Making Beeswax Lip Balm

I love making homemade lip balm using beeswax.  There are many recipes out there and you really need to experiment with the wax to oil ratios and the different types of oils in order to find the one that works best for you.

I prefer a simple recipe that uses only beeswax and a liquid oil, such as olive or sunflower.  I also like to add a few drops of vitamin E oil and sometimes an essential oil, such as peppermint.

Your lip balm can go into any container, but I love to use twist-up tubes that you can find at a soap making supply company.

Melt 1 part beeswax and 1 to 2 parts* oil in a bowl set on top of a pan with an inch or so of simmering water.

When the wax is melted, carefully remove the bowl from the heat and add a few drops of vitamin E oil and a few drops of peppermint essential oil.  Then, for a colored lip tint, add a little bit of lip safe mica.

Using a dropper, fill the tubes or other containers.

Then, allow it to set until fully cooled and hardened.

Enjoy your lip balm!

* If this is your first time making lip balm you might want to start with the least amount of oil and test the consistency.  Then you can add more oil, if needed.  To test, take a spoon that has been in the freezer and dip it in your lip balm mixture.  The lip balm will harden on the cold spoon.  Try it out on your lips!  Adjust oil, as needed.  (I got the spoon idea from this Soap Queen TV episode about making candles, which is a similar process to making lip balm.)

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Parisian Macarons

Parisian macaron is the new cupcake. They are everywhere. Every single one of the baking blogs I read has had at least one post about macarons. Bakerella even made Macaron Pops.

Do a google image search on macarons and prepare to be swept away to baked goods heaven.

Better yet, do a google image search on Pierre Herme macarons and, wow.

I found out that Mirabelles in Burlington sells French macarons, so I went there and bought some. Okay, twice. They were so good.

It was then that I decided I had to make my own.

After reading and researching, I found this excellent post from Serious Eats, How to Make Macarons.

Side note: That post was from October 2007. What rock have I been living under? I am only just recently learning of these amazing confections.

Here are the ingredients from the Serious Eats version:

Ingredients

225 grams icing sugar
125 grams ground almonds
110 grams egg whites (about 4), aged overnight at room temperature
30 grams granulated sugar
Pinch of salt

You’ll need to read that whole post, though, before you attempt this yourself.

Okay, so the first thing I did was take out a small loan to buy the almond meal. That stuff was $11/pound!

I found it in the natural section of the supermarket. You can make your own, but I do not have a good quality food processor.

Then, I had to convert all of the measurements into ounces because my scale is America-centric and doesn’t have grams. (Actually, it’s a postal scale that I use for measuring soap ingredients. USPS doesn’t need to measure in grams.)

Ingredients

7.9 ounces icing sugar
4.4 ounces ground almonds
3.9 ounces egg whites
1 ounce granulated sugar
Pinch of salt

Those are all weight ounces, not measuring cup ounces.

I read somewhere that you should age the egg whites for 3 days. (Ew, I know.) I put mine out Friday night and made my macarons Sunday afternoon. (I know, ew.) It makes the egg whites thin and watery, and gives your meringue more volume.

Pre-measure everything and have it ready before you start.

The almond meal is lumpy. Push it through a sieve before using.

Sift the powdered sugar, too. Then, whisk them together in a bowl and set aside.

Make the meringue.

Fold it into the almond/sugar mixture.

That’s it. Fill up a piping bag. I didn’t even use a tip; I just cut off the end.

Pipe onto your baking sheets, lined with parchment or a silicone baking mat thingy.

I went out and bought beautiful, shiny, new aluminum baking sheets. They work better than the non-stick because they don’t over-brown the bottoms.

Now, I have read everywhere that you have to let the macaron batter sit for an hour to form a skin and that is how you get the feet, or something like that, but that Serious Eats post mentioned that David Lebovitz didn’t think that was important.  So, I decided to try it both ways.

Here is the one place where I deviated from the Serious Eats post (well, besides the ganache recipe): I baked mine at 300-degrees, not 325.  And I did not use a double baking sheet or prop the door to the oven.  I basically followed the baking instructions on this post by Bakerella, where she takes a macaron class with Tartelette.

Go look at the photos at the top of that post and prepare to swoon!  While you are there, read the post.  It’s best to have read at least a couple accounts of how to make these before you try it.

