Unknown's avatar

About SJPONeill

Retired(ish) and living on the side of a mountain. I love reading and writing, pottering around with DIY in the garden and the kitchen, watching movies and building models from plastic and paper...I have two awesome daughters, two awesome grand-daughters and two awesome big dogs...lots of awesomeness around me...

Dining in…

DSCF7458

I’ve ended up with some cabbage and pumpkin getting near their use by date, and also some silverbeet that I blanched and froze before Christmas that I wanted to thaw and test. The cabbage was simple as I did it the same way as described in the Healthy Food Guide Tuscan Stuffed Chicken recipe that I reviewed in October. It is quick, easy and adds an interesting tang to plain old garden variety cabbage. As you can see I got distracted by other activities and the cabbage was a little scorched in the pan…

I tried combining the silverbeet and pumpkin into patties by mixing them with a small eggs but I need to add something else to the mix to help them combine (stick together) better – tasted good, just a bit fragile in their construction…Hard to see in this shot are the hash brown I made by modifying the kumara fritter recipe from the Curried Kumara and Salmon stacks that have been a regular fav for a couple of years now…they worked out really well and I will be doing them again…

This meal was rounded off with a couple of sausages grilled in the trusty Foreman griller…

Overall: needs work but tasty and filling…

Toasties the easy way…

Although I generally plan my daily meals, sometimes I do get the munchies late at night. As I have reduced the amount of off-the-shelf munchy food around the house – for combined health and resource reasons – toasties are my quick’n’easy recourse when the munchies strike…


While there is one of the traditional toastie pie makers in the pantry, I rarely use this as it wastes too much of our homemade bread slices…

This is so simple that it’s criminal…

Butter each slice of bread on one side.

Prepare your fillings…for me this is thin sliced cheese, thin-sliced tomato and my custom egg’n’onion mix. Other options maybe a THIN layer of creamed corn and/or spaghetti (Watties, from the can).

As there is always a surplus of eggs here, they are used in cooking at every opportunity but I always found that an egg cracked directly onto the bread would run every which way. What I do now is crack one egg plus any additional herbs, spices etc and 1/4 small onion into the Tupperware Terminator

DSCF6486

The Terminator – greatest kitchen tool ever!

This finely slices and dices the onions and other other herby/spicy things, and slightly foams the egg so that it is not as runny and sits where it is pour on the bread.

Heat the pan to medium heat.

Place the first piece butter-side DOWN in the pan once it has warmed up. Even with our large size homemade bread slices you can usually get two slices into a large frying pan like this one…

DSCF7481

Pour in the egg/onion mixture and spread evenly over the bread. Don’t worry if some of the mixture finds its way to the hot plate through holes in the bread – this is a self-cauterising toastie.

Layer the tomato and cheese slices evenly over the egg mix.

Add the second slice of bread butterside UP onto the work so far…

Cook until golden brown and then flip…

DSCF7485

The lighter patches are where some of the egg mix has soaked through the bread to the pan surface – nicely cauterised and tidy…

When the second side is golden brown, remove and let it cool for a few minutes so that any liquid cheese does not make a break for it when cutting.

Slice into halves or quarters in accordance with personal preference…optional is a scattering of ground sea salt or flavoured salt…

Daily Prompt: Luxurious | The Daily Post

What’s the one luxury you can’t live without? Photographers, artists, poets: show us LUXURY via Daily Prompt: Luxurious | The Daily Post.

image

Well, it is hardly something that I can not live without as I have clearly done so for some time but it would be luxury to be able to just sit here on a warm but rainy day with a good book and watch the grass grow…

image

I always seem to be so busy now between maintaining and developing the section, looking for work (this is always a good time for that – not!!), trying to get some writing done, and also fitting in just some plain old ‘me’ time…I think that I will have to start enforcing some me time to just keep the balance right and rocking gently back and forth here would be a good place to start…

The expedition…

When the girls arrived on Thursday afternoon, they announced that ‘we’ needed to visit the pond aka the stream at the bottom of our hill…I managed to fend this off til yesterday and as soon as Elisabeth was awake and dressed, she was ready to go…although consented to wait til after breakfast…

IMG_20131220_110550-001
Honey ‘toast’ not cooked…

Then we were committed to our expedition…with Elisabeth as lead scout…

DSCF7425
This way(?)

