Color coordinating your Christmas tree can be a hassle—especially if you ever decide you want to change your color scheme.
21.10.2023 - 17:57 / bhg.com
Cake stands are timeless, versatile, and stellar centerpieces for any table. Whether you top them with seasonal decor, plants, charcuterie, jewelry, or dessert, our best cake stands never go out of style.
While they look stunning and are certainly Instagramable, cake stands aren’t always the top tool for creating a magazine-cover-worthy cake or tart. Nearly all cake stands are immobile.
Even if you tuck small pieces of waxed paper or parchment paper under the first layer to catch any drips or excess garnishes, you still have to fuss with spinning the cake—or yourself around the cake—to frost it evenly on all sides. There has to be a better way.
Thanks to Karla Marro, executive pastry chef at Miller & Lux in San Francisco, and her brilliant dessert decorating hack, the solution might be in your home already. A vinyl record player!
After seeing Marro’s ultra-soothing demonstration on Instagram, we reached out to her for the dish on how she initially came up with the idea. She tells BHG that she remembers seeing the technique years ago on a French reality cooking show called “Qui Sera le Prochain Grand Pâtissier?” (Translated from French, the title is “Who Will Be the Next Great Pastry Chef?”)
“Years later, I was working in New York City, and the executive pastry chef was making a lemon tart with a marshmallow-topped cloud,” Marro recalls. “During the tasting, the head chef requested only meringue, so I told the pastry chef about the record player idea. He asked, ‘Do you have one?’ and I promised him, ‘I can find a record player before the end of the week!’”
Marro bought a record player on Facebook Marketplace and started practicing on food storage container lids until she mastered the pacing and spinning strategy.
Rotatin
Color coordinating your Christmas tree can be a hassle—especially if you ever decide you want to change your color scheme.
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Christmas is only a few month away, and falling back on the same decor as last year (or even the past five years) is oh-so-boring. Instead, try bringing some new style into your holiday decor.
Do you want to support wildlife in your garden – but you don’t want a ‘wild’ looking garden? You’d like beautiful borders and gorgeous pots? Even, perhaps, a short neat lawn?
Mandevilla, also known as Dipladenia, Brazilian jasmine and rock trumpet, is a woody climber native to tropical Central and South America. It has gently scented, vibrant blooms and makes a fine conservatory plant in the UK.
We’re back in New Zealand today to see more of Jill Hammond’s beautiful garden. She has spent the last 28 years transforming a 7.5-hectare (18.5-acre) piece of land in rural Hawkes Bay, New Zealand. When she and her husband moved in, it was a completely bare piece of land, so she’s created this entire garden from nothing.
Today we’re visiting with Jill Hammond.
The garden may be in the thrall of autumn, but there is still a fair bit of colour around in patches, with the promise of more to come. Colour is concentrated most in the dahlia beds, where the blooms show little sign of stopping – we, and Jack Frost, know better! There are still roses in bloom, with ‘Strawberry Hill’ the main contender, continuing to delight:
Interior design trends have an intriguing way of reflecting the world we live in outside of our homes and even inside our phones.
Fall is a great time of year to think ahead to a new plot, and sheet mulching can get you started on that vision. Though it can be done at any time of the year, autumn is ideal because the area will have a chance to break down over the winter. I’ve used this technique to create a garden in my backyard after digging up invasive plants, to establish pathways between raised beds, and to keep weeds out of a new area on my front lawn for galvanized raise beds. The process of sheet mulching enables you to put yard waste, like lawn clippings, fallen leaves, and wood chips, to good use. And by spring, you should have a diggable area, ready for plants.
Believe it or not, 2023 is nearly over, and on the horizon, we have a sneak peek into the captivating home trends set to dominate in 2024.