"If you feed your faith, your fear starves." --unknown
Well, many of you know that I'm about to leave you very soon, but don't be sad! I'm trying to keep myself together and I'm surprised by how calm & tranquil I've been. I'm going on my mission to Berlin! I fly out tommorrow and I report to the MTC on Wednesday. And I'm 90% packed!
For those who don't know what I mean, I'm serving a religious mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for 18 months; I'll basically travel all over the northern part of Germany and talk to people about my religion and serve them however I can. It's very exciting, but I'm well aware of wonderful things (and people...) that I'll be without for those 18 months.
So if you're slightly (or maybe not slightly) wondering why I'll be radio silent for so long, it's not because I have nothing to say, that's for sure! You can still follow me and my adventures by clicking on the cute German flag to your right! :)
Thank you all for your comments and for reading my venting or geek-out sessions. I'll be picking up where I left off as soon as I return, I promise!
Have an adventure everyday!
"I would challenge you to a battle of wits, but I see that you are unarmed." ~William Shakespeare
Monday, August 1, 2011
Monday, July 18, 2011
I Solemly Swear You'll Love This
"Not my daughter, you b****!" ~Mrs. Weasley in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
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{best line from the movie, hands down}
Well, if you're looking for a fun, new tutorial, then prepare to work some mischief! This is my first tutorial for photo manipulation especially for this blog, so here we go!
{swish and *flick*!}
For this tutorial, I used Paint Shop Pro, but really any tutorial like this can be used w/ any program {like the regular Photoshop}. The things I'll show you might have different names or might be in slightly different areas, but all these kinds of programs should have the same capabilities.
So I opened the original {my Deathly Hallows 2 premiere getup!!} and immediately used one of my favorite commands, "brightness and contrast" it brings out the colors quite nicely:
So it looks a lil' like this:
I usually play with the numbers depending on the original lighting, and so should you for your project. But a good first try should be -10 brightness and +10 or 20 contrast.
Next, add some textures! They can be found just about anywhere, but I get my kicks on http://browse.deviantart.com/resources/textures/. Most people post them primarily for free use, but each artist has their own rules and generally all of them want credit if you use them publicly. Like for this tutorial, or if you post a piece online, you don't want to plagorize!
So here's the ones I'm using for this tutorial:
| http://ericamarieart.deviantart.com/ |
| http://night-fate-stock.deviantart.com/gallery/28174591#/d2s1ccw |
I tried finding some that would fit the "vision" if you will of what I want to see when it's finished; since I'm sporting Gryfindor colors, I wanted the tones and hues to be on the red/orange side and I picked things that would do that for me. If you were doing Slytherein, you would want something that is sort of already green/dark green/black.
So I pasted each one into the project as seperate layers. You'll notice that they're all seperate for a reason; you can change each one seperately or delete one that you don't like. It's the breathing air of photomanipulators everywhere. You just go to Edit-->paste-->paste as new layer and it should do the work for you. I rename mine so I know which ones I'm dealing with. Make sure you change the sizes of the textures so it covers the whole space of the picture (some will be really big or small).
The next part is fun:
They won't start off looking like this, but next to the layers, there is the word, Normal by each of the layers. If you click on that and scroll through the different options, you can see it does really cool things to the layers, so you can see right through them to the picture, which you want. Here for example, I've got both of them on Hard Light and the top reddish layer on 68%. Like I said, you're gonna have to play around with them because each picture or texture doesn't lead to a cookie-cutter result. That's the mischief part!
You can tell that part of the texture is covering important things like--my face!
On each layer, you'll want to lightly and gently erase so you don't loose your texture's effect but you can still see the vitals.
As you can see, I fiddled w/ the layers and decided the reddish layer would be on Overlay at 84% and the tan swirled one on Hard Light at 70%. I used a relatively large eraser, but fiddled with the most important parts: Opacity and Hardness. Opacity will still erase but it won't be bold, if it's only 32% visible; it compliments the magical sense that I want, sort of smokey and awesome. The 17% Hardness will make the edges of the eraser very fuzzy. If you mess around with it, you'll know what I mean.
And you can't have a wand without MAGICAL SPARKLES! So we'll top off this project with some different colored sparkles.
For this part, I used free and downloadable brushes. It's something I'm still experimenting with, but think of this like those stamp markers from kindergarten; instead of drawing the sparkles you can use the brushes to "stamp" them there.
