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Showing posts with label slow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label slow. Show all posts

All is calm...






Goodness, there are so many things going on at this time of year, I need to take a moment to stop and notice the quiet, beautiful, times around me.

This week, Hugo graduates from early childhood to early primary.  There will be a ceremony with capes and crowns and rose petals, and no doubt lots of tears from this mama.

Elsa turns TEN.  That, I find hard to believe. 

There is Christmas and the associated elving, oh and that market, so exciting.  Then there is garlic to harvest, late summer crops (still) waiting to be planted, a green house to irrigate.  We have lovely guests coming to stay this weekend too. 

In among the busy, the tinsel, the rush, I'm trying hard to remember to take a moment, to relish the quiet times, to notice the pretty and most importantly, to squeeze my not-so-little babies a little tighter.  

I hope you are finding some calm and bright in your world. 


Eating like kings


They say that necessity is the mother of invention, but in our house, it could be that mother has the necessity of invention, or something like that.  

These past few months as I haven’t had a regular income, I’ve had to be really inventive to make those proverbial ends meet.  We’ve had to be more resourceful about how we shop and what we eat. 

Funny enough, despite a restricted food budget, we’ve never eaten better.  I've really enjoyed the challenge of trying to come up with meals using what’s on hand, what’s in the garden and if we don't have an ingredient, substituting or simply doing without. 

Last night we made pizza for dinner but we had none of the traditional toppings in the pantry.  No mozzarella, no tomato, no mushroom or ham.  Normally I would make a dash to the shops to buy the missing ingredients but instead, I used what we had on hand.  Plenty of milk, ingredients for dough and a garden full of herbs and garlic.   

First I made cheese with the milk.   A soft farm house cheese like a bit like this.  We made the pizza bases and topped them with garlic, olive oil, herbs, smeared some with nettle pesto, dolloped the fresh cheese and finished them all with a generous grating of parmesean.  The children loved them. Best ever pizza they said.  Win. 

Today I stirred finely chopped chives, thyme and parsley through the rest of the cheese and served it with a loaf of Irish soda bread - baked using the whey leftover from making the cheese.   Add radishes and lettuce from the garden, some pickled olives from a friend's tree and lunch was complete.

So simple and so delicious.  Peasant food it may be, but I couldn’t help but think that we eat like kings.  

In which five roosters had a bad day









It was a lucky escape for the three roosters who chose to sleep high in the wattle tree.  For the other five, asleep on the roost, it was not so lucky.

It was a job we were dreading, but eight roosters in the coop is just too many. Just ask the hens.  Or ask me for that matter, that pre-dawn chorus was getting too much. It was time for them to go.  So once the boys were asleep on Saturday night, we caught five of them and gently put them in a small pen 'til morning.

Early Sunday morning the preparations began.  We made a little camp fire and set a large pot of water to boil, grabbed a trestle table and sharpened some knives.  Then I made a batch of brownies.  Because I think it is necessary to have something sweet to counter the unpleasant task of the day.

Good friends arrived with more experience in these matters, to lend a hand and share their knowledge. And the job of the day got underway. Chopping, dunking, plucking and cleaning.

Once all five roosters were dispatched, cleaned and dressed, it was time for lunch.  We took the hearts, marinated them for a while in olive oil and garlic before cooking them over the last of the fire's coals.   They made such tasty morsels.  The livers were pan fried to make something like this pasta recipe, washed down with a very fine riesling from France. It made a fitting accompaniment to those five young roosters.

Did you know that supermarket chickens are around six to nine weeks old when they're killed?  Our roosters had a much happier and longer life of five months filled with sunshine, pasture and plenty of worms.   And one bad day.

Today is a good day.   We have a freezer full of meat that we reared and processed ourselves.  The hens look happier and can rest easy without being hassled by too many roosters.

What's left of the soft rooster feathers flutter around the garden in the gentle spring winds.  They collect in the corners of the porch, where they're promptly collected by small birds who take them away to build their nests.

How could you not...


It was with mixed emotion that I accepted the invitation.  I was super excited to be spending three days with a group of food lovers, learning new charcuterie skills.  But I was dreading the fact that, well, first we were going to kill a pig. A home slaughter.  A chicken is one thing, but a pig, sheesh, how would that go?

I'm a firm believer of knowing where your food comes from, and taking responsiblity for the food you eat.  And I endeavour to make sure that most of what we eat comes direct from the farmer, including any meat.  But yeah, I was about to take a giant leap into, the, um business end of being an omnivore, and I was not sure I if I was entirely up to the challenge.

We all arrived at my friends' farm early on a gloomy winter's morning.  Most brought with them a wealth of family tradition and recipes for butchering a pig, sharing their stories over a fortifying glass of Strega.  Meanwhile, that little pig sniffed and poked around in her little pen laid deep with fresh straw, took a little nap and looked perfectly content, oblivious to the fact that her hours were numbered.  Once everything was ready, a call was made to the butcher and as soon as he arrived I felt a huge sense of relief.  He looked strong, he looked capable and reassuringly, he looked kind.

