Sunday 1 July 2012

General update 01.07.12

Hi everyone!
I just updated my cooking challenge page with a few new recipes ticked off the list - I've now completed 31 recipes so far with 41 to go. I've been going a bit Eastern crazy lately as I've done the Thai Green curry and more falafel (but baked this time which made me feel a lot better about the calorie content!) and I'm thinking of doing a chickpea and potato curry in the next week or so. Check out my Cooking Challenge page if you have a moment!

In other news, Tom's birthday has been and gone - we went to Silverstone to see the Free Practice for the MotoGP. Unfortunately we couldn't stay for the actual race on the Sunday as Tom had to work but we still had a brilliant time (despite the typical British weather that somehow left me drenched and sunburnt in equal measures) and we're already thinking about booking the whole weekend away next year.

Free Practice on the Friday at Silverstone
Because of our trip to Silverstone I thought Tom's birthday card should have a MotoGP theme to it, and after wracking my brains for days I finally came up with a design I really liked involving a hidden message - the design had checkered flags on the outside, and images of one of Tom's favourite MotoGP riders, Casey Stoner on the inside, and a hidden message in the folded part...

Checkered flags (which took ages...)
MotoGP winner 2012 Casey Stoner













Before he won the Championship last year Casey Stoner's rider number was 27 so I thought this would work well seeing as Tom turned 27 this year.

And now that Stoner is the reigning champion he is now riding under the number 1, so I thought I could play on this to write a cheesy message on the inside of the hidden part of the card.

It's small but the blue number on the bike is 1

I found the hidden message card tutorial on Youtube here (it takes a second or so for the video to start) and even though the original design on the video was quite feminine, the basics can be applied to any kind of card like the one I made.

In addition to the recipes on my Cooking Challenge list I also baked some toffee brownies as a late birthday treat for Tom. Absolutely, unbelievably, sinfully delicious, but so, so bad for you it doesn't bear thinking about (seriously, a whole stick of butter and 3 and a half bars of chocolate went into it!).



In other news, I'm going to be working at another Flower Show in London next week (Hampton Court) which also coincides with a family party to celebrate my cousin Jenny's end of treatment for breast cancer and her 40th birthday, so I'm really pleased I've managed to coordinate things so that I can work on the stand and do the family thing as well.

What else? Oh yes, we had Australian Christmas last weekend which was great fun - it's essentially a big get together for friends who we might not see on a regular basis and we have a bbq and just pretend like it's Christmas in Australia (but without the presents). There's been so much going on in the last month that it's been quite hard to stick to my budget so I'm hoping the next couple of weeks I can get by without spending much and slowly get more out of my overdraft. There's more birthdays coming up in July (including mine) so I'll still have to be careful about money for the time being.

And finally I got to see a specialist about the on and off dizziness I've been having, and he doesn't actually think I have labyrinthitis, which is good news in one sense as it means I won't be left with lasting damage to my inner ear. Unfortunately though he believes I'm been getting vestibular migraines which are what is affecting my balance, and which means I might need to be on medication for the rest of my life (boooo), and also means I have to completely cut out caffeine. Now I can cope without the stimulant side of caffeine as I don't drink much real caffeine these days anyway, but I just really like the taste of coffee and tea, so not sure how I'm going to cope without that. The bit that really upsets me though is.... *pause for dramatic effect*..... no more chocolate either!!

CURSES!!
He's definitely missing his Cadbury's Caramel

So that's my life in a nutshell for now. I'll try and update more as the weeks go by on everything (Cooking Challenge, decaffeinating myself, and getting out of my overdraft).

Ta ta for now,

Lettie xx

Sunday 10 June 2012

More homemade birthday cards

Here's some more homemade birthday cards and gifts I've recently made for friends.






This one I made for my best friend Amy's birthday. For the paper flower I followed a tutorial I found on youtube (with background music from Emilie Simon which made it even better!), and I then stuck a piece from a broken bracelet in the middle with sticky pads.













I also made some photo-candle-jars or whatever you want to call them using some old photos of us and our friends from over the years which I printed on normal paper in black and white and glued onto a clean jar on top of some old book pages I'd already glued on.  I then tied some cream ribbon around the neck of the jar added the tea lights and voila!  
 
 
That's a photo of the cardamom biscuits we made together in case you were wondering...
It was also my friend Becky's birthday a few weeks ago but because I was away working at the Chelsea Flower Show with work I didn't have time to work on a nice card before her birthday, which I felt pretty bad about. So since we were going to her Dad's birthday this weekend I decided to make them both a card. 

They're both very musical so the cards had to have a music theme. With Becky's I decided to make a heart shape out of a treble clef and a bass clef (I've seen it on a tattoo before and it looks cool) which I made a stencil for and then cut out of book pages (I love using old books for craft projects, in case you hadn't noticed!) and stuck onto some nice red card and added some more book paper to the edges. It was pretty tricky tracing the treble clef and cutting it out so I'm even more proud of how it turned out (even if the whole thing could have done with being a tad more central).


I then cut out a happy birthday message from the remaining red card for the inside, which again I stuck on top of old book pages to make it stand out more against the black card. Ideally I would have liked to have used old music scripts but I just don't have any lying around and didn't have time to go hunting for some.


For Becky's Dad I decided to make a piano themed card from some ideas I'd seen on the internet and this is how it turned out.

 
It might seem pretty simple but it was actually quite tricky making sure everything was the exactly the right size and getting the white keys to lay out right without either overlapping each other at the bottom or leaving really big black gaps at the top. I probably should have made the curve a bit less pronounced, or made the keys themselves narrower, but it didn't turn out too badly in the end. I was going to add in black music notes to the red section at the top but it would have been very fiddly and I didn't really have all that much time before the party in the evening (which was a musical extravaganza itself!). Both Becky and her Dad liked their cards which is the main thing anyway! :)

Right that's enough blogging for one day I think. If you have any comments or questions about any of these cards or the photo jars, just leave me a comment below!

