Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Latest Forum Posts
Collapse
-
Late to the party on this one, but only joined TQS in November 2025. Bought the pattern so can view Sarah Fielke's videos...
-
I like the suggestion also. I plan to put a white layer behind the center white circle also to minimize the seam allowance...
-
Wow! Lovely. I'll bet it's heavy, warm and cozy.
-
So excited - my quilt got a 1st in its category at the El Dorado County Fair. I did it in Flannel - quite challenging -...
-
My vision in Moda Grunge now that school is out for summer!
-
That’s beautiful. Good job.
-
Proud of you, Carole! You are doing great.
-
Finally started my BOM over the past few weeks and just finished month 3. I’m using Bella Solids. I restrained myself...
-
Since she doesn't address it, contact her through her website and ask....
-
Very nice. Your colors are lovely.
-
Month 6 finished! Roll on Month 7.
-
She showed how she buried knot at beginning of process. How does she bury it at end?
-
Denise, this will be spectacularly beautiful!
-
I am using Grunge for the fabrics. The kit is lovely but the postage was a killer to Australia so I chose my own in similar...
-
I don’t believe so. These are custom dies specially made for this quilt. The only embroidery on the quilt is straight...
-
Accuquilt applique dies usually come with the embroidery stitches. Will the BOM applique also come with these stitch designs?...
-
Please use this TOPIC to ask questions about Month 6.
- Loading...
- No more items.
Trending Forum Posts
Collapse
-
how much fabric is needed for trees...
-
Home from the Maine Quilts show where my Color my World quilt, rename ‘Home,’ received 3 ribbons. I’m overwhelmed...
-
Well, here it is, the end of 2022, and I finally have finished my 2021 BOM quilt! I apologize that the photo is not centered....
-
Hi There,
I hope you can help me. I know I'm very late in getting to this point but life is finally allowing... -
I'm quite behind on my BOM, but now have all the tall buildings of the outer ring done. I would like to add some house...
-
Hi all.. I am behind in my Color My World and just starting the skyscrapers... Does anyone have the finished size (with...
-
My quilt is finish
-
For anyone paper piecing, is your quarter inch a tiny bit larger? When I’m trimming up the finished building, I line...
-
I decided early to do paper piecing instead of the wax…I’m more comfortable . However, I have a few questions…anyone...
-
Will we have access to the Color My World videos after December 31st? I can't seem to find info on this.
-
I am BRAND NEW to the Quilt Show and fell in love with this pattern. I downloaded all of the instructions. My concern is......
-
I'm a new-ish star member and would like to download the "Color My World" pattern...but I can't find where to...
-
See how I quilted Color My World and the added surprise quilting in Wendy’s border:
https://bbquiltmaker.b... -
Hello - I know someone has solved this problem...I seem to remember a question arising when we put the inner circle together...
-
Cap'n John showed me a new feature--you can see all the photos posted on any particular topic--at once.
Open... -
I know Barbara has reminded us to download all files prior to the end of the year. I finished my downloads today and decided...
-
Please use this topic to share your FINISHED top or quilt here. This will make it easy to see all the great quilts everyone...
- Loading...
- No more items.
'Wot RoTT' exchange
Collapse
X
-
-
-
-
Filter
-
Administrative
new posts
-
LOL!Originally posted by PosyPAnd a rhubarb pie should be 12" long by 3" wide 8) :lol: if only you could get the pie dish the right shape for it :wink:
By the way, with rhubarb, it is very sharp and can need more sugar than sometimes you think, look for the smaller stems they tend to be sweeterLyndhurst, Ohio USA - East Side Suburb of Cleveland, Ohio

- IP
-
[quote="sewengel"]I have a great recipe for rhubarb. KILL IT!! I can't stand any type of rhubarb much to my DH and late MIL sadness. LOL
Sharon, how could you... Rhubarb and Ginger jam is one of the greatest pleasures in this world!
Marilyn, yes a tea-brack is a sort of fruit cake where you soak the fruit in tea overnight (there is also a porter cake where you soak the fruit in alcohol). A thick slice with a slab of Kerrygold butter and a cup of tea .... nothing like it

