Pulled Pork – 4th of July cookout alternative

I’ve been busy sewing, but nothing that I can share just yet. My Friday night post will be about what I made for dinner today instead.

Try this if you’re bored with traditional burgers and franks for your 4th of July cookout…. and it makes a really good alternative if it’s predicted to rain.

Smithfield sells pork tenderloin with a variety of pre-seasoned choices. This is our favorite.

Ingredients list:

  • 3 to 4 pound pork loin (center cut)
  • 1 can diced tomatoes
  • 1/2 cup vinegar
  • 1 onion, sliced
  • 2 tablespoons Worcestershire Sauce
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 1 teaspoons salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon pepper
  • *optional* Barbeque sauce to be served on the side

Place pork tenderloin in the crockpot and top with sliced onions. Mix the remaining ingredients (except for the barbecue sauce) in a bowl and pour over the pork. Cook on low for 10 hours or on high for 6 hours. (I’ve recently switched to cooking it in my Instant Pot on the 35 minute meat setting.)

Remove from pot and either slice or shred it easily with a fork. Top with your favorite barbecue sauce or spoon some of the contents of the pot over the pork.

Designing Quilts

I have EQ 8, but I’ve never taken the time to sit down and learn how to use it. I keep thinking someday I will, but it just hasn’t happened yet.

For now, I’m still old school and draw my plans out on graph paper if I’m not using a pattern.

These are a few recent projects.

And, the next one I’m sketching out tonight to begin soon.

Dollar Tree is a great place to buy graph paper, but not all locations stock it.

Recently, I found a source online to download 1/2″ graph paper, which I used to graph the individual blocks for the idea I’m working on.

You can click the download button below for the pdf.


There are are other sizes of graph paper available to download from their website http://print-graph-paper.com

And then there were 7

I just finished the seventh second chance quilt. It looked okay, so I first thought I’d just quilt it as is.

That was before I opened it all the way up and realized the light bluish teal fabric was thin broadcloth, which wouldn’t be very durable. I disassembled it and created a new top inspired by the Fabric Cafe 3 Yard Quilt pattern, Brick Street.

I used quite a bit of the original fabric from the rail fence blocks. The lime green frogs and butterflies will be saved for a future kid quilt.

The peacock fabric used in the alternate block was from JoAnn’s, as was the blue fabric used for the sashing and backing. (I’m sure going to miss that store!) Border fabric is a Benartex print that coordinated surprisingly well with the peacock print.. It was bound in a plum Kona fabric.

I haven’t made any quilts lately with fabrics that are a bit on the wild side and might appeal to a teenager somewhere. I’m hoping this one will.

The quilting design is Happy by Urban Elementz.

Here’s a “before” photo of the next rescued quilt top. It’s a jelly roll race design. I’ve already started it, but I’m curious, what YOU would do to improve it?

My husband’s suggestion was a little drastic, “strike a match”. Is it bad that I’m really looking forward to saying “I told ya so!”? 🙂

Patriotic Strings

This post was set to publish on July 4, 2024. I plan to share updates each Friday night if I have something to share. During the week, I’ll review previous posts, make edits if necessary, and republish them. I had another patriotic string quilt to add to the original post. It’s the first one you see below.

String quilts are among my favorite type of quilt to create. I enjoy transforming leftover fabrics that many quilters discard into something useful and beautiful.

I have several friends online who have been making them for years. My interest sparked when a local friend claimed, “string quilts are ugly!” Gauntlet dropped. Challenge accepted! In the process I discovered how much fun they are to make and unlocked a new realm of creativity. I’ll let you be the judge on whether or not she was proven wrong. 😉

My latest string quilt features blocks that finish at 8″. I use old phone book pages as a foundation for stitching the strings when I have them. For this quilt, I used our local grocery store (Publix) ads, as they provide large newsprint pages that allow for various shapes and sizes. The strings often aren’t straight or even, and often cut on the bias. Paper foundation helps stabilize them.

The stars were made using a free pattern from Urban Elementz called Fast No Match Stars. I like how easy it makes piecing the rows without worrying about clipping off the star points.

This star quilt was made by piecing 8″ string sections for the centers, stitched horizontally rather than on a diagonal. The finished block is 16″, with 1″ sashing and cornerstones.

My smallest strings are stitched to adding machine tape and trimmed to 2.5″ wide. I replaced the pieced squares in the pattern Star Trails by A Bright Corner with strips of strings.

I have friends who avoid paper foundations because they don’t like removing them. I prefer paper because fabric left in the block makes the quilt too heavy for our warm South Florida climate.

I actually enjoy removing the paper while watching TV in the evenings. It’s not a bother for me and keeps my hands busy when I’m not stitching a binding by hand.

I’m really happy with how the three quilts turned out. I still have many patriotic strings left, so I’ll look for my next idea to use them after I finish the million other projects on my quilt bucket list!

A Quilter’s Challenge

My current project is a group of ten “Second Chance Quilts”. I first read the term coined on the Wedding Dress Blue blog. It’s always so much fun to see what Deanna begins with and then fall in love with her finished quilt.

