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Wednesday, February 5, 2014

World Nutella day!

Today is World Nutella Day!  Yay!  Unfortunately, I've been snowed in all day, so by the time I found out, I had no chance to go out and get Nutella.  Boo!




There's no reason nobody else can enjoy it though.  I urge everyone to at the very least, enjoy a spoonful.  I plan to do some late celebrating in the near future with this Nutella-stuffed brown butter sea salt chocolate chip cookies recipe.  I've been trying to eat healthier, but this might just be perfect to have as a special treat. I'll just have to share with some other people so I'm not tempted to eat them all.

Nutella is Italian, but I don't think I'd love it so much if not for trips to Germany as a kid.  It tastes better on freshly baked German rolls than on anything else.  Plus, a Ferrero plant in Stadtallendorf, Germany produces the Nutella for Germany and northern Europe.
No need to explain why it's relevant to this blog.  It's delicious.  That's reason enough.

Valentine's Day Crochet Hearts with Lollipop Arrows

Holidays are big where I work and we're always finding excuses to bring in food and other things for everyone.  Mostly food.  For Valentine's Day last year, we decorated paper bags and anyone could fill them with treats.  It was a throwback to elementary school days of trading valentines with everyone in the class, but our parents weren't paying for it.  I'm not a huge fan of Valentine's Day, but I like candy and I love anything crafty and creative.  So, I came up with something to make it more fun.

Valentine's Day bag
Me embracing researching foreign laws too much


I'd love to say I came up with this craft+candy myself, and it's possible I did because after a lot of searching, I can't find anyone else who's done this.  I know that my initial inspiration was a pin on Pinterest showing crochet hearts.  Unfortunately, it was misleading and linked to an Etsy Shop instead of a pattern.  I looked around and found an amazing, free crochet heart pattern.  I had tried a few others in my search, but this one wasn't huge, was relatively fast to make, and came out actually looking like a heart.  I took some red yarn I had lying around, put my hook to work, and knocked out enough hearts for my coworkers and then some.


Crochet Heart
One of many.  The camera makes it look slightly less heart-shaped.
I liked it, but figured that a bunch of yarn in the shape of a heart wasn't the best gift, especially for the male coworkers.  Our team revolves around food, so I knew that was what was missing.  I wanted it all to go together, and finally thought of using something as an arrow through the heart.  It's a classic Cupid-inspired symbol of Valentine's Day.  Candy canes seemed too Christmasy and other treats wouldn't fit.  I even considered Smarties (which I can't have lying around or I will eat a whole bag in one sitting), but they didn't quite look right.  I either found it somewhere, or a lightbulb went off, but I realized dum-dum lollipops would be perfect!

dum dum valentine craft
Sweetest arrow in a heart I've ever seen

I got a valentines pack (which unfortunately only has 5 or so flavors...none of which are typically favorites in my experience) and started sliding them through the hearts.  I probably made 20 even though I only needed a dozen or so for work, and the whole thing took 4 or 5 hours spread out over a couple of days.  If you want to do this, it's not a total last-minute craft, unless you want to pull an all-nighter, but it doesn't take forever either.  This would be fun to do with kids too, especially if they're learning to crochet.  It's maybe a step above beginner and good for practicing counting, sc, dc, and hdc.


Lollipop valentine
Finished pile
People loved them.  Some of the women even still have the hearts somewhere.  I can't complain about what I got in my treat bag either!

Office Valentine treats
Nom nom nom

If you're looking for something a little different and handmade for Valentine's Day this year, this heart and arrow craft is great.  Maybe some people can even modify it and improve on my idea!
Have fun and happy early Valentine's Day!

Monday, January 13, 2014

Musik Monday - Jingle Bells (Bayern München)

It's almost 3 weeks after Christmas, but I couldn't resist sharing this gem.  I've posted English speakers singing in German in the past (The Beatles and Elvis), but not the other way around.  It's wonderful and sort of hilarious either way.  Regardless of language ability, sometimes accents are just hard to lose.  Someone once said that the accent you have speaking a foreign language is a special and unique thing that you shouldn't work to get rid of.  I tend to agree.  Plus, it makes for some fun videos.

Behold!  The Bayern München soccer team singing Jingle Bells!

Monday, January 6, 2014

Musik Monday - Wooden Heart

Wednesday, January 8 is Elvis Presley's birthday.  He would have been 79.  Because of this upcoming birthday, it seems appropriate to have a Musik Monday featuring the King of Rock 'n' Roll.  As luck would have it, he sang in German...at least once.  Once is better than never though, especially for my purposes.



This clip is from his movie, G.I. Blues, and the song is Wooden Heart.  If it sounds familiar to German speakers, it's because the melody is the same as the German folk song, "Muss i denn, muss i denn zum Städtele hinaus" by Friedrich Silcher.  To anyone who didn't sing that as a child (i.e., anyone who didn't grow up in Germany, with German parents, or learning German), that's the song he starts singing in German at 1:06.  

