The Swiss make nice saddles along with the watches.
Saturday, October 31, 2009
An old horse, new tricks
The Swiss make nice saddles along with the watches.
Friday, October 30, 2009
Happy Halloween
There's something reflective about autumn, and I've been thinking about when we lived in England, and Amanda was exactly the age baby Nova is now. Our country has Americanized the world, so maybe the British celebrate Halloween now, but back then they didn't. I remember our English friends trying to explain a bizarre November "holiday" called Guy Fawkes Night, or Bonfire Night, when kids asked for pennies and hanged effigies were burned. There is a complicated history behind it, but I plucked this little fact out of Wiki:
In 18th-century England, it became a tradition for children to display a grotesque effigy of Fawkes, termed a "guy", as part of the Bonfire Night celebration. As part of the tradition, they would often stand on street corners begging for "a penny for the guy". The "guy" would be burned on a bonfire at the end of the evening. As a consequence, "guy" came to mean a man of odd appearance. Subsequently, in American English, "guy" lost any pejorative connotation, becoming a simple reference for any man.
So this is how Americans came by the word "guy," and made it one of the most overused words in the English language! Now Guy Fawkes Night in England boils down to an excuse for young people to party and look for mischief. Just like our Halloween. Have fun this weekend and watch out for "guys" and spooks!
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Baby tales from another time
We were living in Felixstowe, England when Amanda was born. It wasn't a little village, but a fair sized town on the chilly North Sea that was still small enough to walk everywhere. I loved it there. Every morning I walked out for daily food shopping, and pushed my baby in a perambulator like all the other moms. People are always surprised when I tell them it was common to leave your sleeping baby outside on the sidewalk in the pram while you went in the stores. Of course, most shops were small (baker, butcher, etc.) and there wasn't room inside for a big pram anyway. So you ducked in and did your business while keeping an ear out for your kid. Imagine leaving a baby outside a grocery store now!
The English baby nurses we saw for routine care at the Felixstowe "Surgery" were kindly but no-nonsense types. When I told them Amanda would sometimes cry inexplicably (as all infants do) they advised me to "put her pram outside in the garden air for a bit, go in have a quick cup of tea." So maybe this is how the famous British "stiff upper lip" comes about! I'm sure Prince Charles' old nanny did it to him. Hummm...
But not bad advice actually-- a tea break is good for mom's nerves, and both parties are happier when they get back together. And I tell Amanda it's OK to put Nova down sometimes when she cries. Like all new mothers, I worried about many things when Amanda was a baby, but leaving her outside alone for a few minutes in her pram wasn't one of them. Everyone did it. But these are just memories of a very different time and place.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
"One of Those Fine October Days"
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
A happy baby
"A baby may look helpless. It can’t walk, talk, think symbolically or overhaul the nation’s banking system. Yet as social emulsifiers go, nothing can beat a happily babbling baby. A baby is born knowing how to work the crowd. A toothless smile here, a musical squeal there, and even hard-nosed cynics grow soft in the head and weak in the knees."
Enjoy:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/03/science/03angi.html?_r=1
Monday, October 26, 2009
Figs and starlings
An enormous tree full of inedible figs. But not to the flocks of European starlings who show up every fall, and make a big racket fighting over the green figs and pecking holes in every one. And there is plenty for all this year. In fact, I've never seen such huge figs on our tree, probably because of the hot summer. But October is never warm enough (yet) to ripen them for eating. I've heard of gardeners growing figs successfully in our climate, but I guess you need the right variety in the perfect location.
Sunday, October 25, 2009
European Hornbeam
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Vita Sackville-West
"If it is true that one of the greatest pleasures of gardening lies in looking forward, then the planning of next year's beds and borders must be one of the most agreeable occupations in the gardener's calendar. This should make October and November particularly pleasant months, for then we may begin to clear our borders, to cut down those sodden and untidy stalks, to dig up and increase our plants, and to move them to other positions where they will show up to greater effect. People who are not gardeners always say that the bare beds of winter are uninteresting; gardeners know better, and take even a certain pleasure in the neatness of the newly dug, bare, brown earth."
