4 Ingredient Super Sangria

The Super Bowl party invite said to bring a beverage to go with wood fired pizza. I took that as my cue to make sangria.

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My sangria-making habit started after my semester in Spain. My friends and I used to go to this Chinese restaurant that had the best sangria in town. (Yes, Chinese food. In Spain. With amazing sangria. You with me?) We developed kind of a routine of stopping in every week or two, starting with a pitcher of sangria, improving our Chinese food in Spanish vocabulary while looking over the menu, eating a meal that tasted strikingly similar to Chinese food back home, and then my friend would finish off the fruit at the bottom of the pitcher. By the end of the semester, I was hooked on sangria and excellent at ordering Chinese in Spanish.

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These days, I think of sangria as a summer drink and usually make it with more citrusy and peachy flavors. But we had a delicious apple and pear sangria when we were in Tucson last month (I’d link to a post about that, but it’s not written yet), so when we got the party invite, I was ready to try making a winter sangria.

I kept it simple with just four ingredients: apples, pears, red wine, and blood orange Italian soda (yep!). The soda had a very light flavor, so it wasn’t overpowering. It also contributed the bubbles, extra sweetness, and a nice clear glass bottle to make the sangria in, so our friends wouldn’t have to remember to return a pitcher to us later.

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I poured most of the soda out of the bottle to start with, added the other ingredients, and then added some back in after tasting.

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In the meantime, I started slicing apples and realized the slices were just a little too big to easily fit through the opening of the bottle, so instead I did kind of a chunky matchstick cut. “Chunky matchstick” may not be an official culinary term, but it might make a good band name and pretty much describes the way the fruit was cut in our Tucson sangria.

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I slid the pieces in the bottle one at a time until it started looking like there was a whole lotta fruit in there. Then I poured in the wine through a funnel, so I wouldn’t spill it all over. But I almost did that anyway, because I was taking photos while pouring. (Blogger problems.)

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I filled the bottle part way, so I’d have room to adjust my ratios after a taste test.

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That’s probably about the time I realized I had all these produce stickers on my elbow. And the waistband of my hoodie. Because I am awesome.

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Also probably because I stuck them all on the counter before I washed the fruit. (Am I the only one who does this?) Then I’m guessing I leaned right on them while I was taking photos of apples.

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See what I go through for you guys?

Anyway, so after tasting, I added a little more of everything, then tasted and adjusted a few more times until it was just right. I had looked at a recipe, but then I didn’t really follow it. It’s more authentically Spanish if you don’t follow a recipe. Drinking wine while you make it helps too, even especially if it’s only lunchtime.

I gave it a few hours to chill in the fridge.

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Finally, I covered the soda label (which I hadn’t had time to remove properly) with navy blue paper, because I wanted both Seahawks fans and Broncos fans to feel free to partake. I labeled it ¡Super Sangria! (The upside down exclamation point makes it Spanish.) Then we headed out to watch the not-so-Super Bowl. At least there was plenty of wine at the party.

Entertaining in a small home

Peruvian nativity scene

The Buffet/Open House we hosted on Christmas Eve (and made a fort for) came from my grandmother’s tradition (the gathering, not the fort). A few years ago, my mom started up again. And this past year was the first time we’d hosted it. We were excited to include Phillip’s family too, even though that’s a lot of people for our little place.

As I was thinking about how to make it all work, I kept googling things like “buffet in small space” and getting unhelpful results that either linked to furniture on shopping sites or articles that focused on formal holiday spreads with lavish decorations. Since I was scratching my head over where to even fit the coffeemaker, most of the suggestions – a decorative 4-foot potted tree, for example – were out of the question.

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The assumption seems to be that if you’re hosting a holiday gathering, you have thousands of square feet to spare and plenty of time to paint portraits of each of your guests for placecards. I don’t have either, but I believe you can still entertain in a smaller home and that you can keep it as simple as you choose.

