Weird weather week here in Mid Suffolk and Wednesday had a really cold wind. Thursday morning a very thin layer of snow on the car roof. March Many Weathers for sure.
It's good to have all the new ladies at Keep Moving Group but they all know each other so tend to only talk amongst themselves - difficult to get them to help with things too and to get them to stop talking!! Oh well, it's my fault for putting the group details on the local villages facebook pages! but previously it's just been one or two new people at a time. 11 is a bit overwhelming. The lady who has been leading our exercises for a year now has been poorly so me and another lady have been sharing the leading. We have all the exercises written down and have been doing them for 3 years now so it's just a case of standing at the front and working through them.
Being short of blog ideas I've already posted about virtually everything done in the kitchen this week except for making a big pan of pizza topping. It was two tins of plum tomatoes without the juice, onion chopped small and almost all of a red pepper, I saved a piece for my salad. Seasoned the mix with oregano and divided into 5 portions.
In 1939, Valerie Braunston and her family hoped the war would pass them by in the quiet neighbourhood of Bush Hill Park, Enfield. But as the Blitz began, her carefree childhood became a daily fight for survival. Valerie endured air raids, rationing and a fractured education while London was battered for eight relentless months. By 1944, V-1 and V-2 rockets forced her evacuation to a pig farm in Lincolnshire, but she quickly plotted her return to London to pursue her dream of becoming an actress.
Years later, after Valerie moved into care at 88, her son found a manuscript while clearing out her house. Discovered beside a jammed-up typewriter, it captured her memories of that time, infused with her humour and resilience.
One afternoon many years ago, James Rebanks met an old woman on a remote Norwegian island. She lived and worked alone on a tiny rocky outcrop, caring for wild Eider ducks and gathering their down. Hers was a centuries-old trade that had once made men and women rich, but had long been in decline. Still, somehow, she seemed to be hanging on.
Back at home, Rebanks couldn’t stop thinking about the woman on the rocks. She was fierce and otherworldly – and yet strangely familiar. Years passed. Then, one day, he wrote her a letter, asking if he could return. Bring work clothes, she replied, and good boots, and come quickly: her health was failing. And so he travelled to the edge of the Arctic to witness her last season on the island.
This is the story of that season. It is the story of a unique and ancient landscape, and of the woman who brought it back to life. It traces the pattern of her work from the rough, isolated toil of bitter winter, to the elation of the endless summer light, when the birds leave behind their precious down for gathering, like feathered gold.
Clocks Forward this weekend, have to remember how to do the car clock again - it's easy - once I remember. Have a good weekend - I'll be back Monday.



Having portions of tomato sauce in the freezer is so handy... I add a pinch of sugar as well. Looking up Stanley Tucci now...
ReplyDeleteStanley Tucci??
DeleteI think Kirsten has just read the other Sue's blog (just food...) and SHE mentions Stanley today. But he's half Italian and has some great pizza recipes,so I can understand the confusion
DeleteOh I see - he's on Sue in Lancs post! Too many Sues!
Delete😂😂😂😂
DeleteWe are everywhere us Sues ... just to confuse blogland. ;-)
DeleteI must make pizza topping to freeze alongside my new rectangular bases. Stanley Tucci is great.
ReplyDeleteYour bread maker made more bases than mine - or rather I made mine too big!
DeleteThanks for the book info Sue. I’ve borrowed the Place of Tides audio book from the library. I listen while knitting or crocheting 😄 Anne in Lancs
ReplyDeleteIt's an interesting story
DeleteI have planned fridge clearance pizza for tomorrow and hopefully it will be a warming treat in this miserable weather. Catriona
ReplyDeleteHope it's a good pizza
DeletePlace of Tides sounds a rally interesting read, as does the wartime one. Pizza topping is great to have in the fridge as doubles as pasta topping and soup base too.
ReplyDeleteI don't read many non fiction but these were good finds
DeleteP.S. Hailstones again this morning and a really cold wind, so that has knocked all thoughts of gardening on the head!
ReplyDeleteGood book recommendations, as ever. I never bother to change the car clock - I just have to remember which part of the year we're in. Everything else changes automatically, apart from the grandfather clock.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad phone and lap top are automatic!
DeleteMarch has flown by, hasn't it? I have a No Kings protest rally here today and I'm glad it will be sunny, altho, it will be a bit cool. Hoping for millions to participate all across the USA. It's encouraging to see how the groups at marches have grown larger and larger.
ReplyDeleteI read that there were 1,000s of protests nationwide
DeleteIt was cold here. I will always be sad I could not go, but Tim went. 3300 protests. An estimated 8 million participants. Our little town had over 300 show up.
DeleteGood tip about how to make pizza sauce, foolishly I’ve always left the tomato juice in and then of course it takes forever to reduce!
ReplyDeleteThat book looks great, I must track it down at the library.
Alison in Devon x
I always buy whole plum rather than chopped as it gives more options
DeleteI found The Place of Tides to read as an ebook while I travel to and grom Greece next month. thanks for the recommend.
ReplyDeleteHope you enjoy it
DeleteHaving pizza sauce on hand is great and has so many good uses beyond the pizza.
ReplyDeleteIt is very cold in MA too, but thankfully the sun is shining.
11 people in the exercise group makes it well funded. BUT...why can't these new women be friendly with everyone? I would be tempted to ask one of them to help lead the exercises.
They don't seem interested in getting to know the rest of us
DeleteI admire you leading the exercises! I used to go to a class for Abs when I lived in New York (it was at 6 or 6:30 am so it was a rush to get home, take a shower, and still get to work by 9) and I always wanted to be in the back in case I couldn't keep up!
ReplyDeleteAs it's for over 65's we don't do anything fast or strenuous!
DeleteSometimes it's just easier to remember one clock is an hour out of sync.
ReplyDeleteThey have to be right - it would constantly annoy me otherwise
DeleteVery kind of you stepping into the role of exercise leader. Im trying to come up with blog topics too and meal options that don't break the bank.
ReplyDeleteFinding things to blog about is difficult sometimes but then I resort to shopping, food or looking back at old posts!
DeleteInteresting reading material! Any change in a group dynamic can be a little stressful, but I can see how this might seem overwhelming! Hopefully over time it will normalize.
ReplyDeleteIt's so odd having more new people than the number that have been going before. I hope they start integrating better
DeleteHow lovely to find the rhubarb for sale. We used to have some growing in the garden, but I think the deer ate that too!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad your clocks are finally going forward, ours did it at the beginning of March and it's really messed up the schedule that sister and I chat on. It will be good to be back to the usual 5 hours that we're used to lol
In 5 years here I have planted 4 rhubarb crowns and only one has survived and that it small and useless!
DeleteYour sauce looks wonderful. I made a rhubarb crisp yesterday for our dessert the next little while.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
I'm glad you enjoyed Place of Tides, it was one of my highlights of last years reading. Yes, I'm currently reading Stanley Tucci. ;-)
ReplyDelete