Sunday, August 31, 2014

End of Summer

Summer seems to peak and decline in August. The last of summer's vacations and outdoor get-togethers start to wind down as the weather becomes a little more unpredictable later in the month.
Fortunately blackberries are in season that gives us a little more of a summer push we may be hankering for. We found this simple blackberry sauce recipe from PBS that sounds so delightful and easy!

Simple Homemade Blackberry Sauce
Prep Time: 3 min(s)
Cook Time: 5 min(s)
Total Time: 8 minutes min(s)
Servings: Makes just over 1 cup

A simple fresh homemade blackberry sauce recipe that can be made in under 10 minutes from start to finish. Great for pouring over ice cream, pancakes, waffles, and French toast.

Ingredients
1 1/2 cups fresh blackberries, washed
1/2 cup water
3 Tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice

Instructions
1. In a medium non-stick sauce pan, cook the blackberries, 1/4 cup water, sugar, and lemon juice on medium high for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.
2. Transfer the berry mixture to a blender or food processor and puree the fruit for 30 seconds in two 15 second intervals.
3. If the sauce is completely pulverized and pasty thick, add the remaining 1/4 cup of water.  Blend again for 15 seconds.  The sauce will be fluid.
4. Transfer the sauce to a serving dish.  Store any remaining sauce in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
With all the fresh produce starting to dwindle down, now would be a great time to start canning for the winter months. Peaches, beans, tomatoes all could be enjoyed from the garden or CSA when the dark days settle in. There are all sorts of different canning recipes that can be found online or elsewhere but you need to be careful on where they come from. Always trust a reliable source like the Ball company who sells the majority of canning products on the market. They have a ton of canning recipes, tips, and instructions to help you with starting or improving your canning skills. If you don't have the time or space to do full blown canning, pickles and freezer jams are very easy to make. Canned goods also make great gifts in a pinch.
August is a great month to get some of your outdoor projects wrapped up. Painting your front door, staining your deck or having your windows replaced is best to do before the rain hits. Also, if you're doing any renovation work the light is still good until around 7-8pm and it's less likely to have mud tracked in and out of the house. It is also a good time to get your yard work taken care of just in case the rain starts after the weekend. 
If you're fortunate to have garden space, some of the most gorgeous flowers are in season right now. Dahlias are spectacular and come in so many shapes, sizes and colors. They are relatively easy tuber to grow they just need plenty of sun (native to Mexico), prefer sandy soil , need to be cut back and dug up in the fall, then stored in a cool dry place. In some areas you can leave your tubers in the ground over the winter but can be risky. If you do decide so, make sure they are in well drained soil and add a hefty amount of mulch to the top before freezing temperatures. If you don't have a garden or don't find pleasure in gardening, Pike Place Market, local farmers markets or farm stands will have many varieties to choose from. 


Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Pacific NW Magazine Article

We had the pleasure of being featured in Pacific NW Magazine in the Sunday August 17th Seattle Times. Rebecca Teagarden did a wonderful job of writing the article and Benjamin Benschneider took great photos of my space.

You can click on the link or just scroll and read!

Small downtown condo lives luxuriously large

“I brought the office home during the recession,” says interior designer Paula Devon Raso. “It’s in the bedroom. And the bedroom came out here. It took quite a bit of juggling around.” And judging by the surroundings, Raso is quite an accomplished juggler.

Pacific NW associate editor


There are many reasons to downsize.

For interior designer Paula Devon Raso it was a bum knee and a Pekingese with a bad back.

So, in 2003 Raso sold her two-story, 1,000-square-foot town house in the 98 Union building in downtown Seattle and took a 750-square-foot one-bedroom, one-floor unit there.
She gutted it and set about doing what interior designers do, carving out space and storage where none seemed possible, disguising ductwork and throwing light into even the deepest passages.

She painted and primped and made it her own; walls the color of a child’s blush in the bathroom, the rest of it old gold. There are cherubs on those walls and hanging from the bathroom chandelier, candles glimmering from tall holders set on the floor, antique silver trays, cups and bowls out and about, antique mirrors, etchings, drapes that puddle. Whitewashed oak floors cede to the kitchen’s honed limestone, substantial marble counters there adding old-world splendor to that compact space.

Outside, Raso turned the narrow wrap deck into a formal hedge garden, bay trees as green exclamation points. Beyond, in front-row views, lie Puget Sound, Alki Point, the Olympic Mountains, Pike Place Market and much of the city. (She has no need of the Great Wheel. Her view is better.)

When Raso finished, she thought her place was just about perfect, European glamour wrapped in a small gift box.

And then it was 2007. Everything shifted.

“Once I got the bed in here, that was something,” Raso says. And by “in here” she means the living room.

“I brought the office home during the recession. It’s in the bedroom. And the bedroom came out here. It took quite a bit of juggling around.”

Doesn’t show. The double bed (she sold her antique French number and bought this one at Restoration Hardware) next to the antique Italian dresser seems like the most natural thing in the world. “The silk curtains had been on the bedroom windows,” she says of her technique for separating, but not hiding the sleeping space.

“It’s been really tricky,” she says, a little weariness in her voice and Nico, the current house Pekingese, in her lap.

She takes it all in and says, “I wouldn’t call it French. The reason I hesitate is I think my love of European antiques ruins people’s perception of what I do.”

There are a few well-placed modern touches here, too. The dining table. Raso designed it; metal legs, MDF top, all treated to an antiqued golden finish.

She moved a daybed before the windows to serve as the sofa, and it does, while also keeping the view to the water wide open. Shifted, it becomes seating for three at the table.
“The designer Thomas O’Brien has his bed in his studio,” she points out. “And he uses that for his dining chairs.”

You will not find even one coaster in Raso’s home. “Oh, no. Never in this house.” Things are meant to be used and worn in, then worn out.

“With me, it’s all an evolution. What we like to say is that our work shows a timeless quality, and this holds up pretty well. Having storage (along the hallway, in double-sided cabinets in the kitchen, living room) doesn’t hurt. And the view.”

“I never would have dreamed to do this,” she says of her compressed home. “But it does work. And I’m saving at least $1,500 a month.

“I like to think of it as efficient

“A friend of mine says it’s like sleeping in a little Parisian garret.”
Rebecca Teagarden writes about architecture and design for Pacific NW magazine. Benjamin Benschneider is a magazine staff photographer