We're in the middle of a spell of glorious Spring weather here, sunshine, clear blue skies, chilly evenings which make the warm day feel even better. Marvellous. It's lovely to sit in the garden with a cup of tea, watching the bees and butterflies doing their thing in among the flowers.
hello tree. hello sky. hello clouds. all are full of joy in the springtime.
This is my little herb garden where I sit in the afternoons and drink tea. It's very pretty, in a "things in pots" kind of way, I think. The sad squished looking things in the smallest pot are oriental poppies which I am trying to grow from seeds which I saved from the one that flowers in the garden already. They don't seem very happy.
This weekend we planted more stuff - I know, I know - including some sage plants, half a dozen sweet pea plants, a new climbing rose bush and a dozen little lavender plants. I have decided that I will try to do more rose and lavender flower-drying this summer, weather permitting.
Also at the weekend, it was the grand Cake and Craft and All Kinds of Other Stuff Event in the village hall. There were a few of us there with stalls, ready to sell our various wares to the clamouring public. There was a HUGE cake sale, with dozens of different cakes available, as well as cakes you could buy just a slice of to have with a cup of tea and a chat with your neighbours. I'd like to point out that my coffee and walnut sponge cake went very quickly. Yes, it was THAT popular.
Unlike my Clementine and almond cupcakes which paled into insignificance next to the gorgeously glittery decorated cupcake offerings of the village yummy mummies.
The event was very successful. Dozens and dozens of people came along, everyone seemed to be either eating cake or carrying round cakes to eat later, and we raised a good chunk of money for Sport Relief, which was the aim of the exercise after all.
The village hall looked very cheerful and festive with all the bunting. I took this before the start, hence the lack of people.
And, best of all (for me, anyway) I sold a few things from my little craft stall. I chatted to people, I saw neighbours I haven't seen in ages, and I picked up one or two commissions for later on in the Spring, so a good afternoon all round.
Mr WithaY and I celebrated that evening by buying a Chinese takeaway with my profits. We'll never be rich, but we will be full of Chinese food.
Oh, and I won the raffle. Twice! I have been taken to task* for accepting two raffle prizes, but my reasoning is that if I have bought 25 tickets, statistically I am likely to win more than once. I therefore feel justified in accepting two prizes.
Had I won a third time, I would have been gracious and said "No, no, no, please...put my ticket in the bin and let someone else have a turn." But two prizes? All mine.
Mwahahahahahaaaaaa.
Anyway, one of the prizes was a big box of chocolates. Like I'd have abandoned that.
Is there a formal laid-down raffle prize etiquette anywhere?
One of the other raffle prizes was this:
A Gruffalo cake! Brilliant.
In other news, at the garden centre where I bought my new climbing rose and the lavender plants, they had some slightly mental moss rabbits for sale.
Look at the eyes of the one on the right! He's clearly crazed and dangerous. He'd be carving his way out of the garden with a trowel before you knew what had hit you, I reckon. Brrr.
I do like the garden centre. You can get pretty much anything you want, as long as what you want is deranged.
A giant metal cockerel, standing 6 feet high? Check.
Paving slabs with artistic interpretations of fish embedded within them? Check.
A statue of Atlas, supporting the world on his mighty stone shoulders? Check.
Frantic whirling plastic solar-driven butterflies, to strike terror into the heart of any pet? Check.
A solemn Aslan-type stone lion, looking mournfully at you from across the yard? Check.
Dozens of ornaments made from cutlery? Check.
Plus they have an aquatic centre where you can buy tropical fish, or marine fish, or snakes, or this...a rain forest in a box.
There's a tiny pond at the base with fish swimming, and then above that there's steamy, foggy mini-jungle with little frogs in. Brilliant.
In other, other news, I had a go at making peanut butter last week. Why, dear readers, did I decide to do that? Fucked if I know.
For some reason it seemed like a good idea, and we all know how those ideas generally work out, don't we? I bought several pounds of shelled (but not skinned, crucially) peanuts and searched out some recipes on the Internet, which, as we also know, never lies.
