Sunday 30 December 2012

Hi Everyone
Firstly, here are the answers to the hard quiz from November - I know some people tried it but found it too tricky to submit answers to me.

1.   Door locker, citrus fruit tart. ..KEY LIME PIE
2.   Cooked US State  BAKED ALASKA
3.   American River with a silt base tart. - MISSISSIPPI MIUD PIE
4    This festive roll is not for the fire - YULE LOG
5     Dark Wooded area celebration cake - BLACK FOREST GATEAU
6.    Cocoa confectionary with trainee girl guide - CHOCOLATE BROWNIES
 7.    What you do to start a race.  - SAGO
8.    Sweet Ballerina - PAVLOVA
 9.    One for the 25th December - CHRISTMAS PUDDING
 10.  Mr Clinton's daughter with a type of hair arrangement - CHELSEA BUN
 11.  Granny Smith's shoe repairer  APPLE COBBLER
 12.  Public School shambles - ETON MESS
13.  Espied Richard - SPOTTED DICK
14   Half a pair of long legged bloomers - with praise! - KNICKERBOCKER GLORY
15.  French eat white dessert - BLANCMANGE

There - it wasn't too tricky - or was it ?

Well, I hope you had a really good Christmas, and, if you celebrate the 25th with a traditional dinner, that it all went smoothly and tasted great.  I also hope that you didn't over-indulge and made yourself feel uncomfortably full all day.
A radio programme on the radio on Xmas Eve told of how the Romans actually had a building in their gardens called a VOMITARIUM for when they had overdone it on the eating and drinking - no prizes for guessing what that was there for!!

There were prizes for those boys who entered Alex and Priyesh's multiple choice Xmas quiz in their blog.
A bit suspicious though - they all had the same answer for the question about the spice used in Mulled Wine- the answer on the internet was cumin and of course that must be a mistake because I knew it was Cinnamon from the choice of answers. Suggests that the contestants had accessed the quiz on line or had bribed the 2 boys who set the quiz!!! Just warning you-  if any of the boys who entered the quiz offers you a glass of traditional mulled wine that they have made - it might taste a bit like a sweet curry?!
If I am wrong, and anyone finds a recipe for mulled wine using cumin then I stand corrected and will give a prize to you if you bring me a copy of it.
It was my turn to cook on Christmas Day this year - we entertained family, and I offered a selection of starters, turkey and beef as the main course with 5 different vegetable dishes and home made stuffing.
For dessert, my sister in law brought her home made Xmas pud - delicious - and then I had also prepared other sweets - Nigella's gelato meringue dessert with chocolate sauce and fresh raspberries, a home created chocolate roulade filled with creme fraiche and cranberries, and a fresh fruit salad. Whew!
The highlight of the meal though was the Xmas Crackers that my brother in law had sourced - each contained a wind up reindeer named after one of Santas 8. In the cracker box was a little race track which you put in the middle of the dining table. Then we raced our own reindeer against the others!  It was hilarious.  Below are pictures to illustrate the game. You can buy them for half price now on Amazon - get some for next year!
 



6 Racing Reindeer Christmas Crackers

I bought myself a good book just before Christmas, after hearing it serialized on the radio. It is called The Horologican . I think you know that I am very interested in the history of the English Language, and this book – a book of hours - gives you many long-forgotten extraordinary words in the English language, arranged according to the hour of the day when you really need them.

On the food side, let’s look at one or two breakfasty words….
The study of breakfast is called ARISTOLOGY, and an aristologist would have even studied the 19th book of the Iliad – a famous Greek epic written by Homer. The whole 19th book is given over to the subject of whether to eat breakfast or not! Agamemnon gives a long speech commanding the Greeks to JENTICULATE – eat breakfast- whilst Achilles gives an even longer speech pointing out that it will make them late for work (ie. Killing Trojans!) Had Achilles been more reasonable he would have settled for a quick CHOTA HAZRI – a  brief breakfast just enough to keep you going til elevenses! It’s a Hindi work for little breakfast, and was even used in a story about a chap who, in 1886 spent the night up a tree with a tiger, and, when he returned at dawn simply wanted a chota hazri before he would tell them of his adventures!
Eggs, in the eighteenth century were actually called CACKLING FARTS on the basis that chickens cackled all the time and eggs came out of the back of them!
A lovely onomatopoeic word for a rashly roasted rasher of bacon is BRIZZLED - scorched near to burning.

