Melty

June 1, 2011
{yummy chocolate ice cream from the lovely brown-eyed baker}

One huge thing I am looking forward to on our trip back to America next month? Hard ice cream. On a sugar cone. From an ice cream shop.

Ireland doesn’t really have ice cream shops. They have convenience stores that sell one kind of ice cream cone. There’s usually a big plastic ice cream cone out front. And inside, you can get a ’99’: soft, vanilla ice cream on a wafer cone with a chocolate flake stick stuck into it. {looks like this}

Creamier than soft ice cream in America, but still not hard ice cream. No debating which or a million flavours to pick, no sprinkles or jimmies to dip in. And no sitting in the warm summer night while you lick faster and faster to keep it from dripping all over your fingers.

And with that, my mouth is watering for a hard ice cream cone. Or one every day we’re back in Maine. It’s vacation, so I can do that, right?

Rocking

May 31, 2011

Remember my landing strip from yesterday? Well this will just have to be included.

{image from here}

Tray + rocks + Bean boots. Count me in. Love an easy DIY that has me scavenging!

Landing

May 30, 2011

Happy Monday, darlings! This doesn’t happen very often, but I am so glad the weekend is over. It was filled with so much cake. Eleven layers in all. Luckily, my job is done and it’s on its way to Cork to be iced!

So back down to business. While I was baking away this weekend, I spent a little time planning our new dream house. 

My new, imaginary dream house will desperately need a landing strip. You know that space where you can drop bags and keys and take off muddy shoes and hang coats? We need that.

At the moment, we’ve been using our entire front room. It’s like we have a whole runway, overrun with size 14 sneakers (his, not mine), my bike and helmet, bills, papers, mail. I am losing the battle.

Since we finally got rid of our futon over the weekend, the newly painted sideboard is moving in. I think we have a chance at creating a mudroom landing strip of sorts.

If we weren’t limited by space and budget and this being a rental, here’s some inspiration I think we’d take.

{image from here}
{image from here}
{image from here via Apartment Therapy}

What do you think? Do you have a landing strip or a whole runway?

Fun

May 27, 2011
{calming image of exactly where I want to be from here}

I am so thrilled that Friday is finally here. This week felt plain old long. I’m going to be spending some time this weekend baking a wedding cake (and theoretically enough cake for 220 people, so it might be quite a project!) and moving our newly painted sideboard into the house! It took way longer than expected to make enough room for it, but now I’m going to get it all organised so I can show you next week!

The Sweetest Occasion featured a splish-splashy party, complete with octopus balloons and pretty popsicles. Must add popsicle molds to the bring-from-America list!

These Oreo pops would have made my week so much sweeter. How totally yum.

Now that my sewing machine is fixed (thanks mom-in-law!), I’d love to make this beachy tote if I can scrounge up some fun fabric. Those stripes are cheerful!

A dear friend sent me over to this blog (written by her dear friend, so it’s like I know her!) and I just loved following her photo journey. And for the lovers of Irish tea? Gorgeous. Although we might now incite a Barry’s versus Lyon’s battle. Ha!

This apple braid looks easy to make but would definitely impressive to serve!

Have you seen this edible spray paint? Can you imagine? It makes things look like this! Amazing!

And in case you missed posts on From China Village this week, here’s Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. And a Thursday bonus!

Enjoy your weekends, everyone!

Flame

May 26, 2011
Yesterday, my co-workers told me they thought my style at home would be sleek and modern with clean lines. Is that a bit euphemistic for cold and witchy? Must remember to be warmer and cosier in the office, since this is image here is just my style!

Have you checked out the new edition of Rue? It’s filled with great ideas, beautiful images, and daydream-worthy fetes.

The best thing about online magazines like Rue? If you like an image or product you can click right over to them and (virtually) toss them in your cart! Very quick, which might actually be very dangerous.

I’m loving these flame-colored cocktail napkins on page 12. See? You barely get started and you’re already adding to the wish list!

Both

May 25, 2011

I happened across this little video on a friend’s Facebook last week. I was intrigued by the title, and I found myself guessing what the question would be. But I don’t want to spoil it for you. Give it a peek, then we’ll chat.

Sad and happy all at once, right?

It made me wonder whether I have regrets of my own. I generally don’t do regrets. I work under the assumption that there’s a reason for being where you are if you’re aware of the lessons you learned getting there.

But what if I had been faced with harder choices? Or different choices? Lived in a different era? Or if I had to pick a regret, had to give an answer?

It’s a tough one, alright.

What about you all? Do you have regrets? Are they big or little? Happy or sad?

Relationship

May 24, 2011
{seriously great crowd shot from here, along with an interesting article on the 2012 campaign}

Yesterday, College Green was transformed into one of the first stops on the president’s campaign trail. A sea of faces who waited for hours to hear the words of my president.

I didn’t venture in and fight the crowd. The closest I got to the real celebrity was a quick stop outside the American Embassy to ogle the motorcade on my way to the train station. You know me, I’ve got a thing for motorcades.

