Yesterday I tried a new recipe, for The Easiest Pizza in the World, found at Everybody like Sandwiches. A no-rise, no knead dough? I didn't think it would work, but to my amazement, and the delight of the Resident Grandson, it worked a treat! Here's the recipe
the easiest pizza dough in the world
1 packet of yeast (2 1/4 teaspoons)
1 c warm water
2 1/2 c flour
1 t honey
1 t salt
2 T olive oil
2 T fresh rosemary, chopped (optional)
cornmeal
Preheat oven to 210C. In a large bowl, add in the yeast and warm water
and stir until the yeast dissolves. Add the flour, salt, honey,
rosemary (if using), and olive oil and stir with a wooden spoon
vigorously until combined. Let dough rest for 10 minutes.
Sprinkle cornmeal onto a walled baking sheet and press dough into it until thin. Add toppings of your choice and bake for 20-25 minutes until pizza crust is golden and cheese is bubbly.
Notes
I followed the recipe pretty much as written, but left out the rosemary. I didn't have cornmeal, so just floured an ordinary baking tray and pressed (well actually, rolled) the dough out to cover it. Next time I'll divide the dough in half and make 2 smaller pizzas.
I used bread flour - cos I had some - and would again.
This is the yeast I used - it keeps for ages in the fridge. That's a lot of yeast for the amount of flour, but there was no yeasty taste. And it was cooked all the way through, the bottom was lightly browned, and it didn't stick to the tray.
It made a very large pizza (leftovers tonight) but it was delicious! Will definitely be doing this again!
I used the toppings requested by TRG, and they were expensive - Leggo's pizza sauce, red onion, some capsicum, hot salami, and Mozzarella cheese. But I could make a much cheaper version, I'm sure.
Next time I'll add the honey and oil to the liquid, and then stir in the flour, sifted with the salt.
The dough was a bit sticky when mixed, I had to work in a bit of extra flour. And I did knead it, just a little...
Now I'm wondering, what else could I do with this dough? Top it with bacon, pineapple and cheese, maybe?
And if I baked it without any topping, and maybe left it a trifle thicker, would I have Turkish bread? Then I could make some Anybean Hummus! (see below)
Or, what if I rolled the dough out, spread it with say, pesto, rolled it into a sausage, and sliced it - pesto rolls?
And then there are sweet possibilities - cinnamon scrolls, perhaps? If you experiment with this, let me know!
This handy little idea comes from Grill a Chef, the blog of chef Joshua Stokes
Anybean Hummus
1 can of beans
1 splash of an acid (citrus or vinegar)
a handful of nuts
some salt
some pepper
a pinch of a spice or an herb
a glug of oil
Spin
the ingredients you have chosen in a food processor until smooth.
Taste. Adjust. Taste again. Adjust until satisfied. Serve as you would
any other hummus that you have purchased at the market... but would not
feel as rewarded eating.
Oh, and if you like recipe-surfing, try this - Food Gawker
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Quilters
Spent some time at my quilt group, Goldfields Quilters, today. It's always interesting to see what people are making, and for once I had the camera.
Lorraine's latest quilt is a showstopper. Great graphic design, one of those quilts that you just keep looking at and finding new details.
Lorraine and her family had a very sad time last year, and we all got together and made up a collection of blue fabrics for her. This is what she's done with them.
This is a queen-size quilt, and she is hand-quilting it. Detail of the centre.
Christine is using her father's ties for a hexagon quilt.
And Brenda is making great progress with her amazing quilt -
tiny, tiny hexagons, joined with fine hand stitches.
She says it's getting rather heavy, and this back view shows why.
Such talented quilters, and good friends too. We have a great time on meeting days. Wish I could share Eileen's latest joke, but it's a bit rude...
Lorraine's latest quilt is a showstopper. Great graphic design, one of those quilts that you just keep looking at and finding new details.
Lorraine and her family had a very sad time last year, and we all got together and made up a collection of blue fabrics for her. This is what she's done with them.
This is a queen-size quilt, and she is hand-quilting it. Detail of the centre.
Christine is using her father's ties for a hexagon quilt.
And Brenda is making great progress with her amazing quilt -
tiny, tiny hexagons, joined with fine hand stitches.
She says it's getting rather heavy, and this back view shows why.
Such talented quilters, and good friends too. We have a great time on meeting days. Wish I could share Eileen's latest joke, but it's a bit rude...
