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Sick chick

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Found this beauty splayed out on the floor of the coop when I opened them up one morning on the weekend.

He’s a bantam Blue Cochin, very sweet natured and one of our favourite breeds of chicken.

Despite his having no apparent strength in his legs his eyes were bright, his appetite good and his neck and wings strong.

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We’ve had chickens limp and muscularly flaccid before and they’re usually dead in a short while — no water or food will entice them. The symptoms don’t resemble avian flu so I haven’t been particularly worried. If you keep animals, some are going to die.

But this guy was so perky, it was worth doing the research to find out what was ailing him.

Enter the internet:  Turns out he’s contracted botulism — and a very mild case from which he can recover. The bacterium lives in soil, water, dead mice — anywhere in the great outdoors — so it’s not a huge surprise that one un-medicated chicken in a free-range flock will come down with some challenging ailment.

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You can see here how he’s pitched forward to balance on his legs — he’s able to stand but has no real strength in his lower limbs.

In time, his liver with break down the toxin and life will be back to its routine of wandering, roosting and dust baths.

In the meantime he’s enjoying life in the basement. His space is bright and airy, N&L hand-feed him tomatoes and cucumbers, and he clucks and cackles every time we walk by.

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It’s a good life!

Puffer Cakes

We love these airy little cakes. They mix up fast on a Saturday morning, leaving the cook free to brew up a fresh pot-o-coffee while they bake in the oven.

You’ll need a jumbo muffin tin or mini-bundt cake pan in order to make these individual cakes. Next week I’ll post a variation you can make in a cake or loaf pan.

1

You’ll need 2/3 flour,  1 T sugar,  1/2 t salt, four eggs, 2/3 c milk and 2 T soft butter. You’ll need the sour cream at embellishment time.

2

Put everything in the blender, including the soft butter.

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Blend. Let it whirr away for a few minutes. In this case, you cannot overmix.

3

In fact, while the blender is whirring, generously grease the muffin tin.

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Turn off the blender and pour the batter into the muffin tins until about 1/2 to 2/3 full. In this giant mini-bundt pan I can fill five of the six cups, and one of the finished cakes is one serving.

Place in a 400 degree oven and bake 20 – 25 minutes or until the puffer cakes are puffed and golden on top.

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They’ll emerge from the oven looking quite heavenly and if you’ve used adequate grease in the pan, should pop out easily.

Place one or two puffer cakes on a plate, spoon on a generous scoop of sour cream, and top with a tart fruit sauce.

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Many years ago my friend Sigi discovered this lingonberry sauce from IKEA. I now stash jars of it in the cupboard specifically for puffer cakes but you can use any jam or fruit compote, of course.

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Dust generously with icing sugar and dig right in. Guaranteed to have you using your fingers to clean the plate!

Puffer Cake Recipe

2/3 c flour

2/3 c milk

1 T sugar

1/2 t salt

4 eggs

2 T soft butter

sour cream

lingonberry sauce or other fruit sauce or jam

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.

Generously grease a mini-bundt cake pan or giant muffin tin.

Combine flour, milk, sugar, salt, eggs and butter in blender and mix until very well blended.

Fill mini cake pans 2/3 with batter.

Bake 20 – 25 minutes.

Remove from oven and place on plate. Top with sour cream and lingonberry sauce and dust with icing sugar.

Serves four and doubles easily.

Let me know how it goes!


And he comes from away

Anyone recognize this fiddler?

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He played at the Bindertwine Fall Fair in Kleinberg on Saturday.

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He’s a lefty.

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In 2006 he declared himself a candidate for the federal Liberal party.

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He’s our own Canadian *bad boy*.

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And used to high-kick on stage in a kilt.

Birds on the Wires

If you can access this link to the short video Birds on the Wires, please do so. It’s absolutely lovely.

A Brazilian videographer saw a photo of birds perched on four parallel electrical wires and decided to align their positions with notes on a musical staff.

