31 December, 2020

What's New?

 


Life suddenly became a little more exciting and complicated. My boss asked me if I might be interested in buying the business! The answer was 'Yes!' The second answer was 'Let me try to get the funds sorted'.

There was (and is) so much to learn! I've gone from working 20 hours each week to 45-50. It's not surprising the blog has suffered. But there are plans.

31 October, 2020

Happy Hop Tu Naa!


I saw this last year, and wanted to save it.

A friend told me, "It is important to eat locals." When I asked "Is it?" She answered, "Yes, it cuts down on the food miles. … Unless you chomp on a tourist by accident."

So there you go. Eat locals. Be wary of tourists masquerading as locals as it will bump up your food miles.

06 September, 2020

Project Clean Up

My role is changing at work, and my hours are slowly getting longer. With this in mind, we (as a family) have chatted about changed needed at home. 

We're trialing a system where we all do one hour of cleaning and tidying at the weekend, and 15 minutes each days. The people who don't make dinner are responsible for washing up, drying the dishes and tidying the kitchen. Thankfully none of us are terribly messy cooks. 

The sitting room is looking so much better. The windows have been cleaned, the floor vacuumed/swept, everything dusted, my crafting stuff sorted, chairs cleaned of dog hairs, and the bin emptied. 

In the kitchen all appliances, apart from the kettle, microwave and coffee maker have been put away. The cooker cleaned, and also the work surfaces.  Dishes have been wash, dried and put away.

No area is perfect, but there is a significant improvement.

15 August, 2020

50 Character Building Questions

My poor little blog has been neglected very badly. I've been focusing my attention on writing "Jenny and The Bobs", and also on work. 

Yesterday, I came across this fabulous list from Ginny Di on youtube. I've been using it to flesh out various characters. It feels like the novel has taken a huge leap forward, and the characters feel real! Several new scenes popped into being as I was answering the questions.
  1. Are you a morning person or more of a night owl?
  2. What’s the first thing you notice about a person when you meet them?
  3. You see a huge spider in your room. What do you do?
  4. If you could go back and change one decision you made in the past, what would you change?
  5. Tell me about your first kiss.
  6. Do you give people second chances?
  7. Are you a cat person or a dog person?
  8. Do you think you’re attractive?
  9. What’s your worst habit?
  10. When was the last time you cried?
  11. Are you a good liar?
  12. What’s your biggest pet peeve?
  13. Have you ever had your heart broken?
  14. Are you more likely to use your fists or your words in an argument?
  15. What’s something you’re naturally good at?
  16. What’s something you had to work hard to be good at?
  17. Can you tell when someone is flirting with you?
  18. Do you think money can buy happiness?
  19. Do you believe in destiny?
  20. Are you a good cook?
  21. What do you think happens after you die?
  22. Did you have to grow up fast?
  23. Who do you look up to?
  24. When you go to a tavern, what do you order?
  25. What do you like most about yourself?
  26. What do you like least about yourself?
  27. Do you want kids someday?
  28. Are you a planner, or more spontaneous?
  29. Can you keep a secret?
  30. Do you like being the center of attention?
  31. If you knew you were going to die tomorrow, what would you do today?
  32. Do you enjoy getting all dressed up for a special occasion?
  33. Where do you feel safe?
  34. Do you love or hate being alone?
  35. What’s the last nightmare you remember having?
  36. Do you admit to mistakes when you make them?
  37. Do you want to grow up to be like your parents?
  38. How do you deal with being sick? Are you stoic, or super whiny?
  39. What did your parents expect from you when you were born?
  40. Do you have a strong sense of style?
  41. Would you rather camp outdoors or stay the night in an inn?
  42. Is there a food that most people like that you absolutely hate?
  43. Are you more of a hoarder or a minimalist?
  44. Are you superstitious?
  45. Are you the kind of person who remembers people’s birthdays and pets’ names and stuff?
  46. What do you do to feel better when you’re sad?
  47. Is it hard for you to trust someone?
  48. Are you susceptible to peer pressure?
  49. If you decided to stop adventuring and settle down, what kind of job would you take?
  50. As a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?

03 August, 2020

Some Say...


Some say he sleeps upside down. Some say his boots are made from tyres left in the TT pit lane. Some say he knows 17 words for rain. All we know is he's called the RPU Stig.

