Savory Spinach and Buttermilk Pancakes

One rolled and complete, one open to show the filling...this might be the time to add a little sweet chili sauce...

One rolled and complete, one open to show the filling…this might be the time to add a little sweet chili sauce, possibly a little chunky salt as well…

My start point was a container of butter milk that had just reached its ‘best by’ date…I didn’t even know what buttermilk was let alone remember what we bought it for – clearly to use in something but what? And, more importantly, what to use it in now as I am always loath to hiff an unopened container of food just because it’s time is up – it just seems so wasteful…

Cyber-searching found me this at Holy Khao:

‘Gredients

  • 1 cup finely chopped baby spinach (tightly packed) – washed & drained
  • 1 cup buttermilk
  • ½ tsp baking powder
  • 1/4 – 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp chilli powder
  • 1 pinch nutmeg [optional]
  • 1 cup pancake mix (see below)
  • ¼ cup fat free cheese (I used crumbled feta) – [optional]
  • Oil/ cooking spray for cooking (we ALWAYS use butter for pan cake cooking)

For the pancake mix, I fell back (shouldn’t drink and cook, eh?) on the tried and true Edmonds recipe, found on page 129 in that classic Kiwi icon, the Edmonds Cook Book (2010):

  • One cup of flour
  • one egg (I used two because I can and because we have a surplus of eggs big time) – The eggs probably affect the freezability of the pan cakes – next I will try sans eggs.
  • Any thing that was already listed above was left out.

Cheese is optional. Add any seasoning to adapt to your tastes.

Fillin’

I’m not really that much of a starter for sweet pan cakes but love ’em savoury…Looking at what else I needed to consume in the fridge, I grabbed:

  • Half-a dozen cheery tomatoes. If you don’t have half a dozen, six will do.
  • Half a dozen small fresh mushrooms.
  • 1/4 medium onion.
  • 4-5 decent size mint leaves.
  • A decent handful of parsley – probably about a cup unchopped.
  • One small carrot, topped’n’ tailed.

Bonus points

  1. It has chili in it.
  2. The cooked pancakes can be frozen.

Assembly

Place the filling ingredients all in the Tupperware Terminator Minigun of Kitchen Utensils and rev it up like you’re starting the mower on a cold day…

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Place the blended components in a bowl and set aside.

Measure out baking soda, salt, pepper, nutmeg, and chilli powder.

Gently mix with buttermilk so it can start its leavening reaction and set aside 2 minutes. (I missed this step and so the leavening was uneven)

Stir in spinach & feta till just incorporated.

Gently stir in pancake mix till mixed and no lumps are visible. Do not overmix.

Cook 1/4 cup batter on a hot griddle till golden brown like regular pancakes.

Place a proportional dollop (amount of filling divided into number of pancakes) on each pancakes and roll into a…what else…a roll.

These passed the taste and texture test in their own right but I had them with some venison sausages because, yup, you guessed it, I had some of these in the fridge also in need of consumption…

Three pan cakes and three sausages (they’re not THAT big) certainly hit the spot and just about wiped me out. I have two left over in the fridge and will try these tonight with the same filling but with a tad of chili sauce mixed in as well…

Edit:

– Yeah Baby!!! That filling was great with a couple of tablespoons of sweet chili sauce mixed into it – next time I might try adding some chili flakes to the mix instead.

– The nagging itch at the back of my mind finally coalesced into something tangible: if I added bulgar wheat to the filling, it’d be tabbouleh – I think that itch was what nudged me towards the filling in the first place: I actually subconsciously wanted tabbouleh..

2012 in review

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2012 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

4,329 films were submitted to the 2012 Cannes Film Festival. This blog had 27,000 views in 2012. If each view were a film, this blog would power 6 Film Festivals

Click here to see the complete report.

Going nutty

DSCF6607-001I went through a bit of a vegetarian phase last week…well, not quite, I looked up a few recipes at healthyfood.co.nz but this was the only one that I made…

Ingredients

For the spicy peanut sauce

  • 1/2 teaspoon oil
  • 1 tablespoon chopped onion
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed
  • 1/4 teaspoon grated fresh ginger
  • 2 tablespoons crunchy peanut butter
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce
  • 1 small pinch ground chilli
  • 1 squeeze lemon juice
  • 1/4 cup trim milk

For the vegetables

  • 1 egg, hard boiled
  • 1 medium potato, scrubbed and cubed
  • 1 carrot, peeled and cut in quarters lengthwise
  • 1/2 cup broccoli florets
  • cauliflower or other seasonal veges (I usually use 2 cups of veges in total)
  • snow peas or a few beans if you have them

Step 1

Steam the veges till tender (the egg can hard-boil in the saucepan of water that you set the steamer on top of).

