Sunday 30 December 2018

Vegan recipes page



You may or may not have noticed, but I have added a recipes page to my blog.  Click here or see the link at the top of the page.  It includes links to posts I've made with recipes in them already, and is something I hope to expand on a lot in the new year; so just flagging it up for now.  Maybe I'll link to other recipes, but only ones I actually try myself.  I certainly need a better picture of my slow cooker vegan chilli, that's for certain.  It looks manky here, and I assure you it doesn't taste that way.  Recipes will be simple, vegan and delicious.  None of this fancy 35-ingredients-you've-never-heard-of stuff.  Just nice food that's easy to make.  Because I made it.




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Saturday 29 December 2018

Garlic and Other Surprises


Down on the allotment this morning, pottering about, I come across this:



Looks like garlic to me.  Let's take a closer look:


Yep, that's a clove of garlic that is.  Must have dropped it when I was sowing some of my other cloves.  That green stalk you can see just above it: that's garlic too.  That's what garlic grows into when you plant a clove of it in autumn.  (Here's a video I made all about how to do that).

I found this and another clove just on the surface of the soil.  I gently removed them.  They were already putting down an impressive root structure:


Impressive indeed, but I don't think a clove of garlic would survive much longer above ground.  So I buried them elsewhere, one in my new and emerging bottle herb bed, and another in a spot where a cat likes to shit:


Garlic repels various "pests" of various sizes, cats included.  Aphids are another.  This year I've been spreading my garlic cloves around into smaller patches all over the allotment, in the hope of finally getting cats to stop shitting anywhere I'm growing things I want to eat.  My allotment is not a toilet, OK moggies?  Thank you.

It was a joy to have the opportunity to plant some more garlic, past the time of year when it's recommended to do so.  Pottering on, I spotted this:


This, I am almost certain, is a pea shoot.  Almost certain, because I sowed some peas about 3 or so weeks ago, after reading that this is a good idea, if you want some super-early peas in the early, early spring.  It seems to be working.  I've made myself a note to scatter some more next weekend.  Perhaps this year I could have an outdoor microgreens patch.  I had not considered this.





Related posts

My first week as a microgreen gardener
Weekend Allotment Fun
The Art of Pottering
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Friday 28 December 2018

Give #ExtinctionRebellion some of your money.

It is possible to donate money to #ExtinctionRebellion now, which is something I'm happy about. If you'd like to do that, click here. You can set up a regular donation, or just do it as a one off. 




Shelf Life

Getting a haircut or shaving off a beard after months or years of being all shaggy; cleaning the bathroom or sorting out your kitchen cupboards; adding a new word to your vocabulary that perfectly describes something you genuinely had no idea there was a word for; walking somewhere you've walked ten thousand times before but taking a new and different route, just because...a sudden jolt of consciousness and life into something that had become completely routine.  It's the most mundane of things, sometimes, that have the greatest life-changing power.  Suddenly, the whole world is different, even though nothing (or nothing much) has changed.

Over the course of 2018, I've accumulated four double sets of greenhouse shelving units; £19.99 a pop, eight shelves each.  A total of 32 shelves.  That's about the most boring thing I could have told you about myself, but I'd like you to focus on it anyway.  Shelves are great.  Particularly these kind of cheap, self-assembly-able shelves.

Some are in my flat, and others are in my shed.  Here are the ones in my shed:


I use them for cultivating cuttings...

Sage and rosemary

...taking a closer look at things...

Mushrooms

 ...drying herbs...

Chives

...and generally keeping everything neat and tidy.

Everything in its right place.
My fourth set of shelves arrived only today, and so I now have enough shelves to have some kind of shelving unit in every room in the house.  It's weird how happy this makes me, but it's also completely normal.

In the bedroom, I'm slowly morphing the shelves into a kind of wardrobe:


These shelves in particular are great because while you have to build the frame one shelf space at a time, you don't have to put the actual shelf in the space, meaning you can have a double height space, if you see what I mean.  The shelves themselves are just a kind of wire mesh structure, that you can add it, or leave out, as needs require.

In the windows, I have this:

Lounge window shelves
In the kitchen, I have this:


Even in the bathroom, I have this:


And finally, in the bedroom, I have this:


It's not so easy to tell from that angle, but what you're actually looking at is a double whammy of shelves, right there: some on the windowsill, some in front of the window at the head of the bed.  I like to think it of growing my own curtains.

The most important thing about all of this, of course, is how it allows me to bring more plants into my home.  The more plants you have in your home, the better your life will be.  This is something everyone knows, and something we can all agree on without the need for further discussion.

