Thursday, September 29, 2011

Friday favourites

Egg and bacon tarts.

I love this recipe, so easy, and no pastry involved - a version of Impossible Quiche.

Preheat oven to 220C/400F. Thoroughly grease a large 12 cup muffin pan (or two 6 cup pans)

Ingredients
4 large eggs,     1 1/4 cups milk ,    2/3 cup SR flour,
150g bacon pieces,     50g grated tasty cheese,
4 spring onions, finely chopped     a sprinkle of (dried) mixed herbs      salt to taste (remember the bacon and cheese are salty)

Beat eggs, add milk, stir in flour until reasonably smooth, then add bacon pieces (no need to cook them first) cheese, onions and herbs.
3/4 fill muffin pans with the mixture. They will puff up when cooked, but flatten out again as they cool.
Bake for 20 mins, turning after 15 mins.  Allow to cool slightly and run a knife round the edges to remove - they are inclined to stick. Makes about 16-18.
You can vary this by leaving out the cheese, and adding other goodies like mushrooms, asparagus, or red capsicum.
You can also bake this in one large pan, which will take longer. In that case, grease and line the container with baking parchment.
This recipe works best in metal containers, as the bottom doesn’t brown well otherwise. Bon appetit!

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Learning to drive


At the ripe old age of 21, the Resident Grandson has finally decided to get a driver's licence. He already knew the basics - he used to have a "paddock bomb". What he needs is on-road experience. Although at 21, he doesn't have to prove he's done 120 hours of supervised driving, it's still a great idea, and we take every opportunity. Most days, I've been meeeting him after work, and we get in half an hour or so, mainly just around the town. As he gains confidence, we've been going a bit further afield, and a lesson with a Driving Instructor the other day taught him a lot - he plans to have more lessons with her.
Last weekend, he went to Melbourne with his Mum, and drove all the way there, then home again - at night this time. He was very pleased with himself!
But there's a good few weeks to go before he'll be ready to take the test.

Things were much less complicated when my mother got her driving licence. She simply drove up to the police station, where the copper remarked that he's been expecting her, as he'd seen her driving around, and duly issued the licence. This was in Minyip, in 1926. She was just 18.

Oddly, she never owned a car herself until after Dad died, when she traded in the big Ford sedan for a Mini Minor.


 As far as I know she only had one accident in all her years of driving - one frosty morning, the Mini skidded on a patch of ice, and slid into a deep culvert. Mum was unhurt, though shaken, but the Mini needed repairs. Mum swore that was it - she'd never drive again; but I'm afraid I tricked her. When the Mini was fixed again, I suggested we go to the garage and inspect it. Once we got there, and she was happy with the repairs, I told her she'd have to drive herself home, and left her to it. Looking back, it was a bit cruel, but she did indeed drive for a good few years after that, keeping her independence, so I suppose it was justified.
She finally sold her car when she turned 80, as she was getting deaf, and no longer felt confident driving.

She used to tell some funny stories about driving in the early days. On one occasion some of the family were travelling from Minyip to Ballarat. A few miles out of Beaufort, they got a puncture. Having already used the spare earlier in the trip (it's about 200 km from Miyip to Ballarat) they had a problem.
In those days, care tyres had a rubber inner tube, much as bicycles still do today. If the tube was punctured, it had to be repaired by vulcanizing a new patch on - a process requiring heat and a special kit; not feasible on the side of the road.
But they were resourceful in those days - some items of underclothing were requisitioned from the ladies in the party, rolled up tightly, and stuffed into the tyre. Then they continued on their bumpy way to Beaufort, where a new inner tube was installed. One hopes that when they finally got to Ballarat, the ladies were able to replace their petticoats!


