Guest post – Bugs and Fishes

Happy holidays everyone! I hope you’re recovering gracefully from the Christmas period. I know my waste-line has suffered drastically, but it makes for an even better New Years resolution.

A week ago my seasonal switch plates featured on Laura Howard’s lovely blog, Bugs and Fishes. I just haven’t gotten around to posting about it since crazy Christmas festivities and gorging on everything in my path has been getting in the way.

I recently picked up Laura’s completely adorable felt crafting book. It’s full of the cutest felting projects that will keep you entertained all year. I would strongly suggest nabbing this little treasure.

Well, have you recovered from the piggery of Christmas?

Mull over it

If there’s one thing fiance has talked about ad nauseum it’s the mulled wine reception my cousin had at her wedding three years ago. It was our first mulled experience, and from that moment forward, fiance has had his mind set on having one at our wedding. 
In the spirit of Christmas, last weekend we were entertaining and I gave Jamie Oliver’s mulled wine recipe a shot, and it was gorgeous. We’ve had pre-made mulled wine from both bottles and saches before, but once we tried this recipe, we’re never going back. 
I would definitely recommend making a batch or two of this stuff to kick you into the Christmas spirit. It will warm the deepest, crankiest, most Grinchiest parts of anyone. Bottoms up!
Image found via Berlin-Pedia

Ingredients
2 clementines
Peel of one lemon
Peel of one lime
250g caster sugar
6 whole cloves
1 cinnamon stick
3 fresh bay leaves
1 whole nutmeg {I used 1 teaspoon of dried nutmeg}
1 whole vanilla pod, halved {again, I used 1 tablespoon}
2 star anise
2 bottles of Chianti or other Italian red {we had just one}

Method
Peel large sections from your citrus fruits using a peeler. Put the sugar in a large pot over a medium heat, add the citrus peel and squeeze in the clementine juice. Add the cloves, cinnamon stick, bay leaves and 10-12 gratings of nutmeg. Add your vanilla, and add just enough wine to cover the sugar. Allow this to simmer until all the sugar has dissolved in the wine. Bring to the boil and leave there until you have a lovely thick syrup – this is a great tip Jamie gives – by making the syrup in this way and bringing to the boil before you add all the wine creates a great flavor. But if you do this with both bottles of wine in the mix, you’ll cook off all the alcohol. We don’t want that, do we?

When the syrup is ready add the star anise and the two bottles of wine. Gently warm the wine for around five minutes, then ladle into glasses to serve. 
Thanks to Jamie for the scrumptious recipe! I think my fiance may run away with him. 

Thrifty things – recently collected

Over the past week I’ve collected a number of tasty little charity delights I haven’t gotten around to sharing. 
1. I got this cute little number last week from Enable Ireland for €0.50. I think I’m subconsciously hoarding tea cups for the wedding.
2. A super soft scarf I also got from Enable Ireland, for €1. It reminds me of really lovely, soft, red, washed dreadlocks. 
3. Kinda purpley red pillow that fits right in with the colours I’m into at the moment. I’m not sure what kind of fabric it is, but it repels cat hair = win! Respect charity shop, Prussia Street, €2.