Pages

Tuesday, 17 November 2020

Stuffed roasted peppers with spiced rice

 I have a memory from many, many years ago. We visited a friend of my second cousin (together with my second cousin) up on a lonely tea estate. My parents went home leaving my sister and myself with my second cousin (who was quite a bit older than us and already married) because we really loved the place. We were served stuffed bell peppers for dinner. It was the first time I ever ate stuffed peppers and I found the dish absolutely delicious. Many years later, when I moved to the west where bell peppers are in abundance, I tried to replicate something similar. I was never successful. Eventually I even forgot what that delicious meal tasted like. I tried various different recipes because I knew, deep down, that baked stuffed peppers could taste absolutely divine. I had quite given up especially since my children did not share my obsession with baked peppers. How I came about the idea to give it another try a few weeks ago I have no idea, but try I did. I threw everything I had at it to a point where I thought it may taste disgusting. But I was pleasantly surprised by the outcome, which was a happy family gobbling down some healthy chow saying "But I don't like baked peppers. These are so good."


Preparation time: 1.5 hours; serves 4

Ingredients:

2Rice cooker cups of basmati rice 
2 tbsp.Oil
1/2 tsp.Mashed garlic
65gOnion, diced (about half an onion)
1/4 tsp.Turmeric powder
1 tsp.Salt 
Rice cooker cups of boiling water
1 tbsp.Oil
4Red bell peppers
1 tbsp.Oil
65gOnion, diced (the other half of the onion)
1 tsp.Mashed garlic
180gVegetarian mince
1 tsp.Salt
1 tbsp.Nutritional yeast (substitute with a veggie cube)
1/2 tsp.Cumin powder
1 tbsp.Tahini (sesame paste)
1/4 tsp.Turmeric powder
Green chilli, finely sliced
Green onions or two very small leeks with lots of leaves, finely chopped
1 can (265g)Chickpeas, lightly mashed
3/4 cupTomato puree
1/4 cupWater

Method:

Pre-heat your oven to 180 C (fan oven) [200 C convection].

Wow! That is a long list of ingredients. My advice is to get all the ingredients together, measured and prepped before starting with this. At least the first time you make it. Else you'll end up totally stressed out and overcooking something or spilling stuff everywhere. I talk through experience!

Start off with the rice. I used 2 rice cooker cups of rice because this is all I need for 4 people. If your lot eats more than that then increase as necessary. Alternatively, reduce as necessary. Wash the rice in a sieve until the water runs clean and allow to drain while preparing the rest of the ingredients, i.e., mashing garlic, dicing onions and heating 2 tbsp. oil on high heat. Once the oil is hot enough to make your onions sizzle add them to the oil together with the garlic and stir. Reduce the heat to medium. Stir fry them for around 30 seconds and then add the rice to the saucepan. Keep stirring the rice else it will stick and burn. I use a galvanised aluminium, heavy bottomed saucepan and it works well. I imagine that if you don't have a heavy bottomed pan the rice might stick, in which case you should probably add more oil. Immediately after adding the rice add the turmeric and salt. Keep stirring and frying the rice for 7 minutes. In the mean time put on your kettle and boil 0.5 L water. Once your 7 minutes are up carefully add 3 rice cooker cups of boiling water to your rice. Be careful the steam will burn (again talking from experience!). Reduce the heat to the minimum possible, stir the rice, put on the lid and allow to cook for a further 10 minutes. 

Now to the bell peppers. Cut them in half and take out the seeds. As you see in the picture I left the stems on and so had to take a sharp knife and cut out the white parts of the pepper. 

You can use any pepper you like. We don't fancy green peppers and love the sweet taste of red ones. You can also take the whole stem off. I washed my peppers to get rid of some of the seeds, but if you do this make sure you dry them afterwards else the oil will not stick. Take 1 tbsp. of oil and brush a baking tray (or 2) that will hold all your peppers. Then brush the insides and outsides of your peppers and place them with the cavity facing to the sky. Bake them for 12-15 minutes at 180 C (fan oven) or until slightly tender. You want to avoid over baking them because they will go back into the oven again and there is nothing worse than overcooked vegetables. 

Could only fit 6!

While your peppers are baking make the stuffing. Drain and wash the chickpeas then mash them slightly. I pulsed mine a couple of times in a food processor. It's okay to have a few big chickpeas, but make sure you don't have mush. On medium heat fry the remaining onion and garlic in 1 tbsp. of oil for about 1 minute. then add everything else, in no particular order and mix. Allow it to cook for about 3 minutes or as long as you like as long as it does not burn!

