AS: Cool Britannia (sort of): the British thread 2019

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  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Glad to hear he got it sorted out in such a satisfactory way, RoS!

    CK, those are lovely - both the filter-coloured ones and your more "natural" ones.

    After D's recital, we went to a local pub for lunch - it's quite an ordinary sort of place, but with very decent food - and I had a small but perfectly-cooked steak with a lovely salad of leaves, goat's cheese, pecan nuts and dried cranberries (with a glass of WINE to wash it down), and D. had breakfast - bacon, eggs and v. good fried potatoes.
  • BoogieBoogie Shipmate
    Good news all round @Roseofsharon

    I’m still having to take things slowly due to hurty ribs. It’s not in my nature to take things slowly!

  • daisydaisydaisydaisy Shipmate
    edited March 2019
    For my lunch I have just harvested a lettuce that I planted out last October (it was one of 4 rather sad looking plants waiting for a buyer). In the summer I don’t have lettuce success (slugs & snails) but I am shocked to have a harvest in March - so much for English winters.
  • The Slugs and Snails slip down nicely, when fried in garlic and butter....
    :grin:

    ....I'll get me smock-frock, and shut the potting-shed door on me way out.
  • Bene GesseritBene Gesserit Shipmate
    edited March 2019
    The slugs would be rather bitter, but then so would you if...
  • BoogieBoogie Shipmate
    My son was a year old when he ate a slug. 🤢

    He was on the lawn when he picked it up - I thought ‘awww, he’s looking at a slug’ when gulp! Down it went!

    Ewwwww! 🤮
  • ThunderBunkThunderBunk Shipmate
    edited March 2019
    RoS if it's a private pension there may also be a tax refund due..
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    It's getting springier and springier here - it's currently 9° and has really been rather a nice day.

    We took a run out into the country (to another wee caff that does nice food) and were quite taken with how much of the snow has disappeared. The ice on the river near where we live has all but gone; we think they may have been letting water out of the dam a few miles upriver from us, although it's still mostly frozen further downstream.

    I expect they'll be monitoring it very carefully after the devastating floods last spring; as we came back along the north side we noticed a depressing number of derelict or near-derelict buildings which may have been a hangover from last year (the north side was much worse-hit than the south).
  • daisydaisydaisydaisy Shipmate
    edited March 2019
    I am completely caked out, I’m not sure I want to see another slice until.... well maybe tomorrow. This evening was my orchestra’s concert at a very hospitable church who provided wine & nibbles including cake, and we always bring cake so there was rather a lot to sample. I felt obliged to sample rather more than I should have. Extra hours digging needed on the allotment tomorrow to work the excess off, I think!
    P.S. the concert was well received - they didn’t seem to notice the strange notes being played on the back row where I sit.
  • Wesley JWesley J Shipmate
    edited March 2019
    I've just witnessed the clock at our railway station going magically, mysteriously and betraying common sense go forward 1 hour within less than a minute! From 2am to 3am!

    I want my hour back! And I want it now! Grrrr....! :tired_face:

    No wonder kids start eating slugs! It's madness!
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Some of us lost our hour two weeks ago, and are therefore not losing it tonight ...

    I need that snigger smilie we had on the Old Ship™. :grin:
  • Here in Arizona we don't do all that nonsense with our clocks.

    :snigger:
  • Horrid lot. The alarms have all gone off for 6am meds and it's dark and my body click says it's 5am.
  • MMMMMM Shipmate
    Whereas something in my brain has also gone forward - I posted a few days ago that I’ve started waking up at 4. I said to Macarius that when I woke up today, at least it would be 5 - but oh no, I still woke up at 4! Still, did go back to sleep and was surprised by the alarm, which counts as a win.

    MMM
  • Our clocks go to normal times next Sunday early morning. It is currently very, very dark in the morning, even at 7:00 am.

    Still light mornings will mean dark evenings.
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    Some of the electronics in the house have made the time change, some not. It’s knowing which ones. Fortunately the CH seems to be among the smart ones and, more surprisingly, my cheap little clock radio. The phone and iPad are on to it. So that just leaves the cooker, microwave, coffee maker and watch.

