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Cats are connoisseurs of comfort.

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And here are three of our four enjoying the comfort that they have found.

 Pomme, curled up next to Mr FD. She looks a bit "simple" in this photo, but she's not really. She's quite a wily cat, especially when it comes to food. She's the only one who has learned to hold something down with her paw to stop it sliding away when being licked (as proved yesterday with the caramel muffin case!).
 Here is Big George definitely trying to keep out the cold. He is sleeping on one of the blankets that I knit for Spanish Stray Cats - but he has decided that this one is his. He will sometimes share it with Pomme and Millie, but rarely with Bib. She wriggles too much. It's sweet seeing George and his sister Millie together as they often groom each other.
And this is the Baby of the group, Bib, in her trademark curled-up-as-tightly-as-possible pose. It's funny when she climbs on a lap and does a sort of somersault to end up, curled like this, but upside down, in your arms.

It is cold here, so all four have been searching out warmth and comfort, so in the evening they are all gathered in the sitting room with us - usually all round Mr FD "Cat Magnet" - Millie in his arms, Pomme on his lap, George on the back of the sofa next to his head, and Bib curled in the corner of the sofa. Sometimes one will deign to come and sit on my lap, but not often. Sigh. Still, it means I can knit SSC blankies, without having George conducting lightning raids on the wool! 

This was taken in 2010 but shows Mr FD in definite "cat magnet" mode!

With the cold we have been yearning for spiciness and comfort foods. So what is planned for this week?
Well, I have abandoned the Hairy Boys for a while and returned to my collection of recipes that I have been putting together over several years.
Here's the folder, full of slightly sticky plastic pockets with various recipes in them.
Some cut-and-pasted from t'internet
Others from magazines - these are in French, but I can understand them no problem.
And others from various English magazines too - ones from before we moved and from others brought back from the UK. Several on this page were from Good Housekeeping's article (many years ago) which gave a month's worth of recipes - some are ones I return to again, and again.

So I thought I would return to the Book for some favourites that I've not cooked for a while - and some new recipes that I saved but never cooked!

TODAY: I had planned a veggie chilli from the freezer, but in fact we had that as a heat-up-while-Alison-is-here meal - Our friend came for mulled wine on Thursday evening so I popped the chilli in the oven so it was ready to eat when she went. So today we're having the salmon dish that I'd planned for then.

SUNDAY:Paupiettes de Dinde au cantal In fact the recipe I have uses walnuts instead of mushrooms, but I think I prefer the thought of mushrooms. Otherwise the recipes are similar. We're having this with roast potatoes, carrots and green beans. I've not cooked this, so it will be a new experience!
SOURCE: 750g.com


MONDAY: Quick Sausage Stew - this recipe came from who-knows-where but is a quick-and-easy for when I get in late. I might even prep it on Sunday so it just needs warming through.

* 1 tbsp olive oil   * 6 chipolatas   * 1 onion, sliced   * can of chickpeas   * jar of tomato sauce, or home made   * 150 ml chicken stock   * 1 garlic clove, chopped   * zest small orange   *handful frozen spinach, thawed

Heat the oil and fry sausages until goldren brown. Remove. Then cook the onion & garlic until soft, adding a splash of water if necessary. Add chickpeas, sauce, spinach and stck & bring to boil. Reduce heat, add sausages and simmer for 5-6 minutes. Scatter zest over the top & serve with bread.

TUESDAY:Fasting. An old BBC Good Food recipe, Vegetable Taginewith cous cous. This uses butternut squash - one of my favourite vegetables, but I think I will roast it before using it as the recipe, as I like the slightly caramelised flavour that roasting gives to a squash. I'm also using apricots (yum) instead of prunes (yuckity-yuck)

SOURCE: bbcgoodfood.com

WEDNESDAY: Pasta bolognaise - this was planned as a Mr FD warming up meal, as Wednesday is my Line Dancing night. However, as I am not teaching in the afternoon, I will probably not hang around Roanne for 6 hours just to go dancing. I will come home and try to do some practice toute seule with the internet to help me. The sauce is in the freezer already so the pasta will just bneed cooking. I may - just because I love it! - make some garic bread.

THURSDAY: Yoghurt spiced ChickenNow, I have to say that the online recipe isn't very helpful, because it says "Make double the quantities of the spice mix" but fails to tell you what the spice mix is. It is taken from a series of recipes where you had the same base, but then rang the changes around that basic recipe. So the spice mix is: 2 tbsp cumin seeds, 2 tbsp paprika, 1 tsp ground coriander, grated zest of half an orange. Grind the spices & zest together & then use as instructed. I don't have the mustard seeds used in this recipe, but I'll probably just pop in a tsp or so of grainy mustard instead.
SOURCE: goodhousekeeping.co.uk

FRIDAY  Quick Curry + a small amount of rice. This curry, made with chorizo (!!) is cooked in 10 minutes - perfect when I get home from shopping and teaching at 7 pm. It isn't however good fasting food (437 calories a portion!!!) but I'm giving myself a short fasting break. One fasting day a week plus one sensible (small brekkie, small lunch, no snacks) day.

 All the recipes take less than 30 minutes to put together, even if one or two take longer to cook. Easy to make, I think, even if you're not a great recipe follower. Maybe this week is a little "meat heavy", as I do try to have two vegetarian meals a week, but the chorizo curry doesn't use too much meat, and the chicken fillets that I've bought are only about 150g each. I do need to try to eat more vegetables though - I usually only manage 4 portions a day...an apple, a portion of vegetable soup (this week's is butternut squash and tomato, with a few lentils and a bit of pasta) plus two other vegetables at dinner. 

How good are you at eating your recommended five (or is it now seven?!)-a-day?



Pork en papillote recipe.

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I got a bit miffed with Mr FD yesterday - I'd come straight in from work and started preparing the vegetable tagine that I'd planned: roasting the butternut squash before adding it to the sauce (which I think was important to the flavour) and peeling the shallots, and all the other stuff necessary. He comes in, sits down and watches TV.
"What's for dinner?" he asks.
"Vegetable tagine"
A mou of disappointment. "What, no meat?"
I went into a bit of a rant, I'm afraid. Sigh. 

In fact I thought the tagine was very nice - I added some green beans and some tomato passata to the sauce, and I think that wasnecessary. Otherwise I think it would have been a tad meh.

Anyway, for Mr FD and those who want more meat (!) here is a very simple, quick pork chop dish. Frugal Queen has another delicious sounding pork dish on her blog too. But here's mine:



PORK EN PAPILLOTE
Ingredients
drizzle of oil

2 pork chops
handful of coriander leaves
pinch of chilli flakes
100g butter, sliced
salt and freshly ground black pepper
a good squeeze of orange juice and zest
1 lemon, juice only
splash of white wine

4 garlic cloves, kept whole

Method
1. Preheat the oven to 220C/425F/Gas 7.
2. Heat the oil in a griddle pan and griddle the pork for 2-3 minutes on each side.
3. Place one pork chop in the centre of a large sheet of foil. Top with the coriander leaves and chilli flakes.
4. Arrange the butter slices on top, season and then add the orange juice and zest, lemon juice and splash of wine. Place 2 whole garlic cloves alongside each chop.
5. Wrap up the foil to make parcel. Do the same with the other.Place on a baking tray and cook in the oven for 10-12 minutes.
6. Break open the parcels to serve, squeezing the roasted garlic cloves to give a garlicky paste to smear over the chop.

