Friday, 16 October 2015

Adderbury Community Food Market - Thursday, 10th September 2015 - and we win The prize supper tickets....

A busy day in the garden and a WI group walk to look forward encompassing Sun Rising Hill overlooking the plains of Edgehill Battle way back on 23rd October 1642 - between here, Kineton and Radway - just think, that is just 373 years ago - not really so long ago!


and we had lunch at Radway's Rose and Crown village pub which was very good indeed...when we visited on Thursday,1st October 2015...

Back to Adderbury and the Community Food Market where we'd gone for supper with friends, for shopping - I bought super meatballs from Ellie's Greek Food Stall from Mark plus their lovely sweet chocolatey truffles, which we all shared after our hot supper from Smart Cookies.  Imagine my surprise when my name was pulled out of the hat for the Market's prize draw to honour the WI's 100 Year Anniversary this year 2015 - 1915 -2015, which was absolutely smashing.  I shall collect on this next month on Thursday, 8th October!!!

Here's a few photos to wet your appetites for November's Adderbury Community Market on Thursday, 12th November....

Truffles -  the two which came home - just !!!!!!

veggies, hot Scotch Egg from Winslow Pates and Terrines and chicken livers from Chummy of Moore and Lyon

a loaf of really good Gluten-free bread from Cornfield Bakery

the latest home veg-garden harvest for that week - for good home eating!


Happy eating to you all...

Daisy xxx

Friday, 2 October 2015

Cakes and Bakes for Macmillan Cancer Support World's Biggest Coffee Morning - Friday 25th September 2015

Did you go to a Macmillan Cancer Support World's Biggest Coffee Morning Event last week and did you enjoy a slice of delicious cake, a piece of millionaires shortbread perhaps even a flapjack or brownie???

I hope you did for I did and all these cakes and bakes were at the Events I attended and photographed and it was all good fun...and I really hope we made good funds for Macmillan Cancer Support...because that was what all the fun was for.  And how amazing that is, for us to gather our family, friends and neighbours and share a cup of steaming hot coffee and a slice or two of some gorgeous homemade cake or bake or, if life is just too busy, to indulge our desire to feed our friends and raise some funds for others, we pop into M & S or another favourite supermarket and buy a delicious cake or two!

Well, that was done in The Calendar Girls so there's no reason why we shouldn't do the same if we must, hey!

So here's a few photos of the cakes and bakes I encountered last weekend and, if you've a mind too, I should love to see photos of your Coffee Morning Events and the cakes you were fortunate enough to encounter too??




three delicious cake settings for John Nicholls (Trading) Ltd.



three gorgeous cake settings for Pizza Express Banbury...






three scrummy coffee and Coffee Cake Pot's for tasting settings at Marks and Spencer





three mouthwatering cake collections for Anker and Partners

And finally......





three delectable cake and bake settings for Philippa at Banbury Rugby Union Football Club



Well, does that make your mouth water, my vision of these scrumptious cakes and bakes lovingly made by kind friends and bakers for Macmillan Cancer Support World's Biggest Coffee Morning for their 25th Birthday Anniversary for 2015...

Will you kindly send me photos of the delicious cakes and bakes you were fortunate to taste at the Coffee Morning Events you attended....I hope you do!!!


Many thanks lovely coffee and cake bakers and eaters everywhere...


Margaret xxx

Tuesday, 22 September 2015

Preserving a Lifestyle - Tuesday, 22nd September 2015 - and Christmas too!

Making preserves for home eating, giving pots to family and friends for Christmas, is just the darnedest things you can do at home, really it is, and its something I've been doing for years.  Even watching Aunts and other family members make a batch of marmalade, chutney and jellies has been enjoyable too and here I am now, vowing not to pick another berry or drupe and definitely not one single sloe......!  Yet the temptation is just too strong and especially so this  year for there's simply masses of it about everywhere and well, who knows how the world may be next year, or what else you'll be doing?


jelly potting-up tools
The gathering has been easy and the picking too, just an easy stretch of the arm to hand down a fistful of fruit, from tiny blue-tinged sloe drupe, the blackberry fruit, each one a collection of small drupelets to the crab apple hanging down like gold and scarlet earrings or thickly clustered up on high for the birds to feast on.  There's more than enough fruit for all to gather in this year and what better excuse to get out and about at the weekend, than to go into the countryside with basket to hand and go a'brambling'. Don't forget your Wellington boots or a stout walking stick to haul down the higher branches, but carefully, lest you break off a branch!  You must always be conscious of next year's harvest in the making.

my pan of damsons and crab apples cooking yesterday......