..and through the ‘jungle’ we went…

DSCF7428
DSCF7432
DSCF7430

…and saw some of those curly plants on the way…

DSCF7426

…finally…the stream…

DSCF7433
DSCF7438

…then…

DSCF7439

..”Hey! Is that a duck?“…

DSCF7440
Rare New Zealand blue duck aka whio…

…”Sure is“…

DSCF7435

You dogs leave the duck alone!

DSCF7442-001

…stopped to climb a tree on the way home…

DSCF7443

Hey, that was fun, Poppa, let’s do a diff’rent ‘venture tomorrow…”

Austerity and writing | The Crayon Files

Austerity and writing | The Crayon Files.

How frugal is too frugal? It depends on your circumstances. About 10 years ago, I remember being horrified when a TV reporter advising people how to save money said that forgoing buying a coffee Monday to Friday would save $750 a year. I would, I reasoned, rather have my daily cappuccino than $750.

A decade on, however, I’m starting to see how much sense that makes, and now I buy only one hot drink a week (chai latte is my choice these days) or fewer.

I started out with a comment on Caron’s original post but it kept getting bigger and bigger and so I’ve split it out into a post in its own right…

I’ve been in the same position for the last four years and I note each year the irony that it is summer and Christmas and traditionally the season of extravagance and excess…

My first lesson is that you can save as much as you like but sooner or later there will be a point where you still need to be generating some income for life support, probably even if you go totally off the grid.

I learned early that actually measuring stuff instead of the ‘good enough’ or ‘she’ll be right’ philosophies saves heaps…we have two large dogs that consume a lot of dog food: simply by measuring their meals instead of guesstimating saw an average increase of 2-3 days per bag of food (while not upsetting canine morale). I read the breadmaker instructions and found that I did not actually need to use a tablespoon of treacle (which I don’t use in any other cooking) but could get away with a teaspoon of normal sugar without affecting the quality of my loaves. A little experimentation also found that I could reduce the yeast input from three to 2 1/2 teaspoons with no loss of of quality or reliability…


011-001

Looking at the prices of wholemeal bread in the supermarket yesterday, there is a lot to be said for making own’s own bread. I’m not sure how long it would take to recoup the cost of a breadmaker (we got our first one through the Flybuys loyalty programme so it was essentially free – and the second from an estate sale at the bottom of the hill) but with 1.5kg of flour being less than $2 and being enough for 3-4 loaves, and considering the cost of a trip to town if we run out of bread, I think that we are ahead of the game making our own bread, and bread crumbs as a byproduct. Still on flour, here. it is usually cheaper per 100 grams to buy the 1.5 kg bags over the 5kg ones (go figure) and so we generally stock up when it is on special e.g. yesterday it was $1.79/1.5kg, and keep it in a large 20+ litre Tupperware container in the back pantry with a smaller ready-use container in the kitchen pantry.

DSCF7419-001

The big flour bin (which needs refilling)

Stock up on high use items during sales and discount offer – we do this with canned goods, especially canned tomatoes which we use in a range of recipes, and canned fruit. This is generally a good rule for anything non-perishable but perishables may need closer management. As Caron says in her post, avoid ‘lazy’ products like pre-sliced/grated cheese – premixed coffees, etc are another – if you can’t make a decent coffee/cocoa/tea on your own, learn!

You can do many interesting and flavourful things with a rice base as an alternative to potatoes…and you can use the rice as the filling ‘bulker’ while using less other ingredients for flavour. Something that I have learned this year is that you can reduce serving sizes by starting with a smaller serving and giving it 30 minutes or so before deciding that you are still hungry…

DSCF7418-001

A well-stocked pantry

You might not save much in fresh produce by having even a small vege garden in the backyard and it can be quite a bit of work (albeit usually quite satisfying). Where the savings come in is when you can save fresh produce for off-season months. Learn how to blanch fruit and vegetables for longer-term storage – we do have a dehydrator too but I don’t think that we have used it at all yet. Summer-grown pumpkin etc can provide yummy soup for a good part of winter; and herbs (parsley, basil, coriander, mint, etc) grown in summer and then dried can keep you going during the colder months; other herbs like rosemary while provide and then some year-round.

