This is what the postman brought me at lunchtime today:
Sophie - she of the prize winning pumpkin - chose to share her Fortnum's hamper of sweets amongst family. She has 6 cousins and a sister so sharing her success would have made a sizeable dent in the chocolate booty but she also included me. Having an elder sibling has meant learning to share and little Sophie seems to have taken that on board in spades. How refreshing in this day and age of over-indulged, instantly gratified children.
I love my family all the way to moon and back... and not just for chocolate (obviously).
5 Nov 2012
3 Nov 2012
We've done it again! Fortnum's pumpkin success!
(And by "we, I don't mean me at all but the junior members of my sister's family!)
This Hallowe'en I couldn't make it to the annual Fortnum & Mason pumpkin carving competition as I was working a long day but my sister's Midlands-based family made the effort and trekked down to London for it; I joined them for the last couple of hours in the evening. A couple of years back, my niece Kate won the inaugural competition, coming home with a bespoke besom broom and the promise of a Fortnum's delivery truck dropping off a £1000 hamper at her door.
Last year, my great niece Lottie (then 7½) scooped the top award for her entry into the children's section - her winning pumpkin was featured in Fortnum's publicity for this year and she took home a sizeable selection of Fortnum's sweets in one of their famous hampers.
So, no pressure for this year then... To be honest, the bar is now set so high, with very seriously competitive entries from professional pumpkin carvers, that it would be (almost) impossible for the hobbyist to win in the adult section.
Thank goodness, then, for the children's section where, yet again, the winning pumpkin was chosen from those entered by members of my family - this time by Lottie's younger sister, Sophie (6½). Her sister and cousin were also commended for their efforts. In case you can't immediately see it, this is a devil-faced pumpkin with flames, plaited raffia beard and (slightly slipping) horns - and, in my humble and totally biased opinion, much nicer than the adult winner, retaining a certain charm and friendliness.
This Hallowe'en I couldn't make it to the annual Fortnum & Mason pumpkin carving competition as I was working a long day but my sister's Midlands-based family made the effort and trekked down to London for it; I joined them for the last couple of hours in the evening. A couple of years back, my niece Kate won the inaugural competition, coming home with a bespoke besom broom and the promise of a Fortnum's delivery truck dropping off a £1000 hamper at her door.
Last year, my great niece Lottie (then 7½) scooped the top award for her entry into the children's section - her winning pumpkin was featured in Fortnum's publicity for this year and she took home a sizeable selection of Fortnum's sweets in one of their famous hampers.
Lottie's prize winning pumpkin, 2011 Image from Fortnum & Mason website |
The 2012 adult winner: 3 gruesome faces carved around the pumpkin. Makes me think of the first Harry Potter film! |
Winning Children's pumpkin, 2012. |
** Well done, Sophie! **
And thanks for saving me the truffles from your huge hamper of Fortnum's delicious sweets! ♥♥♥
I do keep banging on about this Hallowe'en event but it's a lovely thing to go to if you're a) in London and b) not busy trailing after mini sweet bearing ghouls in your neighbourhood. Like most established department stores, Fortnums know how to keep the crowd entertained - we were treated to superior snacks and drinks in sugar-rimmed martini glasses throughout the hour long judging. I loved the Jeeves-style waiters with their silver salvers of sliced pumpkin and sausagemeat in pastry, bowls of spiced pumpkin risotto and plates of pumpkin pie with vanilla cream and a disc of sugar-dredged, deep fried pumpkin. The last was a diet-breaker; even so, I'd dearly love the recipe! (I've looked online and nothing seems to resemble it; I think there were ground almonds in the pie filling.)
I was very thirsty after my day at work so avoided more than a sip of the blood-coloured vodka and blackcurrant purée in favour of the non-alcoholic thirst quenching blackcurrant purée and soda. Hmmm, it was all so lovely that I'm now wondering about slipping along to the macaron making demonstration this afternoon!
Labels:
Hallowe'en,
Pumpkins
Posted by
Caro
at
09:45
1 Nov 2012
Catching up and a new London apple
Autumn harvest - squashes, late ripening tomatoes, foraged rosehip jelly and syrup. |
I've taken photos I'd like to post, I've had some good fortune, I've made foraged-for goodies, had a day trip to RHS Wisley gardens, started to clear the veg garden (and harvested some spectacular squashes in the process), picked lots of green tomatoes for ripening and made a start on sifting the saved seed pods from my 9-star perennial cauliflowers - and, of course, the Garden Design course is gathering momentum with lots of back to basics sketching, plant knowledge and a couple of assignments (due in very soon) - who knew there was such a lot to know about year round bulbs! I'm still loving it, though :)
New London Apple Image taken from London Orchard Project |
On a completely different note, I've also won a portable barbecue from Notcutts! I can't remember how I came to enter this one as I rarely bother with competitions but, there we are, a lovely cream barbecue duly arrived, ready for use next summer. I'm hopeful that there WILL be a summer next year and am already planning a new layout and planting for the garden in my head!
Posted by
Caro
at
15:38
7 Oct 2012
Foraging on an Autumn morning
~ Dew be-jewelled grass seedhead ~ |
Given the leaden skies and storms we've had over the last week, I'm treasuring every sunny day as it happens. We had a beautiful day yesterday but I was indoors at a workshop all day. Grrrr. Luckily, the sun is also shining today (my one free day this week) and I was determined to go out to find rosehips as I've spied some beauties as I've been walking around the parish - and there's a delicious sounding recipe for Rosehip Jelly in this month's Grow Your Own mag. (And I've run out of home-made rosehip cordial.)
