Sunday, February 13, 2011

Rubber duckie, you're the one...


















 


Welcome to our bathroom in it's 1950 glory.  It's full of chrome- chrome shower doors on the tub, chrome medicine cabinet, chrome (okay, plastic pretending to be chrome) light above the medicine cabinet, even the inside door knob is chrome (all the others in the house are brass).  It also has nice creamy white wall tiles with matching fixtures.  And octagon and dot floor tile in faun/suntan. And bright blue with black outline wallpaper... which does not go with the floor... at all... After hunting through many, many wallpapers, I found one that matches the not quite pink, not quite beige floor- one from Thibaut (taped over the blue fun).  Just need Mom to come show us how to hang wallpaper!


Photo from RetroRenovation.com
Our bathroom contains the one fixture that was upgraded since the house was built- the sink.  Unfortunately when they decided to spiff the place up a bit to prepare it for sale, they took out the original (no doubt chrome-aplenty) wall hung sink with a big moose of a modern pedestal sink.  It's way too big for our modest room and still doesn't help the fact that the only storage in the room is the medicine cabinet! So at a pilgrimage to New England Demolition and Salvage, we picked up a NOS 50s tile-in sink.  I'm going to build it a cabinet inspired by this American Standard ad... and we'll probably add some chrome or glass shelves on either side of the medicine cabinet to hold spare towels. We also found this fabulous vintage NuTone exhaust fan with light to round out our chrome collection.  Just need to find a nicer vanity light for above the medicine cabinet to round it all out.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Now you're cooking with...

...gas? The one thing I regret from our house buying experience is not calling the gas company... We asked the agents and a bunch of houses on the street have gas... so no problem, right?  Wrong.  There are 2 (yes 2) gas mains on our street... both approach our house... but then they stop... about 90 ft away... How much is it to extend a gas main 90 ft?  $9000! Yikes!  Our hopes of having a gas stove and super efficient (tax credit qualifying) boiler were dashed... So this past week we had the nicest oil boiler we could find installed- our first major upgrade to the house. 



 But what about cooking?? We nearly got rid of our old 39" Hotpoint electric stove when we moved in (above)... except it's 39" and a 40" stove wouldn't fit... which turned out to be a blessing... it's a great little stove with a built in dutch oven and the best oven ever... That thing gets to 500 degrees easily and makes the best pizza and bread!  Now I see where people say you should live with things for a year and then decide what to do to the house... We've embraced our little friend... Unfortunately, a couple weeks ago we went to make our famous pizza and the bottom element was dead!  Oh no!

Fortunately we found another Hotpoint (also 39") nearby on Craigslist (above left)... This one has a drop-down deep well cooker (so you can use it as a dutch oven or normal burner), 2 ovens, and push-button controls... Supposedly push-button is super cool, but I worry about it since that's a LOT of switches!  This one's been sat in a cellar for a year, so we need to clean her up and hope everything works.. If not, we can take some parts from our old one.  It's sad after 60 years of service, our trusty girl is being reduced to being a parts car... but it's impossible to find parts for these things.  We'll miss you, old friend!  And we're sorry we ever thought a modern stove could replace you...

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Stir until the ingredients combine into....

...a blog post!  Yes, yes, I know.  My New February resolution is to catch up and be more regular with posting. It begins with me offloading pics from my camera finally!

Our 50s house often reminds me of the house my grampa built in the 50s... and my gramma's kitchen!  Especially around the holidays, I am struck by the urge to stop and make some family recipes (read as: cookies!).  The same way gramma did... the hard way... I have many of gramma's cooking tools and when it comes to making the lebkuchen (a German spiced cookie), only one thing will do... the meat grinder.

Yep, that's right folks... to make the best Xmas cookeies ever, you need a meat grinder.  So I dig out gramma's meat grinder to grind the almonds and citron.  In the box gramma stored the grinder in is a hand written note about which piece was needed to attach it to the counter correctly... I know most of gramma's notes were just reminders to herself, but they're happy surprises that make me smile when I find one... and they're everywhere... so I know there'll be more to find.

Did the cookies turn out like gramma's?  Not quite. There's two recipes that made it to me, so maybe I picked the wrong one... or maybe it's gramma's adjustments that never did get written down... but I do know I got one thing right- the minute hint of metal and elbow grease.