nanila: wrong side of the mirror (me: wrong side of the mirror)
( Dec. 28th, 2021 09:04 am)
This is my list for keeping track of the recipes I try out from my slow cooker Christmas present recipe books. We'll see how long I can keep this up next year once I'm not on holiday!

BBC goodfood "Slow Cooker Favourites"
NB: This book is a little annoying because quite a few of the recipes only seem to involve the slow cooker as an afterthought and suggest a considerable amount of prep either prior to, or after, putting the ingredients in the slow cooker. I plan to largely ignore such instructions so my versions of these are going to be modified.

Recipes tried:
  • Better-than-baked beans, p. 10. Made on 26 December 2021. This called for cooking most of the short ingredient list in a pan on the hob before putting it in the slow cooker, which I found ridiculous, so I just browned the onions and bacon and dumped everything else in straight from the can/chopping board. Made it with butter beans, ate it for breakfast with fresh bread. It was great. Next time I will crumble in the stock cube instead of dissolving it in 200 mL of water, to make the sauce thicker.
  • Herby bean-sausage stew, p. 22. Made on 08 January 2022. This was a very simple recipe so I added some stuff to it, including a crumbled stock cube, garlic granules, thyme, salt and pepper (!!), and a splash of Worcestershire sauce. I suspect it would have been quite bland otherwise as the only herbs were basil and oregano. It was pretty tasty. Humuhumu ate one of the chipolatas as well, which I count as a win because normally she won't touch anything that's been in homemade tomato sauce. 
  • Goulash in a dash, p. 112. Made on 10 January 2022, 08 February 2022 and 04 March 2022. This was awesome. The first time, I had no potatoes and a larger quantity of stewing beef than the recipe called for, so while I mostly followed the ingredient list, I deviated on quantities. I also added caraway seeds, chilli powder and a spoonful of corn flour on the advice of a different recipe. Served with couscous. Keiki yummed it up, as did the adults. 
  • Big batch bolognese, p. 80. Made on 13 January 2022 and 26 March 2022. Left out the bacon, mushrooms and glass of red wine (dry January), and two-thirds'd the recipe because of the amount of mince we had to hand. It was really good, we ate it over rice rather than pasta.
  • One-pan chicken couscous, p. 46. Made on 23 January 2022. I tripled this recipe because I had 700g of chicken. This meant using 3 tablespoons of smoked harissa paste, which felt like a lot and as turned out, was. It was very spicy and even the bloke needed to add buttermilk to it when eating it. I didn't add the couscous directly to the slow cooker as the children would never have eaten that if I did. Very tasty though, will make this again. Possibly with a little less harissa paste, and a tub of natural yoghurt for serving, so we don't have to use the buttermilk that we normally keep on hand for soda bread.
Recipe planning:
  • Spiced carrot & lentil soup, p. 26.
  • Mexican chicken stew, p. 48.
  • Five-a-day tagine, p. 144.

Miss South "Slow Cooked"
Miss South takes the view that most prep is unnecessary apart from caramelising onions or garlic. She is also very keen on using the cheapest  ingredients, especially meat, because everything gets tender in the slow cooker, and takes the trouble to describe where it should be possible to obtain those ingredients. She's fortunate enough to live in London where she can easily acquire unusual ingredients, herbs, and spices, but recognises that not everyone does and suggests alternatives. I like this positioning.