I never really considered trying it until I found myself looking at quilt tops on a guild de-stash table. Eventually they’d have been donated to a craft resource center if they continued to be passed over. As soon as I saw them, I remembered Wedding Dress Blue and asked myself “why not?”. If I wasn’t willing to give them a second chance, who would? I took two that day and the other eight that were still available a week later.

I’ll show you the five I’ve already finished in a future post.

This is top #6.

It was a nice top but a bit small at 44″ x 53″.

My goal for adult lap quilts is 50″ x 70″. I’ve followed Mary’s blog for years, Making Scrap Quilts From Stash and noticed most of her quilts are in that range. (I’ve tested different size lap quilts myself and I can’t get comfortable laying on the couch with a quilt shorter than 70″.)

If you make an adult quilt any smaller, you really need to know in advance where it’s going., likely a place where a senior might use it while in a recliner or to someone who’s in a wheelchair.

I added a row of blocks to the top and bottom of the quilt and then borders. It finished at 52″ x 72″. It would have hit my target size exactly if I hadn’t added the narrow burgundy inner border that I decided it needed at the last minute.

Luckily, I had the perfect fabric for the border. I can’t remember when or why I bought it, and it’s been on a shelf waiting for the right quilt top. I’m glad one finally came along, and it’s now part of a finished quilt!

Figuring out how to make the quilt blocks was fairly simple. You begin with a pair of 6 1/2″ (unfinished) rail fence blocks. One is made with dark strips and the other with lights. Draw a diagonal line on the back of the light blocks. Next, with right sides of the dark and light blocks together, nest the seams and sew on each side of the line. When you cut them apart and press open, voila! You’ve created two blocks at the same time!

I’m really having fun with these second chance quilts! Although I’m in no hurry to see it end, I’m sure I’ll be ready to get back to my own projects before too long.


This is how I found myself at a table looking at orphaned quilt tops… I apologize for the length of this story but I know one day I’ll want to come back to this post and remember how it all started. So, here goes…

A member and past president of the guild I belong to several years ago works at our local quilt shop. When I was there last month she told me how much the guild had changed, and in particular the Community Outreach program.

She told me just enough to rouse my curiosity before getting busy with a customer. As I was leaving, she said “you should come to the next meeting”. I did and was immediately inspired.

I met Vivian, the committee chairwoman and she told me about her mission with bins of quilt tops that had been in storage when she took over. I later learned that “a lot” meant 390. Yep, that’s a lot!
She’d also been working simultaneously to completely empty the storage unit because the high rental expense had been such a drain on the guild and was getting close to finishing it.

By the time Vivian stepped up to be the new chairwoman of the Outreach committee, it hadn’t been active in several years. With a vision, a lot of hard work, and a knack for inspiring quilters she brought it back to life!

Other members have since told me about her accomplishments. She figured out a way to get many of the quilts finished and donated by using both traditional and non-traditional ideas. It was obvious how much the respected her and the pride the felt. I can see why! Inspiring volunteers for a committee that had none, meeting the challenge of dealing with an overwhelming number of unfinished quilt tops and figuring out how to completely empty a storage unit too? I’m not sure if she’s a quilt whisperer or a miracle worker – maybe she’s both!

Several volunteers had worked with her to evaluate the many bins of quilt tops after they were sorted into categories for donation (adult, teen/preteen, child/baby). Together as a group, they decided which ones they would be able to keep and finish and which they had to let go. I can only imagine the amount of determination and perseverance it took to get this far. I knew that under the surface there had probably been many hard moments and doubts but it was obvious she had kept those to herself and never gave up.

There are still plenty of tops that need to be finished but they’ve made an unbelievable amount of progress. It’s rare to find a leader who not only possesses the ability to organize, problem solve, and implement a plan but also has the insight to inspire and involve others in the decision making process.

There will be challenges ahead as the Outreach program evolves and members work with their own stash and fabrics as they’re donated. But, where there’s a will, there’s a way” and this group definitely has the will. There is nothing more uplifting than witnessing faith in action.

I look forward to working with them to “make do” with what they have just as the generations of quilters before us did. And, like those woman many years ago, find joy in the process and the fellowship with other quilters.

Before I edited this post, I’d gone into great detail about the reasons that I’m no longer active in the other local guild. The frustrations and disappointments that had me questioning if I even still wanted to quilt. Little did I know.. it wouldn’t take long for me to stumble onto the answer to that question.

I removed all the incidents that I knew I no longer felt like I belonged at the other guild from this post because I’m looking forward, not behind me. I guess I needed to get it out of my system when I first wrote it.

I hope the other guild is able to eventually make a few changes because they’re all nice women. But, change is only possible when you want it enough to work for it and so far, no one does. They may not be ready for change, but I am.. and I did.

While I was editing the post, this popped up in my email… at the very moment I needed to read it.

Wedding Dress Blue

Quilting and other things I love in this colorful world