SOURCE: altaeditions.com


Sending A Little Love

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Hello, hello, hello dear Readers, and a bigFatDormouse Welcome to Jade from Bohemian Musings. She fell for the pictures of the cats - and who can blame her?!

I recently took part in a "Send a Little Love" swap, organised by Mad About Bags. It was fun to send things to someone else. And - bien sur! - to receive a parcel back!! I was paired with Joy from Daisy Row and here are the things that I sent to her:


Something red - three handmade cards (two red, one a bit risqué!)

Ooh, look! A nekkid lady!
Just in time for Valentine's day
Something heart shaped, or heart themed: I found this little tray which fitted the bill nicely.
 
Something delicious to eat: Joy is successfully following Slimming World, so who am I to sabotage that?! So I sent some sugar free mints, made fairly locally, and a fridge magnet featuring Roquefort cheese (which is not made locally - but Mr FD and I passed through the area recently)

Something hand-made: Well, what else but a piece of zentangle inspired art?! Joy asked for something knitting-themed. Yikes! I found a lovely design to copy on the internet. The zentangling is my own, but the idea came from Ellen Wolters' beautiful design on Flickr. I also sent a rather Gallic-style blue-and-white striped scarf which I found in Roanne (no, NOT in Noz!!)


I have opened my presents from Joy too, but you will have to wait for another post about those gifts. Probably written on Saturday, as tomorrow will be a bit busy...teaching in the morning, from 8.30 to 12, kiné at 2.15, shopping and then another lesson from 5pm to 6 pm. Home for quick (chorizo) curry. I am dubious about this recipe, but I will trust Good Housekeeping!

Thank you again for your comments - they are always really welcome!
 
KEZZIE, MAGGIE, JADE, ARIL & POMPOM 
all commented on those cat photos! They are lovely cats, I have to admit, although George can be a wool stealer when I'm knitting. (By the way Maggie, I loved your blanket for SSC) 
 
MICHELLE
liked the look of the tagine, as did JANE&CHRIS - did you make it, Michelle? And was it well received? Better than here at Dormouse Towers I hope!!
 
JANE&CHRIS and KEZZIE
sympathised about my "wot, no meat?!" husband. To be fair, he is often open to vegetarian, or "meat-lite" meals, but obviously he was having a Carniverous night!

FRUGAL QUEEN and POMPOM
both liked the sound of the Pork recipe. Let me know how it goes, won't you? I'm saving Froogs' Rarebit Pork for another time, but it sounds yummy. We have a chicken-y week (with touches of salami) next week. I'll let you know what we're eating at the weekend.
 
 


Receiving A Little Love. Sharing a Little Food.

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My post about the lovely things Joy sent to me is over at The Teapot.
Suffice to say, Pomme & Bib were very excited about A BOX!!!!!!!

It's my box! Mine, I tell you!

No, I think you'll find it's MY box!


Yesterday's quick curry, using chorizo, was okay, but nothing to write home about. I'm not sure it's a recipe I'll be using again, however.

TODAY: We're having a recipe that I found on the Innocent Smoothies website, which no longer exists. (the site does, but not the page) It purports to provide 3 of your five-a-day. Falafels with imam bayaldi and tzatziki. I'm possibly going to make some Jamie Oliver garlic and herb flatbreads too. This recipe gives the falafels and this one gives the imam bayaldi and tzatziki (just ignore the steps which include lamb!!) I think it's all yummy enough so Mr FD doesn't roll his eyes and say "Wot, no meat?" But I do have some chicken spring rolls to have as a starter, which were on special offer at Carrefour!
 

SUNDAY: Basque Chicken from the Sainted Delia. I've cooked this several times and it is nom-nom delicious! It has peppers in it, but we'll also have roasted chicory (which is a new discovery for me. I love it!) and some carrots to pump up the vegetables.
SOURCE: foodandwine.com
 
MONDAY: Crispy salmon with leeks and courgettes - probably with some sautéed potatoes too. It's a quick recipe as I don't get home till quitelate on Mondays.
SOURCE: goodhousekeeping.co.uk
 

TUESDAY:Chicken with chilli and leeks - Cook two onions & 2 leeks in a smidge of oil until soft. Add 2 chicken breasts & cook for 3 - 4 minutes. Add 2 tbsp chilli jam/ sweet chilli sauce. Mix together. Pop in a casserole dish. Stick in the oven (190°C) for about 20 minutes, until chicken is cooked. We're having this with some sweet potato wedges and green beans.
 
:WEDNESDAYPenne with leeks and salami We appear to be eating our body weight in leeks this week. I hope I've bought enough!! We'll have this with a chicory-and-blood-orange salad.
SOURCE: allaboutyou.com
 
THURSDAY: Dead-easy salami tart with a tomato, onion & chickpea salad
Unroll a sheet of ready made puff pastry. Fold the edges over to give a "rim". Prick base all over with a fork. Spread with a jar of aubergine pesto/ home made (or otherwise) tomato sauce/whatever is in the fridge. Arrange slices of salami and tomato on top. Bake at 200°C for 20-25 minutes.

FRIDAY: Griddled aubergine & courgette gratin. It's a fast day so Mr FD will have to lump the no-meatiness of this. He can have a slice of ham with it, if it offends him so much!


I will reply to your comments but Blogger (or maybe my computer!) is being dead slow today and I'm getting verry frustrated. TTFN. Back later!

Winner! Winner!!

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By my “random generator” - i.e. look at the number of comments, randomly pick a number between 1 and the number, (It was 16) scroll down and count until you reach that number…(Only counting Kezzie as 1 comment)  - the winner of the GYB Giveaway is Aril.

You have won the book "Le Petit Théatre des Grands Gateaux". Can you let me have your address please, Aril?


40 ACTS

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At the moment my daily blogs will be over at The Teapot, as I'm blogging about my efforts to follow 40 Acts this Lent. Do pop over to see what I've been up to!

Happy Days to you all!

First we eat...then we do everything else.

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 SOURCE: izismile.com

Hello, hello, dear Readers. I know I have been neglecting this blog a little, but I am trying to post every day over at The Teapot about 40 Acts of Generosity for Lent, so you can pop over there should you wish to.

I need to say a bigfatDormousewelcometo two more new Followers. How lovely!
SOURCE: 101fundraising.org

I hope you enjoy your visits to Fat Dormouse Getting Thinner (or not getting thinner, as I am eating rather too much chocolate covered popcorn!)

This week I have again used recipes from my recipe collection - it's nice to be discovering old favourites like yesterday's Rigatoni Sausage Bake.
This was yummy, and - although it's high in calories! - will be  revisited again. I think it could be easily made vegetarian with Quorn/vegetable sausages or with lentils in place of the sausages. I guess it could be vegan-ified too, with appropriate vegan substitutes.
 
SOURCE: bbcgoodfood.com
 
TODAY: I had planned to make a beef casserole and had bought the meat and everything...Then I discovered I had a box of casserole in the freezer...So I am going to  use that up, and then freeze the meat I have and use it to make a steak-and-mushroom pie for Monique & Michel when they come next Thursday for a meal. I'd like to make steak-and-ale pie (typically British!) but as Monique doesn't drink alcohol I think it best to avoid the ale component.

MONDAY:Pork, sweet potato and chorizo bake. Actually this isn't the recipe at all, but looking at the recipe I had planned on using, it requires an aubergine which I haven't got, and more time than I will have tomorrow evening. Not the best planning ever! This recipe I can throw together tomorrow morning and put in the slow cooker.
 