Instead, I preferred to listen to my president all on my own yesterday, soaking in his words that always give me shivers; tearing up and pondering, without a sound breaking my thoughts.

So yesterday, I sat perched on the edge of the couch, feeling very 1950’s housewifely in an apron, with a cake in the oven and a dish rag thrown over my shoulder. I listened to my president talk about my two countries, ancestors who are my ancestors, a diaspora I’m part of and that my children and my children’s children will be part of, and a struggling country I live in and root for every day.

***

Politics is a strange animal to me. I struggle because I love the motorcades and the protocols and the elitism of it all. At the age of 20, I loved knowing that the candidate was wheels down and we were about to roll out. I loved flying through intersections blocked off by motorcycle cops. I saved all my S-pins – the little metal clips doled out by the Secret Service to pin to your lapel so you could get through the highest level of security. Right up to the candidate. Right next to the greatness, the importance, that person who was going to change the world.

I believed it. I believed it so hard.

At a certain point, I realized I didn’t like the game. I didn’t like that politics, to many people, is a game. I didn’t like that it was about points and money and strategy and cunning and compromising integrity. I believed too hard in the importance.

I’m reminded of how my mother always says I live my life in black and white, right and wrong.  I struggle with grays.

So I walked away from the game. I married an Irishman, crossed an ocean, and watched my president, that man I believe in so hard, from my couch, even though he was only a few miles away.

I sat on the couch and soaked it in. I let myself miss being right there watching from the wings. I let it ache a little, even as I re-read his words late last night.

It would belittle the carefully crafted words to call it a pep talk, but boy was it ever.

And, Ireland, as trying as these times are, I know our future is still as big and as bright as our children expect it to be.  I know that because I know it is precisely in times like these –- in times of great challenge, in times of great change -– when we remember who we truly are.  We’re people, the Irish and Americans, who never stop imagining a brighter future, even in bitter times.  We’re people who make that future happen through hard work, and through sacrifice, through investing in those things that matter most, like family and community.
We remember, in the words made famous by one of your greatest poets that “in dreams begins responsibility.”
This is a nation that met that responsibility by choosing, like your ancestors did, to keep alight the flame of knowledge and invest in a world-class education for your young people.  And today, Ireland’s youth, and those who’ve come back to build a new Ireland, are now among the best-educated, most entrepreneurial in the world.  And I see those young people here today.  And I know that Ireland will succeed.
{full text here}

So thank you, Mr. Obama, for reminding us that part of our special relationship is knowing when a pep talk is just what the doctor ordered.

Twists

May 23, 2011
{pretty peonies from here on neat little blog!}

Last week I asked Michael to cut me a few peonies from his mom’s back garden. She’s in America for a few weeks and they’ll be gone by before she gets back…so really I was trying to help the peonies fulfill their destiny.

Anyway, he came back empty handed. I asked him what happened. He told me, I just wasn’t sure which ones were the paninis.

Can’t really argue with that, huh?

Tidbits

May 20, 2011
{pretty photo from here}

I missed you yesterday! In fact, I kind of missed me yesterday too! Such a busy day (and week!) I didn’t even have a moment to finish a post for you all (I do have about 12 drafts, but that doesn’t do you much good now, does it?).

I’m back momentarily and then out the door again for a busy weekend. The Irish Countrywomen’s Association has their Annual General Meeting this weekend so I’m on duty. I’m looking forward to having a clear head for some fun recipes and projects next week.

In the meantime, I had a little time to catch up with my Google Reader last night and collect all the fun tidbits from around the web this week. So here they are for you to enjoy as you head into the weekend!

I am dying to make a little stop motion video. This tutorial has all the tips! Isn’t Miss Chelsea just darling?

I added this DIY cabinet spruce-up to our dream house list.

I’m teaching myself how to use my camera better with these tutorials.

Speaking of using my camera better, this book has made the list of bring-back-from-America. Written by this talented lady, whose photos are only gorgeous.

This pretty bowl made me smile. That’s my color. I can’t get enough.

I got a bit dreamy this week and imagined opening a spot like this in Dublin. Doesn’t it just sound neat and hip and oh-so-very-Seattle?

How about a tiny bit of Emily trivia? I’m @emilyholmes on Twitter (follow me, it’s fun!). Want to know why? Well, I’m going to tell you anyway. I was born Emily Holmes Boyle, but since getting married, I use Emily Boyle Westbrooks. I’ve always been sad to lose Holmes, so I figured Twitter was nickname-y enough to handle it. See? I told you, fun trivia.

Now what about you, have you ever had to give up a name? Add a name? Changing my name after I got married was one of the most annoying things no one ever told me I’d have to do. But that’s a story for another day. (Sheesh, can you tell I’m tired? I think in Ireland we call this waffling…)

And with that, I’m back to work for the weekend. Please have some fun for me? See you Monday!