Thanks for reading!
xx

Cooking Challenge update 10.06.12

Hi there,
hope everyone's having an enjoyable Sunday. Once again I've been a bit lax updating my blog so apologies. I have been ticking a few recipes off my list though as well as learning some new recipes that weren't originally included on my 'to cook' list...

Inspired by Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution Day on 19th May I cooked a couple of meals from his Ministry of Food cookbook, including this chicken and leek stroganoff which is just delicious. I also made my very first mince beef and onion pie (in fact my very first savory pie full stop) which also turned out very nicely.








Mmmm, pie and chips...
Apart from those digressions from the cooking challenge list I have also managed to cross off a few more recipes from the list:

In complete disregard for the hot weather I decided to have a go at the beef and ale stew recipe in Jamie Oliver's Ministry of Food book, accompanied by dumplings and creamy baked leeks - I actually made this over two days as the stew was going to take a long time to cook - and since it was actually really, really warm the day I had planned on cooking the stew we decided to have an impromptu bbq with some friends instead and delay the stew until the following day.  It was worth the wait though!


I had fun learning how to make dumplings though (I'd only ever made them once before, many years ago when I was living in Germany so I doubt the recipe would have been the same anyway).

What else...? Oh I also made some brown bread ice cream for my best friend Amy's birthday - now don't pull any faces, it's a genuine dessert made from toasted breadcrumbs and muscovado sugar with is mixed in with whipped cream and egg whites to make the ice cream, and I used to have it probably every month with dinners at uni so I've been desperate to lean how to make it to have a little reminder of my years at Trinity College.
Now that pretty much all my friends from college have now moved on to new pastures there's hardly anyone I could visit nowadays, so opportunities for sampling that delicious creamy sweet ice cream again are diminishing rapidly, which makes me very, very sad... So you can imagine how happy I was to find a recipe for it! When I decided to start the cooking challenge that was one of the first ones on the list I can tell you!

And recently Amy and I made Parmesan Chicken with Proscuitto while the men went out to the climbing wall in town - I think the original plan was to prep the food (which involved a lot of 'breast bashing' - chicken breast that is - great if you've had a frustrating day at work!) and get on the Wii Fit / Just Dance to get a bit of exercise in ourselves, but unsurprisingly a couple of cups of tea led to a long girly chat, which just about left us enough time to get the food cooked by the time the boys got home.


I should have taken more photos of the cooking process as it was a lot of fun, and I'm afraid the photos I do have aren't great as I decided to cut the cooked chicken into strips just to make extra sure that it was cooked all the way through. It was absolutely mouth-wateringly delicious though, so next time I have a few extra pennies to spend on the food shop I shall definitely get some prosciutto to make this again.

So that's it in terms of the cooking update. I'm hoping to make a Thai green chicken curry this coming week (I already have the spring onion, mangetout and asparagus in the fridge so I don't want to waste them!), and since it's Tom's birthday and Father's Day next Sunday then I'm anticipating making a couple of the sweets from the list for the two main men in my life, although I haven't yet made up my mind which ones (desserts, not men!). Perhaps the Tiramisu, or maybe the apple pie... who knows!

Bye for now!
xx

Sunday 13 May 2012

Homemade birthday card

I've been getting into my papercrafts this year and have already made a few bits and bobs - for Valentine's Day I made a nice card with buttons and red ribbon, as well as the book I made for Tom (see my post on Valentine's ideas), and I've had a lot of fun getting creative.

I had a friend's birthday party yesterday so I'd decided I wanted to make her a card rather than buy one. Now before anyone gets the wrong idea, I'm not a compete stingy miser, I'm just trying to be a bit more careful with my money right now, and I personally think the greeting cards that you can buy in the shops are a complete rip off, and I don't know many people who actually keep them, so it's not very environmentally friendly either.

I'd had a couple of ideas in my head of what I wanted the card to look like roughly - quite simple but vintage colours and style as my friend is quite stylish and artistic (her and her partner run a photography business and she is also a trained make-up artist).

This is what the final product looked like and here's how I made it.



































After having a quick look at some magazines for references, I decided to use up some of the book pages leftover from the book I made for Tom (there's a reason I can't throw anything away), to create a nice background on top of some nice black card, which I made by cutting strips of text out of a couple of pages, and then glueing them down with pritt stick. I didn't want them to look too straight and tidy, so I just used scissors rather than the stanley knife. When I stuck them down I didn't glue all the way to the edges as I wanted the edges to curl up slightly to give the  effect of being aged.

I then made some paper flowers to sit on top of the book page strips - I did this by cutting out a medium sized flower outline in some dusky pink paper, and then used that cut out as a template to cut one exactly the same in the same paper. I then used some patterned reddish paper and cut out individual petal shapes (with tabs on the bottom so I could stick them down) and glued them on top of the pink flower outlines with pritt stuck.

After that I sewed on a nice pearlized button in the centre of each flower. To get it right in the centre I placed the button on the reverse of the flower and pushed a pencil through the holes to mark where the needle needed to go through the paper.

I had some more patterned paper which I cut into strips to make the flower stems, and once I'd decided where I wanted to stick the flowers I stuck down the strips and glued the flowers on top. Once they were stuck on I used my fingernails to bend the petals into a more 3D shape.

To finish it all off, I just sewed a border around the front of the card with plain white thread (running stitch) which looked really nice against the black card. The whole things was a little rushed because I hadn't left myself much time and I needed to get on with baking for the birthday party, but I actually don't think it would have looked much better if I'd had the time to complicate it by adding in more elements - I think the vintage feel patterns and colours contrasted nicely with the simple black background and overall it had a nice collage effect.

Most importantly my friend really liked it so overall it was a success - I just wish I'd made two cos I want one now!!