In researching this story I've been asking many questions of many people. This evening, after crafting group, a police officer came into the cafe. I asked if I might ask some questions. There are times each year when applications are invited from UK police officers who would like to transfer across to the Island. These officers are first sent out on patrol to become acquainted with the Island. If the officers have specialist training, like Stig from the Road Policing Unit, they will be slotted into jobs as openings arise. There is no standard time period. It all depends on the individual and the roles that need to be filled. This is all useful for my story.

Sophie, one of the crafters, had told me a bit about casinos. This week she mentioned some casinos give new members a £10. If this £10 token was placed on a roulette table, and won, and then left again, and won again, this would mean the person had won almost £13,000 in two spins of the wheel.

I'm loving that people are now advancing ideas and additional pieces of information.

02 August, 2020

Honey Hill Farm


This morning, we took a jaunt up to Honey Hill Farm. It was rather glorious. 

Ava had a fabulous time finding all the sniffs, plants she could nibble on, and she stop numerous time to sample the water flowing down the lane. 

I now have a far better idea of where Jenny Quayle is going to be living, and an idea of where Uncle Bob lives too.

01 August, 2020

August 2020 Goals



My three goals for August are:

o use my bullet journal each day
o exercise at least 20 days
o finish making my cardigan

30 July, 2020

So Productive


With the changes ahead, my brain is buzzing. I'm concerned it won't be able to keep track of everything, hence the return to the use of a bullet journal. It was very helpful before in making sure things didn't slip through cracks. 

I've only just restarted, and I feel more productive. As I remember things to do they are written down. As I get ideas for "Jenny and The Bobs", (a novel), I write them down. The same thing happens when I need to research subjects.  

Birthday money has been used to buy a new journal and fancy pens. I'm going to keep using my old note book for at least the next month. This is to enable me to work out exactly what I need right now without making a mess of my new one.  (Perfectionist tendencies? ME?!)

Are You An AI?


I've had an interesting 5 minutes chatting on-line with customer services at Amazon. Yesterday, a silicone pastry brush was delivered. Unfortunately, the silicone had ripped where it joined the acrylic handle. This rendered the brush unusable.

I tried to instigate a return, but the options were for Hermes ParcelShop and the Royal Mail. None of those options are available here on my little island. My thoughts turned to customer services.

It was very obvious I was dealing with an AI as I could only select specific responses, but the AI decided to call in back up, Karl. Everything was fine at first, but I realised the phrases felt like stock phrases, not a genuine response to what I was writing. It was all good and appropriate, but stilted. Karl, on behalf of Amazon, decided it wasn't worth it for me to return a faulty piece of kit worth £2.99. I agreed. Karl refunded my pennies and asked if there was anything else he could do to make my day better. That's when I asked "Are you a real person or a fabulous AI?" 

On reflection I should have asked if Karl was a human, not a 'real person'. But Karl said he was in fact real. …  Hold on, he said he was real, not a real person... Is Karl a real AI?!

28 July, 2020

Oh My!

The plan was to write each day. Today's writing is "Oh my!"

There's not a lot more I can say at this moment, but it look like there are big changes ahead. I'm oscillating between butterflies in my stomach, and then there's a a sinking feeling. Thankfully, the Beloved is behind me, and I can talk this hugely important decision through with him.

27 July, 2020

Bullet Journal


Way back, in my previous job, I started using a bullet journal to track all of the tasks I needed to complete. Some tasks were daily ones, some weekly, others monthly, yet others quarters, and a few yearly. It proved to be very useful.

I've decided it is time to re-start journaling to keep track of my many ideas, habits, dailies, weeklies, monthlies, goals and to-dos.

26 July, 2020

Manx Cottage


I have discovered I am a writer who loves research.  It's important to me for my tales of fantasy to be rooted in reality. 

Today, the Beloved and I drove up to the primary location in my story. I had thought it would have been a little further west along the road to the Creg Na Baa, but there was just such a convenient water supply I couldn't overlook the spot on the corner of the Creg Na Baa Back Road, and Honey Hill.

The back of the house is very close to the Creg Na Baa Back Road, and the front has a southern aspect, looking down over fields to Clypse Reservoir, over to Douglas, and the sea beyond. It's only five miles from the sea terminal in the capital, but it's in the middle of nowhere.

'Honey Cottage' is a traditional stone Manx cottage. It was known as Quayle's cottage.It has mains electricity, but the water comes from a stream running down from the hills. The water is fresh, clean and flavourful, having being filtered through layers of peat. When the rain is heavy the water is very peaty.

