Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Thursday, December 26, 2024

Christmas Day is done, and it was good

 Our rather haphazard potluck worked again.

Two kinds of cheese, bread sticks, then ham, mushrooms, sugar snap peas, roasted sweet potato, baked sweet potato, with Colman's English mustard on the ham. Ginger ale and lime ginger cordial.

Then after an interval, German cookies, chocolate snowmen, eggnog, big pot of tea.

We divided the leftovers and after Handsome Son left, I fell into  a deep sleep, woke thinking it was Christmas morning (!) 

Our talk as always was lovely, about food and dog shows, politics, primaries, walking backwards, his memories of the Delaware Crossing on Christmas Days in childhood, local parks, food bank donations, self checkout, steamed clams, oysters,  Howard Johnson's, and more. 

Lovely day and it's almost over. Now to crochet. With a wonderful rendition of Vivaldi's Winter on period instruments, lovely sound. 

I do like early music played on early instruments, more than the piercing silvery sound of modern ones designed to fill a concert hall with sound. Vivaldi was composing for much smaller groups of musicians  in smaller places.


Happy day everyone, with your crochet equivalent.






Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Christmas present and past

We had a lovely day, thank you all for your good wishes. 

Our dinner was a joint affair, Handsome Son bringing ham, roast potatoes, ginger ale, crackers, eggnog, plus home baked cookies from his co worker, sent for me! Joined with the  cheese, vegetables and cranberry sauce, and the many edible gifts around here, we did very well. Also pots of tea.

After he left, I slept quite a while.

One Christmas Day when he was quite young, we took him to the reenactment of General Washington crossing the Delaware, on Christmas Night, 1776,  only about 45 minutes from here, figuring that every American should see this at least once,  to pay our respects.

If you're not familiar with one of New Jersey's main claims to fame, read on



And, credit where it's due, here's the militia group that did the heavy lifting of getting Washington's Durham boat  across a wild river in a snowstorm.   Many other boats were also commandeered to get the army across.

Nowadays the  reenactment is done in daylight, and only weather permitting!

The scene of the Battle of Princeton is about a 15  minute drive, from here, well known locally. Inger and Steve, I expect you're familiar with it. New Jersey is full of historic places where battles were fought, and when I had Brit guests, I'd take them around to all these places where we  were hammered yet again and got our little red coats all dirty. 

And here's a Christmas wish from my friends including dog Jennie, who among many good social works, knit in their rec. time, well, Jennie helps, and include my socks and gloves in their knitted offerings to the County outreach which cares for homeless people.

I particularly like that a community dressed in black and white has a black and white dog and cat. Harmony.

Third from left is Sister Monica, my knitting contact person, and second from right Sister Suzanne Elizabeth, who arranged the goldwork embroidery workshop a few years ago which changed the direction of my artwork. Much to thank them for. They're all stars in their professions, aside from being nuns, scholars, social workers, a force for good. 

My reading is also historic. I finally got around to Crome Yellow, Aldous Huxley's first, much quoted and referenced, novel. It's a satire on the mores of his time, full of real people and places, disguised and fooling nobody.

It's pretty heavy going, doesn't hold a candle to his later brilliant essays. I think, once again, that the early twentieth century English canon is full of works written and published by a tiny group of people with great social standing and privilege. I doubt if they'd make it in a competitive modern publishing world. Mitford, Forster, Waugh, Greene, readable, but I don't think the same works by writers without their access would have been accepted. 

I'm always a bit sceptical about "classics" for this reason. Some, such as Middlemarch, A La Recherche,  all of Austen, are certainly works of genius, but there's a lot we needn't get all excited about. 

Even the great Shakespeare was best in the tragedies and histories. His comedies are just plain unfunny, the tedious old Falstaff clunking about, usually overacted, probably good in their time in a different environment, different audience.

On a cheerier note, here's a little bouquet, courtesy of Emma Mitchell. 


Happy day everyone! Enjoy your day despite grouchy bloggers!

There's usually some kind of little bouquet to be found.









Monday, December 25, 2023

Merry Christmas or Happy Monday

 Yesterday I did the getting the cranberry jelly intact from the can thing, not made from scratch this time. 

Open one end, punch holes in the other, potato nail and meat tenderiser, it surrenders



 Simple table, matching my energy level, no idea what Handsome Son is bringing


And all will be well, and all manner of things will be well

Happy day everyone






Friday, December 15, 2023

Yay me! A much better Christmas across the street

 So I seem to have made it halfway through my ninth decade, and thank you everyone who messaged and emailed and sent electronic and paper cards and wishes already!

At least we think this is the right day. Back where I was born, homebirths with records only in the official log of the midwife, carried away with her,  the father had to go to the town hall to register a new baby. 

My mother wasn't well after the birth, and, one thing and another, it was after Christmas, big family, busy time, that he finally got there. Knowing him, he'd forgotten the exact date, so much going on, and I suspect estimated the likely date! Anyway this is my official bday, fight me! 