Some people went inside, unable to watch the deed, but I felt that this was something, as meat eater, I had to see, and stayed to watch the slaughter, albeit from a comfortable distance.

Far from the horrific scene I had imagined, it was the complete opposite.  It was quick, it was calm and it was respectful.  One moment at home, happily burrowing her nose in the straw, the next...

The pig was still warm when the hard work began, breaking down the carcass and divvying up the recipes.   Prosciutto, pancetta, brawn, cotechino, salami, bacon, ham, mortadella and sausages, an impressive amount of food to feed five families. The fat was rendered into lard and the skin turned into chicharron.  The blood collected and mixed with chocolate, masala and raisins to make sangiuinaccio. Nothing was wasted.  Every part of the animal was treated with the utmost respect and care.

At the end of three days we celebrated with a feast.  We celebrated our work, we celebrated the abundance of food and we celebrated the pig. Tasting what was ready to eat and admiring what was yet to cure.

The whole experience was the most amazing and humbling three days I could ever imagine. An honour in fact. I walked away with a newfound awareness, a feeling of gratitude to the pig, thankful to the friends who invited me to share and to teach. And also admiration for the incredible tradition that a handful of people continue.

It's easy to buy a packet of bacon from the supermarket, a few slices of ham from the deli.  Too easy. I can now see how that makes us so removed from our food and the animals that provide us with nourishment. Absolves us from any blood on our hands (and believe me, there is blood).  After this week I'm not sure  I can buy bacon from the shop ever again, or ham, or any pork product.  Or in fact any meat.  For me, I don't think it's the right thing to do. I'd rather eat less meat and pay more for it, buying directly from a friend or farmer. Or perhaps even think about raising our own.

Maybe, some people might find this story uncomfortable, and wonder "how could you?" After this amazing experience, I wonder, how could you not.





P.S. If you're interested in seeing something similar done beautifully you should watch Anatomy of Thrift 


Real raw food




If last week I did something crazy, this week I did something totally illegal.  Yes, I broke the law.  I bought and drank pet milk.  Alternatively known as raw milk.

Inspired by the Real Food book by Nina Planck, I've been itching to get my hands on high quality raw milk for ages, and found myself considering the idea of getting a house cow. However quietly asking around for a regular supply, this week I finally found it.

"You're allowed to buy cigarettes but you're not allowed to buy this. It's not for human consumption -  only for pets" stated the source of my illegal booty.  I couldn't help ponder this absurd state of affairs as I drove straight home and poured myself a glass.  It tasted so sweet and delicious and unlike any milk I've ever tasted.  It was so good I had to pour it over a bowl of granola and promptly gobbled that up too.  

The big test was going to be if the peeps drank it, because really, I want them to enjoy the health benefits that raw milk provides.   Having never liked drinking milked before, they almost polished off two litres last night and this morning.  Law broken again.  But I was smug in the knowledge that their tummies were full of vitamins, enzymes, fatty acids, beneficial bacteria and a host of other goodness that crime seems a small price to pay.

The virtues of clean raw milk sourced from grass fed cows are extensive, and there's plenty of information around if you look.  Both for and against.  It's a complex issue that I won't explore here.  What I am looking forward to is making yoghurt, butter and fresh cheeses.  All for my pets of course.  I wouldn't to be involved in any illegal activity.

But I was reminded of this... 

Bruny Island Weekend


After a busy Saturday market, on glorious spring day, we drove south to catch the ferry across the channel. We were heading to a Slow Food event - a dinner cooked by Ross O' Meara at the Lunawanna Hall, a little village on the south of the island.

Everything we ate was sourced on this tiny island off the coast of Tasmania.  Olives, oysters, pork rillettes, wallaby terrine, possum and rabbit sausages, corned wallaby legs (so delicious!) really incredible ( I mean, really incredible) spit roasted lamb, some greens and buttery pink eyes finishing with a simple Scottish dessert called cranachan. All washed down with Bruny Island wines.

We stayed at Ross's busy farm nearby and after a luxurious breakfast, slowly meandered back to the ferry, stopping to climb the lookout at the Neck, take a quick paddle on sunny Nebraska beach and drive past Daisy Banks my dream cottage by the sea that's for sale. On the voyage back to the mainland, I dreamt of moving to this magic island one day...as I always do every time I visit.

















Feburary No 5

A new rhythm to our days now that Elsa is back at school.
Slow sunny mornings.
Quieter days. I like it.
Enjoying this book.
I do miss our little kitty cat though...

A slow day


We've all been so busy round here lately. Today was needed to catch our breath. Hugo has been, well, quite frankly, a ratbag. And I feel that he suffers the most when life whirls around him, which is why he behaves so erratically.

Today was a happy day. A slow day. Just me and him. No meetings (I currently find myself on 5 committees!), no long car trips, no swimming lessons or athletics carnivals, not even a trip to the shops. Just some gardening, some baking, some drawing. Lots of tea and cuddles, trying to get our rhythm back. And watching the rain...we need more days like today...