Again, brushes are like textures; there are a lot out there, but give the artists credit! It's beyond me how they create 'em in the first place, so they're nice enough as it is to let us use them. You can find brushes that work specifically for your program here: http://browse.deviantart.com/resources/applications/
The brushes I used were a mix from this package:
If you've never used brushes, you just have to install them into your program. For Paint Shop Pro, I just go File-->Import-->Custom Brush and then I just open the brush files and it's done! When you select your regular paint brush, you can select from the drop-down menu the specific brush you want.
Now I created a whole new layer. It's different for every program, but usually you can right click a layer and select "create new layer"--something to that effect.
When you've chosen your poison so to speak, you can select the colors you want and start stampin'! I usually go dark to light, and for this I stamped some red, then orange, yellow and white, mostly white. It'll look a bit like this!
For sparkles, you keep them on the top layer and on Normal, 100% Opacity. It's how we do.
And thaaaaat's it! To save the project, you simply right click one of the layers and Merge (Flatten) your image. It makes the file not so big. If you were to save it and work on it later, you wouldn't flatten the image, but save it as a photoshop image, not jpeg. Once they're flattened, they can't be pulled apart again!
{ Mischief Managed! }
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Yet Another Palate Pleaser
“As far as I’m concerned, ‘whom’ is a word that was invented to make everyone sound like a butler.” Calvin Trillian
Hello, all! It's time for another post, or basically another recipe post!
It's {über} hot outside, and so I revived a family fav that we haven't made in a while! They're cream-wiches! I'm sure we didn't totally invent it ourselves, but I made up the name, so tell me if I need to rethink it.
It's like an ice cream sandwich, only it's coolwhip and cinnamon graham crackers! They're really easy to make, but I took pictures anyway.
I have all the ingredients out: tin foil, a tub of cool whip (thawed), and a box's worth of cinnamon graham crackers!
You just take one cracker and snap it in half like you would for a s'more.
Then put a not-so huge dollop of coolwhip on one of them, and gently press the other cracker on top to make a sandwich, cinnamon goodness on the outside, of course!
I wrap them in tin foil, no tape or whatever is necessary.
Then you just pop 'em in the freezer! If you have to eat them immediately, I'm guessing if you give it 2-3 hours they should be good to eat--freezing them makes the sandwich stay together, because thawed coolwhip just squirts out of the edges. When we make 'em, we actually freeze them overnight and enjoy them for a few days or two, or however long they last!
I hope you enjoy this quick little treat (it's actually a healthy alternative to ice cream sandwiches) and hopefully I'll think of new and fresh things to blog about in the near future!
I have precisely 3 weeks (21 days!!) until I leave for the MTC and it's gettin' me all giddy just thinking about it! :)
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
I've Got Sketch Appeal
So here's something that I haven't really blogged about or shared w/ you all yet; I've got a thing for drawing.
And all of these drawing is sort of a walk-through of my style and how it drastically changed--for the better! These two characters are my two main characters of the novel I'm currently writing, so I've been drawing them for quite a while now, at least 8 years. That's at least how long this novel has been consuming my writing imagination.
So a little introduction? The blonde girl's name is Chiko and she's very much a zero-to-hero character. She's a small-town girl that travels the world where she learns a lot about what she can do, and a lot about who she is. She thinks by keeping her talents secret, she's safe, but once she's open about who she really is, it saves her life--repeatedly.
The brunette is Kokishi and she can manipulate fire and her confidence burns. She likes to be brave, actively seeks adventure and doesn't say no to danger.
So here I've got 'em in order of when I drew 'em and such. The colored ones towards the end were done w/ photoshop--I've got the sketches on one side and the other is what's called "vector art" where I've colored/painted them through photoshop. They take forever but they really bring out the characters! Sometimes, if not every time, I learn a little bit more about who I'm trying to write about when I sketch 'em out. Tell me which one(s) are your favorites, but otherwise enjoy this display of what I love!
In many ways, I'm beyond happy that these ladies got costume make-overs. After writing more about them, I had to give them something that would match their personalities, but would be realistic to fight and travel in. What do you think?
And all of these drawing is sort of a walk-through of my style and how it drastically changed--for the better! These two characters are my two main characters of the novel I'm currently writing, so I've been drawing them for quite a while now, at least 8 years. That's at least how long this novel has been consuming my writing imagination.
