Tuesday, 28 April 2020
Grated Courgette in the Salad
Adding a bit of grated courgette to a conventional salad (carrot, parsnip, tomatoes, leek, sauerkraut etc.) worked a treat.
The grated courgette (the green part in the picture) came out like a real fruit juice pulp, offering a wonderful, subtle taste to a conventional salad.
Saturday, 25 April 2020
Cheese-and-Beetroot Topped Potato Pancakes
My wife made some delicious potato pancakes to which I added cheese and beetroot to good effect.
Words can't really describe how tasty this was, a wonderful combination of food.
Saturday, 18 April 2020
Kotek's Food Box
The box with the cartoon-type owls is Kotek's food box, full of biscuits and sachet food, so it comes as no surprise that he's always hanging round the box.
Saturday, 4 April 2020
Galway-Donegal Stopover Place
This was an interesting-looking place that we stopped at for about 15 minutes on the coach run from Galway to Gweedore, Donegal last summer.
Love the river gushing through the town centre alongside its quite tall buildings.
Really felt free making my way up to Gweedore last summer, a far cry away from being a de facto prisoner in my flat in Warsaw now.
Friday, 3 April 2020
Canterbury: Mary Tourtel Plaque
While looking at the interesting houses below in Canterbury, my eagle-eyed travelling companion, noticed the Mary Tourtel memorial plaque above, located on Ivy Lane near the Chaucer Hotel.
Have just discovered that Mary Tourtel is buried in St. Martin's church graveyard in Canterbury; started off by drawing animals in children's books; and with her husband, Herbert, was a keen traveller. Moreover, her first Rupert Bear serial was written in 1920.
Have also just read that Mary and Herbert Tourtel remained childless, which is interesting in light of her Rupert Bear construction (can vaguely remember Rupert Bear TV serials from childhood).
Wednesday, 1 April 2020
Canterbury: Passing St. Dunstan's
Another shot from Canterbury last summer, passing St. Dunstan's church on the junction of Whitstable Road and London Road.
Used to pass St. Dunstan's every day while living on Whitstable Road in the early 2000s.
Of course, St. Dunstan's is famous for containing (or being said to contain) the head of St. Thomas More. Have just read that St. Thomas More's daughter, Margaret, recovered his head from a spike on London Bridge and took it back to the family tomb of her husband, William Roper, inside St. Dunstan's.
Have also just discovered that St. Dunstan was a late 10th century Archbishop of Canterbury, and that Henry II started his penitential pilgrimage for having St. Thomas Becket murdered by changing his clothing into sackcloth at St. Dunstan's church before walking down to Becket's tomb inside Canterbury Cathedral.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)