Archive for the ‘Fall Projects’ Category

Homemade Apple Cinnamon Simmering Potpourri Recipe


2010
09.21

As soon as the crisp cool air moves in I long for the scent of apples and cinnamon filling my home.  To me there is nothing cozier or warmer feeling than a home filled with rich aromatic scents (and of course a fire burning in the fireplace too!)!  This recipe was created by me  MANY years ago, when I was a teen, I can remember my mom baking homemade apple pie and the smell was so intoxicating I wanted to smell that apple pie scent every day!  One day, out of boredom, I started goofing around with my mom’s spices and came up with this awesome and yummy scented potpourri that I like to  simmer it in an electric potpourri pot all day long.  Just this one pot is enough to scent your entire home with the smell of homemade apple pie -I’m telling ya’ll,  there’s really nothing better! :-)

I use this recipe from early fall until mid-winter.  I do have a couple of other homemade potpourri recipes I’ll share with you that are perfect for the holidays.  In the spring and summer,  I usually switch over to a citrusy scent that scents the air with fresh and clean aroma. 

DISCLAIMER:  Please do not leave this simmering potpourri unattended.  Only simmer while nearby and PLEASE make sure to always turn it off if you’re going to be leaving your house – this is no different than a candle!  Make sure to check the water level on a regular basis and add more as needed to keep the pot from cracking or from starting a fire.  Please do not use this when small children are present.  Kids this is for adults to try only!

Recipe:

1-2 apples (I like to use the apples that are getting too soft or have a few too many bruises.  I also toss in any apple peels that may be collected throughout the day.)

1/4-1/3 cup cinnamon.  I get a big container of it from the local Dollar Tree Store and it lasts for several weeks.

Apple Pie Spice

Water

Optional:

10 or more drops of Cinnamon, Apple, Apple Brandy, Vanillar or any other complimenting fragrance or essential oil (this is optional but REALLY gives a stronger scent.  I have made this recipe for years without using the fragrance/essential oils.  I’ve only recently started adding it to kick things up a notch – blame it on Emeril! *wink*)

cinnamon sticks

nutmeg

anise

oranges or orange peels, pears

sugar (by adding a 1/2 cup or so it gives a sweeter scent – I used to add sugar all the time but now prefer the more pungent spicy scent of the cinnamon and apples)

apple cider or apple juice

saucepan

an electric potpourri pot with a low setting

Directions:

I like to heat up this concoction before adding it to my electric potpourri pot because it gets the scent wafting MUCH quicker.  You can just toss it all in the potpourri pot but it will take quite some time for everything to heat up enough to smell.

In a saucepan, combine all ingredients.  Add enough water to fill the container.  If using apple cider or apple juice you can skip the water or add equal amounts to the potpourri mixture. (The photo above does not show all of the water.  The fruit should be covered – fill that pot up!)  Stir and place on  burner on med-low setting until the mixture is heated through.  Once it’s hot, pour the contents into an electric potpourri pot and turn on to its lowest setting. Make sure to check the pot regularily for water level so the pot doesn’t crack or start a fire.  This mixture can be used for several days before losing its scent or getting skunky.   When it seems to resemble sludge instead of potpourri toss it and make a fresh batch.  I’m telling you, your home will smell amazing! 

This recipe can be made without fruit too and you will still have great results.  If I have no extra fruit but want to smell up the house in a good way, I’ll just toss some cinnamon in a saucepan of water and simmer that.  Sometimes I add a few drops of fragrance oil and other times I don’t. 

Olive the smell of homemade apple pie, don’t you?

xKim

P.S.  If you like this recipe and would be interested in others please leave a comment here.  If you have a recipe/concoction that you have tried and would like to share please contact me – I’d love to feature you and your delicious scents! :-)

Funky Pumpkin Craft – Another Great Craft for Kids of All Ages!


