Thursday 24 December 2015

Tis Was the Night Before Christmas

It's Christmas eve, well officially Christmas actually, its now like 1am here. But I don't think it counts as Christmas till you've woken up on Christmas morning and looked through your stocking (yes, at 20 I still get a stocking and plan on doing so for at least another 10 years, haha), put on some carols and sat with the family opening presents, ahh so much excitement to wake up tomorrow morning!

Anyway, the reason I made this post was because I was just feeling excited for tomorrow and reflecting back on the festive season, which got me thinking back on the year in general, and basically I am just feeling really incredibly grateful for all that I have and for the fact that Christmas has this universal power to somehow unite a huge percentage of the world for one day, which is something I find really special. So basically I just wanted to say merry Christmas to all of you out there, I really hope it's a special day!

I came across this truly lovely quote the other day, and so will leave it here as a final thought before I go to sleep and can rise and shine in the morning- night guys, lots of love...




Tuesday 22 December 2015

My Ultimate Christmas Playlist

So two years I did a post of some of my favourite christmas carols/songs and since then my playlist has just kept expanding and getting better and better (hehe, in my 'humble' opinion). This year I read an article on Rolling Stone's top 10 christmas albums and basically just downloaded a lot of great stuff, which I wanted to share with any of you fellow Christmas fanatics out there. 

I have a lot of friends (and family) who strongly dislike Christmas carols/songs, which makes me so sad because I so thoroughly enjoy them and think they just spread happiness and festivities, but I know out there are some of you who will appreciate this music, so this is for you. 
I really love every song on the playlist, it's obviously missing some and will definitely keep getting additions each year, but for now, it's already pretty big. So I have just screen grabbed the playlist from my iTunes for you to see. I have highlighted some of my all-time absolute favourites in red, but don't neglect the others, they are all so lovely! 








Gingerbread Christmas Cupcakes

I did some baking today and wanted to share these really delicious and quite unusual cupcakes I made with you. They really do taste like you're eating a gingerbread man in the form of a cupcake, and topped with delicious caramel cream cheese icing, they are just so good. 

I got the recipe from Tanya Burr, and really like it because the cake batter contains quite a bit of buttermilk, which always makes cakes really moist and light. So let me give you the recipe and show you some pictures of the end result :D

The ingredients you'll need are:
* 150ml milk
* 3 tablespoons treacle/molasses
* 375g light brown sugar
* 385g cake flour
* 3 teaspoons baking powder
* 1,5 teaspoons bicarb/baking soda
1,5 teaspoons cinnamon
* 1,5 teaspoons ground ginger
* 225ml oil
* 300ml buttermilk
* 1,5 teaspoons vanilla essence
* 3 eggs

and then for the icing you'll need
* 200g of caramel (this can be bought salted caramel, a caramel ice-cream type sauce or if you're feeling adventurous, a homemade caramel, whatever you want)
* 150g butter
* 500g icing sugar
* 200g cream cheese (plain) 
* 2 teaspoons vanilla essence

Start by preheating the oven to 180 degrees Celsius.
In a pot on the stove/hot, on medium heat, add the milk and treacle and lightly stir until the treacle is dissolved in the milk, then turn off the heat. 
It is super super simple from here on in that all you do is basically mix the dry and wet ingredients separately then added them. 
So in one large bowl, sieve in the flour, then add the sugar, baking powder, bicarb and spices and mix. 
In a separate, medium sized bowl, add the oil, buttermilk, eggs and vanilla essence and mix. Now add the treacle milk mixture to the rest of the wet ingredients and whisk (a hand whisk is perfect, no need to do so electrically) until they are pretty much combined. 
Now, while stirring, add the wet ingredients to the dry to form your batter. 
Don't worry if the batter seems super wet and runny, it is meant to be like that. 
Now all you need to do is spoon the mixture into cupcake cases and pop it in the oven for about 20 minutes (but obviously keep and eye on them as this will depend on your oven). Check that they're done by sticking a knife or skewer into the centre and checking it comes out clean without any raw batter on it. 
If you don't want cupcakes, you can always pour the mixture into a cake tin and cook for 40 minutes rather. 

While the cupcakes cook, you can get on with the icing. Again, it's pretty much case of just adding everything. Make sure to sieve you icing sugar, or else it leaves clumps in the icing. And also mush up your cream cheese in a separate bowl before adding it so it is really smooth. Then just add it all together. Because of the cream cheese it is a relatively runny frosting, but if you want, you can thicken it up with a bit more icing sugar. 