So, my last batch of crab apple and damson juice is dripping nicely thru' butter muslin right now as I contemplate the end of this year's preserving season




but yet, still, the news of great harvests of sloe drupes gathering in the hedgerow this  year is excitement in the making and the inner voice coaxing, even compelling.  Yet, we should all remain calm in the face of such a gathering of fruit, for the sloe simply must be allowed to remain clinging to its branch until after the first frost, for the  chemical reaction to be kicked into touch and the fruit become sweeter.  Yet its almost impossible to forgo sauntering out into country lanes and bye ways on a bright autumnal afternoon and not return ladened with baskets of this gloriously glossy berry.

glossy elderberries...

Stay the hand, please do, and wait for that first frost before you go a'plundering the lanes, eyes cast heavenward in your searchings, for the fruit will still be there, hiding amongst the leaves and prickly thorns.  Certainly this is a must if you're determined upon sloe gin for next year's Christmas season for presents or tippling round the fire, for recipes tell you to needle prick each sloe before use, with a thorn taken from the blackthorn tree or a silver fork if, you like me, follow folklore advice against using just any metal utensil. That's a chore too many for me and  I would much rather allow nature's own hand to prep' the fruit for me than labour over it myself!




a rainbow shines thru' threatening rain clouds...




Modern thought is that you may easily pick your fruit when ever you find it, then freezing your bounty until you're ready to use it.  Country-folk may wait happily for that first frost but if you're only out on warmer autumn days, the opportunity of picking sloes may just be too compelling to ignore.



So will I go sloe gathering this autumn.....um let me think about that for a while!  You see my problem is that the freezer is already full of garden produce which means I really may just have to wait for that first frost...desperately hoping a few sloe will still be hanging about for me!!!


as you see there are masses of elderberries about just now!


Happy days...

Daisy xxx



Tuesday, 1 September 2015

Celebration Big Lunch - Bring and Share Event - Sunday, 31st May 2015 - St. Mary's Church, Adderbury



 The Celebration Big Lunch was an idea of the Eden Project in 2009 to gather people together in a sharing occasion to meet and greet old and new friends and neighbours over a shared lunch time event following the Sunday Morning Service. 

In 2012 when Adderbury joined in, a  huge number of people gathered together in a celebration of togetherness and we at Adderbury were 230 in number for our joint Bring and Share lunch, with people providing favourite dishes.  A lovely variety of home-made delicious food was spread before us with wine and even more delicious puddings to follow for a really super event.

Also in this year of 2015 HM Queen Elizabeth 11 will become our country's longest serving sovereign which fact was also celebrated when we gathered together in St. Mary's Church after Morning Service when a very jolly time was had by all.

We came with good friends enjoying their company with friends and neighbours with the good opportunity of connecting with people you really needed to talk to.

Stephen our Vicar gave us a very good Morning Service encouraging our endeavours towards friendly connections and good conversation with friends, neighbours and those relatively unknown to us which evidently worked very well indeed, for the roof could have been raised with the energy and warmth of shared conviviality that took hold of our community that sunny Sunday morning at the end of May 2015.

I hope we will have another such lunch celebration next year or at least for the following year for it was a great occasion for a splendid lunch and much friendly chatter which all enjoyed and remarked upon.

Here are my photos of the occasion....

















I do regret that rather sorry state of my material but that's the best which can be done at the moment and having become rather delayed in posting this report of a smashing occasion I hope my dear readers will accept this presentation......and I might just add we enjoyed both gluten-free and regular food which was just great, hey!!!

Daisy xxx



Thursday, 27 August 2015

Kohlrabi Slaw, Pork Salami and Home-grown Cucumber Supper - Wednesday, 26th August 2015 - Fresh Gluten-free Eating

I first tasted kohlrabi when weekending with a  girlfriend and her parents in Kent ages ago and we ate steamed kohlrabi and.....well I wasn't quite sure how I felt about it.

We had always eaten good plain food at home with many vegetables but never this particular one and I would suggest my mother had never heard of it, let alone eaten it.  However, if we had, it would probably have been because my father was always keen for us to try something new.

Kohlrabi features in two cookery books I've got at home,  in Summer and Winter by Arabella Boxer and Tessa Traeger, ISBN 0 85533 2166. and in another book by Arabella Boxer - The Sunday Times Complete Cook Book -  ISBN 0 297 783211.