We had a few foodie presents in our household this Christmas. My husband bought me a Stove top smoker - its really good. You fill it with a choice of wood chips, place the items to be smoked on a rack in the smoker, then close the lid and put it on the hob. It smokes food brilliantly. So far I have done trout, salmon and chicken but I shall be trying out lots more things when I have some spare time. The wood chips he bought me included apple, cherry, oak, alder, hickory,
I bought my husband a George Forman grill, family size, for him to grill a variety of stuff for us all.
I have yet to try out my yoghurt maker, which I bought on special offer at the Good Food Show. I do make my own yoghurt using a vacum flask but this kit has a much bigger, wider 'flask' to cultivate the yoghurt in, so you get more at one time, and its easy to clean. The Show was really enjoyable - we left at 3pm after 5 hours there - we sampled loads of yummy products including cheeses, sausages, dips and sauces, wines and punch, coffees and chocolates, breads and oils etc. etc. We went into the demonstrating theatre to see James Martin - that was really good. He is a classic car fanatic these days and owns several special cars himself, but he actually drove onto the stage in the world's smallest car, which is manufactured in GB. He had to roll out of it because he was almost stuck inside!

http://sim.in.com/7db1cbdc0bcf82ad7aebed322579ad96.jpg?p=0

The one really interesting display at the show was this huge range of cheeses on tables in a cordonned-off area of the Hall where, during the week, a cheese tasting event had taken place. There were cheeses of all shapes, sizes and varieties on display that had been judged; their makers had been awarded prizes and certificates.
There were cheeses from all over the globe. The over all winner was a manchego cheese from Spain.
One cheese that I definitely wouldn't have wanted to sample was 'sticky toffee pudding cheddar'!
The entries from South Africa were huge whole cheeses in their rinds, and the rinds were designed to resemble the patterns on the skins of giraffes, cheetahs, leopards etc.! Brilliant!
The sad and disappointing thing though was that, because the cheeses had been out at Room Temperature for over 4 hours, they were labelled 'unfit for human consumption' and could not be sampled by or sold to the general public at the Show. They would all have to be 'binned' at the end of the day!  Food Safety Regulations I know, as I am a Food Safety Trainer, but honestly, it was such a waste of wonderful products.
So, the quiz this week is to find out which country the following cheeses come from:-
(Tip - consult wikipedia list of world cheeses....)
MQUNDU
PANEER
MAJDOULE
RUBING
TYROLEAN GREY
HALLOUMI
SAGA
EPAISSES
RAUCHKASE
FETA
RICOTTA
LEERDAMMER
MANCHEGO
GOLKA
DOVEDALE
OAXACA
MONTEREY JACK
WAIRUA
QUESO DE MANO
UGLICHSKY
Bring the answers to me when school starts - a prize for the winner.
SIGNING OFF.....MRS P






Monday 10 December 2012

  Mrs P here. I am having a bit of a break from writing the blogs as you know; this week it's 2 more pupils from 8P who are having a go. They created this blog all by themselves, and with a bit of tweaking by me have published it for you below.. Do take time to read it through and have a go at the multiple choice quiz at the bottom of the page No one entered last week's quiz; so the chocs go into the roll-over and get added to the prizes for this week. That means there will be a runner up too, rather than just one winner..
Hey guys, I’m Alex and this is Priyesh, from 8P. This week we are blogging about potatoes, and how they are humble. We’ve found 48 synonyms for humble. We had to go through a lot of websites and thesauruses to get them. Some of them are: obliging, obsequious, reverential, self-conscious, self-effacing, subservient, supplicatory, unambitious, unostentatious, unpretentious. All relevant to the spud, don't you agree?




In the English dictionary, it said ‘also called Irish potato, white potato. The edible tuber of a cultivated plant, Solanum Tuberosum, of the nightshade family.’

          Potato in Gujarati is ‘batako’.



