Sunday, June 5, 2011

All inclusive


Click for bigger.

Twins sneeze in unison


YouTube link.

Suspected drunk driver crashes into plane

A Santa Ana man crashed his vehicle through a chain-link fence and into a small aircraft at John Wayne Airport late on Friday, a Sheriff's official said.

Luis Perez, 56, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol after sheriffs responded to a 10:36 p.m. call about the crash, Lt. Jim England said.



Perez's vehicle apparently jumped a kerb, cut through the fence and struck the private plane. That plane crashed into another plane.

Though one of the planes began to leak fuel, the crash didn't start a fire and no one was injured, England said. The incident occurred away from the runways where large commercial planes land and take off.

The Great Moodini hospitalised when stunt goes awry

An Atlanta stuntman is recovering in the hospital after he was badly injured in a stunt that didn't go well during an intermission at Atlanta Motor Speedway’s Thursday Thunder.



Thousands of spectators watched as Michael Anthony Mooney, better known to race fans as “The Great Moodini” failed to get out of shackles before the pace car he was chained to pulled way. He suffered a broken wrist, foot and finger in the accident.

Mooney says he didn’t give himself enough time to complete the Houdini-like stunt, which involves him being chained to a pace car with shackles. The idea is for Mooney to free himself from the chains before the pace car takes off.


LiveLeak link.

Mooney says he had done the stunt successfully twice before. While it usually takes him three to four seconds to get out of the shackles, this time he says, it took longer, and the car sped off with him still attached.

Suspicious substance found on nappy changing table was baby powder

Frontier Airlines officials believe a suspicious substance found aboard a flight from Phoenix to Milwaukee that prompted a response from the Milwaukee Fire Department's Hazardous Materials Unit is actually baby powder.

The white powdery substance was found on a diaper changing counter in one of the aircraft's lavatories by a flight attendant making her final check before landing on Friday afternoon, Frontier spokesman Peter Kowalchuk said.



The powder appeared to be in a dotted pattern, there was as diaper in a waste bin and there were two infants onboard the flight, Kowalchuk said. "We contacted the Transportation Safety Administration out of an abundance of caution," Kowalchuk said.

"We're confident the substance was baby powder and that at no time was anybody in danger," he said. During the incident the airport terminal was not evacuated, the runways remained open and other arriving and department flights were not affected, he said.

Dog missing for six months found 1,300 miles from home

A dog missing since November is back home with his owners after turning up 1,300 miles away. Buster Brown, a labrador mix, disappeared in November 2010 from his family's front yard in Denver, Colorado.



About six months later, on May 20, he turned up in Salinas, California, and was taken to a local animal shelter. Salinas Animal Services found a microchip implanted under Buster's coat designed to alert his owners if he became lost.

But there was a snag: the phone numbers associated with the microchip didn't work. On May 31, just one day before Buster was scheduled to be handed over to the state of California, his owner, Samantha Squires, received a letter in the mail saying Buster had been found.


YouTube link.

"It's like your child coming home," Ms Squires said. "You think they're gone, but they're not." Buster Brown flew home on Frontier Airlines, which donated the cost of the flight, and was reunited with his family. "I don't know what his life has been for the past seven months," Ms Squires said. "He looks quite a bit older and quite a bit fatter."

Woman injured by falling tombstone during 'extracurricular activities' in cemetery

A woman who may have been engaged in sexual activity in Ahavath Israel Cemetery, Trenton, on Tuesday evening was injured when a tombstone fell on her leg, police said.

The 39-year-old woman was not badly hurt, no criminal investigation of the two was launched after the administration decided not to file a criminal complaint.



The woman was with a male friend in the graveyard off Cedar Lane just before 7 p.m. visiting the grave of a relative. When the two engaged in some “extracurricular activities,” one of the grave markers rolled onto the woman’s leg, Capt. James Stevens said.

The woman was taken by ambulance to Capital Health Regional Medical Center for treatment. Police did not know the extent of her injuries.

