I'm trying to get Matt on the Instagram bandwagon as well so you can see what we've both been up to, but for our first Instagram post you'll have to check of what my summer has looked like so far.
1. Some early games at Fenway Park and Matt's Run to Home Base
2. Coffee on the porch on the weekends
3. Making beer cocktails! This one is Hogarden mixed with a raspberry lambic
4. Two craft fairs so far for my Jewelry work
5. Several custom bridal orders completed
6. Produce from my garden
7. I LOVE oysters! Had some for our anniversary date
8. Cirque du Solie in Boston for our anniversary
9. Longest bike ride of the summer, 65 miles finished off with Ben & Jerry's
How's your summer so far? Is anyone capturing it with Instagram?
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
What We're Cooking @ 18 Preston
I (Meg) cook ALOT. It is hands down one of my most favorite things to do. We're still surprised I haven't found a way to make it a living yet. Last night we tried a new recipe from the latest Food Network Magazine and it was so delicious we had to share. I often make tweaks to recipies either to make them more simple or so I can use what we already have on hand. This one I stuck to and it's perfect and so incredible easy. Add some brown rice and this is a perfect meal to impress some guests who love fish!
Get the recipe here: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/food-network-kitchens/soy-glazed-salmon-with-cucumber-avocado-salad-recipe/index.html#
We're collecting more of our favorite recipes on this Pinterest Board. Follow along to see what else we're cooking @18 Preston!
Soy Glazed Salmon with Cucumber Avocado Salad - by Food Network Magazine
![]() |
| Photo by Food Network Magazine |
We're collecting more of our favorite recipes on this Pinterest Board. Follow along to see what else we're cooking @18 Preston!
Monday, July 2, 2012
Dining Room Art Update
My heart was set on my large gallery frame wall the minute we knew the house was ours. My plan all along is to change the art out seasonally, using the frames to bring some decor into our home. I've never been too big on holiday decorating and I think I'll enjoy this subtle approach.
If you caught our first post about the dinning room update you saw what found a home in the gallery frames first. In true Pinterest fashion - paint swatches. While I still love these and have tucked them away to be seen again next spring it was time for our summer update.
The backstory about our summer gallery art is a spring trip we planned to Newport, RI. We went to school in Rhode Island and take an off season trip to Newport once a year. The trip has two missions. 1) eat at some of our favorite restaurants, and 2) visit our favorite antique store, ever! The Armory, to pick out vintage post cards of Newport.
Turns out we couldn't get reservations anywhere we wanted and the antique store was closed for renovations! Luckily there are still Irish Pubs, Starbucks, and Etsy. I found these post cards in an Etsy shop and they are perfect.
The Mount Hope Bridge one is our favorite because it's a Roger Williams University landmark, where we met! There is also a single frames antique postcard of Purgatory Chasam in Newport, where Matt proposed.
And this art update fell into our "free" & "cheap" projects list at $15 for the post cards mounted on scrapbook paper from the stash.
Have you done a cheap of free project lately? link it up over here!
If you caught our first post about the dinning room update you saw what found a home in the gallery frames first. In true Pinterest fashion - paint swatches. While I still love these and have tucked them away to be seen again next spring it was time for our summer update.
The backstory about our summer gallery art is a spring trip we planned to Newport, RI. We went to school in Rhode Island and take an off season trip to Newport once a year. The trip has two missions. 1) eat at some of our favorite restaurants, and 2) visit our favorite antique store, ever! The Armory, to pick out vintage post cards of Newport.
Turns out we couldn't get reservations anywhere we wanted and the antique store was closed for renovations! Luckily there are still Irish Pubs, Starbucks, and Etsy. I found these post cards in an Etsy shop and they are perfect.
The Mount Hope Bridge one is our favorite because it's a Roger Williams University landmark, where we met! There is also a single frames antique postcard of Purgatory Chasam in Newport, where Matt proposed.
And this art update fell into our "free" & "cheap" projects list at $15 for the post cards mounted on scrapbook paper from the stash.
Have you done a cheap of free project lately? link it up over here!
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
The Mission: Free & Cheap Projects
All of the new home owners/new renters out there, can you relate to our current predicament?
You just shelled out a good chunk of your life savings on your down payment/rental deposit. You move into your beautiful new place and want to outfit it to look like - face it - everything you've been pinning since you knew the place would be yours! You don't notice at first, but after a good four months it hits. You're balancing your budget and you start to wonder "what have we done?" Your poor credit card has gotten a work out.
In the spirit of blogging about real stuff, ugly or pretty, let's all get ourselves in check, know that those homes on Pinterest weren't built in a day, and get on the free/cheap project band wagon.
Here is the plan: make a list of every free/cheap project you can get done in your home. Projects you've purchased materials for that have sat unfinished are allowed as long as your either not spending anything, or only your predetermined "cheap budget" to finish it. Our predetermined "cheap budget" is about $40 for the month. After you've made said list, Git-er-done!
18 Preston's Free & Cheap Projects
You're welcome to link up your lists or completed projects below. Grab a button and follow along.
You just shelled out a good chunk of your life savings on your down payment/rental deposit. You move into your beautiful new place and want to outfit it to look like - face it - everything you've been pinning since you knew the place would be yours! You don't notice at first, but after a good four months it hits. You're balancing your budget and you start to wonder "what have we done?" Your poor credit card has gotten a work out.
In the spirit of blogging about real stuff, ugly or pretty, let's all get ourselves in check, know that those homes on Pinterest weren't built in a day, and get on the free/cheap project band wagon.