If you want to play some Christmas games, just go to:


INTERESTING SPUD FACTS


·       Children get more vitamin C, B1, B6, Folate,Iron, Magnesium and Potassium from potatoes than beetroot, bananas, nuts, broccoli and avocado all combined.

·       All the nuts, seeds and nut products eaten by children provide kids in the UK with less selenium than potatoes.

·       The record number of chip portions sold in a fish & chip shop, in a day, is 4000

·       ¼ of all potatoes grown in Britain are made into chips. That’s around 1.5 million tons each year, or nearly the same weight as 125,000 full double decker buses.

CHRISTMAS FOOD FACTS


·       One notable medieval English Christmas celebration featured a giant 165-pound pie.
The giant pie was nine feet in diameter. Its ingredients included:
* 2 bushels of flour
* 20 pounds of butter
* 4 geese
* 2 rabbits
* 4 wild ducks
* 2 woodcocks
* 6 snipes
* 4 partridges
* 2 neats' tongues
* 2 curlews
* 6 pigeons
* 7 blackbirds.

·       In the Ukraine, they bake a traditional Christmas bread called "kolach". This bread is braided into a ring, and three such rings are placed one on top of the other, with a candle in the center of the top one. The three rings symbolize the Holy Trinity.They also set the table for Christmas Eve dinner with two tablecloths: one for the ancestors of the family, the other for the living members as in pagan times, ancestors were believed to be benevolent spirits who, when shown respect, brought good fortune. The Ukrainians also prepare a traditional twelve-course meal at Christmas time. A family's youngest child watches through the window for the evening star to appear, a signal that the feast can begin. 

·       The inventor of the Christmas cracker or bon-bon was Tom Smith who owned a sweet shop in London.
Visiting France in the 1840's, while Tom was in France, he came across sweets wrapped in a twist of paper. As they were quite popular, he began to copy the idea.When Tom noticed that young men were buying them to give to their sweethearts, he began to place "love mottoes" on small slips of paper inside the sweet wrapping.Later in 1846, and thinking about Christmas, Tom's thoughts turned towards placing toys and novelties inside the twisted wrapping. He experimented with this and invented the idea of producing a wrapping that could be pulled apart. Voila! The humble Christmas cracker!

A fun christmas quiz - Mrs P has the answers locked away in the Food Tech safe. Print off your responses, hand them in this week, and win a Christmas selection box!  If no one enters, the 2 bloggers get the chocs!!


1Mince pies used to be oblong with a pastry figure on top. Who did this symbolise?

Jesus Rudolf Noddy Holder

2 Brussels sprouts got their name because

They were called russels, but this was mispronounced They were popular in Brussels Little cabbages was deemed too long a name

3 How many mince pies should you eat for luck?

3 6 12 52

4 When did good king Wenceslas step out?

On the eve of Christmas On the feast of Stephen To the tune of Jingle Bell Rock

5 In which direction should you stir mincemeat?

Clockwise Anticlockwise

6 Who first tucked into turkey in Britain?

Henry VIII Charles I Oliver Cromwell Queen Victoria

7 Which spice would you not normally use when mulling wine?

Cinnamon Cloves Nutmeg Cumin

8 What might have been served as a traditional Christmas dinner in early Britain?

Lancashire hotpot A mustard-smothered pig's head Black pudding

9 What might you find running through the middle of stollen?

Chestnuts Marzipan Gold More cake

10 Which of the following is a traditional flavouring for bread sauce?

Sage

Cloves

Star anise



11 The first mince pies actually contained meat as well as fruit.

True

False



12 What do Germans cook their Brussels sprouts in?

Water Apple juice Beer Schnapps


  Mrs P here. I am having a bit of a break from writing the blogs as you know; this week it's 2 more pupils from 8P who are having a go. They created this blog all by themselves, and with a bit of tweaking by me have published it for you below.. Do take time to read it through and have a go at the multiple choice quiz at the bottom of the page No one entered last week's quiz; so the chocs go into the roll-over and get added to the prizes for this week. That means there will be a runner up too, rather than just one winner..