Food & Drink update 13.05.12

I know I haven't updated this in a while but I have been doing a fair bit of cooking lately (not always things from my Cooking Challenge list).

Ones I have managed to tick off the list are (I'll update the totals on the Cooking Challenge post):
Jamie Oliver's Chicken Korma which I made completely from scratch including the curry paste - ended up being a bit hotter than a normal korma (had to add loads of yoghurt to cool it down) but still very tasty. I did serve it with plain rice and naan bread but I couldn't get a decent picture of it sorry.




I didn't make those biscuits!
Rhubarb fool from Annie Bell's Gorgeous Desserts book which I made for my friend Helena's birthday yesterday - didn't look much like the picture as the lovely homegrown rhubarb from my friend Amy was more green than pink, and I used Courvoisier rather than Cointreau in the cream, but it still tasted really nice! I did make some poppy seed biscuits to go with it, but didn't manage to get a decent pic last night so here's one I put together today (with yummy French gallettes, I can't claim to have made those!). I've got a load of the fool leftover in the fridge now, so I'll most likely have some for lunch!

I also made a paella with roasted veg a couple of weeks ago - based on a recipe from Ravinder Bhogal's book Cook in Boots which again wasn't on the list, but tasted delicious. Surprisingly easy, although makes a real mess of the wok, and it's just as nice reheated as lunch for work. I'll definitely be trying that one again!



To continue my efforts to actually use the meat in our freezer, I tried my hand at slow cooking with a recipe for breast of lamb with baked onion, which I was pretty pleased with. The lamb was really tender, and the onions were delicious. I probably should have served it with potatoes, but didn't have any in, so made a ratatouille and added some plain pasta to the side.

Ratatouille with melted cheese
The leftover onions and ratatouille I added to grilled bread with melted cheese on top and that was delicious (and frugal!).

Baked onions with melted gloucs cheese and chives










Butterflied Toffee Cupcakes
As well as the Rhubarb Fool, I also attempted Toffee Cupcakes for Helena's party (again not on my list), which ended up being delicious even though we had to digress from the recipe slightly when the toffee cream I'd slaved over curdled (damn it!) while we were whipping it. The toffee sauce was amazing though!
Really glad I've learned how to make toffee sauce now - it'll be a good one on ice cream in the summer! Yum!


I love how this simple card turned out

 As well as the baking I also decided to make a card for Helena's birthday since I'm trying to be good and get out of my overdraft by restricting my 'spending money' to just £10 a week. Given I didn't give myself enough time to properly plan anything, I'm super happy with how his turned out. I'll post separately about how I created it.




That's it for food updates for now - I'm making myself hungry thinking about it, so I better get something cooking!

Bye for now,
Lettie xx

Work, weddings, gigs and tattoos

Hi there.
It's certainly been a while since I've written anything substantial on here, but there's been lots going on in my life lately.

Work
 I completed my first big project at work about a month ago (a Spring/Summer update of new books in our catalogue), which I'm really proud of, and went to London twice in one week for London Book Fair and London Wild Bird Watch, both of which were really good experience, albeit a bit knackering!
Romanian stand at London Book Fair - loved the hanging books!
 I got to spend some time with uni friends at the same time (and randomly bumped into another on his way to a football match!) which was just great. I'm now working on the main catalogue for the year which is party a quite tedious job, so I'm looking forward to finishing the amends/proofing stages and getting on to the more creative design side of it. I'm also working on a website refresh project which is going to be an ongoing thing, but am enjoying seeing little things change bit by bit, and working on some proposals to link up with a few people in the industry, which is very exciting, and again really good experience.

Weddings
 In other news, my friends Steve and Jemma also got married a couple of weekends ago, which was just a brilliant day. If you've read any of my previous posts about the wedding you'll know that Tom and I had agreed to play guitar and sing respectively at the ceremony in addition to other wedding party duties - it was really fun learning new songs together and despite being horribly off-key at the start of the first song (I'm blaming the nerves) we got into it and it ended up sounding quite nice and the bride and groom enjoyed and appreciated it, so that's all that matters in the end.

Luckily enough I also managed to get a new prescription for my labyrinthitis that has recently made a comeback, which has made a huge difference to the dizziness (so no falling over in Church!), and also meant I could have a couple of drinks at the reception as well, which was a real bonus!

The Portal companion cube cake with Halo 'Bride & Groom'
Everything was just so much their personality at the reception it was just awesome. The cake, the name cards, the decorations, their entrance music (the Halo theme!) - everything was just perfect for them. The speeches were great too, especially Andy (best man) - despite his fears, it was funny and very well judged, so well done Andy! :)
I might put this on my desk at work
Jemma and Steve got gifts for all of us in the wedding party as well which was really sweet - the boys got personalised cufflinks (Tom had motorbikes!) and I got a gorgeous notebook and pen set, and a lovely turquoise pendant, which will always remind me of the day (it's the same colour as the wedding colour scheme). It was really thoughtful of you guys so thank you!

The party was great fun - the Transformers theme as the first dance, the band, the 'Jaeger-train', and the last few songs secretly planned by Steve (1000 miles by Vanessa Carlton made me cry). All in all it was one of the best weddings I've been to, and it was great to be staying at the hotel too - we all met up for breakfast in the morning to laugh and joke about the night before, pig out on fried breakfast and copious amounts of tea, or nurse hangovers as the case may have been.