Welsh farmers' Rihanna parody wins Glastonbury spot

Two teenage farmers are to perform at Glastonbury, the UK's biggest music festival, after winning an X Factor-style competition with their parody of R&B star Rihanna's S&M.

Richard Lewis, 18, of Llanfyllin, and Llion Vaughan, 17, of Llanrhaeadr ym Mochnant, Powys, who use the alisases DJ Wooly and Will.I.Lamb, have named their version Plough On. The Tractor Factor competition was run by the Farmers' Guardian newspaper.


YouTube link.

The farmers have won four tickets to the Glastonbury Festival, staged between 24 and 26 June, and have the chance to perform Plough On on the Yeo Valley stand at the festival.

Llion said: "The past weeks have been amazing, the response and support from people has been great." Richard added: "The competition has also shown that farmers these days are not just people who work with the land but are very diverse and like to have a laugh."

Oven chips given government go-ahead to use official healthy-eating logo

Supermarkets will be allowed to use logos from a government healthy-eating campaign to sell oven chips, mayonnaise and dairy spreads in return for more cash for the struggling campaign.



Change4Life was heavily affected by health secretary Andrew Lansley's decision to block nearly all spending on marketing. Website hits fell by two-thirds, while 90% fewer people joined the programme, which was designed to encourage healthier lifestyles through better eating and more exercise.

Previously only vegetables and fruit could be promoted by the Change4Life logos and its marketing messages. As part of the new deal, supermarkets and other food and drink companies involved will increase funding for the programme from £12m a year to £15m.



Fat and dairy spreads that can be endorsed must contain less than 41% fat. Only oven chips that contain less than 20g of fat and 5g of saturated fat per 100g can be promoted. Professor Tim Lang, a government adviser on obesity, said he feared Change4Life was now just providing cheap advertising for supermarkets.

Bristol Hooters facing boy's boob-shaped cake probe

Hooters restaurant in Bristol is facing an inquiry after a 'boob-shaped cake' was allegedly served at a 12-year-old boy's birthday party.

The cake's centrepiece represented naked breasts with nipples. It was iced with the words Happy 12th Birthday. It is not clear if the cake was provided by the restaurant or the boy's family.



Campaigners say the incident is contrary to Hooters' claim to be "family friendly" and may breach the terms of the restaurant's licence. Bristol City Council is carrying out a formal investigation to see if licence conditions were breached.

An online petition, calling for Hooters to have their licence revoked, criticises the 'pornographic' birthday cake representing disembodied and life-like naked breasts, with the nipples fully displayed, decorated with the words “Happy 12th Birthday”.

Takeaway fined for serving beetle larva kebabs

The owner of an Edinburgh takeaway has been fined £1350 for serving kebabs containing cooked beetle larva.



Hasan Gundogdu, who runs The Olimpos Takeaway on Elm Row, pleaded guilty at Edinburgh Sheriff Court to three charges relating to breaches of food hygiene regulations.

Food safety officers inspected the premises following a complaint from a member of the public. They uncovered mouse droppings throughout the premises, with concentrated numbers in the preparation room and basement, as well as dead and live beetle larvae.



Staff from Edinburgh Scientific Service also confirmed larvae had been cooked at the takeaway. Mr Gundogdu said the inspection was sparked from one customer complaint and that he had taken steps to improve food safety procedures. "Now everything is OK," he said.

BOOKS CHANGE LIVES

Came across the April issue of North & South magazine at my local cafe the other day. Somehow I had missed this issue. In it was an interesting piece in the books section (this section ran to seven pages) where the editor asked six of their celebrity contributors to name the book that has had a lasting impact on them, or even changed their life.

Here they are with their book:


Tessa Duder, writer.


The Feminine Mystique by Betty Frieden. She also mentioned Ann Finkbeiner's After the Death of a Child, and Rohinton Mistry's A Fine Balance.




Graeme Dingle, writer, adventurer.