SOURCE: en.wikipedia.org
 

TUESDAY: (fasting)Potato and broccoli curry. At 310 calories a serving we might be able to run to a little rice too. As I'm not working it will be no breakfast, soup for lunch and this for dinner.

WEDNESDAY: Back to dancing (must practise today!) so late home. Mr FD will be charged with cooking up a bag of frozen duck-potatoes-and-green-beans mix from Lidl (with extra green beans. And possibly extra duck too.) Quick but delicious! I may also throw together another chicory- red-onion- and-orange salad which we really enjoyed last week. 
SOURCE: gastronomydomine.com
 

THURSDAY: Grillades de Veau et raclette - this is a French recipe from a little recipe booklet. I know veal is considered bad form by a lot of people, but raised responsibly the veal market does mean that the little boy calves who are born on dairy farms are at least not wasted and slaughtered for no reason. This way they are used and not "wasted".
Peel & chop 2 cloves of garlic and 1 onion. Heat 10g butter, & add .5 teaspoon of cumin and the same of ras-el-hanout spices. Mix for 10 seconds, add the onion & garlic and cook gently for 5 minutes or so. Add the juice of half a lemon and about 10 cl of stock. Bring to boil for 5 - 7 minutes. Meanwhile fry the escalopes in oil/butter 1 minutes each side. Cover with the sauce & then cover each escalope with a slice of raclette cheese. Continue to cook for 5 minutes until the cheese is melted.Alternatively pop the frying pan under the grill until the cheese is bubbling.

FRIDAY: (fasting) Vegetarian stuffed peppers (peppers stuffed with vegetarians?) I can prepare these in the morning for Mr FD to pop in the oven for when I get back after teaching in Roanne. I can't find a recipe, but basically you stuff your peppers with a mixture of cooked rice, chopped cooked courgette and celery, chopped tomato, a big spoonful of boursin-style cheese and a dab of harissa. Topped with a sprinkling of grated cheese and baked for 40 minutesor so. Plus some kind of salad. 
 
 
SOURCE: bbcgoodfood.com

 ****

Once again, thank you for your lovely comments.
Several comments about the gifts I sent to Joy for Send A Little Love - from Jane&Chris, Joy, Tracy and Kezzie.

FrugalinFrance - I go to kiné twice a week for my back/shoulders. It does help and I find that if I don't go I have more problems. Luckily my dioctor agrees with me and is happy to continue to provide prescriptions for kiné sessions.

I hope Michelle feels under less pressure at the moment. Remember to b-r-e-a-t-h-e, my dear!

PomPom - did you make the pork chop recipe? I'm glad you like the Lolcats - I will provide another at the end. Sad about the cat allergies - I'm allergic too, but I'd rather have the sniffles and the cats than neither! 

Gill & PomPom - I'll set an extra place at the table for you! You're very welcome.



Trish - did you like the salmon? We didn't have it in the end - with rice left over from the Basque Chicken, I made a sort-of paella with some cod instead. 

Kezzie - you're right! Chicory IS amazing, and we seem to be eating loads of it at the moment. Usually braised in the oven, but that salad was delcious also.

FrugalinFrance - the turquoise eyed kitten you admired is bitey Bib, who I rescued from the Michelin site two years ago in June. She is sweet. But bitey.

Aril - I'm hoping to organise the things I've got to send today. Or maybe on Tuesday. That includes Maggie's calendar which will be out of date before she gets it at this rate!!!

I hope everyone has a lovely week - I will be posting at The Teapot during the week, but back here again next weekend with the menus.

 

Global Scouse Day. Just to let you know!

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Hello again everyone! I appear to have lost two followers. That's sad - I wonder how I offended them? Maybe by not posting often enough - but I am posting most days over at The Teapot as I follow 40 Acts. I hope that some readers here might find my 40 Acts posts interesting too.

Still, I am what I am, and this blog is what it is. I'm grateful for you lovely readers and commenters who remain faithful, so THANK YOU to you 

Food news from last week:
I made the chorizo bake thingyIt was very nice (although it was spicy - maybe I put too much paprika in it!) but I added some passata as well. I think that was a good addition and we both enjoyed it very much. We had it with some rice. I didn't cook it in the slow cooker in the end - I prepared it on Sunday evening and just popped it in the oven for 30 minutes or so when I got home on Monday.

We didn't have the veal dish  on Thursday in the end, as we thought we were going to a friend's for a drink. I thought it would be better to have something I could put in the oven to cook slowly while we were there so it was ready when we got back. I pulled out some beef cheeks from the freezer that I'd bought earlier this month
In the end Alison was ill so we didn't go. But the beef cheeks were yummy with mashed potato and some mixed vegetables. Veal for Sunday this week.

This evening we are going to Clermont for a pot luck supper. You can read more about it (and find a recipe for scouse) over on my post at The Teapot.
And, by happy coincidence I discover that today - the day when I am introducing scouse to the Clermontoise - has been nominated Global Scouse Day:

SUNDAY: We're having the veal au raclette that I'd planned for Thursday.

MONDAY: Tartiflette (recipe in English) - I suspect it's a bit too cheesy for some of you! I'm actually going to cut down on the cheese, up the meat factor (by using gammon steaks that I brought back from the UK), and have a salad with it too. Slightly  healthier!

TUESDAY (fasting)Vegetable (and a tiny bit of pork) stir fry. No recipe for this...Just pork and loads of veggies (carrot, onion, pepper, courgette, mushrooms, celery, leeks) stir fried and then a sposh of sweet chilli sauce added at the end. A few noodles to finish.
WEDNESDAY:Sausage bake. Prepped on Tuesday for Mr FD to heat through before I get back from dancing. If it's anything like last week I will be knackered! We learned a new dance (called "Celtic Kittens"!) which I found to be really fast and complicated (though other people didn't. Sigh).

Don't be fooled by the slow beginning. That's just to lull you into a false sense of security!

I'd spent all week practising two other dances that we'd learned and we didn't do them! NOW I've got to spend this week practising Celtic Kittens to try and batter it into my thick skull and slow feet!
Maybe this is an alternative interpretation of a Celtic Kitten:

SAUSAGE BAKE: Cook some pasta (about 150g for 2 people). Cut up about 100g sausages and fry till browned. Mix cooked pasta, sausages, half a carton of passata, 100g chopped broccoli & any flavourings you wish (I'm thinking some pesto) Put in oven proof dish. Top with mozzarela. Bake for 20 minutes until cheese is melted. I'm using merguez sausages for a bit of spiciness but ordinary chipolatas would be fine. 

THURSDAY: Monique & Michel from across the road are coming for dinner. We'll have River Cottage Warm Butternut Squash salad, a beef casserole-y thing with Dauphinoise (or maybe mashed) potato, and Mr FD's Pannetone pudding, made with choc-chip pannetone.

FRIDAY: (fasting) : Chicken legs with sweet potatoes. Another throw-it-all-together-and-stick-it-in-the-oven dish. Possibly not very fasting-fare but never mind. If I only have my soup midday it won't be too bad.
Marinade 2 chicken legs in a mixture of 0.5 tbsp honey and 0.5 tbsp soy sauce and O.5 tbsp mustard. For about an hour. Then brown the chicken in a little oil. Then put in roasting tin with 1 chopped sweet potato and 1 chopped red pepper. Cook in oven at 190°C until browned and cooked and slightly charred round the edges. I'm thinking of adding onion wedges too.

