Wednesday, 30 August 2017

~crock pot applesauce~

Welcome to a new series here on My Sweet Savannah where a group of us will be sharing seasonal recipes with you! My friend Kristen of Ella Claire Inspired is heading this one up. Be sure to scroll all the way to the bottom of this post to get all the yummy apple recipes!

I decided to make applesauce in the crock pot. Not only is this a super easy recipe,
 {kids can make this!}
but it will make your house smell great! It is also a way to use up those apples on your trees. If you don't have apple trees, a quick trip to the grocery store will solve that!

Any kind of apples will work. You can use a combination of apples, or if you have a favorite type, use those. 

I like to make this in big batches and gift to neighbors. I also like to freeze it and then we can enjoy it year round. 




I like using Weck jars for the applesauce.
You can find them here and here.
You can also print out {any size you like} 
the recipe and add a bit of bakers twine to tie it on the jar if you are gifting.
Simply right click on the recipe and save it to your computer. Add it to a word document, adjust size, and print onto cardstock.







For reference, this recipe filled up 3 1/2 liter Weck jars.
If you prefer a smoother applesauce, simply puree it in a blender or food processor after it has fully cooled.

Looking for more apple recipes? 
~Look no further~





Apple Pie Cinnamon Rolls by Ella Claire | Rustic Apple Cranberry Pie by Anderson and Grant |
Apple Cranberry Slab Pie by Inspired by Charm | Apple Donuts by A Burst of Beautiful |
Caramel Apple Tart by Julie Blanner

Easy Apple Dumplings by Craftberry Bush | Apple Crisp by House 214 Design |
Apple Cider Scones by Everyday Occasions | Apple Fritter Skillet Bake by Nest of Posies |
Rustic Apple Tarte Tatin by Maison de Pax

Paleo Gluten Free Apple Crisp by Nesting with Grace | Crock Pot Applesauce by My Sweet Savannah |
Gluten Free Apple Crisp by City Farmhouse |
Baked Breakfast Apples with Oatmeal by French Country Cottage |

No Churn Apple Pie Ice Cream by Boxwood Avenue | Bird's Nest Apple Pie by Zevy Joy |
Apple Upside Down Spice Cake by Love Grows Wild

xoxo


from
http://www.mysweetsavannahblog.com/2017/08/crock-pot-applesauce.html

Tuesday, 29 August 2017

~refined rustic style~

Yesterday I shared a home that defines refined rustic. 
But what exactly is refined rustic?

It's all about using a lot of texture. 
Think shiplap, wood, baskets, metals, a subtle mix that looks harmonious. 
You can also create this look by balancing contrast. 
My favorite is black and white, but don't be afraid to mix all different shades of white.
Cream, bright white, lacquered white, chippy off whites, use it all.

Use a mixture of materials, both hard and soft. A steel console table with a slipcovered linen sofa would be a good example. 

Refined rustic is good because it's family friendly, not too stuffy, but still looks clean and edited.

Here is a table setting that to me sums up "refined rustic"
The mostly white palette is very refined, as well as the matching well put together place settings and the flowers down the center.
The rustic comes in with the wood "runner" and the mix match chairs.
Notice some of the chairs are wood.


This bathroom is another example.
The concrete sinks are rustic but the lines are very refined.



The rustic wood beams in this living room balance out the sleek interior and hard lines 
of the furniture and the monochromatic color scheme.


I am really loving this style.
How about you? Are you a fan?

xoxo



from
http://www.mysweetsavannahblog.com/2017/08/refined-rustic-style.html

Monday, 28 August 2017

~a home tour where rustic meets modern~

In the latest issue of Cottage White magazine I saw the most beautiful home.
So of course, wanting to see more, I googled it and came up with a great article on it from 
This house captures everything I love right now. Clean lines, a mix of metals, raw wood, and lots of black and white.

Take a look for yourself, I hope you like it as much as I do!

This all white kitchen looks anything but stark. 
Mixing different shades of white and adding texture with shiplap, the caned barstools, etc. helps from keeping it boring.
And those mirrors are fabulous!
I found almost identical ones here.


This room is my favorite room in the whole house. It's cozy, the black {my favorite color to use in interiors} grounds everything and can we talk about that fireplace?