DSCF7423

If we can grow fruit here, you should be able to grow it most places and even a small apple tree can provide enough fruit for current consumption and freezing or drying for later use. Rnubard is another ‘fruit’ that will grow most places and year-round.

For both vegetables and fruit, check out farmers markets or nearby produce stalls as alternatives to supermarket fruit and vege – and I do mean, check them out: the much-maligned supermarket is not always the most expensive option.

Meat can be expensive so experiment with vegetarian meals and those which do not require as much meat as a ‘meat-led’ meal; I listed some examples of such meals that I like under my Masterchef Raurimu category…neither option means sacrificing taste or satisfaction.

DSCF6612-001

This sausage frittata makes four large servings but only uses six sausages and six eggs against the 8-12 for individual servings of sausages and eggs…

DSCF6647

Chickens can be a bit of a Catch-22: it costs about $25/month for chicken feed and that is less than the quantity of eggs we consume…but…we only consume that many eggs because they are there: if we had to rely on store-bought eggs our consumption would be much less…you also need both the space and amenable neighbours…

DSCF7420

Unless you are really really picky, like uber-super picky, use a Sodastream machine for carbonated mixers for drinks…austerity does not need to = abstinence from G&T, rum and coke, vodka and V etc…this will pay itself off in a year, especially if you already have a well-stocked drinks cupboard.

My parents bought me these ‘ecoballs’ as a ecologically-friendly alternative to laundry detergents. I’ve been using them for two years and they do the job as well as laundry powder although I still add Napisan to white loads (I still toss the ecoballs into assist the agitation).

DSCF7421

We have options for water heating here. For the first six years we were here, we relied exclusively on the laundry chippy for water heating and only switched the water heaters back on when our flat line fee got to the ridiculous point that using the water heaters did not actually affect our monthly power bill that much at all. Before the Lines Company took over the power infrastructure on the Central Plateau, our monthly power bill with the water heaters off was consistently around $80-90 – now just the line fee is $150 each month. The heaters are off at the moment because I can not afford to get them fixed til next year but the chippy is there when needed and on summer days there is always the trusty solar shower! Probably 50% of our wood comes from the property and we still have a quite a large stock of coal from when we were living in Waiouru and able do a bulk buy each winter…

DSCF7422

Review your phone services…will uncapped broadband being more and more a staple (and stable!) service, you may find that a flat fee to Skype will be a better option for all your non-local calling – and of course, Skype is free for conversations with other Skype users…

We used to have SKY subscription TV but as neither of us were into sport, the value of the investment worth off at about the same rate as the novelty of having access to so very many channels. There is probably a point with channel numbers where the law of diminishing returns kicks in and the greater the selection, the less the satisfaction. For the last four years, we have just had Freeview – and access to our own large DVD library which we expand largely by waiting for new releases to not be new any more and keeping a weather eye of bargain bins for ‘wish list’ titles. Yes, they are ALL legit titles!!

Depending where you live, plan trips into town. The round trip for us to either of the three closest life support centres (Taumarunui, Turangi and Ohakune) costs about $12 in diesel (more in petrol) and so there are definite economies of organisation here. Public transport may be a viable alternative to driving/parking where a practical and useful service is available.

Check appliance settings: when we first got our plasma TV our power bill increased noticeably; on investigation aka reading the manual, we found that it had been delivered with the brightness set to ‘showroom’ which was dramatically bright but not really necessary even in sunlight and which sucked A LOT more power. I’m not such a zealot that I go around religiously turning off all appliances at the wall to save the LED power consumption but if you are so inclined I would encourage you to consider a. whether the standby mode actually prevents condensation if you live in a cold area and b. whether the start up power consumption is actually more that what the LED would have consumed.

There are not too many places with free rubbish disposal but costs are often based on bulk so, after breaking out anything that can be recycled wherever you are, crush as much as possible of your non-recyclable rubbish. Try to recycle as much organic material as possible into, for here, dogs, chickens and garden…this includes much of our paper waste that which is not required for starting the fire in winter being used in our own mini-landfills as we fill holes in the landscape (a perk of rural living). We did look at making our own paper bricks from the fire but these require a lot of space and time to dry properly and I am not sure how well they would perform in modern burners…this will only become a real problem for us when we run out of holes in the ground to fill…

I will be hunkering down, weathering the lean times for another year and…hopefully, at the end of summer, I will have the first draft of my new novel done. That will be a major achievement, since I’ve been researching this topic in various ways for 20 years, and recently, finally, came up with what I think is the perfect formula for the book.

