1.31.2010

the best and fluffiest butter milk pancakes!

     Well, that’s what KITTENCAL announced them as when she introduced this recipe to the legions of recipe fanatics who pour over the 399,000 recipes posted on RecipeZarr. A plethora of wonderful and sometimes (not very often) just so-so offerings. (Loved by the author of course - why else would they want to see it in print?). Anyway, the following recipe is almost identical to the one I have been using for over 60 years and which my father used when he served up his glorious batches of delicious hotcakes every Sunday morning when I was growing up. And, to top it off, prepared by him from the time he was a young bachelor of 17 or 18 (very young he was, from his telling), to the year he died at age 76. So, except for one ingredient and a somewhat different method of putting it all together, here is the magic formula – try it, you will definitely not go wrong.

from KITTENCAL via RecipeZaar
15 pancakes
          2 cups of flourcooking-clipart-7
          1 teaspoon baking soda
          2 teaspoons baking powder
      3-4 tablespoons sugar
          1 teaspoon salt
          2 large eggs
   1 3/4 cups buttermilk
       1/2 cup sour cream
      5 tablespoons melted butter
          1 teaspoon vanilla (optional)
  1.   In a large bowl combine the flour, baking soda, baking powder, sugar and salt.
  2. In another bowl whisk eggs, buttermilk, sour cream, melted butter and vanilla (if using) add to the flour mixture; whisk until smooth (the batter will be thick!).
  3. Let the mixture sit for 5 minutes at room temperature.
  4. After 5 minutes whisk or mix again.
  5. Drop at 1/4 cup of batter onto a medium-hot skillet: cook until lightly browned on the bottom, turn and cook until browned. cooking-clipart-8
     The difference between this recipe and the one I have used for decades is the sour cream. Sour cream is a great addition, making the pancakes very slightly heavier (of little consequence). Also, I use a full 2 cups of buttermilk and 1 3/4 cups of flour, which seems to balance out the ingredients, the outcome being almost identical. And, I mix the batter as little as possible, adding a small amount of additional buttermilk if it is too thick, and placing it in a warm spot for about 20 minutes before scooping it onto the griddle.
        The manner, and order in which my father put the ingredients together is very old fashioned, but the result? who can tell? If you wish to know his “old-fashioned” way - as used in lumber camps and ranches where he worked as a young man - let me know, and I shall pass it on to you.

      You are no doubt wondering what brought on this culinary addition here? Well, it’s really quite simple. My son and his family were to have a pancake breakfast at our home last Sunday, but unfortunately he had come down with a fever. An attack from some bug or other that kept growling around in his stomach in a painful manner. This was a day or so after arriving back from a holiday with his family in Mexico. I mean, the mind works overtime on that kind of information. Anyway, he was sent off to bed and I assured him that the buttermilk and sour cream purchased to go into the pancakes would keep, and that we would see them the following Sunday a.m. I also said, "God willing!", and told him to just get better.
     Well, he did, but Brie – his wife – didn’t, she got whatever bug it was they decided to share and spent a day or two in bed, saw the doctor, had an exam (is waiting for the results), and slowly began to feel better. Yes, they would certainly be having breakfast with us this Sunday (today) and not to worry.
     Not so fast. It turned out that friends of theirs were on the way down from Alberta and one of the Gulf Islands - even as we were speaking of the coming breakfast together - and had made other plans for our guests. So, to make a long story short, Janet and I had a full pancake breakfast for two this morning - 

                                                              Fruit
                                                              Bacon and eggs
                                                              Pancakes (with Maple Syrup)

     Most enjoyable it was too. Couldn’t waste the buttermilk and sour cream now, could we?