25 July, 2020

Write Every Day!


This is advice given by Anne Lamott, Stephen King, and countless others. It was advice I had been following, or at least trying to follow. Back in at the end of February, I decided to write a blog post most days. I managed 25+ posts each month for the next four months. Then along came July, and I began to feel self conscious. It felt a bit pretentious. So, I stopped. 

This seems to have been a poor decision. Pretty much the only times I have been writing have been at Shut Up and Write. This is my blog, and the writing, recipes, and bits are almost solely for my own amusement. This blog lives in the backwaters of the internet, a tiny creek, many miles from the ocean. If this is a place for me, then I am the one who gets to decide what appears. 

I need to write most days as it prompts me and keeps my brain ticking. It doesn't have to be every single day, and I'm happy to slip in backdated posts every now and then. For my own developer as a writer, I need to do this.

My goal is to write a post a day until the end of the month. In August, I'll add in an extra task of writing or researching for my story about Jenny Quayle, and Grunkle. I've been working on it at Shut Up and Write each Saturday, and the characters are really coming to life. 


06 July, 2020

Tynwald Day 2020



Tywald Day is the Manx National Day. It has its roots in the midsummer courts from Viking times. At midsummer, people would congregate in the middle of the island to discuss the laws, hold a midsummer fayre, meet with friends and celebrate. Over time, the meeting place was settled as St John's, and the date was the 24th of June, St John the Baptist's feast day.

In 1753, the Isle of Man adopted the Gregorian calendar to being it into line with the English-speaking world and the rest of Europe. The decision was taken "Midsummer Tynwald Court shall be holden and kept ... upon or according to the same natural Days upon or according to which the same should have been so kept or holden ... in case this Act had never been made." There were 11 days difference between the Julian and Gregorian calendars, and what was the 24th of June became the 5th of July.

In the years when the 5th of July falls on a Saturday or Sunday, then the next Monday is the day it is celebrated. The Vikings would have felt quite at home. They would recognise the law making, the fayre, meeting with old friends and celebrating.

There is a requirement under Manx law that teach Act of Tynwald must be promulgated on Tynwald Hill within eighteen months of enactment or it ceases to have effect. Promulgation of the Acts takes place on Tynwald Day and the promulgation is certified at the sitting of Tynwald at St John's.

When Covid-19 arrived on the island, many events were cancelled. A decision was taken to limit the Tynwald proceeding to only the legally required elements. This year, there is no fayre, there is no meeting with old friends, and people are being encouraged to celebrate at home.

O land of our birth, 
O gem of God's earth, 
O Island so strong and so fair; 
Built firm as Barrule, 
Thy Throne of Home Rule. 
Makes us free as thy sweet mountain air.

05 July, 2020

I Never Thought My Mother Would Become A Verb


We all have our little habits and eccentricities. One of my Mam's is her inability to walk parallel to another person. Perhaps she is very susceptible to the other's gravity, or maybe she just wants to be close. It could even be she is losing her hearing a little and needs to decrease the distance.  What ever the reason, Mam has a habit of allowing her path of converge with the person she is walking alongside. It's a bit disconcerting being 'pushed' into a hedge, or wall, and being edged into the road.

One day, I was walking with the Offsping. Whilst dodging an uneven section of pavement, I heard the cry of '"Oi, Grandma! Keep to your own side." We laughed, but that was the starting point. Later it became 'Don't Grandma me.'

This morning, we walked along part of the coastal footpath. Ava was off-lease and pootling along. The Beloved looked behind and saw Ava change from walking by my side to walking behind. He named this action 'the reverse Grandma'. I never thought my mother would become a verb!

04 July, 2020

F.R.I.E.N.D.S. part two


It's time to Shut Up! and Write. This is our second week back. It's wonderful seeing M and A again, and we also have three new people. Life feels far more normal now that activities have restarted. 

Facebook has been great for keeping in touch with friends over the last three and a half months, but spending time, in the same physical space as others is pretty dang fantastic. 

I am a contented little bear.

03 July, 2020

F.R.I.E.N.D.S.

Friends laughing together
No, not those New Yorkers, but friends who we meet along the street, friends we meet in town, those friends.

Aren't they just brilliant!

I have really missed spending time with friends, a catch up over hot chocolate and cake. It's so good to be able to meet again and just be.