    I can remember when my mother just pushed the hands round on the wind-up clock on the mantelpiece and that was it.
  • At least it's an easy change for the clocks and watches, unlike the autumn one. (Says the person reaching for her watch)
  • I'm intrigued that WesleyJ was on the station at 2am ....
  • I'm intrigued that WesleyJ was on the station at 2am ....
    Me too - do tell
  • I can answer that - he lives near enough a station to see it from his flat.
  • shamwarishamwari Shipmate Posts: 48
    Got back this morning from South Africa. Plane landed at 5.45am!!! But at least it wasnt raining or snowing.
  • MooMoo Kerygmania Host
    I don't make the daylight savings time jump all at once. The Tuesday evening before the Sunday, I set my bedside clock fifteen minutes ahead. Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday I do the same. On Saturday I am a full hour ahead of standard time, but slightly groggy. On Sunday I am completely adjusted to daylight time.
  • That requires clocks, alarms and phones that aren't connected to the internet/satellites. I did nothing to change my alarms, they did it all automatically.
  • I can answer that - he lives near enough a station to see it from his flat.

    That may be so - but what was he doing, gazing out of window at 2am/3am?

    O I know - waiting to see the clock change itself!
    :grin:

  • finelinefineline Kerygmania Host, 8th Day Host
    Talking of clocks going backwards, my favourite coffee shop has got a new mirror image clock - so it will look like it's 1 o'clock when it's 11 o'clock, and vice versa. When I first saw it, it was around midday - well, it was showing 12:10, so not that different from the actual 11:50, and so I just thought time had passed slightly quicker than I'd realised, which isn't unusual for me. Then I saw the second hand was going anti-clockwise - totally freaked me out at first! Never come across such a clock before.
  • I can answer that - he lives near enough a station to see it from his flat.

    That may be so - but what was he doing, gazing out of window at 2am/3am?

    Perhaps there is some kind of Special Secret Train that comes through at that time.

  • I can answer that - he lives near enough a station to see it from his flat.

    That may be so - but what was he doing, gazing out of window at 2am/3am?

    Perhaps there is some kind of Special Secret Train that comes through at that time.

    Ah yes - the Ghost of a Proper Train, wreathed in ghostly white Steam....
    :warning:

  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    ...with its spectral driver and phantom ticket collector. And only WesleyJ can see the silent passengers make their soundless way to the platform that’s not there in the daytime...
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    I'm starting to hear ghostly music in my mind's ear - this conversation's getting Very Silly. Maybe you all need some more sleep ... :mrgreen:

    Actually this morning I might as well have been putting the clock forward - I woke up at about 5:30 (not unknown for me), went to the loo, came back and thought, great, I've got another couple of hours of sleep ...

    No - I had another couple of hours of not sleep - well, mostly. I think I dozed off again at about 7 o'clock, which is un fat lot de bon when you have to get up at half past.

    I'm now a rather sleepy piglet, and after lunch will have some Quality Bear Time™ (i.e. a nap).
  • Wesley JWesley J Shipmate
    edited March 2019
    I can answer that - he lives near enough a station to see it from his flat.

    That may be so - but what was he doing, gazing out of window at 2am/3am?

    O I know - waiting to see the clock change itself!
    :grin:

    Spot on! :D :D

    (Speaking of ghost trains - they'll have nightly engineering work on the tracks for a few weeks now, so I suppose I may need to sleep on the other side of the house... grrr. But what what's gotta be done, 's got to be done, eh.)
  • MMMMMM Shipmate
    I like hearing what others are eating - what’s on the menu tonight, shipmates?

    It’s roast beef and Yorkshire pud here. My mouth’s watering already!

    MMM
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited March 2019
    Huh. Being still LENT, tonight's frugal, austere, and penitential supper will be Mackerel* on Toast. With possibly Bread and CHEESE to follow.

    At least the bl**dy Mackerel tin has a ring-pull.....
    :grin:

    *or maybe Sardines, whichever tin is closest to the Episcopal hand...
  • Wesley JWesley J Shipmate
    You clearly pull the strings with them fishies.
  • BoogieBoogie Shipmate
    I see two duck breasts defrosting on the window ledge. 😋
  • Curry and ceilidh for me tonight - I’m playing in a folk orchestra for a folk club’s bash.
  • Roast beef in the oven as I write (meat from a Very Good Butcher in west Wales where we were on Friday).
  • Piglet wrote: »
    I woke up at about 5:30 (not unknown for me), went to the loo, came back and thought, great, I've got another couple of hours of sleep ...