I did finally find a few helpful tips, so I decided to pass those on to you, along with my own observations on what worked out for us and what I wish I’d done differently.

 

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Scheduling

Making the party open house allows people to come and go, depending on the rest of their holiday plans. It also (hopefully) spreads out when everyone will be arriving, which is great if you’re fitting a lot of people into a small space.

To choose a start time, I checked with a few family members to see what time they’d be heading to church services or other events and made sure we were starting early enough for them to stop by beforehand if they wanted to. What I didn’t find out until later was how many people (even with cushy desk jobs) had to work regular hours that day. I wish we could’ve accommodated their schedules, as well.

 

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Space

When you live in a condo/apartment/less-roomy dwelling, space really is the final frontier. If you’re going to boldly go into holiday party territory, you really have to think about physically fitting in food, dishes, appliances, seating, and people.

Plan ahead for the seating you’ll likely need – plus backup seating – and leave room for traffic flow. In addition to chairs in the house and back patio (it was a gorgeous day), we opened up our back gate and put some chairs in our (admittedly, not-so-scenic) parking spaces, just in case a ton of people came at once.

If your table space is limited, focus on finger foods. Also, keep in mind that some people aren’t that comfortable balancing plates on their laps. Try to have the option of some table space somewhere, even if it’s a coffee table, tray table(s), or desk (with everything important cleared out of spill-range – there will be spills). I opted to use my desk in the living room for serving, because there wasn’t a lot of room to sit around it anyway, and this allowed me to keep my kitchen table open for seating.

The best tip I read while I was planning was to split up your buffet if you need extra space. You can put drinks, desserts, and/or snacks somewhere separate from the main spread. This was huge for me, since there was no way everything would have fit on my kitchen counter.

Finally, think of the children. If you don’t have a yard or playroom that they can roam free in, find a spot for a fort or kid nook where they can play. If anyone will be bringing an infant, also think about a place in a quieter room where they can console a fussy little one, breastfeed, or set up a Pack ‘N Play if they need to.

 

Holiday buffet tips: Use warming trays to keep hot foods hot.

Serving

Make it easy as possible for people to serve themselves. Pour coffee, cut cake, and clear plates as needed, and then get out of the way! As people arrived, I tried to point out where everything was and invite them to help themselves and let me know if they needed anything. In my head, I had made super cute labels for all the food. In reality, I ran out of time to make that happen.

Don’t feel like you have to put everything out at once (great tip from a caterer)! This allows you to use smaller serving dishes and just refill them as needed.

If you’re doing an open house over a longish span of time, make sure you keep everything at a safe temperature – employing warming trays, crockpots, ice packs, etc. for things that need to be kept hot or cold.

Having snacks and drinks ready to go can buy you time if everything’s not quite ready. Due to some last-minute shuffling, this wasn’t the case for me. Having the punch done so that people could have started there would have taken a lot of the pressure off. In an ideal world, everything would have been ready to go before guests started to arrive. But it’s not an ideal world – see the “serenity” section below.

 

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Serenity

Arrange for and accept help. Ask someone who likes taking photos to take a few and send them to you. (I didn’t do that this time, which is why most of my photos are from after the party.) Make sure you have at least one person there with you early to help with last-minute trips to the store (in this case, my dad), things you just haven’t gotten to yet (Mom), and final details that set the ambience, like lighting candles and putting on music (which I always think I’ll do but Phillip always gets done). Let people bring food. Go with the flow when help doesn’t totally fit the plan.

Sit down at some point. Also eat something. I didn’t do either of these things as early I could (and probably should) have.

Be ready to ditch what’s not working or that shiny idea you just ran out of time for. Accept the things you cannot change.

Holiday buffet tips: take a break and eat cake!

 

What to do with leftover or broken candy canes

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Do you still have traces of the holidays hanging around the house? Wondering what to do with those broken candy canes?

