Monday 30 July 2012

Michael's Quilt

I have finished Michael's quilt which was supposed to be for his 60th birthday, only 2 years late!  Anyway, here it is



I am pleased with it as it is very men type colours, I wouldn't have made it for myself!
He wanted ying and yang symbols, which are his favourite, and I had this put on in the all over quilting pattern -


Callum, my nephew, is taking it back with him tomorrow.  I just hope Michael likes it!


Thursday 26 July 2012

Date, Honey and Apricot Slices


Friday
5 October 2001
Date, Honey and Apricot Slices

File:Nuttin Honey.jpg
Here we go again with the tray bakes, this must have been a big meeting with the ceremonial group. Now I cook for the cake sales in St. Mary's church in Glastonbury, and some day I hope for my children in Newcastle.

I wrote -
'I made these as a try out and gave them to Wendy for the boys – they were lovely so I made more to take to the meeting in Glastonbury on Sunday.'
I spent a great deal of time driving up and down the motorway in this year and found lots of different ways of getting to Avalon. The best was the motorway, because you can't get lost, even me, on two straight roads. This was before we had a satnav, now I rarely cry in the car through frustration at being lost again.
Good old Jane, the satnav lady, though she does sometimes send me up very strange roads, better her than myself.

Oven: 400F/200C/Gas 6 for 25-30 mins

Ingredients:
1 pound mixed dates and apricots
7 oz butter
10 oz wholemeal flour
4/5 oz soft brown sugar
5 oz oats
2 tbspoons water
1 tbs honey


Steam dates and apricots for 10 minutes, mash and chop up and mix with the honey.
  1. Rub butter into flour and add sugar – it can be good to chop up the butter when it gets sticky.
  2. Add coats and mix in lightly
  3. Pack half of the oats mixture firmly down into the tin and cover with the date mixture
  4. Put remaining oat mixture on top like breadcrumbs.
  5. Bake and when done leave to cool, cut into slices in the tin.
    Ice if desired.

Wednesday 25 July 2012

World's Greatest Carrot Cake Recipe


    Friday
    5th October, 2001.
    World's Greatest Carrot Cake Recipe

File:Carrot cake in pan.jpg

This is by far the greatest carrot cake recipe of all time and it has its own story.

I used to teach RE in Plymouth at Tamarside School and every breaktime we had this carrot cake being sold in the staffroom and everytime at breaktime I had a square. I asked the school cook on lots of occasions for the recipe and although she was fond of me, she never would let me have it.

Eventually the school was OFSTEDed and we failed. However, being put under special measures the teaching staff managed to get masses of new training and due to this I beat 4 teachers in London for a Head of RE job in Acland Burleigh School in Camden. Beware of what you wish for – I wished I had stayed in Plymouth. Never mind, at least I met my lovely second husband Fred, but that is another story.

On the day I left Tamarside the cook came up to the staffroom and gave me this recipe in an envelope and kissed me goodbye. It is The Best cake recipe ever – if you make nothing else from this blog make this one!

Oven 190/375/Gas 5

Ingredients

12 oz carrots grated
4 eggs
8 oz soft brown sugar
6 fl oz sunflower oil
8 oz wholemeal flour
2 tsp ground spice
4 oz desiccated coconut
4 oz raisins.

  1. Grease roasting tin very well – if you want to make a tray bake, which is really what this cake is all about, you will have enough for the tin and maybe some left over for a 1lb loat tin cake.
  2. Whisk eggs and sugar until really thick
  3. Turn down mixer and whisk in oil very slowly
  4. Mix in the other ingredients really well.
  5. Pour into the roasting tin, leaving enough room at the top for it to rise.
  6. Level the top of the mixture and bake until firm, shrinking from the sides and golden brown.
  7. Cool in tin, sprinkle with sugar, cut into squares and serve.
  8. Fantastic.

In my book I wrote -

'I made this to take to Glastonbury for a ceremonial meeting. Wendy grated the carrots for me and gave me a hand mixer she never used.'

My sister and I were talking again at this point – we had fallen out for years over nothing at all, and yet over lots of things all bundled into one. How we made friends again, or really for the first time, is also another story. Wasn't it lovely that she gave me a mixer?

