mooseberry
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Thank you so very much, I will play with the napkins and definately try the butter in the molds...never thought of it.The molded butter is from either candy molds (all of mine are from yard sales), or from ice cube molds. The one I have I think is for ice cubes... it's more rubber and flexible. The plastic candy molds get brittle if you leave them in the freezer too long, which, since I'mThis is a great looking setting....how do you fold the napkins like that?Table cloth, placemat, silverplate silverware (2 forks, 2 spoons, 2 knives if serving homemade bread, or just one if not), fruit cup on little dish on top of plate. Across the top (left to right) are specially folded napkin, individual salt & pepper, molded butter pats on glass dish, stem glass, cut glass, coffee cup. Fruit is on the table when they come down, as well as tray with milk, ice water, and juice, plus a carafe of coffee with cut glass creamer and sugar. The entree is brought out on a serving platter with side meat in a separate serving dish, plus homemade bread on a cutting board (or other bread in a different dish)... I lose some fruit, but there's very little waste for the entree, meat and bread since we can eat the leftovers.
=)
Kk..
Molded butter patties? is there a ool for that?
I love to impress/surprise my guests, that would be the perfect set up for me....
Thanks for sharing
.lazybusy the butter tends to stay in the mold in the freezer quite a while. But I'm finding I can do it the morning I make breakfast if I forgot or ran out... start with soft butter, press into the molds (squeeze the air out) and pop in the freezer just long enough for the butter to firm up. Or, if already molded, place on the dishes at the beginning of breakfast prep and by the time the guests sit down it's soft enough to use while still holding it's shape. You could also use a pastry tube and decorator nozzle, but you have to have the butter at just the right temp and I think these look cooler.
I got a book from the library on the napkins. There's probably stuff online as well. That pattern is a variation of one called a "Bishop's Hat." (True bishop's hat has the ends tucked in, I usually let them spread out like a flor de lis.) The other one I use a lot is called "fortune cookie" cause it looks kind of like one and they use it a lot in nice Chinese restaurants.
Don't know if you'll be able to follow this, but here goes... a square napkin really works best for the bishop's hat, but you can fudge it if it's not perfect.
1) Fold napkin point to point to make a triangle, with the fold at the top (away from you).
2) Bring the outside corners down to the point nearest you.
3) Fold those same two corners up to the new point formed in step two.
4) Fold the point nearest you up about halfway to the middle, then fold the same edge again up to the middle, then fold it a third time over the upper half (this triple fold/roll makes the base).
5) Holding it all together carefully flip the whole works over, keeping the top point still at the top.
6) Take the outside corners (left and right) and fold them in, tucking one into the other. I sometimes fold them this far and store them like this.
7) Flip it back over.
8) Take the front points and tuck them into the band at the base (for true Bishop's Hat), or fold them down and let them drape to either side.
9) Pull the back out a little to open it up so it will stand on its own.
Voila!
Fortune Cookie:
1) Fold napkin point to point to make a triangle, with fold nearest to you and point at the top.
2) Fold the outside corners up to the top point.
3) Flip it over by bringing the top toward you (old top is now nearest you).
4) Fold the entire napkin in half by bringing the bottom point up to the top point.
5) Bring outside corners together.
Voila!
Good luck!
=)
Kk.
.
I think this would be really cool and give guests something to remember you by.
I have molds in the mail I was going to use for chocolates, in the shapes of a Moose, now I'll try it with butter too.
Thanks, KK
Maggie