1.22.2010

What the sea hath wrought

Remember the old bench that sat on the edge of the sea, steps from the house? Yes, that one;  a place for gentle contemplation. Well, keep that memory because it’s no longer there. It is no longer there. . . unless you acknowledge that a destroyed mix of rusted iron, and weather stained slats that lie in broken ruin on the grass to be  that bench; waiting in twisted discomfort for an occupant or two.  No, I’m afraid a brutal storm struck in the dark of night, turning the incoming tide into a fury of destruction. Mountainous waves were instrumental in its demise, along with many feet of the garden. Here , lying in broken ruin, is what has become of my seaside bench. Sharer of hours of  dreaming it lies shattered and bIMGP0259eyond repair in its own nightmare.IMGP0257 I had begun this tale of garden woe yesterday, wishing to have you commiserate with me on certain elements of  the that particular storm's damage,  but a much more powerful one following quickly in the previous one's wake, came raging  in to attack the shoreline below us with ever more savagery. Today the story is more brutal. During the night it raged unseen in the darkness as it roiled the waves, but to me, as I stood watching the turgid sea in the gray, rain pelted early morning light, its anger seemed  greater than in the hours before. Ripping into the rain soaked reclaimed land forming the border of the garden it  pulled back into itself yards of lawn and graveled soil,  tearing out a mighty gap beyond the high tide line as it pulled away the supporting wall. The old bench, pushed or thrown yards away from where it lay after the first attack,  became part of a melee of  logs, rocks, and sea waste wildly tumbling along the garden; powerfully, blindly tossed about, its rusted metal legs and sun baked slats destroyed even further.
Now, the aftermath! Oh! Yes! The aftermath! Not of great consequence in the world – there are devastations of much more import – but no matter. Those in the  audience waiting to see for themselves this minor “ fury of the sea” are, I’m sure, looking forward to comparing the before and after. Well, here it is; nature at work, rough but not extraordinary, simply “Mother”, doing her thing. I mean. . . she’s entitled. Maybe we will never understand her moods, but she certainly lets us share them. The Aftermath & Bench bordered
nature has funny jpg cali 5 framed

1.15.2010

Rambling

Accompanied by my favourite font – Comic Sans – I ramble.
     I have just come from having my eyes glued to a browser window from which reams of information dealing with the proper usage of the elements of grammar was pouring out. I was amazed at the erudition of the mind behind the programme, but the manner in which said erudition was  being presented was what truly involved my attention. Everything you might want to know; certainly need to know; should know, and have - quite clearly as in my case - forgotten that you knew about grammar was there before me. Presented in a comfortable and natural manner, it was as though a kindly and caring teacher wished the student to learn the tricky ins and outs of grammar with as little hair tearing as possible. Free from pedantic mannerisms, it was a pleasure to engage in; even though it meant I would be acknowledging and working on my blatant deficiencies.
     Now I have to get myself together, gather up my errors of grammar, sort them out, clean them up and place them where they belong. Goodness, gracious me, what a task lies ahead! Of course, and Happy New Year! I’ve just made a resolution! In print! Oh, my God! Oh! Well. Carry on regardless, and all that. Maybe I’ll be shot at dawn. Now that’s dramatic!
Before I’m accused of ranting and the rambling is lost in verbiage I’ll put down the name of the site that won me over, in case there is another somebody out there who would care to have a look see.
                                                                        grammar.ccc.com.net.eduhttp://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/GRAMMAR/images/title_top.jpg
Put the URL in your browser and a page will come up redirecting you to the Guide to Grammar & Writing site.
The writer who neglects punctuation, or mispunctuates, is liable to be misunderstood for the want of merely a comma, it often occurs that an axiom appears a paradox, or that a sarcasm is converted into a sermonoid.
                                                                                                                              Edgar Allan Poe
                                                                                 1809-1845, American Poet, Critic, short-story Writer

Aniat and I on the beach 1945 antique A very old dear old friend of mine has taken it upon herself to edit my stories and comments. We have know each other for many decades quite a number of years, as you can probably guess from the descriptive photo displayed here - snapped on English Bay beach in Vancouver during the early days of photography. Thank you Anita, for your much appreciated help, and for the numerous, highly amusing and at times informative videos and other tidbits from the ether world you send along
                                                                           
