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Crab Dip Recipe

I made this crab dip recipe a while back, and I wanted to share with you guys, since I like the way it turned out.

By Glory Foods

Hot crab dip recipe
2 eight ounce blocks of cream cheese, softened
1 eight ounce carton of sour cream
1 teaspoon of lemon juice
2 tablespoons of worcester sauce
2 cups grated mild cheddar cheese
4 tablespoons of mayonnaise
8 shakes of garlic salt
1 pound of crab meat
Blend everything except crab meat with electric mixer until smooth.  Fold crab meat in mixing by hand as to not break up crab meat.  
Bake in a buttered/greased dish, uncovered for 35-45 minutes at 375 degrees until golden brown around edges.
Serve warm or at room temperature with crackers.

Summer is for vacation, right?

Hey, not to state the obvious, but I think I’ll let you in on a little secret.  I haven’t been around much on the inter-webs lately. Socking Shocking, I know.  Heh, I have been doing quite a bit of sock knitting too, but I can’t talk about a lot of it yet, because it’s going to be coming out in a few different places in the next months.  Details when I can talk about them, I promise.

So what’s been happening?  Well, let’s just say this is a bit of a story, so I’m breaking this up into two posts.

Last week Michael and I went on a short vacation in honor of his birthday to Ashland, VA, and then continued on to Richmond, VA and finally to his parents who live outside of Chapel Hill, NC.

The common question I was asked when I told people where we were going was, “Why Ashland?”

Well, if you look at Ashland on a map, it doesn’t seem to have much going for it.  It’s small, the town history is rather brief, as there have been no real major events in the town.  No one famous was born or died there.  No battles were fought, no slave uprisings or protests.  It’s a pretty quiet town.

Well, quiet in one way.  In other ways?  Not so much.  Because CSX has a train line that runs right through mainstreet.

And that meant there were trains.  Michael loves trains.

Michael and I have a list (we actually have many lists) of places we see when going someplace (say his parents) that we would like to stop and see one day.  It can be a restaurant, an antique store, a town, a museum  battlefield, anything really.  Ashland was one of them.  We have passed through Ashland every time we take the train to Michael’s parents.  The reason we take note of it is because Main Street is bisected by the train rails.  So there’s one lane of traffic, the rails, and another lane of traffic.  It seemed like a quirky town, with a general store that’s been operating for 120 odd years, old architecture and a quiet southern feel.

It was lovely.  We spent two nights (three days) in the town.  We visited a coffee shop, used bookstore (I found a few gems) and model train store.  We went to the Iron Horse, which had some of the most delicious food I’ve ever had the honor of encountering.  Seriously.  I’ve been to some good restaurants in DC, restaurants run by chefs from shows on TV, ones that have been written up in magazines.  This place ranked above them.  There was this chocolate pave (I think the word was) that blew my mind.  Also, gnocchi that was savory and rich, but the serving was just enough not not be overwhelming.  The almond encrusted chicken I had struck just the right notes with the mashed potatoes and green beans I had with it.  Seriously good.

The hotel we stayed at, The Henry Clay Inn, overlooks main street.  And it has a southern style porch, two floors.  After lunch, we plunked ourselves out on the porch, and Michael watched trains go by.  Me?  I swatched.  I had originally hoped to get yarns from a few different companies so I could work on some design deadlines that I have due later this month.  (It’s going to be a rather frantic few weeks).  For good or ill, they did not arrive by the time I left, so that meant I brought yarn to dream and plan.  I swatched for a few different design calls, and then, when I was done with that, I got to work on my own stuff!

I’m working on a doily to go on the hutch Michael and I are slowly refinishing.  I’m doing something freehand, which is entirely wonderful.  There’s some things I do in my own work that I sometimes find to hard to describe to people who read my patterns, so when I’m designing for magazines I sometimes follow conventions instead of doing what *I* like to do.  When I’m working my own projects, I’m also free to brainstorm ideas that aren’t firm enough to become a design proposal yet, but I need to work out on a piece.  It’s a quirk of mine that even my swatches have the potential to become part of other projects, or part of samples for teaching lessons.  I like everything to have at least two purposes.

One of the best parts of the trip was just watching Michael geek out over trains.  One of the most lovely things about him is that he brings the mind of a historian and researcher to almost everything he does.  So taking a trip to a train town means I get a guided exposition about train history.  Any question  I could have about trains, Michael can probably answer.  If he doesn’t know the answer to it, he knows where to find it.  I love that about him, because it always makes it incredibly interesting to talk to him about what he’s pasionate about.  This trip, Michael had recorded all scheduled trains that were supposed to go through the town.  Then, he tracked in a journal if they were running on time, late, their engine numbers, and a bunch of other information (so he can report back to his train friends on the Amtrak Forums).