Lional Terray's 1963 autobiography Conquistadors of the Useless


Dame Susan Devoy, former world squash champion


Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell




Roger Hall, Playwright


"It wasn't so much a particular book as a particualr author - Nevil Shute.
The Chequerboard.






Lynley Dodd, children's book author and illustrator


All of Jane Austen's books  but Pride & Prejudice was the one I read first, when I was 13.



Barbara Kendall, Olympic gold medallist


Personality Plus by Florence Littauer

Illiteracy in London's schools is a scandal

Books might be aplenty at Hay, but one in three of the capital's pupils don't own a single one

The Duchess of Cornwall at the Hay festival. The Duchess of Cornwall at the Hay festival. Photograph: Tim Ireland/PA
Camilla Windsor, duchess of wherever, has been in Hay, at the book festival, encouraging children's literacy.
Of course she has. Hay is an excellent place to discover children who don't own a single book, who cannot read or write properly. Oh, no, hang on a minute . . . that's London, official seat of royal power. Hay is full of people who self-select as passionate book-lovers.

London's local paper, the Evening Standard, has begun a campaign to highlight what a lot of parents in the capital know already – that even the educational basics are pretty hit-and-miss. One in three kids in the city say they own no books, one in four leaves primary school unable to read or write properly, and one in five leaves secondary school without being able to read and write with confidence.

For years, the last government insisted that primary school was fine, and that problems emerged only at secondary schools. It's a shame that reality is being faced only now – just as funding is so tight. Photo-ops at Hay are all very well. But Camilla knows nothing of what it is like to send your child off to school each day, knowing that they are not making anything like the progress that they could or should, despite your own efforts to help them. But I do, and so do many other supposedly pointy-elbowed "pushy" parents, who are used to having their worries belittled or denied

Fans dismiss claim romantic novels 'unbalance' readers

Psychologist ridiculed for arguing that romantic fiction harms women's minds

A woman reads a Mills & Boon novel
'Destroying marriages, the fabric of society, and the entire cosmos' ... A woman reads a romantic novel. Photograph: John Voos/Reuters/Corbis

Romance novelists and readers have come together to defend their chosen genre against the accusation that "women can become as dangerously unbalanced by these books' entrancing but distorted messages as men can be by the distorted messages of pornography".

An article on KSL.com, a news website owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, claims that there are similarities between what happens to a man when he views pornography and what happens to a woman when she reads a romance novel, according to the Christian psychologist Dr Juli Slattery. Slattery says that "she is seeing more and more women who are clinically addicted to romantic books", according to the article, and "for many women, these novels really do promote dissatisfaction with their real relationships".
Written by founder and president of LDS Life Coaching Kimberly Sayer Giles, the article goes on to present a five-point plan for tackling romance novel addiction. "If you are not in a real relationship, you may want to focus on finding one. Are you spending time reading instead of getting out there making new friends and meeting people?" asks Giles, who also suggests that "if you love to read, just choose a different type of book. There are many interesting choices that do not include arousing scenes".

The piece provoked an immediate reaction online from romance fans and writers. "[I'm] not going to say, 'Oh. It's Mormons' as some sort of explanation because there are many Mormon readers and writers of romance whom I suspect disagree mightily with this argument. I am going to say the following, again and again and again: romances are good. Romances are fantastic, in fact. There are terribly few places wherein women's emotional experiences, personal troubles and intimate sexuality are portrayed favorably," wrote Sarah Wendell, author of Everything I Know About Love I Learned from Romance Novels and founder of the romance website Smart Bitches Trashy Books. "Romances are not bad for you. There is nothing wrong with you for liking them. There is nothing wrong with you for exploring different worlds, different relationships, different emotions, different personal experiences through fiction, and if romances are your preferred way to be entertained, more power to you."