Monday, September 26, 2011

Around the garden

My garden's a disgrace - I admit it. Planted with high hopes around eleven years ago, I lost interest when the drought struck, and anyway I'm not physically able to do much these days. I rely on a local bloke to keep the grass cut, so it's not a fire hazard.
Amazingly, many of the shrubs have survived the Big Dry very well - so well that a working bee was needed to prune and tidy up a couple of weeks ago.
As the last trailer load left for the tip, my daughter cast her eye around and decided that the pile of old tyres I'd been saving for something or other, could be put to good use. This is the result - my new strawberry patch. Ugly, yes. But practical. My garden is built on clay and rock, with hardly any topsoil, so veggies are out of the question unless you use containers. There are six of these conveniently placed along the back verandah, and I look forward to feasting this summer.

Yesterday the Resident Grandson helped me to make made another kind of container garden. We used styrofoam boxes (with the bottoms cut out) filled with a mixture of soil, cow manure and compost. Again, they're ugly (but free) and hopefully the ugliness will soon be disguised by lush green leaves.
There's only six so far, and I've already planted rhubarb in two of them. I'm thinking silver beet and tomatoes for the others.
The seedling apple tree by the gate is just coming into bloom, and will soon be glorious - pity the fruit's not up to much.

The rosebuds are all covered with thrips as usual, but help is as hand; I seem to have hundreds of ladybirds this year, all hard at work.

There's also a pair of red wattlebirds which have taken up residence nearby, and they are doing their bit too. These birds are really honeyeaters, but they eat insects too.

I hope they don't eat the ladybirds too!

Sunday, September 25, 2011

An attitude of gratitude

Some years ago I read about a practice that appealed to me, and I have used it ever since. It's called 'an attitude of gratitude' and it goes like this - every night when you go to bed and settle down for sleep, think about three things you are grateful for.

Not too hard, if you are well fed, snuggled down in a warm bed, with a secure roof over your head. But you need to dig a bit deeper than that. Think about the day now ending - what can you be grateful for? 
Last night, I remembered my trip to the supermarket, where I chose from a huge array of delicious food - fruit and vegetables, a dozen varieties of bread and milk, and every kind of food you could think of. I am grateful for the riches we have in this country! 

I had visited my sister, too, and admired the progress of her pretty new garden. I came away with a bunch of delicious smelling jasmine.
I am grateful that my sister lives just a few minutes away, and that we are such good friends.

In the afternoon, I sat in the sun and finished reading a novel, borrowed from the library. Light and pleasant reading, but the author had worked hard to research and write it, and I am grateful for all of my favorite writers, who have given me so many hours of pleasure.

I'm grateful for my local library too, with so many wonderful books to choose from.
See, it's not hard, is it? And even if you've had a pretty awful day, once you have the habit, there is always something to be grateful for.
What will you be grateful for tonight?

Friday, September 23, 2011

Friday favourites

With all that jam at their disposal, plus fresh eggs, this was always a popular recipe when ladies were requested to *take a plate.

Coconut jam slice
 Preheat oven to 180C, grease & paper a 19 x 29 cm  tin
Ingredients
 80g butter
1/4 cup castor sugar
2 egg yolks
1 tab cold water
vanilla
1/2 cup wholemeal SR flour
1/2 cup plain flour

1/3 cup  jam

2  egg whites, beaten until stiff
1/3 cup sugar
1 cup coconut
Method 
Cream butter and sugar, beat in egg yolks, water & vanilla, add flours, sifted together.
Spread in base of tin, level with the back of a spoon, prick well with a fork. Bake until just cooked, about 15 mins.
Remove from oven, spread with jam of your choice.
(Raspberry is good, apricot is nice too. Experiment)
Beat eggwhites until stiff, beat in sugar, stir in coconut, spread on top of jam.
Bake a further 10 mins, or until top is golden brown.Cool in tin, cut in squares when cold.
Some recipes skip the step of par-baking the pastry, but in my experience, this results in a soggy base or a burnt topping. Just sayin'.

In New Zealand, this is known as 'Louise Cake'. I'd love to know who Louise was...
*Take a plate or ladies, a plate, refers to the Australian custom of asking women to provide a plate of food for afternoon tea or supper at local functions.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Jam it in a jar!