I baked my first sheet of macarons right after they were piped.  When I opened the oven to look at them, I literally squealed when I saw that they had feet!  (Click for larger picture.)

My first batch of macarons.

Here is the side-by-side comparison of the sheet that went straight in the oven after piping and the one that rested about 1.5 hours.

The one on the left is the one that sat out.  It does have a higher foot, but it was kind of cracked, too.  The domed top is almost separated from the foot.  The one on the right went right in the oven.  That is from the same sheet as the ones above, cooling on the rack.  I liked those better.  (And they were shiny.)

I filled them with chocolate ganache, but not the recipe from the macaron recipe.  I made this one from Martha.

And here they are.  But, the pictures do not do them justice.  I want to marry these. They are that pretty.

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Happy Easter!

I hope you all had a wonderful Easter!

My Easter started out with me remembering that I forgot to boil the eggs for coloring, so I got right out of bed and got to work.  While I was in the kitchen, I made a batch of rolls, which came out perfect, like little fluffy pillows of buttery, bready goodness.

After the eggs and rolls were done, I put the finishing touches on my desserts and prepared the platter for lunch.

Last night, I was looking up how long I needed to cook the ham for, so I could plan a preparation schedule, and I found the best ham recipe ever.  No, I mean ever.  It was so amazing.  And, I had fresh syrup from the sugar house we visited last weekend, which made it all the more so.

The rest of the dinner consisted of mashed red potatoes (with skins), asparagus, corn, sauteed peas and red onions, and of course, those amazing rolls.

Then, the desserts.  I told you before what I was making for desserts, but then I realized that I had nothing chocolate, so I added these  Baker’s Mousse Bars.

Here is the torte that I made with the strawberry and mango sorbets.  The icing is made with whipping cream, powdered sugar, lime juice, and lime zest.  I did not like the icing.  Also, the mango sorbet was too tart for me.  I will make this again, but I will use two layers of the strawberry sorbet and normal whipped cream icing (ie vanilla instead of lime).  Still, it was pretty.

The Vanilla-Almond Fruit Tart, via Kraft, was so delicious.  The crust is made from crushed Nilla wafers and toasted almonds.  The cream is made from instant vanilla pudding, whipped cream (the recipe calls for Cool Whip – yuk), and almond extract.  It was delicious.  (I said that already, but it bears repeating.)

Last, but not least, the Carrot Cake Cupcakes, via Martha.  Oh.  My.  God.  They were so amazingly good.  I cannot even tell you.

But, what’s better than amazing, moist, supremely delicious carrot cake cupcakes?  Amazing, moist, supremely delicious carrot cake cupcakes displayed on my new Martha Stewart cupcake tree from Macy’s.

The photos just can’t do it justice.  (Although, the photo at the Macy’s link above does a good job.)

And here’s a close-up of the star of this little show.

Yum!

So, tell me, what goodies did you have this Easter?

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Let’s Get Soapy

I just wanted to pop in with a quick note about the Soapy Love ezineLet’s Get Soapy, which focuses only on melt and pour soaping. Debbie is an amazing melt and pour artist – her soaps really are works of art.

I wanted to tell you about this before the special $12 price ends. Friday is the last day, then it goes up to $15.

Head on over and check out the new issue. While you’re there, poke around her site – it’s really something!

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Blog Announcement

I decided that I am only going to update this blog once a week, on Sundays.  Occasionally, I will drop by mid-week with some random goodies, but for now, I want to focus on doing one quality post every week.

I figured I would start out with the point of this post, before I launch into the long story.  So, if you want to stop here, you’ve already got the important information.

I have struggled with this blog for the longest time.  I had another blog, which was a political blog, and I made some okay money through advertising on it.  Well, paid links, actually.  I hate the look of advertisements.  But it always bothered me that I couldn’t seem to get this blog going enough to sell as many links on it.

The reason is that I am never consistent.  The reason I am never consistent is that I always want to do more than my life allows for.  (For those who don’t know, I home school my three sons, one of which has ADHD and a mood disorder.)  So, I end up setting goals I can never reach, then I just do nothing, which is foolish, I know.  I should at least do something.  Anything is better than nothing.  But, for some reason, I always get easily discouraged by this blog because I want so badly to have the time to make it the way I want it.  But, the fact is that I don’t.

I keep thinking that, now that my oldest is a teen, I will have a little more time.  Ooh, boy, was I wrong!  Come to find out, teens require more work, more time, and more attention – and loads more patience – than any other age past toddlerhood.