The ceremonial meeting was in the third or fourth year of the Goddess Training. Now this is how it went -

1999/2000 Priestess of Avalon training (Millenium Priestesses)
2000/2001 Rituals and Rites of Passage (Still teaching)
2001/2002 Devotional Year (9.11 and beyond)
2002/2003 Goddess Project (Bed and Breakfast)

I remember now that the ceremonial meeting was for the Goddess Conference – I managed to be in the Ceremonial Group – the group of 8 who held the conference together – twice. In the first year I was West – Earth – and had a magnificent costume with a badger head. In the second year I was East – Fire – and was so exhausted after the conference that I had to rest for a good week – I expanded so much energy in prophesy and nearly caught fire in the fire ceremony, another story for another time.

Date and Banana Cake


File:WJT2005 Cakes.jpg
Ladies in Germany feeding pilgrims
with cake - excellent!  I have lots of aprons just
like this and indeed it could be us outside St. Mary's on a cake sale Sunday, except we do not have such a posh canopy, would be nice!

Unfortunately this entry gives no idea why I didn't just go out and get some eggs.  We were still living in Stoke Road at this time, and maybe my back was too painful, it was a difficult time, though the rest was improving the spasms.

Friday
28th September 2001
Date and Banana Cake

My information for this cake is -
'I had three very ripe bananas and no eggs and wanted to make a cake for Luke and Claire and found this recipe which I added to.'

Oven: 160 C for 50 minutes

Ingredients;

10 oz SR flour + 1 tsp baking powder
6 oz chopped dates
3 ripe bananas
mixed spiece, ginger and vanilla
½ pint milk
4 oz margarine or butter
poppy and sesame seeds
water icing

  1. Put the flour in a bowl and add the chopped dates (I chop with scissors)
  2. Mash the bananas with milk and melted margarine or butter.
  3. Mix in some seeds for crunch and taste.
  4. Then add banana mixture to the flour with a spoonful of mixed spice and one of ginger and some vanilla essence. You can vary the spicey mixture to your taste. Mix everything very well.
  5. Bake for up to one hour
  6. Cool and water ice (add boiling water to icing sugar until it is spreading consistency and use to ice the cake with a hot knife (dipped in boiling water))
  7. This cake is lovely and moist and moorish.

Tuesday 24 July 2012

Charm Square and Layer Cake Bag

I went to a class at Barrington Hall and learned to make this bag, which I am now adapting as I think a quilted lining would be better than loose.  Anyway, here it is -



I plan to make one with 10 inch squares instead of 6 inch and a smaller one with 5 inch squares, as examples for the first class of the Improvers Quilting Group.

Plum Opside Down Cake


17th August 2001
Plum
Opside Down Cake

File:Emma Leppermann 1.jpg



I had too many plums, so I made this cake. We had a smashing plum tree in Stoke Road, Slough and another in AppleTree House. There is nothing like a Victoria Plum eaten sunwarm from the tree on a lovely day in Somerset, or Buckinghamshire if it comes to that. Everyone needs to grow plums, and damsons. They are fantastic for jellies. Back to the recipe.

Oven: 170 for 50 minutes

Ingredients:

6 plums
Demerara sugar
6 oz Granulated Sugar
6 oz butter
3 eggs
12 oz SR Flour
3 Tablespoons milk

  1. Butter the cake tin (7-8”) and sprinkle thickly with Demerara sugar.
  2. Lay the halved plums face down into the sugar.
  3. Make a sponge – beat the butter and sugar until light, gradually add the beaten eggs and then fold in the milk and the flour.
  4. Put over the fruit, smooth the top and cook until it is firm and a knife comes out clean (don't go too far in or you will get to the caramelized plums).
  5. Turn out and cool.
  6. Serve with custard or cream.
This is especially good as the sugar caramelizes really well on the plums. If you want more flavour you could add 2 oz of ground almonds and leave our 2 oz of the flour.

Vintage Rouge

The garden is nearly finished, well as good as I care to have it really, and so I can go back to writing and quilting, hooray.
I find that writing this blog each morning is helpful for loosening up the brain and today I am going to show you my latest project, well I have two really.  One is called Vintage Rouge and is a block of the month and I am hoping the first block will turn up today.  Here is the finished quilt -
Vintage Rouge

Lovely and pink.  Here is the first block of which I need to make four -

Photobucket


And here it is finished and quilted up -


Block#1 by Aunt Reen


I think they are the first blocks away from the centre medallion.  I love the fabrics, but of course you can't really tell the colours on the net.


