Possumworld

Friday, November 17, 2006

Archive Success!!!

Okay! I fixed it! I got my archives to work again. Just in case any of you reading this are having the same problem, just go to your Settings page and under "Archives" you might want to make sure that you have the URL to the file where your archives are stored. In the previous version of blogger, you didn't seem to have to do this in most cases. Clearly, in Beta, you do. So, you need to set it up to read: http://blah-blah-blah.com/archives/ and it finds it with no problem.

Ciao for now.

Randy

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Re my lost archives

I had this comment on Possumworld this morning from Major_Grooves:

My archives stopped working when I migrated to Beta too. Funny thing is I found your post through Technorati and when I tried to click through to the "Quick note" post, it wouldnt find the post! Archives are dooomed in the new Blogger I tell ya!

It's not at all encouraging, I have to say. While I do like Blogger, I wish that they wouldn't have encouraged us to all move over to the Beta version before they figured this stuff out. When a new reader comes to a blog, it's nice for them to be able to back to find an old post. And, there are some posts, like the ones I've written on French medical care, that are linked to the blogs of others, so I'm assuming those links don't work either.

All I can do is keep working on it I guess.


Ciao for now.

Randy

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Thursday, November 16, 2006

Quick note

I've only just found out that my archives appear to have disappeared. I don't know if this has to do with the migration over to the new Blogger Beta, or if it's caused by something else. At any rate, for anyone looking for them, I'm terribly sorry.

I'm trying to sort it out.


Randy

Quietly beautiful

This week has been a quiet one in the Possum Kingdom. For me, personally, part of that was due to being down with the dreaded gastro yet again! It's funny; I never used to get stomach bugs and I have no idea where I got this one. I suppose that's one of the differences of living in a community where I actually interact with people instead of mostly being inside a car.

Still, today was better, so we decided to head out to do a few errands in Carcassonne and Limoux. We picked a great day for it, as fall seems to have taken a holiday and let a bit of Indian Summer creep back into the picture. Although it was overcast, temperatures were lovely, in the upper 60s and with all the trees now in their autumn best, we had a spectacular drive.

I don't even mind when it's overcast here, as there is a wonderful quality to the light that seems to make everything glow. In particular, there are some trees that have brilliant red leaves that almost look as if they are lit from within. A true joy to see.

Even when you are doing mundane things like we did today, knowing that you are going to drive home through hills, forests and vineyards that are bathed in almost violent color, gives the whole thing a sense of excitement, almost as if you were doing something special.

In the rest of France, this is the week when people talk a lot about the Beaujolais Nouveau arriving. I have seen perhaps one poster mentioning it here. Of course, since we are in the Languedoc-Roussillon, one of the major wine growing regions in the country, it's not really surprising that no one is excited about a wine that has had a huge success due more to a major marketing campaign than any intrinsic value in the wine itself. Indeed, most people I know who know anything about wine will not drink even a glass of it!

Still, the local wine makers are not fools. We have our own "Vins Primeurs" which are the regional equivalents of Beaujolais Nouveau. These were heavily promoted across the area a couple of weeks ago, with the major supermarkets having special weeks devoted to their sale and all the local shops making sure that there were bottles easily available for their customers to buy.

I have been drinking even less than I normally do (read NONE) lately because of some medication that I"m taking, so I can't tell you if they're any good or not; however I am glad to see the regional producers coming up with marketing plans of their own. They have suffered a lot of from cheap foreign imports now being readily available, and the fact that here, like most places, people just drink less than they once did.

If we want the Possum Kingdom to remain the beautiful agricultural area that it is, then all of those who grow anything locally, including the local vineyards, need to find ways of surviving.

Ciao for now.

Randy

Sunday, November 12, 2006

The Urge to Cook

This comes over me in a big way every once in a while, and I don't really know why. Perhaps it's the weather, perhaps it's a way of dealing with stress, possibly I'm trying to avoid doing other things. At any rate, when it hits me I just have to cook.

The last couple of days have been cooking days. I started simple. In the U.S., we have a product called "Bisquick." It's a baking mix that contains flour, shortening, baking powder, sugar, salt and buttermilk. It's easy, because you just add milk and eggs in various proportions and can whip up a batch of biscuits or pancakes.

I made my one recently with a few changes: oil instead of solid shortening, partial whole-wheat flour, non-chemical baking powder, and plopped it into a couple of plastic bags that I keep in the fridge. It takes care of the measuring of a variety of ingredients, so you can whip something up pretty quick.

The first two days of my "binge" I made biscuits with butterscotch chips, then refined it a bit to add slightly more vanilla sugar and used raisins instead of the butterscotch. They took less than five minutes to mix and were done baking in 15.

But, I wasn't satisfied. The next day I came up with a new recipe for a butter cake, really just a simple pound cake, but instead of using all white flour, I put in a cup of corn flour which gave it a nice crunchy crust.

Still, I needed to cook more, so yesterday I pulled out all the stops: first, I decided to make a meatloaf. I had a variety of pieces of beef, pork and veal in the freezer that individually weren't enough for a meal for two, but were perfect when run through the food processor. I made enough for yesterday and today, then froze the rest for another day.

Then, I found this great recipe for a no-knead bread in the New York Times. I just had to try that. It takes practically no effort to make, but it does need to rise for about 18 to 20 hours. So, extreme patience was called for.


After that, I decided I was craving pumpkin. No canned pumpkin here in France, so if you want it, you've got to cook it. The pumpking at the primeur was BIG, so no way could I buy the whole thing. But, Jean-Paul will cut a piece to order, so I got about 4 pounds worth, came home, cleaned out the yucky bits and popped slices into the oven to bake for about an hour. Afterwards, I scooped it out, mashed it and I had about 8 cups of pumpkin, enough for about four recipes of pumpkin pie. I put it into 2 cup containers, froze three and kept one out for baking.

This morning, the urge hadn't gone, so it was back down to the kitchen. First, I needed to do the next step on that bread, and got it ready for baking after lunch.

Next, I came up with a recipe for a Pumpkin Quick Bread, which came out quite well. I mixed that up, got it into the oven and then looked around for something else to cook! Here's the recipe:

Pumpkin Quick Bread Recipe #rz.61729

Pumpkin pie, but in a bread!
20
servings
2
l0aves
time to make 1 hour 15 min prep
2 cups pumpkin, pureed (fresh or canned)
12 ounces sweetened condensed milk
1 cup sour cream or fromage blanc
1 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon salt
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup cornflour
2 eggs
1/2 cup raisins
1/2 cup dried cranberries
  1. Stir together pumpkin, milk, sour cream, eggs and vanilla until blended.
  2. Mix in raisins, cranberries and spices.
  3. Add corn flour and blend well.
  4. Mix salt and baking powder with all-purpose flour, then blend into the rest of the batter.
  5. Stir until all ingredients are moistened.
  6. Pour into two lightly greased loaf pans (or silicone pans that have been moistened with a little water) and place in a 375 degree oven for 45 minutes or until tester in center comes out dry.
  7. If using silicone molds, let cool for at least 10 minutes before removing from the pans.


I still had about 8 of the apples we bought at the Mirepoix apple festival a few weeks ago; they definitely needed to be used soon, so I peeled, cored, sliced added in a couple of absolutely luscious pears and some raisins and made a nice apple compote.

Finally, it was time to bake that bread. I haven't tasted it yet, but I do have to say that it looks astonishing. If it tastes anywhere near as good as it looks, that recipe will become a keeper for sure.

Okay. I guess I'm cooked out for the time being.

Ciao for now.

Randy


 
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