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My Blog List

Sunday, 26 February 2017

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The joy of......vinyl.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The joy of......vinyl.: I could wax lyrical (no pun intended) about vinyl and have done in other blog things but today is different. We had the boiler engineer cal...

The joy of......vinyl.

I could wax lyrical (no pun intended) about vinyl and have done in other blog things but today is different.
We had the boiler engineer call on Friday. The boiler is in the loft. So is my vinyl. Need I say more? Well, probably yes, I do need to say more.
As I've mentioned before I have intended to find my vinyl and maybe even play the odd album but as usual just thought about it and did nothing. With the bit between my teeth so to speak, with the loft hatch open & me needing to go up there to make some space for the boiler engineer. 'Seek & yea shall find' as the supreme being says, so I did and found all 6 album boxes. In total around 120 LP's I think.
I have replaced alot of these with CD's, but not all & what memories these albums brought back! Not even listening to them, just seeing them again.
One album, Rainbows 'Long Live Rock n Roll' I bought at the gig when I saw Rainbow in 1978, I have already mentioned the gig in a previous blog but what I'd forgotten was on the album inner sleeve (it was a plain one) I had written an account of the gig. Some of it was plain laughable but some things I could have been written yesterday! I still appear to write in the same style ( though I use the term loosely!) One day, when I'm feeling brave I'll put the verbatim account on the blog.
I'd forgotten I'd got six Abba albums, blimey that's not doing my rock credentials any good is it! I've also got an REO Speedwagon album that I'd forgotten about, I knew I had some thing somewhere but wasn't sure whether it was  album or tape!
Even got a couple of more collectable items I think. A couple of ELO albums on coloured vinyl & afew albums with posters & one Rory Gallagher with a limited addition single on clear vinyl in with the album. Most of these records would have been bought on excursions into London with my old buddies Alan & Mark. We would usually, but not always, get to Bond Street station & go in the HMV store there, though at that time  they seemed abit dearer than other places. Next stop the brilliant Virgin Megastore at the bottom of Oxford Street. At the time the biggest record shop in the UK, across the road from the Megastore in a basement was a store called Simons, if my memory serves. This place was great because it was cheaper than most, mainly because alot of what they had were imports, some had a little nick in the corner, not the record itself but the cover. For the amount we saved this was of little consequence. Mark introduced us to a little record shop in Soho that sold all sorts of bootleg albums and some more rarities, I seldom brought from here though, I was always a cheap date!
On the rare occasion we'd have a beer somewhere though not often (how times change!) and from there we'd be back on the tube heading home, talking of course music. There was a real excitement about our purchases & more often than not we'd probably meet up at one or other of our houses later to play the albums, though I remember Alan was always slow to play them, he'd have quite a backlog waiting to be heard!   Buying the latest album from a particular band was always an extra thrill. I well remember getting hold of the first new album Quo had brought out since I'd become a fan. It was 'Whatever you want' & is still a fave of mine & I have to say I still  to this very day, I get that frisson of excitement when getting a bands album 'hot off the press.'
Oh, the boiler engineer? Oh yes, the boiler is fine but we have a leak somewhere in the system. Bugger, lets put another record on!

Thursday, 23 February 2017

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Fish Pie,Storm Doris & hols booked!

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Fish Pie,Storm Doris & hols booked!: The fag end of Storm Doris has hit us, just very windy and cold here, I understand other parts of the country have had it much worse. Anyway...

Fish Pie,Storm Doris & hols booked!

The fag end of Storm Doris has hit us, just very windy and cold here, I understand other parts of the country have had it much worse. Anyway what better dinner could there be on such a day as a nice fish pie.
The Memsahib had a fish pie mix of Smoked Haddock, Cod & Salmon. I mixed this in with some softened onions and garlic, plenty of parsley and made a white sauce with rye flour. This made it a little dark but we didn't have any white wheat free flour. Mixed these two in & cooked the spuds.
Eventually put through a ricer, though I hate to say it I broke one of the ricer filter things you push the potatoes through. There was just one piece of not quite cooked spud that bent the disc out of shape. I couldn't believe how Olly managed to break one not long after I brought it home........I do now! Sorry Oliver! Once mashed I spread the spuds on the fish & used a spoon to make sort of fish scale shapes, brushed with melted butter & baked for 40 minutes or so. Though I say so myself it was very nice & as you can see I got the seal of approval of empty plates!
Fish and sauce waiting for potato topping.