When the cakes are done, let them cool entirely (this is the point my impatient is at a high, so I usually pop them in the freezer for 10 minutes to cool, because it is important they are not at all warm). Now you can ice them however you want- I put the icing into a piping bag and just did a little spiral on top of each one. 

You can decorate them however, if at all, depending on what you want. To make these even more christmassy, I just used a ready-to-roll red fondant, rolled it out and cut out a bunch of little stars to put on top of each one. 

This recipe makes a lot of cupcakes, like probably about 36, so you can definitely half it if you don't want so many!

And that's it! Do make these, they are really delicious, and like I said earlier, they are quite an unusual thing, like not many people make them, but because of the gingerbread-y ingredients, they feel very familiar and really are super yummy. Happy baking!




DIY Christmas Table Decorations/ Setting

I apologise for my complete lack of presence on this blog in the last two months, particularly because this is my favourite time of year and now, with only 3 more days to Christmas (!!!), I kind of want to cram in as many Christmassy, festive posts as possible! Okay, so this one is another DIY sort of post- basically I was bored around the house and have been spending ample time on Pinterest looking at so many christmas decoration ideas, crafts, table settings, all of it, and decided to do up our table and make a cool little centrepiece for a big Christmas dinner we are having at our place tomorrow. I didn't want to go too overboard (well some would argue I kind of have anyway, but I didn't want anything too extravagant), so wanted a rustic sort of vibe and despite the fact that I'm not always the best DIY person around and generally lack the patience for crafts, I'm pretty happy with how it turned out, so thought I'd share it with you in case any of you are looking to spice up your Christmas tables this season!

Here's what you'll need:




You'll need some scissors, a serrated knife, glue, sticky tape, prestic, crhsitmassy washi tape, a chopping board, silver spray paint (or any colour you want), coloured card, lots of different patterned and christmas coloured ribbon, brown craft string, tea light candles, pine cones and pine needles (we basically just went for a walk in the forrest and gathered a bunch of foliage), fake spray snow, a large 2m piece of driftwood, lots of different size candles and a bunch of mason jars. Obviously none of these are essential, you can pretty much just do what you want with this, but that is what I used. 

Okay so the first thing I did was decorated the tea lights by just wrapping a strip of really cool christmas washi tape around the metal holder of the candle, and then because the tape was a bit thicker than the candle, I just tripped the edges. 




The next thing I did was fill some mason jars with green foliage and pine needles. You can pretty much put whatever inside, but this was all I could find, although I saw some pretty cool ones on Pinterest with holly and red berries and ribbons and stuff inside, so you can go to town with this. I then tied a thin ribbon round it into a bow as well as a second bow in some craft string too. I haven't done it yet as the dinner party isn't till tomorrow and I don't want to kill the plants or make them soggy, but you then just fill the jars up with water and float some tea lights on top of the water, and it looks super pretty. 





The next thing I did was make these really cute little cutlery holders that you can slip each person's knife, fork, spoon and serviette into and place it onto their side plate, or however you wish to position it. I used a template I found online which had this really lovely little quote about being grateful on it. I know this was actually meant for a thanksgiving table setting  but seeing as we don't celebrate that here and to me Christmas is still a time to be with family and friends and give thanks, so I really liked these.
To make these, you just print the template, I printed it onto red paper to stick with the Christmas theme. Once printed you follow the dotted line to cut it in half, and then glue down the two edges, about 1cm on each side, to make a little envelope. Here is the template if you want to use it. 



 With some more jars I had, I then just used a whole variety of different sized, coloured and patterned ribbons as well as the washi tape to tie around the jars at different levels and layering them basically just to make them look pretty. You can really just do whatever you like, but I think they turn out to look really lovely and are super simple! The jars I used are actually these solar jars which light up, you obviously don't need these, I just used them because we had them, but they look quite cool lit up as well. 



Next, I used one of these jars to make a rustic sort of wood-lined jar. I had seen these done with cinnamon sticks too, but I just used actual sticks I had found lying around in the forrest as the jar was too tall for the cinnamon. I just used the knife to cut/break the sticks into the correct length and then used prestic to attach them all around the circumference. One done, I just tied some ribbon around the sticks and then sprayed the whole thing with a light dusting of fake snow spray. 



Similarly again to the jars, I tied a bunch of ribbon around several candles of different sizes.




 Next I spray painted some pine cones silver so that I could dot them around the table too. I also spray painted some of the pine needles and sticks from earlier silver too so that I could put them in bunches around the pine cones. Make sure when you spray paint to put down a covering first and give them a few minutes to dry before you put them on the table. 




