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Archive for the ‘other sides to this life’ Category

I went to a market on Saturday morning.

Nothing untoward about that.

This market was in Parliament Hill Fields in London, in the grounds of William Ellis school at the bottom of West Hill–old stomping grounds for me–I went to school in Highgate–just up the hill.

It happens every Saturday and is beloved by the residents of this densely populated area of north London.

A barking chorus of what look like adorable dogs–large and small, hairy and smooth, tethered to the wire mesh fence–greets you on arrival.

“Don’t forget the bones!” is obviously the anxious  message.

You can bank on bumping into friends, everyone shopping for the social occasions of the weekend.

The marketeers come from far and wide. There are breadmakers, cheesemakers, cakemakers, butchers, fishmongers and numerous vegetables stalls. There’s even one dedicated to tomatoes–tomatoes in March?

I ask the stallholder about that, after he gave me one to try which was wonderfully sweet. He says he grows them under cover on the Isle of Wight. There’s no answer to that!

Another stall sells a variety of game with ready-to-cook pheasants, partridge, wild ducks and pigeons. Venison too.

These last two stalls reminded me of what I miss in France, where I glory in the market culture and its emphasis on the seasonal, but where it’s often difficult to find “the out of the ordinary”.

Pheasants and partridge are hunted wild but not farmed–I rarely see them in the markets or supermarkets.

Farmers markets in the UK usually offer this variety of produce, plus a helping of home cooked fare in an atmosphere of village fetes in summer.

I found myself feeling a touch of envy for this Saturday crowd of Londoners, out in the spring sunshine and planning their tasty weekend meals.

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I’m discovering that blogging can become addictive.

We are in London for a week and I’m not cooking–so my source material is limited and I’m finding it difficult and frustrating.

I’m having blog withdrawal symptoms!

This is not reasonable I know.

London is coming out of winter fast and looks beautiful.

A willow tree close to the river in Chiswick was a cascade of bright fresh green and a large grey heron was sunning himself on the river bank.

Every morning there are new blossoms out.

We were driving north on Devonshire Place towards Regent’s Park just now when Meredith started singing–

“I’ve often walked down this street before;
But the pavement always stayed beneath my feet before.”

It was the emerging cherry blossom  both sides of the street that evoked the feeling of Freddie Eynseford-Hill’s joy filled ode to Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady!

Primrose Hill was covered with lunchtime picnickers and it’s not the end of March yet, though the clocks go forward tomorrow.

Nevertheless reasonableness doesn’t come into it and in spite of being spoiled with some good theatre and meals with friends, I still felt a dish of cold turkey was all there’d be for lunch!

I eased the pain by enquiring about pollack, in the well run fish shop on Gloucester Avenue.

The friendly French owner gave me the french name–lieu jaune, which I remember seeing on the stalls back home.

It’s a member of the cod family and a sustainable alternative to other white fish. Its resurfacing, so to speak, is not uncontroversial though.

They were out of it, but he recommended coley instead.

Tonight I shall cook FISH.

Phew–withdrawal of symptoms!

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Michel Montignac
Michel Montignac in the kitchen of La Tour d’Argent restaurant in Paris (1993)
Photograph: Ian Cook/Getty Images

Shortly after being diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes, my friend David Clifford recommended Michel Montignac’s book, Dine Out and Lose Weight, now retitled  Eat Yourself  Slim and Stay Slim!

I read it and  found it helpful. Montignac emphasises the importance of changing one’s “way of eating” rather than dieting.

His theory is that it’s high sugar content in some carbohydrate foods that encourages the body to store unwanted fat that increases weight, rather than a high calorie intake.

He was a pioneer in using the glycemic index of foods–which measures the effect of carbohydrates on blood sugar levels (how quickly carbohydrates turn into glucose in the blood) to help people lose weight. Controlling excess weight is important for people with diabetes.

One day last September I read that Michel Montignac had died at the relatively young age of 65.

I emailed The Guardian newspaper to ask if they were planning an obituary. They replied, asking if I knew him. Though he came from southwestern France, I didn’t know him personally but  explained that I knew his work. The Guardian obit editor then invited me to write Montignac’s obituary.

It was an offer I couldn’t refuse.

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It’s raining, it’s pouring…..

And the hail was so heavy yesterday it left the fields looking like it had snowed.

Just to reassure me that Feste in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night didn’t get it all right when he sings:

Hey Ho, The Wind and the Rain.

When that I was and a little tiny boy,
With hey, ho, the wind and the rain,
A foolish thing was but a toy,
For the rain it raineth every day.

But when I came to man’s estate,
With hey, ho, the wind and the rain,
‘Gainst knaves and thieves men shut their gate,
For the rain, it raineth every day.

But when I came, alas! to wive,
With hey, ho, the wind and the rain,
By swaggering could I never thrive,
For the rain, it raineth every day.

But when I came unto my beds,
With hey, ho, the wind and the rain,
With toss-pots still had drunken heads,
For the rain, it raineth every day.

A great while ago the world begun,
With hey, ho, the wind and the rain.
But that’s all one, our play is done,
And we’ll strive to please you every day.

These two photos of our bitter almond tree were taken just a couple of days ago—and remind me that things will change again– for the better!

 

 

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Nature’s first green is gold.

Her hardest hue to hold.

Her early leaf’s a flower;

But only so an hour.

Then leaf subsides to leaf.

So Eden sank to grief,

So dawn goes down to day.

Nothing gold can stay.

 

Robert Frost

[The American poet much loved by my American wife, Meredith.]

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'Where did she go?...'

