Sunday, March 20, 2016
SPRING!!!!
Yeah...it is kinda like THAT!
I always think of Andrew Wyeth's painting "The Sexton" on the first day of Spring, these days.
After hearing Wyeth, years ago, in an interview explaining with the twisted sense of humor he had...that he had first entitled the painting
"She didn't WINTER well"
(true story)
So the first day of Spring, I usually think (or sometimes say out loud...confusing those around me at the moment)
Ha!
Apparently, I WINTERED well.
Anyway...here is to another Spring.
Working on my painting today,
and soon to plant a flat of pansies!
Perfectly gorgeous day out...the daffodils are up about 6 inches now and the geese patrol does a fly over every morning so precisely you could set your watch by them.
Happy Spring!
Saturday, March 19, 2016
Friday, March 18, 2016
Tarte de AmĂȘndoa and Almonds in Wildflower Honey
Tarte de AmĂȘndoa
Almond Tarts...individual bite-sized or full fluted tart pan sized to serve with tea or coffee, these are traditional Portuguese treats. Almonds can be slivered, crushed or whole. The recipe calls for sugar...but tastes much better with honey. A touch of cinnamon can also be added.
Or you can just enjoy the toasted almonds by themselves with Wildflower Honey.
These are wonderful with a soft or semi-soft cheese and fresh fig, sliced pear or apple.
The Recipe:
Tarte de AmĂȘndoa
Crust:
One pre-made pie crust pressed in a fluted tart pan or into individual tart cups.
Filling:
2 cups slivered, crushed or whole almonds.
1 stick of butter
1/2 cup sugar or honey
3 tablespoons milk.
Over medium heat in sauce pan blend almonds, milk, honey or sugar and butter. Cook stirring constantly until butter melts.
Pour filling into prepared crust/tartlets
Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes. By the time this is done the house smells incredible!
Best Served Warm.
Enjoy!
Thursday, March 17, 2016
Rissoles...and Signs of Spring
Rissole (pronounced Ris-ol) are basically the, hide-the-leftovers in a wonderful crumb crust, of Portugal. They can be made with almost any meats, cheeses or vegetables. They have their own specific gravity, it seems. I made these about the size of my palm...but can now understand why they are traditionally made about half that size. Delicious and unique tasting. Very filling and simple to make. (recipe to follow)
So, warm and wonderful today. And the sounds, smells and signs of Spring are everywhere now. From the geese V-formations overhead to the pair of (noisy) Mockingbirds that are BACK again this year. Spring Peepers at night. All of the trees bursting with buds, and the willows have tiny leaves started.
Used my compost from last year's tote to fill baskets and pots and top dress the roses and bayberry bushes...and started layering this year's batch with winters straw, fallen leaves, used newspaper and household vegetable and fruit scraps and peels. Coffee grounds and egg shells. And a handful of red worms. By Fall it is all transformed into rich black soil! The black earth in my baskets and pots...I built that.
Yeah...still fairly amazing after all this time.
Soon the daffodils will be up and bright yellow. In the back-ground you can see
"The Children"...three Redbud's "Idgy" bought last year for my birthday. I am giving them another season in the original pot (having already trimmed them back to bonsai)...by Fall I will be trimming the roots way back and moving the entire clump into their bonsai dish where they will be a small Redbud Forest...emphasis on SMALL. I am going to try to keep them about 6" to 8" tall.
A friend of Chris and I saw them and my Ficus and Cascading juniper and immediately told her Mom
"I want a TINY TREE for my apartment!"
I LOVE the entire process and am planning to try my hand at A Wisteria, A Maple Clump, A Willow , and A Male Ginko in future years.
Another harbinger of Season Change...I've started a Spring Landscape in acrylic. Okay it is just a sky and an idea today...but just wait and see...
Building a landscape...painting (for me) is a wonderful form of relaxation. Meditation. Working today on the sky...later adding the ground...then maybe a lane with puddles reflecting some of the sky...shadows from the trees on the ground...then the tree trunks and branches. Building up trunks and textures with gel so I can come back and dry brush with moss and lichen. Leaves and maybe a stand of wildflowers in the foreground...and finally using tiny detailing brushes to add fine detail and highlights. It is all very satisfying.
Yeah...just like building a small world on a canvas.
More as I work on it.
So anyway, that Rissole Recipe!
Rissoles
1 cup of any meat pre-cooked (shrimp, fish, pork, chorizo, beef, or any combination of these) ground finely
I used Pork and Chorizo in mine.
1/4 cup any root vegetable
1/4 cup total (mixed) chopped red or green peppers and minced onion
Paprika, salt, coarse cracked pepper and garlic powder 1/2 tsp of each.
Mix all together well.
(may also add a pinch of nutmeg)
(for fish use lemon pepper)
(may add any cheese)
Pastry
I used pre-made flat pastry sheets.
Cut into rectangles.
Prepare an egg dip with
2 whole eggs and 1/4 cup milk in shallow bowl.
Prepare a Crumb Dip
Using stale bread ground to fine crumbs. Set aside in another shallow bowl.
(you may also add seasonings to the crumbs if desired)
Melt 1 stick of butter or margerine or 1/2 olive oil in shallow skillet.
To Assemble:
Place a pile of meat, veggie, cheese mixture on on half of rectangle. Bring the other side over and seal to form a small pastry packet.
Dip packet into egg/milk mixture and then immediately into bread crumb mixture until both sides are well coated.
Transfer to medium heated skillet with butter, margarine or olive oil.
Do this with remaining meat and pastry.
Fry until golden brown over medium heat turning once.
Good served hot...or at room temperature.
Can be served with gravy or in the case of fish with tartar sauce or cocktail sauce.
Enjoy this Taste of Portugal!