Recipes tried:
  • Macaroni Cheese, p.107. Made on 27 December 2021, 15 January 2022, 29 January 2022. This was really good. Even Humuhumu liked it without dumping an inordinate quantity of ketchup on it, and it involves mustard powder and white pepper. She asked me what was in it and I told her I had made it "as simply as possible". (Muahaha) It calls for evaporated milk, which I didn't have, so I substituted double cream that was left over from making Christmas trifle and that was fine. I also love that it didn't require doing anything to the 500g of dried macaroni other than coating it in corn flour prior to putting it in the slow cooker. The crunchy bits at the bottom of the cooker went down well with Keiki and me. I may butter the slow cooker next time as it did require some elbow grease to remove.
  • Tarka Dal, p 102. Made on 03 January 2022, January 2023. This is AWESOME (capslock fully merited). I doubled the recipe apart from the caramelised onions (I used 2 instead of 4), and I didn't have fenugreek seeds so I used ground fenugreek and didn't double the amount of that either. It was absolutely delicious and I will make this regularly. Additional: I'm finding that I don't seem to have to cook things for nearly as long as Miss South recommends. She said to put the slow cooker on high for 8 hours. I put mine on low for 5.5 hours and that was plenty. I turned it off and let it sit (another 2 hours) until dinner time, and it was just the right temperature for eating with fresh basmati rice and steamed mangetout. Perhaps I have an overpowered slow cooker?
  • Spiced Carrot and Parsnip Soup  p. 151. Made on 16 January 2022. I'm not very enamoured of this. It is quite a healthy recipe. Possibly too healthy. It needed a lot of salt to make it palatable (to me, anyway), and I ended up dumping in the leftover sauce from making chicken adobo, which gave it chicken fat, soy sauce, and sesame oil, all of which helped. It was a little weird, ultimately, as the adobo flavours didn't quite match the Indian spices from the recipe, but at least I enjoyed eating it. I won't make this again. 
  • Saag Aloo, p. 180. Made on 22 January 2022, 07 February 2022, 04 June 2022, 21 October 2022, 20 December 2022. This was so easy, I actually bothered to caramelise the onions, just because I like caramelised onions. The recipe didn't call for this. I didn't add the grated coconut because I didn't have any (!) but I did add a leftover half of an avocado. It's super tasty, but this is the second of Miss South's recipes that would benefit from a good deal more salt. I didn't add it to the pot directly this time but sprinkled it on top in the form of adjika spice mix.
Recipe planning:
  • French onion soup, p. 142.
  • Cuban style black beans, p. 88.
My recipes
  • My usual chilli. Made on 04 January, 27 February, 2 May, 5 June 2022, 28 October, 19 November, 3 December 2022, 5 February 2023, 11 February 2023.This consists of browning a 500g packet of mince (either beef or vegetarian depending on what I have to hand) in a pan on the hob, then dumping it into the slow cooker with the following. I use a teaspoon to scoop out the spices from their jars but I would hesitate to be accurate about the actual quantities.
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nanila: me (Default)
( May. 4th, 2025 01:34 pm)


I rather missed the boat on this one, apologies for its lateness. In my defence, we've mostly not been in the UK for the past two weeks.

April starts off quite domestic with lots of cat clips, and finishes in central Europe with lots of adventure clips. We travelled from [home] to Vienna, Austria via nine different trains, one of which morphed into a German rail replacement bus services which turned out to be terribly civilised.
  1. Who was your first crush?

    Real person: It was a boy named Colin, in the fifth grade. I would have been ten years old. I can't remember anything about him except he had blue eyes and I could make him laugh until he cried.

    Fictional TV character: Jean-Luc Picard.

    Fictional literary character: Sherlock Holmes.

  2. Are you an introvert or an extrovert?

    I have extrovert energy, but I'm an introvert and I very much need my alone time.

  3. What is your favorite non-sexual thing you like to do with the love of your life?

    I can't think of a particular favourite. I just enjoy his company.

  4. What is one quirky habit your partner does that either annoys you or makes you grin?

    This does both: throwing his pants at the laundry basket and missing. Like, every single day.

  5. Do you believe in monogamous relationships?

    It works for me. I do understand they're not for everyone.
Mushroom time lapse

The box had to sit in the dark for three months for the mycelium to form inside the black plastic, but once released, the mushrooms grew to edible size in just over a week!

Here's what they looked like just before harvest:

20250411_070409

(You may have to click the top image through to Flickr to view the time lapse video. For some reason the YouTube version uploaded as a short and I can't work out how to get to the embed code.)
nanila: me (Default)
( Apr. 1st, 2025 09:32 am)


Contains the usual round of cats, kids, a little bit more work than usual because I spent a lot of time in the lab, and a quick trip to Cornwall.
  1. How often do you typically shower/bath?

    Once a day.