The next day the wedding party (parents excluded) all went to Alton Towers, and again we had amazing luck with the weather - it chucked it down on the Sunday and then was glorious all day long on Monday! - and there was hardly anybody in the park so we managed to get a go on all the best rides at least once (I finally got on Air and Sonic Spinball!). We also tried the new new 'ride' Nemesis Sub Terra which isn't really a rollercoaster, it's more of a scary experience based on the Nemesis backstory - it didn't last very long, but was prett good for what it was, just don't expect a rollercoaster. I'm just glad I didn't have bare legs, put it that way... Here's an ad for the ride:


Gigs and tattoos 
The fun didn't stop after the wedding and Alton Towers though, as I'd booked tickets for the following weekend (for Tom's Christmas present) to go see one of our favourite bands Alkaline Trio on their 15th anniversary tour. When we got there we discovered that one of the support bands was in fact The Dear & Departed, who are fronted by Dan Smith, who is also a tattoo artist who works with Kat von D at High Voltage Tattoos in LA (where LA Ink was filmed). Having seen the band featured on the TV show it was great to see them live and in person, and besides the cool factor, I genuinely really enjoyed the music and they were really good live.  
I want a butterfly in this style
After their set we went to say hi and had a chat and a photo with Dan. We started talking about tattoos (couldn't pass up the opportunity!) and discovered that he's actually going to be working in Swansea in September so we agreed I'd e-mail him an image of what I was after and hopefully we'll sort something out with his assistant to get an appointment booked. It's very exciting, and because what I want is a little different I wasn't 100% confident that it was something your average tattoo artist was going to be able to achieve in the way I wanted it. At least this way I've seen lots of Dan's work, and I'm confident he's a real professional so if anyone should be able to do, then he should.

After the second supporting act, a guy called Dave Hause (who sang a cover of the Hold Steady's Constructive Summer - yay!), we finally got to see Alkaline Trio! They opened with 'We've Had Enough' which is one of the songs I've been listening to a lot lately, followed by another favourite of mine 'Time To Waste, which they didn't play last time I saw them, so that made me very happy! This is the best video I could find on youtube (my videos were terrible quality) of the opening.


They did quite a few older songs as well that I wasn't so familiar with, but since it was their 15 year anniversary it was to be expected. They did some brilliant acoustic songs including Crawl and Blue In the Face with Dave Hause joining them on stage. I didn't get a good video of this (plus you'd hear me singing in the background which would ruin it slightly), but I found a decent-ish video on Youtube of the same song performed in London a few nights later on.


So that's pretty much everything life-wise so far. I've got a separate post coming up for Cooking Challenge and general food updates, but also lots of other things to be looking forward to as well. I'm going to work at Chelsea Flower Show in a couple of weeks so will be an opportunity to see London friends again, and then I'm planning on looking at wedding dresses again with Tom's sister after that, which should be fun. Then we've got my best friend's birthday weekend and the Queen's Diamond Jubilee, then Tom's birthday, then Australian Christmas, my sister's graduation, and loads more!

Buy for now!

Lettie xx 





Sunday 22 April 2012

Final Countdown

It's the FINAL COUNTDOWN...da-da-daaa-daaaaa, da-da-da-daa-daaaaa...

Sorry about that.


It's officially 6 DAYS until Jemma and Steve's wedding and everything is slotting into place - Tom's suit arrived yesterday and it fits him great and he looks so handsome in it!! He really liked it as well, so I think that might be the suit of choice when it comes to be our turn, whenever that may be! (No pressure, of course). I'm so excited to see what everything looks like, the Portal Companion Cube cake, the game character name cards, the first dance.... ah it's all so exciting!

Things have been going well on the singing front too - we've settled on three songs we both like and that we believe are suitable for the church (it's only while they're signing the registers), and we can play and sing them quite happily. We've just submitted the lyrics for the vicar to give final approval but we've thought about it a lot and we're hoping he's ok with our proposed choices:

Grow old with you, by Adam Sandler (from the Wedding Singer)
In it for love, by Richie Sambora (guitarist from Bon Jovi) - the video's here if you're not familiar with it)
Don't wanna miss a thing, by Aerosmith

We've done them a couple of times in front of Tom's family and now they want us to play at his sister Jess's wedding next April, which is cool but we've come to an agreement that Becky has to sing with me, and Rob (Tom's brother and Becky's boyfriend) has to play guitar with Tom. That's a huge relief to me, as I'd forgotten how nerve-wracking it can be to sing in front of people you know, more so than strangers in my experience.

Unfortunately, timing is everything, and this last week I've come down with the symptoms of labyrinthitis again - grrr! So I'm back to being a dizzy mess but thankfully nausea is pretty minimal right now. It's the worst possible timing because I had a mega busy week at work with the launch of my first brochure of the year with the company (it looks so good!), as well as two days in London for various events, so I've had a combination of long days in the office, plus very early starts (of the 'up at 4am' variety) and very long days on the road to and from London, as well as staying up late with uni friends while I was there Friday night, none of which has really helped with the balance issues I've been having. Because it's been so busy at work, it's not been an option to take time off, but I'm hoping that now that all the major stuff is out of the way that I'll be able to chill a bit in the couple of days we have off before and after the wedding next weekend - wishful thinking I'm sure, but you've got to be positive!

I did speak to the chemist though as I'm not sure the drugs I'm taking are really helping the vertigo so I might need to go to the docs on Monday to get a new prescription or a referral to a specialist.  The drugs I'm also taking are also the kind that you definitely cannot drink alcohol with so that's a bit of a bummer with the wedding only 6 days away, but I'd rather be sober and not fall over in Church, than have a horrible reaction to booze. Again, terrible timing.

The other complication is that we were planning on going to Alton Towers with friends after the wedding weekend, but I'm pretty sure mega fast rollercoasters won't help the dizziness so I might have to sit out the rides which will be really annoying if I have to miss that. Sometimes life is just not fair.