This business with the blog has been on my mind a lot lately.  I have done a lot of thinking about the blog and I keep trying to do more with it – like all the Easter posts I promised – but life keeps getting in the way.

But, the thing is, a lot of my favorite blogs only update once a week.  There are blogs that get tons of readers and are great blogs, yet they only update once a week.

The question I had to ask myself was: do I want to have one good, quality post, that readers can reliably expect once a week, or do I want to keep on trying to do more posts, only to end up doing nothing?

The answer was pretty obvious, but it is hard for me to let go of things sometimes.

Then, I read a post on Soap Queen the other day with tips on social media from a talk Anne-Marie gave at a social media conference.  She outlines the six rules for social media engagement and one of them is routine.

That sealed it.  I knew what I needed to do.  So, I sat down and outlined the minimum commitments I would make to all of my social media platforms/blogs, and I decided that I would focus on posting here once a week, so I can give you guys a good quality post that is worth reading and I will be satisfied with what I am doing here.  You know, instead of saying I am going to blog and then never doing it, and feeling like this blog is a total failure.

Unfortunately, this is my post for this week.  My six year old was very sick all week, so I just wasn’t able to put anything together.

If you made it this far in the post, I am both surprised and flattered!  Thank you for reading All Things Hold Together.

You can also follow me on twitter, where I will share interesting links I find throughout the week.

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Easter Desserts

I can’t believe that it’s almost Easter.  Less than two weeks.  Much to do, much to do.

First, make sure you get out there and buy all the good Easter candy before it’s gone.  I’ve already bought all of mine.

Now, I am planning the Easter dinner.  The first place to start: dessert.  Of course.  Really, it’s the most important part.

So far, I have the following:

Vanilla-Almond Tart, by Kraft.  This recipe looks so simple and good.  It uses Jello instant pudding and Cool Whip for the filling.  I know it might seem like cheating, but it is just so darn good.  I use real whipped cream in place of the Cool Whip in every recipe like this I have ever made.  It makes all the difference.

Fruit and Cream Cake, by Betty Crocker.  The one I am making is basically like this, but it’s made from a sheet cake, cut into thirds and filled with mango and raspberry sorbets or sherbets, or whatever.  The recipe is in a free calendar I got from Betty Crocker and I don’t want to dig it out right now.  The recipe at the link is the basic concept, though.

Carrot Cake Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting, by Martha Stewart.  I love carrot cake.  So do the kids.  It’s an Easter staple around here.  This year, I am going cupcake, using some adorable Easter cupcake liners by Wilton, with cute chick and bunny picks.  I will not be doing the fancy-pants toppers that Martha made, but only because I don’t have the springerle mold.

I do not need to do a trial run of any of these desserts (I don’t miss those days), so I won’t have pictures until the day or two before Easter.  There are, however, pictures at the links, which are far better than any I could take.

What desserts are you making for Easter?  Or, if you aren’t making dessert, what is your favorite Easter dessert?

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Adventures with Bento

I am completely obsessed with bento, those adorable Japanese lunchboxes.  I mean obsessed to the point that I spent hours looking at bento websites and ogling the Just Bento Flickr pool.

As tempted as I am to buy myself a bunch of cute bento supplies – and I am tempted – I decided that I should start with what I have and see if I really like bento-making.  Then I can buy myself a bunch of cute bento supplies.

Everything I used I had on hand, except for sushi rice.  I bought that.

Fortunately, I have a Hello Kitty egg shaper, which I bought to make bath bombs.  I didn’t use it to make eggs because even extra large eggs are not quite big enough.  But, it was great for making onigiri, aka rice balls.

And, the bottom was great for cutting out bread, turkey, and cheese to make a little Hello Kitty-shaped sandwich.

I sliced a carrot on the diagonal into thick slices and boiled them.  Then, I used a metal mini cookie cutter to cut out shapes.

For my box, I used a Glad container (actually a grocery store brand knock off) and lined it with the dark outer leaves of a lettuce head for color.  I filled my box with two Hello Kitty rice balls, a mound of cooked broccoli, a hard boiled egg, cut into halves in a zig-zag pattern, the carrot cut-outs, and the Hello Kitty-shaped sandwich.

The verdict: addictive!  I can see myself making these for my lunch every day.  It was so fun to make and to eat.