2010
09.20

I think I must be ready for fall because I certainly have punkins on my brain the past few days (especially this evening!)…  I have a couple more pumpkin projects I whipped up just in mere minutes this evening as I was sitting here examining the toilet paper pumpkin I posted earlier.  I got to thinking how addicting those things are to make because they’re so much fun to make, there’s no cutting, sewing or gluing necessary.they’re super duper quick and just too stinkin’ cute to have only one….so when my husband started hollering, “honey, uhhh…where’s all the toilet paper?  There’s none in any of the bathrooms and why do we have 12 pumpkins lined up where the toilet paper used to be instead?  And WHY are there pumpkins in all of the  toilet paper holders “….. He knows I’m craft obsessed like no other BUT who would ever want to admit to doing something so corny?!  Sheesh!  So I just shrugged my shoulders and said I had no idea how that happened and then starting shucking the other 12 under the table as fast as I could….  I figured I better find myself a new addiction or should I say a new victim…to “pumpkinize”" (another new word you saw first here on OJS *wink*)! So, I did just that.  I started looking at the case(s) of pumpkins I had decorated earlier and realized I could come up with a more realistic looking one by adding some filler….so I began to play.  I grabbed a bag of fiberfill for one pumpkin and some dry rice and plastic shopping bags for another and started on my next pumpkin adventure….

The tutorial below is based on the darker orange pumpkin on the far left.  These same steps also  apply to the black and white checked pumpkin – you just need a larger piece of fabric, more filler and a paper towel tube.

 Ingredients:

1 empty toilet paper tube for the smaller orange size pumpkin OR 1 empty paper towel tube for the black and white pumpkin

enough fabric to wrap around the filler and tuck far enough into the tube

dry rice

fiber fill, old socks, crumpled newspaper, shopping  bags, rice, etc..to fill the pumpkin

Pumpkin or cinnamon scented dry potpourri ( I used the kind in the paper envelope satchets but any dry brand will work.  Another idea is to use Carpet Fresh but I don’t think the scent would last as long.)

cheese cloth or an old nylon to put the potpourri in

a stick to use for the stem

green fabric scraps or ribbon for the stem

2 green fabric coated floral stems

Directions:

1.  Lay out the fabric so the pattern is face down on the table. Then, stand a toilet paper tube directly in the center of the fabric and start adding small handfuls of dry rice for weight and fiberfill to build the body of the pumpkin. (Sorry for all the wrinkles.  I had already put the pumpkin together but then decided to take it apart to get photos for a tutorial! )

2. Next, start pulling the fabric up and tucking the fabric ends into the center of the tube. 

3. Keep forming the pumpkin, adding additional fiber fill if needed or removing some  if it’s too stuffed.  Continue pushing the fabric ends into the tube.

 

4.  Once all the fabric is tucked in the tube and the pumpkin is formed into your desired shape, add the bundle of fragrance to the tube. (I forgot to take a picture of this step but all I did was add fragrance pellets in a piece of cheesecloth and then tied it with a rubber band.)  By adding it here you can easily remove it to add a new scentor refresh as needed.  Next, place the stick into the tube for the stem.  This also helps hold the fabric in place.

 

5. Grab your scrap of green fabric  and fold in half pushing the center down into the tube.  Arrange to form leaves.

6.  Wrap the green floral stems (or chenille stems) around a pen to form spirals.  Stretch out slightly and tuck one end of each down in the tube. 

Aren’t  these just the cutest darn punkins you’ve ever seen??  Now, I want you to imagine doing this very same technique with a gift wrap paper tube and a large piece of fabric or a sheet.  Can you just imagine how adorable that would look with a pile of funky patterned pumpkins sitting in a corner all grouped together?!  The best part of this whole project is that you can easily take them apart to store and then rebuild them again next year!  The fabric can be washed, changed and the fragrance refreshed whenever needed. 

I’m off to go find something else to turn into a punkin….kids, ya better look out because your mama has lost it!  *grin*

Olive me some funky punkins, don’t you?

xKim

P.S.  If you make any of these PLEASE share!  :-)


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