I have found instructions for easier piecing on a lovely website in the States, this started in May 2012 and the blogger is going to put on instructions for each month - it is a 6 month block of the month.


I am also going to make two more twisted bags, as in the day class I attended.  I will take a photo of the almost finished one and put it here.  I woke up this morning thinking how to improve it, and I do think that incorporating the lining into the quilting is the way to go.  Anyway, will give it a go with 10 inch rather than 6 inch squares to make a much bigger bag.  Photo later.  I am looking for a lovely layer cake (40 ten inch squares of co-ordinating fabric that will make two bags) to use for the bigger bag and when I find it I will let you know.



Sunday 22 July 2012

Apricot and Coconut Teabread and 9/11





Monday
23rd July 2001
Apricot and Coconut Teabread

At this time I was still teaching in London and struggling in every day, spending the weekends and evenings lying on the sofa because my back was so painful due to the accident we had in August 1999.

Oven: 170 Middle shelf for about 1 hour
Ingredients:
12 oz SR Flour
pint salt
4 oz sugar
5 oz chopped (snipped) apricots
2 oz desiccated coconut
zest of 1 lemon(originally I had written rind but I now have a zester and it is better!)
4 eggs
150 ml cream/yoghurt/milk
2 oz melted butter

  1. Mix the flour, salt, sugar, coconut, apricots and lemon zest in a bowl.
  2. Whisk together eggs, cream and melted butter.
  3. Add to the dry ingredients making a soft dropping consistency adding more milk if necessary.
  4. Bake in a well greased 2 lb loaf tin.
  5. Turn out and drizzle icing over (icing sugar and boiling water mixed to a smooth consistency) and add snipped apricots on top.
This is a lovely cake eaten warm. It is very crumbly and moreish and very good with a cream tea.

This must have been the beginning of the Summer Holidays as I am cooking on a Monday, and probably celebrating the fact that I don't have to hobble into school. Shall I tell you the story of how I left teaching?

It was the 11th September, 2001, just after this summer holiday. I was teaching in my classroom on the ground floor.

I had insisted that they move my classroom as it was becoming so difficult for me to climb the stairs, and I had also insisted that they let me have a chair for assemblies as I couldn't stand for more than 5 minutes without pain. At this time things were going from bad to worse. Every now and again I would have a muscle spasm in my back that was so painful I would cry, and one day in the supermarket … well never mind. All you need to know is that things were getting worse.

In the afternoon one of my students came into my classroom. Beside teaching, being Head of Humanities and having a form class, I also taught student teachers, he was one and not one of the best. It is best not to have silly hair when you are trying to become a teacher, especially if you put a bag over the braids every day. I am not joking. Only in London – right on chaps!

He said 'Some Arabs have highjacked a plane.'



NYC Twin Lights 9-11 "Tribute in Lights" Memorial 2005.jpg

I said 'Grass is green, sky is blue, Arabs highjack planes. Why are you telling me this?' Now he looked shocked and it is only recently that I have come to realise that there had been precious little highjacking of planes in the 90s, it was a 70s and 80s phenomenon and I was old enough to remember it.

The lesson finished and I went into the office to watch the planes hitting the towers. We all watched in silence, over and over again. I picked up my coat, said goodbye and went home.

I went next day to the doctor who had been telling me for a good while to stop work, as my back was getting worse. He signed me off to Christmas, then to Easter and I finally got my pension at 51. God is good.

The planes that day changed so many lives. I myself realised that life was too short to keep on keeping on at something that was making me worse. I had been spending lots of time dreaming about a bed and breakfast in Glastonbury, planning the rooms, the colours, the names. At the time I had been studying with Kathy Jones – year one was the introductory priestess course (1999-2000) and year two was ceremonies and rituals (2000-2001). After I left the school I began the devotional course, which was wonderful, and then in 2002 the course for bringing imagination into reality – I had already used this for the bed and breakfast. But I had left by Imbolc 2002.

Sometimes I miss the Goddess Movement a lot. I wish I could find a way to bring the strands of my beliefs together, to teach the good stuff from each. What would I have?