Urban fantasy novelist Amanda Bonilla, a "ravenous reader of paranormal and urban fantasy romance", said that she gets through at least a book a week. "And I can safely say that I don't foam at the mouth or experience the DTs when I'm not reading a steamy sex scene. I don't get the shakes and rock back and forth on the floor when my mind isn't filled with visions of the quintessential Alpha-male seducing me against my better judgment," she blogged. "Reading is an escape. It's fantasy brought to life in your mind … I wholeheartedly disagree with this psychologist's assertions."

The piece also prompted a fierce rebuttal on Twitter, where crime writer Jason Pinter started the satirical hashtag #romancekills asking "what other horrible calamities romance novels are responsible for".
"My plea to romance writers: please stop writing. You are destroying marriages, the fabric of society, and the entire cosmos," wrote Pinter, going on to suggest that "the destruction of Alderaan was due to Darth Vader reading too many romance novels", that "Maria Shriver's marriage to Arnold Schwarzenegger dissolved because Arnold was reading too many romance novels" and that "King George VI only developed a speech impediment because he kept thinking about scandalously illicit romance novels".

Romancekills quickly became a trending topic, with other writers and readers jumping in to defend their choice of literature. "Fleas carrying black death were imported into Europe in romance novels," contributed romance novelist Rachel Grant. "The Titanic hit that iceberg because the lookouts were too busy reading romance novels," added literary agent Amy Boggs. And "every time a woman reads a romance novel, her lover dies … slowly, and with great pleasure," wrote novelist Christina Dodd.

QUEEN'S BIRTHDAY HONOURS

In the list of honours announced today you will find people honoured for services to Maori (quite a few), education, sport, biosecurity, music (several), netball, entertainment, broadcasting, dairy industry, electrical industry, surf life saving, rugby league, cricket, community (loads), and a heap of other categories too covering most aspects of life in New Zealand. But I cannot find any awards for services to book publishing, bookselling, writers and writing, librarianship, or literature and literacy.

The closest we get, and I'm delighted to see this one, is Katerina Mataira being made a Dame Companion for her services to the Maori language. Well deserved too. More below.

Awards of this nature are made of course as a result of persons within various industries, sports and other organisations being active in seeking to have their worthy companions honoured.
Methinks that those of us in the wider world of books are far too modest and lacking in initiative when it comes to these awards. Surely there must be some authors, book publishers, booksellers, or librarians worthy of nomination?

I mentioned Dame Katerina Mataira above. Here is a biographical piece and list of books she has translated taken from the Storylines website.  There is more info at the website.


Katerina Te Heikoko Mataira

Katerina_Mataira_1.JPGAuthor, artist and academic Kāterina Mataira (Ngati Porou) was born in Tokomaru Bay in 1932 near Gisborne on the east coat of the North Island. Kāterina credits her gift of storytelling to her parents, Raniera and Erana Harrison, who raised a large family in Ruatoria. Māori was their native tongue. ‘My father was a brilliant storyteller,’ Kāterina recalls. ‘Many of his stories were about his own life. They were full of real people and real events. There were scary ones too. He loved to tell ghost stories, then send one of us kids outside to fetch wood for the fire.’
Kāterina was educated at St Joseph's Māori Girls College in Napier and trained as a teacher and art educator. She established the first Māori language class in a state school at Northland College in Kaikohe in 1956. In 1958 she was part of a movement of Northland art educators that presented the first exhibition of contemporary Māori Art.
Kāterina has been at the forefront of Māori language revival and teaching for many years. In 1985 she helped set up the first Māori language immersion school, Kura Kaupapa Māori at Hoani Waititi Marae in Auckland, and co-authored Te Aho Matua – the philosophy and charter for kaupapa Māori schools. In 1987 she was appointed a foundation member of the Māori Language Commission. In 1996 she was made an Honorary Doctor at the University of Waikato. She has published a number of award winning picture books in Māori for children. However, her ground-breaking work has been the writing of novels in Māori - Te Atea (1975), Makorea (2002) and Rehua (2006).
In 1998 Kāterina was awarded the Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in recognition of her contribution to New Zealand. She lives with her husband, Junior Te Ratu Karepa in Raglan where she continues to write books for children. She has eight children, 29 grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Kāterina's son, Pita, an artist, has illustrated some of her books, continuing Kāterina’s tradition, as she was first published as an illustrator. 
In 2000, Creative New Zealand offered a grant to Ahuru Press to publish her three-volume historical novel written in te reo. In 2001 she was the recipient of the Te Tohu Tiketike a Te Waka Toi/Te Waka Toi Exemplary Award. Elizabeth Ellis, Chair of Te Waka Toi, Māori Arts Board of Creative New Zealand said ‘Kāterina is an exceptional, creative person. As a Māori woman at the forefront of Māori language renaissance, she’s provided leadership, direction and security. As a writer and an artist, she’s had a profound effect on New Zealand society’.