(...and a great way to create a new meal out of leftover this and that!)
Later!
Wednesday, March 16, 2016
Chris and the Incredible Discovery...Leading to a Fall "Rose and Idgy" Adventure...and Fado
So...Chris is back from holiday with exciting news.
He found, in his travels, a tiny town in Illinois that I had never even heard of...or been.
(...in my younger years I spent a lot of time through the back-roads of Salem, Effingham, and Paris...)
The Town.
Olney Illinois. (pronounced ol-len-nee)
Which, it seems, is only on the map because of its White Squirrel Population.
Right. Who knew????
Not just white squirrels. Albino. Everything from Parks to Gift Shops and,of course, the white squirrel rehabber...revolves around them.
Where the local Sprint Car Champion and the Cross Country Champion take second billing to the pigmentally-challenged rodents. Current albino squirrel population around 100.
A place where harassing one of their white squirrels in a park can net you a $750. fine...leaving one to wonder what would possibly become of you if you accidently ran over one or hunted/ate one. Possibly jail time?
Squirrel is right off the menu.
A Mainstreet Atmosphere...Several nice lakes...several nice parks...white squirrels...oh...and this place
The McClure Guesthouse. An 1872 Italianate Victorian Home now used as a Bed and Breakfast! Okay...now I've GOT to see it!
Talked during Morning Coffee and Chat with "Idgy" because this is a very short drive/straight shot across the Indiana/Illinois State Line, and it looks like we may be incorporating this (and the squirrel adventure) into our Fall plans.
Face it. It is PERFECT.
We are both a couple of NUTS...we'll fit right in!
Finishing up (Virtual) Alfama, Portugal today.
A stroll through Alfama and Castelo de S. Jorge.
https://youtu.be/jKHWPtwFays
Alfama is well known for Fado (pronounced fa-doo like hair-do not dough)
a genre of music dating back to the 1820's in Portugal.
https://youtu.be/r_e_Jpo6g54?list=PLEZ2X9WCTzAKbBY3HL_EqZLiOir8BHsdX
(Example of Fado)
With the musicians performing Fado known as Fadistas.
Fado is a type of story-telling ballad generally involving some type of loss or longing...fatefulness and melancholia.
The name comes from the Latin word Fatum or fate.
After listening to several different fadistas I can only imagine that this is an acquired taste in music.
Tomorrow...Rissoles!
Until then...
Florida, Ohio, North Carolina, Illinois and Missouri...Or why there is NEVER enough Coffee...and I should have stayed in Alfama
Face it...for a LOT of us (including Marc Rubio)...it was just like THIS last night.
Politics can be brutal.
A ghastly sweep by both Trump and Clinton, that left me at midnight shaking my head and saying WTF is WRONG with people. Folks, if these are America's best hope...we are in DEEP SHIT.
Really.
One of them has revived the HATE we fought so hard in the 70's to rise above. A video taken by TYT Network just outside of the polls yestrday where a Trump Supporter was actually telling a group of non-supporters to "...go to Auschwitz..." and of course THIS woman in Chicago using the Nazi salute.
Un-fucking-believable.
and the other who practically insures we will see business as usual in the
White House ( i.e. The Rich getting richer,corporate shady deals and the rest of us pretty much screwed) Endless Congressional gridlock and investigations/scandal, unless-of course- she is INDICTED before the election in November.
I'm not sure they MAKE enough coffee for morning's like this...
But my MANTRA this morning is "It isn't over until it is OVER" and realizing that although the 15th has shifted the fight to an uphill battle...
and for a lot of us...the pre-war advice remains the very same now as it did then.
"Come home CARRYING your shield, or On It."
So we fall back and re-group.
Watched Rubio's "End of the Trail" speech last night...and although he was not my candidate, I felt kind of sad for him.
Watched Kasich's victory speech in Ohio and although he (also) is not my pick...felt a sense of happiness for him...and for the fact that Ohio didn't go to Trump.
Watched both Hillary's Victory Speech and Bernie's Concession Speech in a fogged disbelief.
The delegate count now stands for the GOP (1237 needed for the nomination)
Trump: 690
Cruz: 419
Kasich 146
And for the Democrats (2383 needed for the nomination)
Hillary 1050
Bernie 733
None of these counts includes the Super Delegates...just the Delegates actually won at this time.
Sanders is 317 delegates behind...not an insurmountable number...but the race just got much much more challenging.
The next group of Primaries slated for March 22.
Arizona, Idaho and Utah (and for the GOP...also the Samoan Islands)
Politics...definitely not for the faint of heart.
(...more coffee, please...)
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
The Great Earthquake of 1755...Fiera da Ladra...and Alfama
In 1755 on November 1st, a .9 Earthquake struck the Iberia Peninsula levelling Lisboa. It would be known as The Great Earthquake of 1755. Very few areas were spared. Fires raged. 40 minutes later the Tsunami from that Earthquake would wipe most of the rest away. Nearly 100,000 people were killed.
One of the remaining cities: Alfama
All very troubling to the clergy at this point since Alfama (among other things) was the "red light" district. They could not fathom why God would destroy the Cathedrals and kill the devout but spare those they deemed sinners. They would later chalk this up to being "tested".
The Great Earthquake did spur the scientific minds at the time, though, and the field of seismology ( albeit rudimentary) would emerge from this catastrophe.
In Alfama, today, the mixture of Roman and Arabic influences remind.
Exploring one of Alfama's better known Street Fairs- Fiera da Ladra (The Thief’s Fair)
Which is basically a citywide flea market. Piles of new and used merchandise on sidewalks and in some instances places directly on the street itself. A Hoarder and Haggler's Paradise.
Now off to catch up with the Primaries. Florida, Missouri, Ohio, North Carolina, and Illinois.
More anon...
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