Our foremothers made jam in prodigious quantities. All the farm produce that couldn’t be immediately consumed was preserved in some way – by pickling, salting or jam-making. Jam was particularly useful, as well as delicious. A slice or two of bread and jam is a wonderful ‘filler’ at the end of a meal. Before you shudder, bear in mind that those hard-working people consumed far more calories to get them through the day than we, in more sedentary times, would need. Farming meant hard physical labour, not just for parents, but for any child old enough to contribute.


My copy of the Barossa Cookery Book, (first published c.1917) gives awesome quantities in some of the recipes, like this one for Melon Jam – 24 pounds of melon, 20 pounds of sugar, ½ pound preserved ginger….it must have been a big preserving pan!
 I’m told that some women made large batches like this in the copper…

 Jam-making had to be done when the fruit was ripe, usually the hottest time of the year, and was done on a wood fired stove. Somebody had to keep a close eye on the pan for several hours, to make sure it didn’t burn – burnt jam is horrible.
Often a task for one of the children, the consequences of inattention were dire – fruit and firewood were free, but sugar – and preserving pans – had to be bought.
Almost anything could be made into jam, and there were many ingenious ways to stretch out the fruit. Carrot jam relied on a few oranges or lemons to add flavour; the addition of lemon or ginger made the bland pie-melon more appetising. Pie melons were a staple crop back then, for actual pies as well as jam. Very easy to grow, and HUGE in size.
 Quince jam, apricot jam, peach jam, fig jam, grape jam, and gallons of plum jam – well-stocked pantry shelves were a source of justifiable pride to the thrifty housewife.
Cheek by jowl with the jam would be jars of pickles and chutney, and bottles of sauce and relish – all valued to dress up the ubiquitous mutton that turned up at nearly every meal. Vegetables, especially beans, could be salted in earthenware jars.
 I still have the patent bean slicer my mother used – it clamped to the table like a mincer – and remember helping to salt beans. Mum knew full well that the beans didn’t have too many vitamins left by the time the salt was soaked out of them, but what can you do when the garden is full of beans?
Another nutritionally dodgy habit was the custom of adding a pinch of soda to the saucepan when cooking peas or beans – it keeps them looking nice and green, but destroys most of their vitamin content in the process. We know better now.
I loathed green beans as a child, with good reason. String beans, as they were called then, have a long fibrous strip running down each side of the pod. Unless they were carefully ‘topped and tailed’, peeling off the strings in the process, they were disgusting to eat!
Modern plant breeding seems to have eliminated the stringy bits, and now I love them.

The advent of Fowlers Vacola Bottling outfits was a welcome addition to food preserving. Joseph Fowler had begun with a fruit bottling business in his Melbourne backyard, and by 1915 had formed the company of J. Fowler & Co., producing home bottling kits. These comprised a stove-top sterilizer, glass bottles, rubber rings, tin lids, clips, and a thermometer.

At first Fowler sold his kits door-to-door from the back of a cart. During the Depression Fowlers Kits became a household name, and in 1934 Fowlers was registered as a public company. Housewives all over the country were encouraged to bottle their own produce by ‘Mrs B. Thrifty’ in the Fowlers ads.

Almost everything was preserved in the glass bottles, which were vacuum sealed by heating on the wood stove. Mum preserved rabbit and chicken meat, all kinds of vegies, even mushrooms, and fruit in a thick sugar syrup.

‘Bottling’ quickly became an art form – there were competitions at local and State Agricultural Shows for the most decorative jars, and some women spent hours arranging carefully cut portions of carrot and parsnip in rows.Then botulism was discovered, and the dangers of preserving vegetables outweighed the benefits.
When I had a family to feed I used to make lots of jam, but the need passed until more recently, when I had a market stall and sold homemade jam – and very popular it was too.

For a while I enjoyed making all kinds of jams and jellies, relishes too. I got sick of it in the end, yet it was a far more pleasant process than it used to be, with a gas stove, and a freezer, so fruit could be stored for cooler weather.

I still make jam now and then, not too much, because I don’t need the extra calories, but when you have a lovely crop of quinces or figs, what’s a girl to do?