Once the bell peppers are done remove them from the pan and set aside. There may be some juice in the peppers or in the pan. Wherever it is just leave it there. Turn the rice into the baking dish and arrange the bell peppers on top of it with the opening to the sky. Stuff the peppers with the filling. You can heap the filling if you have too much (this will depend on the size of your peppers). 

Bake for 10 minutes. I did not cover my baking pan with foil (trying to reduce that carbon footprint) but you could cover it if you were afraid it would dry out or don't like having a bit of crunchy rice. 

Serve hot! 


You can find a more printer friendly version here

Sunday, 1 November 2020

Stuffed Hokkaido Pumpkin

 I first ate a stuffed Hokkaido pumpkin at my Georgian friends place. It was so delicious that I stole the recipe from her and made my own. Unfortunately it didn't taste anything as delicious as my friends. I was so sad, but I blamed it on the fact that her pumpkin was organically grown, with love, in her own garden. Thereafter I lost the recipe, but every year since then, when the shelves were brimming with Hokkaido's during the fall, I craved for a stuffed pumpkin. So for the last few years I've been experimenting with stuffing pumpkins. This year I finally perfected my recipe 😁. We've been so busy eating it that there was no time to post it! I hope you'll still have some pumpkins left on the shelf.

Preparation time: 1.5 hours; serves 2

Ingredients:

1Organic Hokkaido pumpkin (about 20 cm diameter)
1 tsp.Minced garlic
1/2 tsp.Salt
1 tbsp.Olive oil
200 gFeta or similar (I use a cheese based on cows milk)
1/2Vegetable cube
1/2 cupCouscous
1/2 cupCoarsely chopped walnuts
1/4 cupDried cranberries, coarsely chopped
3/4 cupHot water
1 tbsp.Chopped cilantro

Method:

Pre-heat your oven to 180 C (fan oven) [200 C convection].

Cutting and cleaning out the pumpkin is probably the most time consuming and difficult part of the this recipe. You'll need a very strong and sharp knife to cut open the top. See the picture below. Take great care  while doing this. Cut the hole big enough so that you can fit your hand in later to scrape out some of the insides. 


Put the minced garlic, salt and olive oil into the pumpkin and coat the surface well. Don't forget to coat the inside of the lid. 


I've found that Hokkaido pumpkins tend to split in the oven. This is a bit annoying because one of the nice things about the dish is that it looks really good. So if it splits and falls to pieces, well what was the use? Because of this I've taken to wrapping the bottom part of the pumpkin with aluminium foil. Sometimes before I bake it and some times after. However, wrapping with foil is not essential, it's just to keep the pumpkin together. 

Put your pumpkin on a baking tray (this is essential) and bake for 15-20 minutes or until the flesh of the pumpkin is soft enough to scoop out. This will not only depend on the size of your pumpkin but also on how thick it is. 

While the pumpkin is baking you can get the other ingredients ready. Coarsely chop the walnuts and cranberries (if they are too large that is). Cube the feta cheese and finely chop the cilantro.

Once the pumpkin is baked remove it from the oven and scrape out some of the flesh (about 1/2 to 1 cup). Be careful to leave enough flesh so that the pumpkin retains it's shape. If the flesh is hard you can cut it into small cubes, if not it will just break up when you mix things together. Now place all dry ingredients in a bowl and mix. 


Pour in the hot water, mix everything together and then stuff the pumpkin with the mixture. 


Put on the lid and bake for a a further 15 minutes.


You can serve this as a side or a main dish. We like it with a bit of crusty bread and a salad.




Saturday, 24 October 2020

Pumpkin fairy lights

 I wanted to make pumpkin fairy lights to light up the crochet witch that my daughter made for me, but I could not find anything I liked anywhere. I was not about to buy some lights. I'm not sure why, but that somehow didn't seem right. After raiding my craft drawers I only had to buy some paper!


You will need:

A string of 20 fairy lights 
A hole punch
20 Brads [for some reason called "sample bag clips"(Musterbeutelklammern) in Germany]
Brown play-doh or plasticine or similar substance
1 sheet 50,5 * 70 cm Orange transparent paper (Transparent-Extrastark)
Scissors
Ruler
Cellotape
Pen/pencil (maybe!)