Step 2

While the veges are cooking, prepare the sauce. Heat the oil in a small pan or saucepan. Cook the onion and garlic until tender then mix in the ginger. Add the peanut butter, soy sauce, chilli and lemon juice and mix well, then gradually stir in the milk.

Step 3

Simmer the sauce until thickened. If it becomes too thick, simply add a dash more milk. When the veg are cooked, pile them onto a warm plate. Slice the egg into quarters and use the spicy peanut sauce for dipping.

Overall, I found this take on the recipe rather bland, nice for sure but not stunning. The only deviation I made from the recipe was for using frozen stir-fry veges instead of those listed in on the page but the blandness lay in the nutty sauce…

The next night, I changed tack and eliminated the veges in favour of some of those superb Hellers sausages that have been on sale the last few months at New World. I made the sauce as advertised but upgraded the ‘small pinch’ of ground chili to a full teaspoon – Woohoo! Now we’re cooking!!! That really is now SPICY peanut sauce…

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Of course, now, I have to be somewhat cautious because I detest peanut butter on toast, pancakes, scones, pikelets or anything else except as an ingredient in cooking but this is so nice with the extra chili that I am going to have to try it again…and again…but woe will be me should I expend the last of the peanut butter on a mere sauce…

My Little Life: Live and Learn

My Little Life: Live and Learn.

In the link above, Mama M is angsting about apologies from two perspectives: one of considering that she had been over the top in criticising five day a week kindy, and another of educating her daughter on why an apology needs to be sincere and not just a compliance √.

Sometimes the bigger lessons of an apology are that little things that we can do may have longer and more lasting effects that we ever thought…

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A teacher in New York was teaching her class about bullying and gave them the following exercise to perform. She had the children take a piece of paper and told them to crumple it up, stamp on it and really mess it up but do not rip it. Then she had them unfold the paper, smooth it out and look at how scarred and dirty is was. She then told them to tell it they’re sorry. Now even though they said they were sorry and tried to fix the paper, she pointed out all the scars they left behind. And that those scars will never go away no matter how hard they tried to fix it. That is what happens when a child bully’s another child, they may say they’re sorry but the scars are there forever. The looks on the faces of the children in the classroom told her the message hit home. Pass it on or better yet, if you’re a parent or a teacher, do it with your child/children.

Kinda trite but totally on the money, a mistake once made, deliberately or as an accident, be it an act of ommission or commission, can never be fully recalled and there will always be a slight edge where the wound once lay…Here’s an example of a good apology that I stumbled across the other night while considering this subject. Although we live rurally I’m no farmer (not one little bit) and so was scanning the pages of Straight Furrow for any potential useful bits of kit and equipment (aka farmer porn!)…

It’s been an awkward year for me, one of lost friends and shifting principles. I began the year as the dairy Farmers’ friend, saying they were doing all they could to clean up waterways.

I reeled off a list of on-farm clean-up actions they were taking to keep waterways clean. I quoted figures from the most recent report of the Clean Streams Accord, among them that casttle were fenced off from waterways on 84 percent of farms.

Then I found this figure was wrong.

Naively, perhaps, I did not realise that the accord relies on farmers honesty to report their own progress towards the agreement’s targets.

When the Primary Industries Ministry finally, after eight years, got round to checking for itself, its audit found a descrepancy. Only 42 percent of farms had fenced their waterways.

It was quite a shock. I beghan to think about the arguments from the Manawatu-Whanganui regional council for their prescriptive One Plan – that they’d had enough of asking farmers nicely to chnage their ways. They hadn’t listened and now it was tiem to force them to act.

After all, regulations had been needed to stop them pouring cowshed effluent into rivers some years earlier – they hadn’t voluntarily stopped that.

So, in March, just as the Land and Water Forum was meeting (unbeknownst to me), I changed my tune. I said:

“it’s seems obvious that we have too many cows in the most sensitive parts of the country – sandy, shingly, free-draining areas laced with streams, close to groundwater and big recreational rivers.

“and I think there’s no doubt that these cows are the main source of the excessive nutrients that are polluting rivers and lakes in these regions. The simple solution is to regulate a reduction in cow numbers.”

I suddenly found I had lost some of my old friends but gained a lot of new friends – all of the Green persuasion.

This was awkward. I’d railed against these people for years and here they were welcoming me as a new ally. I didn’t see it that way – still don’t. I’m not on their side. There’s much they say that I dodnot agree with.

The only side I’m on is that of you, my friend, the reader, who has the right to be as fully informed as possible about this important debate. And that’s been my intention all along. As the information – the science, expert views, farmers’ experience and other facts – has come to light I have given it to you. 

~ Over The Fence, Jon Morgan, Straight Furrow, Jan 22, 2013.