Worldwide Faith Cake

File:Buddha sunset.jpg
Buddhism – concentration, calm and awareness of the present moment



Hinduism – devotion, goddesses for all, non-violence, Gandhi






File:Godess Durga painting.JPG

Goddess – the Divine as Feminine, the Wheel of the Year, women sitting in circle, the land
Sikhism – community, feeding the hungry, courage



File:Sikh wedding.jpg

Catholicism – mystery, deep scholarship and spirituality,



File:Plzeň Františk ambit DSCN0800.JPG
mysticism, prayer, saints and angels, freely giving teaching, service to all.
All these divisions, it is very sad indeed. I was very happy with the Goddess Movement until I realised that they too were bigoted and lacked peace for all. Shall I tell you that story too? Well I will, but later on.

Gooseberry and Redcurrant Jelly and Cailleach and the Getting of Wisdom


    Now we have the recipes and the stories!

      Sunday 24th June 2001
      Gooseberry and Redcurrant Jelly

    'Today we picked the gooseberries and it was a lovely crop – 5 pounds already from one bush. (Stoke Road)
    I froze 4 half pound bags, made a crumble with some and added 2.5 lbs of gooseberries to 1.5lbs of redcurrants with 1.5 pints of water. I boiled it for ½ – ¾ hour and am now straining the juice for jelly though a pillowcase into the big glass bowl. More later.'

    'Today (Monday) I boiled the juice (1.75 pints) with 1.75 lbs of sugar and it made 3 pots of jelly. Very wasteful of fruit but a beautiful colour and very clear. Tip: Never squeeze the jelly bag it makes the juice cloudy.'




    You will be glad to know that I bought a jelly bag after this, consigning the pillowcases to the beds, or the rubbish bin, and have made good use of it over the years. Sometimes there is a glut of apples, especially here in Avalon, and I made apple jelly and add mint with spiced vinegar, or sage, or other herbs. They are better left for a good three months so that the herbs infuse through the apples.

    Shall I tell you my apple story? At one time, when we first came to Glastonbury, I was in the Goddess Movement before I went back to the Church. After we had moved into AppleTree House in Autumn 2002 to run the bed and breakfast we had made some apple nectar with the last of the Bramley apples and I had taken it all to a ceremony for Samhain that year.


    I was Cailleach that day, and stirred the apple nectar in a cauldron over a fire. One by one the priestesses came along a line of black veiled and gowned figures who were scrying into the future and speaking prophetically to each woman.

    Finally each one came to me, sitting alone behind a screen, to be given apple nectar and Cailleach's words, or not. Sometimes I didn't speak at all to them. Anyway, as I was sitting gowned in my black velvet cloak with my hood up and stirring the cauldron I heard a Voice in my head.

    'What do you want?'

    This Voice had not been heard so clearly by me for a long, long time. It wasn't asking 'what do you want?' as if you had knocked on a door, but more 'what is it you need – ask for anything and you can have it.'

    I knew what the answer to this question should be, I had read my Bible a lot as a girl and I had been an R.E.Teacher. Even so, I kept on thinking – money, health, grandchildren, etc. etc.

    Finally the voice spoke again with huge impatience -

    'Hurry up.'

    This made me laugh a lot inside and I said

    'Wisdom',

    which of course is always the right answer to this question – see Solomon!

    Wisdom is also Sophia, the Female energy principle, the Holy Spirit within Judaism and the place where the Goddess Movement meets the Church, and one day the men in dresses will recognise this!

    Luca della robbia, tondo con spirito santo.JPG
    Within four months I had left Kathy and the priestesses and had been welcomed back into Mother Church. She always welcomes you back, and sighs when you leave again. But She knows you will one day come back for good.

    Always ask for wisdom, if you are given the choice, that is my recommendation! As with Solomon, everything else will probably come along with it, eventually anyway, God be praised.

File:Ballymote Church of the Immaculate Conception South Aisle The Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Middle Window Detail 2010 09 23.jpg

Friday 20 July 2012

Four Seed Bread - the Staff of Life


File:Korb mit Brötchen .JPG
My second recipe - I am getting the hang of this.