Method:

First make a trial strip. You need to do this because the bulb has to fit through the hole that you punch. Cut a 1.5 cm by 10 cm strip of orange paper and punch a hole into the end. Check if the bulb completely passes through. I found that the wires coming out of the bulb are wider than the bulb itself so I had to squeeze them a bit to get them through the hole. If your bulb does not fit through you may have to find a hole punch with a larger hole or a smaller bulb. If you have to buy the string of fairy lights and have a hole punch at home make a hole in a thick piece of paper and take it to the store with you so you can see if the bulb fits through it. Don't forget it you make a larger hole your strips will have to be wider. Adjust accordingly. Also don't forget if your bulb goes through too easily it will also come out easily. Mine just happened to be perfect. Once I had the paper in it did not just slip out. 

Once you have the correct material cut 11 strips of orange paper per pumpkin (1.5 by 10 cm). It is not so important that the strips are exactly the same width, but it is important that they are exactly the same length (that is, for one pumpkin). Stack them and trim them if necessary.


Punch a hole in the bottom and in the top. If you have a single hole punch things will be easier, but if you don't you can use a regular hole punch. I have a single one somewhere in the house but no one seems to know where it is! When using a two hole punch you'll need to take the back off the hole punch so you can see where you are punching. Make a small dot at the place you want to be the center of the circle. Place the strip into the hole punch so that you can see the dot and then punch! You can stack a few together so things go quicker. In fact if you can punch all 11 in one go then it will be much easier for you to pass the bulb and the brad through the hole. It worked with my standard hole punch so I think it should work with most.

Pass the bulb through 11 strips of paper. The side you want to be on the outside is facing my hand in the picture. The side on the top will be inside the pumpkin. In the photo I passed one strip through, but later on I passed all 11 at the same time and to get it through the last bit I bent the paper a bit. This seemed to get it through.


And then pass a brad through the hole on the other side as shown in the picture. 


Next distribute the strips to form what looks like a Chinese lantern (at least thats what my kids think it looks like).  You may need to loosed the brad to make it easier to distribute the layers. It's easy enough to tighten it later. Squeeze it a bit to make it look more like a pumpkin. 


Take a small blob of play-doh and form the stem. You may need to hold the wires together. My wires insisted on separating so I put a small piece of tape around them to hold them together. 


And voila!! 

PS. You may need to wait for your play-doh to dry before hanging your lanterns.




Friday, 16 October 2020

Sri Lankan Vegetarian Cutlets

This recipe has been a while in the making. While I can make fish cutlets pretty well it doesn't do us much good because my kids are vegetarian and it is only my husband who is a pescatarian. Cutlets are a popular Sri Lankan short eat, but they are also served with rice and curry unlike other short eats. Like all Sri Lankan short eats they take time to prepare and are best eaten piping hot. 


Sri Lankan's have all kinds of myths as to why cutlets pop. I've been given years of advise about how to make the perfect cutlet. I've followed all instructions but none of them work consistently. But fortunately, after around 20 years, I finally realised why these snippets of advice actually work and why cutlets pop.

Cutlets pop because there is too much moisture in the cutlet and/or the oil is not the right temperature. [This is exactly the same reason why my falafel used to pop (passed tense since I've perfected my falafel!)] And it is as simple as that. Reduce the moisture, use a thermometer and you too can make the perfect cutlet. So you might ask "then why did it take so long to perfect this recipe?" The answer is a simple combination of "it's not so easy to reduce the moisture with just vegetables" and "it's hard to find the time when you have a full time job and two kids". 


Preparation time: 2.5 hours; makes 24

Ingredients:

500 gFloury potatoes, peeled
250 gCarrots, peeled
1 tbsp.Butter
100 gLeeks (tender green part)
1Garlic clove (small), minced or pulped
1/4 tsp.Bullion powder (or bullion cube)
1 tsp.Salt
1/4 tsp.Pepper
1/4 cupBreadcrumbs
1 lOil - for deep frying
1 lrgEgg
1 tbsp.Flour
1/2 cup + 2 tbsp.Breadcrumbs

Method:

Make sure you use "floury" potatoes. In SL this would be the yellow ones. Unfortunately I don't personally know which type these are in other countries. According to the BBC Food Desiree, Estima, King Edward and Maris Piper are floury varieties. In Germany they are sold as "floury cooking" (mehlig kochende) potatoes! If you use what German's call "firmly cooking" (festkochende) the potatoes will not be as easy to mash and seem to retain too much water because they have to cook longer to become mashable. 