Monday, November 21, 2011
An American connection
The story of my great-grandfather Micheal Maher is the perfect illustration of what happens when family details are not recorded and passed down. Micheal (that's not a typo - he signed his name to several documents with that spelling) is something of an enigma. No records have been found of his arrival in Australia.
In 1868 he married Annie Hassett, in the Catholic church at Hamilton.
The marriage certificate shows that he was born in 1842 at Thomastown, Kilkenny, and his parents were Thomas Maher and Mary Read. He began his life in Australia as a labourer, but when he died at Minyip, Victoria in 1913, he was a wealthy man, owning nearly 2500 acres of land.
He and Annie had five sons and two daughters. His sons were each left a farm, and the daughters received 500 pounds each - a large sum in 1913.
When Micheal and Annie married, their residence was Port Fairy, but they moved to Ararat - at least two of their children were born there.
In 1874 the family moved to Minyip, taking up land near Annie's brothers, the Hassetts.
Over the years, Micheal continued to buy land and pay it off - his long and complicated Will gives details of several farms, some still mortgaged.
Some time between 1908 and 1913, Micheal returned to Ireland. It must have been after 1908, because he brought back a present for my mother, Annie Maher, his first grandchild. The present was a child's knife, fork and spoon set, with ornate silver handles, in a leatherette case - now owned by one of my nephews.
Micheal presumably still had some family connections in Ireland, but that information is now lost to us. What remained was a story of relatives in America - either Micheal or one of his sons supposedly exchanged letters with a Stephen Maher, who had settled in America. My mother had a vague memory of this, and thought Stephen or one of his sons was a doctor...
Thanks to the wonders of the Internet, it's now much easier to research your family tree. Using Ancestry.com, several family members have discovered that the American story is true!
Stephen Maher was actually Micheal Maher's uncle; he left Ireland in 1825 and settled in New Haven, Connecticut, and two of his grandsons were indeed doctors. There are many Maher descendants still living in Connecticut today.
Micheal and Annie's children (not necessarily in order, I don't have all their birthdates) were -
Thomas m. Grace Kenny - no children
William, m. Ellen Kenny - stillborn child
Michael, m. Amelia Sullivan - Frank & Mollie
John, M. Elizabeth Drum - Michael, Kathryn, Veronica & John
Patrick, m. Agnes Sullivan - Annie, Eileen, Kathleen & John
Anne (Sr. Philomena, Brigidine Convent, Wangaratta)
Jane m. James Hickey - no children
Two of Micheal and Annie's sons also visited Ireland.
Thomas retired from farming and took an extensive world trip, including Ireland.
Pat (and probably Ag) went to Ireland, and brought back souvenirs - a silver Celtic cross pendant for my mother, with her initials, A.M. engraved on it. Mum treasured her cross, and wore it often; my sister has it now. Pat also sponsored an Irishman, who worked on the farm for some years.
Pat Maher (on right) and his cousin, Pat Kelly.
Annie Hassett's sister, Honorah, married James Kelly, and the two families were always close.
Micheal died in 1913, and is buried with his wife in the Minyip cemetery. Some of his descendants still live at Minyip.
That brings my Irish history to a close, I hope it hasn't been too confusing! All the information here, plus a bit more, will be published on my website, Marcie's Memoirs. Still tinkering with that, I'll reveal it soon...
Now it's time to tackle the history of my German ancestors, and be warned, I have LOTS of information about them!
In 1868 he married Annie Hassett, in the Catholic church at Hamilton.
The marriage certificate shows that he was born in 1842 at Thomastown, Kilkenny, and his parents were Thomas Maher and Mary Read. He began his life in Australia as a labourer, but when he died at Minyip, Victoria in 1913, he was a wealthy man, owning nearly 2500 acres of land.
He and Annie had five sons and two daughters. His sons were each left a farm, and the daughters received 500 pounds each - a large sum in 1913.
When Micheal and Annie married, their residence was Port Fairy, but they moved to Ararat - at least two of their children were born there.
In 1874 the family moved to Minyip, taking up land near Annie's brothers, the Hassetts.
Over the years, Micheal continued to buy land and pay it off - his long and complicated Will gives details of several farms, some still mortgaged.
