I'm sorry my poussin was the source of your weird chicken-related dreams. I got the poussin from Tesco. To my knowledge, although it may have tried to escape its captors, I doubt very much that it had been in a hotel lift, and it were, it would have meant you no harm.
Today, however, I had a baby chicken. A bit more meat on it than the aforementioned poussin, but it wasn't great. I think I'll stick with the chicken legs in future. Don't have nightmares...
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I'm becoming more and more suspicious these days!I thought it may have been. Apart from the taste and texture, I like to think that the fish I eat has been swimming in the sea and enjoying its life, rather than being crammed into an underwater cage with thousands of other fish. I have some frozen salmon which is supposedly wild caught, but I'm not sure I trust that. Is our food natural any more?
I heard it was a really bad year for blight last year as well - hope we have better fortunes this year! I seem to be very lucky with birds and spiders in my garden, pests rarely get a hold (except those pesky snails and slugs grrrrrr). I think I may qualify for a national collection of spiders - good thing I like them!Hi All
So back to Saturday.. brekkie usual slice LC toast cooled, good butter, copious tea. My fussiest meal of the day since I like my toast cooled before I spread a thick layer of butter and my tea very strong with dribble of milk, sort of mahogany colour. Just some useless info!
Lunch was avocado and prawn salad.
Supper was t/a of Tandoori King Prawns with cauli bhajee.
Yesterday same brekkie.
Lunch was big chunk of Red Storm with 3 Carrs water biscuits (2.5g each so not bad). Needed something quick and easy as was pottering in the garden in some very welcome sunshine.
Supper was half a small spatch**** chicken with broccoli preceded by gin & soda and 6 walnuts!
@DJC3 glad the dizziness is getting better, a week is a very long time. @maglil55 thanks for the advice about the specials at Antica. @Antje77 well done on handling your delicate conversation with your neighbour and glad it had a good result and you are still friends. @shelley262 I agree about homegrown tomatoes, the flavour and they are the perfect temperature if picked before eating. In 2020 I grew lots of stuff but broccoli defeated me. It was invaded and devoured by white flies. the following year we had tomato blight and it was in the whole village so I didn’t feel guilty just disappointed. Since then I have grown tumbling cherry toms in hanging baskets with great success after been told if they’re up high off the ground the blight won’t get them.
I heard it was a really bad year for blight last year - hope we have better fortunes this year! I seem to be very lucky with birds and spiders in my garden, pests rarely get a hold (except those pesky snails and slugs grrrrrr). I think I may qualify for a national collection of spiders - good thing I like them!
I love all my garden spiders but the huge ones that gallop around my house are less welcome near me!
Just as well someone does, I suppose. I know they serve a useful purpose, but something makes me frightened of even fairly small onand can'tg look at video or even still footage of them - irrational I know, unless I was a fly in a past life!
Had to Google pease pudding. Not at all what I imagined.Pease pudding is something neither my Mum nor my Gran ever made, even though my Mum was a school cook for a while. By her time, perhaps they were serving fresh vegetables and kids didn't want old-fashioned stuff like that. My Gran was a cook in a biggish house which was part of the Buckingham Palace set up (mews houses for the gentry who worked for the crown) so I guess they were too posh to eat pease pudding. I'm not posh and I've always loved it. The nobs didn't know what they were missing.
Everything in the oven now: the peas, the spiced chicken and another chicken dish just to get the ch thighs cooked. So I can have it whenever I feel like it. Maybe after my haircut. BG back up in the 7's now. It's a bit of a roller coaster ride.
I was one of the nurses picking up the pieces! Smelling gangrene, a smell never to be forgotten is a good incentive to not go down the same road.Sadly, you have only to walk round a hospital ward to see the long-term consequences of relying solely on antidiabetic meds and making no changes after diagnosis
Grated into a quiche?Edited to change racketeering to raclette !
B: full fat greek with blackberries and chia seeds
Exercise class , followed by coffee (tea for me) with friends
L: 2 slices livlife toast with raclette cheese on. This was one of the 5 cheeses from Saturday. We ate it cold on Saturday where it was pleasant, but today it showed its a lovely melting cheese, really silky. Had taster bites of the other cheeses too.
Mid afternoon a packet of chicken crackling
D: bolognaise mince on cabbage and leeks for me, on spaghetti for him.
Hazelnut ice cream to follow
Any ideas how to use a very very mature piece of emmental cheese? It's a bit too strong for hubby and me and it was very expensive