  2. Do you prefer showering or taking a bath?

    Shower in the morning, bath at night.

  3. What's the longest you've ever gone without a shower/bath?

    48 hours at most, in recent memory. I've probably gone longer on a lengthy camping trip.

  4. What's your favorite personal hygiene product?

    Moisturiser. My skin tends towards dryness so I have little tubes of hand cream everywhere- desk, car, dresser, coat pockets, bags. I favour the L'occitane ones.

  5. Do you shave your legs and/or beard? If so, how often?

    Yes, legs, erratically in winter, regularly in spring / summer. I don't have a beard.
  1. If you were a crayon, which color would you want to be?

    To no one’s surprise: black.

    Which color do you think you would be regardless of what you wanted?

    Also, black.

    Would you rather be used and get blunt, broken and lose your wrapper, or not be used and stay pristine?

    The former. I would want to be worn to a minimal nub, lost under a piece of furniture, and chewed to bits by the family pet. I would feel as if I had truly fulfilled my crayon-ish purpose then.

    Would you rather be in a small set of crayons or a large set?

    I always loved the glorious rainbow in those big boxes of crayons, so definitely a large set.

    Would you rather be Crayola, or a different brand?

    The Crayola brand (and wrapper) is iconic, so I would like that, but as long as I got to live my best crayon life, I don’t mind.
Great thing to which I am *drumroll pleez* 13 years late to the party: "Elementary".

I just started watching it. I am on S1E4 and I have already lost count of Lucy Liu's eyerolls. The scenery is so well chewed it should have disintegrated. I am in love.
  1. How far back can you trace your family tree?
    That depends on which side of the family (maternal or paternal) we’re talking about. I have distant relatives who have done a lot of work tracing back the ancestry of various people from my grandparents’ generation to the late 1700s / early 1800s. However, there are also substantial gaps, particularly on the paternal side. I couldn’t tell you the names of my great-grandparents on that side.

  2. What is the most interesting (or strange) thing you've heard about one of your relatives?
    I knew that one of my great-grandparents had been a chemist at Eastman Kodak, but until recently I hadn’t gone and looked up the various patents he filed in the mid-20th century.

  3. How do you feel about legacy names like John Henry Smith IV or naming children after other relatives?
    I think whatever other people choose to do about naming their children is their business, although if you name your child something like “SanDeE*” I may have to fight the urge to judge you for overcomplicating the administrative burden they’ll endure for the rest of their lives.

  4. Would you consider yourself and/or your family to be traditional?
    Not really. I think the absence of religion in our lives probably affects this. We do like traditions that involve food, though, like Pancake Day (Shrove Tuesday) and Easter.

  5. What is one tradition you have passed on to your children and/or plan to pass on to them?
    I have passed on the following to them:
    • It is OK to put shoyu (soy sauce) on anything.
    • Rather than have the argument over pumpkin pie v pecan pie for Thanksgiving dinner, it is best to make both. Also, it is OK to celebrate Thanksgiving at the weekend, since it is not a thing in the UK.
    • There is no such thing as “quickly” popping into the bookshop. Or the library.

nanila: (kusanagi: amused)
( Mar. 11th, 2025 09:40 am)
20250308_113412

This photo of Comet on the bookshelves in my office made me laugh when I ran across it today, so I'm sharing.
  1. Did the house where you grew up have a newspaper delivered regularly?

    I grew up in a lot of different houses. The only one where a newspaper was delivered regularly was my grandparents’ house, who read the local version of the Times on Sundays. I used to read the entire thing, starting of course with the comics.

  2. Have you ever subscribed to an actual print newspaper?

    Yes, and still do. We also have print magazine subscriptions, because it keeps us from being distracted from things on our phones.

  3. When was the most recent time you physically picked up and read a newspaper?

    Yesterday. It was the most recent edition of “The New European”.

  4. Do you pay for news online now?

    Yes, I do. I have a paid subscription to “The Guardian”. The academic institution I work for also provides a paid subscriptions to “The Financial Times”, and I read both regularly.

  5. Do you have any saved newspaper clippings?

    Yup! Mostly stuff about various space missions I worked on.
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