Some time between 1908 and 1913, Micheal returned to Ireland. It must have been after 1908, because he brought back a present for my mother, Annie Maher, his first grandchild. The present was a child's knife, fork and spoon set, with ornate silver handles, in a leatherette case - now owned by one of my nephews.
Micheal presumably still had some family connections in Ireland, but that information is now lost to us. What remained was a story of relatives in America - either Micheal or one of his sons supposedly exchanged letters with a Stephen Maher, who had settled in America. My mother had a vague memory of this, and thought Stephen or one of his sons was a doctor...
Thanks to the wonders of the Internet, it's now much easier to research your family tree. Using Ancestry.com, several family members have discovered that the American story is true!
Stephen Maher was actually Micheal Maher's uncle; he left Ireland in 1825 and settled in New Haven, Connecticut, and two of his grandsons were indeed doctors. There are many Maher descendants still living in Connecticut today.
Anne & Jane Maher |
Thomas m. Grace Kenny - no children
William, m. Ellen Kenny - stillborn child
Michael, m. Amelia Sullivan - Frank & Mollie
John, M. Elizabeth Drum - Michael, Kathryn, Veronica & John
Patrick, m. Agnes Sullivan - Annie, Eileen, Kathleen & John
Anne (Sr. Philomena, Brigidine Convent, Wangaratta)
Jane m. James Hickey - no children
Two of Micheal and Annie's sons also visited Ireland.
Thomas retired from farming and took an extensive world trip, including Ireland.
Pat (and probably Ag) went to Ireland, and brought back souvenirs - a silver Celtic cross pendant for my mother, with her initials, A.M. engraved on it. Mum treasured her cross, and wore it often; my sister has it now. Pat also sponsored an Irishman, who worked on the farm for some years.
Pat Maher (on right) and his cousin, Pat Kelly.
Annie Hassett's sister, Honorah, married James Kelly, and the two families were always close.
Micheal died in 1913, and is buried with his wife in the Minyip cemetery. Some of his descendants still live at Minyip.
That brings my Irish history to a close, I hope it hasn't been too confusing! All the information here, plus a bit more, will be published on my website, Marcie's Memoirs. Still tinkering with that, I'll reveal it soon...
Now it's time to tackle the history of my German ancestors, and be warned, I have LOTS of information about them!
Friday, November 18, 2011
Trevor's salad
When the weather warms up, we dust off the salad recipes. This is a recent addition to the repertoire, which I first tasted at grand-daughter Lucy's 18th birthday party. Made by her Dad, Trevor, it was the perfect foil for the curry dishes served that night. Turns out it goes with everything, it's ridiculously easy to make, and doesn't need a dressing!
Ingredients
mixed lettuce leaves
fresh tomatoes
small continental cucumber
3 or 4 spring onions
small tin crushed pineapple(in natural juice)
pepper and salt
Two for the price of one today - this is a salad my mother used to make, and it's still a regular feature of our Christmas lunches.
Orange and onion salad.
oranges, peeled and sliced
salad onion, finely sliced - or red onion, or spring onions
mayonnaise (some of us like the old Condensed Milk mayo with this)
Delicious with cold chicken or ham.
S'pose I'd better give you the mayo recipe too, but this is really only for lovers of condensed milk...
Condensed milk mayonnaise
1/2 tin Nestles condensed milk
1/3 cup vinegar
1/3 cup oil
1 level tsp. mustard powder
1/2 level tsp. salt
Method
blend mustard & salt with a little vinegar, stir into condensed milk, add rest of vinegar and stir. Slowly add oil, stirring until combined and thickened.
This keeps for a long time in the fridge.
What you do with the remaining condensed milk is your affair...
Ingredients
mixed lettuce leaves
fresh tomatoes
small continental cucumber
3 or 4 spring onions
small tin crushed pineapple(in natural juice)
pepper and salt
Method
slice the lettuce leaves (think salsa)
dice the tomatoes
slice the cucumber lengthwise in quarters, then chop
slice the spring onions (scissors are fast)
drain the pineapple
Mix all ingredients in a salad bowl, add enough pineapple juice to moisten,
season generously with salt and pepper.
(no quantities given, you can make this for 2 or 10)
Two for the price of one today - this is a salad my mother used to make, and it's still a regular feature of our Christmas lunches.
Orange and onion salad.
oranges, peeled and sliced
salad onion, finely sliced - or red onion, or spring onions
mayonnaise (some of us like the old Condensed Milk mayo with this)
Delicious with cold chicken or ham.