This morning I made chocolate brownies. Some of them were left for The Beloved and The Offspring, some were taken to the local shop, and the rest were consumed by Cat and myself.

It was most amusing, Cat bit into a brownie and let out a groan of pleasure. She then announced we had to have a moment of silence for the wonders of brownie-ness. With my brownie, I had mint tea, the mint picked fresh from the garden. It was rather fantastic, so fresh and refreshing.

Then the chat started. We talked and talked, about everything and nothing. It was so good.  After two and a half hours, we hugged and parted. 


02 July, 2020

"Rape Colored Skin"


(This has been copied from facebook. No copyright infringement is intended. I wanted to be able to come back to it again and again.)

I have rape-colored skin. My light-brown-blackness is a living testament to the rules, the practices, the causes of the Old South.

If there are those who want to remember the legacy of the Confederacy, if they want monuments, well, then, my body is a monument. My skin is a monument.

Dead Confederates are honored all over this country — with cartoonish private statues, solemn public monuments and even in the names of United States Army bases. It fortifies and heartens me to witness the protests against this practice and the growing clamor from serious, nonpartisan public servants to redress it. But there are still those — like President Trump and the Senate majority leader,Mitch McConnell — who cannot understand the difference between rewriting and reframing the past. I say it is not a matter of “airbrushing” history, but of adding a new perspective.

I am a black, Southern woman, and of my immediate white male ancestors, all of them were rapists. My very existence is a relic of slavery and Jim Crow.

According to the rule of hypodescent (the social and legal practice of assigning a genetically mixed-race person to the race with less social power) I am the daughter of two black people, the granddaughter of four black people, the great-granddaughter of eight black people. Go back one more generation and it gets less straightforward, and more sinister. As far as family history has always told, and as modern DNA testing has allowed me to confirm, I am the descendant of black women who were domestic servants and white men who raped their help.

It is an extraordinary truth of my life that I am biologically more than half white, and yet I have no white people in my genealogy in living memory. No. Voluntary. Whiteness. I am more than half white, and none of it was consensual. White Southern men — my ancestors — took what they wanted from women they did not love, over whom they had extraordinary power, and then failed to claim their children.

What is a monument but a standing memory? An artifact to make tangible the truth of the past. My body and blood are a tangible truth of the South and its past. The black people I come from were owned by the white people I come from. The white people I come from fought and died for their Lost Cause. And I ask you now, who dares to tell me to celebrate them? Who dares to ask me to accept their mounted pedestals?

You cannot dismiss me as someone who doesn’t understand. You cannot say it wasn’t my family members who fought and died. My blackness does not put me on the other side of anything. It puts me squarely at the heart of the debate. I don’t just come from the South. I come from Confederates. I’ve got rebel-gray blue blood coursing my veins. My great-grandfather Will was raised with the knowledge that Edmund Pettus was his father. Pettus, the storied Confederate general, the grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, the man for whom Selma’s Bloody Sunday Bridge is named. So I am not an outsider who makes these demands. I am a great-great-granddaughter.

And here I’m called to say that there is much about the South that is precious to me. I do my best teaching and writing here. There is, however, a peculiar model of Southern pride that must now, at long last, be reckoned with.

This is not an ignorant pride but a defiant one. It is a pride that says, “Our history is rich, our causes are justified, our ancestors lie beyond reproach.” It is a pining for greatness, if you will, a wish again for a certain kind of American memory. A monument-worthy memory.

But here’s the thing: Our ancestors don’t deserve your unconditional pride. Yes, I am proud of every one of my black ancestors who survived slavery. They earned that pride, by any decent person’s reckoning. But I am not proud of the white ancestors whom I know, by virtue of my very existence, to be bad actors.

Among the apologists for the Southern cause and for its monuments, there are those who dismiss the hardships of the past. They imagine a world of benevolent masters, and speak with misty eyes of gentility and honor and the land. They deny plantation rape, or explain it away, or question the degree of frequency with which it occurred.

To those people it is my privilege to say, I am proof. I am proof that whatever else the South might have been, or might believe itself to be, it was and is a space whose prosperity and sense of romance and nostalgia were built upon the grievous exploitation of black life.

The dream version of the Old South never existed. Any manufactured monument to that time in that place tells half a truth at best. The ideas and ideals it purports to honor are not real. To those who have embraced these delusions: Now is the time to re-examine your position.

Either you have been blind to a truth that my body’s story forces you to see, or you really do mean to honor the oppressors at the expense of the oppressed, and you must at last acknowledge your emotional investment in a legacy of hate.