And of course, when you're feeling dizzy and unsteady on your feet, cooking with gas and sharp utensils isn't exactly the safest of activities so I've not been doing much from my cooking challenge list lately, although I did manage hot cross bun pudding (bread and butter pudding but better - try saying that quickly!) before I got properly messed up by the dizziness. That was definitely a success so I'll be making that again next year :) I'm trying to minimize how much time I'm spending on computers, reading, games or TV right now so I'm not going to type up the recipe for this I'm afraid, but you can find it in Annie Bell's Gorgeous Desserts (in the festive section I think). Only thing I did differently was I used regular caster sugar instead if golden, and I used 1.5 tsp of vanilla flavouring into the custard mixture instead of laying a vanilla pod on top of the pudding, just because I couldn't find any in any of the supermarkets I tried that day, but I don't think that would have made a big different to the taste really.

One word. Yum.


Anyway, I think I'm going to leave the update there for now so I can have a break from typing.

Hope everyone else is well and I'll try and update this more often once the dizziness has calmed down a bit.
Ta ta for now,

Lettie x x

Wednesday 28 March 2012

Cooking Challenge (and life in general) update 28.03.12

While Tom takes advantage of the nice weather to clean his bike and re-spray the exhaust, I thought I'd take advantage of the laptop being free and update the old blog! It's certainly been a while... Hi!

Since the last time I came on here I've been to look at a few (a lot) of wedding dresses with Tom's sister Jess and other bridesmaid Becky, and have been on the hen party for Jemma and Steve's wedding in a couple of weeks. I've also started to get a cough and am losing my voice bit which is definitely nicht gut for the wedding singing plan...I'm taking effervescent vitamin C tablets again to try and fix things before this weekend as I'm going back to Droitwich to do a girly dress rehearsal for our hair and make-up, but also hopefully to show Jem some of the songs we've been working on.

Hen party was loads of fun though, and was surprisingly beneficial as it gave me much needed bowling practice for a night bowling with work colleagues (including some very senior people from Europe) last night - whilst I sucked at bowling on the weekend I didn't do too badly at all last night and managed to hold my own on the men's team - I even got a strike or two! Yippee!

Anyway, back to the Cooking Challenge. I've managed to tick off a few other recipes but I have to honest I don't think I didn't a very good job on some of them so I'll be trying them again at some point to really try and get them right!

At the time of my last post (ten days ago I think) I started prepping everything for Ravinder Bhogal's Goan Sausage Burgers with Masala Chips and Chilli Pineapple Salsa, but as I'd left it too late I decided to just put it on hold and carry on the following night. Unfortunately the burger mixture got pretty soggy over night in the fridge so it didn't hold together very well when I did cook them following evening. The masala chips were really yummy though, although a bit sickly towards the end. I'm going to try to remember every thing I did to actually write this one up this time. This recipe had quite a few components so bear with the long post (also explains why I tried to make it over two nights!)

Ingredients (serves 6)
As usual I made this in smaller proportions for just the two of us and I can't quite recall what those were now, but I'll try my best to remember what I used to compare with the original recipe.

Goan Sausage Burgers
3 fat garlic cloves, roughly chopped (I used 1 really fat one)
1 thumb fresh root ginger, peeled and roughly chopped (I cheated and used a couple of tsp pre-chopped ginger which probably contributed to the mince getting too wet)
500g lean pork mince (I used roughly 350 - 400g)
1 small red onion (I used 1/2 white onion) finely chopped
1 red chilli (deseeded), finely sliced (I used 1/2 a chilli)
1 tsp each cumin and coriander seeds, both toasted in a dry pan and crushed (as I've mentioned before I dislike cumin and coriander so don't have seeds, so instead I just used a tsp each of the ground spices)
1 tsp mild Madras curry powder (I used 3/4 tsp)
zest and juice of 1 lemon (the lemons I had were a bit soft so didn't zest very well, so I decided to just add all the lemon juice which proportionally would have been too much for just the two of us, so again probably didn't help the mince mixture)
6 tbsp chopped fresh coriander (I think I probably just 1/3 of a bunch)
1 egg, beaten
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
a little vegetable oil for shallow frying

As I could tell the burger mix was getting a little wet even from the start I added some crushed up Jacob's Crackers (as in Jamie Oliver's burger recipe) to try to get it to bind a bit better.

For the pineapple salsa
1 small pineapple (I cheated and used 1/2 tin of pineapple rings)
3 tbsp chopped fresh mint (I just used a couple of shakes of dried mint)
1 red chilli (deseeded), finely chopped (I used half a chilli)
3 tbsp copped fresh coriander (I don't think I bothered this time!)
Juice of 1/2 lime (I used bottled lime juice, approx. 1.5 tbsp)
1 tsb mango powder (I left this out as there's nowhere near me that sells it!)

For the masala chips 
6 Desiree Potatoes, peeled and cut into thick wedges (I used about 5 large new potatoes)
100g jaggery or palm sugar (I used muscovado sugar sugar instead)
3 tbsp white wine vinegar
Groundnut oil for deep-frying (it uses a lot!)
2 tbsp vegetable oil
2 garlic cloves, crushed
2.5cm knob fresh root ginger, peeled and finely grated (I just used a couple of tsp of the pre-chopped stuff again)
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp chilli flakes

Phew! That's a lot of ingredents. Do you see why I didn't have the energy to attempt this in one night now?
Here's the method now:

Method 

1. Start with the burgers. Put the garlic and ginger into a food processor and blitz to a fine paste. Mix the paste in a large mixing bowl with the pork mince, onion, chilli, ground cumin and coriander, curry powder, lemon zest and juice, and chopped coriander. Combine well and then add the beaten egg to bind. At this point I whizzed up 3 or 4 Jacob's Crackers into crumbs in my mini-chopper and added them to the mix to try to get it to stick together better.

2. Let the mixture rest for about 30 minutes to allow the mince to absorb all the flavours. Don't add the salt or pepper until you're about to fry as apparently this draws the moisture out of the onions and makes it go soggy. As my mixture was quite wet already I didn't bother salting mine at all in the end, and it still had some really good flavours.