- IP
Comment
-
Yahoo search gave me this info on tea brack. Looks yummy!
So do you use brewed tea or Irish Whiskey for your recipe??
Tea brack — a.k.a. Irish Freckle Bread — is a moist, close-grained, packed-with-fruit breakfast bread. The flavor of the whole wheat is discernible, yet not overpowering because it's complemented by just the right degree of sweetness. Interestingly, the recipe uses brewed tea as its liquid. If desired, substitute 2 tablespoons Irish whiskey for an equal amount of the tea. This recipe comes from our award-winning cookbook, The King Arthur Flour Baker's Companion
Great recipe choices. I'll have to go to the store tomorrow to see if I can find rhubarb! Thanks for the suggestions.
Lorna
- IP
Comment
-
Renata, traditionally we don't use dates in a tea-brack - but you can put whatever fruit you like into it.
Here's the recipe:
RITA'S IRISH TEA BRACK
16oz dried fruit (we just use raisins and sultanas)
16 fl oz strong black tea
4 oz soft brown sugar
4 oz granulated white sugar
1 egg
14 oz plain white flour (without raising agent)
1 heaped teaspoon mixed spice
1 teaspoon baking powder
Put the raisins and sultanas into a bowl, cover with the tea and leave overnight to allow the fruit to plump up. The next day preheat the oven to 160C/320F. Line two 2lb loaf tins with baking parchment. Add the sugar and egg to the fruit and tea and combine well. Sieve the flour, mixed spice and baking powder and add it to the fruit mix stirring thoroughly. The mixture should be softish. You can add a little more flour if it seems too runny or a little more tea, or milk, if it seems to dry. Divide the mixture between the two loaf tins. Bake at 160C/320F for 30 minutes and then turn down the oven to 150C/300F for a further 20 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean. Cool on a wire rack - if you can wait that long - and serve with butter and a cup of tea. Enjoy.

- IP
Comment
-
Rita,
I had to look up sultanas, never heard of them. Seems they are what we refer to as Golden raisins here in the states.
Does this sound like your mixed spice? 1 tbsp cinnamon, ground
1 tsp coriander, ground
1 tsp nutmeg, ground
1/2 tsp ginger, ground
1/4 tsp allspice, ground
1/4 tsp cloves, ground
Also, would nuts be good in this do you think?
Karen
- IP
Comment
-
I have a recipe for Barmbrack similar to this but it includes currents and only brown sugar, not the mix of sugars and for a shortcut - if I have forgotten to put the fruit to soak overnight (usual occurance :roll: ) I will use hot tea and simmer the fruit for about 1/2 hour - just be careful that the mix is not too hot when adding the egg!Originally posted by ReetzbobeetzRenata, traditionally we don't use dates in a tea-brack - but you can put whatever fruit you like into it.
Here's the recipe:
RITA'S IRISH TEA BRACK
16oz dried fruit (we just use raisins and sultanas)
16 fl oz strong black tea
4 oz soft brown sugar
4 oz granulated white sugar
1 egg
14 oz plain white flour (without raising agent)
1 heaped teaspoon mixed spice
1 teaspoon baking powder
Put the raisins and sultanas into a bowl, cover with the tea and leave overnight to allow the fruit to plump up. The next day preheat the oven to 160C/320F. Line two 2lb loaf tins with baking parchment. Add the sugar and egg to the fruit and tea and combine well. Sieve the flour, mixed spice and baking powder and add it to the fruit mix stirring thoroughly. The mixture should be softish. You can add a little more flour if it seems too runny or a little more tea, or milk, if it seems to dry. Divide the mixture between the two loaf tins. Bake at 160C/320F for 30 minutes and then turn down the oven to 150C/300F for a further 20 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean. Cool on a wire rack - if you can wait that long - and serve with butter and a cup of tea. Enjoy.
Haven't made any in ages I think that I will have to now - huuungreeey!
- IP
Comment
-
Rita and Rosemary, I have all the ingredients for either of your recipes right in my pantry. Do you know how excited I am? I'm still a new quilter(need frequent breaks
from the sewing machine)... so there is nothing, including quilting, that could take me from the kitchen to make bracks :P :P Will let you know how they turn out. Not sure which version I'll try first but we'll find out in the kitchen.
Mille Grazie!!!!