Oh well. I don't know about November being a "particularly pleasant month" in the Northwest. But I suppose if you had a garden staff to order around, and servants bowing and tugging their caps it would be more fun. Anyway, I have enough "sodden and untidy stalks" to keep Vita's gardeners busy for a long time. But I agree, there is something about that final tidy up that's almost as satisfying as the first spring work. Maybe it has more to do with the promise of rest?
Friday, October 23, 2009
See the fall colors
"Even if something is left undone, everyone must take time to sit still and watch the leaves turn."- Elizabeth Lawrence
Easier said than done, after the busiest summer I can remember! But I like the quiet season of late fall before "The Holidays." Just ignore the sight of Halloween and Christmas back-to-back in the stores. I looked out the window yesterday at my soggy garden, and decided to take my time with the clean up for a change, rather than complaining and rushing around in the cold rain. After all, the mess isn't going anywhere. I'm looking forward to seeing my friends again, and looking ahead to the new year. Who knows?
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Out for a walk today
Nova and BOB
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Crochet
Chaucer wasn't thinking about crochet when he wrote that line, but doesn't it apply to everything we try to master? I can't take credit for making the doilies in this picture-- I bought them for a few dollars at thrift stores. Doilies are useless, but still pretty. I get them out now and then and wonder about all the ladies who did this exquisite work, only to have it thrown in the Goodwill bin. Our grandma's homes used to be full of lacy doilies.
I like to crochet, but I'm not very good at it. I don't especially like following exact directions, so this makes things like crocheting and baking harder and more frustrating than it needs to be. I make loopy Afghans that aren't quite square, thick scarves, pillow covers and baby hats. Crocheting is the perfect activity for a droning TV football game. I can keep John company, and when something happens (which isn't too often) I can glance up and watch the replay.
When I was getting started, I wasted money on crochet pattern books and later found some of the best instruction was free on the Internet. For example, there are hundreds of "how-to" videos on U-Tube. And I especially liked the free crochet and knitting stuff on Bevscountrycottage.com where I found a truly easy pattern for Nova's orange baby hat.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Sourdough bread
The starter is a sticky/living/breathing/growing/bubbling substance that needs to be fed weekly in order to "work." An old friend of mine and a SUPERB baker (she makes speciality quality loaves weekly) got me started with a dab of starter. Julie, the original gift is still alive and kicking. Although this summer when it was too hot to bake and I forgot to feed it, I think my starter saw The Light a few times.
The science is complicated, but basically real sourdough bread dough takes many hours to "proof" (rise) without yeast. This gives it the great crust and soft chewy texture. There are long hours when you do nothing at all, but then suddenly you must tend it! Sourdough baking is meant for someone who hangs around the cabin all day (or is clever enough to time their modern comings and goings to bread dough.)
The sourdough recipe I use with added yeast recipe doesn't have the same texture, but it's quicker--under 3 hours. In most bread making, the first step is to combine the ingredients, and knead. I usually knead until I get bored, 5 or 10 minutes. Then dough goes back in the bowl and is left in a warm place until it looks like this:
Sunday, October 18, 2009
The clean-up begins
On the other hand, here's a picture of the lovely hops vine I wrote about on August 4. The little pods look like miniature pine cones, and I think they smell like beer perfume, if you can imagine that. When I got tired of working, I took my camera out and looked for interesting things to photograph like the rudbeckia black seed heads. Soon the garden will be a cold, soggy mess.
We're looking forward to seeing the honeymooners and Nova and Roger next week in Seattle when they return from the pacific coast.
