Archive for the “Uncategorized” Category

Oh we had a wonderful group in this week to visit

our garden center and floral design center here at the LaSalle location.

What a great bunch of kids – and from here they headed to

Briarcrest Retirement Center at 14525 Clayton Road in Ballwin

and donated the arrangements they made!

I am sure the residents at Briarcrest were thrilled

these Brownies made some

beautiful bouquets!

These girls have some great troop leaders – thank you Jen Nozka were sharing your photos!

We made quite a photo montage between us!

di

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Walter Knoll Florist to Donate 100 Percent of sales of date flowers for the next 3 weeks to Haiti Relief

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SUV Drive into Walter Knoll Florist O’fallon, Makes a mess but no one is hurt. Video and Pictures.

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Some thoughts on giving flowers on a 1st date.

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If I could enter
The Sweetest Kiss photo contest I’d certainly have to enter this pic from Elephant Rock.

Order Flowers From DiGirl

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Walter Knoll’s Store at 5501 Chippewa store is moving to 4620 Hampton ave in Saint Louis Hills, Near hampton Village, Details about the new Walter Knoll Florist signature store

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Home Made Marshmallows

If you’ve got a stand mixer and a candy thermometer you can make the most delicious homemade marshmallows!

3 envelopes unflavored gelatin
1-1/2 cups granulated sugar
1 cup light corn syrup
¼ tsp salt
1 tbl pure vanilla extract
Powdered sugar for dusting

Combine the gelatin and one-half cup of cold water in the bowl of your stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment and allow to sit while you make the syrup mixture.

In a medium saucepan combine the sugar, corn syrup, salt and one-half cup water – cook over medium heat until the sugar dissolves. Raise the heat to high and cook until the mixture reaches soft ball stage – 240 degrees. Stir often, this takes about 10 minutes.

With the mixer on low speed slowly pour the sugar syrup mixture into the dissolved gelatin. Crank the speed to high and mix until the mixture is very thick, about 15 minutes. Add the vanilla and mix it in thoroughly.

Generously dust a half sheet pan (or 8 x 12 baking dish) with powdered sugar. Pour marshmallow mixture into the pan and smooth the top spreading the mixture to the sides with a dampened spatula. Dust with more powdered sugar. Allow to stand uncovered overnight until it dries out.

Turn the marshmallows out onto a board, cut them with cookie cutters that have been dusted with powdered sugar into fun thanksgiving turkey or feather or whatever shapes for topping your sweet potatoes! Or cut them into squares. Dust the cut shapes in more powdered sugar. Take the scraps to work for your co-workers to devour! The quantity of marshmallows will depend on the pan you set them up in. An 8 X 12-inch baking dish will give you anywhere from 20 to 30 depending on the size you cut them to. I like to use the baking sheet for thin half-inch thick marshmallows.


My Chicago buddy, Rob Rausch, comes through St Louis on his way to his family Thanksgiving in Kansas City every year. He’s quick to put the apron on and run a sink full of soapy water to clean up as I cook, all he charges is his own little pan of W H A T E V E R we’re cooking up! Write me, I’ll get you his contact information.

NOTES:
Knox gelatin comes in boxes of 4 envelopes. One of these days I’m going to figure out this recipe using the 4 envelopes! Check the expiration date on the gelatin box!

Nielsen-Massen Vanillas, Inc make a Madagascar Bourbon Pure Vanilla Bean Paste which I used this year – a full tablespoon – the marshmallows have all those wonderful dots of vanilla bean seeds!

Coconut marshmallows are great also – Toast coconut in the oven until light brown, enough to coat the bottom of your pan at least twice! Use coconut flavoring instead of vanilla– but double the amount – 2 tablespoons will do – then spread the marshmallow mixture onto about half the toasted coconut and then top with the rest – press it into the mixture – later when you cut them, some of the coconut will come off – you can roll the cut sides into that – a little powdered sugar can also be added to the toasted coconut.

There is still time to order your Thanksgiving centerpiece or send ahead a pretty flower arrangement from Walter Knoll Florist! Mom’ll thank you for that! Have a great holiday! Check back soon, we’re having an employee holiday cookie contest and I’ll be posting the winning recipes!

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A short history of the Bonsai and how to care for them

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Well our Autumn Flowers category is up, there goes summer!

It seemed like a longer summer to me, I think because of setting the clocks for daylight savings time earlier this year – which was lucky since I had new gardens to dig. Well, what is summer after all if not for ane herb garden and a few tomato and hot pepper plants?

When I moved to Affton last fall I brought from my city garden


the lavender, rosemary, marjoram and some thyme.


Also dug up those crazy Indian “stink” lilies and Kent’s Yarrow.

Dug some quick holes and plunked them all in the first week of October last year. When we had those warm days in March I started digging, just got the little 3 X 6 foot patch under the back porch windows done before the freeze came back – luckily my precious transplants made it through that snap!

First there was the clearing of the sod to create the herb garden – have you ever dug a bed in a zoysia lawn? Oh my that’s some back breaking work –

When the end of April brought warm weather again I started digging in earnest . . . probably cleared a 10 x 12 foot patch which somehow came out in the shape of Missouri. Thank goodness my digging spade had just been sharpened!

Picked up a few herb plants at the wkf greenhouse and then hit some local herb society sales for some unusual herbs and hit some estate sales for some (ahem) unusual “things”.

The doll heads on the sticks keep me from poking my eyes out when I bend over to prune or sniff. The folks in the houses on either side of us wondered what kind of wackiness was going on until I explained.

A couple doses of Miracle Grow and before long you couldn’t see the toys for the fullness of the plants. My lemon grass got to 6 feet tall!

Finally, as we close in on the fall season, I have everything pruned back
and under control – soon I’ll be pulling the annuals out and giving everything
a good mulching and spend the next 4 or 5 months planning what shape I’ll
make the bed next year as I intend to make it at least twice as big. Perhaps
I should do Texas.

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