of paper to make a fan for it. Rolls of wall paper were not wide enough. I went to a teaching supply store and got a roll of 48 inch by 12 ft paper that is used to cover bulletin boards. This one has a cloud design, but they had many colors and patterns. This cost about $8.50. It also comes in different sized rolls both larger and smaller.



At a building supply store I bought two wooden slats 1 1/2 inches wide by 2 ft long for $1 each and painted them to match. These attach to the ends of the fan to weigh it down and hold it in place in the window. These were cut to just under 22 inches and I drilled a hole in one end for a ribbon to go through later.



The roll of paper is long and wants to roll back up so you need to weigh it down to work with it. I cut 5 inches off the width so that when folded in half it would be just under the 22 inches (height of the window).


I found I couldn't work on a tabletop to fold the 12 foot roll in half (so that the finished fan would be double sided) because it kept wanting to roll up. I needed a long stretch of floor to work. 

Live and learn: it would have been MUCH easier to work with a single thickness instead of double. Also, I should have used double sided tape and sealed all three open edges before trying to fold it into a fan. If I did it again I would definitely not fold it, but only use one layer of paper.

I used my quilting ruler and a bone folder to impress guide lines every 2 inches so that I could fold it evenly. This took a long time! I didn't want to use a pencil since I wanted this to be double sided.

I used white glue to stick the wooden slats to the ends of the fan.

I used a hole punch and stick on hole reinforcements to make a path to string ribbon through to gather the fan. The ribbon also went through the holes that I drilled in the wooden slats.