Sunday evening kickback

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WellSeasoned

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You thought chainsaw huh?
 

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Very nice. We went on the Duck boat tour in Boston today, also finished 2 face jugs and am now canning 8 pints of salsa. This is as much relaxing as I get. :)
Second one is an attempt at a self portrait

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Sweet! They get better every time u post them! Do you sell them at all? You should make some of those tree faces.
 
Sweet! They get better every time u post them! Do you sell them at all? You should make some of those tree faces.
Thanks! Yes I do sell some. Next one is a "Green Man" for one of our Hearth pagans.
 
I thought "face jug" would be a third of a jug.
 
I hope there isn't a head in that pressure cooker.

It's gonna shrink.
 
Hot off the press tonight. Salvaged cherry box with natural edge lid.

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Trying to wrap my head around how can I get a carved sitting pig out of this cherry crotch burl for the wife's friend in the next few weeks. It is very dense wood and I can't wait to see the grain pattern underneath. The chainsaw will be the starter tool to pare it down to rough shape. The chips will fly and it should be fun.

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Two lids awaiting box carcasses. Might have to raid the seasoned maple woodpiles for the right match. I will build the boxes to fit the lids. This will be a new design, too nice to burn these shorties.

IMG_5226.JPG IMG_5230.JPG
 
Thanks! Yes I do sell some. Next one is a "Green Man" for one of our Hearth pagans.
I am so impressed with your face jugs and can't wait to see that Green Man! Not that I'm an expert, as you know, I collect them! I have a few from a local potter was well as A few Meaders and Matt Jones but yours are realistic, they have "emotion" captured, not sure if that makes sense but I don't know how to explain it otherwise!

I will be using my pressure canner for the first time tomorrow, if you hear an explosion, it's just me _g I cooked up 20# of ground chicken to make chili, it was on sale at my butcher for .99 a pound, couldn't pass it up. They sold me their dented #10 cans of crushed tomatoes and kidney beans for $1.99 each too, perfect, cheap eats!
 
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I cooked up 20# of ground chicken to make chili, it was on sale at my butcher for .99 a pound, couldn't pass it up. They sold me their dented #10 cans of crushed tomatoes and kidney beans for $1.99 each too, perfect, cheap eats!

I am a Texan. I am quite sure that you will go to hell if you make chili with chicken. Not to mention putting beans in it. >>
 
Here's the Lanier Meaders I had to pass on at a bid live, on line auction....sold for $3,500

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I am a Texan. I am quite sure that you will go to hell if you make chili with chicken. Not to mention putting beans in it. >>
Hell doesn't scare me as much as that pressure canner does :)

I would have bought beef, that's how I usually make it, but 80/20 ground beef was $2.99/lb....chicken .99/lb. I do like kidney beans in my chili but I do use chipotle peppers for a great smoky flavor. Sorry, I know you Texans are serious about chili, brisket and BBQ but I'm just prepping for the next flippin storm. Two years in a row near Halloween, 2011 ice storm, 2012 Sandy now power for over 2 weeks. We have a generator and a chest freezer full of food
thought that we could use more than pickles and kraut in jars ready to eat :)
 
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I laugh about BBQ and chili. Apparently they were both invented at exactly the same moment in at least four states. ;lol
 
And can turn reasonably rational men into enraged animals defending their methods to make both ;)
 
I am so impressed with your face jugs and can't wait to see that Green Man! Not that I'm an expert, as you know, I collect them! I have a few from a local potter was well as A few Meaders and Matt Jones but yours are realistic, they have "emotion" captured, not sure if that makes sense but I don't know how to explain it otherwise!

I will be using my pressure canner for the first time tomorrow, if you hear an explosion, it's just me _g I cooked up 20# of ground chicken to make chili, it was on sale at my butcher for .99 a pound, couldn't pass it up. They sold me their dented #10 cans of crushed tomatoes and kidney beans for $1.99 each too, perfect, cheap eats!

Meaders went for traditional, which have a lot of personality, but normally walked a line between cartoonish caricature and spooky folk art.

I'm definitely trying to hone my skills at realism. Making a self portrait was the first time I ever tried to draw or sculpt an actual real person, rather than just something realistic. The face jug imposes some challenges in proportion, etc, that wouldn't be there in a plain sculpture. There are some crazy ones out there that I follow on facebook- including "The Bloody Jug Band", whose singer makes them and runs a charity involving pottery.

Also- have you seen this? Got great reviews:

http://jugfacethemovie.com/
 
Hot off the press tonight. Salvaged cherry box with natural edge lid.

Trying to wrap my head around how can I get a carved sitting pig out of this cherry crotch burl for the wife's friend in the next few weeks. It is very dense wood and I can't wait to see the grain pattern underneath. The chainsaw will be the starter tool to pare it down to rough shape. The chips will fly and it should be fun.

Post when you have something on that. Good work
 
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That didn't help me. I'm canning up tbat chili and I swear, I'm standing in my livingroom peering into my kitchen as this pressure canner gets up tp pressure, it's totally freaking me out but I'm trying to face my fear (even if I'm standing in the next room)
Is it a weighted canner, or gauge? I always feel like the weighted one is constantly venting, and has a pressure relief valve, so not that big a risk
 
That didn't help me. I'm canning up tbat chili and I swear, I'm standing in my livingroom peering into my kitchen as this pressure canner gets up tp pressure, it's totally freaking me out but I'm trying to face my fear (even if I'm standing in the next room)
Heck... I still leave my shop when charging up my 70 gallon compressor after a full bleed-down. ;lol
 
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I laugh about BBQ and chili. Apparently they were both invented at exactly the same moment in at least four states. ;lol

Chili was around in Mexico (that became Texas and AZ) long before the Texans arrived. It was a poor person's stew and likely to be 50% peppers and tomatoes if meat was scarce. It rarely if ever had beef in it. More likely it was venison or antelope if meat was plentiful and probably armadillo or roadrunner if not. Some claim this became a Texas dish due to the prison system where it was served as a common meal. Evidently it was so good that freed prisoners wrote back for the recipe. Then they started canning it. Texas chili went national when Texas set up a San Antonio Chili Stand at the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago.

http://whatscookingamerica.net/History/Chili/ChiliHistory.htm
 
http://whatscookingamerica.net/History/Chili/ChiliHistory.htm

"The only thing certain about the origins of chili is that it did not originate in Mexico. Charles Ramsdell, a writer from San Antonio in an article called San Antonio: An Historical and Pictorial Guide, wrote:"

"Chili, as we know it in the U.S., cannot be found in Mexico today except in a few spots which cater to tourists. If chili had come from Mexico, it would still be there. For Mexicans, especially those of Indian ancestry, do not change their culinary customs from one generation, or even from one century, to another."

"If there is any doubt about what the Mexicans think about chili, the Diccionario de Mejicanismos, published in 1959, defines chili con carne as (roughly translated):"

“detestable food passing itself off as Mexican, sold in the U.S. from Texas to New York.”
 
Written by a Texan in 1926 and the world revolves around Texas of course. ;) Personally I don't like the taste of ground beef or hamburger, so I have always made chilli sans beef. Heresy I'm sure and yes, it has beans in it.
 
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