Potatoes added.

The finished result. Yum!

Plates loaded and ready to go.


The seal of approval.


At last we've booked a holiday! Tara saw a very good deal on the 'Secret Escapes' website of a boutique hotel in Ca'n Picafort in Majorca, going the end of September. Look like a nice place, not too touristy , we're going B&B so can explore the local restaurants etc. Can't wait!!

Sunday, 19 February 2017

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Limehouse Lizzy

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Limehouse Lizzy: Thin Lizzy were a tremendous band sadly of course no more with the death of Phil Lynott an unbelievable 31 years ago! Scott Gorham plays wit...

Limehouse Lizzy

Thin Lizzy were a tremendous band sadly of course no more with the death of Phil Lynott an unbelievable 31 years ago! Scott Gorham plays with Black Star Riders, Gary Moore alas no longer around & not sure about the other former members so someone, somewhere  needs to uphold the Thin Lizzy banner. Step up to the microphones 'Limehouse Lizzy.' I don't know about you, but when I initially think 'tribute band' I think second rate & just plays pubs. That's very unfair. The tributes I've seen have all been second to none, other than the original artists of course, I've seen both the 'Illegal Eagles' & 'The Australian Pink Floyd Experience' both of whom were very good indeed.
In a way I guess seeing a tribute band is better than seeing the original. They want to sound like the band they are taking off & tracks sound like they are straight off the album whereas the original could add a few 'twiddly bits,' a tribute band won't do that.
So that's what I think of tribute bands anyway, always well worth seeing.
 'Limehouse Lizzy' played at The Stables in Wavendon on Wednesday, its a great little venue, full capacity is 398 seated and another 50 standing, whilst all the seats were taken there wasn't the full amount standing. Those who were included a couple of dyed in the wool Thin Lizzy fans well into their 50's happy to headbang & join in the riffs with their air guitars,& who am I to knock them?  They had a good night & so did we. 'We' being Self, Tara, Julian & Kevin & met a customer from MK there, Dave & Clare.
Got there much too early but on the positive side it meant we were parked near the auditorium, also no crush at the bar were a very pleasant pint of Doombar was partaken.
Timing at most gigs these days are pretty good, with curfews and fines for going over them has made venues are better time keepers so Limehouse Lizzy came on at 8pm. There was an interval which was bit of a surprise, helped swell the Stables bar coffers I reckon,it finished about 11pm I think.
They played all the barn stormers you'd expect and want to here: Waitin'  for an alibi, Jonny the Fox, Bad Reputation, Whiskey in the jar, Rosalie, The Boys are back in town, Jailbreak, The Rocker & a nod to Gary Moore with Parisienne Walkways plus all the tracks I've forgotten, there's more than one Thin Lizzy tribute band as Limehouse had 'borrowed' a guitarist from a band form Liverpool I think to stand in for their guitarist who has had a op, you wouldn't have known it, they really seemed a very tight band with some amusing banter from  the main man, Wayne Ellis who did a very Impersonation of PL. All in all it was a great  gig, I'd see them again!    


Saturday, 4 February 2017

An idiots guide to an Idiot: College Lake walk.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: College Lake walk.: I popped over to College Lake this morning, hadn't been there is ages. It's changed considerably since we used to go there with the ...

College Lake walk.

I popped over to College Lake this morning, hadn't been there is ages. It's changed considerably since we used to go there with the boys  as 'Friends of College Lake.' Once we got the dogs it didn't seem right going for a walk without them as you can't take dogs in so our membership lapsed. Now its owned by the Berks, Bucks & Oxon Wildlife Trust (BBOWT). It has lost some of it's charm and everything is a bit more official, guided walks for instance have a set number that they will not exceed due to health & safety! The cakes used to be made by a couple of old ladies and were proper home made cakes that stick your ribs together, now it's Mr Kipling's airy fairy cakes, it's still an interesting place to visit for all that.
 I had a wonder round and went into a couple of hides, there's alot of Canada Geese there at present, I'm no expert but I do enjoy just gazing over the lakes, my old binoculars at the ready, I also took a few photos with varying degrees of success that I have attached here. You'll see the photo of the shepherds hut built at the John Farris foundry in Shaftesbury, Dorset, this is a real coincidence as we've had ancestors from Shaftesbury who have worked there, the foundry is long gone now of course the houses built on the site are on Farris Close as I recall.
A very pleasant couple of hours, off to the NEC in Birmingham tomorrow for a trade show until Thursday.....I can hardly wait!
General view from near the visitors centre & café.