So that's it! Food planned!
Just an update: My scouse is smelling good, the pickled red cabbage is made and I have also made a Canterbury Pudding Tart - as Mr FD is from Kent & lived in Canterbury for most of his childhood. Here is the recipe



GILL: As ever, the place is set at the table for you - rather like Elijah at the Passover feast!
Maybe, one day, you will surprise us all!!

FISHCAKE RANDOM: Was the cake made? Was it enjoyed by all? I bet it was!

TRISH: I'm glad you enjoyed the salmon. It's always nice to know that I've introduced a new dish to someone. I enjoy experimenting so it's lovely to hear if others enjoy the food too.

POMPOM: I always enjoy reading your comments on the LOLcats pictures. Which one caught your fancy this week?






A Little Giveaway!!

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Monique and Michel from across the road came for dinner last night, and we had a very nice time. I cooked a "typically British" main course of chilli (!!) with garlic bread. They were much taken with the garlic bread which they had never had before - which is bizarre as so many British think of it as a French invention (presumably because it is often made with a baguette)


We started with a River Cottage warm salad of butternut squash, mushrooms and blue cheese (Très orginale was the verdict), the chilli, garlic bread & guacamole, cheese (including some cheddar I had in the freezer) and then Pannetone pudding. I used a BBC recipe, not the one Mr FD uses. Mine only had 3 eggs in, instead of Mr FD's 6 egg concoction. No wonder mine didn't taste quite as rich!!

A very pleasant evening...and in their usual generous way, they brought lots of gifts - homemade marmalade, home made Vin de Pamplemousse (grapefruit wine - nicer than it sounds!), chocolates, a bag of little brass charms from their antique shop, and a lovely scarf for me. Which I am wearing now.

Which brings us to the Giveaway...I have LOADS of cotton or silk or polyester or whatever thinnish scarves. More than I can wear, more than my holder can hold. If you would like a scarf just leave a comment with the basic colour you would like (if I have it!) I will count up the comments & the scarves on offer and divvy them out. Then I'll contact you for your address  (if you're successful) and I'll send you a scarf. Simples.

Food is an important part of a balanced diet*

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* according to Fran Lebowitz. You can't argue, really, can you...?!

Hello, hello dear Readers! I hope you are all well! We have been basking in very mellow temperatures today (and yesterday too) which has meant going out without a coat for the first time in yonks. Driving to church today I almost felt spring had arrived - there is certainly that slightly fuzzy green look on the trees, and there have been one or two intrepid spring flowers poking their heads up. FINALLY! Although I do know that March can be like a false lover, as someone said, and can be faithless and suddenly change, so I won't get too excited yet!


We had very nice fish cakes yesterday, with a spicy mayonnaise, wedges and salad. I, however, did not thread them onto lemongrass stalks, but plonked them on the plate! The presentation may not have been great, but the taste was!

TODAY: I bought some sprouts (yuckity yuck!) for Mr FD in the market on Thursday, so he will be having sprouts. I will also let him have some of my roast beef, yorkshire pud, broccoli, carrots and roast potatoes! (If he's good...!)


MONDAY: Cold beef, chips and baked beans. 

TUESDAY (fasting): Marinated beef and vegetable stirfry This will use the rest ofthe beef up, so it won't quite be the same recipe.I'm not sure if the marinade would "take" on cooked beef. Still, on verra I'm using red cabbage too, as I have half a one to use up, so it will be quite a dark dish!

WEDNESDAY: Chicken in cider This is a Nigel Slater recipe that we had over Christmas - very delicious. Mr FD will be down at Alison's, giving her a lesson in how to use her new phone & I will get back late from dancing. I can prep this before I go (several cancelled lessons on Wednesday morning) so he can just pop it in the oven on a lowish heat. We'll have it with bread.


THURSDAY: I'm out for lunch in Clermont - I'm going down with Alison as I have an opthamologist appointment. Then we'll look around the shops and have lunch out. What fun! Mr FD will have a pasta/chorizo/vegetable combo for dinner (did I buy any chorizo?!) while I'll just have soup.

FRIDAY (fasting):Spinach, sweet potato and lentil curry On Fasting days I really enjoy something spicy and I think this will hit the spot!  It will be prepped before I go to Roanne teaching/shopping and won't take long to heat up when I get back. If I can find some naan or pita bread we'll have one with it.



Here is a stylish cat in a scarf. I am giving away scarves...If you'd like one,(a scarf that is, not a cat wearing a scarf. SORRY PomPom!!) then do please feel free to pop over here and sign up...You've got at least another week.


Thank you, as always for your comments. They truly are appreciated!

SANDRA: I think you should try the pannetone pudding - it's even better than plain old bread-and-butter pudding (well, I think so!)

ANGELA & MAGGIE - did you try the recipes? Did you like them? Did you? Did you?! (Actually, I don't suppose Ang was doing any cooking after her nasty fall! Maybe when it's better...!) And Maggie: if I can find blue, blue it is!

POMPOM: I think Graany does need a kitten...but there is that awkward problem of allergies. Could you go to your local shelter and cuddle some kittens for a while? I used to do that. 
Would you like another scarf? Let me know!
FISHCAKE RANDOM - what cake did you make? I meant to make one this weekend but never got round to it.

MARIA: Now you know about scouse day you'll have to try making it!!

GILL: the place is set for you. See you soon!

JOY: I am sure I can find a scarf for you!

MICHELLE: Garlic bread is thought of as Italian/French in the UK too, but I know that many Brits think it's a French thing. 

KEZZIE: You may have many scarves...but would you like another?

Have a lovely week, dear Peeps. Don't forget, I may not be posting here, but I am posting most days over at The Teapot.


Okay, okay...Cute Cats overload. Stop NOW!!!





 

Fun and Games in La Poste

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Oh! You wouldn't believe the laughs I had in the Post Office yesterday! 


Well, okay, that's a slight exaggeration, but the man behind the counter and I bonded quite well!



You see I'm taking part in a blog swap, organised by Creative Chaos, and my swapee is Elaina over at A Little Bit Country. Elaina lives in New Zealand, so I prepared a fairly light package for her, rejecting seeds as NZ is strict about what goes into the country, and a book, as being too weighty. I took it to the PO, and the man slid it (or rather, tried to slide it) into a sort of slot-like contraption.

"Too thick for a letter", he said. "It will count as a package. That will be 28€"

Squeal! 28€ is quite a lot more than the contents are worth... I'm really not sure about this.

Well...he said, you could try squeezing it a bit to make it thinner. 
Which is why, after a quick consideration of the contents to ensure there was nothing breakable, I was sitting on a seat bouncing up and down on the package.

We remeasured it. Getting better, but still not sliding into the measuring slot.

I know! he said. Scotch! (No, thanks, it's a bit early in the day for spirits..I thought before remembering that "scotch" is the French equivalent of sellotape. A brand name that has become the common noun) 
So I leant heavily on the package while the PO man wound sellotape round and round the parcel. Success! Cheers from us both when the measuring slot accepted the parcel. It was still not cheap, but it was more in the ball park of what I was expecting to pay for postage.

Then only the customs forms to negotiate - new rules for sending stuff from France to other countries meant that forms had to be completed in duplicate - same info on both forms - how much do you say handmade cards are worth? Do you write exact cost or round it up? Oh! Doesn't France love burearocracy!?

Finally I finished and left the parcel and its contents in the hands of La Poste. It was only as I was walking home that I remembered that was actually something in the package that was, if not exactly fragile, at least possibly breakable if caught at the wrong angle. Let's hope my flabby backside or the combined weight of me, a PO worker and yards of scotch aren't the straw that breaks the possibly-breakable-thing


(No, Elaina, I haven't just sent you an empty box!)



