Tuesday 26 April 2011

question cat poses

The hornsea saffron biscuit crock is a kind of functional model of question cat. We did a photo shoot to try and capture this. I don't think I explained the concept well to her.







'kraut


The experiments began. I have a book on wild fermentation which is brilliant and spurred on by the cabbage mountain in our fridge we started with sauerkraut. Possibly the least scary sounding thing in the book for ralph who has issues with off/squishy/furry food. This book is brilliant, it has some really great instructions and introduces a wide range of techniques, none of which seem out of the grasp of people with a sensibly stocked kitchen. Most do not need any special starters although some will require an exciting parcel through the post. Thank you to ralph's friend sophie who sent us a kombucha mother all the way from japan and started all this nonsense.


The coffee crock and beer bottle set up for attempt number one. This has hand grated red cabbage in it with a jar top held down by the water filled bottle.


I mentioned before the hunt for hornsea pots and these are the crocks I got from ebay. There is another saffron pattern jar too. Some scrubbed pebbles and a flattened out bit of milk bottle hold down the contents.


For this batch we used white cabbage, carrot and apple grated in the magimix. I had more trouble with this one, it didn't yield much water and it was hard to keep it under the liquid. The milk bottle plastic is a bit flimsy, something more rigid will be needed I think.


The cabbage was in the jars for a pretty long time, 4 weeks for the red maybe and 3 for the other one, maybe a bit more. The red one mostly just tastes like very salty cabbage but the second one with the carrots actually has a kind of tang which I think is the ferment, it's nice. Ralph likes it.

Success.

Friday 1 April 2011

slave to the dishes

I just lost an hour or so wondering if anyone has thought of a pleasant way to let your dishes dry. Our ever overflowing draining board, which does have a flat rack, but then spills over onto a tea towel on the side is starting to make me a bit sad. We are pretty regular with the washing up but I guess if you actually cook real food you are going to use many pots and bowls. There is always a mean dish mountain.

It seems that at some point dish drainers got new fangled, but as yet are to become aesthetically welcome. Apart from this one, you can get it from john lewis. But where does the actual washing up go? Obviously some people's food is dispensed from a nozzle directly onto the plate. It looks nice though.


I think it'll have to be something along the lines of this one...


This plastic coated wire does have a kind of utilitarian charm. It seems they are made in britain too which surprised me. Good.

Glad to share my dish washing accessory knowledge.

bucket

This place seems to be a little like plumo.

These would be good on the 'stead or as I should say urban homestead. I say that as some mean folks are trying to stop people calling their places urban homesteads, they want the term all for themselves. If you do a web search I'm sure it'll come up, oh or look here.

Anyway, leather bucket at nkuku.