Friday 29 December 2017

Bread, pan, le pain, pane, naan


When I asked Jeanne to be my wife forty+ years ago, there was no ancient mystical knight, like the one in the Indiana Jones movie, standing in the background intoning, "You have chosen...wisely." Good thing, I wouldn't have appreciated it. I preferred to be alone with her.  

But I had. Chosen wisely. I didn't know at the time just how many many levels of skills she possessed but as our lives together began, I started realising what a real treasure she was.  

For one thing, she could bake bread. And not just any old bread. Her loaves came out of the oven looking like golden brown cumulus clouds that smelled of wheat and yeast, and shortly thereafter, of melted butter. 

Good bread is the most fundamentally satisfying of all foods; and good bread with fresh butter, the greatest of feasts.

Because of the quality of the bread she bakes, I felt that the word 'bread,' which is currently written here in the Helvitica font, should instead be written in some artistic sort of font so that you would all realise in what high esteem I hold it.  I have just looked at all the fonts available to me for this blog and found that none of them are suitable. Oh, well.

Her loaves did have one fault though, if you want to call it that. They were too big. I'd have to trim the edges off each slice before I could put it into the toaster. And the tops never got fully toasted because they stuck out the top of the toaster.  So forget about tucking a sandwich made from her loaves into a zip-lock sandwich bag. It couldn't be done. Way too big. (I'd have to use the gallon size) 

The problem was that she was using inherited bread pans from a past age when any given sandwich was expected to weigh a couple of pounds and provide at least 2,000 calories. The kind of sandwich that farmers, lumberjacks, and I suppose, grizzly bear hunters, used to carry along with them wrapped in a feed sack. 

I don't know if any of you are Pat McManus fans, but one of his stories, "Further Teachings of Rancid Crabtree," that is contained in the book, A Fine and Pleasant Misery,  starts with a description of just such a ham sandwich. I love that story. Makes me remember many of the sandwiches that Jeanne assembled for me during my early days at Robinson Furniture.   

I finally solved the problem of plus-sized sandwiches by buying her some new, modern-sized non-stick bread pans that produced loaves of a size that allowed the slices access to toasters and baggies.

By now, you're probably wondering when I'm going to get to my point, whether I intend to simply reminisce all afternoon, or whether I'm just plain hungry. Well, don't panic. Here we go. My topic today, is not surprisingly, bread. 

There are little bakeshops absolutely everywhere here. Glen Eden, for example, has four of them within a two-block stretch of downtown. The trouble is that they mostly seem to be clones of one another. They turn out bread that is okay. I shouldn't really criticise it, but it falls short of the really good stuff. 

Fortunately, we have been slowly discovering bakeries that do produce 'real' bread. They are few and far between, but their products deserve to share a breadbox and breadboard with Jeanne's creations, they're that good.

If you have been reading this blog, then you have already heard about Pandoro, the Italian Panetteria on Queen Street, and I've told you about Maison Vauron in Newmarket, La Cigale in Parnell and the Pyrenees Delicatessen in Mt. Albert. I doff my cap to all of them. But there are a few more that are every bit as good. 

Let's take a look at three today. Oh, if only smell-o-vision existed. I could drive you wild.
Here's one I discovered on the corner of  K' Road and Symonds Street in Auckland. 


It's a very small place with an even smaller selection to choose from. But what they do, they do right. I have been buying the larger loaves that you see in this basket on the counter. It is very dense, and it makes the kind of toast that makes coffee and toast a meal. 



I wish I had seen this cart out on the street somewhere. It would be fun to buy something from it 


Here I am at home ready to have some Portuguese bread and butter. (and now,since Christmas, thanks to Kath and Lee in the Copper Country, some thimbleberry jam)


This one is brand new. It opened within the last few day and it is a winner. And the best part of it is that it is just a few doors down from the Aussie Butcher in Henderson. 


They bake their bread in a wood-fired oven and it's right out front so you can watch the process. 

It's surprising how quickly he fills up his cooling racks. 
I like that. Did you notice the wood piled up beneath the oven a few pictures back?


 Finally, here is the Little Bread and Butter Bakery.  This was the first real bakery I was aware of in Auckland. It produces wonderful, unique kinds of bread that change weekly. We no longer get over this way very often, but I have just discovered the right combination of a train and a bus ride that will put me right on their doorstep. They are part of 'Ponsonby Central,' a block-long gallery of trendy shops that do a huge business. Not far from the bakery I bought some hard sausage. This next picture below shows another entrance into the Ponsonby Central Complex.


