Friday, October 31, 2014

HALLOWEEN GREETINGS FROM JUST2GYPSIES...



HALLOWEEN GREETINGS FROM JUST2GYPSIES!  And what could be better on Halloween than sharing a couple of  creepy cocktails?

zombie woman : a scary undead zombie girl

Ingredients

  • 1/2 ounce white rum
  • 1 1/2 ounces golden rum
  • 1 ounce dark rum
  • 1/2 ounce 151-proof rum
  • 1 ounce lime juice
  • 1 teaspoon pineapple juice
  • 1 teaspoon papaya juice
  • 1 teaspoon superfine sugar

Instructions

Add the ingredients other than the 151-proof rum to a shaker or a pitcher and stir. Add to a collins glass that is filled 3/4s full with cracked ice.  Enjoy!

post icon





Siobhan's Favorite:

 BLOODY EFFIN' MARY...




Ingredients

3 cups tomato juice
1 cup vodka
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon prepared horseradish
3 ounces fresh lime juice, plus a wedge for rimming glasses
3 ounces Worcestershire sauce
Sriracha sauce
Seafood seasoning, such as Old Bay, for rimming glasses



Directions

Special equipment: 4 Collins glasses

Suggested garnishes: celery sticks, blue cheese stuffed olives, sliced banana peppers. small cooked shrimp, lime and lemon wedges, pickled green beans

In a large pitcher, stir the tomato juice, vodka, horseradish, lime juice, Worcestershire and some Sriracha together until combined. Chill until ready to serve.

To serve, cut a slice in a lime wedge and rub it around half of the rim of 4 Collins glasses. Pour some seafood seasoning on a plate and dip the wet rims into the spice to adhere. Fill the glasses with ice and the chilled Bloody Mary, and garnish as desired.





HAVE A VERY SCARY NIGHT!!


Thursday, October 30, 2014

Note To Siobhan...





Note To Siobhan...

Dearest Daughter,

please PLEASE PLEASE  stop using our best Tupperware bowls for soaking cats' feet--and try not to use their lids as stretchers for injured frogs.  Seriously.  Your heart is in the right place, but it's really kind of gross.  Besides, I need them in the kitchen...Thanks!

Love,
Mum  

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Building A Gypsy Wagon, Part 11 / Bohemian Bits And Bobs (Tying Loose Ends, Completing Odd Jobs...)

Since my last wagon post, Just3Gypsies Farm has been inundated with emergencies--horse injuries, cat funerals, and dog surgeries.  Such is life on a farm--particularly one that is blessed with a multitude of animals...
 Between emergencies, Siobhan and I have continued to work on our beloved gypsy wagon--building  roof trusses and roof framework while waiting for our tin roofing  to arrive.  When our framing was completed, we concentrated on more pleasurable work-- adding bohemian bits and bobs, tying loose ends, completing odd jobs. All the Fun Stuff.  Some folks say "the devil is in the details".   Other folks say "What the hell does THAT mean?!"  I say  it's the smallest details that give us the greatest pleasure.

Some of the details we added were Necessities...

An antique chest (Cline's antiques, $75.00) with a large drawer for storing table cloths and kitchen linens, and ample cabinet space below for storing canned goods and tableware.  The chest's large flat top accommodates a cutting board and bread basket, and serves as a workspace.
  A fully functioning replica antique icebox (Ebay, $125.00) 
                                           
Gypsies took great pride in their wagons, and kept them scrupulously clean.  Siobhan and I found the perfect cleaning tools to help us uphold the tradition: 

  Ornate vintage clothes brushes (Ebay, $6.00 and $4.00) to hang beneath ledge seats--perfect for keeping cushions clean and bright.

 A beautiful hand painted broom and wooden dust pan, a treasured gift from Siobhan (Victorian Trading Company, $29.95 and $24.95) and a vintage Fuller Brush Company ostrich feather duster (Ebay, $19.99)

DUST PANFAIRY TALE ROSES WOODEN BROOM



Some of the details we added were Luxuries.

 Siobhan remarked that the Horse Chair would be a cozy place to curl up and read or sketch--if it only had a convenient tray to hold a drink or snack .  And so the drop-down shelf tray was built, complete with a wooden rack below it for books or artist supplies. (hinges, Lowes, $; no other expense--made from scrap lumber.)


  True to gypsy tradition, every bed and bench is resplendent with ornate cushions and pillows.

Woven tapestry pillows on Siobhan's Horse Bench (ebay, $18.00 and $33.00).  Arm rests are made from wood scraps and carved wood horse corbels (ebay, $55.00).  * Coordinating small  brush hanging beneath bench seat for cleaning cushions (vintage clothes brush with carved horse head handle, ebay, $14.00).
                                        
Woven tapestry pillows on long bench seat (ebay $33.00 ea.).  Arm rests are built with antique carved wood lion corbels (ebay, $65.00 per pair), and antique brass stair rail brackets (pictured below).  *Vintage carved lint brush with lion handle (ebay, $6.00)  matches carved arm rests.

Spider Web Motif Handrail Bracket In Antique-By-Hand Finish (item #R-010MG-125-ABH)
House of Antique Hardware, $24.95 each.

                                   
Sacred Grove print cushions in lower sleeping quarters (Gael Song, $26.00 ea.)

Various pillows in upper sleeping berth: antique circus print pillows (etsy, $34.00 ea.),  woven tapestry elephant pillow (Amazon, $19.90), embroidered beaded floor cushion (Eyes of India, $31.88).


One of Siobhan's treasured "bits and bobs"--an antique hand carved wood clown, rescued from a now-defunct traveling circus...(private purchase, $110.00)


  Each window in our wagon is adorned with a creamy antique lace panel and an antique embroidered Rabari Banjara valance  (antique lace panels, circa 1920, purchased from Yorke Centre of Antiques, UK, $7.00 - $18.00 ea.) ; antique kutch valances, Maharaiartsus/Ebay, $65.00 - $94.00).

                                    



 A custom doggie bench was built beneath Siobhan's back window; the padded upholstered top lifts for easy storage of rawhide bones, dog sweaters, leashes, and treats. No expense--made entirely from lumber scraps and fabric remnants.


Sometimes Siobhan and I will look at something we've built, and say "wouldn't this work better?"  And so we tweak our design a little.

                                                                        
 After several near-slips, we added extra wood handles (Grand River Wood Products, $12.50 ea.) to the sides of Siobhan's ladder as a safety precaution.    







 After Boxing in under the hearth floor extension, we said "Wait a minute!  Why couldn't we add a door to one end and use it for storage?!"  And so we did...
Storage compartment is large enough to accommodate a folding pet gate, a large flashlight, and a small fire extinguisher.


Some of our favorite bits and bobs were added simply for the Pleasure they give us...

Antique carved wood horse corbels, purchased from India through Ebay. ( $55.00 ea ); carved pediment, Cline's Antiques ($16.00).


                                                  

Antique carved wood king and queen figurines, purchased on Ebay.  ($46.00 pair)


                                            
                               Antique horse brasses, purchased through ebay.ie ($16.00 ea).
                               Custom leather martingales, hand made by Master Saddler Robert
                               Steinke, Ireland ($44.00 ea.)


And now, FINALLY, our tin roofing panels have arrived!  So it's Back To Work--until next post...

"Baxt hai sastimos tiri patragi."
"good luck and health"