I've served up the vegetable in various over the years always liking its crunch and mild sweet flavour, and its odd-looking bulbous shape with green shoots sticking out, like waving arms.  Its a member of the cabbage family and comes in two colours, pale green and a purple variety, which I've never seen but goes well with the growing awareness of the purple veg. with the flavenoid content and appeal.  My family in Australia have eaten purple potatoes, which actually stay that colour even when cooked, unlike the purple dwarf beans I've grown this summer, which are green inside and turn green when cook.... you have to eat them raw, to eat purple beans!!!

I bought this Kohlrabi at Deddington Farmers' Market last weekend and found an Internet recipe for a slaw with carrot and mixed with mayonnaise, cider vinegar and raisins, and this is what we ate for supper last night, with sliced Pork Salami from Lidl and homegrown cucumber from the dear SO's greenhouse...



Kohlrabi from the Styan Family Produce stall at Deddington Farmers' Market. next to the aubergine
Kohlrabi & carrot slaw with Salami and cucumber from the garden




















The recipe made enough for a party so I've frozen half for future eating with other meats and salad items.
Dulano Air Dried Air Salami from Lidl....

















It was very quick and easy to make thank goodness as I had to get on with chutney making - marrow, plum and ginger - from the tonnage of marrow He bought home last weekend, well, it seemed too good an opportunity to miss!

I'd bought a small one from Deddington so we have plenty of marrow, hohoho...!






the small marrow will be perfect for supper...for stuffed marrow, steamed marrow, baked marrow and so on.  Well it is the season for marrow, hey?
Happy veggie eating...

Daisy xxx




Thursday, 20 August 2015

Herb Butters and Ratatouille Summertime Harvest - Thursday, 20th August 2015 - Filling up the freezer !!!

Summer’s here and I’ve been harvesting herbs from the garden; parsley, coriander, basil, sage and fennel and now I have several fat rolls of herbed butter in the freezer all ready for slicing up.





We’ll use the butter for whizzing into hot mashed potato, on toast, to garnish and enrich soups, add as a garnish to pork and lamb chops, on your favourite steak dish and so on….

Then you can use your butter on hot scones or in your scone mixture, to add to your sauté pan with olive oil to cook an omelette or mushrooms or anything else you fancy, come to that!
One of my favourite books has been an inspiration – Eatability – by Jocasta Innes with Bronwen Cunningham – ISBN 0 – 356-14720-7 – which I’ve had for years but, of course, you’ll find recipes enough on the internet very easily.  Like…

Lavender butter, or lavender butter with other herbs, with honey – plus many ingenious uses for them.  I have to admit not having ever made lavender butter but I have popped a sprig of lavender under a cake mixture before making and the cooked flavour has been delicate and rather nice, especially if you then make lavender flavoured butter cream, having previously stored a few sprigs of the plant in your box of icing sugar, or by using lavender butter in the mixture.  I imagine you could also add lavender flavoured honey to the butter and icing sugar, plus a few chopped leaves to add colour and interest.


I decided to make use of a few leaves of sage too but, wary of its very strong flavour, mixed in half a red onion and two cloves of garlic with the herb and one packet of salted butter; I usually had two to three handfuls of herb  plus a few twists of freshly milled black pepper.  Him indoors would insist on white pepper but I can’t stand it so never use it.   The finished butter had a very nice red colour and I’m looking forward to using it…


Here it is in the mixing stage….I machine chop my herb and any additions then mix everything together by hand not by blender or food processor, because this way I don’t end up wasting any!

Putting my rolls of butter into the freezer I came upon the last three shapes of butter from last summer, which was most surprising since I thought all of this had gone earlier in the summer when, low on olive oil, I’d gone to my freezer for the last of last year’s butter for a sauté dish of something or other being cooked for supper.  So all was well for supper and it’s perfectly OK to keep any herbed butter in the freezer for up to a year before using....



So, after clearing up the kitchen I chopped up the ingredients for a ratatouille, warmed my slow cooker, sautéed the aubergine, peppers, onions, tomatoes, herbs, and seasoning for about ten minutes before tipping everything into the slow-cooker and leaving the mixture to cook overnight and well into the afternoon before tasting.  It was OK if needing a little tomato puree and salt and just another hour to finish cooking the runner beans which I’d added as an afterthought, having picked a good handful the day before and needing to use them.



ingredients ready ...and I'd skinned my aubergines ...I won't next time!!!

ten minutes saute time.....



and here's one I cooked and  enjoyed earlier!!!



I shall make more ratatouille and perhaps even lavender butter in the next few days, a pot or two of tomato sauce and who knows what else!  I mean you just have to, don't you, with your garden bursting with harvestable goodies and farmers' markets bringing together a wide variety of vegetables and fruit, herbs, glorious oils, cheeses, fish and meat.

I do hope my freezer has enough space for everything!

Daisy xxx