3. While that's resting, make your salsa. Peel and finely chop the pineapple, or in my case, pineapple rings. Combine with the mint, chilli and coriander if using. Add the lime juice, season, mix well and if sprinkle over the mango powder if you are using it.

4. Now it's time to make the wedges. These really were yummy so I might make them to go with other meals or as a snack, but not too often mind - they were deep fried after all!

Run the potatoes under water  to remove some of the starch and stop them sticking together, then wrap them in a tea towel or use kitchen roll to dry them off - this is important when deep frying as if they're too damp the oil will spit like crazy and you could get some nasty burns. I once had hot oil spit in my face as a child, and trust me, it is utterly horrible, so really make sure you dry off those potatoes as best as you can!

5. You won't be parboiling the potatoes, as they're meant to be firm when you cook them in the sticky chilli sauce, but you can pop them in an oven to keep warm while you cook the burgers like I did.

6. Soak the muscovado sugar in the white wine vinegar and keep mixing until it's pretty much all dissolved.

7. Add enough groundnut oil to a deep-ft fryer or a wok, so that your food will float in it and not touch the bottom. Heat until a dice sized cube of bread goes brown in 1 minute and then you can start deep frying the wedges, in small batches in best, until they are golden brown and cooked through. Drain the wedges on kitchen paper. I then popped mine in the oven at about 100c just to keep warm while I cooked the burgers as I knew it might not be that simple...

8. Heat a little vegetable oil in a frying pan (I think I probably used too much) and shape your sausage burgers into patties, by taking handfuls of the mixture, shaping into a ball and the flattening it slightly into a burger shape. I could have used the burger making kit and it might have bound together a bit better but then the patties would have been a lot thinner, and I wanted to at least try it by hand.

9. Fry for 4 - 5 minutes on each side over a medium heat to make sure they're cooked through but not overcooked. Once they're done, keep them warm while you finish the masala wedges (you can just swap them in the oven).

10. In a separate pan or wok, eat the vegetable oil and fry the garlic and ginger with the cinnamon until golden and fragrant. Mine might have turned out differently if I'd used fresh root ginger, but to be honest it still tasted great and the consistency was fine so I didn't really notice much of a difference this time. Pour in the jaggery (or muscovado) and vinegar and heat over a medium temperature. Let it bubble until almost most of the vinegar has evaporated, sprinkle in the chilli flakes, mix once, and quickly throw in the wedges and move them around to coat in the sticky sauce.

11. Serve at once with the burgers and the pineapple salsa.

I'm afraid I made the mistake of serving these on dark plate and when pretty much everything you're cooking turns out brownish, the photos come out pretty awful, but when I make this again I'll try to take a better picture!

I liked my potatoes a bit softer to Ravinder's recipe so mine definitely looked darker than the ones in her book (although the different sugar could have made a difference as well), but I still think they were really nice.

I wasn't mad about the salsa initially but then the masala wedges were pretty sweet so it was nice to have something refreshing to tone that down a bit. Although the sausages didn't stick together all that well, they did still taste really good, so I will try this again, but I'll try to get it right this time!!

In addition to that I've also made hummus, falafel, and vegetable bhajis, so that's another 4 in total crossed off the list, but I'll right those up separately, if I get the chance.

That brings the challenge stats to:

19 recipes done,  53 left,  and 39 and a half weeks to do it!

That's all for now! All this writing about food has made me hungry!!
Laters,
xx

Sunday 18 March 2012

Cooking Challenge update 18.03.12

Sorry I've been a bit lame about keeping this updated lately. Tom and I have been working in earnest on learning and practising wedding songs for our friend's Jemma and Steve's wedding in April so I've not had much chance to sit down and write, but also Tom's needed to use the laptop to check out guitar music etc. Looks like I might have to dust off my old laptop if I'm going to keep on top of everything I want to be writing about!!

Lack of updates aside, quite a few recipes have been completed and crossed off the Cooking Challenge list since my last cooking update on 22nd Feb.

I managed to kill two birds with one cauliflower so to speak as I made both the Macaroni Cauliflower Cheese Bake and Cauliflower Cheese Soup with one cauliflower in one week (both from Jamie Oliver's Ministry of Food).
I'm afraid I've had too many sleeps since I made those so won't really be able to write down the recipes from memory, but they were both very tasty, albeit not very healthy. Not good for the pre-wedding  weight-loss plan. If I make them again any time soon, I promise I will make a note of what I did so I can write it up properly at a later date!


The cauliflower cheese soup was actually really delicious and surprisingly filling for a soup, so I'll definitely be trying that one again, although maybe after the wedding now as I'm at my target weight now so want to maintain it. It did 3 servings on the night I made it and then I think I took it to work three days in a row and I think Tom had some another night in the week, so it really did last a fair while.

The only thing with cheesy recipes like this is that the longer you keep them simmering on the stove, the more the fat separates and starts to float on the surface. It doesn't make a difference to the taste but it just doesn't look very nice. If you don't think you could cope having so much cauliflower in one week, then you could always portion out the soup into freezer bags and just defrost as and when you fancied it. [NB: I've not tried this yet so don't know how well it would thaw but you never know until you try :)]







The Macaroni Cauliflower Cheese Bake was also really nice so I hope I'll get a chance to make that one again sometime soon after Steve and Jem's wedding!


Other than that, I've also had a go at Jamie's Vanilla Cheesecake, which Tom's Mum has made quite a few times before - it's actually quite a citrus-y cheesecake thanks to the citrus zest so I think vanilla is a bit of a deceptive description. I love citrus flavours though so made me happy! I made it for the first birthday party of my friend's baby Ffion (I can't believe she's one already!) and everyone said it was nice, but you know I have high standards, so I'm always going to be self-critical. Whilst I was making it I felt that it was quite easy, but as I hadn't tried it before I wasn't really sure whether I was deluding myself or not! The one thing I wasn't 100% sure about was whether I was toasting the rolled oats too long or not - the recipe says to toast them in a frying pan until they turn a darker colour, but mine took absolutely ages to change colour and when they did they started smelling quite strongly, which made me worry that they were just burning slightly.