Either way, I say the monuments of stone and metal, the monuments of cloth and wood, all the man-made monuments, must come down. I defy any sentimental Southerner to defend our ancestors to me. I am quite literally made of the reasons to strip them of their laurels.

Caroline Randall Williams(@caroranwill), 26th June 2020.
She is the author of “Lucy Negro, Redux” and “Soul Food Love,” and a writer in residence at Vanderbilt University.

01 July, 2020

July Goals



My goals this month are to:
o finish my cotton cardigan
o finish the smocking sample
o exercise every day

The exercises consist of:
o tightening the muscles in my back to help with shoulder stability
o shoulder exercises
o squatting
o head twists
o body twists
o foot stretches

30 June, 2020

Smocking


On the Great British Sewing Bee this year one of the challenges was to created a smocked item of clothing for a child. They were using machine smocking. It created a little desire in me to try hand smocking, and today I started.  Oooh my!

The first step is either transferring dots to the fabric, or buying a fabric with regular spots on it. I chose the latter. It's simple enough, created a very regularly, tightly pleated piece of fabric by putting many lines of running stitch through the fabric. I am going into the fabric immediately before the dot, and coming out again immediately after it.

This is going to take some time!

26 June, 2020

Thor Is Displeased


At about 10.30pm last night, the skies lit up. There was fork lightening and sheet. It was amazing. Here’s last night’s map of most of Ireland, most of the UK, and well, the Isle of Man should be visible bang slap in the middle of the image.

I get the feeling someone, or something, has really pissed off Thor, Ba’al, Zeus, Jupiter, and Taranis.

23 June, 2020

Temperature Blanket May

Woo hoo! I'm back to the Temperature blanket, and I've started work on May. The little octopus created a bit of a diversion, but I'm back on track.  Although, I have no idea whether May and June will be finished by the end of June.

It's getting too hot to work on it as it grows larger. I'm ready to take the summer months off, and come back to it in the autumn.

22 June, 2020

New Computer


My previous laptop was finding life rather difficult. It was often running at 100% capacity, and was often hot. This is not too desirable for a device sitting on my legs. 

I'm now using a Jumper ezbook. It's a smidge smaller than my previous HP, and it's ever so lightly heavier, but it works so well for what I need. Most of the time I want a computer to access the internet, write blog posts, for creative writing, and writing patterns. There's might be a few puzzle games thrown in the mix too. The small size makes it perfect for taking to a coffee shop for writing sessions. And of course, the light weight makes it perfect for people with dodgy joints.

The keyboard is an American one. The " and @ signs were switched, and there's a few other bits of weirdness. One big drawback of me is the function keys have been printed in a soft blue, and for me, this makes them almost unreadable against the soft grey of the keys. I've set the keyboard to UK configuration, and the keyboard cover that came with the machine has the UK layout. A huge benefit it the keyboard cover is printed in white on grey. This has made my life considerably easier. 

There is one area of the keyboard where I will need to take great care, the power button is where the 'delete' was on my previous laptop. Care will need to be taken!

21 June, 2020

..., ..., Knees, and Toes



My knees are behaving a bit better, and my toes have been absolute starts. These glorious toes haven't caused any problems.

It feels as if I have the same level of pain, but it's now diffuse rather than concentrated in my knees.

I am a little bear who likes to get stuff done, and this weekend has involved painkillers, sitting on the sofa, napping, playing games, and watching youtube. Not much productive activity involved!  Ah well, there's another weekend coming up in a few days, let's hope I can get stuff done then.

20 June, 2020

Head, Shoulders, ... and Toes



There are times when certain body parts demand so much attention, and I just want to ignore them.

Last night, as I was rising from my chair to go to bed, my left knee started screaming at me. There wasn't much I could do to ignore it. Even whilst lying down in bed, my knees wouldn't stop screaming. They demanded a pillow underneath them for support, and a nice hot water bottle for comfort. 

I've no idea what I have done to offend them. They are still moaning about something this morning. My Saturday morning walk along the coast is not feasible today.

19 June, 2020

Steam Mop Pad


Yarn: King Cole Cottonsoft Baby Crush
Composition: 100% Cotton
Colour: Aquas
Needles: 4mm

This mop pad was made using the twin triangle method I commonly use for shawls. The outside edge has a row of eyelets, and through this a cord has been woven. This keeps the pad firmly in place whilst the mop is being used.

