From the category archives:

PHOTOGRAPHY

Cream cheese, cranberries, and french toast? Yes please! Looking at this picture right now is making me drool. I really love the smell of french toast on the griddle. Yummm. You should surprise your significant other with breakfast in bed with this recipe. It would be nice. Do it.

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Cranberry Filled French Toast
By Jenny Park
Serves 4
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 45 minutes

1 ½ cups fresh or frozen cranberries
¾ cup sugar
1 orange zested and juiced
1 cinnamon stick
3 whole eggs
2 Tablespoons whole milk
1 Tablespoon fresh orange juice
2 teaspoons ground Saigon cinnamon
4 ounces cream cheese, softened
1 loaf brioche, cut into 8 thick slices
2 Tablespoons butter, divided
Garnish: powdered sugar and maple syrup

1. Place cranberries, sugar, orange zest, juice, and the cinnamon stick in a small sauce
pan over medium heat. Stir.
2. While the cranberry mixture comes to a boil,
3. Place eggs, milk, juice, and ground cinnamon in a shallow dish and whisk together
until completely combined.
4. When cranberry mixture comes to a boil, bring the mixture to a simmer and begin
crushing the cranberries as they soften.
5. Once the mixture has reduced by ½ and has turned in a thick jam-like consistency
(about 20-25 minutes), remove from heat and allow to mixture cool.
6. Once the mixture has come to room temperature, gently fold into the softened cream
cheese until fully combined.
7. Scoop a small amount of bread out of each slice and fill with the cranberry cream
cheese mixture.
8. Gently press two slices of bread together.
9. Heat a griddle on medium heat and melt 1 tablespoon of butter.
10. Dip two French toasts into the egg mixture until completely saturated and place onto
the hot griddle.
11. Allow the French toast to cook on each side for 4 minutes or until golden brown.
12. Repeat with remaining butter and French toasts.
13. Finish each with a sprinkle of powdered sugar and drizzle of maple syrup. Cut each in
half and serve hot.

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You have have seen some pictures I shot of these amazing Easter eggs over at Oh Joy. I am so in love with them. I wanted to explain a little more about the process Elisa took to make these beautiful things.

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In most of the pictures you will see matches, this weird pointy stick thing, which is called a kistka,  and candles. So here is the deal. Elisa used a Ukrainian Easter Egg Decorating Kit. They are a little hard to find so buying them online is the best bet.

Basically, you take the kistka, which is the tool that applies the wax to the egg, and add a bit of wax in one end, then hold it over a flame to melt it and then apply your design to the egg. Once you have applied the design you dye the egg whatever color you want. Then you hold the egg up to the flame to melt the wax, then wipe the wet wax off with a cloth. See the crazy colored towel in the first image? Thats what she used to wipe the wax off. The eggs in the first picture used a different technique. Elisa used chap stick. She applied the chap stick, then dipped the egg in dye, then wiped the chap stick off, then repeated that until she was satisfied. I have never heard of these Ukrainian Easter Egg Kits before, and I wish I had when I was a kid because I would have been totally obsessed. I hope everyone has an amazing Easter full of good food and pretty eggs!

Also thank you Emily Henson for styling these photos!

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Yay! New Images in Rue. What an amazing issue #3 is! Woo!!!

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Picture 17

Picture 18

Yay! I love you RUE!

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Good times.

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Here are some new images I did with food stylist Jenny Park. I’ve been wanting to do images like this for a very very long time. I’m happy I finally got the chance. Yay chili dogs!

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corn

dogs

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Also, please note the great creativity it took to create the images below. Thanks.

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Left to right: bacon wall, bacon mustache, bacon sandwich.

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If you have yet to see Rue Magazine you must go immediately and look. Its amazing. What else is amazing is that some of my work is in there. Yay.

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I shot this book over a year ago, just a couple months after I graduated college. Its amazing to see how far I’ve come as a photographer. This book was such a struggle at some points, and really exciting at others. How many way can I come up with photographing cookies? How can I make I make the style of each image conducive to one another. Krystina the author, gave me a lot of creative control which really helped the process move a lot quicker. I will be forever thankful for her trust and support in me. Here is an inside look of some of the images that I took for this book. Crazy About Cookies will be available at Barnes and Nobel and other bookstores starting in November. Please support it!

Crazy About Cookies by Krystina Castella, Sterling Publishing

Cover_Crazy_About_Cookies_Krystina_Castella

Ginger_Crazy_About_Cookies_Krystina_Castella

biscotti_Crazy_About_Cookies_Krystina_Castella

Pistachio_Crazy_About_Cookies_Krystina_Castella

fortune_Crazy_About_Cookies_Krystina_Castella

Smores_Crazy_About_Cookies_Krystina_Castella

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© 2007-2011 Teri Lyn Fisher. Please contact me if you would like to use one of my images. Thank you.