S'pose I'd better give you the mayo recipe too, but this is really only for lovers of condensed milk...
Condensed milk mayonnaise
1/2 tin Nestles condensed milk
1/3 cup vinegar
1/3 cup oil
1 level tsp. mustard powder
1/2 level tsp. salt
Method
blend mustard & salt with a little vinegar, stir into condensed milk, add rest of vinegar and stir. Slowly add oil, stirring until combined and thickened.
This keeps for a long time in the fridge.
What you do with the remaining condensed milk is your affair...
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Grandad's last trip
We lunched at the historic Craig's Royal Hotel in Ballarat.
This gorgeous old pub is a Ballarat landmark, built in 1853 at the height of the goldrush, and recently refurbished to full Victorian glory.
There were eight cousins in attendance, plus partners, and we had a great time. We've known each other for sixty or seventy years, and grey hair and wonky knees haven't dimmed the fellowship.
Josephine brought a treasure trove of family photos, and Brian and Bernadette heard the story of our convict ancestors for the first time. There was a great-aunt's diary, a collection of old newspaper clippings, and lots of reminiscences.
Barry told the best story of the day, about the death of my grandfather, Pat Maher. Pat lived all his life on the farm in Minyip, but when he retired, he used to divide his time between visiting various family members. In 1949, he went to visit his sister Jennie in Sydney. Unfortunately, he died there. The family knew he'd want to be buried in Minyip beside his wife and daughter. So...his son Jack, and nephews Frank and Michael, decided to bring him home.
Barry was just a nipper, but he remembers it well. The war was over, but petrol was still rationed - they wouldn't be able to buy any on the way. "Dad had all these 4 gallon drums." Barry told us. "He filled them up with petrol, put a bit of rag over the hole, and screwed the caps on tight. Then he stacked them in the boot." Jack's car was a big old pre-war American model, something like this one.
It's about 1000 kilometres from Minyip to Sydney, and on the roads of the day, the trip probably took them about 24 hours each way. "They collected Pat, and brought him home on the back seat, with the three cousins sitting in the front. They delivered him to the undertaker in Minyip, and went home and had a beer."
Understandably, this story gave rise to a few questions. There was a spirited debate as to whether you could have fitted a coffin across the back seat of the car. Consensus - no, you couldn't.
Barry stuck to his version of the story, backed up by his sister Pat. You really don't want to hear all the suggestions that were made for the best way to convey your deceased relative home in the back of the family car...
When we stopped laughing, we wondered - are there laws about that sort of thing? Do you have to get permission to take a body interstate (with or without a coffin)?
Anyway, that's how Pat Maher made his final journey, and was duly interred in the Minyip cemetery beside his beloved Ag. And I'm sure Jack, Frank and Michael treated him with all the care and respect he deserved - he was much loved.
Edit: some doubt has been cast on the truth of this story, I'm hoping to verify it - or not - soon.
Friday, November 11, 2011
Baking 101
But BAKING is different.
So I've put together a few notes for those just starting out - when I was learning, I wish someone had told me a few things...
Butter and sugar, eggs, flour and liquids, interact in weird chemical ways.
Some recipes depend on beating in lots of air, others rely on various rising agents. Too much sugar is sticky and sickly, too little will give you a dry, crumbly cake.
So when you're baking, stick to the recipe. Follow the method, check the oven temperature, use the right sized tin. All the recipes I give here have been made dozens of times, and adjusted here and there until I'm sure of success.
- Every kitchen should have at least one set of measuring cups and spoons - and make sure they are Australian measures - American measures are different.
- When measuring flour, spoon it into the measuring cup, take a knife, tap the cup sharply, then level the top. Flour and associated dry ingredients should be sifted - if you don't have a proper sifter, use a large strainer. Or as a last resort, stir the flour vigorously with a whisk, or even a fork.
- You can replace half the white flour in a recipe with wholemeal flour - any more than that will require extra liquid, and may throw the recipe out of balance.
- You really need some sort of scales - electronic ones are good, but expensive; I managed for many years with el cheapo mechanical scales.
- An electric mixer is great, but hand beaters will do the job - even a good old-fashioned wooden spoon works, if you have time, energy, and good arm muscles. My mother used to cream butter and sugar with a fork - over the years the tines of her baking fork wore down on one side - a bit alarming when you think about it, where did all that metal go?