The Octagonal Hide I'd just been in. 

Display of old farm machinery and wagons.

The Shepherds hut mentioned.

The details of where it came from, how it ended up here  don't know.

Snowdrops out already.

A few Wigeon.

Wigeon.


Arty shot of some Coot & Mallard gliding across the water.


 
 

Friday, 3 February 2017

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Dinners.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Dinners.: Kathy came over to dinner this evening which was nice. haven't seen her in ages so it was good to catch up and all that. Just the three...

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Dinners.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Dinners.: Kathy came over to dinner this evening which was nice. haven't seen her in ages so it was good to catch up and all that. Just the three...

Dinners.

Kathy came over to dinner this evening which was nice. haven't seen her in ages so it was good to catch up and all that.
Just the three of us so what to cook? We've enjoyed the Rick Stein series on weekend breaks & with our minds still on wanting to go to Cadiz I chose a recipe he did from there, its called Baked Sea Bream Rota style.
It called for 3 Sea Bream, got the already gutted but with the heads left on for extra flavour whilst cooking. As usual the best recipes are usually pretty easy to make, just thickly slice some waxy potatoes & bake for 20 minutes or so, in the meantime fry onions, garlic, green peppers ,bayleaf & then some chopped & skinned tomatoes. The tomatoes ended up being one of the biggest faffs as one lot of boiling water didn't seem to split the skins so a second dowsing was needed.
While this is cooking away you need to make the Picada. In a pestle & mortar you beat the living daylights out of some fresh parsley, garlic cloves and sea salt to make a kind of paste, this is spread on and in the fish. Add to the part cooked spuds, pour the peppers, tomatoes etc over them and bake for half an hour or so. Though I say so myself it was delicious. I took the heads off prior to serving & left a plate out for the bones, there seemed to be quite a few little ones in my fish.
The good thing about this recipe was it was all in one, you didn't need anything else with it. Unfortunately in my enthusiasm in cooking and eating I forgot to take a photo so the attached is from Rick Steins recipe website, though mine looked pretty similar!
Poached pears for pud, just six small pears peeled and poached in red wine, vanilla pods, cinnamon sticks an strangely some thyme. Cooked the pears for about 35 minutes then reduced the liquor to form a syrup, all topped with cream. Another simple but effective recipe.
A very pleasant evening had by all, Kathy is very easy to talk to & we talked about all sorts though of course quite alot about Alec & Laura who we all miss greatly, sounds like they are having a great time & off pear picking shortly to top up their savings.
Similar to how my version looked but in a different bowl!
  You'll notice the title of this blog thing is 'Dinners,' the plural, that's because today I cooked a spag bol. Nothing out of the ordinary there but its another good hearty winter meal and also a meal that benefits from cooking slowly. I always add a few bits and pieces so I suppose its not  just a spag bol. Purists may be outraged! It's got peppers and carrots in & smoked paprika  a genuinely awesome find thanks to our good buddy Stanley PS! 
Basically once you've softened the onions & garlic bung everything in and cook slowly. Don't forget to add some chocolate.....Yes you read that right, chocolate it does bring out the flavour though I didn't put it in the Memsahibs version which is of course meat free, oh yes, sling in s slung of red wine as well, you know it makes sense. Cook for at least an hour, longer if you can , just on a low heat, it's no problem just give it the occasional stir. Cook up some pasta mix both together, grate some cheese over the top, a good Cheddar of course & enjoy.
Spag Bol bubbling away nicely.

Veggie spag bol  also simmering away.

Nice piece of Cheddar.

Our dinners all ready. Meat on the left veggie on the right.

All washed down with a nice glass or two of red.



Sunday, 29 January 2017

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The Sunday Indian

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The Sunday Indian: We had dinner with Paul & Kate today originally to be at their house but after all the problems they've had since a dickhead plumber...