    No - I had another couple of hours of not sleep - well, mostly.
    Same here - even with the clocks changing. I woke the Missus just before 9.

  • Just in time for Church!

    We were missing one or two folk this morning, though mostly those who had already filled in their leave forms, but I suspect that the paucity of Scouts/Cubs etc. (it being Mothering Sunday) may have had summink to do with the State's tampering with Time.
  • Wesley J wrote: »
    You clearly pull the strings with them fishies.

    *sings* You shall have a Fishy, in a little Dishy, you shall have a Fishy, when the Boat comes in.....
  • Lothar 1 cooked me steak with asparagus. With his body clock it was either a very late lunch or early dinner. Or I suppose tea, if I go back to my youth.
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited March 2019
    Steak for Tea??

    No, no - Bread and Butter, with Jam and/or Marmite......

    .....and CAKE.
  • Stir fried veg (pack) with egg fried rice containing peas and peanuts. Because I bought the pack from the very reduced counter yesterday and it needed eating today.

    Another very reduced thing I acquired this week were some trousers with a belt at £1.50. No they don't fit me, they're huge, size 20 or something. But there's enough fabric in them for me to make something that does fit.
  • finelinefineline Kerygmania Host, 8th Day Host
    I had steak for breakfast, with an egg and onions and tomato. Steak was reduced from £4 to £1, and the box of 6 eggs was reduced to 30p. Bag of onions was reduced to 10p. Nearly all my food is reduced. I spend about £15 a week on food this way.
  • I was taken to the local pub for a Mother’s Day meal - goats cheese and beetroot salad, pork loin with crackling and Yorkshire pudding and a chocolate and peanut butter bomb with hot caramel sauce.
  • Dinner here was wot the English call Spag Bol but the Italians don't.
  • la vie en rougela vie en rouge Circus Host, 8th Day Host
    Hello everyone

    Just back from a very pleasant couple of days in Chamonix at my employer's expense.

    I tried skiing on the trip a couple of years ago but didn't love it so this year I signed up for dog sled. This is slightly alarming at the beginning until you get the hang of it but after that it's good fun. I really enjoyed it. Mush!
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    Gammon with slices of fresh pineapple fried until caramelizing.

    The builders start on the kitchen tomorrow (I hope) - so that may be the last meal in for a while. Fortunately there’s a nearby road which has a good few restaurants. If we work through them in order of proximity, that’ll be Chinese, pub, Indian, Thai, Italian and Korean (by which time I’d hope the works would be done).
  • Our lunch today would not get your salivary glands working overtime,MMM.

    Mothering Sunday lunch with the vegetarian branch of the family, who have two autistic children with vey definite ideas on what is edible, was the same as they have every Sunday.
    Quorn Veggie Roast, with a plentiful accompaniment of roasted vegetables, and various greens. Followed by an Eton Mess Cheesecake.

    I have spent the evening drooling over my new cookbook - Yotam Ottolenghi's "Simple", a Mothering Sunday gift from our other son, and planning meals for future pleasures.
  • Family movie night last night (Sunday). We watched Under Hill 60 which is two hours. We wanted early start to watching so DIL made nachos which we ate from plates on our laps in media room. #1 son has such a lot of tablets that he needs to be in bed early.

    Nachos were good and better because it is not often on the menu, let alone eaten like a picnic.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    We went to East Side Mario's, a New York Italian chain, for lunch; D. had Italian wedding soup, house salad and garlic bread, and I had shrimp, tomato and vodka penne, with Caesar salad and bread.

    Mid-evening I made some guacamole*, as there was an avocado left in the fridge that needed using up, which I've just finished with some crackers.

    @Firenze , have you any idea how envious I am that you have to patronise Edinburgh restaurants for a week??? :wink:

    * I'm under no illusions that I could fool a real, actual Mexican into thinking it was guacamole: it was an avocado mashed up with mayonnaise, garlic, lemon juice and a tiny pinch of chilli powder. Quite nice for all that.
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