If you want to try it out, Just Bento has a ton of great information.  (Look at the left side-bar for links to get you started.)

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Happy St. Patrick’s Day

StPats

I had planned on doing lots of fun St. Patty’s Day decorations, crafts, food, and of course desserts, but then I realized that today was the day we would be leaving for vacation.  No corned beef and cabbage for me. :(

I did manage to make some festive cupcakes, though.  I already had bought the papers and napkins before I realized we wouldn’t be home.  Nothing fancy.  It’s a box mix with canned frosting.  The sprinkles were from Christmas.  I picked out the red ones.

I guess I will just have to make Easter that much more extra awesome!  Starting when we get back.  Two weeks of Easter goodness.

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Soap Making Resources for Beginners

I have had a few people ask me about how to start making cold process soap, so I thought I would gather up some resources and post them here for all to see.

Cold process soap making involves mixing oils with a lye and water solution. The resulting chemical reaction, called saponification, creates soap.  There is no lye left in the soap when the saponification is complete.

Lye is a caustic substance – ie it can burn you – so there are some safety rules you should follow.

Before you start making soap, watch this video from about.com on lye solution safety.

About.com Candle & Soap Making is an excellent resource for beginner soap makers.

Also check out their step-by-step photo tutorial on making cold process soap and the basic soap making video.

Another good resource is Teach Soap and the Teach Soap forum, created by the owner of Bramble Berry Soapmaking Supplies, Anne-Marie Faiola.  Anne-Marie’s blog, The Soap Queen, is loaded with lots of fun tutorials and other information for the soap maker.

Anne-Marie also has a YouTube channel, called Soap Queen TV.  Coming in April is a series of Soap Queen TV episodes on cold process soap making basics.

A wonderful book for beginning soapers is The Everything Soapmaking Book, by Alicia Grosso.  That is what I used when I started cold process soap making and it is great.

You can use many different things as a mold to make cold process soap.  I prefer a wooden mold, but when I first started out, I didn’t want to invest that much money, so I used a silicone bread pan.  They make great soap molds, but they are floppy, so if you use one, make sure you support it.  I use a shoebox.

A good starter recipe that does not require any fancy oils is a good place to start.  You can find all of the ingredients at the grocery store (except maybe the lye, but you can usually find that at the hardware store in the plumbing section – make sure it is 100% lye!).  Hold off on buying a bunch of fancy supplies until you decide that you like soap making.

Below is the first recipe I ever made, as recorded in my soap making notebook.  It uses olive, coconut and castor oils.  You can find castor oil in the pharmacy section of your supermarket, with the laxatives.  The castor oil gives the soap a very creamy feeling.  I personally don’t like it very much, so I don’t normally use castor oil anymore, but a lot of people like it.

Olive, Coconut, and Castor Oil Soap, 3-Pound Loaf

6.8 oz lye
16.2 oz water

31.5 oz olive oil
16 oz coconut oil
1.5 oz castor oil

All measurements are in weight ounces.

A few more tips:

  • Always run your recipe through a lye calculator to make sure you use the correct amount of lye.  I have found mistakes in the recipes in soap making books!
  • Make sure you have enough time to devote to making your soap, without any distractions.
  • Have all of your materials ready ahead of time, before you mix anything.
  • Be safe!
  • Raw soap will hurt like the dickens if you get it on a paper cut!!
  • Record everything you do in a notebook, for future reference and to see how far you’ve come.
  • Have fun!
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My New Favorite Cookie

I recently discovered the awesomeness that is gluten-free peanut butter cookies.  Who needs flour?  It only takes away from the peanut buttery goodness!

I used chunky peanut butter to get those little peanutty bits.

I use what I call the 1-1-1-1 recipe (don’t say the dashes).  I call it that because it makes the recipe easy to remember.

1 cup natural peanut butter (chunky or smooth)

1 cup sugar (I use half white and half dark brown)

1 egg

1 teaspoon baking soda

Cream peanut butter and sugar in mixer (1 – 2 minutes).  Add egg and baking powder, mix for 2 minutes more.  Shape into balls.  Place on cookie sheet and flatten slightly with a fork.  Bake at 350 for about 10 minutes, or until lightly browned.  Cool on cookie sheet for a few minutes, so they don’t fall apart when you pick them up.  (Time based on 1 dozen cookies.  Less time, if you make them smaller.)

Try not to eat them all!

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