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Goodwill adventures and dim sum
Dim Sum is a popular Chinese lunch in Seattle. Every three months or so, a group of John's co-workers from Boeing clock out early on Friday and head up to Seattle for lunch at the Jade Garden restaurant in Chinatown. I love dim sum so I'm happy to tag along. And the Boeing group is fun because several nationalities are at our table: Korean, Filipino, American and Chinese. It's great having a Chinese expert when you eat dim sum. Not only can he explain what you are eating (sort of) but he can converse in Chinese with the staff and order special dishes. The restaurant staff push loaded food trolleys between the tables, you pick and choose, and the table shares many small dishes. There is usually something for everyone, and if it isn't on the cart, they are happy to make it. And before you know it you have eaten many shrimp dumplings, and don't especially want any dinner.
Friday, October 16, 2009
No beautiful autumn???
I'm happy to say, this is not in Seattle. This is a picture and the message my friend Candi sent me from Montana:
"This is what happens when the temperature suddenly drops down to 8 degrees in October. Green leaves which had not even begun to turn color yet froze on the trees. A week later, the temperature is rising back to normal for October. The leaves are now thawed and are turning black. There is a strange smell in the air, like wet hay rotting in a barn. It's a weird and ugly world."
Ugh! this is what I'm hearing from our friends in across the west! I guess real winter will be a relief after this...
Baked apples with dates and pecans
The apple crop is wonderful this year. Here's a dessert project for a rainy fall weekend.
Healthy, too!
Baked Apples with Dates and Pecans
1/4 cup pitted diced Medjool dates
Juice of 1 orange + 1 tsp. zest
3/4 tsp. cinnamon, divided
1/4 tsp. salt
4 or 5 baking apples
1 tbs. melted butter
2 cups apple juice or cider
2 tbs. brown sugar
2 tsp. cornstarch + 1 tbs. water
Heat the oven to 350. In a small bowl, stir together the pecans, dates, salt, 1/4 tsp. cinnamon, orange zest and juice.
Core the apples, and peel down about 1/3. Stuff the apples with the nuts/pecans, then brush with melted butter. Arrange apples in a 8x8 baking dish and add juice to the bottom. Cover tightly with foil and baked until the apples are very soft, but not mushy and falling apart. Transfer apples to serving plates.
Simmer the remaining pan juices in a small saucepan until reduced by about half. Add the brown sugar, cinnamon. Mix the cornstarch and water, add this mixture to the simmering pan and heat until thickened. Serve the apples drizzled with the thickened sauce. (And ice cream or whipped cream-- don't want to go overboard on the "healthy" thing :-)
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Slug saloon
Well... to be exact, it's a concrete lantern I bought at a going-out-of-business sale. Does anyone really need a non functional oriental lantern? Nope. But it was the classiest thing I saw among the gnomes, begging squirrels, and turtles with glasses. And after trudging around that block of hideous statuary, I felt like I should reward myself with a little useless "something." Not to belittle the lantern, which has great significance in Japanese culture. And have you ever heard of a "Japanese lantern poem?" A bit like Haiku, but even more structured because the poem can look like a lantern. I love the Internet.
If nothing else, this one will make a fine hiding place for slugs. Many people swear by the happy hour "death by beer" method of killing slugs, so maybe I'll set up a miniature lethal bar in there. I found a passionate discussion about this on the Internet too, right down to what type of beers they prefer. Slug weather has arrived in the northwest. I think it rained more today that during the entire last 5 months. It is still in the 50's during the day, 40's at night so I'm not in a panic (yet) as to where I'll winter all the outside pots and plants I don't want to freeze. But our long, warm, beautiful Indian summer is definitely over.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
The simple comfort of home
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
The last garden roses
Monday, October 12, 2009
The day in pictures
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Thank you Tom and Amanda
Our lovely bride Amanda
Friday, October 9, 2009
Deer visitors
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Great-Grandparents
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
New Nova pictures
Nova is a darling baby, and I could hold her for hours-- which is exactly what I got to do yesterday afternoon. Lucky, lucky Grandma! I've been hearing about her "cranky hour" but she skipped it yesterday, and I don't think she cried once from 3-8 :-)