- IP
Comment
-
Karen, it is 1 teaspoon of mixed spice, not 1 tablespoon! We just get it as a tin of ground mixed spice. The spices vary according to the different manufacturers. But I think the principle flavour is cinnamon and cloves with a hint of ginger. The tin I have at the moment lists the ingredients as Cinnamon, Coriander, Cloves, Fennel, Ginger and Bay Leaf. Do you use a mixed spice for pumpkin pie? It will work for this too. Yes, I would say Golden Raisins are the same as Sultanas. Really, any dried fruit and nuts will work in it. Personally, I just love it all fruity.Originally posted by sugarmuffin57Rita,
I had to look up sultanas, never heard of them. Seems they are what we refer to as Golden raisins here in the states.
Does this sound like your mixed spice? 1 tbsp cinnamon, ground
1 tsp coriander, ground
1 tsp nutmeg, ground
1/2 tsp ginger, ground
1/4 tsp allspice, ground
1/4 tsp cloves, ground
Also, would nuts be good in this do you think?
Karen
Rosemary, a Barm Brack here is always made with yeast not baking powder. And it always has mixed peel in it which I really don't like. And then there's the ring to break your tooth on! :roll:
- IP
Comment
-
Rita, yeast in a 'barm' brack doesn't surprise me, since barm is an old term to refer to fermenting yeast and to be 'barmy' is to be suffering from a surfeit of fermeted products. My recipe comes from the Hamlyn All Colour Cookbook (Mum has a copy, & I got my own after I got married) Their Barm brack recipe is
12 fl oz cold tea
7oz soft brown sugar
12 oz mixed dried fruit
10 oz self-raising flour
1 egg.
I always chuck in extra fruit, because I remember as a small child that dried fruit was exactly that dried, and in a handful of sultanas you would only get 1 or 2 that would squish between the fingers, nowadays they all squish between the fingers ergo - they are not as dried as they used to be. Therefore you need more fruit today to get the sameish number of them if the recipe is over 20 years old. Anyway I like lots of fruit. :wink:
The first time I made some for the in-laws, FIL insisted on trying a slice fried with his breakfast, it works nearly as well as christmas pudding
PS do you think Renata has got the fruit into the tea to soak yet? :wink:

- IP
Comment
-
Late to the party on this one, but only joined TQS in November 2025. Bought the pattern so can view Sarah Fielke's videos...
-
I like the suggestion also. I plan to put a white layer behind the center white circle also to minimize the seam allowance...
-
Wow! Lovely. I'll bet it's heavy, warm and cozy.
-
So excited - my quilt got a 1st in its category at the El Dorado County Fair. I did it in Flannel - quite challenging -...
-
My vision in Moda Grunge now that school is out for summer!
-
That’s beautiful. Good job.
-
Proud of you, Carole! You are doing great.
-
Finally started my BOM over the past few weeks and just finished month 3. I’m using Bella Solids. I restrained myself...
-
Since she doesn't address it, contact her through her website and ask....
-
Very nice. Your colors are lovely.
-
Month 6 finished! Roll on Month 7.
-
She showed how she buried knot at beginning of process. How does she bury it at end?
- Loading...
- No more items.
What's Going On
Collapse
There are currently 4577 users online. 141 members and 4436 guests.
Most users ever online was 45,077 at 12:30 PM on 02-01-2026.
Forum Stats
Collapse
Topics: 8,422
Posts: 157,231
Members: 29045
Active Members: 1,016
Welcome to our newest member, [email protected].
Latest Topics
Collapse
Trending
Collapse
There are no results that meet this criteria.
Working...
X




Comment