Brief Lancastrian Encounter

This weekend, in the last gasp of our dreich summer, I went to Morecambe. I’ve wanted to go for ages because what I can see of the sea from the M6 motorway looks so inviting.

The sun shone on Saturday as Significant Other and I set off towards Lancaster on the way to Morecambe. This is not the best signposted city and we got snarled up in the shopping traffic in the city centre looking for the way to Morecambe. The upside being a view of some great buildings and old narrow streets and now I want to go to Lancaster for a weekend to explore it.

Morecambe itself, in common with so many seaside towns is fading (well, more accurately, has faded) although there is some lovely art deco architecture.





The old Midland Hotel has been refurbished and looked a bit out of my price league. Checking out their website confirmed that!

The Winter Gardens are being renovated and a look inside showed what a major task the Friends of, face. They are hoping for grants and in particular lottery money, to help. I hope they get this as it is sad to see the ruin of such a fine building. I was not allowed to take photos inside, but there is a good slideshow of the interior on their website.


It was warm as long as we stayed out of the sea breeze, and I was chilled walking out to the end of the Stone Jetty. The jetty, built in the early 1800's, is all that remains of Morecambe’s harbour where ferries from Scotland and Ireland docked. This area is now renovated and covered with sculpted birds and jokes inset into the paving. Sig Other found the jokes amusing.

View towards the lake District

Local lad Eric Morecambe is celebrated in a statue surrounded by verses from “Bring Me Sunshine”. I took this photo for my mother who is a fan.


No visit anywhere seems complete without seeking out the second hand bookshops of the area. I spent nearly an hour in the one on the prom. I’d have spent more money had the owner bothered to create any order inside the shop. Obviously a stranger to labelling, or even the alphabet; such haphazardly mingled genre must cost this chap dear.

In contrast, the chatty owner of the jewellery shop next door had me investing in some starfish shaped earrings. I also learned why my silver jewellery tarnished. Apparently it is because I don’t keep it in little cloth bags.

We headed out of Morecambe to Carnforth which has the distinction of having the railway station where Brief Encounter was filmed. We were too late for the visitor centre as it closed at 4pm, but, again, they have pics on their website.

http://www.carnforthstation.co.uk/

I think a longer visit centred in Lancaster is definitely called for.

Sunday was expected to be wet, but the sun came out and so we took off to Dunham Massey, an estate owned by the National Trust with a house and extensive grounds including a deer park. I’m glossing over any mention of venison and Sig Other was well warned off referring to Bamby Burgers.

I usually have no luck with wildlife, so I was resigned to a fruitless wander round a country park with nothing but a few sparrows on view. Not so! More and cuter deer than I thought possible, posed for the camera. Although they are wary of people, and those children who galumphed after them had no hope of catching them, the deer are clearly used to humans and coexist with the crowds during opening hours.
How many deer in this picture?

Very cute deer.

















Fallow Deer










And finally, some autumnal fungus.







Spiritual spam

Some mornings I spring lightly from slumber ready to face the day with all senses functioning; others, I just stumble out of bed and never quite get it together. It was the latter which caused me to fall for some spam and almost open it.

Eyes not really focussed and brain most certainly disengaged, I squinted at my emails and tried to think who was sending me something about Panis. Yeah, anyone with any sense would have realised instantly, but on that occasion, not me.

Panis, I thought, why does that sound familiar; what bell is it ringing? A faint warning must have operated at some subconscious level as I looked it up before opening the email.

Panis, completely fascinatingly, are demons in the Rigveda, which is a part of the sacred collection of Vedas, and an element of Hindu prayers.

However, since I didn’t previously know that fact, it can’t have been that bell which rang. More likely it was the slight similarity with Panos, an educational charity whose email newsletter I receive monthly.

Both these interpretations are infinitely more interesting than the spam that lands in everyone’s in trays with tedious regularity.

http://www.panos.org.uk/

Munching while mammon burns






I tend to blame rather a lot of capitalists and those politicians who prop up the worst of the chaotic gambling club that is international finance, for the present catastrophes in banking. In their extreme greed they care so little for ordinary people. But I especially vent my ire on those who are set fair to destroy Scottish banking heritage and threaten the production of Scottish bank notes. And those who abjectly fail to value or protect that heritage.



Having found some pics of money, I remembered this one, which is a Clydesdale tenner showing Mary Slessor. The first woman shown on the front of a Scottish bank note. Slessor, born 1848 in Aberdeen is commemorated for her work as a missionary in Nigeria helping abandoned children. The map on the reverse is where she worked.


Enough words will be spilt over this that I need not add more today. Therefore, I will munch while mammon burns. Ghastly mixed metaphor notwithstanding, one has to do something to take one’s mind off the hideous political and financial situation in the allegedly ‘real world’. Instead, I will divert attention to the everyday that is my real world, that of pottering in the kitchen creating new ways to feed myself.

