The endless cold rainy weather finally pushed me to making bread. Yesterday's soup, of tomatoes, chicken and chickpeas, in a broth of chicken and dandelion greens, needed an accompaniment.
So here's whole-wheat, AP and chickpea flour, big loaf to cut into four, three now in the freezer.
It's got great flavor and you see a nice dense texture. The crust is crisp, not hard. This is so much better than the bread I bought for several weeks till I got my baking mojo back. One slice is as satisfying as a couple of the air filled shop loaves, even though they were wholegrain with seeds and good stuff.
This is helping with my current struggle with being a civilian again, no medical people hovering and advising and encouraging, neighbors off high alert. There's a lonely re-entry phase and it's not easy.
The drama's over, things are pretty smooth, and all the people have gone away again. I wonder if old people who often consult doctors are in need of personal attention as much as medical guidance. Anyway, I knew there would be a letdown and it's here.
It's made room to be more distraught about the endless bad political news, so I need a new coping strategy. I'll let you know if I find one.
Activism I always have, and here's where I remember to say thank you to readers, particularly new and helpful commenters.
You are more important to my mental health than you know. Much more, particularly the good humored people, who, despite their own struggles, are still generous enough to encourage me.
I continue to be a bit accident prone, in the style of the Three Stooges. Today's feat: I managed, while rinsing a cup, to aim about a pint of water up my bathrobe sleeve, then when I looked down at it, it poured back over my feet. So by seven am I'd already changed to a second, dry, robe and socks. This wasn't the coping strategy I had in mind.
But this sustaining lunch was a good step
Cod baked with butter, salt and black pepper, with fresh apricots, celery including clippings of foliage from the celery heart growing in the kitchen.
Today's Tuesday knitting group was my reentry! Welcomed back by old friends, and there were three new people all wanting to learn. So, our usual great teacher absent on family business, two of us heroically offered to teach crochet. They were all adept and it was a fun session. So good to be back.
Lovely stitch pattern for a headband.
In between learning and showing, talk ranged over antique dolls, garage sales, Indian embroidery, grandchildren, weather, flying with knitting needles, the Dollivers, "Amelie", and more.
Then home to Textiles and Tea with Johanna Norry, who works in collaborative and solo weaving, with photography, examining personal and social history. She's a professor of textiles with degrees both in textiles and anthropology.