And so should I be…while cash is short, I should be focusing on those things that require less/no money and more muscle or mental input…I have so many stalled writing projects that this should be the perfect opportunity to at least advance them significantly…

Daily Prompt: Eat, Drink, and Be Merry… | The Daily Post

Photographers, artists, poets: show us DINNER via Daily Prompt: Eat, Drink, and Be Merry… | The Daily Post.

Random dinners…some flash, others expedient…

The week in review

Well, all in all, it;s been a pretty challenging week apart but at least the weather has been summery…

DSCF7385We use an old drop-saw to chop firewood up to about 5-6″ in diameter into fireplace-friendly lengths…it is actually a very efficient and effective way of doing it as you can use one hand to raise and lower the saw while using the other to control the wood…after many years of faithful service and right in the middle of a job, it gave up the ghost. I think that it is the bearings and probably not a big job to repair (by someone with the right tools that knows what they are doing) but until I can afford that, I have reverted back to using a hand saw to slice and dice wood for next winter…

It is actually not quite as bad as one might think and I find cutting wood by hand quite satisfying. I do have a bow-saw but I find that the best saw for the job so far seems to be a stock standard pruning saw that rips its way through anything including quite hefty manuka branches…

DSCF7386

Then, right in the middle of a job, Mr Mulcher just gave up the ghost…on stripping it down, I found that the problem was that the screws that hold the engine to the chassis have worked loose and two of the four had already vacated the premised with a third bent in place after catching the edge of the chipping blade mount. Normally this would be another quite quick fix…except…that the flywheel is rusted onto the crankshaft and can not be removed so any repair has to be an indirect route. What I think has happened is that the last guy that tried to remove the flywheel has loosened the engine mounts and not retightened them after giving up on it – that was over a year ago and only a guess on my part so not much that we can do about that.
DSCF7389

I am hoping that it may be possible to either get a shorter bolt into the gap between the flywheel and the chassis; or that it may be possible to drill a whole through the flywheel thought which new bolts can be inserted – not sure what this might do to the flywheel balance thought…In the meantime, I have all this mulchable material mounting up and have had to designate this area by the main gate as the disposal area for that which would have been mulched. The little maple in the foreground has been relocated to make room for the trailer – it never really liked it much there anyway – and this was an area that needed filling at some stage anyway…
DSCF7393

What is annoying though is the loss of mulch at this time of year as it is damn useful for putting on the garden to reduce water loss…

DSCF7395…and I have been doing a lot of clearing this week, my summer project being to clear a metre wide clear area on both sides of the fence around the house to prevent the bush consuming the fence…

I thought that I had better mow the front lawns before they got onto of me but I got halfway up the main drove before one of the belts that drive the blades died…great!!!! It never rains…

DSCF7391

I have started to clear some of this waste land down the driveway past where the woodpile was…it gets a lot of sun while still being relatively sheltered and I am hoping to transfer some of our vegetable production down here…

DSCF7392

Phase one has been shifting some of the self-seeded zucchini from the box garden before they take it over…They seem to be doing OK here and now have some of the remaining mulch over the soil to hold in the water…

DSCF7384

The terracotta containers we got for a song from the Te Kuiti Warewhare have finally died…DSCF7390…but I think that this long-suffering little maple will be a lot happier actually in the ground by the rock garden…the crimson leaves are a nice offset to all the shades of green…

DSCF7398

And after much procrastination and waiting for the ‘right day’, I finally dragged this from here:DSCF7397So that I can continue to reorganise the punga trunks and backfilling behind them (which is whether the mulcher is so damn useful!). By next summer, this area should be pacified, possibly with a pond fed by the drain from the driveway in the immediate foreground…

DSCF7412And to wrap it all up last night, I swept the drive of all the accumulated detritus from the week’s work…with that done and the lawn’s all mown, this place looks pretty choice…