After use, I soak the pad in warm, soapy water, and then toss it into the washing machine with a pile of clothes. This cleans it beautifully.

18 June, 2020

My Little Octopus


A little while back I forgot to take my Temperature Blanket in to work, and needed a lunch time crafting distraction. The week before, a customer had brought in Women's Weekly; this had patterns for an octopus, knitted and crocheted. I saved the pattern for a colleague, and took a fancy to making an octopus myself. But the tentacles looked wrong. So, as per usual, I redesigned the whole thing.

Yarn: King Cole Giza Sorbet 4ply
Composition: 100% Cotton
Colour: Magical (white and lilac)
Size: baby
Hook: 2.5mm
Amount used: 50g
Started: 8th June 2020
Finished: 18th June 2020

17 June, 2020

Four Weeks Since Last Infection


It's now 28 days since there was a case of Covid-19 identified. We seem to have survived quite lightly. If this horrible disease hadn't made it into one of our care homes it would have been very light indeed. 

The danger has passed (for now), and the  focus seems to be trying to help the economy. We are planning an on-island holiday this summer. We have come out of this in a strong financial position, and I think it is important for those of us who can to spend money in the local economy. We'll rent a holiday cottage for a week, and our holiday spending will be centred around local products and produce.

16 June, 2020

Just Around The Corner



This is a photograph taken by a friend. She applied a filter, and the result is wonderful. It's not far from my home. It's a little moment of beauty. It promises home is just around the corner.

15 June, 2020

Watermelon and Feta Salad


This recipe is based on Mediterranean Watermelon Salad. I am not a fan of honey, nor lime, so I have substituted the dressing for a classic vinaigrette. 

Ingredients
2 slices watermelon
5cm cucumber
2 fresh mint leaves
2 fresh basil leaves
25g crumbled feta
1 Tsp vinaigrette

Method
Cut the watermelon into bite-sized cubes. Cut the cucumber into small chunks. Chop the herbs. Crumble the feta. Mix everything together with the vinaigrette.

Notes
I made an extra portion of Chicken in Mustard and Vinegar. The cold chicken breast was sliced and served along with the salad.

14 June, 2020

Food Shopping


I've just been on my first weekly food shop in almost three months. It felt weird, but at the same time so normal and good. 

The Beloved has done an absolutely fantastic job with the weekly shop. He has queued and queued waiting 2m away from his fellow shoppers, just to get into building. He has done this with almost no complaint. (He's not quite a saint.) 

Going shopping, selecting the foods on the shopping list, plus a few extras (watermelon, sugarsnap peas and baby corn) was good. 

Tomorrow, social distancing rules will be dropped. All of the tape on the floors in shops will be able to be removed. We will be able to eat in restaurants and cafés. We will be able to get back to "Shut Up and Write!".  If we were to hold quilting in a café we could return to quilting too. 

Slowly, surely, life is being resumed. It feels very good.

13 June, 2020

Pecan Pastries


Ingredients
1 packet (280g) Jus-Rol gluten free puff pastry
75g pecans
40g light muscovado sugar
1 Tsp maple syrup
15g butter, softened
1 egg, beaten
25g apricot jam
1tsp lemon juice
1Tsp boiling water

Method
Preheat the oven to 200C. Line a baking sheet with parchment, or a silicone liner.

Cut the pastry into 6 rectangles. Place the filling along the centre of each rectangle. Cut strips on the diagonal either side of the filling.Fold the strips towards the middle, alternating right then left, to create the plait. Tuck the ends under or cut them off.

Bush each pastry with egg wash and bake for 15–20 minutes, or until the pastry is crisp and golden-brown.

Whilst the pastries aer cooking, combine the apricot jam and lemon juice with 2 tablespoons water in a small saucepan. Slowly heat the mixture, stirring gently, until runny. Pass through a sieve and set aside. While the pastries are still warm brush them with the apricot glaze.

12 June, 2020

Starting To Wave Goodbye To Lockdown Weight


A while back I lost more than 13.5kg (30lb). Slowly the weight crept back on, and then leveled out at a lost of 8kg. I was okay with this. When the Beloved was in hospital, I felt I was ambushed, and weight piled on. Then in lockdown the whole amount returned.