 Te Reo Translations:
  • Paenaena o Papa Koroua by Joy Watson, illustrated by Wendy Hodder (Ashton Scholastic 1993).
  • Aha ai Nana? by Carol Geissler, illustrated by Linda McClelland (Scholastic 2000).
  • Haereere a Clyde by John Tarlton (Scholastic 2000).
  • Hi Ika ma te Mawhitiwhiti Pungawerewere by Lino Nelisi and Elspeth Alix Batt (Scholastic 2000).
  • I Kai Parakipere Ahau by Alan Trussell-Cullen, illustrated by Kelvin Hawley (Scholastic 2001).  
  • Ta Pokiha by Gavin Bishop (Scholastic 2001).
  • Rakiraki Kei te Puna by Jan McPherson (Scholastic 2001).
  • Ko Maui Raua ko te Atua o te Ahi: he Purakau Maori by Gavin Bishop (Scholastic 2001).
  • Haere ki to Kuia Kainga by John Tarlton (Scholastic 2001).
  • Katarina by Gavin Bishop (Scholastic 2001).
  • Pipi Paopao by Gavin Bishop (Scholastic 2001).
  • Tarau Poto o Papa Koroua by Joy Watson, illustrated by Wendy Hodder (Scholastic 2002).  
  • Pakoro a Papa Koroua by Joy Watson illustrated by Wendy Hodder (Scholastic 2003).  
  • I te Timatanga by Peter Gossage (Scholastic 2004).
  • Kihi by Vicki Adams, illustrated by Kelvin Hawley (Scholastic 2004).
  • Nama Tino Rahi Rawa Atu i te Whaiao by Julie Leibrich, illustrated by Ross Kinnaird  (Scholastic 2004).
  • Teihi Tare by Elizabeth Pulford, illustrated by Denise Durkin (Scholastic 2004).
  • Tarakihana Pakupaku by Joy Cowley, illustrated by Gavin Bishop (Scholastic 2004).  
  • Weta by Joy Cowley, photographs by Rod Morris Mataira (Scholastic 2004).  
  • Hinepau by Gavin Bishop (Scholastic 2005).
  • I Roto i te Ngahere by Yvonne Morrison, illustrated by Jenny Cooper (Scholastic 2005).
  • Kia Heke te Po: Nga Kirehe Ngahere o Aotearoa by Julia Crouth (Scholastic 2005).
  • Te Waka by Jean Prior, illustrated by Gavin Bishop (Scholastic 2005).
  • Ko Wai Toku Ingoa? by Gillian May, illustrated by Geoff Dale (Scholastic 2005).
  • Poti a Papa Koroua by Joy Watson, illustrated by Wendy Hodder (Scholastic 2006).
  • Whakaeke i Nga Ngaru: E Wha Iino Purakau by Gavin Bishop (Random House 2006).
  • Aha Kei Runga? photographs by Glenn Jowitt & Katerina Te Heikoko Mataira (Scholastic 2006).
  • Horeta Me te Waka by Gordon Campbell, illustrated by Zak Waipara  (Scholastic 2007).
  • Tiare by Sarah Eady, illustrated by Robert Farrier (Scholastic 2007).  
  • Pukunoke by Pauline Cartwright, illustrated by Annabel Craighead (Scholastic 2007).
  • Hinemoa te Toa by Tim Tipene, illustrated John Bennett (Scholastic 2008).
  • Rapu Rāpeti by Elizabeth Pulford, illustrated by Jenny Cooper (Scholastic 2009).
  • Hūhū Koroheke by Kyle Mewburn, illustrated by Rachel Driscoll (Scholastic 2009).
 Awards:
  • White Ravens List 1994 for Cry-baby Moon.
  • University of Waikato Honorary Doctorate 1996.
  • Te Kura Pounamu Medal 1996 for Marama Tangiweto.
  • Te Kura Pounamu Medal 1997 for He Tino Kuia Taku Kuia.
  • University of Otago College of Education Writer in Residence 1997.
  • Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit 1998.
  • White Ravens List 2000 - Special Mention for Kapa Haka.
  • Te Tohu Tiketike a Te Waka Toi/Te Waka Toi Exemplary Award 2001.
  • Te Kura Pounamu Medal 2003 shortlist for Te Tarau Poto o Pāpā Koroua.
  • Te Kura Pounamu Medal 2005 shortlist for Tarakihanā pakupaku.
  • Te Kura Pounamu Medal 2005 shortlist for I te Timatangā.
  • Storylines Notable Books List 2006 Picture Book list for Te Waka.
  • Storylines Betty Gilderdale Award 2007.
  • Te Kura Pounamu Medal 2007 shortlist for Whakaeke i ngā Ngaru.
  • Te Kura Pounamu Medal 2009 shortlist for Hinemoa te Toa.
  • New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards 2010 Picture Book finalist for Hūhū Koroheke.
  • New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards 2010 Book of the Year for Hūhū Koroheke.    