Anyway, as I assembled the newest shelves and found their places, I was taken over by a sense of wellbeing for reasons I can't articulate.  It had something to do with the calm that comes come commonly after any good old tidying up, but it was something more than that.  A feeling of completeness, of everything being as it should.  I don't really need to say anything else about this, except to remind you: find your "shelves", my friends, whatever they may be.




Related posts

2018: Year of the Shed
Unshopping
Mundane Freedoms
The Great Indoors
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Wednesday 26 December 2018

Vegan Christmas Dinner



It'll be my five year "veganniversary" on January 1st, but this year was only the second fully vegan Christmas dinner I've shared an experience of with others.  My parents have been vegetarian for over 20 years now, or technically "pescatarian" (they still eat fish) and before two years ago, I gratefully tucked into to my (always delicious) vegan Christmas feast alone, as they went with swordfish, tuna, or some other  seabody.  Last year though, for the first time, and with only the gentlest of pressure from me (honestly), the three of us went fully vegan for Christmas dinner.  What we had was so incomparably yummy that it was unanimously decided to have exactly the same meal again this year.  I think that counts as having become a tradition.

So allow me to indulge in some standard-issue vegan smugness (you can't stop me, it's my blog) as I share with you the recipes and some pictures of what we ate.

For main course was Chestnut Cottage Pie, the recipe taken from The Vegan Cookbook - Tony & Yvonne Bishop-WestonIt has an implausible, extravagant number of ingredients that combine into a magnificent, flavoursome whole:

  • 125g dried chestnuts
  • 1.2 litres vegetable stock
  • 750g potatoes, chopped
  • 1 sweet potato, chopped
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 6 tomatoes, chopped
  • 2 onions, chopped
  • 1 carrot, chopped
  • 125g cauliflower, chopped
  • 1 green pepper, deseeded and chopped
  • 1 small courgette, chopped
  • 1 tablespoon chopped dates
  • 1 tablespoon yeast extract
  • 6 sprigs of rosemary, leaves only, finely chopped
  • 3 tablespoons sweetened soya milk
  • 1 tablespoon chopped parsley
  • 1 heaped teaspoon cornflour
  • 1 teaspoon carob powder
  • 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon blackstrap molasses
  • 1 dessertspoon tomato puree
  • 2 dessertspoons orange juice
  • Salt and pepper
For the stock:
  • 500g mixed vegetables, excluding potatoes, parsnips or other starchy root vegetables, chopped
  • 1 garlic clove
  • 6 peppercorns
  • 1 bouquet garni
  • 1.2 litres water


1.  Place all the ingredients in a large saucepan.  Bring to the boil and simmer gently for 30 minutes, skimming when necessary.

2.  Strain the stock, cool the refrigerate it.  It will keep for up to a week in the refrigerator, or up to 3 months in the freezer.

My Dad made this, unsupervised, so how closely he followed the recipe is a matter of opinion.  I like to think he was meticulous.  Anyway, here is the recipe copied exactly from the source:

RECIPE

1.  Cover the dried chestnuts with the stock and soak overnight, or boil them in the stock for 1 hour.

2.  Place the potatoes and sweet potato in a pan of water, bring to the boil, then simmer until soft - about 25 minutes.

3.  Meanwhile, heat the olive oil in a pan and add the tomatoes, all the remaining vegetables, the dates, yeast extract and rosemary.  Add this mixture to the chestnuts and their liquid, much of which the chestnuts will have absorbed, and simmer for 15-20 minutes.

4.  Preheat the oven to 180C.  Drain the potatoes and mash them with the soya milk.  Stir in the parsley, plus some salt and pepper.

5.  Place the cornflour and carob powder in a small bowl, add the vinegar, molasses, tomato puree and orange juice and mix into a paste.  Add the paste to the chestnut mixture, then stir over a low heat until the liquid thickens.

6.  Divide the chestnut mixture equally between six 12cm pie dishes.  Place a layer of mashed potato on top.  Bake for about 20 minutes, until lightly browned.




Delicious, nutritious, and not all malicious.  No animals were harmed in the making of this pie.  It will give you, by my count, 10 of your "5 a day" (assuming chestnuts count as one) so if you want to, you can eat nothing but crisps on Boxing Day and still come out on top.  




And now for dessert.   This was Banana Nut Pie from The Yoga Cookbook - Vegetarian Food for Body and Mind - Recipes from the Sivananda Vedanta Centres  This has fewer ingredients but that's alright, it's not a competition.