He also got the wrong name, having completely forgotten Mom's choice by the time he got to the church for the baptism. This was always performed asap after birth, because you never know. She wasn't up to the walk, babies always carried to church, so Dad did the honors. 

When the priest asked the new baby's name, they had a quick male conference and ended up naming me for the priest's mother. Which turned out to be the same as my mom's name. Which sent her as ballistic as she felt up to being, when we got home,  since she hated the Old Tom, Young Tom tradition of her brother's family and didn't want an Old Liz and a Young Liz in her own!  Terrific guy in many ways, physically one of the most courageous of men, my dad, but not clerically  gifted.

Yesterday Gary came over to wish me a happy bday and  check my tire pressures! He had the compressor out anyway for the neighbor across the street, so he did his and mine, too. I returned the bday wishes, since his was last week, you might have guessed he's a hellbent Sag!

This is a great Christmas for the neighbor across the street, this time last year newly diagnosed with cancer and facing chemo, this year tests clear, feeling fine! Hence the tree, no tree last year.



And Gary helping unload.

Yesterday was the smallest misfits box ever, missing eggs, 




Everything yellow or orange or pinkish.  Every now and then I have enough food in the house to cut way back on ordering. 

And since I can officially start the Christmas season, here goes



They'd have arrived on time, too, no wandering hopelessly across the desert for twelve days, not asking the way, claiming a star was leading them.

Happy day, everyone, and I hope you get as long and happy a life as I'm lucky enough to have




Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Post-Christmas and a seasonal collection

Yesterday's Christmas celebration was great and I did have enough energy, after simplifying and getting a lot of help from Handsome Son.

Paper plates on top of the regular ones, serving ourselves from the stove instead of fancy serving dishes, saved work and cleanup. The food went over fine, despite its episodic cooking, freezing, reheating. 

He brought cheese and crackers as always to start, ginger ale and egg nog to continue and Christmas cookies and candy, German from Aldi, very good.  

I made my seasonal collection of foil candy wrappers


At Easter he brings Aldi bunny chocolates, so there's a bunny collection then. This collecting I do is probably along the lines of fruit wrappers and banana stickers. 

He also made the tea, absentmindedly making builder's tea -- leaves into the kettle and boiled.  And it turned out to be the best tea I've had since my youf. I remember my mom had a metal teapot, Pico ware, and maybe that's the secret. I use china and porcelain.

So all went well , lovely day,  And now the table's cleared, and when I get to the library, I can borrow a puzzle. Maybe I can reborrow the cat one I never got to, if it's in. 

And today's Ukraine salute, instead of combat and battle, is about the force of art, seen in this lovely hardanger and reticello piece by a Ukrainian embroiderer. If you don't read French, continue, there's a translation


Happy day everyone, do something you like to do today, stitching, collecting bits of tinfoil, whatever pleases you. 

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Christmas, The Golden Bough and orange wrappers

Today, which would have been my Dad's 128th birthday, we're finally having Christmas dinner. At this point I'm past it and would as soon move on, but Handsome Son really wants to do it, so okay.

I finally, after years and years of meaning to, have borrowed The Golden Bough. 

Just to find out what the gist is. It's about religion, early beliefs and who knows what else, and it's high time I at least opened it. I've seen so many references to it.

And here are a few images from a really lovely blog, Spitalfields Life, about London and local history and characters. Today's is a departure, a post about a collection of fruit wrappers! 


These are the tissue paper wrappers that used to come on individual oranges and other citrus fruits, smelling lovely and with really good graphic art. Evidently some people made collections, and this is a lovely one.

There are more, if you go to Spitalfields Life. I have it on my  feed, and it's endlessly interesting. I have no particular stake in London, but this blog makes it interesting, with quirky events and people and all the small handmaker businesses to be found if you know where to look, and they do.

Happy day everyone, enjoy your day even if you're not quite up for it!




Saturday, January 7, 2023

Christmas is coming, finally

Yesterday I removed the Dollarama, (but Cocktail Lady got an extension)  Christmas setup, it being Twelfth Night, Three Kings Day aka the Epiphany.


Here's the fake fireplace looking cheerful and today Handsome Son asked if we could celebrate Christmas on his day off, Tuesday. 

So we will. If I need to rest in the middle I will. Most of the cooking's  done anyway and the table's still laid. This year we've even missed the Orthodox dates. But we're ahead of Valentine's anyway.

I did get in an expedition to return library books to the book drop at the further away libe yesterday. I had two days overdue fine, and my account is labeled DELINQUENT until it's paid. 20 cents. I may as well rob a bank, since they've already labeled me a criminal, jeez 

 I didn't have enough oomph to get gas on the way home and get a replacement insert for the rear wiper blade which is currently a bunch of ragged bits. Another day.

I saw Gary yesterday and he evidently was thrilled about the brownies. I didn't think he expected quite such a prompt return! Anyway turns out he loves them, so maybe after Handsome Son has had a share, the rest will end up next door.

Meanwhile, here's a new puzzle. Sparkling M, bear with me, this one has more than one possible answer:



Happy day everyone, let's hope someone bakes you a treat, or, if not, diy!