Monday, 6 August 2012

My cactuses


I need to make a confession: I can't keep flowers alive at home. And that is something that really saddens me... a Scandinavian home has plants inside, right?! So my mother-in-law just solved my problem (we hope) by giving me 4 little cactuses. They don't need to be watered all the time so hopefully they will survive more than a couple of weeks. And they are so damn cute (for something full of spines).


 

all photos by me




Saturday, 4 August 2012

Scandinavian style - Line T. Klein photography

Some of my favourite pictures from Copenhagen based photographer Line T. Klein. I chose to include this post on the Scandinavian style series because her pictures show the simplicity, the light and the unique beauty of the Scandinavian living. A moodboard in black, white and wood.

 

 


 

 




all images via


Thursday, 2 August 2012

The Princess and the Pea (and a daybed by Moroso)

This week I'm back to language school. We are reading the stories of Hans Christian Andersen (in Danish off course... so not as easy as it seems), and yesterday I rediscovered one of my favourites since I was a child. The Princess and the pea. I could always relate with that story because I bruise like a peach, and what little girl doesn't dream of being a princess?! But I liked it, above all, because of the pictures in the books of that huge bed, with 20 mattresses and 20 duvés, and all the other wonderful and colourful images I could create in my mind.
"Prinsessen på ærten"   .   via

So It probably doesn't come as a surprise that one of my favourite pieces of furniture ever... a "must have" in my dream house... is the day bed called Principessa, designed by Nipa Doshi and Jonathan Levien for Moroso, and inspired by this same story.

Principessa   .   source
Principessa   .   source
Principessa   .   source
Principessa   .   source



Monday, 30 July 2012

Scandinavian style - side tables for plants

I have already made a post about vases and how Scandinavian style includes bringing plants and flowers inside the home. Today I just want to share with you two side tables designed for holding plants. I had seen the IKEA PS table table many times before, but I just discovered the Retro plant table and I think it's really pretty and would fit perfectly in my home.

Retro plant table by Cult Design   .   via

PS sideboard with 4 cups by  IKEA  




Sunday, 29 July 2012

Home Made Bread


A week ago I discovered a great blog called lark&linen. It's a blog with a mix of interior design, food and little everyday life things...the sort of things that I like. As I was exploring the recipes list, I found one for bread that didn't need kneading. The author of that blog said that that recipe was so simple and easy, that she did it on a Friday evening after a few drinks. I had never made bread before, never had the guts, but after reading that statement I decided to try it.

The original post had a link to this video where you can see the explanation of the recipe, and you should check it out, but I'll write it here anyway, to make it easier. 

3 cups of flour (all purpose)
1/4 tea spoon of yeast
1 and 1/4 tea spoon salt
1 and  1/2 cups water 

Mix the flour, yeast and salt. Add the water and mix it all with your fingers and once you get a dough it's done. Cover the bowl and let it rest for at least 12h. 
Pre-heat the oven at 260.C (500.F) with the pot that you will use inside.
Remove the dough from the bowl and shape the bread. Then cover it all with sesame seeds or flour.
Place the bread in the hot pot and put it in the oven with a cover for 30 min. Then remove the cover and leave it for 15 min. more. Done!

Well now, my personal experience was...interesting... to say the least. Not because the recipe wasn't that simple, because it really was. But because anything that could have gone wrong went wrong. And I'm the only one to blame. The most amazing thing though, is that in the end I still had a delicious home made bread, just out of the oven, for breakfast. Allow me to show you just how idiot-proof this recipe is.

Last evening I grabbed my little piece of paper, where I had written the recipe down, and, filled with courage, started working on that bread. 
going wrong n.1
1 cup of flour, hmm... 2 cups of flour...erm... I don't have any more flour. Ok, ok, no stress... I'll make a third of the recipe instead. 
going wrong n.2
Then came the yeast. I couldn't find yeast in powder in the supermarket, only in a sort of a cube "thingy", so I didn't know very well how to measure it. I ended up using a little chunk of the thing with the size more or less of a 1/4 tea spoon.
going wrong n.3
I had no problems with the salt...haha. But then I got distracted and added more water than I was supposed to for a third of the recipe. 

I started mixing everything and it was like if I had gone back to my childhood. 
(As I felt that gooey dough on my fingers I remembered the times when me and my brother wanted to do some collages and there was no glue at home. My mother would then mix some flour and water and that worked perfectly fine as glue.) 
I decided to wait the 12h to see if any sort of miracle would happen. Then this morning I went back to the bowl and the goo was still very much a goo. But I can be as stubborn as a mule and so decided to carry on.

going wrong n.4
(well this actually ended up working perfectly fine)
Due to the already described texture of the dough I obviously couldn't shape it into a bread. But apart from that, I didn' have sesame seeds to cover it with, because I had decided to use flour...but now I also had no flour. And I didn't even think about that until that precise moment. So what to do, what to do?... Oats! I always have oats around, for my pancakes and to have with yoghurt. It worked great!
going wrong n.5
As if I hadn't done enough stupidities, I left it in the oven for 5 min longer than what was supposed, so some of the oats covering the bread got a bit "toasty". 

But the bread actually looked like a bread. So I decided to take some pictures. Then I put it back on the kitchen table and stared at it for a while. I thought: what the hell! It looks like bread... let's see if it tastes like bread. I cut a slice, it was still warm, I spread some butter and home made strawberry jam, took a deep breath and bit it. It was real, I had made bread and it tasted good! Ok it was a very small bread, but still...
I've been wearing a huge smile since then, all proud of myself for finally making my own bread...despite all the things that went wrong.

all photos by me




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