The first book I bought | WordPress.com

This post is inspired by two if Caron Dann’s recent posts The first book I bought and The toy I always wanted…but was afraid to ask for

The first book post really got me thinking about the first book that I bought with my own money and I can not remember or even have an inkling of what it might have been…possibly I was a later starter into buying my own books because we always had lots of books at home and my mum’s parents also had a big library…Christmas and birthdays always included books so it may be that i never felt particularly compelled to buy any myself for some time. Our holiday crib at Wakouaiiti was also close to the local tip and we used to scavenge discarded books from here all through summer…loads and load of Readers Digests which offered good and very diverse reading material…

Looking through the survivors from back then, I did find…

DSCF7403…these SBS books which we used to buy through our primary school…this was the first time that I recall having a fairly unilateral decision making ability although my parents were still paying for the books…these are all well read and I hoping to introduce the twins to them soon…

DSCF7404…these which I remember sifting through the book bargain bin at Woolworths or MacKenzies in Thames Street to find…a bit of an eclectic mix but all again well read and dating from the early 70s…

DSCF7402We used to go to all the various local church and other fairs and fund-raisers and these were also a good source of ten cent books, again well-read and from that same era around 1973-74…around the same time, I also discovered book exchanges and would sift through the shelves looking for anything that looked a. interesting and b. affordable. Although I chewed through a lot of pulp fiction during this phase (from the mid-70s until the mid-80s – joining the Army seems to have killed this past-time off), this wasn’t necessarily a bad thing as I found that pulp fiction is not necessarily bad fiction; and reading that which was bad fiction helped me develop a taste for that is good fiction…

It’s not that I did not have the means to buy my own books before this: while Caron was struggling to save her miserly 10 cents each week (she is correct: that IS a miserly amount for that time), I thought I was hard done by with 50 cents a week at the same time, and supplemented this by lawn mowing and other part time work. In addition to having access to a wealth of books from other sources, books also competed with other resources for my meagre resources.

At first it was Matchbox cars and the runner-up Corgi series and i think that I could buy one a week with the pocket money…

DSCF7198

Survivors

…and then, one day in about 1973 when I was feeling particularly flush, I bought my first Airfix model for the princely sum of 99 cents from Martyns Cycle Shop …and for the next five or so years, models were the major consumer of my income such as it was at the time…

DSCF7401

That first model was the Folland Gnat in the upper right above…for nostalgia sake, I bought another last year, going out of my way to ensure that it was not the new-tool release and was gutted to find that the rockets that made the original so cool had been removed from the mouldings…

The Fiat G.91 (top left) and Hs-123 (bottom right) are box Airfix classics from the 60s. Today they are considered pretty crappy but they were pretty cool in 1973…I bought and built both of these while staying with a friend in Waikouaiiti, the result of our pea-picking and possum hunting expeditions…both were painted using oils left over from his older sisters paint-by-numbers sets…DSCF7400The Supermarine S.6 was 10th birthday present; the Wildcat was a gift from my Dad after a work trip; he took me to Mr Conn’s cycle shop in Oamaru one school holiday afternoon and I walked out the proud owner of the Auster Antarctic; the Tiger Moth was a summer holiday acquisition from the little bookshop in Wakouaiiti; and the Lysander I bought while staying with my cousin in North Oamaru – we cycled into town along the railway cycle track, having to make the Friday night round trip before it got dark as we didn’t have lights on our bikes…

This scrapbook surfaced a few years back from one of my many boxes of ‘stuff’ – in it are many of the covers and instructions from those hastily assembled models, few of which were not assembled and painted by bedtime on the day of acquisition…I’m glad that it has survived the years because it holds many memories…

Back then, I was never that shy about asking for something that I wanted – not that the asking ever did much to increase my chances of getting it. In fact, the only time that I think I can definitely establish a casual effect between cause (asking) and effect (receiving) was with this really super cool water pistol that had a periscope mirror that could see round corners and a swivelling nozzle that would (allegedly) let you shoot around corners. I bugged everyone about it and my Mum’s cousin, Murray, who was staying with us at the time, bought it for me. Of course, it didn’t work as well in the flesh as it seemed to in the ads and it was soon broken and eventually disposed off…