So a little introduction? The blonde girl's name is Chiko and she's very much a zero-to-hero character. She's a small-town girl that travels the world where she learns a lot about what she can do, and a lot about who she is. She thinks by keeping her talents secret, she's safe, but once she's open about who she really is, it saves her life--repeatedly.
The brunette is Kokishi and she can manipulate fire and her confidence burns. She likes to be brave, actively seeks adventure and doesn't say no to danger.
So here I've got 'em in order of when I drew 'em and such. The colored ones towards the end were done w/ photoshop--I've got the sketches on one side and the other is what's called "vector art" where I've colored/painted them through photoshop. They take forever but they really bring out the characters! Sometimes, if not every time, I learn a little bit more about who I'm trying to write about when I sketch 'em out. Tell me which one(s) are your favorites, but otherwise enjoy this display of what I love!
| The pink arrows sort of show all the earliest pics I could find of "Chikaz" or Chiko. The green arrow? Kokishi! |
| This is actually one of the first vector art projects I tried and I definitely learned a lot from the process. |
| This was my second project, and I love it so much because even after a few years, I'm completely happy w/ it. |
In many ways, I'm beyond happy that these ladies got costume make-overs. After writing more about them, I had to give them something that would match their personalities, but would be realistic to fight and travel in. What do you think?
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Something Wicked this Way Comes!
So I wanted to do a lil’ shout-out to my homeboy, William “the Bard” Shakespeare.
I went w/ my brother and my friends to an outdoor production of Macbeth and my oh my! Was I in heaven or what? I had more fun than you could "shake-a-spear" at! So because I’ve got the Bard on the brain, here’s some attempts at describing his awesomeness:
My favorite History: Richard III
My favorite Tragedy: Macbeth
My favorite Comedy: Twelfth Night
Some grand quotes:
"You speak an infinite deal of nothing." {The Merchant of Venice}
"My purpose is, indeed, a horse of that colour." {Twelfth Night}
"My purpose is, indeed, a horse of that colour." {Twelfth Night}
"I am a Jew…If you prick us, do we not bleed? If you tickle us, do we not laugh? If you poison us, do we die? And if you wrong us, do we not revenge? If we are like you in the rest, we will resemble you in that." {The Merchant of Venice}
"Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?" {Romeo & Juliet}
"By the pricking of my thumbs, Something wicked this way come." {Macbeth}
"Our doubts are traitors, and make us lose the good we oft might win, by fearing to attempt." {Measure for Measure}
| Lady Macbeth--bold, brash, and Scottish |
"Do you not know I am a woman? When I think, I must speak." {As You Like It}
"Love sought is good, but given unsought is better." {Twelfth Night}
"Love sought is good, but given unsought is better." {Twelfth Night}
"Though she be but little, she is fierce!" {A Midsummer Night’s Dream}
"{Thine} face is not worth sunburning." {Henry V}
"What’s past is prologue." {The Tempest}
"Let me be that I am and seek not to alter me." {Much Ado About Nothing}
"Beweare the green-eyed monster, my Lord. It doth mock the meat it feeds on." {Othello}
"If this were played upon a stage now, I could condemn it as an improbable fiction." {Twelfth Night}
"Confusion now hath made his masterpiece." {Macbeth}
"Thy wit is a very bitter sweeting; it is a most sharp sauce." {Romeo & Juliet}
One reason why I love Shakespeare: Okay, like I can narrow it down to just one, jeez. I can’t narrow anything to just one. But I like that all of his characters have brilliant personalities, has strong female characters even though in his time, women were taught to be lesser then men. He took the common stories of the day and made up his version which was fresh, bold and better! His imagery is luscious and to die for! His wit, intelligence and expertise on the ways of humanity are spot on. And above all, he’s taught me that characters—as well as people—reveal who they truly are by what they say…and what they don’t say.
“In black ink my love may still shine bright.” William Shakespeare
Characters: They're [Supposed to Be] People, Too
So here's another little something for the novice writers out there.
How many times have you read a novel and thought: okay, plot was great. Writing style--liked that. Characters? meh.
That's actually what I thought while reading Shannon Hale's Forest Born this week. Don't get me wrong, I ADORE her books (5 stars for Goose Girl) and have since high school. It's just that syndrome where the first book is your all-time favorite and the other books don't get quite as much love, they just don't seem as great. Which is why I don't really like the idea of writing series, because I don't know if I could trust myself to undo such a dangerous thing as that.
