February in the Garden Centre is a lot more interesting than our January visit was. Lots of plants in flower, like these colourful Primulas.
A look at what interests me and keeps me sane in rural Powys.
February in the Garden Centre is a lot more interesting than our January visit was. Lots of plants in flower, like these colourful Primulas.
The original recipe comes from A Pinch of Nom, and calls for the rice to be pre-cooked in water with a chicken stock cube added. I do it a different way:
One good size onion, chopped
Half a smallish courgette, chopped
A good handful of frozen mushrooms (about 4 medium fresh ones)
I used frozen red pepper, but try half a smallish one, chopped
Half a big carrot, grated
About 4 oz (115 g) beef mince but you can use more if you like, I'm being frugal If veggie, just leave out and put more/different veg in.
About three tablespoons of frozen peas (I just pour until satisfied!)
I added some frozen cherry tomatoes I grew last year - the titchy ones - but you could chop up a couple of larger tomatoes
Beef stock cube
1 pint boiling water
2 teaspoons of Cajun seasoning (note to self, add to shopping list as mine is 3 yrs out of date now!!)
A good glug of Worcestershire sauce
4 oz (generous half a cup - my rice scoop is 1/4 cup) Basmati rice - but I only had easy cook Long Grain rice in the cupboard
A little oil
* * *
Brown off mince and set in a bowl on one side. Fry chopped onions, and add courgette, mushrooms, pepper after a few minutes. Fry until softened, and add cherry tomatoes, and carrot. Put mince into pan with veg. Add Cajun seasoning and Worcs sauce. Stir well and cook for a couple minutes more and then add rice, and stir. Add stock and peas, and turn up to boil, before dropping it back down to a steady simmer. It's ready when rice has absorbed all the liquid. I love my rice dishes and make this regularly.
Well, the cats decided I was a slug-a-bed and started nagging me at 5.30 this morning. I finally got up at 6, and then Pippi was nagging me to go out. It was dark and raining, and I kept telling her no, and she kept on yowling until I finally gave in as it was getting lighter outside. Yesterday I had the first Bank Vole of the season, very vocal, and I managed to rescue it using the broad yoghurt pot with a foil lid which had been my breakfast the previous day. Pippi didn't notice I had rescued it and she and Lulu sat by the kitchen bookcase half the morning hoping it would appear again. Then she went out and came back with a died-in-the-night Robin. Poor soul. I took the little corpse out and put it under the Christmas tree on a nest of grass.
I need to get back to Elderberry Bunny's bonnet today. I have been too tired the last few evenings to work on it. I need to go to the Vets on my way to the Garden Centre, as Alfie has a tapeworm - hence weightloss and starey coat and he is the one who is sick now and again. They are wormed when they have the wormer/flea combo but clearly this needs a specialist wormer. He is the one who grabs the meeces and voles from Pippi and eats them - she doesn't seem interested once they are dead.
Right, time for some breakfast and I need to put the wheeliebin out whilst I remember. After this they are going from a two week collection to three . . . just for wheeliebins, the recycling is still weekly.
I unloaded the car first thing. Just have a big box to bring in but may wait until my offspring are here on Weds. I went to Llandod and got some shopping - just £42 this week, but then the only meal type food was a big tray of mince for £7.50 which will feed me for two nights (Cajun Dirty Rice) and one portion in the freezer, and then a Mince Cobbler with cheesey scone topping for Weds to feed all of us. After all the driving to and fro at the weekend, I had to put yet more diesel in the car. I also came to the end of the latest Audible book - Ken Follet's latest, Circle of Days, which I can recommend. It's about the building of Stonehenge.
On a winter's day, the sofa is the best place to be. Alfie was by me on the recliner.
Tomorrow I have made an executive decision that my "wages" for the weekend are going to be £21 worth of well grown dark pink Hellebore from the expensive garden centres. I reckon I more than earned one!
I sold just ONE item all morning. Then 3 more by mid afternoon, but I haven't covered my outgoings yet. February is not a good month for a Fair, and the weather didn't help either. I was talking to another dealer friend today and saying people used to know about antiques and knew what they were looking at - now they haven't the foggiest and it's all about "the look". What happened to those people who DID know about antiques - they can't have ALL died off during Covid.
It rained very heavily this afternoon, mostly when I was unpacking the car and then again when I went back to it, and then twice as hard when I was driving home. My favourite trainers gave up the ghost and took on board water and I have had soaking feet all afternoon. Another expense! I went up into the attic to move something this morning, and thought I had cracked the craft light problem when I found a display light which clamps on your stand. But no, the bulb had gone and took ten minutes to try and unscrew (it fits tightly into holder). The air was blue . . .
On the positive side I saw two lots of 2 Magpies (good luck I hope) and I am opposite the people I was stalled out next to at Builth. A lovely couple and they will look after my stand when I need the loo etc. I have promised them cake. Helen, one of our old antiquey friends, helped me unload too, bless her. They have a huge stall, double and a doorway, so I imagine unpacking and packing up takes hours for them.
Here are a few photos of other people's stands:
Well, I enjoyed the drive there as it was dry, and all the Catkins are out on the Hazels, and masses of Snowdrops on the verges and in hedgerows. SO pretty. When I got to the Fair, there were lots of Daffodils out. It's quite sheltered there and they flower early.
Right, fingers crossed for me tomorrow and a shame I'm not a jewellery specialist as they are about the only ones taking the money when everyone is skint. Savvy folk always have money for jewellery.
Today I have:
Done one load of washing (heavy linen duvet cover).
Washed my hair.
Researched about a dozen items, which takes longer than you would think. Lens helps a lot though.
Been in my secret cupboard to look for some pieces of studio pottery - it meant moving heavy boxes about, great fun!
Found all the other items I wanted to take to the Fair and loaded them. Lots of different trips and careful planning/packing. Keith was so good at that, bless him.
Taken compost out and litter tray contents (it's so wet and muddy in the orchard).
Polished a gallon copper Victorian harvest jug.
Polished a copper belly warmer (used on stagecoaches, back in the day).
Made a lovely crusty half and half loaf.
Made a Chocolate Apple Cake to thank my neighbour for bagging up some well-rotted muck heap for me.
Made a Spicy Dorset Apple Cake (and eaten a piece!)
Done three lots of washing up and drying up.
Walked 4,000 steps around the house doing all this.
I am absolutely shattered now, but still have to make a chicken curry for my own "ready meal" on Saturday and Sunday, when I come home late from the Fair. Tomorrow will test my upper body strength . . .