What did we have for Sunday lunch?

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We have just eaten well, with my rector & his wife. I'm too well wined to write very much - I'll try to tell you about the week's menus tomorrow (or more likely on Tuesday) but we ate well today -
River Cottage Tahini dressed courgette & green bean salad
Spinach & feta cheese filo pie, potato gratin, salad (courtesy of Caireen), and baked ham for the meat eaters
Cheese and then Panetonne pudding, courtesy of Mr FD.

Good wine plus a snifter of Cu Dhub single malt means I'm heading off for 40 winks!!

Have a good week, dear friends. I'll be more compus mentis tomorrow...honest!

Yes, I'm still alive!

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Sorry, sorry, sorry dear Peeps! I had all good intentions of blogging on Tuesday, but I had a preaching appointment (for this Sunday) sprung upon me, so I wanted to get that under my belt. It's a good job I did, as I found it a bit of a struggle, to be honest! I finally found an old sermon - last preached in 2001 - that gave me a springboard for the rest of it! I'll post the sermon on The Teapot tomorrow, if you're interested (it may be my Pause In Lent contribution!) but I thought Mags and her Rend afficianados might like to know that I'm hoping to play one of their songs during the service...so maybe we'll get some more fans!

"Create in me a clean, clean heart"

Several of this week's meals were focussed around ham, as we had the ham last Sunday. It really was delicious, and I'm thinking I may go back to Ikea to buy one more before stocks run out - they were Christmas hams,already boiled, just needing a 30-40 minute roast to be truly scrummy. They had a use by date of May 2015, so they will need getting rid of shortly! 

This week may be focussed around a joint of pork that I'm cooking tomorrow. I'm hoping on two meals (for two) plus small leftovers to supplement aanother meal. It rather depends on how much the joint shrinks during cooking!

TODAY: Scouse, leftover from last month's Pot Luck Supper. I may (if I can be bothered!) make pickled red cabbage. Otherwise I may just make braised red cabbage to go with it.

SUNDAY:Roti de porc aux pommes This wasn't the recipe I was planning...but it might be now!!


with red cabbage and some carrots.

MONDAY: Asparagus risotto (from a packet mix!) with cold pork.

TUESDAY:Fasting:Red bean and mushroom burgers, with lots of salad, and maybe some pork.

WEDNESDAY:Rougail de saucisses - which is a slightly curried tomato-and-sausage stew. I'll prep this on Tuesday and Mr FD can just heat it up in the evening. I'll be out dancing.

We learned two new dances (can't remember their names!) in the 2nd (Improvers) group last week - I was very pleased that I picked them up quite well. There are two other dances I can't get my head round though - Celtic Kittens (now renamed Septic Kittens as I really hate it for its nifty footwork that I can't do!) and "Just Add Moonlight"...That one is less tricky but I need to put in some work on it this afternoon.

I bought these boots last week which do look a bit clunky for dancing in, but actually they're great! I know they're not cowboy boots, but with my dodgy feet I can't do pointy cowboy type boots. These are so comfy and slightly slippy, so I felt great dancing in them on Wednesday. Mine are in silver rather than bronze.

THURSDAY: Chorizo, potato and Spinach bake - basically, chop up some new potato type potatoes (firm flesh) and par boil. Slice up about 100g chorizo plus cut an onion into wedges and a thickly cut red pepper. Mix together & cook in oven for about 20 minutes or so. Throw in a few cherry tomatoes, should you feel so inclined. Then either wilt some fresh spinach, or defrost some frozen spinach. Mix everything together. Make sure it's all piping hot and serve. We'll probably have this with some frozen mixed vegetables.

I'm trying hard to up my vegetable/fruit intake, by making sure that we have a side serving of veggies no matter how many vegetables are in the main dish. So although yesterday's lentil shepherd's pie had carrots, tomatoes, lentils, spinach and leeks in, I also had a serving of mixed veggies. Lidl sell good packs of microwaveable vegetables like this:


Very convenient and quick to prepare - and not too expensive. They were selling at under 1€ last week.
I'm also adding 4 dried apricots and a handful of nuts to my breakfast. I've reduced my fruit juice intake, and now have about half-and-half juice and water, which I find fine. In fact straight juice tastes too strong now! With a vegetable soup at lunch time and an apple too I'm not doing too badly!

FRIDAY:Fasting: Southern Style Rice, with a little bit of added chorizo - and vegetables!

I haven't been weighing myself for ages, so I don't know how much weight I've lost doing 5:2, but I do know that my "aspirational jeans" (which are a small size 16) are almost all-day-wearable. That is to say, I can get them on, I can zip them up, I can bend down in them, but after a couple of hours they feel a bit uncomfortable!  But having said that, another pair of size 16 jeans are too loose around the waist (it's my tummy that causes the problems, not my waist!) so I am feeling happy to continue with 5:2 as I am pretty sure it's working. It would work even better if I didn't have wine and chocolate on non-fasting days, but hey! There you go!

Talking about jeans...
Is there anyone out there who would be interested in buying a pair of black jeans size 20. I bought them when I was at my biggest, and they have hardly been worn, but now they do just fall down. They are very good quality BUT unless you are 6 foot, you would need to take up the legs, as I bought them at Long Tall Sally. If you're interested (or know anyone who might be), let me know in the comments section and we can negotiate!!

As usual thank you for your comments...

 Lots of you commented on my exploits at the Post Office! It seems that all over the world The Evil  Slot of Package Measuring is becoming common! I'm definitely going to have to learn to find thin, light things to send for swaps. I don't want to stop doing them, but I am going to have to curtail my random purchasing, and think more cleverly. Christmas will be fun!!

I haven't forgotten about the scarf giveaway...I bought a new one (NO!!!) when I was shopping for my boots, so I will get round to sorting them out soon - promise! Of course, scarves are quite flat so postage shouldn't be too bad! (I hope!!)

I hope everyone has a good week, full of good food, good friends and good times. thank you all for visiting. Do let me know if you try any of the recipes - and what you thought of them.



Recipe, chat, food and cats. A bit of everything!

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I had a very busy weekend - on Saturday I was down in Clermont Ferrand making palm crosses, and then helping tidy and organise the Church offices. I then went to see "Selma" and finally sang at an evening of prayer for Africa. Due to weird timings my food consumption was not very healthy, by a long chalk - breakfast was fine (fruit juice, toast-and-cheese, yoghurt and dried fruit-and-nuts), lunch was a chicken/salad sandwich and a yoghurt/fruit bar (200 calories in the bar alone!) eaten hurriedly before the film, and then dinner was a cheese panini and chips, scoffed in a small park near the church (while being watched by slavering dogs!)

Sunday was a late get-up (clocks going forward) a bit of domestic activity, and then writing letters for 40Acts Day 31. I then became so involved in writing more Ninja notes (as I'd delivered all my spares around Clermont) that I found that I didn't have time to blog. I'm way behind writing up my 40 Acts reactions over at The Teapot.

Yesterday was all day work, and today I've got planning to do, cat litter trays to change, kitchen floors to wash, chicken casseroles to make, and a cake to make to use up some stewed plums that I took out of the freezer to fit something else in.

This one, copied from another blog, sounds as though it might be the ticket, especially as a commenter noted that she'd used stewed plums with no problems. 