Both are love songs, but they don't quite have the same meanings.  The folk song is about a guy going away, telling his girlfriend he will stay true to her, and that if they are together after a year, they'll be married.  Wooden Heart is more of a "don't break my heart" than a "I won't break your heart."  I guess Elvis sang plenty of other songs asking women not to break his heart.  Someone posted a good translation on a forum if you're more curious.

Some of the pre-production filming for the movie was done on location in West Germany while Elvis was stationed there in the Army.  I'd recommend watching the full film if you can find it...not just because I absolutely love Elvis and would almost always recommend him.

Alles gute zum Geburtstag Elvis!

Monday, December 30, 2013

Musik Monday - May You Always

It wouldn't be New Years for me without hearing the bit below.  It's not really music (though it uses Auld Lang Syne in the background), but I thought I'd use it anyway.  The man speaking is Harry Harrison, a radio DJ I grew up hearing daily.  He worked as a DJ from 1953 through 2005, most famously on WMCA, WABC, and WCBSFM.  He not only talked about the music, but also shared personal stories and became a friendly voice for many people.  The clip below was played every year around Christmas and New Year's Day after being recorded in 1965.  You can read the text here, but I'd recommend listening when you have a chance.  It's well wishes and hopes for everyone listening.  It's a small tradition for me that I hope all of you can enjoy.


Saturday, December 28, 2013

Easy Ornaments 2: Crochet Snowflakes

Even though Christmas is over, it's still winter and there's still some need for last-minute presents.  I needed something fast but nice for my coworkers' stockings at work earlier this week.  I had ornaments in mind, but knew they'd already seen crocheted ice skates (something for a future post) and my go-to ornaments take a little too long.  This was Sunday evening and I needed them for Monday morning.  I'd seen snowflake ornaments and figured those couldn't take too long.  A few patterns later and I found one that was easy to follow and got me 13 snowflakes for work plus 3 larger ones for other people in just a few hours.

easy crochet snowflake
Coworker Snowflakes

I found the pattern at the Attic 24 blog (note it uses UK, not USA crochet terms) and altered it slightly for some of the snowflakes.  The star-like ones were the first 2 rounds as the pattern explains.  The other ones are Round 1 followed immediately by Round 3.  I wanted them all about the same size, but wanted some variation.  One is bigger because I used a larger hook by accident.  I also didn't stretch and set as the pattern suggested because I was short on time, but they still came out pretty good.  At the very least, it's clear what they're meant to be.

The pattern does not make them ornaments (it doesn't have the loop of string to hang them), but that wasn't a hard fix.  There are 2 options:
-Finish off as the pattern says, cut a piece of yarn a little longer than the loop size you want, and tie it to one of the points.
-Do not cut and finish off normally.  Instead, when the last stitch is complete, cut the yarn several inches from the last stitch.  Thread the yarn through the chains to one of the points.  Once it's through the chain at the point, tie the yarn to itself close to the point.
I like the 2nd option because it's all the same thread and it looks neater and more stable.

It's a really fun pattern, and is right around the beginner level.  You only need to know how to chain and single crochet.  Just remember that once the initial loop is formed, the first round is done in the loop as a whole, not the individual chains that make up the loop.
I'd definitely recommend this for anyone who has a basic grasp of crocheting, especially if they are strapped for time and have extra white yarn lying around.

Have fun and a belated Merry Christmas!

Monday, December 16, 2013

Musik Monday: Sesame Street, Santa Claus kommt Heute

Since Christmas is somehow only about a week away, it seemed appropriate to share something Christmasy for Musik Monday.  This is "Santa Claus kommt Heute", translated literally "Santa Claus comes today", better known as "Santa Claus is Coming to Town" done by the cast of Sesame Street (including some Muppet guests).







Even though Sesame Street did come to Germany as Sesamstraße in 1973, two years before this video was made in 1975, this is not an episode of Sesamstraße.  It is from an episode of Peter Alexander präsentiert Spezialitäten (Peter Alexander presents Specialties), a popular German variety show that aired on ZDF.  Peter Alexander was an Austrian entertainer who both acted and sang.  He eventually transitioned to TV in the 60's.  His variety show first aired in black and white from 1963-1966.  ZDF then picked it up in 1969, aired it in color, and continued with it through 1996.  It was an extremely popular show through its entire run.

This episode featured Peter Alexander traveling to America to visit Sesame Street for a Christmas special.  Though this clip only features the puppets singing, he joined them in singing and dancing.  I think my favorite parts are Bert's Santa outfit and Ernie's lederhosen.  

Look at how adorable they are!

The puppets were originally voiced by their American voice actors and the sound was later dubbed to German.  This episode was #1 in 1975.  It had were 38 million German viewers and more in other German-speaking countries.  I honestly was never a Sesame Street fan (my favorite was Grover...I think that says a lot about how I felt about the show), but this I enjoy! I should thank my mom for sharing this with me in the first place :)