THE PRESSURE GOES ON


Having been somewhat seduced by cooking with a pressure cooker in recent weeks, after reviewing The New Zealand Pressure Cooker Cookbook, I decided that I couldn’t keep borrowing a friend’s pressure cooker and so I went out to research the market and get one of my own.

There must be at least a dozen models to choose from out there but in the end mine came from a company called Steel Fern’s online site and I’m delighted with it. It looks good, it is efficient and easy to use; I chose the combo set (rrp $320) which means effectively I got two pressure cookers, one with a 5 litre capacity (standard size) and one with 9 litre capacity, especially good for soup and large cuts of meat. When it arrived I found the package contained:

1 x 5 litre base
1 x 9 litre base
1 x Pressure Lid that you can use between the two bases
1 x Glass Lid that you can use between the two bases
1 x Small Steamer Basket & Trivet
An instruction manual with Kiwi recipes.

You can check out their website – www.steelfern.co.nz for details and pictures and for any deals they may have going.
Other pressure cookers I looked at ranged in price from $100-$400 but did not provide two different bases, just the standard 5 litre version, so I feel mine was especially good value.
They also threw in The New Zealand Pressure Cooker Cookbook but I’m not sure if that is standard. If you do contact them say you saw on my blog that they included the free cookbook and could you have the same package!

Last night I made the following, taken from The New Zealand Pressure Cooker Cookbook, (thanks to Steel Fern I now have a copy at the bach and another in the city), which was a great hit with our holiday weekend visitors:PA
CKCINSitre base Pressure Lid that you can use between the two bases
1 x Glass Lid that you can use between the two bases
1 x Smal Steamer Basket & Trivet
with an instruction manual with Kiwi recipes
 Corned Beef with Mustard Glaze

Corned beef prepared in the pressure cooker gives a fantastic result in a fraction of the time. Try it finished with this sticky mustard glaze.