- The microwave is a boon - it's much easier to cream butter and sugar if you warm the sugar a little bit first.
- Buy the best ingredients you can afford - cheap flour is often poor quality. Doesn't matter with sugar, it's all the same anyway. Use real butter, of a reputable brand, never margarine (shudder). Use real vanilla extract, not imitation, and cochineal, not some chemical colouring. I rarely use artificial colourings or flavours, even for icing.
- Buy icing mixture, which has some cornflour added, and is less likely to go lumpy.
- Store all your baking supplies in airtight containers - opened packets absorb moisture and the contents go stale more quickly. Look for big jars at the Op shop.
- Collect cake tins in various sizes - square, round, loaf and slice pans. They don't have to be non-stick; again, Op shops are a good source. If you buy muffin tins, look for the 6-cup ones, easier to rotate in the oven for even browning.
- Buy the freshest eggs you can find - check the use-by dates, and keep them in the fridge. Stale eggs don't have the same rising abilities as fresh ones. And always break an egg into a cup before you add it to your mixture - saves nasty surprises!
- Home baked cakes and biscuits (in fact any food you prepare yourself) are much better for you than commercial products - no artificial colours or flavours, no preservatives, no hydrogenated fats.
Friday favourites
Carrot cake
This is the best carrot cake recipe I know.
It's a large cake; you'll need at least a 20 cm square pan, or a large deepish slice tin.
It's dairy-free, too.
Preheat oven to 180C, grease your pan, cut baking paper to fit the bottom.
Ingredients
2 large eggs (60 g)
1/2 cup oil (I use canola)
3/4 cup raw sugar
2 cups (about 300 g) grated carrot
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1 + 3/4 cups SR flour
1/2 teasp bicarb. soda
1/4 teasp each of cinnamon and nutmeg
Method
Prepare carrots & walnuts - a food processor is faster than grating the carrots. Walnuts can be placed in a plastic bag and crushed with something heavy - rolling pin, chopping board.
Beat eggs, sugar and oil until light in colour
Mix in carrot and walnuts, then stir in flour (sifted with soda and spices) stirring only until combined.
Pour into tin, bake 30-45 mins, or until a knife inserted in the middle come out clean.(Who remembers when Mum used a straw to test cakes??)
When cold, ice with white icing, sprinkle with cinnamon or nutmeg. The icing would be nicer with a teaspoon or so of butter, but then it wouldn't be dairy-free, would it? Your choice. Lemon juice is good for mixing the icing, too...
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Flower garden
I love to crochet - it's faster than knitting, you get to play with lots of pretty colours, and you end up with something useful and beautiful. Here's a glimpse of my latest work-in-progress, a flowery afghan. It's based on a Granny Square variation by Lucy of Attic24, but I've tweaked it a bit.
I calculate I'll need 165 squares altogether; I've made 120 so far.
Don't know what I'll do with it yet, I hope to finish it by Christmas.
I can write up the pattern, if anyone's interested...
First you make some little circles.
They become bigger circles.
Then you turn them into squares.
After you've darned in all the ends (my least favourite part of the exercise) you block the squares, so the finished rug will lie nice and flat.
Blocking means you pin them out flat, spray with water, and leave them to dry
Then you sew them all together...
I calculate I'll need 165 squares altogether; I've made 120 so far.
Don't know what I'll do with it yet, I hope to finish it by Christmas.
I can write up the pattern, if anyone's interested...
Monday, November 7, 2011
But wait, there's more!
Now that we’ve seen Annie happily married to Fred, you might
think I’ve run out of Irish ancestors to tell you about. Well, not quite.
If you’ve been paying
attention so far, you may have noticed that most of my stories are about the
women in my family. That’s no accident. All too often, it seems to me, family
historians follow the male line, and the wives and daughters get barely a
mention. But their stories are just as important.
Life was hard for all of our pioneer forbears, both men and
women, but I think the toll was greater on the women. Living in a time when lawmakers, doctors, and clergy were exclusively male,
women were essentially powerless. For most, marriage was the only career
available. To them fell the burden of bearing and rearing children, making a
home wherever they found themselves – sometimes far, far away from their
homeland.