A pudding cake of honey, cinnamon, and plums 
adapted from Ripe by Nigel Slater
  • 2 cups (250g) all-purpose flour
  • 1 slightly heaping teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 2/3 cup (220g) golden syrup
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • 1/2 cup (125g) butter
  • 1/2 cup (125g) light brown sugar, packed
  • 12 ounces (350g) plums
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 cup (240ml) whole milk
Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line a 9-inch square cake pan with parchment paper.
Sift the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and cinnamon into a bowl.
Warm the golden syrup, honey, and butter in a pan until the butter melts. Stir in the brown sugar. Halve the plums, or cut them into quarters if they are large, and remove the pits.
Break the eggs into a bowl, pour in the milk, and whisk to combine. Pour the golden syrup mixture into the flour and mix with a spoon. Pour in the eggs and milk and continue stirring until you have a loose batter without any traces of flour.
Pour the mixture into the prepared pan, scatter the plums in the pan, and bake for 35 minutes. Place a piece of foil loosely over the top of the pan and leave to cook for 15 minutes longer. Switch off the oven, but leave the cake in for a further 15 minutes, then remove and leave to cool.

Baking this on a Fast Day might not be the greatest idea yet, as I may be forced to try it! However the oven will be on for the casserole and for today's dinner (sweet potato and spinach bake with a tomato sauce - and not as much cheese as the recipe suggests!) so I should make the most of the heat! 



Right! I need to get back to my planning now! Take care my Lovelies!



Easter Greetings, Easter Food and - owls?!

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I just loved this LOL cats!!!

Life has been rather busy this last week, with my usual Thursday "off" (to catch up on preparing lessons/ iron/blog/ do a tad of housework etc) taken up with a training course on administering the TOIEC test. It was reasonably interesting, with a few freebies thrown in, plus a chance to catch up with colleagues I don't see very often. We also went out for a curry at lunch time. Well...I say a curry. It was chicken in a vaguely spicy sauce, but there was no sense of "curry" about it. Most of us (English)  tried to hide the snorts of derision when the waiter asked if "it was too spicy" for us?! Still, the garlic naan was nice (if a bit thin) and the onion bhaji was tasty (if a bit odd, being onion-ring bhajis) 
LOLOwls has opened up a whole new seam of irrelevant photos!


Next week I will need to get my head around a new timetable - my lessons in Clermont that take up all Monday are finishing, so Monday will become free. My all day lessons on Tuesday will start up again, so Tuesday will no longer be free to prepare. Wednesday stay the same: out all day in Roanne (but for 2 weeks it's school holidays, so I will only be there in the morning). Thursday will involve a couple of phone lessons, and Friday,  which currently has a free morning, will be taken up with a 3 hour lesson in the morning and then teaching/shopping in Roanne in the afternoon. Of course, if Infolangues give me more phone lessons that may all change again!!

Sorry I haven't blogged my menus much recently. I have still been meal planning, but just not blogging. I think I need to tidy out my big larder cupboard again though - it's so messy I don't know what's in it! It doesn't help that Mr FD isn't very good at keeping to a system, so everything just gets lobbed in. 

So..
TODAY: stuffed peppers and jerk chicken drumsticks. The peppers were for yesterday, but I didn't make them as there wasn't time before I went out. So I have peppers to use, plus other bits-and-bobs to stuff them with. Plus two chicken drumsticks. So I bought more chicken to jerkify and then to freeze.

SUNDAY: Souris d'agneau, with roast potatoes, carrots and leek-and-broccoli cheese.

But I'm afraid my souris d'agneau are ready prepared and just need warming through! 
 
MONDAY: Duck confit tart - good for the soul if not for the waistline!! Served with green salad. Lots of green salad! We may be attacking the courtyard today so we'll need sustenance!

TUESDAY (fasting) Imam biyaldi, chickpea salad, tomato salad.
 

WEDNESDAY: Beef casserole from the freezer, baked potatoes and vegetables. OR leftover duck tart. Not sure yet.

THURSDAY: Mushroom fajitas. But with rice. I have made these before and they are lush.

FRIDAY: (fasting) Turkey with pesto and mushrooms - basically turkey escalope, sauce made with pesto and mushrooms. As I'm fasting, there'll not be too much of the turkey and pesto but a lot of mushrooms! Mr Fd can have pasta with this. I'll just have veggies.

***
As always, thank you for your comments. It is always lovely to hear from you.
 

Some of you (SANDRA & CACHE MIRE) commented on the recipe for plum pudding cake - it was a success, although I cut down on the amount of sugar in it, which may have been a mistake. We've been eating it as a cake, but I may make custard and have it warmed as pudding tonight. 

KEZZIE - the sweet potato and spinach dish worked well, but I think it's better as an accompaniement to something (meat?!) The tomato sauce is necessary too. I had it just with extra veggies on Tuesday, but preferred it with the chicken casserole on Wednesday. 

FRUGAL IN FRANCE - I find 5:2 reasonably easy, now I'm in the swing of things. It's not great, fasting, but it's bearable. As I remind myself, many people survive on less than my fasting day every day of their lives!

I had several comments about my boots - oh they are so comfortable! And I can dance in them!! 

POMPOM - Are the owls to your taste or do you prefer the cats?!

Here is an Easter Bunny Cat for you all
Wishing all my dear readers a Happy and Blessed Easter
 
 
If you want to read what I thought of 40 Acts, here's a link to The Teapot (if you need them, there are certainly LOLcats there!)
 



Recipe and Grovels!

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I am so sorry! I am really bad at updating my blog recently. I think I need one of these LOLcats!

 ...because I'm certainly not doing it!

Just to let you into a delicious recipe: 
 
DUCK CONFIT TART
Serve this tart warm, with a green salad alongside.
serves 6
250 g self-raising flour
125 g butter, cut into small pieces
cold water
1 x 400 g tin duck or goose confit
500 g small whole potatoes, cooked (I used tinned potatoes)
4 eggs
75 ml milk
2 tbsp double cream 
butter for greasing
4 shallots, diced
2 cloves of garlic, crushed, peeled and chopped
a bunch of flat-leaf parsley, chopped
sea salt
freshly ground black pepper

1. To make the pastry, put the flour in a bowl, add the butter, and rub together with your fingertips until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs. Using a round-bladed knife in a cutting motion, combine a couple of tablespoons of cold water with the mix until a pastry ball forms.

2. Turn out on a lightly floured surface and quickly knead until the pastry is even and smooth, then wrap and place in the fridge to chill for 30 minutes. (Or, do what I did and use bought pastry!!)

3. To make the filling, open the tin of confit and remove the meat (save the fat, in the fridge, for roasting potatoes). Discard the skin and then roughly chop the meat. Slice the potatoes. In a bowl, beat the eggs with the milk and cream.

4. Heat the oven to 220°C/gas 7.

5. Lightly butter a 20-25cm pie dish. Roll out the pastry and use it to line the dish.
Add the confit, shallots, garlic, parsley and seasoning to the pie base, then layer the potatoes over the top. Finally, pour the egg mix over.

6. Cook the pie in the middle of the oven for 45 minutes. Reduce the oven temperature after 30 minutes if the tart is browning too much on top. 
 
 
It really is delicious! Though not necessarily very good for the diet, I fear!!
 
