Nothing yet… BUT.. the kitchen has arrived! The main cabinets are a distressed vintage white and the island is a distressed black. Granite, lighting and appliances arriving soon. Mike and Jeff discuss the logistics…
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For Lynn
Ben turned One Year Old yesterday! Because I stupidly, rashly, deleted my original blog, you don’t have the old archives and Ben’s year-long ginormous growth history. So I’ll recap here… and let me tell you, Great Danes are an awesome family dog, love love love this guy. Easiest dog I ever had to housetrain. You just have to wrap your mind around the idea of having a small horse in the house. Mike’s mind is not completely warped wrapped yet. He hasn’t made peace with the idea of the folding chairs as toss-around dog toys either. We’re working on it, right Ben?
We’re getting there….
Lately every time I pull up to the house I find myself smiling. After many years of admiring the place, five years of trying to acquire it, and then finally the past year and a half of work to bring it around to it’s glory days, we will live there in just a few months. There is a serenity in those fields, I’ve always felt it…even as a passerby many years ago. Little did I know that I would one day call it “home”.
Raised panels going up in the office…
Giant flat rocks serve as stepping stones in the courtyard out to the main brick patio. I’m trying to come up with a perennial plant layout along and inbetween these stones that will have something blooming at all times….any suggestions? The courtyard will have shade much of the morning but sun for the rest of the day.
Pete put alot of time into cleaning up the backyard today. The excavator is parked on the area we plan to make a raised bed vegetable garden. Great location, lots of sun, and not too far from the kitchen.
You think you know someone.
When you hear the name “Paula Deen”, what comes to mind? I’m thinking Bobby’s smashed potato cakes, Bobby’s Caramel Cake or Bubba’s shrimp gumbo. Isn’t that what she does for a living? I had no idea she made furniture too! Well, she endorses it anyway.
We recently browsed a furniture “galaxy” as this one was called, and I have never seen more ornate and tacky furniture housed under one roof, including the ornatest of the Newport Mansions. Why, even Donald Trump makes furniture there… or rather.. he endorses it. What does that mean, exactly? It’s the kind he would have in HIS home? I’ll tell you this, what he endorsed is the most gawd-awful tackyness I’ve seen in a while. Paula on the other hand, has good taste in what she endorses. I like the simple lines, the cottage or down south feel.
SOOOO…. when I came across her line of home furnishings on the web, I fell in love with a bedroom. After much discussion, a decent price and a review of the bedroom set we currently occupy (it’s a King with the middle support thing underneath bent and no longer holding the middle up properly) we placed an online order for a Paula Deen bedroom set…… assembly required. *ahem*
This Joint Is Jumping!
At this stage of the resurrection there’s a lot of activitiy and we’re rounding the bend towards moving in! Light fixtures and lamp posts have been installed, as well as railing on the mudroom porch. Can a great dane jump over said railing? That remains to be seen, and I sure hope not.
Ok I give up
It’s been pointed out to me that reading a “private” blog is a major pain in the ___. So, I’ve made it public again. It should now update in your google reader or blogroll and the address to click on or save is http://thisoldhousetoo.blogspot.com/ Let me know that it’s working, and I apologize for the inconvenience.
Kate’s Meatloaf
I have always loved Katharine Hepburn, although I’m not sure I could articulate exactly why. She was eccentric, certainly. And perhaps sometimes a bit full of herself, but what an extraordinary life. She had guts. Lived on her own terms and accepted no less. Fenwick, the location of her beloved family home on the shores of Old Saybrook, CT isn’t far from here. I used to take a ride through now and then with the hope that I would figure out which house was hers, and perhaps catch a glimpse. You couldn’t ask the locals, they were fiercely protective. I was looking at all the wrong houses, however, assuming it must be one of those hidden behind walls, hedges and long driveways. I was wrong. It was right in front of me all along, with the lighthouse directly out in front of it. I didn’t figure this out until she had passed on.
If you’re a KH fan, an excellent book written by Eileen Considine-Meara, At Home with Kate, has honest insight into the home life of the star, truly a fun read. Eileen’s mother was Kate’s companion, housekeeper and cook for many years. One of Ms. Hepburn’s favorite dishes was Fenwick Meatloaf. I’m not a big fan of meatloaf, but my family loves it. Over the years I’ve tried to find a recipe that I can actually enjoy, and this one is delicious. Recipe below:
Fenwick Meatloaf
1 pound ground beef
1 pound ground pork
1 pound ground veal
1 cup bread crumbs (Kate liked Pepperidge Farms)
1/2 cup beef boullion
1/2 cup parmesan cheese
2 large eggs
1 onion, chopped fine
1 tsp minced garlic
salt & pepper to taste
Olive oil for greasing the pan
3/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
Preheat Oven at 350 degrees – In large bowl combine meats, bread crumbs, bouillion and cheese. Stir in eggs and onion. Add garlic, salt & pepper. Place the mixture in large greased loaf pan and make a deep horizontal indent along the top of the loaf. Sprinkle the parsley into the cut. Bake in the preheated oven for 1 hour. Serve immediately.
Putnam, CT
When Marcella Gruelle fell ill and died in her early teens, Johnny was devastated. But knowing how much his daughter had adored Raggedy Ann, he began writing the stories that were eventually published.Gruelle soon gave Raggedy Ann a brother named Raggedy Andy, and through the years the two floppy rag dolls acquired many other wonderful story book friends – all inhabitants of a very special world, where dolls come alive and enjoy magical adventures when no mortals are present.