Their entryway is the perfect combination of modern ad rustic. The clean lines of the table with the old metal box underneath, the wood lamp and the pitcher with flowers adds that farmhouse feel.


Check out that herringbone walkway!


The back entrance or mud room, what's not to love?



Contrast should be my middle name-love it.


Do you think that vanity is metal? Fabulous, just fabulous. 
Love their "artwork" too.


Another shot of my favorite room. Of course it overlooks a lake. I wish I knew the source for that metal cabinet.


I hope you enjoyed this tour as much as I did. To see it in print, look for this magazine:
{page 16-31}


xoxo



from
http://www.mysweetsavannahblog.com/2017/08/a-home-tour-where-rustic-meets-modern.html

Friday, 25 August 2017

The Most Famous Sofa is No More!



When you think of famous sofas, just a few come to mind.  There is the Knole Sofa, from the 1600s, the first and most important sofa made.  Though modified for today’s comfort, this version of a sofa is still widely made today – including this one that was just installed in Provence:


A modern day version of the Knole sofa seen at the “Le Mas des Poiriers.”


Another iconic sofa is the Chesterfield.  Long thought to have been first made for Lord Phillip Stanhope, the 4th Earl of Chesterfield, in the 18th century, this has never been authenticated.  Still, the Chesterfield remains one of the most widely recognized sofas in the world.



And then there is Lee Radziwill’s famous silk velvet Tiger sofa – seen above.

Though not as famous as the Chesterfield or the Knole, it’s hard to think of another personally held sofa that is as well known as this one.  Radziwill custom ordered the sofa in the 1960s when she moved from London to New York City.  The sofa was placed in her library with its lilac walls.  Radziwill kept the sofa for years and years and when her son Anthony moved into an apartment, she gifted him with the sofa.

Is this the most famous sofa of all times?  Surely it’s not as famous as the original Knole sofa but it’s hard to think of a more well known one.

 

In the new Veranda, this house features a tiger sofa in Scalamandre silk velvet, inspired by Lee Radziwill’s own sofa.  The sofa was the setting off point for the decor of the entire house.

The Radziwill sofa is so well known that when Lee’s daughter-in-law, Carole Radziwill, wrote her memoir, she included this story about the sofa: 

“I have bumped up against history.  It won’t be the first time.  Most things here, I am learning, have a story.  The tiger couch, for instance, is not just a couch, but one his mother had custom-made at De Angeles. It has been photographed for fashion books. People in certain circles know this couch, just as people in other circles know this chair.”



Carole Radziwill is famous for all her many lives, like the cats she is now fostering.  First she was a single, very respected TV reporter working in war torn areas.  Her career as a reporter earned her three Emmys and a Peabody Award. 


Carole and Anthony Radziwill at their wedding. 


While working as a reporter, Carole kissed her Prince and got married.  And he was not just any Prince, but he was also the nephew of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.  The title is from his father, who comes from a long line of Polish royalty.  Apparently Anthony Radziwill never used his inherited title although his cousin and surrogate brother,  John Kennedy Jr., used to teasingly call Anthony “Principe.”   The two couples, Anthony and Carole and John and his wife Carolyn, became the closest of friends, and the four were inseparable.

Anthony was a testicular cancer survivor when they married and he suffered a recurrence of cancer on their honeymoon.  Their five years of their marriage was marked by sickness, operations,  and heartache.   During this stage, Carole was the young bride but also a full time nurse. 


John and Carolyn Kennedy’s ashes were sent to sea.  Anthony was very, very ill at this stage.


After valiantly fighting to beat cancer, Anthony was very ill when he and Carole received the horrifying news that Carolyn and John Kennedy had died in a plane crash.  Anthony clung to life for just three weeks before he too died.   Suddenly, Carole was a young widow who lost not only her husband, but also her best friends.  She was grief stricken for years.

Five years later Carole released her book “What Remains.”    It’s a gut wrenching tale of cancer and death and loneliness and what remains left behind.  I highly recommend it.


(to order the book, just click on the cover.)

Carole was the celebrated best-selling author in the next phase of her life, although she mostly stayed under the radar, that is until producer Andy Cohen, a friend, talked her into joining his hit Bravo show – “Real Housewives of New York.”   On the show, Carole plays the role of the intelligent, mature housewife although she was embroiled in a bit of a scandal when she started dating someone about 20 years her junior.