This week's menus (in brief)
TODAY: Cajun chicken, potato wedges, HM coleslaw & waldorf salad
MONDAY: Duck tart and baked beans
TUESDAY (fasting) Vegetable curry
WEDNESDAY: Chilli beef & vegetable stir fry
THURSDAY: Hairy Dieter Swedish meatballs & rice
FRIDAY (fasting): Zesty pork with salad & a bit of rice

Sorry! I need to go and ice a carrot cake which I made to take into my students for their last lessons tomorrow - it was a very good recipe, actually. Here's the link to what is supposed to be a "healthier" carrot cake

Life pootles on...

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Hello dear Peeps!

Life continues to pootle by - how is it that we're almost 1/3 through the year already?! - while we don't seem to do anything particularly noteworthy. Still, isn't that part of the pleasure of life: enjoying what you do, even if it's nothing special?

I have been going through odd phases where I get worried and upset about minor things - often things that one can do nothing much about. I find myself getting oddly down. While I'm not a great optimist, I am usually a happy-kind-of-bod, but there have been days when my stomach has been in knots and I've not really known why. I assume this is somehow connected to my "time of life" but it isn't terribly pleasant. 
Hey-ho.

Yesterday was a good day though. Mr FD was on a cycling tour with the Cycle Club, with a planned stop for lunch in a place called Lavoine, about 30 km from here. Some of the non-cyclists were meeting up for a walk beforehand, so I duly met with two other ladies and we drove to the village where we parked up and strolled for 30 minutes in one direction, turned round and strolled back. They chattered away while I tried to follow their rapid French. It wasn't great weather - a damp, grey drizzle - but still nice to get out.

The cyclists dribbed and drabbed to the restaurant, while I chatted with Sylvie, a friend of ours, who understands my need for a slower conversation! When they had all arrived we were served, first with a kir and snacks, and then with a huge plate of salad, with toasted cheese, ham and hard-boiled egg. This was followed by turkey in mushroom sauce, spaghetti and grilled tomatoes, then a good cheese board, and then tarte tatin with ice cream and crème anglaise. The wine flowed throughout, coffee and eau-de-vie was offered - all for the princely sum of 13€ (£9.50!) 

Of course, if you'd cycled 80 km with another 20 or so to go then it's all good fuel. A leisurely stroll doesn't use up quite so many calories though!! We decided to go for another walk at the nearby Ski Station before we left for home


We only did 2.2 km more but it made us feel a bit less guilty!

Then when I got home, Mr FD had already arrived home after the ride down, and we had been invited to Gilles' house for apèros (Sylvie is Gilles' girlfriend) so we went there to drink our way through a bottle of fizzies. I didn't feel like eating much so I had a cheese sandwich for supper. Mr FD made himself a throw-it-all-in omelette with a couple of rolls. He had used up more energy than me though!

Planned meals for this week:
TODAY:Pork mince ragu with soufflés and green beans
(we're having the Nature ones, not the brochet (pike) flavoured ones!)

MONDAY: Beef, chilli, vegetable & noodle stir fry - planned for last week, but not eaten. I have Straight to Wok chilli noodles that require eating.

TUESDAY:Cod with chorizo crust (a Hairy Dieters recipe) plus vegetables. Mr Fd might have some potatoes with his. But he might not.

WEDNESDAY: Aubergine Bake - but I'll be using some of the ragu sauce from Sunday, instead of chopped tomatoes. I'm guessing we'll be down at Alison's (or up here) drinking apèros as Cathy is arriving this week - huzzah! so this is an easy pop in the oven & forget about it meal.

 
FRIDAY: Richard is taking us and Cathy out for a meal tonight. We're going to La Murette which is a Belgian restaurant serving delicious Belgian beer and good food too. I will be fasting all day but forgetting about the 500 calorie limit at dinner time!

My work hours are right down at the moment - I've finished my all day Monday lessons, my all-day Tuesday lessons are a bit hit-&-miss at the moment because the people are zipping all over France to various meetings/events, Wednesday is still busy, but Thursday is also thin-on-the-ground with a phone lesson every now and then. With four bank holidays in May (FOUR?!?!) I won't be earning that much. Luckily Mr FD is working very hard and getting paid well, so we won't be in too much difficulty. Also, I had this good news (if it actually happens, that is!) last week which will mean 300€ a month added to the coffers without me doing anything for it. Well, I've already worked for it, but now I will see the results of those labours. Finally.

As always thank you for your lovely comments.
KEZZIE: I'm back!

FRUGAL IN FRANCE - was confused about why I baked carrot cake for my students and why I was coming to the end of my course with them. I explained to her by email that my teaching is not in school (Thank goodness! I did that one year. Once was enough) and that the carrot cake is so we don't have to learn anything in the last lesson!

POMPOM: Here's a lot of owls for you.

I discovered that the French have two words for "owl" - chouette and hibou. I was told that chouettes don't have visible ears, while hiboux do. I don't know if that's true. Any French speakers to verify?

Chouette - no ears to be seen
            
Hibou - just look at those ears!

Well, I suppose I ought to go and do something productive. I cleaned the fridge today! It is sparkly now.

Through the Generations...

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 I have been thinking a little bit about family heirlooms and what is passed down through the generations. As you will see,  I'm not just thinking about things, but talents and characteristics...  Recently I came across the company Patience Brewster, an American company which is family run, taking advantage of talents within the generations. If you're not familiar with the name, Patience Brewster specialises in handmade figurines, whimsical ornaments, and stationery. There are some lovely things on the site, designed by the very talented mum, with the business run by the children.


I love the penguin!  Some of the designs are too fairy-twee and whimsical for my tastes, but I do really like the stationery in particular.


 So while thinking about the heirlooms and antiques and family treasures, I came to the conclusion that actually, there's not a great deal in the way of "things" that has been passed through our family. Mum has certain tea services that were her mum's, and her grandmother's before that.

One a little like this:

and another Minton one,  like this...






There is the oak table that Mum said I could have, but I've never quite worked out how to get it from Liverpool to St Just, but hopefully, one day, I'll get it out here.
But there aren't that many "things" that have been passed through the generations.

So what else has been passed down from mother to daughter...?

Artistic flair, perhaps? Mum used to do the most beautiful calligraphy - I once found a book that she had designed using a poem by James Elroy Flecker as inspiration. Full of the most amazing callgraphy and art work. It inspired me to take up calligraphy too, and maybe that creative spark has been passed down to me...I certainly love creating things, from zentangle inspired art, to cards, to calligraphy. I don't think I'm as talented as Mum, but it's certainly something I enjoy doing.

I'm not sure Nana was particularly artistic, but my Nana knitted - oh, boy, did she knit!? And crochet. But knitting was definitely her forte - she always knitted us school cardigans and jumpers, as well as other garments. I was often requesting different pullovers, and  I particularly remember a brown-and-yellow striped polo neck, something like this one:
and another in pale blue/navy blue stripes. Maybe that's where my love of pullovers comes from! And I still have the granny stripe blanket that she crocheted for me when I went off to college 33 years ago.
This isn't it...but it could be:


Mind you, looking at the wobbliness of the blankets that I knit for Spanish Stray Cats, I'm not totally sure the knitting gene has been passed on to me! Here is Darcy modelling my blankets:



The only pullover I ever knitted for myself was a fairly comprehensive disaster, ending up so huge, due to who knows what failure on my part to check tension, or something technical like that, that I had to sew about a third of it into the seams!

 I suppose the thing that is the most precious that certainly ties my Nana, my mum and me together is a Christian faith. Nana went to County Road Methodist Church, and brought mum up in the Methodist denomination. Me, my brother and sister would be dropped off at Nana's on Sunday, and we'd be taken along to Sunday School at County Road. I can remember singing "Hear the Pennies Dropping" and "Wide, wide as the Ocean..." and it is from those seeds that my Christian faith grew.

