On carrots, literal and metaphorical.
This last weekend, we realised that it had been some months since we’d had a proper day out which didn’t involve calling into a DIY shop of some sort, or going to visit someone who might be getting rid of indecent quantities of timber, or genearlly ferreting out something to do with building/demolishing/re-rendering some part of our vast empire. So, we determined to rectify this sorry state of affairs forthwith, and buggered off to Cornwall for a proper miniature holiday. You know: like a real holiday, but, er, shorter. And without accommodation. Or, in fact, being away for more than, um, a day. But still – a change is as good as a whatsit, and all that, and a change we did indeed manage.
The morning we spent getting lost finding our way to Pencarrow, a large stately house between Bodmin and Camelford, while the rain attempted to move from spitting to tipping. We realised about an hour’s drive from home that we’d come out armed to the teeth with a full change of clothes for the small girl, food, drinks, a flask, a nappy-changing bag and even a spare pair of shoes and jeans for me, but we’d completely forgotten coats for ourselves; fortunately, Camelford smiled on us, and a charity shop provided a fleece for Quercus while a hardware shop had a surprising range of lightweight rainproof jackets. We managed a picnic – despite having forgotten mayonnaise or butter for our otherwise bare bread – under overcast skies and walnut trees laden with green bombs, and the Pencarrow peacocks are as lovely as I remember them being when I went there as a child.
From Pencarrow we went to Boscastle, for a walk on the cliffs, around the valley, and through the village itself, for most of which the small girl slept in the sling on my back, waking just in time for tea and scones at a riverside eatery. Her initiation into the greatest of British traditions, fish and chips, took place later in the evening, at long past small-person bedtime o’clock; one of my enduring memories of this time will be of us sitting on the giant breakwater on the beach at Westward Ho (!), passing chips and morsels of fish to a small girl wrapped tightly in her father’s fleece, while she grinned at the wind in her hair and commented on seagulls approaching.
It’s astonishing the difference that one day off can make. We’ve all felt a bit like new people since Saturday, and we’ve all been much happier for it. There’s always something we should be doing, or somewhere we should be tidying, or something that could do with a wash/change/paint/sand/drill, and it’s not that everyday life hasn’t got lots of carrotty lovelinesses of its own, of course, but rather that sometimes, in order to appreciate them, it helps to be able to view them from a distance, I find; the carrots of proper daytrips are thus many and varied, in that you have a good day out, which is a carrot in its own right, but then you have the side-effect carrot of recognising your daily life carrots too. Gosh. What a lot of carrots.
We have determined to make these days off, these steppings-out from our daily lives, a more frequent happening, if only to give us time and space to remember how good our life together is, and how lucky we are to live as we do, in a place we love (even if it does drive us demented sometimes), with people who make us happy (and, er, demented).
So, talking of carrots, which we weren’t, really… I’ve been at the 52 Recipes malarky again, with the following:
Saffron-braised carrots with broad bean pilaf
Ingredients
For the carrots:
About eight large carrots, chopped as you fancy
A large pinch of saffron
A mug of veggie stock
A large onion, peeled and chopped
A generous sprinkling of cumin, coriander, parsley and thyme
A rather more timid sprinkling of Tabasco
Giant wodges of chopped garlic, so indecent in quantity as to make numbers futile
A slug of olive/sunflower oil
Then…
Basically, sling the lot in a pan, bring to the boil, and simmer for about twenty minutes or so, lid on in an attempt not to curry the entire house. (Or, you know, curry away: I myself quite like the smell of tandoori pillows at bedtime.) (I think some chard or spinach would add to this rather well, and possibly some potatoes too. Otherwise it is rather… carrotty.)
For the pilaf:
A mug of broad beans
A large mug of brown rice
2 red onions, chopped
A handful of sultanas
A handful of pinenuts
A handful of chopped unsulphured apricots
A sprinkling of cumin
Then…
Boil the broad beans briskly for about five to ten minutes, drain, and park somewhere. Sling rice, onions and cumin in a pan and add boiling water to cover the rice; bring back to the boil on the hob, put a lid on and switch off the power, and the residual heat should do the rest. Sling the rest of the ingredients – including the beans, because who would forget the beans? The beans which are part of the title? Not me – oh no – in for the last ten minutes or so before you eat, and there you go. The carrotty bit over the top of the rice goes really well, though Quercus tells me it’s lacking something. By which he means SAUSAGES.
(I’m spending a week cooking dinner from Cranks Fast Food by Nadine Abensur, because I’ve had the book for about eight years, and have only done the stuffed courgette recipe so far, because I find the writing style so off-putting, and, frankly, so deeply pretentious as to be quite toe-curling. Then there’s the fact taht every recipe in it seems to revolve around cumin, tabasco, tamari and something else that a delicatessen in Kensington might be able to order for you, but which your average supermarket probably hasn’t heard of. So, I thought I’d give it a bit of a blitz, to see if it’s worthy of its shelf room. So far, I like the recipes well enough, though I find myself changing ingredients here and there, and ignoring half of the method; the jury’s still out on its long-term residence here, though.