Carole and her young boyfriend Adam Kenworthy

Hey, it’s good enough for our President AND the President of France!


Carole lives in an interesting building in between So-Ho and the West Village in an Historic Landmark District.  The five story Queen Ann building was built in 1886 as a grammar school.  Her apartment has large windows and 16’ ceilings in the main living room.  A tiny kitchen and bedroom ring the expansive living room.   Carole ran for and won a place on the co-op’s board of directors.

A few years ago, Carole made a big splash when she completely decorated her condominium in gold and caramel tones with green accents.  The color scheme was chosen around the famous Radziwill tiger sofa. 

The renovation  was beautiful and it made all the blogs and websites.

The issue though became the sofa itself.  The silk velvet fabric is so expensive that most can’t afford even a pillow made out of it, much less the 30 yards needed to cover an entire sofa.  After almost sixty years, the velvet was becoming rather decrepit.

About ten years ago, Carole had pieced the velvet back together by taking fabric from the back of the bottom cushions that was then used to cover the torn parts.

Now, ten years later, the repairs were failing.  The sofa was badly in need of a restoration – but at those prices, who could afford it?

When the new season started a few months ago, the sofa became a talking point.  The other housewives commented on how bad it was beginning to look.  Carole had started fostering kittens for Howard Stern’s wife Beth Stern and their claws had destroyed the fragile sofa completely.

On Andy Cohen’s late night show, even he asked about the famous sofa and Carole told him it was an issue, explaining how well known it is and that people are invested in it!

So it came as a complete shock to look at the Architectural Digest web site today and realize that the famous Tiger Sofa is no more!!

After all these years, the most well-known tiger sofa is forever gone.


Here’s a look at Carole’s condo – Before her first remodeling, The First Remodeling and The Newest Decor from today!


BEFORE:  Before the first remodeling, Carole had an architect add these rather scary-looking, but stunning stairs up to the second bedroom.  Underneath the stairs, she had a piano.



BEFORE:  Another view of the dark floors and modern staircase.  Definitely in need up a decorator.



DURING THE FIRST RENOVATION – Carol added a large chandelier and the apartment got a new coat of paint.



RENOVATION #1:   For the first renovation, Carole hired Wayman Robertson.  He refinished the front hall in Philip Jeffries Rivets wallpaper.  At the opposite end is the kitchen with its new striped floors.



RENOVATION #1:  The gold rug, the tiger sofa, the two chairs now covered in green velvet.  Large new mirror between the windows, new chandelier, long console behind sofa.  A small dining table and two chairs were placed under the large mirror.


RENOVATION #1:   The windows are not the same width – but by dressing them alike, it’s not so noticeable.

.

RENOVATION #1:  The view behind the sofa.   Art work, matching lamps.



RENOVATION #1 – A big change was the addition of the gold velvet sectional underneath the stairs – the piano is now gone.  Notice that the upholstered feet mimic the feet on the tiger sofa.



RENOVATION #1 – The ceiling was wallpapered with silver leaf in a square pattern.  This helps to warm up the room and draw the ceiling back down to more human proportions.


RENOVATION #1 – A night view of the condo.


RENOVATION #1 – Carol posed in front of the new velvet sectional.



And here, in front of the staircase.   The dining table and chairs have been moved over here for some reason.


BEFORE:  Carol doesn’t cook so she decides to turn her kitchen into more of an office space.  Of course right after the renovation is completed, she meets a budding Chef who moves in and starts cooking up a storm in her “office.”



BEFORE:  Carol  talks to her architect about turning the kitchen into more of an office.


RENOVATION #1 – The kitchen was updated.  New mirrored subway tile backsplash.  New striped floors.  Counter space is turned into desk space by moving the sink over.



RENOVATION #1:  Carole’s small bedroom is downstairs.  Here is covered in a suede fabric on the bed and walls. 



RENOVATION #1: The second bedroom is upstairs.  Carole turned this small space into an office/closet.


The first renovation was given high marks. It looked good in photographs and on blogs and even better when Carole was filmed in her apartment for Real Housewives of New York.