In case you need it (maybe floury=fluffy?)

Cut the potatoes roughly into large dice (~2 cm cube) and add them to boiling water. Cook for around 8 minutes or until soft and mashable. Don't cook them so that they disintegrate. You want some body to your cutlets. This is what distinguishes them from croquettes. Drain the water and allow the potatoes to cool.

While your potatoes are cooking prepare your carrots. I've struggled for a long while trying to figure out how to integrate carrots into my cutlets. I don't know why but I just feel like carrots are the right thing to have in there. What I've found with carrots is that they don't smash very well (unless you put them in a food processor and turn them into puree) and if you boil them forever they absorb too much water. So to incorporate them into my recipe I had to figure out how to cook them and get rid of some of the water. I finally accomplished this by grating them and then steaming them in a cheesecloth.

I like to use organic carrots because they tend to taste of something. I mean, they actually taste of carrots! You should grate the carrots on a coarse setting (the coarse setting of any "old" grater should be fine). Then line your steamer with cheesecloth and place the grated carrots in the cheesecloth. Steam them in this way for about x minutes or until they are soft. How long you actually have to steam them will depend on how coarsely you grated them. When you remove the carrots from the steamer pick them up in the cheesecloth and leave them in a colander to cool.

Leeks are another must have in cutlets. However, leeks cannot be mashed. So apparently the trick is to fry them in butter until they are soft else they will cause your cutlets to pop. I'm actually extrapolating from advice I have been given about onions! Use the leafy part of your leeks. If you are in SL or ever have been marketing in SL you will know that Sri Lankan leeks have way more green top than white bottom. In Germany it is completely the opposite. My theory is that Germans just leave their leeks in the ground for so long that the green tops are too hard to be eaten and thus have to be trashed. I personally cannot buy leeks with soft enough leaves that they could be used in a cutlet. But I'm hardcore and decided this year was the year for cutlets so I planted my own leeks. And they do not have a thick white bottom AND they have lots of nice soft green leaves (at least now they do!). If you cannot find leeks with soft leaves you can substitute with green onions (scallions, spring onions, whatever you want to call them). And if you are not in SL you know exactly what all these things are!

Leeks straight from my garden

Chop your leeks finely. Add the butter to a pan and pan fry the leeks (scallions, green onions, spring onions,...) together with the garlic. If you want to add onions you can also fry them in the butter. Just make sure you dice them really, really small. If you over fry any of these ingredients they will become hard. You don't want this. So very lightly fry them and as soon as they are soft remove them from the heat. 

By now your potatoes are cool enough. You can smash them with the back of a fork or use your hands. Don't use a potato masher because then you will have croquettes and (just a reminder) we are not making croquettes. Move over to the carrots. Pick them up in the cheesecloth and squeeze some of the water out. Don't squeeze all the water out. Just give it a light squeeze. Too much squeeze will make the carrots very dry and not very tasty. 

Add the carrots to the potatoes along with the leeks/garlic, salt & pepper, bullion powder, breadcrumbs and mix all the ingredients together. 

Now we come to forming the balls. It's very easy and unlike popular belief, they will not pop if they are not perfectly spherical. How big your balls are depends on, well, many things. But mainly it is a matter of taste. I like smaller balls. About a tablespoon full or something that fits neatly in the palm of my hand. So take a tablespoon of mixture and roll it into a nice tight ball. The first time you attempt this recipe you should make all the balls first and line them up on a baking tray (or a large plate, chopping board, etc.). Next, in a bowl, whisk together a tablespoon of flour and one egg. Pour the remaining breadcrumbs into another bowl. 

The next part some people find very messy and end up getting egg into their breadcrumbs and loads of stuff sticking to their hands. To avoid this use my two hand method. 

Take a cutlet (in your right hand) and drop it into the breadcrumbs. Use your left hand to pour some breadcrumbs over it. Once the surface is no longer damp pick it up in your left hand and squeeze it a bit so that the breadcrumbs stick and the cutlet becomes tighter. Dip a bit of this cutlet into the egg mixture and then move it to your right hand where you can roll it about so that the egg dampens all the surface. Then drop the cutlet back into the breadcrumbs, pour some breadcrumbs over it, pick it up in your left hand and put it back on the board until it is ready to be fried. So left hand dry, right hand wet. Of course you can switch the hands. Or if you are really lucky have someone else to do the dry/wet part.