The Sunday Indian

We had dinner with Paul & Kate today originally to be at their house but after all the problems they've had since a dickhead plumber cocked up a simple job and managed to flood most of their downstairs their kitchen has now been taken out and they have industrial fans and extractor units installed today to dry it all out. Its all in the hands of their insurers  & will be sorted out, but they have to get there first! Both are in very good spirits and are not downhearted much to their credit! They will of course look back and laugh once its all back in place, the plus side is the redecoration will be done to their specifications.
Away plan B was called upon so we went to Paul & Kates local Indian called the Nabab and very good it was. They have a Sunday Buffet style offering, one price and you help yourself, must admit I was pretty hungry so tucked in and forgot to photograph anything, so the attached piccy is thanks to Tara! She had a good selection to choose from as well, all washed down with a pint of Cobra. A very good meal, we'll go there again!
Back to Paul & Kates for a cuppa & general chitchat. Paul did the big Garden Birdwatch as well as already mentioned in yesterdays blog, it was interesting seeing all the Greylag geese over in the field they back onto. I must admit Paul & Kate haven't sold us the idea of staying in a bothy! They stayed in one on Exmoor over New Year. No heating, no electric but they enjoyed it. I get the idea of enjoying the solitude but not the cold, they've already booked similar for Xmas & Boxing Days this year.
Paul has suggested I go down again in May to see the dawn chorus at his local nature reserve which sounds good, discuss nearer the time, we also spoke about my ongoing pipedream of walking The Ridgeway from Ivinghoe Beacon to near Avebury (about 80 miles) and also of walking Hadrian's Wall (60 miles). Might get a few takers interested in doing it as well, or it might be like Last of the Summer Wine! Logistics is the problem, I don't want to carry a tent so would want to B&B, hostel & pub it so what sounds like a cheap outing probably isn't. Also I don't want a route march, I want to be able to enjoy what we see, maybe linger awhile, particularly on Hadrian's Wall I think,
anyway we'll see what happens.
A good day and it was great  seeing Paul & Kate.
Taras dinner of Onion bhaji, rice, veg curry, salad.


Saturday, 28 January 2017

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Big Garden Birdwatch

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Big Garden Birdwatch: This annual event I do in memory of my Mum really. She loved birds & I think would probably taken part in this mass bird observation ove...

Big Garden Birdwatch

This annual event I do in memory of my Mum really. She loved birds & I think would probably taken part in this mass bird observation over a weekend in January. Basically you spend an hour and see how many species and how many of that species you get in your garden. The RSPB want all sorts to take part both urban and rural, small garden to big garden the whole mix of places where birds might be.  Ours is a small garden but not very far from countryside. Results were 11x House Sparrow,1x Starling,1x Blackbird,1x Robin,1x Woodpigeon, 1xDunnock and very last minute 2x Blackcap. These were a surprise as I have never seen them in our garden before, I'm pretty sure I identified them correctly with the help of the RSPB website bird-finder. Having trouble emailing results though as  the site keeps saying there's an error, could be alot of people using it. Texted Paul & his results  were of course different , they back directly onto fields. He saw: 2x Blackbird,1x Blue Tit, 8x House Sparrow, 1x Dunnock,1x Collared Dove,1x Woodpigeon, 1x Starling. 
I've done this for the past few years & it brings back nice memories of my Mum.
Stayed away in Norfolk again this week, I stayed near Norwich, nice hotel but the Real Ale was off though I was recommended an American Pale Ale called Shed Head. It was really nice, a good fruitiness to it that I like along with a bitter after taste. An amber coloured beer and 4.6% in strength.
Dinner took the form of a very posh looking prawn cocktail with king prawns and then belly pork, cider gravy with bubble and squeak made with broccoli. Abit full for a pud so left it there, just in time to get back to my room to watch 'Winterwatch' a programme I find fascinating and very relaxing to view all about British wildlife and how they get on in winter.
Pint of Shed Head.

Prawn cocktail.
Belly pork.
 
 

Sunday, 22 January 2017

An idiots guide to an Idiot: More food.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: More food.: Popped out for a bite to eat on Thursday evening to celebrate that it was nearly the end of the week, just to The Chequers, cheap & chee...

More food.

Popped out for a bite to eat on Thursday evening to celebrate that it was nearly the end of the week, just to The Chequers, cheap & cheerful and fine for all that.
No Halloumi which was a real pain as it's one of the two menu choices the Memsahib usually has so Salmon fillet it was with a sweet potato and kale salad with it , I had a Beef Yorkie Burrito, basically  roast beef wrapped in a Yorkshire pud with chips. It was nice though the Yorkshire was a little tough, how they do that I cannot imagine. Puds were a Mint Sundae for Tara and a cherry bread and butter pudding which was nice washed down with a very acceptable pint of IPA & a Bacardi & coke for T.
Always nice to get out & have some time together, it was a  good evening.
Taras dinner.