I roasted the peanuts, and then realised with a cold horror that I had to get all the red skin off them. Fuck. That took three hours, and left me with blisters on my thumbs. Then it was time to put the shelled and skinned peanuts into the food processor. Well, in fact, as I discovered when I re-checked the recipe, you are supposed to put them into the blender. I, however, failed to clarify this small but telling detail, and spent 45 minutes watching a pale yellow concrete-like substance forming with painful slowness.
I added peanut oil, as some of the recipes suggested, which didn't seem to help. I re-checked the original recipe I had used and realised I ought to be using the blender.
Coaxing the thick, gritty, warm peanut-crete out of the food processor and into the blender with a flexible spatula is a memory which will stay with me a while.
Once I started it blending, however, the texture changed quickly to something almost peanut-buttery, and I was greatly cheered. I tested it, added a dash of salt and a spoonful of honey, an then whizzed it for a bit longer. It was clumping together around the blades at the bottom of the goblet, so I poked it with my spatula and then turned the blender all the way up to eleven.
Readers, it did its best. It tried. It really did.
There was a sudden strong smell of burning, then smoke poured out of the motor. I turned it off at the wall socket and removed the blender goblet. Mr WithaY (who had been popping into the kitchen at hourly intervals to ask "how's it going?" before laughing uproariously at my crap peanut butter-making) manfully carried it out into the garden in case it went up in flames.
We left it out there for an hour to think about what it had done.
I decanted the peanut butter into jars. It's paler than the shop-bought stuff but actually tastes rather good.
I won't be making it again, I think, though.
*Hello Laurie!
Showing posts with label bunting making. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bunting making. Show all posts
Monday, 26 March 2012
Wednesday, 21 March 2012
Put out more flags
You could grate cheese on my rough scaly gardener's hands; it must be Spring. There are other clues, of course. The birds are yipping and chaffing in the early mornings, the sun is shining more often than not in the afternoons, there are bees and bugs in the garden, and even some butterflies.
By which I mean that my hands are rough, not that you should grab the very nice chap who comes in now and again to help us manage our acreage, and forcibly try to grate Parmesan on his hands. That would just be weird.
Anyhoo. Mr WithaY and I had a spot of financial good fortune - we won the Lottery! Yes, £51, aaaaaaaall ours. We won't let it change our lives though. There had already been a conversation about what to do with the garden, so we decided to spend that nice little windfall on some fruit bushes.
The Great Planting was as follows:
10 strawberry plants, 5 each in a large tub on the back patio.
2 redcurrant bushes, planted at the side of the house where the cold frame now sits, and the lavender bushes we put in last year are flourishing.
2 Ceanothus bushes, which we hope will attract butterflies and bees. They've been planted in the front garden, where we'll be able to see them from the sitting room. I also put some Oriental poppy seedlings under them, which had seeded themselves from the gorgeous pink one in the front garden.
2 parsley plants, one flat-leaf and one curly-leaf, both added to the herb garden in the back garden.
1 woad plant, in a tub, all on its own in a state of high honour. I am slightly anxious that Mr WithaY will nurture it, tend it, coax it into flower, and then make a shitload of dye to paint himself blue and run around the woods naked like an Ancient Briton.
I moved the blueberry bushes from the fruit bed in the back garden, and put them in their very own bed on the other side of the garden. Hopefully they'll have better luck without being stifled by the giant raspberry bushes, which seem to be intent on taking over the entire garden.
Mr WithaY planted carrots, radishes, pumpkins, aubergines, several varieties of courgette and sage seeds, some in the vegetable bed, some in pots in the greenhouse. We moved the greenhouse to a different spot in the garden where it can be accessed without having to cross any wet muddy patches, thus making watering things easier. Hopefully it means things won't just DIE like they did last year.
Oh, and Mr WithaY mowed the lawn, without losing any fingers. Hurrah.
In other news, I am busily preparing for the cakes and crafts sale this Saturday in the village hall. I have promised to make some cake, and am also having a stall of my homemade crafty stuff to sell. It will be interesting to see if anyone buys anything. I hope they do, or I am giving all my friends the same things for Christmas and birthdays for the next 10 years.
Today I am making bunting. Yards and yards and bloody yards of it. It's strangely therapeutic. And it will come in handy for the Jubilee/Olympics/summer barbecue parties I hope we will be having over the summer.
