Sunday, August 22, 2021

Sunday Salon Ramblings

 

Its been an interesting time here lately and I feel as I may look like this particular verison of Mona Lisa :-)

In a nutshell - the cemetery which borders our property has decided to expand.  They cleared a good acre of trees away that gave us a privacy border. Then they knocked down our power line. A live wire is down and the tractor guy still continued to work. Amazing he survived.

A few days later, our electric and water company had a pump break in a well.  I didn't know they had such huge wells to service so many people!  We were without water for 4 days. Fun stuff.

Last but not least Tropical Storm Fred knocked out our power for several hours.  We missed the air conditioning but others across the US had it way worse.  That's it, my three self pity stories. First world problems, eh?

Reading/ Deb at Readerbuzz wrote about this Peter Mayle book a few weeks ago. It's an enjoyable little book with loads of bread recipes. I'm looking forward to trying a few of the recipes.


If you want a decent mystery where (I'd bet) you don't have the ending figured out try Stolen by Tess Stimson.  A child disappears at a wedding in St. Pete Florida and it has good twists.



Next up is The Family Plot by Megan Collins, an author new to me.  Sounds intriging. 


In the kitchen / Besides the Mandarin chicken we also had tried a Donna Hay recipe - a Potato, Pea and Chickpea curry.



Potato, Pea and Chickpea Curry

1 tablespoon peanut oil
1 teaspoon black mustard seeds
1 Onion chopped
2 Cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground coriander
4 waxy potatoes (800g) peeled and chopped
440g can peeled tomatoes, lightly crushed
1 can of chickpeas 
1 1/4 cups fresh peas
6 fresh or dry curry leaves
1 teaspoon garam masala


Heat the oil in a deep frying pan over a medium heat
Add mustard seeds, cover and cook until they pop
Add the onion, garlic, cumin, coriander and cook, uncovered, for 1 minute.
Add the potato and the tomato and cook for 7 minutes, stiring occasionally. Add chickpeas. 
Add the peas, curry leaves and garam masala.
Cook stiring occasionally, for 5 minutes or until the potato is soft
Serve with steamed rice and cucumber yogurt

That's it for me this week. We have been staying in, avoiding excessive heat, looking at houses for sale online, reading and cooking. I hope this finds you all healthy and happy!

Linking up with 




15 comments:

  1. Sorry about so many problems with your electric! Stolen sounds good, especially since it takes place in St. Pete.

    I hope this week is kinder to you!

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    Replies
    1. Thanks, Vicki, it’s been much better. We get lots of rain daily but that’s the typical weather pattern here.
      If you get to Stolen you’ll find lots of twists. The author mentions FDLE & Amber alerts and was quite accurate. We retired from there after 32 years & I was surprised to see the mention of the agency/procedures.

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  2. Golly, things have been rough for you lately. Being without water, a downed powerline, and no air after Fred---that's three awful things. I understand why you feel like the Mona Lisa in the cartoon!

    I hope you liked Confessions of a French Baker. I'm a baker so my eyes light up when I see a new baking book, and who knows how to bake better than the French?

    Potato, Pea, and Chickpea Curry sounds fabulous!

    Here is hoping you have a better week, Tina. A much better week.

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    Replies
    1. Deb, thanks for the good wishes! The French baker book is interesting and I’m planning one of the stuffed breads. Maybe garlic and parsley but the marinated mushrooms sound good too.

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  3. That's a lot! I'm so sorry. I hope things look up this week. Big hugs from my neck of the woods.
    That recipe looks amazing. I need to google waxy potatoes...
    And yes to Stolen and the Family Plot. They both look great! I'm not much of a bread baker other than rolls and a few easy bread recipes but I'd love to see your creations! Stay safe!

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    Replies
    1. Heather, I’ll post that bread soon. It seems I’m out of powdered milk and it’s essential to a few recipes. I enjoyed reading your Sunday Salon and seeing your book choices.

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  4. And I thought we had a stressful week anticipating Henri! I sure hope things are better for you in the week ahead. Confessions of a French Baker caught my eye, too, and there is a copy in my FL library. I'd like to check it out in the fall. Take care, Tina.

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  5. So much going on for you--hopefully this week will be better. Your curry looks delicious. I love Donna Hay's easy recipes. Thanks for sharing with Souper Sundays this week!

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    Replies
    1. Deb, this is a lovely cookbook, I was hoping to get that curry in on time for Souper Sunday & IHCC.
      This week is better for sure!

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  6. OF COURSE I love the Mona Lisa! Sorry to hear about your annoyances and I hope they are all resolved soon.

    I might just try that recipe! I think you left out the chickpeas, though. Or am I reading wrong?

    best... mae at maefood.blogspot.com

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    Replies
    1. Mae, I thought of you when I saw that meme! Thanks for telling me about the omission of chickpea. I was copying the recipe and it doesn’t actually call for them, I added them for protein- just edited the post 👍

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  7. Good grief! You really had a bit of a tough week hey! Glad to hear and see you can at least still poke fun at it. That's the spirit!

    I'm also interested in The Family Plot. Seems like a good read!

    Hope your new week will be less shocking (no pun intended!)

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    Replies
    1. Elza, it was frustrating at the time but nothing earth shattering...just annoying! I started The Family Plot and it's very creepy :-0

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  8. Wow! Sounds like a lot is going on! I hate you lost your tree line. We depend on ours for privacy as well and the rest sounds insane. The Family Plot looks really good. It's been on my radar so I'm curious to see what you think of it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Katherine, I have been lucky with the Netgalley approvals so far. Family Plot starts out creepy, not violent but...creepy.
      We can plant some fast growing hedges for that area where you can now see our house and RV port. Once we got over being mad we realized we can adapt the property line for privacy. Still.... ugh

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