Hey guys, I’m Alex and this is Priyesh, from 8P. This week we are blogging about potatoes, and how they are humble. We’ve found 48 synonyms for humble. We had to go through a lot of websites and thesauruses to get them. Some of them are: obliging, obsequious, reverential, self-conscious, self-effacing, subservient, supplicatory, unambitious, unostentatious, unpretentious. All relevant to the spud, don't you agree?


In the English dictionary, it said ‘also called Irish potato, white potato. The edible tuber of a cultivated plant, Solanum Tuberosum, of the nightshade family.’
          Potato in Gujarati is ‘batako’.

If you want to play some Christmas games, just go to:

INTERESTING SPUD FACTS

·       Children get more vitamin C, B1, B6, Folate,Iron, Magnesium and Potassium from potatoes than beetroot, bananas, nuts, broccoli and avocado all combined.
·       All the nuts, seeds and nut products eaten by children provide kids in the UK with less selenium than potatoes.
·       The record number of chip portions sold in a fish & chip shop, in a day, is 4000
·       ¼ of all potatoes grown in Britain are made into chips. That’s around 1.5 million tons each year, or nearly the same weight as 125,000 full double decker buses.

CHRISTMAS FOOD FACTS

·       One notable medieval English Christmas celebration featured a giant 165-pound pie.
The giant pie was nine feet in diameter. Its ingredients included:
* 2 bushels of flour
* 20 pounds of butter
* 4 geese
* 2 rabbits
* 4 wild ducks
* 2 woodcocks
* 6 snipes
* 4 partridges
* 2 neats' tongues
* 2 curlews
* 6 pigeons
* 7 blackbirds.
·       In the Ukraine, they bake a traditional Christmas bread called "kolach". This bread is braided into a ring, and three such rings are placed one on top of the other, with a candle in the center of the top one. The three rings symbolize the Holy Trinity.They also set the table for Christmas Eve dinner with two tablecloths: one for the ancestors of the family, the other for the living members as in pagan times, ancestors were believed to be benevolent spirits who, when shown respect, brought good fortune. The Ukrainians also prepare a traditional twelve-course meal at Christmas time. A family's youngest child watches through the window for the evening star to appear, a signal that the feast can begin. 
·       The inventor of the Christmas cracker or bon-bon was Tom Smith who owned a sweet shop in London.

Visiting France in the 1840's, while Tom was in France, he came across sweets wrapped in a twist of paper. As they were quite popular, he began to copy the idea.When Tom noticed that young men were buying them to give to their sweethearts, he began to place "love mottoes" on small slips of paper inside the sweet wrapping.Later in 1846, and thinking about Christmas, Tom's thoughts turned towards placing toys and novelties inside the twisted wrapping. He experimented with this and invented the idea of producing a wrapping that could be pulled apart. Voila! The humble Christmas cracker!

A fun christmas quiz - Mrs P has the answers locked away in the Food Tech safe. Print off your responses, hand them in this week, and win a Christmas selection box!  If no one enters, the 2 bloggers get the chocs!!

1Mince pies used to be oblong with a pastry figure on top. Who did this symbolise?
Jesus Rudolf Noddy Holder
2 Brussels sprouts got their name because
They were called russels, but this was mispronounced They were popular in Brussels Little cabbages was deemed too long a name
3 How many mince pies should you eat for luck?
3 6 12 52
4 When did good king Wenceslas step out?
On the eve of Christmas On the feast of Stephen To the tune of Jingle Bell Rock
5 In which direction should you stir mincemeat?
Clockwise Anticlockwise
6 Who first tucked into turkey in Britain?
Henry VIII Charles I Oliver Cromwell Queen Victoria
7 Which spice would you not normally use when mulling wine?
Cinnamon Cloves Nutmeg Cumin
8 What might have been served as a traditional Christmas dinner in early Britain?
Lancashire hotpot A mustard-smothered pig's head Black pudding
9 What might you find running through the middle of stollen?
Chestnuts Marzipan Gold More cake
10 Which of the following is a traditional flavouring for bread sauce?
Sage
Cloves
Star anise

11 The first mince pies actually contained meat as well as fruit.
True
False

12 What do Germans cook their Brussels sprouts in?
Water Apple juice Beer Schnapps