For the pie shell:

200g rolled oats
175g wholewheat flower
1 tablespoon date syrup
150ml oil
200g sunflower seeds
water for mixing

For the filling:

200g cashew nuts
150g pitted dates
1 litre water
2 tbsp arrowroot
1 tsp grated orange rind
1 tsp vanilla essence
2 bananas, plus slices decoration
200g chopped walnuts

RECIPE

1.  Preheat the oven to 200C.  Oil a 23cm loose-bottomed round flan tin.  To make the pie shell, mix all the ingredients together, adding a little water to bind them.

2.  Spread the mixture in the greased tin, using your hand to spread the mix evenly around the base and sides of the tin.  Bake in the oven for 10-15 minutes, until golden.  Allow the pie shell to cool completely before removing from the tin.

3.  To make the filling, put all the ingredients, except the bananas and chopped walnuts, in a food processor or blender and puree until smooth.  Transfer the mixture to a pan and cook over a low heat until it thickens.  Remove from the heat and allow to cool.

4.  Slice the two bananas into the pie shell.  Pour the cooled filling on top and decorate with banana slices and the chopped nuts.  Chill until set.



My Mum made this, also unsupervised.  I was not involved in the creation of this Christmas dinner in any way except the eating of it.  It was entirely vegan, and entirely delicious.  I couldn't recommend either course highly enough.  If you're considering going vegan for your Christmas dinner, or already have and need some help enticing your more carnivorous relatives to the table, here are two excellent suggestions.







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Tuesday 25 December 2018

Persicaria microcephala




Thanks to reddittor /u/Croco-nut I can now reliably inform you that this weird plant I posted about yesterday is called, Persicaria microcephala.  Also known as "purple fantasy" (but then so are some other things, as is often the way with plants) and "red dragon" now that I've learned more about it, I think it's a definite contender for the 'inedible bed' on my allotment, so-called because it's where I plant things that look interesting but that can't (usually) be eaten. 

I'm over in Yorkshire with my parents for Christmas, and my Dad's specimen (acquired at the same time as mine) is far superior to my own.  This isn't just because it's in Yorkshire (though obviously that's a decisive factor; nothing has ever been made worse by putting it in Yorkshire) but, I deduce, because it's had a good deal more sunshine.




Another reason to take it outside, methinks.  Merry Christmas, again.





Related posts

Look at this Weird Plant
Prayer Plant Pregnancy
Snake Plant Propagation Time
Rubber and Cheese
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Monday 24 December 2018

Apple Wine News




I find homebrewers and winemakers a little intimidating.  They seem to be very good and asking questions I can't possibly answer, because I don't even understand them.  This should probably prompt me to learn me about the science of wine-making, but it hasn't yet.  This, of course, is my fault, not theirs.

Yesterday I asked whether my apple wine was ready for bottling.  Answers were confusing.  Someone suggested I dilute the two demijohns, because there was too much space left above the liquid for oxygen, which can lead to vinegar.  I don't know why this is true, but true, nevertheless, is what it is.  Others suggested I do no such thing.


I settled this morning on tipping the contents of one into the other, thereby depriving any potential vinegar of its opportunity to exist.  Hopefully, it's not too late.


I'm pleased with how much the liquid (whatever it may turn out to be) has settled, and begun to clear.  This is what you want in a wine. It certainly tasted more like wine than anything else, and much less sweeter than it did when I last racked it off, which I can only assume means that the yeast has gone to work on the sugar. 

What remained from the demijohn went into a bottle, with just a little bit to spare. I'll leave this to "clear" some more (disturbing it has turned it quite cloudy again) before deciding whether or not to bottle the rest.  In the meantime I think I need to invest in a hydrometer. 






Related posts

More Wine!
Wining. Every Day. 
Water, Wine and Other Liquids


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Look at this Weird Plant





I acquired this marvellous, monstrous specimen from a relative this year, bewitched by its triangular leaves. I haven't taken the time to work out what it is yet, so I just call it the triangle plant.

That's all I have to say about that, the rest of this post will just be waffle. But if you're reading and happen to know what this is, please comment below. I recently opened up commenting to anyone, so a google account is no longer required, after learning of the imminent demise of Google+ (which is actually a bit of a shame in my opinion, I thought it was quite nice). Anyway here are some close ups:




I've started a thread on /r/whatsthisplant to assist me.  So far the only suggestion is "ornamental polygonum" but I'm not convinced.




Here's a video about my indoor plants you might like, if you like plants:


If you don't like plants, you're making a mistake.  Merry Christmas!

UPDATE: It's a persicaria microcephala.  So now you know.


Related posts

I'm making a terrarium
Prayer Plant Pregnancy
My Windowsill Herb Garden


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