Somewhere along the line you can heat up your oil. You need enough oil to deep fry. If you are using a deep fryer just follow the deep fryers instructions. I use a saucepan and fill it with 1 litre of sunflower oil. You can use whatever oil you like. Nothing can make a cutlet healthy! If you do not use a deep fryer make sure your pan is deep enough so that the oil is only half way up to avoid the oil from overflowing. Heat your oil to 350 Celsius and fry your cutlets until they are golden brown. You should lower them into the hot oil to prevent splashing. I usually fry 3-4 at a time. If you put too many in the temperature of the oil will drop too much and you can only guess what happens then (yes, POP!). If your cutlets sink to the bottom and stay there (mine do) then the part touching the bottom of the pan will burn. So you need to figure out a way to prevent this from happening. I stick my skimmer mesh under them to keep them off the bottom. 

(In case you are wondering what a "skimmer mesh" is)

Drain on paper towels. Enjoy hot with ketchup, Sriracha sauce, or your favourite dip. Or serve them along side rice and curry. Check out my Sri Lankan curry recipes for rice and curry inspiration. 


You can find a printable pdf here.

Wednesday, 14 October 2020

Vegetarian Phyllo Pie

After attempting to make some Turkish cigars I had some left over phyllo pastry. I also happened to have a lot of mushrooms and an urge to eat pie (despite the temperatures outside being 30℃!). The pie filling was very photogenic and my tummy was rumbling even before I had put it in the pie. Definitely a keeper since it tastes as good as it looks.


PS. You could use a basic dough or use my pot pie filling with the phyllo dough.

Preparation time: 90 minutes; Serves 2-4

Ingredients

250 g Brown mushrooms
350 gWhite mushrooms
1 mediumRed onion
1 tbsp.Oil 
250 g Potatoes, peeled
1 tsp.Minced garlic
180 gVegan sausages
2 tbsp.Fresh oregano, finely chopped
1 tsp.Fresh thyme leaves
1 tbsp.Flour
8 leavesSwiss chard (Mangold)
1 tbsp.Olive oil

Salt & pepper

Method:

Wash your mushrooms and either slice them into 4 or quarter them. I've heard you should not wash your mushrooms but I always do because they are always dirty. Cut your onion. You can either dice it or slice it finely. I sliced mine in this instance. Heat the oil in a heavy bottomed frying pan on high heat. When frying mushrooms I always like to use a cast iron pan. It makes the mushrooms brown and caramelises the red onions better. Also using high heat seals in the liquid which makes them taste really good. When the oil is hot add the onions and stir fry for about 1 minute. Next add the mushrooms, sausages and garlic continue to fry stirring occasionally until all the mushrooms are browned (they might not brown if you use a non-stick pan so go for cooked instead). This could take up to 5 minutes. When they are done remove from the heat. 

While your mushrooms are cooking prepare the potatoes by peeling and cutting them into large dice (around 2.5 cm). Boil the potatoes. They should be cooked but not break to pieces because they are going to be cooked again and you don't want them to turn to mush. During the time that the potatoes are boiling, and after the mushrooms are done (else you may burn the mushrooms!), wash and roughly chop the Swiss chard. You can use the stems in the recipe too. Drain the potatoes and add them to the mushrooms. Add salt, pepper, oregano, thyme and Swiss chard, sprinkle the flour on top and then mix everything together.  It is important to sprinkle the flour on top so that it doesn't clump. The flour is to bind together the juices from the mushrooms and chard forming a thick sauce. Return to the cooker on medium heat and continue to carefully turn things over until the chard is cooked (i.e. is limp). 


Put your oven on at 180 ℃ for a fan oven or 200 ℃ for a convection oven.

Now you can concentrate on putting the phyllo dough together. I used store bought dough that was pre-cut to a triangle, but you could use any shape you like and be creative when lining your pan. I used an approx. 20 cm diameter stoneware soufflé dish. Brush your dish with olive oil. Then brush a sheet of dough with olive oil. Make a very thin coating. I found the best way to do this was to use my fingers. I first applied the dough with my brush and then distributed it with my fingers. Line the pan with dough. Make sure there is plenty of overlap and plenty extra to wrap over the top. Each new piece you add to the pie should be coated with olive oil. If you prefer a thicker crust just use more layers of dough, especially if you want to take it out of the pan to serve it. 

Pour in the filling and top it off with some extra dough with not so thin layers of olive oil! 


Bake at 180 ℃ for 30 minutes.




