Friday, July 24, 2015

The Table Girl's Birthday

Paper Plates and Crystal has been hijacked! By me, Kathy's sister. And there's a reason for that...

Once a year the family's celebrational table suffers because Kathy is not allowed to create the table setting. The family rule is that whoever has a birthday doesn't have to prep, cook or clean up. Which means that every July there is a table setting to do, and Kathy can't do it. It usually falls to me, her sister, to do the table setting. And I try to do something fun and interesting...and not outside the scope of my abilities.

This year Kathy sort of chose her own. Often she begins with a single inspiration. I decided to let her provide my inspiration. She chose a tea party with finger food rather than a sit down birthday meal, so I asked her to choose a teapot from her collection to be the starting point for the table. Such a rule follower she is. Not. She chose two. One that was a gift from friends and the other that belonged to our grandmother. The final choice was mine.

One teapot had more of the colors to which I am naturally drawn. I chose the other: a plump little apple green teapot with daisies and ladybugs. Our Mom created a wide table runner in the same apple green. The teapot was elevated in the center of the table on a glass cake stand, and a total of nine little bouquets of daisies surrounded the teapot, anchored the runner and sat on the birthday girl's plate in lieu of a place card.

I provided a slight nod to the red ladybugs (I can't stand the color red), plopping a maraschino cherry in the glasses of punch. We didn't really have hot tea because, hello, hundred-degree weather. So the yellow punch with the smallest spot of red worked just fine for me.

The menu (does Kathy usually write about menus?) included sandwiches (some were ham and some were smoked salmon), cheese-pecan wafers, stuffed snow peas, blue cheese and caramelized onion tartlets and petits fours. Pretty tasty. And the table looked fresh as...well...as fresh as a daisy. So that's the story of 2015's "Happy Birthday, Kathy!"  She'll be back for the next post. And I'll see y'all next July!

Thursday, July 9, 2015

LAKehouSe Or Bust

I was recently reminded that one of my favorite weeks of the year is less than a month away. It is the week of my mother's family reunion! And this year there are FOUR generations of our family who will converge on a Mississippi State Park from eight states across the U.S.  Some of us will come and go during the week. Others of us will be there the entire week! I will be one of those.

You are probably wondering what this has to do with my usual posts of table settings and events. While it is a little impractical to try to "set" the tables after the masses descend, the first part of the week is generally dedicated to what my sister, cousin, niece and I refer to as "LAKehouSe". During these few days while everyone else arrives we enjoy a little calm before the joy- and fun-filled storm.


LAKehouSe (representing Lynn, Amy, Kathy and Sarah) is always a carefully thought-out, well-planned, lovely few days. We share a cabin and divide up the activities and the cooking. Some years we have a general theme and then each of us comes up with our own details. Other years we just leave open. As you might suspect I have been known to throw in a table setting or two over the years. Have table settings...will travel!

This year we are celebrating the 10th anniversary of our trip "across the pond" where we traveled to England, France, and Belgium. Since daughter and niece, Sarah, won't be joining us the first part of the week, Lynn, Amy, and I "drew" for which country(s) we would represent in the cooking and activities we plan. I'm all England this year while Lynn and Amy will share France and Belgium. And, yes...there will be a table setting...or two. 

I will post about this year's LAKehouSe after I get back. Until then you can imagine me (spread sheet in hand) planning menus, activities and table settings with an English flair.

Cheerio!  And thanks for stopping by.

(I wonder how much work it would be to replicate Stonehenge in miniature?  Hmmm...)