Me with both puddings.

My dinner.
   

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Turning history on it's head.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Turning history on it's head.: I went to a fascinating lecture on Wednesday evening held at the University of Hertfordshire in Hatfield & run by a group called 'He...

Turning history on it's head.

I went to a fascinating lecture on Wednesday evening held at the University of Hertfordshire in Hatfield & run by a group called 'Herts at War.' They promote history and research into Hertfordshire's part in the Great War. Tonight historian Peter Barton was to talk about the Somme. I blogged awhile ago about his brilliant BBC documentary series called 'The Somme from both sides of the wire' this talk  went into more depth than he was allowed to in the documentary and was really interesting.
For a hundred years the only accounts of the Battle of the Somme indeed most of the war have been from the allied side but there was German records, these records have never seen the light of day before now & what an account they give!
Did they know we were coming? Yes they bloody did! They listened into the many phone conversation's from the front line back to brigade & division HQ's. The Germans couldn't believe how many unencrypted  phone conversation's there were. The only fact the Germans didn't know was exactly when the attack would take place........then there's the interrogation of prisoners, though to be honest 'interrogation' is the wrong word.It sounds aggressive, in the Great War the German form of interrogation was anything but brutal, it was  making prisoners feel at ease and having a chat. British officer prisoners were walked through a section of Germans employed in drawing up to date trench maps, accidently on propose letting the officers see what they were doing. These maps were very accurate, so making the officers think-well they know everything! what difference would it make telling them the little I know?  
There are published accounts of being POW's in the Great War written by officers after the war who more or less start their account with- well of course I only told them my name ,rank and number...........a hundred years later the verbatim German accounts of their interrogations tell a different story.
I was quite shocked to see one German record of the battle order of the British for the Somme, noted on it was my own grandfathers division, brigade and battalion of the Middlesex Regiment he served in!
Barton told us these records have hardly, if at all been touched since the day they were placed in the record repositories across Germany after the Great War, in his fifteen years of researching these records he has only come across one other person interested in WW1,most historians are still fixated with the Germans of WW2.
Perhaps the most shocking facts he has come across is the British treatment of German prisoners accounts taken from Germans  who had escaped back to their own lines. Accounts of robbing German prisoners of their personal belongings & a dreadful account of a British soldier lining up five German prisoners, putting a bullet into the first & seeing it kill all five. The only other account of such barbarity I have read is of a Nazi officer doing similar to Jewish prisoners. Surely the British don't do this?  We 'play the game' don't we?  These meticulous German records seem to tell otherwise. This does make it sound like Barton was taking an anti  British stance, far from it, he was the first to recognise & salute the bravery of British & Commonwealth troops alike but there are always two sides to war, at least!
The part of the agust BBC is interesting. They commissioned Peter Barton to make this series, first called 'The Somme from the other side of the wire' not 'both sides,' to be screened around the centenary of the battle. He told them the kind of records he'd uncovered & to begin with they were very gung ho about bringing these fact to light but as the anniversary got nearer they started back peddling. First the name change then you can't say this, or that, he told us it got to the point of single words being edited out. The word 'traitor'  was not allowed even though it appeared in a British order about what to say if captured and to give information would make that soldier a traitor. There was supposed to be a book to go with the series but Barton refused to write it as the account therein would be too different to what he was allowed to say on TV. The BBC weren't best pleased with him but good for him to sticking to his guns! The BBC allowed quite a sanitised account of these incredible records, Peter Barton's lecture was warts and all. The Germans didn't think much of the leadership and soldiering qualities of the Australians for instance, Barton tells us this didn't go down too well in his lectures in Australia!
The things he has unearthed have challenged our view of not just the Battle of the Somme as these records cover the whole war but before we can really understand the full picture we need both sides accounts don't we? To get a balanced view, after all it has always been the victors who write the history books, Barton predicts it will be many many years before much of the German archive is properly understood and even longer before it is digitised, there is just no funding for any such project. He says himself that after all his research he is only slightly less ignorant now than before he started.
This lecture was a real eye opener & has I believe turned history on its head. 

Sunday, 15 January 2017

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Vinyl or CD's?

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Vinyl or CD's?: My first music was brought on vinyl of course, cassette tapes alittle later then CD's. With the so called renaissance in vinyl I thought...