Originally posted by french frank
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Preparations
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostHow are we all doing with our Christmas preparations?
Not sure,I'll check with my wife.
got that Andre Rieu album yet ER? Maybe there is a box set edition?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... sometimes I find cheddar goes well with some sherries - a good amontillado, fr'instance. Better than with most red wines, anyhoo...It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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I still have to get my cards, though the stamps are ready and waiting: I'll probably give Tate Modern a visit tomorrow. The ex-gf and I usually exchange calendars, but last year she asked, "Why do you always send a bloody calendar? I get so many they come out of my ears!" - though she always sends me one, for which I am genuinely grateful. Last year I couldn't decide on an alternative. "Oh never mind, don't worry" she told me, "I hate receiving presents anyway 'cos I've got everything I'll ever want in life". It's a problem knowing what to get when you're on your jack, but I actually prefer being my own solitary nag on the day of all days when we are supposed to rejoice and enjoy our families, if we have them. I'd probably be terrible company.
The last 2 years I've treated myself to one of St Spree's Christmas-Meal-For-One packages, consisting of three slices of turkey breast swimming in a tablespoon of oxo gravy, two chipolatas, two stooks of presumably sage and onion stuffing, four small roast potatoes, four sprouts, a tablespoon of peas and a ditto each of baby carrots and bread sauce - all ready to put in the microwave, to be dished up with cranberry sauce which will serve as jam for the next month, downed with a couple of glasses of house hock, and followed up with one of the pair of xmas puds accompanied by custard. But the combination has never settled on my stomach, used as it is to mainly vegetarian input, so I shall get some turkey fillets in breadcrumbs and fry them instead for my main course this year.
I shall dig out all my recorded Christmas music, pile it up beside the sound system, hope the ex-gf is too busy to ring, and snooze the afternoon away.
There's probably nothing much worth watching on telly in the evening, so I'll induge in some of my favourite movies.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 07-12-12, 21:10.
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Thropplenoggin
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI still have to get my cards, though the stamps are ready and waiting: I'll probably give Tate Modern a visit tomorrow. The ex-gf and I usually exchange calendars, but last year she asked, "Why do you always send a bloody calendar? I get so many they come out of my ears!" - though she always sends me one, for which I am genuinely grateful. Last year I couldn't decide on an alternative. "Oh never mind, don't worry" she told me, "I hate receiving presents anyway 'cos I've got everything I'll ever want in life". It's a problem knowing what to get when you're on your jack, but I actually prefer being my own solitary nag on the day of all days when we are supposed to rejoice and enjoy our families, if we have them. I'd probably be terrible company.
The last 2 years I've treated myself to one of St Spree's Christmas-Meal-For-One packages, consisting of three slices of turkey breast swimming in a tablespoon of oxo gravy, two chipolatas, two stooks of presumably sage and onion stuffing, four small roast potatoes, four sprouts, a tablespoon of peas and a ditto each of baby carrots and bread sauce - all ready to put in the microwave, to be dished up with cranberry sauce which will serve as jam for the next month, downed with a couple of glasses of house hock, and followed up with one of the pair of xmas puds accompanied by custard. But the combination has never settled on my stomach, used as it is to mainly vegetarian input, so I shall get some turkey fillets in breadcrumbs and fry them instead for my main course this year.
I shall dig out all my recorded Christmas music, pile it up beside the sound system, hope the ex-gf is too busy to ring, and snooze the afternoon away.
There's probably nothing much worth watching on telly in the evening, so I'll induge in some of my favourite movies.
I admire your stoicism, SA. Christmas can bring out the best and worst in people and families - the worst being the fake smiles and forced jollity and those gifts that are meant to make up for a year's worth of indifference: "Look, see how much I care! I got you that Cliff Richard calendar you never wanted!"
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Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostThere's nothing quite like the thrill of eating English cheese in France.
It's a real white-knuckle ride chez Thropplenoggin!!
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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amateur51
I think Quentin Crisp, that maestro of the solitary Christmas, got it just about right.
1) Tell friends A that you'll be with friends B and vice versa. They'll each be so relieved/ticked off that they'll not dare to check with each other.
2) Pop into the chemist and get sufficient boxes of Complan in a myriad flavours sufficient for the festive period.
3) Once home, move you wardrobe against your door to prevent access by concerned neighbours
4) Take the phone off the hook and settle back into non-convivial solitude.
Now that is bah-humbuggery!
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amateur51
Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostOne advantage of being old is making your own rules. We'll be starting on our cake next week as a friend's visiting, and won't be icing it. Indeed, it'll probably be eaten to accompany cheese - mature cheddar. There's nothing quite like the thrill of eating English cheese in France.
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The Christmas season begins in September here in the Philippines. Quite literally, with Christmas songs playing in the malls.
Anyway, as we are here for Christmas (last year we were in the UK) I thought it might be good to make a Christmas cake. Every cake that Filipinos have is a variation on a chiffon cake, so a fruit cake is seriously unusual. I used Delia Smith's rich fruit cake recipe, adapted to what I could find in the tropics. The main differences were:
a) they've never heard of any flour but self-raising (or 'all-purpose' as it's known here)
b) you can't get sultanas or candied peel, or nuts of any variety, except for packs of salted peanuts, cashews or mixed nuts that do contain almonds
c) getting hold of mixed spice is impossible, though whole cloves, cinnamon bark and nutmegs can be found
The fruit I ended up with was raisins, dried mango, dried papaya, dried pineapple, dried iba (sour - a tamarind substitute) and cocktail cherries. Cashews and almonds were sufficient (taking care to avoid the garlic flavoured almonds); and the coffee grinder made short work of the cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg. The sugar was excellent muscavado (this is a sugar-producing country), molasses was easy to get, and New Zealand butter is available, too. I could not avoid self-raising flour.
The alcohol was the local rum - Tanduay - which the dried fruit seemed to like, because it soaked it all up overnight.
The result was such a success that there was no way I could keep the cake till Christmas, and I now have made three more - two of them as presents!
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThe Christmas season begins in September here in the Philippines. Quite literally, with Christmas songs playing in the malls.
Anyway, as we are here for Christmas (last year we were in the UK) I thought it might be good to make a Christmas cake. Every cake that Filipinos have is a variation on a chiffon cake, so a fruit cake is seriously unusual. I used Delia Smith's rich fruit cake recipe, adapted to what I could find in the tropics. The main differences were:
a) they've never heard of any flour but self-raising (or 'all-purpose' as it's known here)
b) you can't get sultanas or candied peel, or nuts of any variety, except for packs of salted peanuts, cashews or mixed nuts that do contain almonds
c) getting hold of mixed spice is impossible, though whole cloves, cinnamon bark and nutmegs can be found
The fruit I ended up with was raisins, dried mango, dried papaya, dried pineapple, dried iba (sour - a tamarind substitute) and cocktail cherries. Cashews and almonds were sufficient (taking care to avoid the garlic flavoured almonds); and the coffee grinder made short work of the cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg. The sugar was excellent muscavado (this is a sugar-producing country), molasses was easy to get, and New Zealand butter is available, too. I could not avoid self-raising flour.
The alcohol was the local rum - Tanduay - which the dried fruit seemed to like, because it soaked it all up overnight.
The result was such a success that there was no way I could keep the cake till Christmas, and I now have made three more - two of them as presents!
The thought of garlic flavoured almonds almost fills me with horror. What do they use them for? Does it work in any way?
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