And yet another entrance ...




Look at Bread and Butter's sales display. It's like a combination bakery and art gallery, don't you think? 



 These are good, but they're not quite like the Aunty Anne's salty pretzels back home.


They have a nice sense of humor. 



That is a long French loaf and I think, a Bergsteiner Sourdough round loaf. Never tried that one before. Should be good with a piece of salami so firm you could drive nails with it. 


You know, good bread is not only a joy to eat, it really photographs well too. That picture's gorgeous. I should have cut the sausage so that the end was slanted toward the camera, but look at all those colors and textures. Can you just imagine how crunchy those crusts are? You see, once again, I have chosen...wisely.       -djf

Monday 25 December 2017

Christmas Day, 2017, at Kaitarakihi Beach, Bay

Of all the impossibilities I might have imagined during our often sub-zero Michigan Christmas holidays, lazing on a beach and watching our daughter and grandsons splash in a warm ocean would have had to be at the top of the list. And yet, here we are, and there they are.  

This is our tradition now. We drive down to little Kaitarakihi Beach. Allie first found it six years ago and has been coming every year since. The carpark was already jammed when we arrived at about 11:00 a.m. Oh well, Allie found a spot at the very edge. More cars were arriving as we left the lot laden with our beach chairs, chilly bin, and towels and headed for the beach. They'll find a spot too, even if they have to park on the access road. 

To help you get into the right frame of mind for viewing these pictures, listen to this Kiwi take on a popular Christmas song. Then, stroll through the pictures. 




We're in a bay off the west coast so it's a very gentle beach. The boys played in the water till their teeth were chattering. Then, they wrapped up in over-sized towels, sat in the sun and ate lunch. (PB&J sandwiches, chips, cherry tomatoes, blueberries) Can't get much better than that. 


A beautiful little grotto in the cliff. Inside it's got a mini-water fall happening. Take a look...and a listen. I'm amazed that my camera picked up the kids' yells as well as it did. They are quite a distance away. Maybe the grotto's shape allows it to act as an acoustic reflector. 





Fantastic rock formations.

A blooming pohutukawa tree and lush vegetation everywhere


For a while, it seemed as though I had made a new friend. This oystercatcher preceeded me down the beach. I was able to stay quite close to him for some time. He seemed to wait for me at times to catch up. 

I've never seen an intact horse mussel shell before. They're always broken up. 


Every once in a while when I was a kid, I'd take out a box of cowry shells my dad had brought home from the Philippines and play with them. It amazed me that he had once been in a place where these treasures could just be picked up at will. Now, here I am and we have collected over 400 of these beauties. 


A limpet, some tube worm cylinders and a sea fan. 



I just have to include one picture from inside the little cave each time we visit this beach. 


This is just before leaving. 

But before we do, let's take a last look around. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cXFnubfJSQU


Heading home....


Here's a speed limit sign for a corner. You knew that that was kilometers per hour didn't you?



We're at the Huia Beach Road Round-a-bout. Don't know what these are. 



I don't think that I've shown you these orange circles before. These are pedestrian crosswalks. Cars must come to a full stop if there are peole waiting to cross. In most places, the roadbed is raised there too, so they act as speed bumps, and cars naturally slow down when approaching them.  


Jeanne worked hard yesterday and did lots of preliminary cooking. A turkey and some kumera have been in the slow cooker since early this morning. I have the potatoes peeled and sitting in salted water on the stove. We plan to have an early dinner before long, and some rhubard crumble for dessert a bit later. 
The adults will have a taste of Bailey's Irish Creme before bedtime.

Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night.       -djf

Saturday 23 December 2017

Pohutukawa



The New Zealand Christmas Tree is once again blossoming all over the islands. The bright red flowers don't last long, but the trees show individuality and each seems to blossom when it's good and ready. That helps to extend the season during which we can enjoy the red and green show that they put on. 

It reminds me too that the Waitemata Honey Company has it's bees on Rangitoto again. I wish them a bountiful harvest. 

Today's post is a short one. I just wanted to take a close look at the flowers and how the stamens burst out. 

Here are a few pictures. -djf


A tree in front of the Ferry Building in Auckland.



And another big one in Grafton.










My closest one. 