Yummy, but a bit too crumbly...
 The end product turned out ok but not as nice as the one's Tom's Mum has made in the past - the base was a bit crumbly when we cut it - but the topping was really tasty in fairness. Tom's Mum did suggest not bothering toasting the oats and she also suggested putting the cream cheese mixture through a sieve to get rid of any lumps before adding the whipped cream. I might try it that way if I make it again (so many other recipes to get through first though!!



One of the other recipes I've tried lately is Jamie's Chicken Chow Mein. I've not made much (if any!) Chinese-style food from scratch so this was quite a new experience to me. The main comment I have about it is that it really should be made and served pretty much straight away as otherwise it can dry out a bit and everything starts to stick together. Jamie's tip of reserving some of the water you cook the noodles in was definitely useful for loosening up the chow mein, but then you have to keep tasting to make sure you're not diluting the flavour too much. I had to keep adding soy sauce and lime juice every now and then to make sure it kept its flavour.
The other thing I would have done differently is sliced or chopped up the water chestnuts a bit before adding them to the wok - the ones I bought were quite huge, and although I have memories of loving water chestnuts when we had takeaways as a child, eating them whole felt a bit odd. It must be something to do with the texture, as I can't think of any other way to describe why it was a bit strange!

And finally I also made some Breakfast Burritos from Ravinder Bhogal's Cook in Boots (I think last weekend). One of my friends has recently bought a couple of chickens for eggs so we've had quite a lot of fresh eggs lately, and since we always have tortilla wraps in the house it seemed like a perfect excuse to try out this recipe. I added in some sliced mushrooms when I was frying the chorizo just cos I love them (maybe also because I needed to use them up!). I'll post a proper write up of the recipe if I can soon. This post has already gotten a bit long without actually providing much useful content I'm afraid! I'll try to rectify that soon!

That's all for the Cooking Challenge update so far, although I have been cooking other things besides!

The current totals are as follows!

Recipes completed: 15        Remaining: 57     Weeks remaining: 41

Next challenge is Goan Sausage Burgers (which means I get to use the burger making kit again! Yippee!) with chunky masala chips and pineapple salsa! Pork mince is defrosting as we speak so hopefully I can update on how that goes sooner rather than later!

Bye for now!
xx

Thursday 1 March 2012

The Art of Love and Intimacy (article)

On a related note to my previous post about my (very much belated) Valentine's Day gift ideas, I've been wanting to share a link to an article on here for a while about relationships - I was going to put it up around Valentine's Day, but I've been kind of preoccupied with stanley knives and pritt stick and lots of teeny bits of paper - from a blog I discovered a few months back through Stumble Upon about the difference between Love and Loving.


I highly recommend this article to anyone who is in a relationship, whether it is blissful, difficult, or just carrying along as it always has done, but also for people who might have had relationships end because one or both of them felt that they were no longer in love. I think this article has some really helpful advice and suggestions, not just for people going through martital / relationship difficulties (and I know a few people who are going through this right now), but also for couples who just need a gentle reminder about how to keep their relationship a loving one, how not to take each other for granted, not to get in a rut, and so on and so.

In fact the blog in general has tonnes of articles on different aspects of relationships so it's well worth a browse if you're even vaguely interested in relationships, or if there's something in particular that's bothering you about your relationship, or a friend's relationship.

One thing that my mother always says (and my mother is right about everything, as I'm sure your's is too), is that trying to share love across multiple relationships is similar to a blood transfusion. Just as one person only has a limited amount of blood available to give in a blood transfusion at any point in time, the amount of love that we have to give to others at any point in time (in intimate relationships, I'm not talking about friendship or familial love here) is limited to a certain extent. If one person in the couple starts spending time with and thinking about someone else, if they start giving their love and affection to someone else, then it also drains the love from the first relationship. Having been in a long term relationship where eventually it became apparent that the other person quite clearly had feelings for someone else, I can wholeheartedly say that for me at least this analogy rings true.

There's nothing so painful as feeling like you are giving everything to a relationship, but that your affections and even your presence is unwanted, that ultimately there just isn't enough love between the two of you to keep it going. But equally, I have been on the other side of the situation in the past, and I know what it feels like to have feelings for someone else when you are already in a relationship, and to see your feelings for the person you care about slowly ebb away as you get caught up in the excitement of something new. What the article above helps you realise is that when people say they are no longer in love with someone, it actually means that they are not actively loving that person. As the article states, there is a very, very important difference between claiming that you love someone, and actively loving them.

Once we're settled in a relationship it can be almost too easy to say 'I love you' to our partners, but to actively love them - by doing something thoughtful or considerate, making them their favourite meal, or making them a gift  - that takes a bit more effort. Instead of just repeatedly telling our partners that we love them, perhaps we ought to be asking if we are being loving, if our actions make them feel loved.

These are just some of the thoughts I've had on the subject since reading this article, but I can honestly say that it's encouraged me not to take love for granted, and to make sure that I continue to put effort into my relationship, because that is what is going to make sure it lasts.

I hope you find the article (and perhaps my thoughts on it) helpful too.

Bye for now,

Lettie xx

(Belated) Valentine's gift idea: The Story of Your Relationship

Hi there,
I know I've not been updating the blog (especially the Cooking Challenge stuff) very regularly lately and that's because I've been working a lot on Tom's belated Valentine's present in the evenings when he was out climbing, and on weekends when he was at work, but it's finally finished (in the sense that I'd done as much as I could do) and although it took many, many hours (and involved a bit of cursing) I'm really pleased I stuck with it.