But, this season, Season 9, the sofa became an issue.  Looking back to an early episode, I should have realized a completely new renovation was in the works:  fabric samples in blue tones were laid across the back of the sofa.  I just didn’t really notice those!



In a later episode, Bethany comes over to talk about the sofa.  She tells Carole that the destruction “looks intentional at this point.”  She says the sofa looks like it has gone through a ginzo knife and a Cuisinart.  They decide to turn over the cushion.


And here you can see the bottom cushion is covered in a plain brown fabric, since a decade ago, Carole had already used that fabric to repair the sofa.

There was just no way to go on with the sofa like this, especially with a litter of foster kittens running around. 

When Carol meets John Bossard, a designer, in Aspen, she asks him to redecorate for her.  Perhaps he already knows about the famous Radziwill sofa.  No one can be sure of that.   It’s hard to believe but Bossard does not have a web site up, yet.  Oy.  NO WEB SITE?!?!?

At first the order was just to redo “THE” sofa but of course that never works and John’s work was not finished until the entire apartment was redecorated from top to bottom, just a few years after it was all done before. 


Bossard kept the Jeffries paper in the entry but the rug was updated with a more traditional design which suits the small space much better.  The kitchen was closed off with a frosted door that lets in light but keeps out the distraction of ovens and refrigerators.    The ceiling was painted a dark color and a contemporary sputnik fixture was added along with a collection of mirrors.  And it looks like all the trim was painted a darker brown.  The changes are subtle, but the space is much more elegant than it was before.



WOW.  WOW.   The new apartment is completely different!!!  It’s now icy blue and silver and very sleek much like Carole is!!  The tall mirror remains but now there are blue curtains and a fabric shade, along with window seats in blues.  The arrangement is different too – the curved sofa that was under the stairs has been moved across from the Radziwill sofa that is now –EEK – in an icy blue fabric by Lee Jofa!!!

Say a goodbye prayer for the most famous sofa that is now just a memory.


And here is how it looks.  Bossard said he had to rebuild the sofa, replacing the filling and reconstructing its original form.  It looks wonderful and brand new and good to go for another 60 years.  Carole’s twin Brutalist table lamps, wearing new icy blue shades,  remain on the console, next to a new piece of art work.  There are all new tables – the wood coffee table is gone, as are all the side tables.   The one thing I miss are the Chinese chairs that once flanked the console.  I don’t understand why they were tossed.


Carole’s original Dunbar chairs,  now recovered, remain, as does the shelf and cabinet.  The floors were also redone, they are now a silvery gray brown.  

I love the new furniture arrangement – it makes more sense like this.


Another banquette was added to the corner, this time it becomes a small dining spot, which is handy when your boyfriend is a chef.  The sunburst mirror remains, but everything else is new.


The view in front of the cabinet and shelf.  The faux sheep are at the right and at the left,  the plant is actually a lamp!



A close up of the new icy blue sofa.  In the corner, an acrylic pedestal.



The kitchen aka office has a new fabric wall, but that’s all.



The first floor bedroom has also been completely redone.  In silvery blues with pink accents – it blends with the living room decor.  The walls are upholstered and there is a new petal art exhibit by Bradley Sabin above the beds.   The vanity was moved down from the second floor closet.



There is just enough room for another window seat in pink.



And upstairs in the second bedroom, the once office closet is now a large dressing room.  The room was carpeted in leopard in homage to the now long gone tiger.  The ceiling was upholstered and everything is now dramatically lit.  It’s for a star, that’s for sure.  But it’s hard to believe they actually sell this space as a “second bedroom” when in reality it is just a small closet!

And so, this sofa that made it through the swinging sixties, the Vietnam war days, the Bonfire of the Vanities 80s…..


to the advent of the internet, through the new millennium, to the destruction of the twin towers and to the age of social media!!!  Whew!!


Do you think it will last another 60 years?  I doubt it.  Surely it won’t be remembered as a blue sofa!  Long live the tiger sofa!!!





from
http://cotedetexas.blogspot.com/2017/08/the-most-famous-sofa-is-no-more.html

modern farmhouse kitchens

While grocery shopping the other day I was drawn to this new magazine, Modern Farmhouse Kitchens. I think modern farmhouse might just be m...