A lick of paint, the smell of smoke

Whew!  Turkey Day is DONE!  What is it about that particular hollerday that can engender such drama!  It’s mostly just folks gathered around a table, eating food, then watching football.  Oh, that’s right:  ‘folks’.   And, in less temperate parts of the US, ‘folks’ are generally stuck in the house for the entire day.  I envy those who have a big house – and even better?  A family room and possibly a rec room.  And a living room.  And a guest house.   Obviously, my fantasy includes lots and LOTS of space so people aren’t jammed at the table asking a young guest ‘is it yours?‘ when his young girlfriend has just announced her pregnancy.

Ummm.  really?  You just asked that?   (and you know who ‘you’ is, right?  of course you do 😉

There is a lot to be said for eating alone on Thanksgiving.

And another thing – Why a sense of smell is important (and why Labeling helps, too):  making gravy, I grabbed a thawed container of what I was sure was my homemade chicken stock.  But there were these little ‘crystals’ at the edge of the lid that looked…’not chicken’.  Sniffed (rather than just streaming into the roux).  Glad I did – it was lemon syrup I’d made and forgotten to label.  I can’t even imagine what a cup of intense lemon syrup would do to a traditional turkey gravy.  Who knows?  Perhaps it would’ve kept the focus on the unusual taste and off the ‘question’.

But we all got through the day, with the young girlfriend saying ‘oh, I do love the smell of woodsmoke’, which was just a lovely thing to hear.  We just installed a wood stove and have been heating the house with it.  Being a closed system it’s not quite as picturesque as a fireplace (or even an open wood stove) but it sure does the trick and emits a faint whiff of that yummy woodsmoke smell.  I have some friends who heat their entire 2500sf house via their wood stove – they are retired and the lady has more energy than folks 1/3 her age, so they forage wood and she actually chops that stuff up!  I’ve seen her do it!  They now have a log splitter but even with that, it’s a lot of work.  But their Nicor bill is $25/mo.  For those of you living in the snow belt, you know how amazing that is!  And their house always smells so….homey.  Wood stoves and steam radiators.  And the sound.  There’s something about the pop of a wood stove and the slight hiss of a radiator that says you are safe from the ravening Beast of Winter.  If I recall, CB I Hate Perfume did a November fragrance with woodsmoke.  I love his scents, especially the ones that evoke weather-related smells (and I consider woodsmoke to be weather related).  Black March is the epitome of a cold, wet Spring day.  The November one & Burning Leaves are the essence of  late Autumn.

Black Friday (which will lead us into Paint):  I would rather eat a cold, dead rat than go to a mall on Black Friday – but there is one HAPPENIN’ place that I love:  Black Friday at the Thrift Store.   Oh, baby!  A brand-new humidifier for 75cents (50% off its $1.50 pricetag).  2 near-new wicker chairs for the patio:  $5ea.   Y’all know how much I love vintage Pyrex.  Ba-BAM!  Promotional gilt & blue lined casserole.  $1.  ONE DOLLA!  Jaysus, be an oven!pyrexAnd my Thrill of 2016:  my solid wood Bassett Furniture hutch (from back when furniture was Furniture, with dovetail joints and not a piece of particleboard to be found).  $50.  It’s in the bathroom, being primed and painted – btw, if you have inclinations to do this remember:  90% prep.  10% paint.  Truer words never spoken. Took El O 30 minutes to get all the hardware, glass and stuff off (it would’ve taken me 3 hours – some of those hidden hinges are tough) but omg!  it makes painting such a breeze.  I was going to use an oil-based paint solely because I love the smell – turps and linseed oil is a woozy Happy Place for me – but El O looked pretty green at the notion…and it’s our only working shower so…latex!! which smells like chemicals but disperses rather quickly.  It’s coming along well and I hope to have it done and ready for towels and body creams by the middle of the week.  That wasn’t one of my Done by December demands but hey!  It’s here.  It’s $50.  And I haz the paint.  So.  Done by December it iz!  The top part now has the primer on and I’ll paint tomorrow, fiddledeedee!  What’s up for you guys, post-Turkey?  Non-turkeys?  What’s goin’ on?

work in progress

work in progress

 

  • maggiecat says:

    My husband and I have to put up with my mom over Christmas – and his brother, with whom we’re staying, heaven help us (his idea of hosting is to call pest control before we get there, which if he does will be an improvement over last time when I lasted about 15 minutes in the house). But this is the price we will pay to see my son, his wife and THEIR NEW BABY MY FIRST GRANDCHILD WHO WILL BE HERE NEXT WEEK. OR BEFORE!!! Whew, sorry, I’m a little excited. At any rate, this means we had a quiet, peaceful, Thanksgiving at home. Food, football, gratitude for our blessings. It was nice.

    • Musette says:

      your excitement is delightful! …and are you SURE there isn’t a Motel 6 somewhere near? I am not a fan of staying with family – hell, in general I won’t even stay with friends more than a weekend because (fill in whatever) – but the ‘pest control’? Lol! Then again, we have that Mice Moving In for Winter thing here (saw one this am) so even ‘clean’ folks get pests (remember March’s rats? – and I can vouch for her cleanliness!)

      Come back and tell us allll about that new grandchild!!! They are SO much fun!

      xoxoxoA

  • GrandmaGaga says:

    Just thought I’d mention how much I enjoy these kind of random posts and the even more random comments; it’s sort of like getting one of those ‘update’ Christmas cards….but with no competition over whose family is the best!