Plums for pudding
Some more experimental cooking over the last few days. I had some very sour plums so rather than screw up my face and eat raw, I cooked them.

Plums, halved
Butter – not too much
White wine – a good splosh
Honey – few teaspoons
Vanilla extract – very little
Tablet crumbs

I softened the halved plums in butter, before placing them in an ovenproof dish. I added the wine, honey and vanilla extract to the hot pan to mix with the butter, then poured it all over the plums before sprinkling them with tablet crumbs. Into the oven for a while till it all got suitably gooey. I served these with single cream.

Chilli chocolate buns
Ever willing to try new things to eat, I bought some chocolate with chilli added. It was dreadful. I didn’t want to chuck it, so I made some chocolate chip buns with it.

Plain flour
Baking powder
Two eggs
Caster sugar
Carotino oil which is a mix of red palm and canola oil
Crushed up chilli chocolate

Mix together and bake till done. They are fine, but the chilliness still comes through, so there won’t be a repeat of this experiment. The Carotino oil is a new one (to me) I bought last week. It is bright orange and tastes a bit different to other veg oils. I’ve used it as salad oil and in ordinary cooking, but because of its colour I won’t be frying an egg in it. The orange also seems to have stained the Tupperware measuring jug I used in the above recipe.

This is the link to the carotino oil website. It only has a few disappointing recipes, on the other hand it goes into more details about omegas 3 and 6 and lycopene and Q-enzyme 10, all of which as a vegetarian can be difficult to include in my diet. And, easily seduced as I am by packaging, it looks nice in my oil collection.

http://www.carotino.eu/uk/

Inchoate urge

I have an inchoate urge to do some knitting now the days are shortening, and in the distant past I recall being a more than proficient knitter. I can make this claim in great confidence as no examples of my knitting are now extant! This prompted an online search for fractal knitting after mentioning this urge to significant other who was once promised a fractal jersey. He cannot recall who offered this but I took it upon myself to look into the creative possibilities.

Fractals are features of mathematics often seen as arcane by the anti-logicians amongst us. They tend to be mentioned by those who enjoy describing the Fibonacci Sequence and casually tossing around references to recursive algorithms.

Mathematicians assert their inability to describe fractals in Euclidean geometry, but fractal analysis can be done using computers. There are links in all this to sacred geometry which is concerned with the patterns of monoliths, shells or even the harmonies in music. In other words there are certain designs which appear constant in nature and human design which can be described using mathematics, but fractals, despite their complexity, or because of this are useful in many sciences including medicine.

Fractals are not just esoteric creations in maths labs but occur almost mundanely in nature. Clouds and ferns are fractals, as are those pointy shaped cauliflowers on sale in upmarket whole food shops.
All well and good, but when I looked into the mass of fractal crafts online, there is a vast range of patterns and examples of fractal knitting, quilting and needle point just for starters. But somehow I doubt that sig other is going to receive a fractal jersey for the dreaded December pressie fest from me. Any knitting I take up will have to be easier that all that, so it may be he will get a Dr Who scarf masquerading as a moebius strip.

Weekend wanderings

For some time now, I have been interested in increasing my creativity. This prompted me to join an Artists Way group which was based around the book of that name by Julia Cameron. The exercises in the book are designed to help bring out your creativity by nurturing it, especially through ‘Artist’s Dates’. These are activities, usually done on your own which ‘feed’ your creativity wellsprings.

I try to fit in as many as I can but this tends to be sporadic in my case, however, I had a fairly inspiring weekend. On Saturday I tasted my way around the farmers market, eating all the veggie and sweet things on offer, before going along to watch a Tai Chi demonstration.

I followed this up with a visit to the National Library of Scotland exhibition of 500 years of Scottish Printing. The efforts the exhibitors have made to include some women’s printing history added to the relevance of the materials on display. There was one excerpt on a wall describing a woman’s letter to the legal body of the day asking to have her first marriage annulled as she was forced into it and the scoundrel absconded soon after learning her folks wouldn’t settle any money on her. She subsequently heard he’d been killed and married some one else. Predictably, aforementioned scoundrel turned up again. But! The story ran out before the end so I don’t know what happened!

According to the NLS website blog, the first book to be printed in Scotland that was written by a woman, was Ane Godlie Dreame (Edinburgh, 1603) by Elizabeth Melville, Lady Colville of Culross.




On Sunday I went to Threipmuir Reservoir for a walk and muttered constantly at myself for not bringing my camera to photograph the views across the Pentlands in the early autumn light. I had been doing so well remembering to photograph places I go on walks this year, but maybe I need to leave the camera somewhere obvious so I see it before leaving home!