An example of a poor apology might be “Hey, Saddam, no WMD, huh? Our bad…” or “Maybe we could’ve thought this Arab Spring thing through a bit more…

  • It’s never too late to apologise but let’s be straight about it…sooner is better than later, and both a preferable to carry on as you’ve always done…how might things be different if:
  • People realised that when you have a hammer all you look for is nails and thus it took so long for common sense to break out in the prosecution of the campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan?
  • The jet heads weren’t in control and the A-10 production line was not scrapped in favour of more fast jets – the same fast jets that are desperately seeking work..?
  • Someone said “F-35!! Enough already!!! Let’s can it!”

Hmmm….

Weekly Photo Challenge: Beyond

Weekly Photo Challenge: Beyond | The Daily Post

In this challenge I have looked for photos where the subject has been in the foreground but which (probably more by accident than design in my case), the background draws you in other directions…beyond…

Raurimu down the hill Aug 04

The purpose of this photo was to have the national roading agency on about the recurring pot holes at the top of our driveway where it meets the state highway…in the distance though, you can see the road reappear as it rises north out of Raurimu, on its way to Owhango and beyond…

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Here’s our gate again, this time looking back the other way – as you can see, about the six months later, the potholes are getting sorted – with the ‘new road (it used to follow the hill round to the left) disappearing into the deviation towards National Park and beyond…the digger on the lawn was trying to (for 2 dozen Tui – beer not bird – and a banana cake) to even out some of the bumps in the lawn but it was too heavy and just left big trenches I had to fill…

Follyfoot in the Mangaroa Valley May 03 - 1

This is Follyfoot Farm (no, not the farm of teen screams in the 70s!) at the northern end of the Mangaroa Valley, which parallels the Hutt Valley in Wellington. Although the farm is the focus of the picture, the range of hills on the skyline draw the eye and the imagination towards the south and the point where these hills meet Cook Strait…

Greg, Dan, Tom, Bren, Jock, Maurice, Ash and Mr Stead on the Red Lakes track

This was taken on a  7th form study trip in 1981 up to Mt Cook – that’s Mt Cook Village below and, beyond, the mountains rise to peak at Mt Cook. The picture was taken about where the Mt Cook Village inset box intercepts the track in the map below.  Unwin Hut at the bottom of the map is where we stayed for the week…if you’d like to know more about Mt Cook Village walks, click the map…

mt cook red tarn

Five Question Friday! 1/25/13

That I don’t always contribute to Five Question Friday is often not so much an issue of whether Mama M’s questions float my boat in any given week but is often more of me getting motivated…but certainly in this period of seeking employment and optimising the great weather for domestic projects, motivation is running high…so here goes…

1. Do you embrace or dread snow/cold weather days?

When it’s straight cold e.g. like this:

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…I don’t mind it too much…when it’s ongoing days of this:

Image…when all the heat is sucked from the ground and house, and it is just miserably cold and wet…nope, not much embracing going on then…

2. Which game show or reality show could you totally win?

As a spectator, I usually do OK inWho Wants To Be A Millionairebut would probably freeze and stutter if actually on the spot; reality shows just leave me cold so I think that’s a non-issue...

3. What is your preferred climate?

I like New Zealand, specifically where we are now on the Central Plateau where both winters and summers are comfortable but not extreme…I’m not sure that I’d be so keen to return to the deepest South again, certainly not anyplace where urban snow and frost would be regular occurrences…then maybe, I’m just over urban…?

4. What do you buy every time you walk into the grocery store, no matter what?

I always stock up on dairy: milk, butter and marg…if we don’t it it now it can always wait it the freezer til it’s time comes…

5. If you see a spider/bug in the house, are you brave enough to kill it, or do you call for your other half?

I’d prefer that someone else deal with it, but can general wind up enough backbone to deal with it myself…I spent enough time in South East Asia sharing space with greeblies to want to still do it now…

World of Tanks gets physical

WoT media

It has been a while since I posted anything about my modelling hobby other than occasional  hopefully relevant images in the Weekly Challenges…

Once upon a time, I used to be into gaming, either on the PC, Xbox (CLASSIC!!), or the Wii – we even have two Wii’s so that we can play NZ or US Wii games – but nowadays, I simply don’t have the time and when I’m sitting at the PC it is to work or, at the moment, look for work…so while I am aware of World of Tanks, mainly through its pop-up ads that permeate through the webosphere, I am not a player…World of Tanks, parent company, wargaming.net is also the major sponsor of David Cundall’s quest for Spitfires buried in Burma (perhaps) at the end of WW2. In mid-2012, WoT also began to post at Paper Modeling, a site I monitor pretty much daily piquing interest in the paper modelling community with promises of new paper models based on tanks in the game. Those promises are now being fulfilled at the rate of one a month.

