Summer Shopping List

Summer Shopping List | Sophster-Toaster Blog

Aerie swimsuit \\ Tarte eyeshadow palette \\ ModCloth skirt \\ Lime Crime semi-permanent hair colour \\ ModCloth shorts \\ ModCloth pajamas \\ ModCloth sandals \\ Rosehound Apparel top

I feel like my wardrobe is missing several key pieces this season. Last summer, I lived in old clothes that were sacrificed to new puppy nipping, pulling, jumping and playing. I didn’t buy anything new because I didn’t know when I would be able to have nice things again without fear that my new furry friend would destroy them. Now that she’s all grown up and doesn’t see shoes as tasty snacks and flowy hemlines as tug toys, I can wear whatever I want… but oh no! I have nothing to wear.

I won’t be able to pick up every item on my summer shopping list, but here are the fun and beautiful warm weather things I’ll certainly be choosing from.

Summer Shopping List | Sophster-Toaster Blog

Sparkle Collective DIY hoop art kit \\ ModCloth clutch \\ Les Tresors De Claudet vintage picnic basket \\ Coldfish vintage dress \\ Keds shoes \\ Warby Parker glasses \\ American Apparel shorts \\ Urban Outfitters swimsuit \\ Cat Mamola necklace \\ Oh Me Oh My dress

All images courtesy of retailers.

Garden Rhubarb Macarons

Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog

I decided to keep it simple with this month’s new macaron recipe. I made simple vanilla/almond flavour shells and used rhubarb, cut from my garden, to make a quick coulis to flavour a luxurious pastry cream filling. The result is a decadent looking cookie with a subtle sweet rhubarb flavour that tastes just like springtime.

Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog

Ingredients

for the rhubarb coulis

  • 1 cup fresh rhubarb, chopped (about three stalks)
  • ¼ cup sugar
  • 3 tbsp water

for the macaron shells

  • 1 cup ground almonds (as finely ground as you can find)
  • 1½ cups icing sugar
  • 3 large egg whites, at room temperature
  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 1 tsp high quality vanilla extract
  • pink gel food colouring

for the rhubarb pastry cream

(adapted from Joy of Cooking)

  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 2 tbsp flour
  • 2 tbsp cornstarch
  • 4 large egg yolks
  • 1 1/3 cups milk
  • ¾ tsp vanilla
  • 5 tbsp rhubarb coulis
  • pink gel food colouring

Method

for the rhubarb coulis

  1. Wash the rhubarb and chop into 1 cm pieces.
  2. Add to a small saucepan with the sugar and water and bring to a simmer over medium heat, stirring to dissolve the sugar and coat the rhubarb.
  3. Reduce the heat to low and simmer for 20 minutes, stirring occasionally and pushing the rhubarb pieces against the side of the saucepan to break them up.
  4. Move to a small bowl and set aside.

for the macaron shells

  1. Prepare your parchment sheets by drawing 1″ circles, ½” apart across the entire sheet (or using silicon baking mats with the circles already printed on them) and placing them on a large flat surface suitable for drying your batter, like a dining table. You will need 2-3 half sheet pan size pieces.
  2. Sift ground almonds and icing sugar, together, twice. Set aside.
  3. In a large stainless steel mixing bowl, beat egg whites with a hand or stand mixer on high speed until you have a foam with no liquid remaining.
  4. Slowly add the sugar while continuing to beat the egg whites. Beat on high speed until the egg whites reach stiff peaks. You’ve made meringue!
  5. Add vanilla and beat in.
  6. Fold your almond and icing sugar mixture into the meringue in two parts.
  7. Here’s the part that takes practice: it’s time for the macaronnage. With a spatula, spread the batter, with some force, against the side of the bowl. Then scoop it up by running the spatula along the side of the bowl again and try to flip it all over and sort-of lightly smack it back into the bottom of the bowl. Gather the batter up again and repeat 15-20 times. It takes some time to figure out the best way to do this, don’t be afraid to play around with it. When doing the macaronnage correctly, repeating more than 20 times can result in oily, blotchy macarons, but I’ve found that doing it incorrectly doesn’t count towards this limit. If you are doing it right, the batter will take on a noticeable and somewhat sudden change in consistency, this means you are about half-way to that limit. When finished, the batter should be thickened and drip slowly from the spatula. You will have to pipe it onto your baking sheets/mats and it won’t work if the batter is too runny. This is the technique that defines macarons, this is what makes mastery of them impressive.
  8. Add a small amount of the gel food colouring and lightly marble it through the batter.
  9. For perfectly round macarons, use a large, 0.4″ plain tip with a pastry bag, or do it the lazy way and cut a corner off a zip top bag for mostly round macarons. Twist (or don’t yet cut) the bag at the tip and place it, tip side down, in a tall glass. Fill with your batter and twist, close or clip the other end to help keep the messy batter moving in the right direction. Pipe the batter into the centre of the circles on your sheets/mats and stop before reaching the edges as the batter will spread out a bit.
  10. Once finished piping, carefully pick the sheets/mats up and drop them back on to the table from a high of a couple of inches. The theory is that this helps the cookies keep their round shape and form the little bubbles (the pied) when you put them in the oven.
  11. Leave the cookies on the table, uncovered, for 15-30 minutes to dry. This is a good time to preheat your oven to 350°F. You will know the macarons are dry when they look smooth and are no longer sticky to the touch.
  12. Place an oven rack in the centre of your oven. Place a sheet of macarons on two doubled up sheet pans (this will stop the bottoms from getting too hot, resulting in cracked macarons) and bake for about 15 minutes. Rotate the pan half way through baking. At this point, if you want to try to keep your cookies light in colour, place a second oven rack directly below the first and move your cookies down to it, then place a third sheet pan above the cookies on the higher rack to protect them from the heat above. It can be hard to tell when the macaron are done. I pull them out when the kitchen smells sweet and the cookies look crisp, have just started to brown and don’t look splotchy in the middle.
  13. As soon as the parchment sheet/baking mat is cool enough to handle, take it out of the pan with all the cookies on top and place it on a cooling rack. The macarons will be too sticky to remove from the sheet/mat now; once cooled, they should peel off easily. I usually wait a few minutes for the pans to cool a bit and for the oven to come back to a steady temperature before moving the next sheet to the pans and baking the next round.