The drawback to walks in the country is the mud. The walk out to the reservoir was wet, muddy and splashy from happy dogs chasing sticks through puddles spattering me with even more mud. Also, why do I wear my best jeans for these occasions? It just makes me moan, but I did enjoy being outside the city for a change.

http://www.theartistsway.com/

http://www.nls.uk/events/printing-exhibition/index.html

http://www.geo.ed.ac.uk/scotgaz/features/featurefirst2630.html

Absent Osprey's

I took some pics during our dismal summer, and this is one from a trip to South West Scotland taken at 10pm near midsummer.

This one is from a trip up the A9 to try to see the Osprey's. They failed completely to turn up after me making an effort to go visit!! I'd only been meaning to for the last ten years. I later discovered they were all getting the celeb treatment by BBC's naturewatch. Clearly I didn't have the right equipment or charisma of Bill Oddie and his team of intrepid bird fanciers. Bitter? Me?



Well, I got lost that day and took several hours to find my way back to the car park at Loch Garten. At least it was hot and sunny and the scenery (minus Osprey's) was at its best.






Getting lost meant I could take some other pics. This one is of a part of the Forest of Garten which is being allowed to return to bogland. I was there just as the dragon flies were hatching.




More bog in the Forest of Garten. I had one unsettling moment when reading the information board in the carpark. There are over 100 different kinds of spiders in the forest. As an arachnophobe, I find this an inexcusable excess of nature.

CERN Again

I’ve kept track of the news about CERN all day today. I have to admit to a little anxiety over whether it would actually work when they switched it on. Probably I am too used to things not quite delivering what they promise, but in this case it was by all accounts prefect.

The best potential spin off from all the publicity is that more girls will see how exciting physics is and choose to take this as a subject at school and go on to have careers in science. Or at least I hope so!

Well done all these hard working folks at CERN for a job well done and now onto the next phase of discovery and new theories.

Darcy Disappoints

Normally I find TV programmes boring, trite, insulting and overly focussed on men and balls (aka sport). Last night, however I was treated to time travel fantasy of the most diverting sort. Lost in Austen began with the first of a four part series where a 21st century gal is transported to Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice novel.

From an entirely non Bobby Ewing style shower, Lizzie Bennet emerges into Amanda Price’s bathroom and convinces her to go through the door into her life.

Fair enough to say it was a clunky beginning, but all time travel fantasies are like that. I don't want to get too negative with a 'can't do' attitude, but as far as I know it is not possible to travel though time, so it is not going to be realistic. The only way is to get it over and done with, with the minimum amount of explanation and get straight into the story. It was the same with both series of Life on Mars and audiences by and large stuck in there. Readers/viewers will either accept this or they won’t and if you want to enjoy the rest of the plot you suspend disbelief and critical thinking. The clue is in the word … Fantasy!

I liked Miss Price’s mutterings to herself and these contained the best lines, especially when she mused about meeting Mr Darcy and reminded herself that he wasn’t going to be Colin Firth, with the line “even Colin Firth isn’t Colin Firth, they had to change the shape of his head with make up.”

As ever the actor failed to live up to my image of Darcy. I don’t have an exact image in my head of the perfect Darcy, but I am convinced I’ll recognise it when I see it. Even Colin Firth didn’t succeed in meeting my expectations, but this Mr Darcy really let the side down. I’m not keen on dark brooding heroes and this one crossed the line from Byronesque into Neanderthal so prominent is his brow and scowling demeanour. Bingley was better, if a bit twee.

Dismal Darcy notwithstanding, the programme is excellent and I look forward to the next 3 episodes.

http://www.itv.com/Drama/perioddrama/LostInAusten/default.html

Impending Sogginess

More cookin’! It was the impending sogginess of the mushrooms wot persuaded me to have a bit of a cook-in this evening. That and the rain and the thought that autumn is approaching.

I’d bought far too many veggies in the supermarket so I knew they needed culinary attention. When I looked in the fridge I saw that the damn mushrooms were going soggy – Sainsbury’s you have got to get a grip about the quality of your mushrooms. This keeps happening to me, that I buy mushrooms, get them home and the next day they are mush minus the ‘shroom.

I got inspired and had a go at some new ideas. First I dug out the pearl barley I’d bought in anticipation of soups and broths and got that cooking in a pot. Then some new potatoes. Then I lined up the spices, herbs and flavourings.

Next I peeled rather a lot of mushrooms. I cannot bear not to peel them, but don’t care if others leave them unpeeled – what the eye doesn’t see and all that.

Eventually and with the help of my Edith Piaf CD I got three good meals to freeze.

1. Mushroom, mustard & barley
This became mushrooms in olive oil, Dijon mustard, dried tarragon and barley and a tiny bit of garlic. Season to taste with bouillon powder. Most of it didn’t reach the freezer it was so good. I’m really pleased with this experiment.