Oh yes. At the risk of sounding like Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells, what the fuck has happened to the quality of writing at the Daily Telegraph? Eh?
Check this out for quality highbrow journalism, found on their on-line site yesterday:
"The court was told that the man Laura Johnson, 20, was seeing had jumped into her car and forced her with his two pals into driving them as they stole a haul of electrical goods, fags and booze. "
Putting to one side the inevitable Name, Age thing that all newspapers seem to need to do, since when were "fags and booze" the terms of choice in this context? And "pals" too. Sort it out, you lazy, tabloid-esque skivers. Oh, and I have not altered the punctuation either. Yes, it really is that bad. It's barely comprehensible.
Gah. And pah.
I know it's easy to criticise and that anyone who spends any time reading stuff I write will undoubtedly find plenty of semantic and grammatic errors, but hey, I don't get paid for writing, and I assume that most Telegraph journalists do.
Bastards.
By which I mean that my hands are rough, not that you should grab the very nice chap who comes in now and again to help us manage our acreage, and forcibly try to grate Parmesan on his hands. That would just be weird.
Anyhoo. Mr WithaY and I had a spot of financial good fortune - we won the Lottery! Yes, £51, aaaaaaaall ours. We won't let it change our lives though. There had already been a conversation about what to do with the garden, so we decided to spend that nice little windfall on some fruit bushes.
The Great Planting was as follows:
10 strawberry plants, 5 each in a large tub on the back patio.
2 redcurrant bushes, planted at the side of the house where the cold frame now sits, and the lavender bushes we put in last year are flourishing.
2 Ceanothus bushes, which we hope will attract butterflies and bees. They've been planted in the front garden, where we'll be able to see them from the sitting room. I also put some Oriental poppy seedlings under them, which had seeded themselves from the gorgeous pink one in the front garden.
2 parsley plants, one flat-leaf and one curly-leaf, both added to the herb garden in the back garden.
1 woad plant, in a tub, all on its own in a state of high honour. I am slightly anxious that Mr WithaY will nurture it, tend it, coax it into flower, and then make a shitload of dye to paint himself blue and run around the woods naked like an Ancient Briton.
I moved the blueberry bushes from the fruit bed in the back garden, and put them in their very own bed on the other side of the garden. Hopefully they'll have better luck without being stifled by the giant raspberry bushes, which seem to be intent on taking over the entire garden.
Mr WithaY planted carrots, radishes, pumpkins, aubergines, several varieties of courgette and sage seeds, some in the vegetable bed, some in pots in the greenhouse. We moved the greenhouse to a different spot in the garden where it can be accessed without having to cross any wet muddy patches, thus making watering things easier. Hopefully it means things won't just DIE like they did last year.
Oh, and Mr WithaY mowed the lawn, without losing any fingers. Hurrah.
In other news, I am busily preparing for the cakes and crafts sale this Saturday in the village hall. I have promised to make some cake, and am also having a stall of my homemade crafty stuff to sell. It will be interesting to see if anyone buys anything. I hope they do, or I am giving all my friends the same things for Christmas and birthdays for the next 10 years.
Today I am making bunting. Yards and yards and bloody yards of it. It's strangely therapeutic. And it will come in handy for the Jubilee/Olympics/summer barbecue parties I hope we will be having over the summer.
Oh yes. At the risk of sounding like Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells, what the fuck has happened to the quality of writing at the Daily Telegraph? Eh?
Check this out for quality highbrow journalism, found on their on-line site yesterday:
"The court was told that the man Laura Johnson, 20, was seeing had jumped into her car and forced her with his two pals into driving them as they stole a haul of electrical goods, fags and booze. "
Putting to one side the inevitable Name, Age thing that all newspapers seem to need to do, since when were "fags and booze" the terms of choice in this context? And "pals" too. Sort it out, you lazy, tabloid-esque skivers. Oh, and I have not altered the punctuation either. Yes, it really is that bad. It's barely comprehensible.
Gah. And pah.
I know it's easy to criticise and that anyone who spends any time reading stuff I write will undoubtedly find plenty of semantic and grammatic errors, but hey, I don't get paid for writing, and I assume that most Telegraph journalists do.
Bastards.
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