Tuesday, 15 September 2020

Salsa

 I have not posted my salsa recipe. Unbelievable. I can just picture myself stuck somewhere far from home with kilos of ripe tomatoes and bag of chips! 

Chunky homemade salsa

Preparation time: 1 hour; serves 4 - 6

Ingredients:

275 gFleshy tomatoes (Fleischtomaten work well in Germany)
Green chillies (but you can adjust this to your taste, take the seeds out if you must)
75 gWhite onions, finely diced
2Garlic cloves, minced or pulped
1/3 cupCoriander leaves, chopped
1tsp.Salt
2 tsp.Lime juice
1 tbsp.Concentrated tomato paste
1/4 tsp.Chilli powder 


Method:

This is super easy to put together. You can adjust any of the seasonings to your taste. Make it burning hot, or leave out the chilli altogether, it still will taste delicious.

Dice the tomatoes as small as you like. Don't mash them. Salsa is not supposed to be a paste! If your tomatoes are too watery, squeeze out the seeds or drain them after dicing. Slice the green chillies, finely dice the onions, mash the garlic, chop the coriander leaves. Put everything in a bowl except the concentrated tomato paste. 

I'm not sure what you would use in other countries. In Germany this comes in a tube and is available in any supermarket. Because my tomatoes are never really, really red I use the paste to give a bit more colour. It also mixes well with the water that the tomatoes let and makes it a bit less runny. 

Lastly add the tomato paste working it in carefully. You don't want to mash the tomatoes when you do this. You could drain a bit of the water from the salsa and mix it into that if you have trouble. Of course this will depend on how thick your concentrate is. 

Finally, cover the salsa and allow it to stand, preferably in the fridge, for 30 minutes. Be careful, your fridge will reek of onions and garlic, but it will disappear after a few days!

Not so chunky homemade salsa!





Thursday, 23 April 2020

Easter window decorations

What with everyone being at home things have been a bit busy lately! But after 2.5 weeks of it I just had to take a break from everything. I was determined to get the house decorated for Easter. I'm not sure when the last time was that we were at home for Easter. We usually get away from home for the 4 day weekend. This year we were supposed to be in Brisbane, Australia. Yes, we had a 4 month sabbatical planned starting April 1st. Biggest April fool ever. After one and a half years of planning we were all pretty bummed. The worst part is that it's not something we can ever do again as a family because of the kids schooling. Oh well, we'll find our way down under for a vacation some day!

So back to the window decor! I found this great site which had all kinds of great ideas http://www.woohome.com/diy-2/cute-diy-window-decorating-ways-sure-amaze. And I fell in love with the umbrellas and the snow bunnies.


The site with the umbrella instructions was rather cryptic. Even more so if you don't understand German. https://dekoking.com/regenschirme-aus-papier-basteln/ So here are a few tips. These are not stand alone instructions, you'll need to follow those on the above website and use these as added explanations.

  • Use any paper you like. Don't use card stock.
  • The circumference of the circle is approximately 7 cm. I used a spool of wire to draw around.
  • You will need to cut out 7-8 circles. 
I used some thick transparent paper that I had left over from making little lampshades for Christmas lights
  • When you fold them the "pretty" side should be on the inside (very counter intuitive but you kind of look at the umbrellas from underneath.
  • I didn't have the nice thin double sided sticky tape that the instructions used. And as you'll know, going to the craft store was not an option. So I used Uhu. After a few failed attempts I figured out a good way to make it work that was not too messy. So after folding the circle into quarters I glued the upper side, pressed it together and let it dry using some bead boxes to weigh it down. 
Here is where I put the glue
And here they are drying
  • While they were drying I made the umbrella handles. These are just wooden skewers with wire attached to them so that they could be hung. In my case the wire was an old necklace. I took a wooden bead and thread the wire through it twice and then rammed it onto the top of the skewer (see pictures below). It worked well even without glue because the umbrella is actually rather light. 


  • By the time I was done with the handle the glue had dried on the "petals". Then I opened up the pockets a bit and checked to see how many I needed to make the umbrella. 
As you can see here I needed 7. On another I needed 8.
  • I glued as show in the picture, to make two halves of the umbrella. This is necessary so you can put the handle in the middle.

  • Then I glued the handle to one side with the pointy part sticking out at the top. After this dried I stuck both halves together. 


And this whole project was inspired by a broken necklace that has been hanging on my cupboard door for over a year. I did a bit of upcycling and used it to hang the umbrellas.