June 29, 2020

Devil's food cake for two

I made another chocolate cake from Dessert for Two.



This one was a devil's food cake, and it had two layers.



We didn't like this as much as the other one, but it was okay. The icing was a little too sweet for our taste, I think.



It's so nice to be able to make dessert that's sized for two!

June 17, 2020

More pandemic planting

We don't just have a well mound. We have a weird mound. There's a mound on the front lawn, and we don't know why it's there. At least, we didn't know before I did this. This was even more of a weedy mess than the well mound, but I forgot to take a before picture. The sellers had planted ornamental grass and a small bush there. I took them out in favor of native plants.



This has some of the same stuff as the other mound- bee balm, phlox, aster, purple coneflower, and amsonia. It also has coreopsis.



Oh, and I found out what's in the mound. See that empty spot? There's a tree stump buried there.

June 6, 2020

Mini Texas chocolate sheet cake

Chocolate cake! This was another recipe from Dessert for Two by Christine Lane.


This was fast and easy. It made a 6" chocolate cake with chocolate frosting.


The icing poured on like a ganache and thickened more as it cooled. You can see it's shiny and not like a buttercream. Anyway, it was tasty. It was even better the next day. So, I don't recommend eating almost the entire thing the night you make it and only having one piece each the next morning, like Dave and I did.


So far, this cookbook is two for two!

June 3, 2020

Pandemic planting

Time for more native plants! Our well mound was looking sad. Do you see the bit that looks cut off in the left of the photo? That's from Dave crashing into it with the mower. Haha!


Maybe I should back up a bit. We have well water, and the access cap has to be in a mound. I don't know why. I also don't know when we'd ever access the water that way, since it comes into the house underground via the pump.


Anyway, it gets a lot of sun and seemed like a great place to plant some stuff. So I dug everything up and added some soil before I started planting.


Tada! There's columbine, aster, bee balm, salvia, purple coneflower, crocosmia, phlox, and something else that blooms in the spring that I can't remember right now.


Our township turns yard waste into mulch and compost, which we can then take for free. People really make the most of it. Sometimes there are cars waiting to grab some from the piles. It's a cool program. I grabbed a bit to top off the mound.

Before I planted the stuff in the well mound, I put some aster with the coral honeysuckle.


It's wood's blue aster, a compact, native variety. This weekend I hope to start the next gardening project!
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