And yet, when you think about it, women made the greatest
contribution of all in a new country. They were responsible for raising the
next generation, keeping them safe and well fed and healthy, sending them to
school whenever they could, and generally preparing them to make their way in
the world. No strangers to worry, hard work, and sadness, I hope they also knew
love, and saw at least some of their dreams come true.
Now I’m going to tell you what I know of my great-great grandmother,
Anne Hassett (nee Kennedy), and her daughter, Annie Hassett.
In 1991, I travelled to Ireland as part of a European holiday.
I wanted to find out more about Anne Hassett, among others.
The only information I had came from her death certificate. Anne Kennedy was born in Co Clare, Ireland in 1797. At the age of 25, she married Patrick Hassett, farmer, and they had six children – Andrew, Mary, John, Honora (Norah) Martin and Annie.
I arrived in Ennis, and hired a car (no public transport beyond Ennis). My first port of call was the Clare Heritage Centre at Corofin, where I discovered that there are no surviving records of births, deaths and marriages for Crusheen. But the Griffith Land Valuation of 1855 showed that Anne Hassett rented a cottage and land near the village of Crusheen, about 10 km north of Ennis.
I drove there, and took lots of photos, wanting to remember the place she had left behind, and the familiar sights she had known.
The country around Crusheen was lush and green, with little stone bridges and beautiful lakes.I didn’t find Anne’s cottage, but it probably looked something like this one.
In 1864, Anne, now a widow, left her homeland to emigrate to Australia. She was 66 years old. She had probably never travelled beyond her village before, but now she packed up her bags and embarked on a journey across the world. She wasn’t alone – her youngest daughter, Annie, accompanied her. Anne had a powerful reason to emigrate; her older children were already in Australia, and had sent money home so their mother could join them in the new land.
No shipping records have been found so far, but family tradition tells that the older children went first, probably as assisted immigrants, and when they were established, they sent for their mother. It seems likely that John, Norah, and Martin travelled to Australia together, and settled around Port Fairy. Family tradition tells of Norah, who worked for a Dr. Scott at Hamilton, and for 2 years never collected any pay, but got her employers to save it so she could send it back home to bring her mother out.
(No record has been found
for the oldest daughter, Mary, but she was still alive when her mother died, so
she probably married and was thus recorded under a different name. Oldest son, Andrew is shown as deceased on Annie's death certificate - he presumably died in Ireland, perhaps as a child.)
Before long, Norah and Annie were married, and lived in the
Ararat district. Norah married James Kelly, and Annie married Micheal Maher.
Martin and John Hassett had also found wives, and before long Annie Hassett had
grandchildren to cuddle.
In 1872, the Government opened up land for settlement in the
Wimmera, and the Hassett brothers and the Kellys moved to the Minip district in
1873. Annie and Michael Maher followed in 1874. Annie Hassett went with them –
in fact, a 640 acre block of land was registered in her name.
What a change of scenery it must have been for her! From the evergreen hills of Ireland to the flat plains of the Wimmera, where the only relief from fierce summer heat is the sparse shade of a sheoak tree, and the ground cracks open in the summer. It was good wheat-growing country, though, and I expect Annie found some consolation in seeing her family well on their way to success in their new country.
She died at Minyip in 1877, aged 80, and is buried at Rupanyup cemetery. Recently the cemetery trustees decided to mark some of the older graves, and there is now a permanent memorial in her name.
(My thanks to Pam Murphy for the photo).
What a change of scenery it must have been for her! From the evergreen hills of Ireland to the flat plains of the Wimmera, where the only relief from fierce summer heat is the sparse shade of a sheoak tree, and the ground cracks open in the summer. It was good wheat-growing country, though, and I expect Annie found some consolation in seeing her family well on their way to success in their new country.
She died at Minyip in 1877, aged 80, and is buried at Rupanyup cemetery. Recently the cemetery trustees decided to mark some of the older graves, and there is now a permanent memorial in her name.
(My thanks to Pam Murphy for the photo).
Saturday, November 5, 2011
Bachelors and Spinsters
After the death of their mother, Annie and her sister Eileen
lived at the farm in Minyip, keeping house for their father and younger brother
Jack. There was plenty to do; housekeeping without electricity is no easy job –
no vacuum cleaners, washing machines or refrigerators. Cooking was done on a
wood-fired stove. At haymaking and harvesting time there would often be extra
men to feed – and they expected hot dinners, too!