So, off to Parliament Hill Fields on Hampstead Heath first thing this morning, having already gathered a half kilo of hips from bushes overhanging the streets of Kentish Town at dawn. It was still early so I wore wellies as I knew the long grass would still be wet. What I wasn't expecting was how beautiful everything looked in the sun. There were a few runners and dog-walkers about, other than that I felt I had the heath to myself; an extraordinary thing in the middle of London, and very peaceful. I was completely in the moment, camera in hand, focussing on the tiny details and enjoying the warm sun on my back.
With the light bouncing off the camera screen, it was hard to see my photos outdoors; back inside an hour later, I was very pleased with several of my shots, especially the one above. I've been a bit of wreck this last week (strep throat, eye infection, cold - all now nearing the end) and that's affected my photos. They've all been a bit uninspired. Today, though, I feel I've started to get my mojo (whatever that is!) back.
With the dew to inspire me, I photographed glittering grass stalks, thistles that look like sea anemones ...
... and the sun shining through grass seedheads:
Finally, I reached the bank of rose hips and set to work. This is the first year that I've foraged for rose hips and I'm amazed at how many there are! Is this normal, I wonder?
I gathered a kilo of hips by cutting carefully; there were so many, both single hips and in bunches, it hardly looked as though I'd taken any! I took my secateurs to reduce being scratched (mature hips have very effective protection by way of their thorny stems!); they're also handy for reaching branches slightly too high! Even with using these, my fingers smelled of rosehips on the walk home, a reminder of the goodies to come.
I'm saving the task of removing the stems until later in the day as I want to make the most of this lovely sunshine to get into the veg garden. I have to dig up the strawberries on ground level to make room for some rhubarb plants that I've grown from seed. I'll save a few strawberries as I want to give them their own raised bed next year but all the others will be .... ssshhh, say it quietly! .... composted.
I'm a bit off strawberries after this year (who knew that slugs were so fond of them?) but the children enjoy them. I hoping my redcurrant bush will fruit next year (its third year) and I want to get a couple of dwarf apple trees and some blueberries for the veg patch. Some of the herbs will be relocated in this process - something I'm looking forward to as I love to move things around!
Hopefully I'll have time to post the results of my kitchen efforts with the rosehips fairly soon; I'll certainly be posting again later today with my Capel plant ID - I only knew one of the plants this week, the cardoon, so will have to work hard for my full marks this week!
Labels:
Heath,
nature,
photography,
Rosehips
Posted by
Caro
at
12:58
30 Sept 2012
Capel Manor: Naming of names
My favourite image from last Friday's course: The Castor Oil plant (Ricinis communis). (Not to be confused with Fatsia Japonica, the false Castor Oil plant!) |
This week another 8 plants have to be instilled in my memory bank before next Friday. It's said that the best way to learn is to use several senses at once: students get walked (in all weathers) through the maze of gardens to the relevant plant, told all about it (type, aspect, soil, habit, role in the garden, features, etc), have a quick line sketch and/or photo, touch the plant (well, I do) and - whoosh! - onto the next one. I was so absorbed in sketching the Sedums that I momentarily got left behind and lost the group, thereby missing out on fascinating titbits about Japanese windflowers.
The rest of the morning was spent having our eyes opened as to the meaning of plant names, how and why they're constructed (grouped) and a short potted history of the Binomial naming system. The tutor is excellent - and, believe me, I've sat through some real duffers. She's friendly, passionate, interesting and interested; pretty much what's needed to get the message across.
So, if you'll just bear with me while I get my visual reminders in place, these are the plants that I have to remember for next week:
Sedum 'Herbstfreude' aka Ice Plant. (You either love them or hate them. I'm with the first lot.)
Abelia x grandiflora (a bit of a misnomer as the flowers are tiny!). Domed shrub.
Dahlia 'Bishop of Llandaff'
Anemone x hybrida 'Honorine Jobert'
Macleaya microcarpa 'Kelway's Coral Plume'. Large perennial.
Ricinis communis (Castor Oil plant; fab leaves, highly poisonous, large)
Stipa gigantea ... as the name suggests, a large grass with golden oaty plumes.
Stipa tenuissima ... a short grass with fluffy plumes
I'm a visual learner so looking at the information on paper then matching it with my photos seems to be working ... so far. (I'm putting more information about the plants with the photos on my Flickr page for those that may be interested.)
The afternoon was equally absorbing; we spent much of it drawing upside down! (Not the students, the image. I had a sudden mental image of 15 students hanging, bat-like, from the rafters with pencils in hand!) It's a creative technique to get the right side of the brain to dominate during sketching activities - or, as I would call it, walking before you can run. It's taken from the book "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain" which has spawned a decade of workshops in New York. I had a quick look at their website and, especially, the 'before and after' gallery, from line sketch to tonal sketch with most of the self-portraits seemingly of desperados from a John Wayne Western! Luckily, for homework, we can have a go at doing our line drawings the right way up!
It's another dry day here in London so I'm going to spend a couple of hours in the veg patch - my spaghetti squash has formed another 2 fruits, only 4 inches long at the moment, and growing among the branches of the plum tree. If these grow to maturity that will make FIVE spaghetti squashes! I've had another Sicilian courgette from my balcony plant but the peppers are struggling - I'm likely to bring those indoors to ripen up. I keep having to remind myself that the green pepper on my balcony is really an Orange Bell pepper!
If I have time, I also need to remember that NOW is the time to be planting bulbs for spring, as well as broad beans, onions and spring onions, and a host of flowers for an early display next spring (marigold, cornflower, nigella, nasturtium). I've had the first of my seed catalogues (Thompson and Morgan) so I should be thinking about what to grow next year; how about everyone else? Keen to put this year behind you and plan for next year?
Labels:
Capel Manor,
garden design,
plant ID
Posted by
Caro
at
14:02
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