However, this month I've been taking steps. With the decrease in tensions on my little Island regarding Covid-19 and a return to work, it has all become so much easier. So far this month I have lost 2.2kg (5lb), and plan to keep it up. Currently I'm retraining my taste buds not to expect so much sugar. My goal is to lose about a kilo each week. 

Some might throw their hands up in horror and exclaim, "What's the point?" That's a really easy question for me to answer. I felt so much at a lower weight, and I greatly enjoyed the food I was eating. Losing weight was an act of self-care and self-love. 

One of the really good things about having trod this path before is I know I can lose weight, and I know how to do it. 

11 June, 2020

(sings) We're Coming Out of Lockdown


That's 22 days since last person on the Island was diagnosed with Covid-19 . There are no active cases. Even more restrictions are being lifted. On Monday, we will be able to eat in restaurants and cafes, and social distancing will be dropped, apart from in care homes and health care environments.

This little Island has to be one of the safest places to live on the planet.

I'm so looking forward to going out for a meal.

10 June, 2020

Greek Lemon Potatoes


Ingredients
9 medium baking potatoes, peeled and cut into wedges
1/2 cup olive oil
juice of 2 lemons 
zest of 2 lemons
pinch of salt
1/2tsp black pepper
1tsp garlic powder
2 Tsp dried oregano
1/4 tsp cumin powder

Method
Preheat the oven to 230C.

Place your potato wedges in a roasting pan. Pour the lemon juice, zest and olive oil over them.


Season the potatoes with the rest of the ingredients. Mix everything well. Roast the potatoes for about 30 minutes. Turn the potatoes to enable all sides cook evenly.

Notes
This recipe was based on Dimitra's recipe from Dimitra's Dishes.


09 June, 2020

Black Lives Matter


This is a photograph of the Black Lives Matter protest. Police estimate there were 1,500 people protesting. We were organised into groups of 10, and practicing social distancing whilst wearing masks and gloves.

It was a very powerful and emotional time being part of such a large group, gathered for a simple purpose, to stand up against institutionalised racism. It was the largest protest the Isle of Man has seen in over 40 year.

08 June, 2020

Temperture Blanket Chart May 2020

Gone are the lilacs of previous months, and only two days of aubergine! Look at the 31st, it's burnt orange! It's warming up, and I'm catching up.

07 June, 2020

Strawberry Napoleon


It feels like cheating claiming this is a recipe, but it does go in the oven. There's cutting, sifting, whisking and baking. It's a recipe!

Ingredients
1 sheet of puff pastry (mine is Jus-Rol gluten-free)
250ml double cream
5ml vanilla extract
12 strawberries
icing sugar

Method
Preheat the oven to 220C. Place the puff pastry on a baking sheet and cut into 12 pieces. Dock (or prick) the pastry to allow some of the steam to escape as it puffs up. Bake in the oven for 14 minutes, or until golden brown. Set aside to cool.

Whip the cream and vanilla extract until it forms soft peaks. Hull the strawberries, and slice them.

When the pastry has cooled layer up the Napoleons: pastry, cream, strawberries, a little cream, pastry, cream, strawberries, cream, pastry. Sift a little icing sugar over the top and serve.

Notes
This dish needs to be served immediately after layering up, otherwise the pastry will become soggy. It's a very simple, but elegant dish. Making mini Napoleons rather than the traditional large one means it is far easier to provide each person with a good looking dessert. 

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The Offspring burst into the room and said "I thought you had taken a professional photograph from the internet and used it in your blog. I didn't realise this was the food you had made, and Cat photographed." A rather kind comment, especially as I know I could make a far slicker version of this dish.

06 June, 2020

Recent History For A Society

Alfred Blackburn

A while back on QI, there was a question about when the last American Civil War pension ceased. At that point it there was one person still receiving a pension, Irene Triplett. She died yesterday. Her father had fought in the American Civil War. He had been married a few times, and Irene's mother was 27 when Irene was born, and her father was he was 83 years old. As Irene had congenital deformities she was classed as a dependent, and received a Civil War pension.

This set my mind thinking about The American Civil War, and I gleamed it started because of slavery. The southern states where slavery was legal we concerned when Abraham Lincoln became President. They tried to cede as the Confederated States of America. Confederate Vice President, Alexander H. Stephens, described the confederacy's ideology as being centrally based "upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery, subordination to the superior race, is his natural and normal condition".