Cutting that window and lining up the photo required a lot of patience
Basically it's a scrap book of our relationship (soppy I know) but I read about getting a book made in a print shop of your relationship, and saw a video about making art out of old books so I thought I'd just combine the two ideas. I didn't know who the poet was whose book I was butchering, but I wanted a nice looking, sturdy hardback, that someone else had written notes in, and at £2 from the market in Welshpool, this was perfect. I may well add a 'title' of some sorts over Cowper's name on the front at some point in the future, but for the time being I'm happy with it. I've filled it with our background story (condensed version: we met at high school and liked each other, but never got together, stayed really close friends, and eventually got our act together 8 years after we first met), photos, poems, and memorable moments from our past as friends and since we got together, like concerts we went to, when we moved into our house, and so on. The idea is that as time goes on, I'll add more things to it, hence why it was never going to be finished in the proper sense of the word, as that would imply our relationship was over!

I'm not going to include pictures of everything I included because, well, it's personal, but I just wanted to share the idea as I really enjoyed coming up with all the different things to include and different ideas of how to present them. It's a little bit messy in places as I kept changing my mind about how much writing to include, and how to include the writing over the original typed text, but it gradually became more like a diary summary over the past two years so I needed to write more. To do this I cut out pages of my current journal and just glued them over the book pages, and wrote in them like a normal diary (I used my journals to remind of dates etc). I also made use of some nice paper that I got free with a load of craft magazines I bought when I was researching the industry for a job interview back in November, but I didn't want to make it too girly, because it was supposed to be a gift for Tom, although I couldn't resist a bit of vintage floweriness in places(see below).

I tried to include as many pictures in the book as I could but when I took my original batch of photos to Boots to develop, I realised that it would have been absurdly expensive to print them all, so I had to cut back and just print the ones I thought were most appropriate. I also experimented with creating windows in the pages with glued in photos showing through the gaps, but the pages turned out to be quite difficult to cut without tearing and making a mess. Even with brand new Stanley knife blades it posed quite a few difficulties.

When I first started the project I also purchased a glue gun with the idea of sticking in photos, or glueing pages together with it etc, but it proved to be far more hassle than it was worth. Maybe the equipment I bought was too cheap, or maybe I didn't allow the glue to warm up sufficiently, but it just came out really thick and then seemed to dry and harden ridiculously quickly, so it was pretty much impossible to use. I initially stuck the front cover image on with the glue gun glue but it very quickly lost it's stick, so in the end I just used god old reliable Pritt stick!!



 I love this poem by Carol Ann Duffy (Poet Laureate) from her collection Rapture; in fact it was this collection of poems that got me thinking about a special Valentine's present in the first place. The bit didn't quite turn out as tidy as I wanted, but I basically wanted the verses of the poem to stand out as being on top of the original type (which was itself the first poem of the original book), and going round the edges of the journal paper with a black felt pen actually gave it quite a nice, almost reverse-emboss effect, it just could have been a bit tidier. I might go over it one day if I get round to it.


One of my favourite parts of this project was cutting the photos into different shapes and sizes to fit with the words I wanted to include. Once I got the hang of the Stanley Knife it was really quite easy and weirdly satisfying slicing through the photographic paper. What wasn't quite so easy was the mini-project I decided to do at the last minute and which took absolutely forever to finish.




I'd read another poem by Carol Ann Duffy in Rapture called 'Finding the Words' a few months previously and just felt that it completely reflected what I felt when Tom and I eventually got together. I'd been really hurt by my ex and had been in a place where I could see myself becoming really cold and emotionless about guys I was dating before Tom and I started going out, and this poem just seemed to convey what it was like to find that I could love and be loved again.

Because of the name and nature of the poem I wanted to try to compose this copy of the poem with words 'found' and cut out of the original typed text, but this proved to be a mammoth task. I had to cut out pages and pages from the back of the book (I didn't want to use the Stanley Knife directly on the book itself as I was afraid of tearing the old paper) and ended up learning an awful lot about this Cowper chap through repeatedly scouring his letters for the words of the poem. In the end I had to construct some words out of other words. I became disproportionately excited when I found a word I could use (a certain Mr Palmer very kindly donated the 'palm' and Wordsworth lent his 'Words'. The letters for the title I managed to glean from the headers of his letters, and 'Oxford University Press' lent it's letters towards 'Our Story' at the very front of the book. This might seem sad, but having set myself this stupid task I was damned if I wasn't going to finish it, so every new discovery was a small victory of sorts.


I particularly liked this idea of drawing a calendar page for a memorable occasion, although again, I'm sure someone with more natural artistic talent than myself could achieve much better results. On this day for example we drove up to Manchester to see The Hold Steady and it was one of the most fun concerts ever. Afterwards, we chilled out in the Thirsty Scholar (the pub under the railway lines at Oxford Road station), and then I drove us home with cool music on the stereo and we saw in Valentine's day on the journey home. It might not seem like much, but it was just the coolest experience.







 I subsequently decided to add the little calendar pages over photos I'd already stuck in as another scrapbook-style element.










Like I said I didn't want to include too many personal elements of the book (some of it is copied from old diary entries), but I just wanted to show some of the different ideas I had. As a first attempt I'm really pleased with how it came out (even with my silly stick drawings illustrating the first night we kissed!), but I'm looking forward to adding to it, and developing techniques and other interesting ideas for other projects as they come along. I really enjoyed going back through my journal and sharing thoughts and feelings that I might not otherwise have shared with Tom.

I'm not going to lie, it was a little scary including some of my most private thoughts in the book, and though I'm definitely a believer in maintaining hobbies and doing some things as individuals (basically not becoming one half of a relationship) that it's still important to share your feelings, hopes, fears, and dreams with the ones we love the most.


Anyway, this has already become a pretty long post, so I don't want to harp on. Hope this has been interesting in some way!

Bye for now,
xx