Here is the plan: make a list of every free/cheap project you can get done in your home. Projects you've purchased materials for that have sat unfinished are allowed as long as your either not spending anything, or only your predetermined "cheap budget" to finish it. Our predetermined "cheap budget" is about $40 for the month. After you've made said list, Git-er-done!
18 Preston's Free & Cheap Projects
- Update Dining Room Gallery Art - DONE
- Paint guest bedroom (paint left over from old apartment)
- Install front door bell (parts purchased in January)
- Install new house numbers and update mailbox (purchased new numbers in January, $6 for spray paint) - DONE
- Paint canoe in porch (spent $4 on paint pot sample to use)
- Make craft room curtains (fabric purchased in February)
- Finish mud room (have wood and paint) - DONE
- Use old Groupon to order a gallery frame!
- Select photos for wedding album (yes, still not done, 3 year anniversary is in August)
You're welcome to link up your lists or completed projects below. Grab a button and follow along.
Monday, June 25, 2012
June Garden Progress
We have the New England weather to thank for the success in the garden so far this summer. Don't want to speak too soon, but the abundance of sunshine along with just above average rain fall, and we really haven't had to do much to keep it going. We weed about once a week and water on days without rain.
Doesn't that just make you want to come over for dinner? Photo by Meg.
We've harvested arugula, radishes, and scallions so far. We have summer squash and zucchini growing well, and the tomatoes are just staring to turn red. I found some great tomato pruning tips here:
Meg's already thinking about what to plant for fall crops, but lets eat the fruits of our labor first. We added our first ripe radish to this grilled Caesar salad. http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/food-network-kitchens/grilled-chicken-ceasar-salad-recipe/index.htmlDoesn't that just make you want to come over for dinner? Photo by Meg.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
What we've been Grilling!
Meg got a webber for her birthday last year and continues to work on becoming "queen of the grill." Yes, I'm writing in the third person and made that up for myself. Has anyone seen a grilling apron that says that? I think I need that, and a smoke mask.
Currently my new favorite technique is the grilled Caesar salad. Check out this food network recipe. The only thing I changed was leaving the romain whole so just the outside is charred. I like the mix of some charred and some fresh from the inside. And we will be making lots of kabobs thanks to my new birthday present.
Cashier at Sur La Table "these are for your wife?"
Matt "yeah, last year I got her a blue webber for her birthday"
Cashier "she does the grilling?"
Matt "yeah, it's pretty awesome"
Currently my new favorite technique is the grilled Caesar salad. Check out this food network recipe. The only thing I changed was leaving the romain whole so just the outside is charred. I like the mix of some charred and some fresh from the inside. And we will be making lots of kabobs thanks to my new birthday present.
Cashier at Sur La Table "these are for your wife?"
Matt "yeah, last year I got her a blue webber for her birthday"
Cashier "she does the grilling?"
Matt "yeah, it's pretty awesome"
Matt grils too though!
Just Four Ingrediants
Fact about Meg & Matt at 18 Preston: we like our beer.
We enjoy brewery tours, beer centered vacations, beer events, local brew pubs, beer tastings, and making our own. Yes, we're home brewers and proud of it. Our hobby of beer brewing has evolved over time from bottles exploding in the bathtub to kegging our own. We like to think we've come full circle. We're still not brewing often though, only one batch so far at the new house.
Back to the title of this post. Beer has four ingredients and were growing one of them. If you used to follow along at Miss Meghan Elizabeth you may remember the very tragic end to our hops growing last year. We did so well until we transplanted outside and then it was a hop funeral. This year we tried a different approach and so far so good. We started the rhizomes right outside in a mini planting bed. They aren't situated to get full sun which is preferred, But the look healthy. The only effect we notice is that they aren't growing as fast as they could. You can almost watch hopes grow at 1 to 4 inches day.
We'll keep you updated on the progress and plans for a hop harvesting party in the fall. These flowers probably won't be mature enough to actually use them in a batch of beer this year but they will be prepped and ready to be bigger and better when they come back up next year.
We're not expert hop growers yet, but so far we can recommend starting outside! After last frost in New England. And be patient.
And beer trivia, do you know the other three ingredients in beer?
We enjoy brewery tours, beer centered vacations, beer events, local brew pubs, beer tastings, and making our own. Yes, we're home brewers and proud of it. Our hobby of beer brewing has evolved over time from bottles exploding in the bathtub to kegging our own. We like to think we've come full circle. We're still not brewing often though, only one batch so far at the new house.
Back to the title of this post. Beer has four ingredients and were growing one of them. If you used to follow along at Miss Meghan Elizabeth you may remember the very tragic end to our hops growing last year. We did so well until we transplanted outside and then it was a hop funeral. This year we tried a different approach and so far so good. We started the rhizomes right outside in a mini planting bed. They aren't situated to get full sun which is preferred, But the look healthy. The only effect we notice is that they aren't growing as fast as they could. You can almost watch hopes grow at 1 to 4 inches day.
![]() |
| A hop rhizome |
We'll keep you updated on the progress and plans for a hop harvesting party in the fall. These flowers probably won't be mature enough to actually use them in a batch of beer this year but they will be prepped and ready to be bigger and better when they come back up next year.
We're not expert hop growers yet, but so far we can recommend starting outside! After last frost in New England. And be patient.
And beer trivia, do you know the other three ingredients in beer?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)