The result is quite enchanting!

Birds on the Wires from Jarbas Agnelli on Vimeo.

Question: How much honey will two small bee colonies produce in one late-start summer?

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Answer: This much. Seventy pounds. Three juice jugs and one wine bucket.

In the old days, in the urban days, in the pre-child days, we would save our empties, amble down to the DIY wine store and bottle our own vino.

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This time I drove into town, spoke with the owner of a small Italian grocery, purchased some antipasto containers, came home and container-ed some honey.

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Variations on a tasty theme.

A Bee Story: Part Three

When you’re out driving in the country and you’ve seen tall white wooden columns tucked in the corner of a pumpkin patch or clover meadow or alfalfa field, you’ve known you’re looking at a colony of honey bees.

Farmers and apiarists may be one and the same, or they may have a symbiotic relationship — the bees pollinate the crops for the farmer and the bees produce honey for the apiarist.

Each wooden column is composed of a number of boxes. One of the boxes, the brood chamber, is the queen bee’s domain — where she lays up to 2000 eggs per day.

The other boxes, or supers, are filled with frames for storing honey.

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Each hexagonal cell of this frame is filled with honey and capped with a thin layer of wax.

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In order to access the honey, the top layer of wax is removed — called de-capping — with a specially designed hot knife.

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Cells that have been missed by the hot knife can also be scratched open with a comb.

The hot wax falls off the frame and into a tub and can later be melted down for other uses.

4

With both sides decapped, the frames are placed in an extractor.

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When filled with frames the extractor spins (by either electrical or human power) and centrifugal force draws the honey from the cells where it hits the sides of the drum and then runs down to the bottom.

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And out it flows, golden, aromatic and absolutely irresistible to the human finger tip!

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Now the frames are empty and light, each hexagonal cell a ready repository for more of the bees’ labours, and are replaced in the super and returned to the hive.

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All is calm and well with the world once more.

Tomorrow: Can you ever have too much money honey?

Bee Story: Part Two

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Prior to his theft, the beekeeper prepares to subdue the bees.

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On to a board he sprinkles drops of a smelly substance called Bee-Go.

Beekeepers are not renowned for their poetic nature.

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The Bee-Go board is set to the side.

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The beekeeper prepares to remove the hive’s lid.

Fly away, bees! Fly away!

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Bright sunlight and cool air blast into the normally warm and dark honey storage chamber of the hive.

Bees maintain their hives at a constant 90 degrees F.

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The alarm is signalled:  Intruder alert! Intruder alert!

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But before the bees can defend their honey stores by attacking the enemy, the Bee-Go board is down and a blanket tossed on top to send the foul smelling pheromone deep into the hive.

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The bees are not happy. The stink has forced them from their home. Those that are not stunned by the Bee-Go whirr about in confusion. Their home has been invaded.

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The box, called a super, is slowly pried off. The colony, doped and confused, is helpless to defend its stores.

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The theft complete, the beekeeper absconds with his golden treasure.

Tomorrow: How the beekeeper sleeps at night

A Bee Story

Behold the bee.

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Industrious, diligent, tireless.

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An indispensable element of the planet’s ecosystem.

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A wonder of a symbiotic relationship.

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Living together in the hive by the thousands they work endlessly to produce the honey they will consume as food over a cold dark winter.

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They defend their queen and their honey with their lives.

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Behold the beekeepers.

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The beekeepers plot, prepare, conspire and calculate how they will invade the hive and abscond with the bees’ efforts of a lifetime.

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Fly away, bees! Fly away!

Baked Apple Pancake

The Pancake House is a long-favoured Winnipeg breakfast spot.

There you can dine on waffles, airy German pancakes, tiny dollar-sized pancakes, savoury pancakes, sweet pancakes — everything a Saturday morning could desire.