“Writing is an act of faith, not a trick of 
grammar”.
                                                                                                                     E. B. White
JANUARY 1st, 2001, was a glorious day. It was cool but warmish in the sun, and the sea was only slightly restless. Wandering down to the edge of the garden, and moving onto the beach, I sauntered a few yards along the sand and gravel, enjoying the scrunching sound coming from beneath my feet, then stepping around the bend of the small cove I paused. I had come to visit again an old, very old ruin of a wharf; storm tossed onto the shore in an earlier time. As I gazed along its ruined length I  wondered why I had never taken a photo of this forgotten giant. Having my handy camera handy I proceeded to rectify that error.
ruined wharf with waves and  seagull cali 9
The wharf, 150 feet long (measured), and about 25 feet wide (guessed), lies high on the beach, right on the high tide mark. Broken and gray from relentless rains, burning summer suns, and the cruel battering ram of storms, it still bears a sense of its former majesty. A brave and ruined relic from a previous period; holding within itself the memory of an earlier time when it was the pride of some long ago - now vanished - coastal community. In its massive timbers, joined together by countless iron bolts, well rusted but forever thrusting their twisted and bent forms uselessly into the sky, can be read the immensity of the trees that once towered along the shores of this Strait. How their height and enormity must have thrilled the early settlers who had longed for such a world as this on which they now gazed. But others who stood with them had also dreamed, but theirs were the dreams of wealth. Their imaginings pictured not the beauty and wonder of the ancient trees, but the uses to which these forest giants could be put. 
I climbed onto the wIMGP0266harf and walked along the massive, torn and broken timbers that had held so tightly to their original form - a walk made difficult by the deterioration of the wharf itself and the accumulation of detritus from land and sea layered over it. The afternoon tide was beginning to draw up to the section of the beach on which my giant lay. Standing on its ravaged sea side edge I watched as the new tide pushed gently into the base of this sleeping titan. Small pebbles and foam born bubbles lapped at the black charcoaled areas of the wharf’s timbers - timbers scorched from years of beach fires built to chase away the chill of sea washed summer nights. Successive decades of swimmers, bathers and beach combers had used the old wharf for a back rest or protective wall against wind and sun; countless fires set beneath its shadow had left their charred signatures on the ancient wood. IMGP0268 
A combination of age, weather and fire and the scrubbing of endless tides had polished sections of the old wood to a marvelous sheen. The mahogany richness of the colour, remarkable. It is warmly reminiscent of the surface of a highly polished and treasured desk. To play my hands across its surface borders on the sensuous; closing my eyes I imagine the fine exquisite texture of some early romance that had once tantalized my touch.
To know that this tragic, dethroned old wharf might still be here long after I am gone, is a treasure to hold. I keep the promise of this to myself, knowing it will be waiting, unhurried, just a step around a bend, along a sandy sea kissed beach. So, whenever I have a longing to return to its side and share a radiant sunrise, an inspiring sunset, or just a simple, beautiful sunny day in its company, I stroll along the ageless sands, follow the shorelines edge and true to its promise, find it waiting.

1.06.2010

Christmas Carols & Cards

What is Christmas without children excitedly  peering at every package under the tree, making wild guesses as to what wonderful thing is hiding inside just waiting to be opened to astound and thrill? And what do we adults do or think when we see the joy on those little faces? Well, we usually have 1119381_19125217 Xmas tree canes stockings clipart sore jaws from the smiles of pleasure that are locked across our faces. I for one love to be around when our gorgeous granddaughters tear at the wrappings of each gift handed out to them by their parents. Handed out by the parents, yes, but of course delivered during the night by Santa.children_outside_with_christmas_tree_card-p137712452828745265q6k5_400 framed  Parking his reindeer pulled sleigh for a moment on their roof he slips into the house with his enormous, over laden bag of wonders. After depositing a host  of goodies under the tree he speeds quickly away to bring Christmas joy to other sleeping tots. But, wonder of wonders, he always manages to finish the milk and cookies left out to give him energy for his gigantic task. (They are still too young to ask a lot of questions, but they can often be seen looking quizzically at the plethora of Santas that can be seen in most large shops being very HO! HO!).  Still that will have to wait for another time; the way things are right now is okay by them. No rocking that boat - at least not this year.
Our two granddaughters, Rowan and Jaris, are very keen on a lot of things - drawing and colouring being undoubtedly the absolute favourite. They draw and colour hour after hour. You need never wonder if they’re bored. “How is it possible to be bored when there are so many wonderful things to  fill the day?” would be the rejoinder were you to pose such a question to them.Well, one of those things is the choral group they belong to. Grandma and I and the parents attended their Christmas concert this year and it was a joy. Childrens' voices raised in song, what an ear-ringing pleasure. A special treat, was the result of a contest the choir had this year, to have a Christmas Card sale in which the child or children who’s card was deemed the most successful would see them printed professionally and put on sale to raise funds for the choir.new24819Ro & Jar flower framed
Well, joy of joys, both Rowan and Jaris’s cards were chosen! Not because they are siblings, but simply because they were the ones the judges felt were the best and most saleable.  So there they are, the covers of the cards, and the beautiful, talented young girls.
                 

1236796_16102264   2010 logo framed 1 Antique