2. Some kind of saag
Grape seed oil with a selection of chilli flakes, coriander powder, cardamom pod, garam massala and anything else reachable on my spice rack, as well as a veggie stock cube. Add cooked potatoes, raw mushrooms, fry for a bit, then add spinach. Cook till it’s done. I made it quite dry as I intend to serve it with naan.

3. Proto-tortilla
Ran out of steam before the end of this. I sautéed carrot, yellow pepper, and orange pepper in oil. Added chilli flakes (guess who forgot to buy fresh chillies) then added stock and spinach. I remembered seeing a cookery programme that recommended adding some ground coriander and a pinch of ground cinnamon to this type of dish, so those went in too with veggie liquid stock. Tomorrow I’ll add beans and wrap it in tortillas, cover in spicy tomato sauce and grated cheese bake in the oven then scoff.

This lot should feed me for a few days, although it is mostly destined for the freezer. But this time I will label it as I seem convinced, even in the face of all evidence to the contrary, that I will remember what is in an anonymous freezer box or bag. It makes defrosting more of an adventure than necessary.


Links


I went back to insert the links to an earlier post as promised. I only added these at the end of the post. One day I will learn how to insert links in the text.





Fridge rummaging

Got around to some actual cooking for a change last night. Lately I’ve been snacking or else defrosting previous concoctions in an effort to work my way through the backlog of frozen meals I’ve built up.

I had a rummage in the fridge and noticed the dried cranberries I omitted to get creative with at xmas. Feeling inspired I consulted online sources for ideas and as I didn’t have the exact ingredients for anything I saw there, I did my usual chuck-it-all-in-and-hope-for-the-best.

FIVE SUGARS LOAF

Brown sugar
Dried cranberries
Black treacle
Honey
Hedgerow fruits cordial (Sainsbury’s Taste the Diff)
Butter
Plain flour
Flaked almonds
2 eggs

Can’t give measurements as mostly these were dependent on how much of any one ingredient I had to hand. But the five sugars happened because there was not enough of any one thing, so I experimented. I knew it was going to turn out ok because I actually licked the spoon. Something I rarely do.

I can’t give temperature either as my oven is a mostly ex-fan oven with a door that does not close as tightly as it should. This means that I have to lower the temperature because it sometimes works as a fan oven, but extend the cooking time when it doesn’t. I simply guess when things are ready and am prepared to finish dishes off in the microwave if I guess wrong. Or scrape off burnt bits (thankfully, this is rare).


It is possible that my way of cooking could drive precise types over the edge.

Since the oven was on, I made more use of it. This is part of my electric economising in the face of dire energy bills and a vague sense of greenness. So I sautéed yellow pepper and courgette in very good olive oil, added curly parsley and fennel seeds and a teaspoon of veg bouillon powder. I mixed this with cooked short cut macaroni, pumpkin seeds and a fair amount of smoked cheese before bunging it in the oven till I remembered to take it back out and eat it.


For each particle there is also an anti-particle

Or so I am reliably informed by the CERN website. My inner particle physicist is excited by the imminent LCH start-up due on September 10. This is what 20 years of international cooperation has been working towards and I for one, am delighted that it is almost here.

From the CERN website:
"The Large Hadron Collider is the largest and most complex scientific instrument ever built and the highest energy particle accelerator in the world. The accelerator is located 100 m underground and runs through both French and Swiss territory.
Year 2008 marks the culmination of 20 years of work by physicists, engineers, technicians and support staff from over 80 different countries."


I've previously discussed the value of art, but this is about the value of scientific progress, something I find easier to accept and assign a higher value than old paintings. Not that I am in favour of all scientific progress as I think this is so often derailed by big business skewing research for their own ends (a blog for another day).

What makes this so thrilling is not just the actual potential for new understanding of particle physics. "It will revolutionise our understanding, from the minuscule world deep within atoms to the vastness of the Universe," says the website.

I first heard of CERN years ago, probably from a Horizon programme on the BBC. This sparked excitement as I am a frustrated physicist, and when I studied physics in the 70's little of this was accessible at the level to which I studied. No one had yet discovered the "particle zoo" or named the elementary particles quarks and leptons. Physicists suspected there was dark matter and theorised that at the Big Bang there was anti matter, but these were fairly new theories at that time. I was lucky enough to have physics tutors who had worked in the nuclear and chemical industries and shared their fascination with cutting edge science. Now at CERN four experiments will push forward the science, but I'll stop here with the explanations as a visit to the CERN website will give you everything you could want to know about particles.

Their education pages are terrific and you don't need an in depth knowledge of physics to learn enough to generate your own excitement about this (well, unless you really, really don't like science).

There is also some fun stuff:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j50ZssEojtM

http://public.web.cern.ch/Public/Welcome.html