for the rhubarb pastry cream

  1. Vigorously whisk together the sugar, flour, cornstarch and egg yolks until they are thick and pale yellow.
  2. Bring the milk to a simmer over medium-low heat in a medium saucepan.
  3. Temper the egg mixture by slowly pouring abut 1/3 of the hot milk into the mixture, whisking constantly.
  4. Add this new mixture back into the saucepan and cook over medium-low heat until it has thickened and any liquid is just about worked in. It will get quite thick, quite quickly so whisk constantly and be sure to scrape the bottom and sides often to keep it from burning.
  5. Remove from heat and whisk in the vanilla. Whisk in the rhubarb coulis, a tbsp at a time. Add a small amount of the gel food colouring and whisk in. Transfer to a bowl and cover with cling film to prevent a skin from forming on the surface. Cool on the counter and then refrigerate until cold before piping into the macarons.

Pastry cream doesn’t keep as well as other fillings so don’t fill these cookies until you are ready to serve and be sure to promptly store them in the refrigerator afterwards.

Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog

You will have coulis and pastry cream leftover. The coulis will keep for a few weeks and is quite a treat on pancakes. The pastry cream will only a keep a few days and can be used to make several lovely things, notably rhubarb & custard tarts. It can also be eaten with a spoon.

Garden Rhubarb Macarons | Sophster-Toaster Blog

All photos by me.

Backyard Life

Backyard Life | Sophster-Toaster Blog

When we bought our first house two summers ago, after a decade of renting apartments, we took on an overgrown mess of a yard. We moved in at the end of the summer and didn’t really even know how much space there was or what was under and behind the tangled vines, hundreds of self-seeded onion and garlic shoots, and general garbage that had been casually tossed into the yard for years.

We spent all fall, winter (yes, winter!) and spring that first year trying to get it cleaned up. We pulled out all the weeds, defined the garden and lawn from each other,  tried to fill in the spotty grass, cleaned up all the garbage and hauled out the cinder blocks and old bathtub, and rebuilt a section of fence. The house came with a decent deck and we were able to put some vegetables into the garden last summer, so we certainly enjoyed our first summer in our first yard, but this year, after another year of work, we’re really getting to a place where we love spending time in our yard.

We spent the spring getting the garden ready for planting, seeding in more of the lawn, and pulling out the over grown and sickly bamboo and replacing it with some more manageable shrubs. We’ve got plans to put in a small barbecue patio in an awkward part of the yard in the next few weekends, and then I think it will be pretty close to perfect! I’m very much looking forward to spend my entire summer in the backyard with Pepper and the hubs, sipping lemonade and enjoying the spoils of all our hard work.

Backyard Life | Sophster-Toaster Blog Backyard Life | Sophster-Toaster Blog Backyard Life | Sophster-Toaster Blog Backyard Life | Sophster-Toaster Blog Backyard Life | Sophster-Toaster Blog Backyard Life | Sophster-Toaster Blog Backyard Life | Sophster-Toaster Blog Backyard Life | Sophster-Toaster Blog

Dress ModCloth
Jacket U.S. Polo Assn.
Shoes ModCloth (other colours)
Hair Combs Amazon

All photos by Matt Harrison.

Fleeting Seasons

We seem to have skipped spring here. We had snow falling right up to the end of April then switched suddenly to 20°C weather with no going back. All the plants have burst into life. It seemed like the magnolia and fruit trees would never get their flowers until they were suddenly there. Then, I think due to the sudden start to summer, they had all fallen away and been replaced with leaves within a week.

I thought I had lots of time to photograph my beautiful crab apple tree in bloom, but the petals all fell away before I got the chance. It feels very representative of the way life has been going since I became one of those very busy adults. The seasons and the weather slip away before I knew they were here.

That’s why, this summer, I’ve got a list and big plans to accomplish everything on it. I’m going to spend time with the people I love at the cottage, and spend as much time as I can swimming, even if my only companion is the dog. I’m going to sit on patios in pretty dresses, drinking radlers, shandies and cocktails. I’m finally going to find a good place for breakfast/brunch in this city that I’ve lived in for nearly a decade. I’m going to put lots of vegetables I’ve never grown before in my garden. I’m going to work hard and spend as much time as possible outside on the weekends. I’m going to say yes to the things that make me nervous and no to the things that make me sad. I’m going to thoroughly enjoy this summer before it slips away!

Top Banana Republic
Skirt ModCloth
Necklace Emery & Opal
Hair Flowers H&M
Earrings very old

All photos by me.