Anyway, it's her last book, and I thought she sort of painted herself in a corner. She has Isi, Enna, Dasha, three powerful, fun, and witty female characters (think fun bantering and threats from Enna, I've got a sassy character like her). And then she has Rin, a character who's motif throughout the book is that she's someone else's shadow. Did I mention Rin is the main character?
I'm not trying to bash Hale's story, because when one reads the book, they do get a sense of wanting to become your best self and learn who you are and refine that image. That's all fine and dandy, but Rin sounded so depressing the whole book, wanting to sacrifice herself to dangerous events to protect others--basically telling herself others' lives are more valuable than her own. If the main character thinks that she isn't worth reading about, shouldn't that be a red flag? Main characters should never think like that!
I understand readers come into the ring w/ different backgrounds; I've been very fortunate to never have been in Rin's mindset, so a lot of her reasoning and doubts I couldn't sympathize with. I say that because I know every person has weaknesses, we can't all be the best all the time. But when you have a character that has growing moments and passes w/ flying colors--and then tear themselves up afterwards, it makes reading on that much more difficult.
It turns out that Rin holds herself back because she has this power that she thinks will hurt others--but Isi, Enna, and Dasha do, too and seem to handle themselves just fine. All the characters regret something they've done w/ their powers as well, but Rin holds herself back almost the entire novel while the others get over it and lead on interesting lives. Rin doesn't forgive herself when she's been multiple instances to do so, which again, maybe I don't understand. I honestly hope I don't ever have to understand. But it doesn't seem normal.
So I decided, that in many cases, instead of arguing or venting, why not just avoid this altogether? These are my personal feelings, so I invite anyone to let me know if I'm way off the mark:
I know that I'm not saying all this to complain, but as self-critiquing, too. With my first drafts, my main character was rather whiny and pathetic, which is kind of what I wanted: I wanted to write about a girl who goes from not lifting a finger to really being combative, powerful and fan-flippin'-tastic.
But I realized when editing, I needed to hook my readers from the get-go that this girl I invented is worth reading about, that she has problems to overcome, but she's special, she's unique, and worth their attention and affections and above all, she feels real.
So this isn't me being mean about someone else's work (I promise, I love Shannon Hale! Forgive me!)--this is me seeing what someone wrote and deciding for me & my work, it isn't my style, it isn't what I like to read, so I'm taking an alternative route.
How many times have you read a novel and thought: okay, plot was great. Writing style--liked that. Characters? meh.
| http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6407514-forest-born |
Anyway, it's her last book, and I thought she sort of painted herself in a corner. She has Isi, Enna, Dasha, three powerful, fun, and witty female characters (think fun bantering and threats from Enna, I've got a sassy character like her). And then she has Rin, a character who's motif throughout the book is that she's someone else's shadow. Did I mention Rin is the main character?
I'm not trying to bash Hale's story, because when one reads the book, they do get a sense of wanting to become your best self and learn who you are and refine that image. That's all fine and dandy, but Rin sounded so depressing the whole book, wanting to sacrifice herself to dangerous events to protect others--basically telling herself others' lives are more valuable than her own. If the main character thinks that she isn't worth reading about, shouldn't that be a red flag? Main characters should never think like that!
I understand readers come into the ring w/ different backgrounds; I've been very fortunate to never have been in Rin's mindset, so a lot of her reasoning and doubts I couldn't sympathize with. I say that because I know every person has weaknesses, we can't all be the best all the time. But when you have a character that has growing moments and passes w/ flying colors--and then tear themselves up afterwards, it makes reading on that much more difficult.
It turns out that Rin holds herself back because she has this power that she thinks will hurt others--but Isi, Enna, and Dasha do, too and seem to handle themselves just fine. All the characters regret something they've done w/ their powers as well, but Rin holds herself back almost the entire novel while the others get over it and lead on interesting lives. Rin doesn't forgive herself when she's been multiple instances to do so, which again, maybe I don't understand. I honestly hope I don't ever have to understand. But it doesn't seem normal.
So I decided, that in many cases, instead of arguing or venting, why not just avoid this altogether? These are my personal feelings, so I invite anyone to let me know if I'm way off the mark:
- I feel like, if you can't write about such things as guilt, shame, insecurity or things like that w/o appearing fake, maybe you shouldn't write about them. Some people have vivid stories to tell and they should tell them, and there are people out there that can tell happy stories, and we need those, too.