Although the initial design work has been done to already incorporate these vehicles into WoT, the game, there is a little more to converting a gaming 3D model to a (buildable) paper model so this is more than just a cheap marketing ploy on WoT’s part, although that we should also recognise that paper modelling is far more popular and widespread in Eastern Europe and Asia than it has ever been in the West.

At the same time, using some of my few spare moments each day, generally while watching Coro, I am building a paper model as part of the UAMF Small Scale Armour Group Build and trust me, it’s not as easy as it looks and I probably would be finished now if I had opted for one of the more basic Airfix or Matchbox kits…but I have to be different and so have taken on a what is turning into a bit of a challenge. To a certain (possibly large!) extent this is self-inflicted as I am finding myself relearning a lot of previously learned lessons (pretty ironic for the lessons learned guru!!) as the time I have been able to devote to regular modelling.

Anyway, someone posted in my UAMF thread for this GB (I can post all these links but it doesn’t really matter ‘coz no one ever clicks them) last night that a. maybe it would be an idea to have a paper/card (one and the same thing, really) group build on UAMF sometime this year which lead to a. me posting this response, and b. thinking that it would be an idea perhaps to acknowledge within a wider audience the efforts of those designers that design and share their paper models as free downloads (and also to note the launch of the revamped Ecardmodels.com website)…

A paper/card model GB has been mooted before but I think that there is growing interest in the idea. As Ian says, there are a broad range available for download for free, of all degrees of complexity although I would recommend some relatively simple ones for starters so that builders can come to grips with the different techniques required, especially for folding and rolling – none of it rocket science, but none of it just quite that way we do it with other media…as a start point for anyone who might be interested, I would recommend that they check out the free model section at www.ecardmodels.com (select “free Models’ from the menu bar on the left of the home page) which has a range of mainly aircraft and vehicles with a few ships and buildings as well. There are also sites like the download section of www.papermodelers.com (must register and post in order to download), the models section of www.landships.info, the free section at www.currell.net, and, for those into World of Tanks, the model section on the Russian language (YOU MUST GO TO THE RUSSIAN VERSION AS THE MODELS ARE NOT LISTED ON ANY OF THE OTHER REGIONS FOR WoT) version of the site: http://worldoftanks.ru/media/?category=10 where they are releasing one 1/50 (of course, depending on your preference, printer and copier, the scale could be whatever suits…) tank model each month…

So that’s it really, just trying to spread the paper modelling love…in this days of financial crises and ongoing insecurity, it is nice to have a modelling-related hobby that doesn’t want an army and a leg just for the raw materials i.e. a traditional kitset, but which still provides for the satisfaction of seeing a  model take shape into a (hopefully) recognisable facsimile of the original…

Hawks Over Rangiora

There I was…cleaning out the hard drive…when I found this…a draft post from almost two years ago…some imagery that the lads at Hawkeye UAV shared with me after flying tasks in the direct aftermath of the February 2011 Christchurch earthquake…

I’m not sure why I never posted this…possibly too many authoring tools and it was just overlooked…this mission was flown using Kahu as the team started its journey back north. Although Hawkeye’s capabilities have increased geometrically in pretty much every way (aircraft, sensors, software, etc) in the intervening two years, this series still is till a good look at the sequence of a mission from…

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…initial mission planning in the flight control software…each of the dots on the map above represents the point where an image will be taken from the aircraft, taking into account factors like wind and light.

The next five images are part of the imagery set collected during the missions

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These are then combined into a mosaic…in this case a thermal image of the town from a night mission because silly me has misplaced the daylight mosaic shot…

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…and also the image of the 3D model of the town created from these 2D images are photogrammetric processing (some interesting work at Otago University on this process)…but here’s a short clip of some 3D imagery from another task…

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Pretty cool…more so when it’s all homegrown Kiwi technology and ingenuity…

Weekly Photo Challenge: My 2012 in Pictures

Takeaways from 2012

Meat Loaf 4-08-2012 6-28-15 p.m.

…culinary adventures continued…

Raurimu renovations 009

…the digger that ate the lawn…so much more room…

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…Kirk discovers that TV is more entertaining than chew toys…

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…the chickens finally get their act together…possibly attributable to the mega-mansion that Carmen built for them…

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…the Tupperware Terminator mini-gun of kitchen utensils – instant salsa with a couple of pulls on the ripcord…

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…not so much the mega-hit on blog views the weekend that the ‘family’ came together to rebut the poisonous views of activist Summer Burstyn as the imagery of the three columns covering that weekend…

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…a day in Flanders fields…so sobering…

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…chicken curry and roti for breakfast at Din’s Diner in Singapore – flashbacks to the really good old days of NZFORSEA…

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…a week at the beach…I wasn’t too sure about this at first but it was the best break I’ve had in years…

…and…

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…having a hand in helping these guys grow up…