25th May 2001
Four Seed Bread
I have made this bread a number of times and it is not consistent. Sometimes it is lovely and other times far too heavy. I think it is a bread that needs to be made very carefully, and definitely needs lots of kneading.
It is beautifully balanced nutritionally, I think at this time I must have been preparing for the end of the world, as I seem to be collecting recipes that are 'all-in-one', or maybe it was a vegetarian part of my life. This bread could be made with some chopped rosemary and onion for eating with soup. Or some sun-dried tomatoes and basil for summer salads – I tried this once and it was delicious. It worked that time!
Oven: Pre heat to maximum and cook for ¼ hour at 425/232/8
then lower to 400/200/6 for 35 minutes
Ingredients:
1.25 pints warm water
2 sachets dried yeast
3 lbs strong organic white flour (brown is too dense for this already dense bread)
2 oz poppy seeds
2 oz sesame seeds
2 oz sunflower seeds
2 oz pumpkin seeds
125 ml sunflower oil
4 tsp salt

  1. Put ¾ pint of warm water in a jug with 1 tsp sugar and the 2 yeast sachets. Mix and leave to froth.
  2. Add to ½ pint warm water, mix and mix in enough flour to make a batter. Leave for ½ hour covered in a warm place.
  3. Add the seeds, salt and oil and mix very well.
  4. Then start adding the four to make a good dough.
  5. Knead very well for 10 minutes on a floured board and keep adding flour until perfect.
  6. Put in bowl and in warm place for 5 hours to double in size. Oil the top and cover with cling film and a cloth.
  7. Knock back and shape into 3 loaves, rolls, etc.
  8. Leave to prove again for another 2 hours.
  9. Put in hot pre-heated oven for 15 minutes then turn down and cook until hollow. Cool on rack.

Coconut and Almond Oatcakes


This is my collection of recipes which I have been trying out and writing down for the last ten years. My recipe book is becoming a bit tatty now and I have decided to type them out.

You will see that most of them involve sugar, and there are very few savoury recipes! I am very fond of sweet things, far too fond my dentist says.

File:Vitrine de la pâtisserie L. Bourbon à Brive-la-Gaillarde, France.JPG

I have put the recipes in order of date, rather than gathering them together under any sensible cataloguing, but I like this as you never know what the next recipe will be. By the way, sometimes the recipes will be Imperial measures and sometimes metric. You need a set of scales that can switch from one to the other.

I hope you enjoy cooking them. Some of them are secret and some of them have a story, as you will see.
Bonne appetite!

25th May 2001
Coconut and Almond Oatcakes

These are very filling and good for packed lunches, with complete nutrition and a good protein balance. Add to a yoghurt and 2 pieces of fruit and they will keep you going until dinner time. Perfect!
File:Oatcakes (1).jpg
Oven: 350F/177C/Gas Mark 4 for 20-30 minutes

Ingredients

60g rolled oats
90g oatmeal
90g plain brown flour
125g desiccated coconut
100g raisins and chopped apricots
30g sunflower seeds
30g sesame seeds
75ml/5 tablespoons organic sunflower oil
125ml/1/4 pint juice – apple/orange/tropical fruit – take your pick
2 big spoons of honey

  1. Put oats, oatmeal, flour coconut, fruit and seeds into a big bowl and mix very well.
  2. Add oil and mix very well.
  3. Add juice and honey and make a dough, with more flour if necessary (it will be!)
  4. Pat it out and knead a bit and then pat down to 1/2” thickness and cut out 12 smallish rounds or 6 big rounds cut in half. Make sure the raisins are inside the dough or they will burn in the oven.
  5. Cook for 20-30 minutes and cool on a wire rack.
  6. These will freeze beautifully and each one has
    1. 239KCl
    2. 4g protein
    3. 16g fat
    4. 21g carbohydrate
    5. 5g fibre

Sunset in Glastonbury

Sunset from our house looking over towards Wearyall Hill in Glastonbury.  We have some amazing sunsets, or rather did have before the rain set in.  They are promising good weather from tomorrow onwards, I intend to get out in the garden in a minute to cut the grass as I don't believe a word of it!

Cavalier Puppies

It is sad how infrequently I post on this blog.  I think it is because it is so complicated, but I am trying to work it out and put up quilting, dog and baby stuff!
I am looking for a new cavalier or two and hopefully will have found them by the middle of August - Amantra Kennels is my likely provider of puppies, hopefully.  They have a tri that they are running on at present, but if she doesn't look show worthy will be trying to find a home for her.
This is Bridie, one of Lily's puppies that I really should have kept.  She had a blenheim and two tris and I wanted to keep all of them - Hestia, Hera and Hecate - but I sold them as they were winter puppies and so much work indoors, and the money was handy, after the terrible expense of the caesarian.
And here is Lily with one of the cavadoodles from her last, and last litter.  She is a very pretty dog but amazingly stupid.

Ella Imogen

This is Ella Imogen, my beautiful granddaughter, about two months' ago.