- But if negative motifs belong in your story (c'mon, you can't have a war novel w/o things like guilt, shame, hate, ect) for Pete's sake do some research! I've got lots of injuries in my story like bashed heads, stabs, twisted ankles, and I've never broken a bone, but luckily I've got a dad who knows his stuff. There are plenty of sites out there that would have information on ailments both physical and mental. When making the non-existant look real, you can't have someone stumble out of a burning house fit as a fiddle doing cartwheels.
- I'm mainly referring to the main character when I say: if they're going to have self-esteem issues, give them some sort of redeeming value that makes you at least sympathize. I don't know how many books that I've read where the main character says "oh, I'm horrible at singing, and dancing, and riding, and I don't look pretty, and I can't cook, I'm shy, I'm weak, I'm useless..." uh...why should I keep reading? Give your character something they're good at, heck, even something they know they're good at and enjoy doing. I admit, a character that thinks too highly of himself is borderline witty or annoying. But if their personality is bland and colorless, you could cripple the other elements of storytelling.
- Have someone read your work/read it out-loud. Editing might reveal some cliche' wordings (it sure has for me!) and especially w/ someone else reading--I tell you, if someone is willing to read your stuff and critique it--worship the ground they walk upon and take that offer. If their perception of what's going on is what you intended more or less, that's a good sign. If they don't care and don't hit the emotional level a scene is supposed to have, touch it up.
- If it helps, map out your character: make even a mini autobio. That's right, autobiography. Have them summarize themselves, their likes, dislikes, what makes them cringe, what embarasses them, you name it. If you can draw a circle around their personality, it makes it easier to capture their essence better on the page.
- People-watch. It's stalking but research all at once. And it's entertaining!
I know that I'm not saying all this to complain, but as self-critiquing, too. With my first drafts, my main character was rather whiny and pathetic, which is kind of what I wanted: I wanted to write about a girl who goes from not lifting a finger to really being combative, powerful and fan-flippin'-tastic.
But I realized when editing, I needed to hook my readers from the get-go that this girl I invented is worth reading about, that she has problems to overcome, but she's special, she's unique, and worth their attention and affections and above all, she feels real.
So this isn't me being mean about someone else's work (I promise, I love Shannon Hale! Forgive me!)--this is me seeing what someone wrote and deciding for me & my work, it isn't my style, it isn't what I like to read, so I'm taking an alternative route.
Friday, June 24, 2011
"21-year-old Me", Meet "high school Me"
“I was outnumbered, unarmed, weak, and screwed. In that order.” Jennifer Lynn Barnes' Raised by Wolves
Well, it’s sort of been a while since I’ve written, and I have a very good reason for stalling! It’s a big under-construction post that will be coming your way, I promise! Just a reminder, the poll is still going until July 1st! But…I’ll probably just extend it anyway.
With such a long time here at home away from school, I’ve been cleaning through my things to get rid of things that I don’t really use anymore, while having a very interesting experience looking at the middle school/high school me. I’ve already blazed through 3 years of college and it’s amazing how much I’ve changed and it’s sort of weird; time can feel so short and so long at the same time.
It just floors me how much pleasure I get out of making lists—and if it’s a “to do” list, I get a kick out of crossing things off! Woot! One list that sort of floored me was this list I wrote in the back of things I wanted to be when I “grow up” or really, things I wanted to accomplish while I’m alive and ready to live. Here’s the list:
I want to be a:
- novelist
- mother/wife
- world traveller
- graduate
- musician
- missionary
- artist
However, now that I’m thinking about it, I feel like I need to update this list to make it slightly more specific and yet things I’ve been thinking about adding to the list. They’re not in any particular order, just in order of subconscious thinking:
- be the best sister missionary I can be
- not be frustrated while re-learning German
- publish DS [my affectionate nickname for my novel]
- be a [published] writer
- get a job as an editor, somehow wheedle myself into the publishing business
- graduate from college!
- keep this blog going
- get married/be an awesome mom & wife
- keep in touch with as many friends as I can
- keep travelling! I just cannot stop!
- be the best hip-hop dancer I can be
- go to a renaissance fair WITH a homemade costume!
- choreograph a full song’s worth of MOVES.
- Huske danske efter min mission, ellers lærne igen!
