Tuesday 31 May 2011

surprise snazzie snake shoooos

I came across these whilst looking for smart dresses. I think these are nifty.



LK bennett

dear jaeger....

....could I have one of your ric rac satchels please? I see they are in the sale so maybe you could spare one as a present? Thank you very much, kind regards to you.


Jaeger

doing the spuds


Busy busy, keeping things watered. I got sunburnt and then caught in the brilliant rain. I've put in the main potatoes. We'd prepared for doing them no dig, as I mentioned before, but then the deliveries of compost finished and I couldn't find anywhere to get straw bales from so I was a bit behind. In the end I made do with comfrey, straw from wilkos and the manure that we get at the plot.

Chitted spuds down, a layer of cut comfrey leaves, a layer of straw and then all covered with manure. Please note my nice spiral design. You can see the layers quite well below. Fingers crossed that they grow. We'll see.

dough

The sourdough starter has been plodding along, it's really quite exciting to have the beast in the corner, to chuck it some food and experience the stink go from bad to pleasantly odd.

In this picture the beast is hungry.


I made the first loaves and they worked really well, I was surprised so well. Unfortunately we ate most of them (yes, two big bloomers) before I took a photo. This is the tiny end that is left. The bread is definitely a sour one, it has the twang. I think it will take a bit of experimenting to find the best things to eat it with. It was really nice as toast. But definitely sour.

weiging in, having a big go

I have new scales that weigh tiny amounts, down to 0.01g. This is good when one is trying to make small amounts of moisturiser for example as it will only need tiny amounts of some ingredients. It seems to get such scales you have to buy them from ebay or amazon from places where 'folks who also purchased this item also bought" tiny zip lock baggies or herb grinders. It's quite funny, I guess the market to people hand making face cream or toner is a small one, compared to teenage boys with a "supply business".

Anyweigh (ha ha) I had great fun finding really small things to measure on my new scale before getting on with proper business.

New face cream, cleansing bar and a tester hair clay for ralph.




Cleanser is a bit of a mis-match version of the ones I like from lush, it's good to know I can make something for myself though. It seems to work well so for a first attempt I'm really pleased. The hair clay is too solid so will have another go with that.

Monday 9 May 2011

leggings again

Great, frontier, hair metal, tie dye.


I reckons they are too expensive but I suppose that's not a surprise.

topshop

Thursday 5 May 2011

eat more herbs

I have been getting the mentor emails from learning herbs after reading a bit from them and watching some videos about getting more nourishing herbs into your meals.

Today I watched 'way of the herbal ninja', ha! Stealthy use of herbs, I like it. It's a nice video, I guess I didn't learn anything I didn't already know but I think the more bit and pieces you watch the more the wisdom becomes second nature and assured.

Apparently if I link to it, so others can go see I get some books to download. So here goes.

herb nija!


I'm fond of tumeric, currently trying to get some roots to grow.

crackers

Finally I've conquered one of the last processed food mountain. The dilemma at the supermarket will be no more. We have struck crackers in the kitchen.



I've very nearly eaten them all now. Wow, I made crackers. They are quite firm but not so much it hurts your teeth, a bit curvy so they snap if you butter them but I'm happy to know I will now never be without a cracker. Unless we run out of flour.

I used this recipe from 101 cookbooks but added some sesame and poppy seeds in honour of the sainsbury's ones I shall no longer be buying. Mine are thicker I think than the originals but I did plan that. I see now an oatmeal (is that just porridge in english?) cracker recipe that is next on the list. To be fair oatmeal cracker sounds nicer than porridge cracker.

I was just looking at mightyfoods following mention of the midnight hummus. Looks to be some nice food one there. I do love hummus.

Tuesday 3 May 2011

hat needs

After having to lay down with my head in the shed, it being too hot and me getting all warm in the brain, I think I'll get a sun hat.


I'm not convinced that I like hats, I don't like having a hot head so I have to see if the hat or the sun does the most warming. I like this one from topshop.

bee lodgers

There are bees in the belfry. There are bees in the compost bin.


Big bumbler mamma bee came out and buzzed around cross that I had disturbed everyone. Sorry guys. So I'll have to get the compost later, more carefully from the other side of the heap.

salwars done

I've made the salwars. It took me a while to get around to it, silly really as they were pretty easy to put together. I think they might need ironing now I've washed them.


I'm pleased with my big pleats, more at the back than the front, but went a little bit funny working theses out...now if I know how big I want the waist to be and it is now this big.....I put little buttons on the ankle cuffs, it's possible I'm too fond of buttoned cuffs.


The pattern worked out well, I think they are a bit too full but not in an unwearable way. Also they fall a little stiffly due to the volume of fabric and look a little bunch at the back but wearing and washing might relax this. I'll be using a lighter fabric or making the legs less full next time I think. Fabric is organic cotton from here, aubergine crossweave.

Not bad.

path to trouble




We are doing well with the allotment. We had some purple sprouting broccoli which was so exciting I had been trying to hoard it in the fridge to show to ralph's mum when she visits. Seeds have been going in on time and we have been making progress with the works to fix the years of neglect, dealing with the huge bramble hedge and working through the patches of bindweed roots. The bindweed grows everywhere so we have been working in patches to fork over and remove as much of the root as we can. It's a really crap job, no fun at all and made even more frustrating by the knowledge that we have to do it because the people who had our plot before were neglectful and had no consideration for the future people who would take over the plot.



The broad beans overwintered really well and I'm in love with the peas.


As part of the our progression through the plot, clearing areas and establishing a layout, we have been pulling up the carpet-matted roots-soil-weeds 'weed suppressant' that has been left to become one with the earth. There's nothing quite like attempting to dig a hole only to find that several inches into your stride, under what you think is earth, is a size indeterminable layer of matted plastic that is impossible to break through. We have been finding the edge and pulling it up. One of these areas is the main path onto out plot, we pulled it all up, cleared out the roots and set out a new edge bed for flowers and crops and put clover seed for a new path.


And then..... we are told that all is not well with this. The lady next door is worried.

She has contacted the secretary to find out what we are doing/complain/fuss. Apparently she needs to walk on this area of our plot, because she has ME, to water her plants and now our plants are in her way. We were told that our plot came up to the edge of her raised beds, we checked with her and yes, "that is yours, do what you want there" etc etc. We had a meeting with the secretary and explained this and asked to confirm where our plot ends, which actually is all that matters in this discussion. Off the top of her head, there and then she appointed our boundary about a foot into out plot, you know, the width of a path for our neighbour. We can't argue with this, we don't know where it's meant to be as we can only go on what we are told but it doesn't half seem like a haphazard way to divvy up the plots. Just tell people whatever with no offer to check plans or anything. To argue about this would be painful and to ask for clarification would be seen as us being difficult and unfeeling. But now we know the 'official' boundary we'll just have to establish some kind of stompy-footed-sneaky-selfish-fag butt dropping-neighbour protection. I'm annoyed that she made it all our problem rather than looking at her own bed layout but hey, she wants all she can get. All she needed was to leave a walkway down the middle of the bed she needs to water. And maybe not build her greenhouse right up to the edges of her plot (another part of her argument as to why she needed access). Bah to her.


Our crimson clover is lovely.

I've been working on the potato experiment, no-dig potatosie planting. With a think layer of newspaper and card, manure then a compost well-trench. Spuds in, a layer of cut comfrey and then compost over the top.



Seedlings in the bed of contention. Calendula, spinach, love-in-a-mist, borage etc.


Ralph likes to do the digging with the adz.