Mum went to Old Roan Methodist Church, and when Nana moved to live with us, that's where we went too. We used to take part in the Scripture Exams every year - I can't really remember what these consisted of, but this certificate looks familiar
(Not mine, taken from this site)

Gradually, through the Gideons, through Christian Union, through the support of the church and my parents, I became a Christian, a faith which I've been able to share with Mum, and which has sustained us both through some difficult times. Although I haven't stayed "true" to my Methodist roots, and have tasted most denominations, from Baptist, through free church, to Anglican and now worshipping at an Episcopalian supported church, I still feel a nugget of Methodism when we sing a particularly erousing Weslyan hymn. "That's from my roots", I think to myself, and say a small prayer of thanksgiving for all those who played a part in my coming to Christ.




Food, Fun and Frolics

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Hello dear Peeps! I hope you have all had a lovely week. The weather here has been good, but sadly I've not relly been able to get out and enjoy it. Last Tuesday my foot started to hurt, for absolutely no reason, from what I could tell. I'd been on my feet quite a bit during the day, cleaning and ironing, but it was abut 5.OO when I became aware that actually the side of my foot was really quite painful.



I had a kiné session on Wednesday morning for my back, but asked Jean Claude to take a look at my foot instead. He didn't think it was tendonitis, but started being very doom-laden and talking about bones that break for no apparent reason, except that they are "fatigued". He is very doom-laden about my feet anyway, saying that, because of some wierd condition I have, I'm likely to find I fall over more and more as I get older because my feet are clenching up and will be too small to hold me up! I'm afraid I can't quite get my head round this, and choose to ignore him.

Anyhoo, while the foot is getting less painful each day, I think it best to rest it, so haven't been outside much to enjoy the sun. I've sat on the balcony two or three times, but as they are doing big works across the road on the car park area, it's rather too dusty and noisy to sit out much.

But Friend Cathy has now arrived and the social life is picking up rapidly. Since she arrived on Tuesday we've all met up for drinks on Wednesday, Cathy, Richard & Mr FD and I went out to a restaurant on Friday, and Cathy came here for a curry yesterday! Of course, the wine consumption has also picked up, so I have to be wary of that.

Yesterday's curry was very good (though I say it myself!) I made onion bhajis to start - I used to miss these terribly, until discovering how easy they are to make!! It's sometimes difficult to find the gram flour but usually Grand Frais have it. I use the River Cottage Veg Every Day recipe - but I would imagine they're all much of a muchness. We had these with cucumber raita and mango chutney, and a carrot-and-lettuce salad. Then it was Hairy Dieters' Lamb Dhansak (scroll down for the Lamb Dhansak recipe) with rice


and Jamie Oliver's garlic-and-herb flatbreads. These are really easy and really delicious - I think they need more than the 1 - 2 minutes each side that the recipe says. Mine had about 4 minutes each side and were beautifully puffed up and soft inside. Delicious!!

We ended the evening eating Dime chocolate and watching the DVD, "Saving Mr Banks". Very enjoyable.

The rest of this week's food is looking like this:
TODAY: Hairy Dieter Chicken Chasseur WARNING!!! This recipe is designed to feed 40 people - you will need to adjust the quantities! We're having this with celeriac purée and carrots.

MONDAY: Vegetable chilli with tortillas. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that the avocados that have been in the fruit bowl for 2 weeks will finally be ripe, as I love sliced avocado on chilli tortillas: however I'm not holding out much hope!

TUESDAY: Roasted ratatouille and baked potatoes. There are lots of recipes for the rat, but basically, I'm going to chop an aubergine, a courgette, two onions and a red pepper into chunks. Then toss them, plus a couple of sliced cloves of garlic and some mushrooms, in a couple of teaspoons of olive oil. Tip into a baking dish and pop into a 180° oven. After about 10 minutes throw in some fresh herbs and 250g cherry tomatoes. Roast for about 30 minutes more, shaking the tin from time to time. Stir before serving.

This is Saint Delia's take on it.

WEDNESDAY: left over lamb dhansak

THURSDAY: Possibly chicken satay (but Mr FD has finished the peaniut butter and we ate the bag of cashews last night) Otherwise chicken breasts in some other guise. Don't know what though!

FRIDAY: Chorizo crust fish - planned for last Friday but not eaten as we were invited out. Fish went in the freezer so we'll have it on Friday.

***
Work is not very frequent at the moment, so I'm spending time coming up with ideas for the summer school where I'll be working in the summer: I've been there for the last three years, and last year was the most fun I've had there. I'm hoping this year will be even better!

I'm also popping over to the UK to see mum for a couple of days in May. In fact the end of May is going to be very full!
13-15th May - I'm in the UK
20th - friends of Mr FD from uni, that he's not seen for 30 years, are popping in to stay overnight.
23/24th- we are away overnight to celebrate our 30th Wedding Anniversary. We're going to this hotel



to stay and to eat in the restaurant. This is April's menu:

  • Mise en Bouche
  • Boeuf Charolais Mariné aux Epices Douces, Condiment aux Câpres, Lissé Bio de la Ferme de la Tourette, Salade de Pissenlits à l'Huile de Noix (Marinaded beef, with capers and a salad of dandelion leaves)
  • Lotte Cuite au Beurre Mousseux, Consommé de Tourteau au Gingembre et Coriandre Fraîche, Agnolotti au Safran Bio de Cesset Farci à la Chair de Tourteau, Cube de Céleri de Pays (Monkfish, consommé of crab (I worried that this might translate as tortoise!) and some other stuff)
  • Agneau du Bourbonnais en Cuisson Lente, Jus d'Os au Curry,Rattes Confites aux Agrumes et Thym, Artichaut et Champignons Boutons, Marmelade Tendre au Piment (Lamb, with a curry sauce, new potatoes and artichokes)
  • Fromages Frais et Affinés des Terres d’Auvergne (cheese)
  • « Accord n°3 »: Le Citron, la Meringue et le Chocolat Blanc peu Sucré (pudding: lemon, meringue and white chocolate)
It sounds huge, but I'm sure the portions will be well controlled.

It's not a cheap stay, but (a) it's a special anniversary and (b) I've been saving my 2€ coins since Christmas and have the price of the room saved up. With the windfall of finally getting paid from EAL we can afford the meal too.


28th May We're down in Clermont to see Public Service Broadcasting - a group/ band/ popular beat combo who we really like. They take Public service broadcasts, or clips from films, and sample them with their music. Their recent album takes broadcasts about various events during the space programme and weaves them into the music
This one is entitled "Gagarin":

and one of my favourire pieces is "Spitfire" 

30th May We are considering a weekend trip to Nimes to see another singer, Neil Hannon, otherwise known as The Divine Comedy. Mr FD saw him last year with Bert Bacharach, but I was away teaching. I was mighty jealous!! So we're thinking we may well go at the end of May, and stay in a cheap hotel.

So - a busy time ahead. What fun! With Cathy here too, I don't think my feet will touch the ground - I won't have time for working!!

Thank you for your lovely comments about my last post: heirlooms passed through  gebnnerations.
I did forget to mention two important heirlooms, so I'm going to go back to edit the post after I've finished this one.

That's it now, I think, but I did post something over at The Teapot that it might be worth reading. You might need it one day (though I hope not!) 
I finish with a  Space Age Kitty  in homage to PSB "Race for Space"


Late as usual!

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