Thatâs a bit of an understatement! It has been freezing this week, not by some standards around the world but definitely by ours. The thermometer in my greenhouse registered -5 on the coldest night which means it was at least -8 outside and that didnât really let up during the day either. Needless to say I think I have lost my Runuculas which is a pain in the proverbial, each year I try with them and each year something destroys them. The first year it was mice, the second year it was slugs and this year itâs the cold. I can get another batch in but they will flower much later now. I thought I had nailed it this year as I got them in on time, they grew nicely, I moved them into the greenhouse, put them up high out of the way of mice but crucially forgot to cover them đŁ I was so annoyed with myself but I have to move on, no point dwelling on it so I will put it down to experience and maybe try again next year or maybe not đ€·ââïž
We got off to such a good start in the week between Christmas and new year, the fence went up well and we were able to get some of the old fence line tided but that all stopped when the cold snap came and so no more progress on that as yet. John has been out every day trying to burn under the stump of the huge willow that came down. As there was not much else to be done at least that was one warm job but it has taken days and days and itâs not burnt away enough to be able to pull the stump free yet.
I am always reluctant to go outside when itâs cold unless I have a job I can get my teeth into, one that is going to keep me warm while I do it. As everything was frozen solid that was not much of an option and so I have mostly spent my time inside doing the usual household chores. I did do a bit of batch baking and we now have four lovely fruit cake in the freezer for another day. I also had a go at making crumpets, just because I wanted to see how easy they were to do. The mix was easy enough and the end result was edible (with a few air holes too) but the cooking process was a bit hit and miss. If I had the heat up high, I got great air holes but the bottom would burn, if I didnât have it high enough there were very few air holes and they took ages to cook through. The jury is out on these, yes they were ok but they were a faff to cook and I am not sure it was worth the time spent. The flat bread I decided to have a go at later in the week though, they were definitely worth it and something I would do again. What I was trying to do was see if I could cook them on the top of the wood burner but I think the combination of the cast iron casing and the heavy bottom fry pan meant that the heat did not transfer quick enough to cook them well. So I changed to the hob and they were perfect, especially as we ate them warm with some butter that melted deliciously when it made contact with the flat bread. It is something I would think about doing with the children outside on the fire pit at some point. Got to teach the younger generation that simple food is good food and easy with it.
I have been watching the whole Bovear debacle closely and we had to go to the supermarket to get things like cat food at the weekend. It is very evident that consumers are boycotting products they believe have come from cattle that have been fed with Bovear, if you have no idea what I am talking about then I would Google it, just make sure you look at both sides of the argument. Personally I have moved away from buying any of the products and I have considered âthe science is goodâ argument BUT itâs about choice. I choose not to buy food that didnât need messing with in the first place, if companies are so concerned about the amount of methane released by cattle then ration the product to reduce the amount we need. Of course they are not going to do that because that would dent the profits and so instead they decided to meddle with the food. What they didnât bank on was the backlash from consumers, and yes I will admit that there is a lot of misinformation out there but I also have got to the age in life where I donât trust them to tell us the truth anyway đ follow the money, itâs always all about the profits. Stick with the smaller producers, the small farms, the small businesses because the only profits they are trying to make are for a decent living for themselves and their families and not for the shareholders and the big bonus bosses.
Hopefully from today we are going to see a thaw and the temperatures go up a little to around 8c, that is perfect for the time of year I reckon. I am glad that the freeze will have triggered some natural pest control and definitely of those pesky slugs that invaded us last year but I donât want it to go on too long because I have work to do đ
I have spent this morning hoovering, cleaning and clearing out some of my cupboards, if I wonder why it is there then it probably needs to go, if I havenât used it for a year, then it probably needs to go and I did managed to clear a couple of bags of âstuffâ. Why we have so much stuff is beyond me, we have come from cavemen who spent all their time, hunting, cooking and keeping warm to people who have accumulated âstuffâ to fill our caves because we have too much time on our hands đ
I still have my primal instincts as a hunter gatherer though, thatâs why I love to grow and store produce, then cook with it. I have a lovely beef stew on the go for dinner tonight, we get our beef from a fabulous lady called Emma who is so proud of her cows and the quality of the beef they produce and rightly so. Grass fed cattle, grazing naturally on the water meadows makes for great tasting beef đ„°
Not much else to report this week, we have been busy in the evenings binge watching various tv series, with the wood burner going to keep us toasty warm, but thatâs what winter is for isnât it?