food and Drink · general stuff

a funny week!

It’s been a bit of a strange week here as our routine has been thrown out by Toby’s school play. It happens once a year and means that he goes to school between 4 – 9pm for the middle three days, having his tea there and then doing a performance. He’s coped (just) and although I’ve not managed to get anything done all week (other than keep him entertained) I’ve enjoyed having him around – just him and me, and I’ve been able to concentrate on him without feeling that I’m leaving Amy out. On Wednesday evening Amy and I loved seeing him in the play. Toby was quite bewildered by the whole thing but not upset and some of the older children were really amazing and gave a joyful and spirited performance despite some severe disabilities – there wasn’t a dry eye in the hall!

Anyway, because of the change in routine I’m really behind with replying to emails (again) and not much knitting or housework has been done. I did manage to make some real cupcakes though (inspired by a picture I saw over at Dotty Cookie of some cupcakes Ali bought) and I was really pleased with how they turned out. I just made a regular Victoria sponge cake mixture, plopped spoonfuls into individual cases then swirled half a teaspoon of strawberry jam through each one and baked as usual. I topped them with pale pink glace icing and a dried strawberry (I couldn’t get the freeze dried kind so settled for the chewy dried ones).

They went down a treat at Amy’s school afternoon tea and looked quite appropriate as we were raising money for breast cancer charities.

Have a good weekend, it’s a bank holiday here and looks like rain so we’ll be bed bouncing!

food and Drink · general stuff

Guilt-free Jam

I often think that for most people being a parent means dealing with a large dollop of guilt – guilt at not spending enough time playing with your child because you need to get the dinner on, guilt at not reading them just one more story because you’re dog-tired and just need a little adult time, guilt at being glad it’s nearly the first day of term… (ha, that’s me right now!) The guilty list goes on. Most of my guilt stems from the fact that of my 2 children Toby gets by far the most attention and often Amy has to make do with very little of my time and misses out on activities that we’d do as a family if we had 2 ‘normal’ children. The summer hols are especially difficult for her as she has to cope with the worst of both worlds – she’s not an only child and so doesn’t get maximum available adult attention, she has a brother but he’s not a playmate. We are beginning to look into some kind of respite but it’s early stages and I know I am going to struggle leaving my incredibly vulnerable and precious boy in the care of someone else for more than a few hours. Anyway, at the moment we make do by splitting our family down the middle and doing separate activities – one of us stays at home for tickles and bouncing with Toby while the other takes Amy out.

One of the things I’ve been meaning to do with Amy for ages is berry picking. I remember happy afternoons from my own childhood when we used to go berry picking every year (and chestnut gathering in autumn, snowdrop and bluebell spotting in late winter and spring). I found that there was a pick-your-own farm nearby and so Amy and I set off for a wee bit of quality mum and daughter time. I was surprised that it was virtually deserted there and that they had strawberries rotting on the plants – obviously times have changed since I was little and berry picking just isn’t very popular.

Jam1

Amy and I had a great time though – munching on strawberries and raspberries as we picked them, looking at the different stages the fruit goes through as it develops and generally enjoying the time together. Because it was such a rare and special time we ended up picking more berries than we needed and so when we got home I thought we’d have a go at making jam.

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Let me just say that Delia Smith’s recommended 8 minutes for boiling it up didn’t work for us – it was more like 20 minutes and then I wasn’t sure if it would set.

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The kitchen was a bomb site with sticky goo everywhere (I guess it would have helped if we’d actually had the right utensils and if I’d watched it properly and not let it boil over!)

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The resulting jam probably wouldn’t win any prizes but it certainly tastes sweet to me because mixed in there with the fruit and the sugar are some very special memories of some rare mother and daughter time – a simple activity for sure but then often those are the best.

Jam5

food and Drink

a perfect summer supper…

I’m still enjoying getting my delivery of organic fruit and veg from Abel & Cole but my thoughts have turned away from warming winter soups (although with all the crappy weather we’ve been having maybe I’ve been a little hasty!). Some of the fruit and veg I get is certainly challenging me to cook things that I wouldn’t have otherwise done.

Broadbeans

For instance I’ve never actually put broad beans on my shopping list before but as they’ve been part of the last 4 weeks deliveries and I don’t wish to consign their green lovlieness to the compost bin we’ve been eating a lot of this delicious salad:

Broadbeansalad3

It’s just lettuce (whichever variety you prefer –  I’ve used romaine),
tomatoes (again variety up to you –  I’ve used baby plum tomatoes),
cooked and cooled broad beans (pod them, boil for around 5 minutes, allow to cool, and peel them if like me you don’t like the tough skins),
bacon / pancetta (fried crispy then allowed to cool slightly)
peperonata (I used half a jar of Sacla but you could make your own by slow roasting onions, tomatoes, red & yellow peppers in olive oil and allowing to cool slightly)

Method:

rip lettuce and chuck in a salad bowl, throw on peperonata, tomatoes, beans and bacon, toss lightly, twist on some freshly ground black pepper and grab a fork (goes very well with a gallon glass of chilled white wine)

I tell you, broad beans will be on my shopping list for the rest of the season!