Outside the house there were poultry to feed, cows to milk, and
gardens to tend. Most people were as self-sufficient as possible, making butter,
preserving fruit and growing vegies.
You might think that life in a small country town would be
pretty quiet – dull, even. But you’d be wrong. Country people are pretty good
at entertaining themselves! Annie and Eileen had a very busy social life. Perusal
of the local newspapers of the time show that there were plenty of social
events - a kitchen tea, a concert, a card night, a twenty-first birthday party.
There was plenty of sport for those so inclined: football,
golf, tennis and cricket. Lavish afternoon teas and suppers were the norm.
Mum used to tell the story of a school friend from Ballarat,
who came to stay on the farm for several weeks, and Annie and Eily did their
best to show her a good time. When the lass returned home, she spent several
weeks in bed, suffering from “nervous exhaustion”!
By the late twenties, most people had a car; the Mahers had a
Ford, a ‘tin Lizzie’ and it went everywhere, over the roughest of roads, and even
across paddocks. Their next car was an Essex,
followed by a Chev.
Every little community for miles around had at least one Ball; Bachelors and Spinsters Balls were all the rage (not the drunken affairs we hear of nowadays) and people drove a long way to attend them.
One the way home from one such occasion, in wet weather (the
main ball season was winter) the car skidded on the greasy road (I’m talking
here about an unsealed road which consisted of two wheel tracks with a grassy
centre – you can still see a few tracks like that in the Wimmera - and landed in
the table drain (wide shallow drain at the side of the road). They were
hopelessly bogged, and had to trudge across the paddocks in full evening finery
- long dresses for the girls - to the nearest house where they stayed the rest
of the night. It was not uncommon for them to return home early in the morning, when the boys would milk the cows and then
go to bed.
Everyone had dance programmes, with a little pencil
attached, so the boys could book dances.
When Mum died, we found a few of them among
her keepsakes.
In this one, the writing is my father’s, and I wondered why it
had been kept for so long. The date was July 15th, 1927, and Fred
had four dances with Ann.
She would have been just 19, Fred a couple of years older.
What happened that night that caused one of them to keep the dance programme
for all those years?
Over the next years, Annie had several boyfriends, but they
all fell by the wayside; in a couple of cases, Mum said, because they were drank too much, and there was No Way she would ever marry a drinker! She had seen
several relatives suffer the miseries of living with a drinker.
But Fred was always there, a good-looking, rather shy chap,
and a beautiful dancer, too. Trouble was, he wasn’t Catholic, and thus not a
suitable partner for a good Catholic girl. At what point Mum changed her mind
on this, I don’t know, but Fred and Annie announced their engagement at St.
Patrick’s Ball in Minyip, in 1936. Not a popular choice with her family, as I’ve
written elsewhere.
By now, Eileen was about to be married, and brother Jack
would soon follow suit. When that happened Jack would take over the farm, according
to the custom of the times, and Annie and her father would have to move out. In
those days, sons got farms; daughters were expected to marry (probably another
son with a farm, but at least someone who would support them). But Fred, the
next-to-youngest of thirteen children, was never going to inherit a farm, so
they would have to provide for themselves. Fred had worked for an older cousin
since leaving school, and was saving as much as he could to buy his own farm.
Annie at back, right |
Annie would also need to earn a living, and she had already
arranged to train as a nurse, at the Ballarat
Base Hospital.
She would not be paid for the first six months, but would at least have her
keep, and could live in the Nurses’ home.
Annie enjoyed her training, and made many friends among the
other nurses. The work was hard, but interesting. During her third year at the Hospital,
she caught diphtheria, and was very ill, missing weeks of training.
She still
managed to pass her finals, and became a registered Nurse. She had to make up
the lost weeks, of course, but finally she and Fred were able to marry.
(See also “A marriage of two cultures”)
Friday, November 4, 2011
When life hands you lemons...
...make Lemon Butter!
If you have lots of lemons, this is a Good Thing to do with them.
But if you have to buy your lemons, avoid nice shiny fruit that has been waxed - your local fruit shop might have wax-free lemons.
I know the wax used on fruit is supposed to be "food grade" and harmless, but I don't fancy eating any, all the same.
Lemon butter's easy and quick to make in the microwave - no more endless stirring of a hot saucepan!
You will cook the mixture in short bursts, stirring between times. I use a wire whisk.
This recipe, from my daughter Susie, has more sugar than most, which means it will keep for ages.(as if!)