Here are a few ideas:

1. Crush them up for toppings. To minimize mess, keep the candy cane wrapped, put it on top of a cutting board or plate (in case the package comes open) and smash it to smithereens with a glass, wine bottle, or rolling pin. (This is also super for post-holiday stress relief!) Sprinkle on top of vanilla or chocolate ice cream, brownies, cake, or cupcakes. A multi-colored candy cane will look like confetti.

2. Mix broken candy canes into hot chocolate or coffee. Larger pieces may not dissolve all the way, but they’ll still add some pepperminty flavor.

3. Use as breath mints. Break candy canes into pieces and refill an old mint tin.

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Note: As with any hard candy or cake topping, candy cane pieces can be a choking hazard or just sharp. Be careful about giving them to small children and make sure to supervise them.

Make a fort for kid guests

On Christmas Eve, we hosted an open-house style holiday buffet. While that may not seem to fit in with our theme of simplicity, it was actually a great way to see both sides of the family at once and then spend a quiet, unstructured no-freeway-driving Christmas Day.

We don’t have a ton of space, so making sure we had room for everyone required creative thinking and looking at our place from a different perspective.

Fort under desk for guests' kids

There will be another post about how we made the buffet work. Today I just wanted to share the idea we came up with to give our littlest guests a space of their own during the party. We called it the Christmas Fort.

Fort under desk for guests' kids

To make it happen, I cleared out everything under my desk (been needing to do that anyway), which is in the living room. I removed the power strip and covered the outlets on the wall behind it, put a blanket on the floor and threw in pillows to make it comfy cozy, and then added toys and books that were safe for the under 3 crowd. (Thanks to my mom for sorting our toy box, while I did some last-minute cleaning.) The final touch was a tablecloth over the top, both to increase the fort feel and because the desk doubled as a snack station.

Holiday buffet idea: Use the top of a desk for extra serving space and put a fort underneath for guests' kids to play in.

You could do something similar with any very sturdy desk or table. Or you could create a kid nook in a little corner where there’s not stuff they could easily injure themselves with or damage. (I know. Kids are creative too – they’re great at inventing ways to get hurt and/or destroy things. Just try to make their space reasonably safe.)

In fact, I’d originally planned to move an end table and create a kid nook between our couch and some bookshelves, covering the shelves with either some festive fabric or drawing paper. Then I realized we’d have to lose that nook to make room for the Christmas tree, so I went looking for an alternative and decided to put the unused under-desk space to work.

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Overall, the reactions to the Fort were pretty good. My 2-year-old nephews were in and out. My little cousin said it was an “awesome place” and was so excited about it she made her mom get in too. (I’m sorry I missed that!) Some friends we hadn’t seen in awhile stopped by later in the evening, and their kids basically had their own party in there, giving us adults a chance to catch up.

At the end of  the day, after everyone had gone home, we had to try it out ourselves.

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It was a nice place to be.

***

 

P.S. When I was looking for under-desk fort inspiration, I came across this more long-term solution, using the same Expedit bookshelf/desk combo I have. If you’re interested, you’ll find it on Ikea hackers.

Last-minute Christmas guide

The last-minute Christmas guide: shopping, entertaining, decorating, and travel tips

The last-minute Christmas guide: shopping, entertaining, decorating, and travel tips

If you’re still checking items off your Christmas to do list (no judgment!), here’s a list of quick links from here and around the internetz to help you get it all done – whether you DIY or not!

For those of you who are completely and totally done with your Christmas stuff, consider this a head start on next year. For those of you who don’t celebrate Christmas, you have plenty of time to pour yourself a hot beverage and read through my entertaining past blog posts on travel and/or crafting.

Last-minute Christmas guide: make gift bags from paper sacks

Wrapping and cards

DIY upcycled gift tags

Last-minute gifts: super-quick DIY gift ideas

Last-minute gifts: where to shop

Last-minute Christmas guide: decorating

Decorating

last-minute Christmas guide: entertaining

Entertaining

Cleaning up

Last-minute Christmas guide: travel tips

Travel and packing

Have fun and happy holidays!