1 tablespoon cider vinegar
2 bay leaves
1 tablespoon brown sugar
2–3 small pickling onions, peeled
2 carrots, peeled and each cut into 3 chunks
4–6 whole peppercorns
4 whole allspice (optional)
2 sprigs parsley or thyme
1.5 kg piece corned beef or silverside

Glaze
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup cider vinegar
1 tablespoon wholegrain mustard

1. Place all the corned beef ingredients in the pressure cooker pan and add enough hot water to cover the meat. Bring to the boil, uncovered, and skim off any froth with a spoon.
2. Position the lid on top and lock it into place. Set to high pressure (2). Bring up to pressure and maintain this pressure for 30–40 minutes. Remove from the heat and allow the pressure to reduce naturally.
3. While the beef is cooking, mix together the ingredients for the glaze. When the cooker has depressurised, remove the meat and vegetables from the pan, discarding the cooking liquid.
4. Return the meat to the pan and pour the glaze over it. Heat over a medium heat for 3–5 minutes, spooning the glaze over the meat to coat. Transfer the meat and the vegetables to a serving dish and slice. Serve with any remaining glaze.

Serves 6–8

Here’s a Tip: If your piece of corned beef is smaller or larger than that specified, simply allow 10–15 minutes per 500g of meat.
The glaze proved especially wonderful. Next time I make it though I will include more carrots and more onions.
And we had leftovers today in sandwiches which were simply delicious. The butcher at Nosh in Ponsonby told me he preferred his corned beef cold. I’m not sure, I loved both!

Last week I made Traditional Pumpkin Soup from the same recipe book and it too was a triumph. The publishers have again kindly allowed me to reproduce it here on the blog:

                   Traditional Pumpkin Soup

 Pumpkin soup is an all-time favourite for many people, especially if you add a hint of nutmeg and some crumbled bacon. It’s a really quick and tasty soup to make in a pressure cooker.

1–2 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 rashers bacon
1 large onion, peeled and diced
1 celery stalk, sliced
850g peeled and deseeded pumpkin, cut into 4cm chunks
750ml liquid chicken or vegetable stock
large pinch of freshly ground nutmeg
salt and pepper
1/4 cup sour cream (optional)

1. Place the pressure cooker pan without the lid over a medium heat. Add 1 tablespoon of the oil and fry the bacon until crispy. Remove from the pan and allow to cool, then finely chop and set aside until required.
2. Add a little extra oil to the pressure cooker if required and return to a medium heat. Sauté the onion and celery for 2–3 minutes. Add the pumpkin, stock and season with the nutmeg and salt and pepper.
3. Place the lid on the pressure cooker and lock it into place. Set to high pressure (2).  Bring up to pressure and maintain that pressure for 10 minutes. Remove from the heat and reduce the pressure using the quick release method.
4. Transfer the contents of the pressure cooker to a blender or food processor and whizz the soup until smooth. Return the soup to the pan and add the bacon. Gently reheat and serve with a swirl of sour cream if desired.

Serves 6–8

Here’s a Tip: Start with a piece of pumpkin weighing approximately 1.2 kg. 


Footnote:
To read my earlier column in which I review two pressure cooker cookbooks link here. Includes recipe.
And for my report on the launch of The New Zealand Pressure Cookbook, and a recipe, go here.
Tonight I am making minted pea soup to be served with crusty ciabatta.
Bob Dylan in 1965.
Photo by Don Hunstein
Bob Dylan in 1965.

Books About Bob Dylan

New books by Greil Marcus, David Yaffe and Daniel Mark Epstein reaffirm Bob Dylan’s enduring ability to captivate.

Biographies of Metallica and Queen

The life and times of Metallica and Queen, two of the world’s biggest, loudest and most emotionally complicated rock groups.

Chesterton On Tradition

I've been reading (well, listening to) some G K Chesterton books recently. This quote, from Orthodoxy, resonated with me.
Tradition means giving votes to the most obscure of all classes, our ancestors. It is the democracy of the dead. Tradition refuses to submit to the small and arrogant oligarchy of those who merely happen to be walking about.
Why it has such an impact on me in later posts.

Sunday Reflection


Another one of my favorite songs by Phillips, Craig & Dean. 

Have a blessed week!