A friend in New York City sent us a book about a Japanese cat called Wabi Sabi…

 

When a Japanese cat met a French cat

Wabi Sabi asked

Marmalade about his name

which was puzzling her

 

Marmalade never

Thinks much about his name– more

About the next meal

 

But he’s a kind cat

And polite to strangers–so

He humours Wabi

 

“Yes my name is odd,

But to tell you the truth, I’m

Rather proud of it.

 

You see for me it

Evokes early morning–

The start of a new day.

 

That’s all I will say;

Never fully explain–that’s

The secret of life”

 

 

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Two poached eggs on Swiss Chard or Spinach

Mid-week Meredith went out to lunch with a friend, so I looked in the fridge and found a handful [4-6oz/100-150gm] of Swiss Chard [see below] and a couple of eggs. This is what I did then:

Peeled a garlic clove, sliced it thin and deseeded a small dried red chili.

Poured two tablespoons of olive oil into a sauté pan, added the garlic and chili and let the garlic colour lightly.

Roughly cut up the chard and added it to the pan with a little salt, turning it in the garlicky oil.

I covered the pan and cooked the chard on a low flame turning it now and then to prevent it burning for about 5 minutes until it was cooked through.

Spooned off the excess liquid before making a nest of the chard on a plate ready to receive the eggs.

I poached the two eggs, drained them well and placed them in the nest and hey presto!–a light lunch.

I could have had a small salad with it but I didn’t.

To prepare the chard or spinach

First separate the leaves from the stalks of the chard or spinach, wash them and shake as much water as possible from them, before chopping and adding them to the pan.

Solo light lunch

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You might say “so what?”, cows are usually in fields. True–but these cows haven’t been in the field at the back since October; they’ve been cooped up in the barn all winter. Sorry to go on about it, but something’s up.

My father spent a year in Arizona in 1944 training to be a fighter pilot.

Dad is under the '2'- -far left

He  returned with a strong affection for America and a permanent tan. He used to delight us kids, about this time of the year, by quoting the so-called Brooklyn National Anthem “Ode to Spring”– which went:

Da spring is sprung
Da grass is riz
I wonder where dem boidies is?

Dem boids is on der wing.
Ain’t dat absoid?
Der little wings is on der boid!

There’s plenty of blue tit traffic to and from the bird table–which leans over the field where the cows are enjoying the fresh pasture.

The almond blossom is out–almost–enjoying the sunshine.

Lautrec market is buzzing–a smaller version of Realmont–and there’s a queue at the fish stall. Pots of daffodils are for sale at the épicerie [grocer] and people are talking in that animated fashion that indicates they know something’s up.

I pop into the tiny branch of the bank to do a transfer. Even the Manager is in a good mood.

No room for complacency though. He reminds me, with a bank manager’s useful caution, that things can change again and I remember that this time last year, there was snow on the ground.

Haiku from mid-March 2010:

A chill north wind–cuts,

And keeps the snow from melting,

In the midday sun.

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Jack posed this question yesterday in a comment and it is not an unreasonable one. It made me think about the new language of the internet, which sometimes seems like webspeak gobbledigook!

I put the above question into Google and found this on one site:

Any user-posted root node is subject to moderation.

Moderation refers to two possible changes in a node’s status:

  1. Approval of a node into the selected section of the site;
  2. Front-Paging a node, i.e. allowing it to be listed on the main page.
  3. Note that a node cannot be “front-paged but unapproved”.

Silly me I should have knowd!

I think I understand what is meant but wouldn’t plain english explain it better?!

Moderation has other meanings and there are  jollier definitions:

“Moderation is a fatal thing. Nothing succeeds like excess.”

Oscar Wilde

“Moderation in temper is always a virtue; but moderation in principle is always a vice”

Thomas Paine

Moderation is the inseparable companion of wisdom, but with it genius has not even a nodding acquaintance”–[Oh dear!]

Charles Caleb Colton: (English sportsman and writer, 1780-1832)

“Throw moderation to the winds, and the greatest pleasures bring the greatest pains”

Democritus

This definition is from wikipedia:

Moderation is a principle of life. In ancient Greece, the temple of Apollo at Delphi bore the inscription Meden Agan (μηδεν ἀγαν) – ‘Nothing in excess’. Doing something “in moderation” means not doing it excessively. For instance, someone who moderates their food consumption, tries to eat all food groups, but limits their intake of those that may cause deleterious effects to harmless levels.

This I can understand!





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Spring is in the air at Realmont market this morning. People are very chatty; the terrace of the cafe is packed–seven round one of the small tables, relishing the sunshine.

Winter is still on the stalls though–no change yet from the root vegetables, cabbages, broccoli, sprouts, and cauliflowers that have dominated for months. A few stalls are selling plants for early bedding. Frost still threatens, limiting the choices.

At a pork butcher’s stall I have yet to shop at–mainly because there’s always a long queue–I spot a different looking sausage. It’s marked : Saucisse fraiche Basque.

I ask the stallholder what’s in it: “Piment d’Espelette et poivre”, she says.

The chili pepper of Espelette is a speciality of the Basque country that borders Spain and the Atlantic coast four hours to the west of us. It is harvested in late summer and appears on the stalls here in September. As chilis go it is not very hot–but it’s colourful.

“I’ll take some–thank you” and she cuts off about a pound from a nestling wheel of fresh sausage. I also buy a kilo of pork shoulder.

I already have four or five fennel bulbs in my basket and dinner slowly dawns on me!

The sweetness of the slowly braised fennel will, I hope, contrast well with the lightly spiced sausage.

This a new dish–so we”ll see.

Braised Fennel with Spicy Sausage.

to be continued later today…..

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