 Since I do the same things with yarn, I guess it’s fair.

Stash Sunday – Knit One Crochet Too Ty Dy Cotton

Knit One Crochet Too is another one of my favorite companies.  I fell in love with their Ty Dy Cotton first, and later I came to love their Ty Dy Wools also.  I love the long color runs they do, and a good 75% of their colorways resonate with me in some way.  They’ve got a rainbow version of Ty Dy Cotton that has been calling my name for a long time now.  I just got to figure how to make it work on me… though really?  Rainbows work on almost anybody.

This is not rainbow colored yarn.  This was some yarn that my friend Garret got for me on my birthday a couple of years ago.  I’ve tried to work several things with the skeins I have, but the thing is?  It’s too special for me to break way from my love for it.  Does that make sense?  No pattern I found has lived up to the sentimental value of this yarn.

So, it sits in my stash until I find the perfect pattern for it.  But that’s okay, the yarn is lovely anyway.

The Deets:

Yarn weight

Worsted / 10 ply (9 wpi)
Amount stashed

2 skeins = 392.0 yards (358.4 m)

Stash Sunday – Cherry Tree Hill Supersock Solids

I bought some Cherry Tree Hill way back before I ever even started knitting socks.  I have no clue what I was going to do with the three skeins I bought.  Now, I’m down to one, and it’s this blue baby.

It’s funny.  Michael and I are getting married at a place called Chestnut Hill.  Half the time though I call it Cherrytree Hill, simply because I’ve known Cherry Tree Hill yarns longer than I’ve known our wedding location.  Hopefully I’ll have that sorted out by the wedding.
This skein is also working towards being part of my sock yarn blanket.  It’s lovely.
The Deets:
Yarn weight

Fingering / 4 ply (14 wpi)
Amount stashed

1 skein = 420.0 yards (384.0 m)
Dye lot

Colorway

Sapphire
Color family

Tags

    1 project

    Stash Sunday – Blue Ridge Yarns Kaleidoscope Superwash Sock

    Another Blue Ridge Yarns handpaint.  This one is also in my sock yarn blanket.  Reds are not always my thing, but I love reds that mix with orange.  They remind me of fire, of sunsets, and flowers.

    This one is also in my sock yarn blanket, which is currently hibernating, and probably will still be until the weather gets cooler.

    Deets:

    Yarn weight

    Fingering / 4 ply (14 wpi)
    Amount stashed

    2 skeins = 800.0 yards (731.5 m)
    Dye lot

    427
    Colorway

    Dragon’s Breath
    Color family

    Red-orange
    Tags

      1 project

      Inspirations and Influences: Sunburst Shawl

      You ever have a situation where you can trace exactly when a thought entered your head?  I can remember the exact moment that the idea for the Sunburst Shawl entered my head.  It was over a discussion of Fibonacci numbers and crochet, and I misspoke.  I meant to ask if it was possible to do a crochet technique in the round, and instead I said broomstick.

      My friend replied she had never seen it done before, and I realized and corrected my mispeak, but the idea was then in my head.  WAS it possible?

      But really, in some ways, I think the inspiration for the Sunburst Shawl goes back even further.

      The Sunburst Shawl owes much of its inspiration to knitting.  Gasp!  It’s shocking, I know.

      One of my favorite things to do is knit socks with the magic loop.  I’ve never been a big fan of knitting on straights, and while I like working on two circulars and did that for about a year, I started wanting my needles to have more than just one purpose.  I got into the magic loop because with a longer needle you can do big projects, but you can also use the magic loop to do small projects in knitting.

      At the same time I’d also gotten interested in historical patterns, and both broomstick and hairpin lace.  Both techniques seemed like a great way to make quick crochet patterns with stunning results.  The only problem was that most people who were using these techniques were doing things similar to Doris Chan’s exploded lace.  They were working the techniques in worsted weight yarn.

      I was interested in doing the work in something closer to lace-weight.  While lace is still far off from some of the weight yarn historical patterns were made in (especially with crochet) I thought it would highlight the open-ness of the broomstick stitches in a way that a thicker yarn would not.

      This, combined with  the conversation I mentioned earlier in The Yarn Spot cemented the idea in my head.  It took a few months more of peculating, and a design call that spoke to me, to have everything align correctly.

      I’d like to do more with the broomstick crochet in the round, both because I happen to like round things, and also because I think it’s wonderful to be able to take advantage of technologies that weren’t available before.