Prepare your jars first - small jars are best. They should have lids that will make an airtight seal. Baby food jars are good. (This recipe will fill 7-8 small baby food jars). Jars and lids should be clean and perfectly dry.
You will need
a 1.5 litre capacity microwave-safe jug
A wire whisk is useful if you have one...
4 eggs, well beaten.
4-5 lemons (you need 1/2 cup of lemon juice)
500g sugar
125g butter
Method
Grate rind from lemons, then squeeze the juice, discarding seeds.
Place sugar, butter, rind and juice in microwave jug, cook on high for 1 minute.
Remove and stir, cook another minute. Remove and mix in the beaten eggs.
Then cook in approx seven x 30 second bursts, removing and stirring each time. Mixture should expand and develop lots of tiny bubbles. When it reaches this stage, don't be tempted to "give it one more go" - it may boil over!
Pour into jars, topping up as the bubbles subside a bit. Put the lids on immediately, so the heat creates a seal as the mixture cools.
Store in the fridge. Delish on hot buttered toast, or a filling for tarts or sponge cake.
Maybe you could make a lemon version of the Butter Sponge from last week?
If you have lots of lemons, this is a Good Thing to do with them.
But if you have to buy your lemons, avoid nice shiny fruit that has been waxed - your local fruit shop might have wax-free lemons.
I know the wax used on fruit is supposed to be "food grade" and harmless, but I don't fancy eating any, all the same.
Lemon butter's easy and quick to make in the microwave - no more endless stirring of a hot saucepan!
You will cook the mixture in short bursts, stirring between times. I use a wire whisk.
This recipe, from my daughter Susie, has more sugar than most, which means it will keep for ages.(as if!)
Prepare your jars first - small jars are best. They should have lids that will make an airtight seal. Baby food jars are good. (This recipe will fill 7-8 small baby food jars). Jars and lids should be clean and perfectly dry.
You will need
a 1.5 litre capacity microwave-safe jug
A wire whisk is useful if you have one...
4 eggs, well beaten.
4-5 lemons (you need 1/2 cup of lemon juice)
500g sugar
125g butter
Method
Grate rind from lemons, then squeeze the juice, discarding seeds.
Place sugar, butter, rind and juice in microwave jug, cook on high for 1 minute.
Remove and stir, cook another minute. Remove and mix in the beaten eggs.
Then cook in approx seven x 30 second bursts, removing and stirring each time. Mixture should expand and develop lots of tiny bubbles. When it reaches this stage, don't be tempted to "give it one more go" - it may boil over!
Pour into jars, topping up as the bubbles subside a bit. Put the lids on immediately, so the heat creates a seal as the mixture cools.
Store in the fridge. Delish on hot buttered toast, or a filling for tarts or sponge cake.
Maybe you could make a lemon version of the Butter Sponge from last week?
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Audrey
Some of you will know that Crystal, my sweet little black cat, was tragically killed a few weeks ago. She had been with me for 14 years, and always slept on my bed at night. Life just wasn't the same without her.
So, a couple of weeks ago, I visited the lovely folk at the Castlemaine RSPCA shelter, and came home with this little girl.
She's just 14 months old, a pale "tabby tortie".
After much debate (including a hilarious discussion on Facebook), we named her Audrey, for the eyeliner she wears around her pretty green eyes.
She settled in well, found my bed a comfy place to sleep, and soon learned that our old dog was no threat.
She was supposed to stay inside for several weeks, but oh, how she longed to be out!
Finally the great day came, and she had her first look around her new garden.
So much to see!
So many interesting things to explore...trees to climb, butterflies to chase, it's all quite exhausting really.
Time to curl up and sleep awhile...
So, a couple of weeks ago, I visited the lovely folk at the Castlemaine RSPCA shelter, and came home with this little girl.
She's just 14 months old, a pale "tabby tortie".
After much debate (including a hilarious discussion on Facebook), we named her Audrey, for the eyeliner she wears around her pretty green eyes.
She settled in well, found my bed a comfy place to sleep, and soon learned that our old dog was no threat.
She was supposed to stay inside for several weeks, but oh, how she longed to be out!
Finally the great day came, and she had her first look around her new garden.
So much to see!
So many interesting things to explore...trees to climb, butterflies to chase, it's all quite exhausting really.
Time to curl up and sleep awhile...
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