- try to not compare myself to others (there’s gotta be a plus for being a “jack-of-all-trades”)
- host more parties (when I get back to Provo)
- get far enough as a writer that people actually know who I am and yet don’t berate my work like so many people have with Twilight.
I think that’s a good start; I’m good at adding onto these sorts of things. Just after writing this past sentence, I added 2 or 3 to the list! I’m tellin’ you, it’s like a crazy twitch! Do you have a bucket list? If so, share it w/ me, it might give me some great ideas! It’s amazing that as kids we dream so big, and what’s even more amazing is how willpower can really get us there, despite how crazy the world and life can get.
P.S. I couldn’t end this blog w/o sharing a ridiculous list I wrote in the back of this book. I wrote it w/ a great friend of mine Karin Allred (affectionately called ‘Charlotte Blackwood’ as well) and it’s called:
Things NOT to do on a Plane:
- Move your seat back and forth when the person behind you has food on their tray.
- Open your carry-on and whisper loudly, “got enough air?”
- Get up frequently to go to the bathroom if seated by the window.
- “Test” the help button—just to make sure it works.
- Claim to your neighbor that you made the plane and keep saying, “it’s not supposed to do that!”
- Laugh constantly during the in-flight movie.
- Remind your neighbor, “As my mom always says, what comes up must come down!”
- Make a point of showing your neighbor your fake gun in your pocket.
- Constantly open and close the small tray in front of you.
- Bring a hamster
- Mimic the safety procedures
- Steal others’ bags of peanuts.
I'm not sure if we actually came up w/ all of these or were under the influence of the internet, but we were rather creative back in the day [if not still to this day!]
Labels:
Berlin,
Danish,
Germany,
identity,
lists,
love,
making goals,
mission,
photography,
transformation,
update
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Let Your Voice be HEARD!
Readers, I'm lending you my ears. Only temporarily. I made a cute lil' poll on your right-hand side of your screen, because I'm floored by how many page views you lovely people are adding to the tally, and I want to know what makes you tick, why you're following lil' ol' me.
So please let me know what you like so more fun posts can come your way! Blogging is so much fun when I see how many people are viewing my work. I'm giddy just thinking about it! Thanks, danke shön, and tusind tak! I know how to say thanks in more languages, but three's pushing it.
Have a great week!
{Whitters}
P.S. I set the poll to last for 17 days, so time's a-wastin'!
So please let me know what you like so more fun posts can come your way! Blogging is so much fun when I see how many people are viewing my work. I'm giddy just thinking about it! Thanks, danke shön, and tusind tak! I know how to say thanks in more languages, but three's pushing it.
Have a great week!
{Whitters}
P.S. I set the poll to last for 17 days, so time's a-wastin'!
Dinner of a Lifetime? Ja Wohl!
So here’s a great dinner idea; I’ve shared some great recipes, but I don’t want you readers to think all I make is sweets!
This is a mix of two cultures: German and Indian.
I introduce: Schnitzel and Curry.
Isn’t that lovely? I’ll try to take it step-by-step w/ hopeful hints. Along w/ schnitzel and curry, you gotta have rice, preferably white rice because white rice + curry is an irresistible friendship. I’ll walk through the schnitzel because that’ll take the most time. And the most patience. Schnitzel technically is made w/ lots of different kinds of meats: chicken, pork, veal, you name it. For this we’ll do it w/ chicken!
Snazzy Schnitzel
Thawed, boneless chicken breast(s) {the flatter the better}
2 eggs
Cooking Oil (whatever you like to use!)
The biggest cooking pan you can get your mitts on
Breading crumbs—the brand doesn’t matter, but go for “Italian” or something tasty-sounding.
- You’re gonna set up a sort of assembly line for the schnitzel. You’ll have your thawed chicken, eggs and breading. Wisk the eggs in a bowl. If you’re cooking for one or two people, 2 eggs will be more than plenty, but you might need a few more if you’re doing some dinner group activity. The last station is a plate with a little mound of the bread crumbs.
- Put a couple of tablespoons of oil on the pan, swish it around. Do NOT warm it up until I say so! You’ll thank me later.
- Take each piece of chicken at a time and submerge it in the whisked eggs. Icky but necessary.
- Take the eggy, raw meat (haha) and cover it in the bread crumbs. I like mine to have as much breading as possible, so it’s really up to you how much you want to follow this advice. I just lay the chicken on the breading on the plate, and pat it gently so every inch gets covered. Flip it over to get the other side and repeat; I even sprinkle more on each side for extra coverage.