      Besides, I like to do things that nobody else has thought to do yet.

      Stories from Sunburst

      Most of the work I did on making the Sunburst sample was while I was on a cruise with my grandmother back in October.  My paternal Grandmother loves traveling on cruises, but isn’t quite able to do it on her own.  So she gets her grandchildren to come with her, and we have a grand old time.  Grandma and I had decided on a cruise through the Panama Canal, from Florida to California.

      Sunburst was the perfect project to do on a cruise.  Easily memorize-able, and with simple motifs, it was light enough to be on my lap as we sat outside and watched the water go by.

      On one of the first nights we went to see a comedy show after dinner, and because we were nearly late getting there, the only seats were in the front.  Naturally we got singled out by the comedian, who saw that I was crocheting while he was performing.  After asking after us and what I was doing, he ragged on us a little before moving on.  From then on everyone one board the cruise knew me as “the young girl that knits/crochets.”  (It doesn’t help that I was dressed in vacation clothes, which make me look like I’m a teenager.)

      It was a wonderful thing, actually, to be singled out, because it brought crafters out of the woodwork on the cruise.  So many knitters and crocheters made an effort to find me during the cruise, and we’d talk shop, knit or crochet, and admire each other’s projects.

      Since Sunburst requires a set of circular knitting needles in addition to my hook, I took to sticking the circular knitting needle into my ponytail when I wasn’t using it.  It was the perfect place for it, because I wouldn’t forget to pick it up when I went to go somewhere else with my grandmother.  However, it did have the habit of making me look quite strange, with two pieces of wood connected by a plastic strand making a halo over my head.  Grandma liked to give me a hard time, teasing me about my “halo” or laughing when I got the needles caught on something because I forgot they were up there.

      By the end of the cruise many of the people had watched the shawl form over the two weeks while I was there.  Many couldn’t quite imagine what it would look like when all the ends were woven in and it was blocked.

      So, for any of you Holland America Cruisers out there who were aboard the Statendam with me, here’s the finished product.  I told you it would look better when it was done.

      Stash Sunday – Blue Ridge Yarns Kaleidoscope Superwash Sock

      My first LYS was The Needlecraft Center, located in Davidson, NC.  It was right across the street from the college.  An 8 minute walk, if I was meandering, from my dorm room to their door.  It’s a surprise that I managed to EVER restrain myself from going there.

      The Needlecraft Center introduced me to hand-painted yarns, which continues to be one of my favorite types of yarns.  Blue Ridge Yarns was one of the yarns I learned to love.

      This yarn is currently engaged in a long-term project I’m working on, a sock yarn blanket.  Seems like everyone has to do one at least once in their life.

      The Deets:

      Yarn weight

      Fingering / 4 ply (14 wpi)
      Amount stashed

      1 skein = 400.0 yards (365.8 m)
      Dye lot

      324
      Colorway

      Berry 005
      Color family

      Tags

        1 project

        Things you Don’t See Everyday

        The other day my derailer on my bike was gunked up, which resulted in my bike not working the way it should. (For those of you who don’t know, I commute by bike three out of five days a week.  My bike not working is a problem.)  You see, my derailer wasn’t springing back, so every time I stopped to coast, my chain would fall off my bike.  *unhappy face*  This means I had to keep peddling on the downhills.  Not fun.

        It also meant that I couldn’t take Sweetness and Light where I wanted to take them in the bike trailer.  I was pretty bummed, because I really don’t like to push a stroller when I would be pulling a bike trailer and riding.  Then, Sweetness said, “I can take Light on my bike.”  Keep in mind Sweetness if five.  Her bike is maybe a third of the size of a grownup bike, and also fixed gear.

        I told her that I wasn’t sure I wanted her pulling her sister around, but Sweetness insisted she could do it.  The hookup to my trailer is only a clamp, so it can work on any bike, even Sweetness’ so I couldn’t protest that technically it wouldn’t work.

        Well, I figured she’d tire out soon enough, we’d walk the bike home, switch to the stroller, and go on our merry way.

        Not so.

        Sweetness biked herself and Light (with me running behind to keep up and to assist on some of the uphills giving a starting push because Sweetness couldn’t downshift to start on hills) ALL THE WAY TO THE LIBRARY.  AND BACK.  That’s just over two miles.

        Can I mention just how proud I am of Sweetness?

        And also what an incongruous sight it is to see a child pulling a child in a bike trailer.  It was also really cute.  Just sayin’.

        Anyway, I am now, in this regard, completely superfluous.  I don’t even feel bad about it.