And then all that was left was assembling it. I put on a white table cloth with a red runner down the middle. On top of the runner I put a large, probably about 1,5-2m piece of wood along the runner, just to that the centrepiece could be a bit raised from the table. I first sprayed the wood with the fake snow just to give it a white dusty look. Then I basically just distributed the various decorated jars, candles and tea lights all over the wood. On the side of the wood I then made little bundles of the silver pine cones and foliage  and that was pretty much it. I haven't yet put down place mats or used the utensil holders I made as the dinner party isn't till tomorrow, but you can really just set the rest of the table however you please. 




Apologies for the really crap panorama hahah, I couldn't keep still enough to stop it from coming out squiggly. 
And that's it- I hope this maybe gave some of you a few ideas for the table this Christmas, everything is really simple and easy to do and none of the things you need are particularly expensive and can mainly just be found in the park or around the house. 



Travel Adventures: Budapest, Hungary

I realise it's now taken me months to finish this series of posts accounting my trip to Europe this year, but I promise this is the last of them, as Budapest was our last, and one of my absolute favourite destinations. So yeah, I hope these travel posts haven't been too personal and bored you all to death, but I wanted this blog to be a place that I can come back to one day and read about some of the cool things I got up to, but I have also tried to make these posts 'tourist friendly' so if any of you are planning trips to these places or wondering if they're worth going to, you can get more personal insight into the various cities.

So Budapest was absolutely lovely, I loved that it is kind of this bizarre mixture of what is simultaneously a historical gem filled with rich history and infrastructure, mixed also with a much more modern, stylish and hip side of town as well. One of the things we did whilst there was a walking tour of pretty much the whole city. While I will admit that this was a LOT of walking (you literally span the whole city from Pest to Buda- the city is divided by the Danube river into these two sides), it was 100% worth it.

Let me describe the city by talking about Pest and Buda separately as they really are quite different but both so worth seeing in their own right. Okay so Pest is the side of town that we were staying, we stayed in a really lovely student hostel called Mavericks that, as student hostels go, was pretty well rigged out and facilitated, so I really enjoyed that as a nice place to stay always makes a difference. Whilst I don't know much about the differentiation between Buda and Pest, my impression is that Pest feels a lot more young and modern. At night, in among the streets between our hostel and St Stephens Basilica, the streets were bustling with lively, lit restaurants and entertainment, the works, and in among this side of town there are the ruin bars and night clubs pumping out loud music.  On this side of town is St Stephens Basilica, which is huge, absolutely stunning and surrounded by a big square, it is the tallest building in Budapest and if you look over at Pest from the other side of town, you can just see its dome peaking up above the rest of the city. Also on this side of town are the Parliament buildings and close by to those is a sculpture called Shoes on the Danube Bank. This is a WW2 memorial sculpture that I was so sad not to be able to see personally. Our tour guide told us about it and explained the back story, but we didn't manage to venture there in our own time, so if any of you are ever there, don't miss it like I did, as it is supposedly very much worth seeing. Pest just feels really relaxed and social and this side of the city really captured my heart and I kind of fell in love with it literally from the second we arrived. It is dotted with beautiful parks with pretty trees and the Budapest ferris wheel, warm baths, quaint little shops and other attractions such as Heroes Square, not to mention all the amazing shopping we managed to get done there, and actually spent a lot of time doing, which suited me perfectly. 

So then, on the other side of town, right across the Danube over the Chain Bridge, is Buda. Buda feels a lot more like the very traditional, historical European post-war city, filled with old buildings, castles and cathedrals, but also, similarly to Pest, lots of greenery, trees and flower beds everywhere you look. My favourite thing on the Buda side was right up the hill, which is a bit of a trek (although I think there is a cable car system type thing too), Matthias Church, which (with no exaggeration at all) is honestly the most stunning building I have ever seen. I am not usually one who oohs and aaahs and gushes over architecture but this building is beyond stunning- describing it would not do it justice so rather just Google it (check out its roof tiling) and see for yourself. Up by the church there were also some beautiful sculptures and other lovely little cafes along tree-lined streets. In fact, this whole area and Castle District up on the hill is so lovely to explore, it was a bit quieter than Pest and has beautiful views looking down on the whole city, the river and across into Pest.

So yeah, as you can probably tell, I was really endeared and pleasantly surprised with Budapest and definitely hope to go back as there was so much I didn't get to do, and it was just a place I felt really happy and calm. 

Matthias Church


St Stephen's Basilica




The Chain Bridge


The view looking across at Pest from Buda



And then that was it, after almost a month in Europe we backed up our massive backpacks again and came home- it was an amazing adventure!