My mind pondered, if the daughter of a Civil War soldier has just died, when did the last former slave die. I couldn't find a definitive answer, but came across Alfred "Teen" Blackburn. He is believed to be one of the last living survivors of slavery in the United States who had a clear recollection of it as an adult. He was a 'body servant' to his owner (and biological father) during the Civil War. He died in 1951. Its less than 70 years since the death of last person who was an adult during slavery.

This then led onto the question of whether children of former slaves were still alive today. On Quora, one person identified his grandfather as being a former slave. His grandfather was 77 when his uncle was born, and then 81 when his father was born. Both his father (90) and uncle (94) were alive at the time of writing (March, 2019).

For some slavery is only one generation in their past, either as slaves or slave owners. For more, its two or three generations. The whole concept of "the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery, subordination to the superior race, is his natural and normal condition" sadly did not die with the emancipation of American slaves. It is flourishing in lots of area. It is America's national shame that its President holds black lives so cheap.

05 June, 2020

Happy Wedding Anniversary, Beloved


The Beloved and I married on this day quite a number of years ago. I'm trying to think of little memories, and stories from our life together. So many of these little stories involve a great deal of silliness and playfulness. Just like my grandparents, we love, we laugh, and we play. 

I hope future generations will look back on us with kindness and have the same impression of us as I do of my grandparents. I love this man, and look forward to many more years of love, laughter and play.

04 June, 2020

Cakes for Cops 2020

This is the fourth year I've taken a selection of cakes along to the Police. Normally we are in TT, but this year, we've been dealing with Covid-19. Today's goodies are chocolate and pecan brownies, walnut cake, lemon cake, vanilla sponge, and two types of pat cookies, chocolate chip, and cherry and raisin.

03 June, 2020

Good News!


There's some seriously good news in my little part of the world. There have been no new cases in the last 14 days, and we don't have a single confirmed active case of Covid-19. 

Our businesses and shops are gradually opening. Each week more and more restrictions are being lifted. Today, I was able to visit a friend, in her house. It was wonderful to be doing such a normal thing.

02 June, 2020

Happy Birthday Grandma and Grandpa


Today is the anniversary of my Grandma and Grandpa's wedding. It's also the anniversary of their births. Grandma was born in 1916, and Grandpa in 1914. They married in 1939. They met, fell in love, and became engaged all within 4 weeks. Their marriage lasted until Grandma's death just a few weeks shy of their Ruby wedding in 1979. Grandpa lived on into his 80s.

They were both featured large in my childhood. When I was little, we lived 1.5 miles away in the next town, but in the summer when I was 5 we moved just around the corner from them. A year later, they moved into the house next to us. 

G&G were such an evenly matched couple. They loved and laughed. And their love was an encompassing, embracing, inclusive love. If someone turned up at a meal time a place was set for them at the table. If someone was in need, they would help out in the unobtrusive way. Kind-hearted, generous and loving, that's the best way I can describe them.

It's been many years since Grandpa died, and many, many for Grandma. I love them, and miss them. I would have loved for them to meet my children.

01 June, 2020

Protesting Is Important


When Colin Kaepernick knelt, they said, "This is not the right way to protest." 


When Martin Luther King marched in Selma, they said, "This is not the right way to protest." 


When people marched in the streets of South Africa during apartheid, they said, "This is not the right way to protest." 


There is no right way to protest because that's what protest is. It can't be considered "right" by the systems that it's protesting. 

Trevor Noah

-x-x-x-

What on earth can white people say about institutional racism? We can say we see what is happening, how black lives have so little value. We can say this is absolutely unacceptable. We can say people need to be held accountable. And we can say a systematic change is needed, and is needed NOW!


June Goals


1. Finish or donate 12 balls of yarn
2. Bring the Temperature Blanket up to date
3. Avoid impulse buys

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The three balls of yarn bought last month were impulse buys. I don't have projects in mind for them, and I'm going to return them to the shop, and instead take some chunky yarns. These will go, along with a bag of chunky yarns I was give, to a woman teaches crochet in prison. She was in the shop today, and was utterly delighted when I said I had yarn for her to use in the prison. An additional two balls of yarn are coming from my stash. This takes me to 5 balls donated. 3 were used up.

When I forgot to take my blanket in to work I picked up a hook and new yarn. The result was My Little Octopus. It took way, way long than I anticipate, and so the Temperature Blanket is not up to date. It's two months behind. But, it does mean a third of it has been completed, and in 10 weeks. The blanket will be finished at the New Year.

The impulse buys have been very few, and this makes me happy.