    • Musette says:

      thank you so much for that, Grandmagaga! I confess to worrying about these weirdo posts but I’m unable to focus on (or smell) perfume for now – so this is what ya’ll get! I’m happy to know you enjoy them! xoxoxo

  • Fleurycat says:

    Vintage Pyrex (especially those ribbed glass containers with lids), good vintage furniture, woodsmoke (don’t wash those clothes yet, I need to savor the campfire) and all the wonderful sounds as the pipes expand and contract and the heat kicks in while I’m cozy in bed. I fell in love with our 20’s house in part because of the steam heated radiators. I’ve yet to try the CB I Hate Perfumes line, I think I’d love them…I’m all about seasonal smells: there are too many perfumes to try, and so little time (or cash). Good luck with your project, so worth the effort!

    • Musette says:

      I have more fridge glass than I know what to do with (okay, I lied. I am the epitome of ‘she who dies with the most Pyrex wins’ lol!). I have had gas forced-air for the past 3 houses (including this one) and I hate it. We will probably have to use it in the coldest weather but we’re having such a mild late Autumn that this stove is doing yeoman work in keeping the house at a comfortable temp. It helps that my version of ‘comfortable temp’ hovers in the low 60s. An overheated house gives me hives!

      xoxoxo

  • AnnieA says:

    @L – come to think of it “Did you have a stroke?” is a good counter-question for rudeness

  • solanace says:

    Hey Musette,

    Missed you. No turkey here, but got a new kitchen granite tabletop and have been all about baking bread these days – the house smells gorgeous. Now I’m starting cultivating natural yeast to make sourdough, which is exciting and a little scary. Has anyone tried that?

    • Laurels says:

      My grandfather had a sourdough starter he’d first cultivated during his days driving a chuckwagon from Montana to Kansas City. By the time I was interested in that kind of thing, he’d given up baking. Good for you –if it works, fantastic, and if not, it won’t have cost you much.

    • Laurels says:

      I made turkey stock today. (From a turkey I made Saturday. My sister’s boyfriend has been cooking actual Thanksgiving dinner in recent years.)

      Your post made me nostalgic. My college dorm had steam radiators, although not wood stoves, and I remember that comforting hiss well. And as for “Is it yours?”: that is absolutely a question my grandmother would have asked after her stroke.

    • Musette says:

      According to Saturdays Francine, sourdough isn’t that difficult – but never having made it, I cannot confirm. I make only one bread and that’s Cook’s Illustrated’s Almost No-Knead bread. It’s pretty amazing but lacks that lovely little tingle that sourdough gives.

      Let us know how it goes!

      xoxoxoA

  • Portia says:

    WOW! That sideboard & hutch is TO DIE FOR! Great pickup Musette.
    Around here we have been booking holidays for next year, organising our dogs lifetime registrations at the council, working, living, bickering and loving. All pretty standard and happy fare.
    No turkey but we are extremely grateful for our fortunate lives.
    AND for knowing you sweetheart.
    Portia xx

    • Musette says:

      thanks, baby! there were 3 of them! THREE! I would love to get another for post-reno linen storage but it’ll have to wait. Not one speck of room for it.

      xoxoxoA

  • Tara C says:

    Oh, and I forgot to mention the wood stove that heated the 400 year old stone house my ex in-laws live in in the south of France. I was amazed to see this thing in operation, it felt like going back in time with the radiators softly ticking and the warm stove crackling in the kitchen. They did all their cooking on it too. Fascinating and wonderful.

  • Tara C says:

    Oh man, vintage Pyrex! That piece is beautiful, I love it. And as for rude relatives, I am so glad that phase of my life is over. I no longer participate in family holiday gatherings, I stay home with my own little family in peace and quiet. Can’t wait to see your finished cabinet. It is basically impossible to find real furniture in California. Fortunately I previously lived in Virginia where you can find furniture made with real wood and I am keeping those pieces forever.

    • pixel says:

      Hi Tara! You can find real furniture in CA, at least in the Bay Area. Hoot Judkins. Loads of lovely things, some finish-it-yourself. And Borkholder Amish stuff… drool.

    • pixel says:

      We heated our home with a wood stove one year, when the furnace died and the parts kept being promised ‘real soon’… 4 months later, more like it. Still love my wood stove.

      And happy to enjoy Thanksgiving with friends, not relatives 🙂

  • HeidiC says:

    Is this young girlfriend at least the one you got to introduce to your BWF collection a few years back? I still re-read and cackle at that post from time to time. If it’s the same girl, there’s hope for her and the baby yet. But WOW — and I thought our family had drama this year! My husband’s two sisters have been at it ever since one got pregnant with her 3rd child with a C-section date scheduled for the same day as the other sister’s wedding. Bridezilla has been AWFUL for the last 6 months. They finally had it out Saturday night.

    Your hutch is gorgeous! I miss good furniture, too — my ex’s dad was an ad exec with Broyhill, so my expectations got raised unreasonably high. You’ll have to show us an “after” pic once it’s stocked with yummy lotions!

    • Musette says:

      alas, no. This is the young girlfriend of a ‘relative-adjacent’ (on the cubs’ mom’s side) OMG. they are SO young. 19 & 18. They were here because her family is …….unhappy.

      Wishing them all the best.

      xoxo

      • Musette says:

        and OMG on the sisters! I am curious, Heidi – which one scheduled first? Sounds like C-section came second…which, if true, may win the prize for Best Passive Aggressive Action EVAH! LOL!

        • HeidiC says:

          Wedding was scheduled first — but the pregnant sister has a history of high blood pressure bordering on pre-eclampsia with her other two, so her doctor wanted to do the C-section at 38 weeks and scheduled that day. And bridezilla’s behavior over the next several months certainly did nothing to help with the blood pressure! The whole thing was a clusterf$*&.