Image result for the parts of a pohutukawas flower
Here's a good one I found on-line. Amazing what you can see when you look more closely.  


The Reason for the Season.

It would have been nice if some pohutukawa blossoms could have been used in this Nativity Scene, but I doubt that they would have held up. 
Merry Christmas to all of you. I wish I could offer you a Christmas cookie. -djf



Tuesday 19 December 2017

Handel's 'Messiah',

Allie surprised us recently by announcing that she had purchased tickets for us to see Handel's Messiah. Wow. Jeanne and I heard it just once, about 1972, at the Cathedral in Marquette, Michigan. We would be very pleased to say the least, to hear it again. 

I don't know, maybe I should have said, "See it again," because clearly, the visual aspect of the performance contributes as well. I thought I better do some research to find out just how the Messiah is actually described. 
I found that it is an oratorio. It has an orchestra, a choir and soloists, like an opera does, but it is classed as a concert piece, rather than musical theatre. 

It was written in 1741 and first performed in Dublin. 

This was the 99th year of it's presentation at the Auckland Town Hall. 

We talked to the boys about it and I think they understood that what they would be seeing was not just a piece of classical music, but rather, it was a historical event. One that had been repeated for hundreds of years. Talk about tradition. I don't know that they were quite as pumped about seeing it as we adults were, but they were certainly willing to give it a go.  

We started our evening out at Denny's in New Lynn. Allie had promised the boys a dinner out on the town if they kept the time it takes them to change in to their street clothes after swim class to under five minutes, ten times in a row. They accomplished it. And Grammy and I got to come along. We all enjoyed the food and the American-style ambiance. Then, it was off to the city...
We are now in Aotea Square and there is the Auckland Town Hall. I don't know about you, but when I say 'town hall,' I think of of public offices, low-level politicians and boredom. This town hall does have some offices I know, but it is so much more. So many things about New Zealand have been a wonderful surprise. This place continued the tradition and 'wowed' us all. 


'Boys will be boys.'
This is looking back toward the entrance to the underground parking. Arram is checking out what appears to be a giant Christmas present and Amiri is hanging from the raised fist of Dove-Myer Robinson, Auckland's longest-serving mayor. That is a life-size bronze of "Robbie." He was small in stature, but had a booming voice and huge energy. He was a 'mover and a shaker.' (Especially of his fist, I guess.)

This is the main entrance to the Hall. 


It was opened in 1911


It's 'Great Hall' seats 1,673 people. 

Acoustics are said to be among the best in the world. 

It's about thirty minutes before the performance starts. Most people are downstairs. We are sight-seeing. 




This is looking back at the stairway down. In the left-hand corner you see the entrance to the balcony seating. Arram and I will do some snooping later...

Just look at that. I could look at that all day, I think. The levels, steps, patterns, light and colors and pillars. 

Heading back down. Allie will take the boys for ice cream and Jeanne and I will find our seats on the main floor. 


Here we are. 


There is the orchestra, the choir and up a the top, the organist.  


We're all in our seats and ready to listen.
The floor is of Kauri Pine over 100 years old.  


I mentioned a few photos ago, that Arram and I did some snooping. It is now during the 20 minute intermission. Arram and I came up to get a drink of water, but also to see what the Great Hall looks like from the balcony. Boy, were we impressed. 



Here it is. Arram so liked the view that he brought his mom up here a short time later. I was then taking pictures from the main floor and just missed getting a picture of them looking over the balcony. 



That is the Klais Organ. Eight-two pipes are visible, but there are a total of 5,291 of them. The largest is thirty-two feet tall. The smallest is only 1 inch.  
Maori master-carver Arekatera Haihi carved a set of wooden pipes that produce the sound of traditional Maori wind instruments. These were incorporated into the organ. It is truly a one-of-a-kind.  


The small TV up there allows the organist to see the conductor. 


The view from the base of the stage. 


The entire performance was nearly three hours long. The boys were amazingly mature throughout the evening. When we exited the building the cool night air was so welcome. While there was air-conditioning inside, it was not as comfortable as it was to be strolling our way homeward. 


The Sky Tower is decked out in red and green. It smelled so good here. I think it must have been blossoming pohutukawas. 


I turned back to take one last quick look, and a photo.  Although I'm tired, I rather hate to see our evening end. Thank you Allie, for giving us all a remarkable experience and
another happy memory for your boys. -djf