They also serve a pancake for which they’re quite famous — the Baby Apple Pancake. Butter, sugar, cinnamon and apples play a starring role in this sweet concoction, best washed down with black coffee

I’ve tried for a long time to re-create the cinnamon crunchiness of that pancake and encourage you to try my recipe.

The illustrations will show a doubled version of the recipe at the bottom. It’s cool autumnal morning today — everyone had an appetite!

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Our apple trees are in full production right now so my able-bodied assistant collected some for us. Otherwise, two or more apples will work fine.

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Cut, core and slice apples. I don’t peel them as our apples are not sprayed.

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Melt butter in an oven-proof skillet over medium heat.

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Add the sliced apples and sauté about five minutes, until they soften.

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Meanwhile you’ll need flour, sugar, milk, eggs, salt, and vanilla.

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Mix flour with milk and a pinch of salt.

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Add eggs and vanilla and don’t over mix — the difference between flat and puffy. We’re aiming for height but the flops are delicious too (been there and ate that).

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Lumps are all right.

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Pour the batter over the apples in the skillet. You’ll have only a thin layer.

Bake at 425 degrees for 15 minutes

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While your pancake is baking, combine 1 T sugar with 1/2 t sugar.

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After about 15 minutes, remove the skillet from the oven. The batter will be only lightly set.

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Run a knife or spatula around the edge of the pancake to loosen, put a plate on top, take a deep breath and flip over the skillet.

Slide the pancake off the plate and back into the pan. Phew!

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Sprinkle this freshly cooked side with the cinnamon sugar combo and put the skillet back into the over for about 10 minutes more.

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It will emerge puffed up and shiny with a crunchy sugary crust.

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Loosen the edges of the pancake and slide it on to a warm serving plate. Then cut into wedges and serve. You can drizzle it with syrup if you like, as the tartness of the apples contrasts nicely with the sweet.

This is absolutely our favourite weekend breakfast.  Hope you’ll give it a try!

Baked Apple Pancake Recipe

2 or more apples

1/4 c butter

1/2 c flour

1/2 c sugar

1/2 c milk

2 eggs

1/2 vanilla

1/4 t salt

1/2 t cinnamon / 1T sugar

Preheat oven to 425 degrees.

Cut, core (and peel if desired) apples.

Melt butter over medium heat in oven-proof skillet.

Sauté apples until softened. Remove from heat.

Combine flour, sugar, milk, eggs, vanilla and salt until just blended.

Pour batter evenly over apples and bake in oven for 15 minutes, until batter is set.

Remove skillet from oven, run a spatula around the edge of pancake to loosen. Sprinkle with cinnamon sugar mixture.

Invert pancake on to large plate and slide pancake back into skillet.

Return the pan to oven for about 10 minutes more, until golden and puffy.

Slide pancake on to a warm serving plate, cut into wedges, drizzle with syrup and enjoy!

Let me know how it goes!

September 11th

Liliana was 13 weeks old and we were in the car on our way to a doctor’s appointment for her first check-up.

At 10.30 a.m. I stopped for gas en route and the attendant asked if I’d heard the latest about the World Trade Centre. I thought it was the start of a joke.

“It’s been blown up.”

Pardon? I was already muddled from three months of interrupted sleep, driving with a map and a compass as I still did not know my way around my new province and the wee babe was making noise in the back seat.

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I quickly tuned in to the CBC and listened to what the rest of the world was learning in horror.

I thought about the time I’d joined a friend for lunch on the 54th floor where he worked.

My ears had popped as we went up and up and up in the elevator.

I’d felt the building sway as we ate our meal in the windowed cafeteria.

I’d felt relieved to be back on terra firma later that afternoon.

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When we returned from the doctor’s appointment I sat in front of the television and spoke on the telephone with journalist friends in B.C.

It didn’t take long to find someone who knew someone who’d been killed in the debacle.

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But mostly I thought about the choices we make. And where life takes us.

Have a good day, everyone.