

Well, we had snow yesterday, first time for quite a few weeks, it was forecasted we should have 10 cm. of the stuff, I think the forecasters may well have been right. Today we are supposed to get rain and Wednesday more snow. The roads were a mess yesterday as it appears they don't bring the plows out until it has stopped snowing. No salters either as far as I could tell. We only drove to the bowling alley which is about a 15 minute drive and the roads were a mush of dirty snow. When we came out after bowling we had to clean the car of quite a lot of snow. In fact Matt did OK, I got him start the car whilst I and our team leader (also a woman) brushed off the car.
Once home, we discovered our toaster oven had decided to give up the ghost, so Matt went out again to get a new one. He did well, a $50 toaster for about $25. Canadian Tire were having a sale again. That's $600 saved on the treadmill and another $25 on the toaster. This morning I was trying to figure out how to use it, it appears somewhat more complicated and I ended up with a piece of dry bread instead of a piece of toast. Back to the drawing board.
I love rice puddings and here is an easy one to make. Something of a blast from the past.
Yield: 6
Ingredients
3 cups milk
2 cups water
4 pared peels from a lemon
1 1/2 tablespoons vanilla extract
3/4 cup short grain rice
1/3 cup dried currants
3 tablespoons sliced almonds, lightly toasted
2/3 cup sugar
1 egg yolk (optional)
cinnamon, for garnish
Directions
Heat milk and water with peelings from lemon and vanilla to just below a simmer and stir in rice. Simmer uncovered for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally. Remove lemon peels. Add the currants, almonds and sugar and simmer 10 to 15 minutes more, testing rice for doneness. Remove from heat, let cool for 15 minutes then stir in egg yolk. Spoon into a serving bowl and sprinkle with cinnamon. Rice pudding will set further as it cools. It can be served warm or chilled.
Toasters do give up the ghost at the most inconvenient time. One can see that you've been enjoying the Olympics, so you may have withdrawal symptoms when the games end. I have a feeling that the games did not go down well with the Europeans - must have been that everything happened early in our mornings.
ReplyDeleteMaybe so, but then I remember being in England and sitting up all hours of the night watching the games from Japan, not sure if it was winter or summer. A lot depends on how interested you are and I am sure there are lots of reruns some of which wouldn't give the results before the end.
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