A little bit of self promotion


We're getting ready for holiday pop up shops and sales. We've also taken out ads on 2 favorite blogs: Small Measure and Frolic!  If you don't know them, go check them out, so much good reading on both sites...and lots of great pictures.






If you have a blog and want to swap ad space, I've made a few standard size ads and figured I might as well put them here and let you grab 'em.  If you do, let me know and I'll give you a spot on this blog, too! Please link to http://shop.wolfieandthesneak.com. Let the holiday madness begin! (Or continue, if you're a seller you've likely been in the middle of the chaos for weeks, huh?)

Using the whole hog, I mean hen



I wasn't raised in a particularly food-centric household, and in my late teens to late twenties was a vegan. This meant I didn't really know how to cook much besides dry pasta. I could heat up a can of beans or cook a mean tofu patty, but when I became a meat eater again I left all meat cooking up to Charlie. He knew his way around an iron skillet, mentally stores and adeptly cooks his dad's recipe for a burger with perfection every time.

When I was finally ready to "honor" the animal through cooking it, well, I had to learn from the very beginning.  I also keep my internet ears open to new ways to use up the whole animal, at least as much as I know how. If you're in a similar boat, I've listed a few of my favorite go-to recipes below.

My own drawing of Ally, our mean black hen


I use these recipes nearly weekly:
How to roast a chicken (Martha Stewart)
How to cook a chicken breast (The Kitchn)

Bone broth: My approach is different than others I see online, I'm not sure how I came up with the process, since I use the internet as a cookbook.
Roast the skin, bones, drippings, fat in the oven on 350 for 30 minutes, stir/flip everything as best you can and roast 30 minutes more.
In a slow cooker/crock pot, cover the bones, etc. with water, add 2 bay leaves and a handful of thyme. Simmer for 12 hours. After you strain out the solids, you will have a richly flavored, unsalted broth.

Floursack tea towels from Girls Can Tell

Keep it going perpetually if you want, like Nourished Kitchen does. I generally use it for a giant batch of soup and toss (or bokashi) the bones.

I most often use homemade broth for chicken noodle soup or chicken and dumplings. Sometimes I'll use it in place of water to cook rice or barley, which is fantastic.

For chicken noodle soup I loosely follow the directions my sister in law gave me: 
Boil some kind of chicken with bones in. Today I used chicken thighs but I usually do a whole cut up chicken. Remove chicken to cool and pull off the bone. Put chopped onions, carrots and celery in broth cook until just done, add meat back in ( no skin, : p ) add salt and pepper to taste. I scoop out a cup or two of it and puree it and put it back in. Then I make a roux ( 3 or 4 tblspn butter same amount of flour, melt and add some stock, then pour it all back in the pot. It gives it some thickness which we like. Then just add noodles or rice, (I use the Amish egg noodles, they are yummy) when they're done YOU EAT!
Mabel will drink the broth and call it a meal.  If we have extra broth left over, the dogs get it with their dry food. After all, they deserve a nutritional boost, too!

Bigger than Life

At 11 AM (Eastern) you can find Wolfie and the Sneak prints here (Simple Modern Dining). Not a member? Click here to join...I get a spiff if you use my link.



A few weeks ago I was contacted by a buyer for One Kings Lane about partnering up to do a sale for them. They gave me a couple options about how it could work. I'm at max printing capacity for a couple holiday shop requests, and being pregnant I knew my limits were even lower this year than other years. They, however, offered to partner me up with an outside printer who would both take care of the printing and frame the pieces for sale! How could I say no?

A few things they have right now that I love: Orange Camp StoolJen Garrido print, Archipelago Havana candles,  Vintage West German Cachepot, Better Homes and Gardens Garden Book, Oberon Dining Table

I have to admit I hadn't really looked at One Kings Lane before being contacted by them...partly because I have a hard time saying no to a good deal, partly because my general first impression was they catered to a more formal style than my own. But since looking into them more, and finding their blog and stylistic, story-telling videos, you get the feeling they're much more into curating a collection of usable, albeit sometimes super fancy, goods. I think they pretty much have the old Domino and current House Beautiful readerships pegged.

Feel like you have too many pieces of art and no where left to hang 'em? Look! One Kings Lane shows you how to hang a gallery wall.

Party Hardy!



Little Sugar Creek, the community garden I help lead, is part of the Friendship Gardens network. Guess what!? Friendship Gardens is having a party this weekend! Part of the party is a silent auction, so I've donated 2 prints, printed on canvas and framed. I don't print on canvas very often, so it was a treat to see them on a different material, and all framed up they look pretty snazzy!  I wish I had actual photographs, maybe someone at the auction will get some?


Happy Birthday to Me!

I've been messing around with my website, trying to get the blog to look like the site to keep the "flow" of things, and now everything is all wonky. I'll get it sorted out...sometime.

In the meantime, my birthday is coming up and so I've been daydreaming about some luxurious** goods to add to my little world.



Any painting by Lulie Wallace. Since she's in Charleston, SC I would want to turn the purchase into a good excuse to take a road trip to pick it up, too.


Voluspa Golden Cypress Sawara and Illume Balsam and Cedar candles are my favorite scents. We don't burn candles often around our house {except maybe to cover up the stank of compost collecting in the sink one (or five) days too long} bur are more apt to warm up the space with a candle during winter. These are the most perfect fragrances to carry you from fall through winter, both reminiscent of freshly fallen leaves crunching under foot with a hint of a Christmas tree for good measure.

Tasty treats from Whimsy and Spice...especially anything pumpkin!

Bridgman Pottery egg cups:  After all, the pretty eggs from our hens deserve an equally pretty display during breakfast, don't you think? I think I'd like a mish mash of colors, too. They're all so tempting!


The reality? I've asked for a truck load of compost to be brought in. Oooo la la, talk about luxurious!



**By luxurious I just mean things we don't need. We actually don't really need anything right now, we have so much, so any addition seems like quite a luxury.