On the menu this week: stuffed courgettes; green beans, tomatoes and garlic; Boston baked beans; herby gnocchi (with a radically different sauce from the recipe one); something to do with pasta and, probably tabasco and cumin. Wish me luck… )
(Image courtesy of The Salty Spoon, because I have that very casserole dish, and because my camera, now six, is in the process of dying a slow and painful death; anyone got any recommendations for cameras which don’t break the bank?)
happyfor you guys to have had that break. weall need those shifts, little changes, relaxing shake-ups. it’s similar to telling mamas to take a break for themselves. distance makes a difference. mental refreshment makes an enormous difference.
makes me ‘home’sick when you mention boscastle and stately homes….
So pleased you’re finding the time and pennies to have some days out. I think it’s only too easy to think you haven’t got enough of either, and push on with projects, not realising the advantages to be had from a good break, even if it is only a day here and there. I know we were guilty of not taking enough days out, when we were first in renovation mode. I can’t believe it was 15 years ago now…
Did you see that programme on toddlers and sleep last night on C4? It amused me enormously. I think even the ‘nicey’ person would have been 1000% too ‘harsh’ for you though
Mon: glad you’re doing OK with the in-laws, too. Nice pics, by the way.
BW: nope – didn’t see it; haven’t got a TV. I’ve come across Chireal whatsit before, however, and yup, I don’t think her way would be my choice. I’ve known her to help some people, though, so each to their own, I guess. And yes – so nice to get a break, and hopefully we’ll remember how much more productive it made the rest of the weekend, too. The long-term effects are worth any short-term loss!
I think you mean Westward Ho! (!), rather than Westward Ho (!)
Oh to live in a place with an exclamation mark in the name. Would this liven up Slough, or Milton Keynes? Slough! Milton Keynes! Oh, OK then – maybe not.
yea for daytrips! & lovely carrot dishes
Carrots – of all variety – sound v lovely. I have a camping trip planned for Sept but just realized that will be the first carrotty thing since…. March? Could be why Despond is Sloughing just a bit around here!
Have you got a TV card in your Mac? If so, do be careful – I know of someone who was fined £1000 for not having a TV licence, not having a TV, but having a standard PC, which all have TV cards these days. Don’t know if Macs come with them as standard – but if you had to give your name and address in when you bought it, they’ll have passed it to TV Licensing for ‘investigation’.
glad you had a good day out:) I purchased my fuji camera on ebay £40 i think and it is great, was second hand but they had uypgraded and it was like new
Quercus: I just don’t think that punctuation, no matter how dramatic, is going to cut it with those particular cases… It was a noble effort, that said.
petoskystone:
Megan: it’s the creepy, infiltratey-sloughey-desponds that you have to watch, I think – the ones which sneak up on you because you’ve been too busy for carrots, or just haven’t noticed how long it’s been and so on. Sly, those despondy sloughs, they are. Bring on the camping! Are you headed somewhere exotic, or just for a change?
BW: nope – didn’t have to give a name and address, and am pretty sure it hasn’t got a TV card. So far, we’ve had no trouble with the licensing bods – have just written and told them the situation. Our aerial is visibly broken, for a start, and it’s now been over two years since we had a TV working here, so far with no problems bar the odd letter checking our situation hasn’t changed. That said, Quercus’s mother once had an investigator of theirs attempt to stick a foot in the door when told he couldn’t come in, so I do know they aren’t always mild-mannered. It’s the assumption that of course everyone has a TV! who could not? that gets me – it was so full of tripe when we last watched it that I was only surprised that so many people continue to shell out the fee and whatnot. Apparently fewer than 8% of the population have a broadband connection but not a television; that suits me fine.
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ambermoggie: have been contemplating eBay; also Amazon, for the free shipping. Must actually put some time into it shortly, as am a bit ham-strung pictorially at the moment, and I miss it! Digital cameras are wonderfully freeing, aren’t they?
Ha! So you did, actually, go to a hardware shop!
Heading off to local mountains – but not the right-on-the-doorstep ones. No, we’re driving at LEAST an hour. So… exoticish? But there’s rather a lot of traveling heading my way so sanity is being purchased CHEAP for now!
Ally: aah. Um.
Megan: exciting and budget gets my vote, eeeevery time.
that sounds like the most divine way to spend a day — i’m positively GREEN over the thought of rain and wind (manna to my soul — especially since it’s stinking bloody hot here)…..and the sea….*sigh*
Mel: it’s tipping it down today – don’t feel too envious!