- Place the breaded chicken on the pan! Set the temperature on medium when you’ve filled the pan or whatever. When I did this before, I heated the pan up before the chicken was on the pan and ended up burning the breading to a deathly crisp but the chicken wouldn’t be cooked all the way. Waste of time and money, right? When you put the chicken on THEN heat the pan, both the breading and meat will be cooked right.
- Chicken is a BEAST to cook, so don’t throw a hissy fit right away. The best way to cook chicken is just flipping and flipping and FLIPPING. Schnitzel is going to be that traditional golden brown, but it will get dark. And DELICIOUS. You just let both sides of each piece cook and when you feel it’s done, cut each piece in half. Now raw chicken is a sickly pink color; cooked chicken is bleached-teeth white. You’ll know “cooked” when you see it. The meat will be white and firm, and the whole process will make the kitchen smell pre-tty good. And that’s pretty much it! It took me a few tries to get it just right to let other people eat safely, trust me.
Classy Curry
- It's SO easy; you're gonna face palm yourself on why you didn't think of this sooner. Go buy a box of “Golden Curry” curry. You find it by the awesome Asian delicacies. It’s a small box, the lettering is metallic and most of the box has Japanese letterings. Be not a-feared.
- This box will have solid blocks of ALL the seasonings you’ll need. You just need water! There’s a recipe on the back you can follow, but if the Japanese has got you hyperventilating, here it goes:
- Bring the water to a boil in a small pot—y’know, that means you see bubble constantly coming to the surface?
- Put every last bit of that curry goodness into the water. You can turn it down to low or simmer. It’ll dissolve and take on the consistency of gravy. Delicious, delicious gravy. Once it’s finished, keep it on low, so it’s warm but not fusing into the pan or anything. No crusties!
- I’d suggest doing the curry once you’ve got the schnitzel cooking at the same time—curry takes little to no time to cook, so yeah, when the stove’s on for the schnitzel, get the curry starting, too.
So there you have it—if you need veggies to complete the meal, do so. I’m no expert at veggies, isn’t rice healthy enough? If you need healthy-food advice, this…ISN’T the blog you’re looking for. If you like yummy food, keep reading for sure!
So yes, this is a great meal. The curry goes SO well w/ both the schnitzel and rice, so slather it on! Curry is even quite awesome in “leftover” format, too. This Golden Curry stuff is really good, but it’s not extremely spicy, until you’re into that thing, I think they have different spicy levels, but the normal stuff is great.
I hope you like this dish! This is something that my mom has made for us, and something I love to treat myself with as a college student. Be sure to leave questions and comments below!
P.S. I'm soo excited to eat/make some legit German schnitzel in a few months! <3
Saturday, June 11, 2011
My Silly Scribbles from ENG 218
It's good to be back! If you've been starving for some ridiculousness from me, I'm sorry I made you wait a decent 2 weeks. We were supposed to go on a trip of a lifetime back to visit Germany, Italy and Denmark but because of stupid weather, unlucky circumstances, and no wiggle room to rebook our trip we had to cancel. It meant a lot to our family, especially to visit family in Denmark.
So the next best place we could think of was, naturally, DISNEYWORLD. and HARRY POTTER WORLD. if you're FB friends w/ me, go see the 80+ pictures that were taken by your's truly.
Tagent= almost over
I bring this up, because on this trip, I brought a writing journal w/ me to fufill my writing goal of writing everyday {which I would give myself about 3.5/5 stars--but I read 5 books! Holy whuuut??}
And because I brought it w/ me, it brought back memories and I decided to post some of the ones that I enjoyed writing, and reading over again. These posts are unedited, how they are seen in my journal. The journal entries were part of a class requirement--I just had to have a certain amount of writing but I could write about anything--which I did. The freewrites were timed and I had about a max of 5min to write.
{describing a childhood home/setting}
Smells remembered from childhood:
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| Vader isn't what you would call a "people person." |
Tagent= almost over
I bring this up, because on this trip, I brought a writing journal w/ me to fufill my writing goal of writing everyday {which I would give myself about 3.5/5 stars--but I read 5 books! Holy whuuut??}
And because I brought it w/ me, it brought back memories and I decided to post some of the ones that I enjoyed writing, and reading over again. These posts are unedited, how they are seen in my journal. The journal entries were part of a class requirement--I just had to have a certain amount of writing but I could write about anything--which I did. The freewrites were timed and I had about a max of 5min to write.