That was a nice thing that Murray did but generally I’m not so sure that it is a good thing to succumb to much to childhood asking and bling-hunting…looking back, I was never unhappy with birthday and Christmas surprises and I think that is half the funny of both giving and receiving: that surprise when peeling back the wrapping…one of my favourite Christmas surprises was this…

Revell Ju-87B 1-32 boxartIt is a seriously sized box and I really thought that I was dreaming when I found it at the foot of my bed…my parents must have ordered it in as I had never seen anything like it in any of the model shops that I had been in…I still have parts of it that surface occasionally in my spares box (yes, I have come back to this hobby); I don’t remember what happened to the main airframe in the end but it suffered numerous indignities during its life with me, including an attempt to motorise the propeller with a (too) powerful electric motor than almost took a finger off when I connected the power…

Most definitely the best toy never asked for…

Fissionchups

DSCF7405-001

Saturday night dinner

A Kiwi classic meal, fish and chips is a quick and easy meal after a hard day in the sun…this weekend was the first time that I have used a beer batter but it certainly won’t be the last!!!

Switch on your deep fryer at an intermediate setting; or start to heat a pot of cooking oil – the healthy stuff, of course…

The batter is simple, just an egg, about half a cup of flour (self-raising or toss in 3/4 teaspoon of baking powder), and enough beer (Tui Golden Lager worked well) so that the batter is runny enough for the fish to be dunked in it. Let this sit in the fridge for 30-60 minutes – the Masterchef recipe said 30 but I got distracted and left it for 60 and it was still good and still good again for Sunday’s dinner as well.

Personal choice whether you batter the fish whole or in pieces…my preference s is for pieces so I chopped the fish into thumb-sized chunks that I then submerged into the batter. The fish I used was terikihi, caught by our mighty hunter ans fisherman SIL a few months ago…it freezes well…

While the fish is soaking up the beer flavour from the batter, start on the chips. I always suffer from The Legend of the Little Boy Whose Eyes Were Bigger Than His Puku when I make chips and make more than I need (but rarely more than I can eat!!). I usually use our custom chip cutter but I am thinking that next time I might cut them myself so that they are bigger and chunkier.

Once chopped, give them four minutes in the microwave. This pretty much cooks them and means that the frying is mainly applying a crispy surface. By now, your oil should be hot enough so you can transfer the chips directly into the oil from the microwave. I use a slotted spoon to do this to minimise splashes – trust me, that oil is HOT!! Keep the chips in the oil for four minutes then take them out and drain them.

Turn the fryer up to its hottest setting and once it is hot hot hot, place the chips back into the oil…leave them in the oil until they attain your personally preferred shade of golden brown. Remove and drain.

DSCF7414-001

Sunday night dinner

Add the battered fish to the oil and cook them for two to three minutes – this is all they need to cook all the way through. While they are cooking, plate the chips and, as soon as the fish are done, drain them and plate them as well. Sprinkle some sea salt over the top, squeeze some lemon on to the fish and voila, done!!

Daily Prompt: Tattoo….You? | The Daily Post

Photographers, artists, poets: show us PERMANENT.

via Daily Prompt: Tattoo….You? | The Daily Post.
Because it takes over an hour to now our lawns, I like to listen to an Audible book while mowing as a form of concurrent activity. I still have my original Creative Rio MP3 player that came with my original Audible subscription way back in 2001 – all 64MB of it! – but I had to buy a new player when Audible stopping supporting its original compact data format.
My new -since 2010 – player is a Creative Stone MuVo 4GB and while switching books while mowing the lawns on Monday, I noted that it was longing a bit worn and I wondered how long it might last…little did I suspect that question was about to be answered for me…
…as my player dangled by the headphone cable, Indiana Jones-like, near the spinning blades of death, before succumbing, unlike Indiana Jones, to their whirling dance of devastation…
image

The scene of the crime…
image
The culprit in time out…
image

Crime scene investigation…
image

The evidence…I think that it is safe to say that the damage is PERMANENT…
Replacement will have to wait until normal employment services are resumed…the jury is still out on whether a new plug can be attached to my noise-canceling headphones…fortunately there’s no more travel on the horizon before Christmas…
…and then…
…to add insult to injury, I just started on the top lawn when the mower snapped a drive belt so I couldn’t even finished the damn lawns!!!!