Nearly the end of January, and I don't know where the month has gone.
I'm working on the second sock of a pair in an Aran design, so I'll wait till I've got the second one finished. I took a break because C wanted a new hat, having left his warmest one somewhere in Maine or New Hampshire. He fusses about his ears so I spent a while choosing a pattern on Ravelry that had earflaps, and then he decided he didn't want them. By the time I'd lined the first one with fleece (which he was adamant he did want, it no longer fit him, so I had to knit another. It was a pattern that was easy to adjust, the coloured strip ran over multiples of 4, and the diamond pattern over multiples of 10, so to adjust the original 100 stitches up to 112 and down to 110 was easy. So, very unusual for us, we have a his 'n' hers.
In the kitchen - C came across a recipe in Ottolenghi's "Ottolenghi" for a crusty Italian loaf, and he has fallen in love with the end result. It is, apparently, the sort of bread he dreams of buying when we are on holidays in Greece and France. It's a two-day affair, starting with a biga the day before, so it has required a bit of adjusting to my Sunday morning housework routine to ensure that it's not ready to go into the oven at the same time that I am trying to get the kitchen floor washed. I think we had the book out because I had been trying his double lemon chicken recipe, printed in our national paper and originally appearing in the New York Times, I think. Anyway, by now I have typed the recipe out and laminated it, to save having to hoist the book out every week. So far I have been using pasta flour as what I had on hand, but when C went to lodge a cheque at a bank in the town centre yesterday, I went along with him because I had a pretty good idea I would find 00 bread flour in the supermarket there, and indeed I did - the one specially for long slow ferments, so it will be interesting to see if it makes a difference.
It is also marmalade orange season here. So I looked up various pressure cooker recipes, chose one and was delighted with the end result. It called for cooking the oranges whole for about 15 minutes first. Then they were wonderfully soft and it was easy to scrape most of the white off leaving the peel to cut finely. I used jam sugar so as not to have to boil it for too long, and we ended up with ten tangy jars. C was horrified when I said there was 6 lb of sugar in there, but he did his mathematics and realised that it was actually much cheaper than quality bought marmalade. I used this recipe here, and it was easy to scale up to 3lb fruit. I did move to a larger pot for the last boil with the sugar, having a larger quantity.
You have a lot to show for January!
ReplyDeleteI buy my pantry stuff from the Amish in Pennsylvania but I know I always felt good when we got back home and I stocked the pantry and then rolled the goodie out over time. Now I order online and get far less but I often combine with a friend to help lower shipping for each of us. They make a cherry jam to die for.
You remind me of my mom who was a master knitter like yourself. She would make me hats, scarves and mittens-which I dutifully lost pretty quickly. (mittens) Do you handwash the hats with the fleece lining? And is that real fleece?
As always your pics are delightful. :)
hugs Margot
I think it's so great that you can adapt those knitting patterns with such great results. The hats look nice and toasty. And so does the bread in a whole different way. I've never made marmalade, but it sound delicious. I usually find myself buying a jar of cherry or peach jam when we're on vacation and trying to plan when to open it so it will not go to waste as it's usually only me who uses it. I just noticed today that I can do the Windows 11 upgrade but I'm always so gun shy of doing it myself. If I had been able to wait one more month for my new computer I would have had them do it when they transferred all my files. You are so good about that technical stuff too.
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