Journal Entry 9/3/10
A list of interesting sentences created with fridge magnets (mostly if not all credited to my roommates):
- *Her hair felt gone.
- I am raw gorgeous sweat.
- Delirious women scream and use knives.
- Bitterly rips gown after swimming club.
- We white boys live have purple smooth language.
- We produced one in the hot spring.
- Me feet is languidly moaning.
- Boil and smear beauty but iron shadow.
- Worship puppy love, please.
- I must like life after death.
- Stop chanting at me luscious forest.
- This mad man moons their mother.
- He is staring as she sleeps in water.
- Incubate our pink eggs and they will blow up.
- Whisper a sweet symphony.
- Some enormous chocolate fluff is under the TV.
- Trudge beneath the garden and fiddle.
- I want black lust.
- I shot him.
- Frantic meat spray.
- Think about my ugly blue tongue.
- Lick a juicy pole.
- Winter is the cool of summer.
- Watch your falling blood.
- She shakes her butt delicately.
- Lie those out next to the sordid bed.
- Honey you’re behind rocks.
- You could run away but I will crush you.
- His elaborate apparatus drools.
- My milk eat a girl.
- Me want her rust like skin goddess.
- Drunk though essential.
- Wax my bare smelly legs in the misty wind.
- Mostly we cry but manipulate men easy.
{describing a childhood home/setting}
Germans. Everywhere. Mountains faced us on the east all covered with thick evergreens. The Tree of Life is the left, probably the tallest and biggest tree I’ve ever seen in my whole life—taller and thicker than a mansion, with a handsome bird’s nest on the highest point. Some of our crazy neighbors are herding their flock of sheep; those buggers always manage to break out and graze by the Tree as though it’s a magnet to all living creatures. Depending on the time of year, the grass is tall and bends like waves on a windy day, or the field gets a buzz cut and hay bales that look like giant marshmallows take its place. Germans are staring at me through their windows.
Journal Entry 9/21/10
What I am good at: dansk, writing, making up/finding names, cooking/eating, ping pong, reading, talking, clarinet, piano, singing, dancing, drawing, photography, laughing/getting people to laugh.
What I am not good at: sports (Frisbee/Capture the flag, volleyball), eating veggies, break-dancing, math/chemistry, thinking realistically, remembering names, focusing on homework (especially boring homework).
What I want to be better at: writing, racquetball, working out, sign language, listening, being assertive
{There are some things that I’m not good at that I don’t really care to improve. Good or bad?}
Journal Entry 10/4/10
List of Problems I’m Glad I Don’t Have (or hope not to have):
- a crazy/psycho ex
- mean roommates
- food allergies
- car/motion sickness
- divorced parents
- switching majors
- abuse (of any kind)
- debt
- unemployment
- death of a child/stillborn (this is what initially started the list; I could’t fathom how hard it would be to be pregnant only to lose a child that’ll never grow up.)
- illegible handwriting.
Fast Freewrite cir. September '10
1. Fudge—Mississippi
2. Grandpa’s farm
3. Mormor’s house
4. Homemade rootbeer
5. Camping
Unusual people I met recently (this week)
1. Bree’s sister
2. New coworker
3. My bishop
4. RS stake counselor
5. Oskar
Earliest Memories
1. Kindergarten naptime
2. Getting a “bad apple” card to take home
3. Heart-shaped sunglasses
4. Playing at the beauty salon w/ Polly Pocket
5. Singing to Lion King.
Things that make me mad:
1. Lies
2. F’s
3. “holier/cooler than thou”
4. Obama/politics
5. Mormon haters
Calming places:
1. Temple
2. Art museum
3. Pool
4. Bookstore
5. Bed
Things that hurt:
1. Migraines
2. Braces
3. Tight pants
4. Burns
5. Soap in the eye
Things I’ve ignored:
1. Messy room
3. People on FB from high school
4. Practicing clarinet
5. My journal
Things I wish I could do again:
1. White water rafting
2. Be in a relationship
3. Live in Germany
4. Travel
5. Speak German
{the thing that I love about this list, is that I’m currently happy because I’ve got a #2 again, and on August 3rd, I’ll get to have #3-5 back in my life. WHUUUUT?!}
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