Day 19: Pepperoncini Cheese Dip Recipe!

Day 19: This is a DELICIOUS appetizer. Pepperoncini Cheese Dip. I always buy this dip pre made, at a local grocery store. The sad part about the pre made stuff, the ingredients have a ton of items that I can’t even pronounce. Preservatives and other random items I just don’t want. SO, I guessed and tested and made my own! It’s not exact, but it is pretty darn close! STILL yummy.

Pepperoncini Cheese Dip

– 1 cup sour cream (I prefer to use Cacique brand Crema Mexicana)

– 8 oz. cream cheese

– 1/4 cup cottage cheese

– 1 fresh squeezed lemon

– 2 teaspoons fresh parsley

– 3 garlic cloves (minced)

– 2 tablespoons of the pepperoncini juice

– 1 cup parmesan (grated)

– 1/4 cup Irish sharp cheddar

– 1/4 cup jack cheese

– 1 – 2 cups pepperoncinis (chopped)

– Salt and pepper to taste

Directions:

– In a food processor: combine the sour cream, cream cheese, cottage cheese, lemon juice, garlic, and pepperoncini juice. Blend until creamy. Do a quick blend, in the processor, of the 3 grated cheeses (don’t blend too much, keep a bit of the cheese chunky). Stir in the chopped up pepperoncinis (don’t blend, you’ll want the crunch of the peppers in the dip). I LOVE pepperoncinis…. so, I put in 2 cups. You can put in less if you’d like. Add salt and pepper to taste. You’re done! Feel free to play around with the types of cheese you use. Instead of Irish Cheddar… maybe Gruyere or Fontina?

Serve this cheesyness with some bread… OR, potato chips. Hee. Bring this appetizer to your next holiday party, and enjoy! You can ALSO serve it warm…. I like it both warm and cool.

– Chelsey

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Day 18: Leaf Place Markers

Day 18: Today…. leaf place markers! This will be perfect for your upcoming Thanksgiving dinner. It’s a very simple table marker DIY.

What you need: leaves, a permanent marker, and a bit of string. If you’re going to use “fresh” leaves, create these place markers the day of your dinner. If you’re afraid you wont have any fall leaves by Thanksgiving time, press a few leaves in between some books. That way, they’ll be all ready to mark your plates for Thanksgiving dinner.

Write your names on a leaf, tie a grouping of leaves together, and mark your table place spots.

Enjoy (and enjoy your dinner)!

– Chelsey

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Day 17: DIY Love and Noel Blocks

DAY 17 is brought to you by, the lovely Mandy of A Sorta FairytaleHi! My name is Mandy from A Sorta Fairytale blog! I’m here to share a fun DIY project with you all! Thanks Chelsey for having me.

With fall in full swing, the Holiday’s are on my mind. How about you?? I’ve been itching to find some awesome home/holiday decor that I could make myself. But if I’m being honest, I’m not good at DIY stuff, so if I can do this – anyone can. lol.

This is actually a project that I did for a church activity and I really loved it so I thought I’d share! My friend Paige made a set of these and pretty much told me how to do it – so I can’t take any credit for creativity… lol. 

What I love about these blocks is that they are year-round decor, but can also be Christmas decoration as well since they are reversible.

Here is what you need:

– 4 wooden blocks

– Paint (whatever color’s you want)

– Foam brushes

– Stencils (or in this case, we used a cricut and contact paper)

– Sand paper or ab electric sander.

– Rubber Gloves

– Wood Stain

– Hair dryer (to speed up dry time)

– Here are the step by step directions, based on how I made them.  

  1. – I went to Home Depot and just got the cheapest wooden board I could
    find. I found one that was 12ft x 8in (2″ depth) for $4.98. I had them
    cut the board into 8″x8″ squares. It ended up making 12-13 blocks, I only needed 4, but
    it was fine because I was giving some of the other blocks to a friend.
  2. – Sand the blocks down so that they are smooth enough to paint. You can sand them with individual sand papers but it will take quite a while, so if you have an electric sander that would be much easier and cut down on time.
  3. – Paint the blocks whatever color you like! I painted mine white to start. I used a hair dryer to speed up the drying time.
  4. – This next part is tricky. At least it was for me. Because I didn’t have the size stencils I wanted, I bought contact paper at Fred Meyer, and then my friend Paige used her Cricut to cut out the letter stencils. But if you don’t have a Cricut, you could easily buy stencils that would work or try tracing the letters and cutting them by hand.
  5. – Stick contact paper stencils to painted block. Put the ‘N’ on the other side of your ‘V’ block.
  6. – Paint in the stencils the color of your choosing. Let dry.You can stop here if you decide you like them as is.
  7. – Use the sand paper along the edges of the blocks to achieve a “distressed” look.
  8. – Paint on the stain. (I suggest using rubber gloves, as to not stain your hands!) I used a dark walnut color stain, the brand is Minwax. It’s recommended to leave it on between 5-15 minutes and then rub it off with a rag.I left the stain on for way too long on my blocks and so they ended up being really sticky/tacky & took a long time to dry. I sprayed some polyurethane on them hoping it would help coat the blocks and harden. And it did, it just took a few days. Because we painted the wood first, the stain doesn’t soak in as well, so be sure to remove the stain fairly quickly so your blocks don’t end up sticky like mine did. In the end though, I love the way they turned out! They look older and more rustic.

And that’s it! I really am not the best crafter, so I hope this wasn’t too confusing!

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A very big THANK you to Mandy for sharing this fantastic DIY. Please, be sure to give her blog home a visit.

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Day 16: S’mores in a Jar

Day 16: Yup. Simple as that. S’mores in a jar! The perfect hostess gift. Pop some marshmallows, chocolate, and graham crackers into a jar. Add a customizable sticker, from pear tree greetings. Bam! There you go.

::note:: I wrapped the graham crackers and chocolate in plastic wrap. I didn’t want the crackers to get stale or the chocolate to get weird (whatever that means).

Cost: – Jar: thrifted for $2 – graham crackers: $3 – marshmallows: $3 – chocolate: $1 (there’s enough left over to make MANY s’mores jars). –

Enjoy!

– Chelsey

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Day 15: Polka Dot Wreath

Day 15: Today I’m sharing a sweet wreath DIY with you. My polka dot wreath! It’s so simple and lovely for the fall. What you need: a wreath shape, moss, pom poms, hot glue, and optional: deer and trees.

How-to:

– Glue your moss onto your wreath.

– When your moss is all secure, grab the pom poms. Glue them on.

– Optional: add a plastic toy deer and a couple bottle brush trees.

– You’re done!

Cost:

Wreath: $2 – Moss: $6 (for a large bag) – Pom poms: $2

– Chelsey

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Day 14: Paper Pinecone Garland

Day 14: Last year for my 50 DIY Days I created a pinecone garland… this year, I’ve made it even MORE simple. A paper pinecone garland. Made from my illustrations: all you have to do is print out this page on card stock, cut it out, and hot glue to a bit of ribbon. Hang and enjoy! So simple, and perfect for your upcoming Thanksgiving.

Happy Thursday!

– Chelsey

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Wordless{ish} Wednesday: Happy day after election!

Yay! No more commercials! Did you have a good Tuesday?

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{If you have a Wordless{ish} Wednesday, please feel free to link it up below. And, feel free to link up to these blogs too… Parenting by DummiesProject AliciaJenni from the BlogBree: his honey and her mommy, and Live and Love Outloud.