Monday, 31 January 2022

Part of the secret of a success in life is to eat what you like and let the food fight it out inside... Mark Twain

If you were to ask me, "What do Kiwis eat," I could no more answer you with accuracy than if a Kiwi were to ask me, "What do Americans eat? 

New Zealand is a nation that is full of immigrants from absolutely everywhere, and the choices of foods available here because of them are reflected in the markets and restaurants and opportunities that abound.  In the past, I have occasionally done posts about cultural foods. In this post though, I am going to try to scratch the surface of the list of some very common things that all Kiwis like to eat.  

Any Kiwi who reads this may shake their head and think that I haven't done a very good job of reporting.  If so, I apologize. I am admittedly only scratching the surface with this effort.  I will continue with food posts and expand the range.

But here is a start.  I  haven't searched out anything special today. I will simply report on those items I've purchased or seen myself as I did our shopping. And to someone who reads this post and who has no knowledge whatsoever of New Zealand, this limited look into its cuisine may be of some interest.  

Fish and chips are available everywhere, and I don't think I've ever had a bad meal.  The picture below shows a plate available in a restaurant. As many times though as we've eaten fish and chips from a plate, with proper use of knife and fork, we've also eaten them with our fingers after unwrapping a large newspaper covered package. 

I've got to tell you, the first time I ordered fish and chips from a tiny takeaway place on Swanson Road, and watched them lay out several sheets of unprinted newspaper onto the counter, and then dump on my pile of still steaming chips (French fries) onto it, followed by a bunch of battered fish fillets, (usually hoki), and wrap the papers around it, sealing it with a piece of tape, I knew that this was my kind of place and my kind of country.  I took it home to my family and as I unwrapped it, plates were rapidly filled, the ketchup bottle was squirted, and happiness reigned.  Talk about finger-licking good.  A little later, I started buying a combination of fish and chips and deep-fried chicken for the crew.  Wrapped the same way. Almost too hot to carry, but so simple and delicious at the end of the day. And I discovered that such places gave huge portions of the chips. We always had some left over.  Jeanne generally used them the next day in a Spanish tortilla.   

I don't know if I'm right about this, but to me, fish and chips says New Zealand.     



New Zealand is an island nation, and seafood is an important part of its cuisine. The most common shellfish is the green-lipped mussel.  

Jeanne has both steamed these and fried them in a batter. They are wonderful however they are prepared.  


 

Oysters are popular.  I much prefer the mussels myself, but I see lot of people grabbing packages like this from our favorite fish market.  


 

I had no idea what silverside was when I arrived here. I found out that this is very similar to our corned beef. With mashed potatoes, it's very good, and the leftovers make great sandwiches. 



How could I not mention lamb?  Back home, lamb is considered by some to taste a bit 'gamy.' I always liked it though, even as a kid (no pun intended), when mom roasted a leg and served it with mint sauce.  Of course, her maiden name was Churchill so I think we were a step ahead of many folks in our appreciation of this meat.  

As you see, this is a butterflied leg of lamb. I like this presentation. I have in the past slapped it onto a very hot grill and results were just short of Heaven on earth.  The high fat content of lamb allows you to really get a nice char on it without drying it in the least.  


Pies are enormously popular here. I wish the names of the pies were a little more prominent but look closely.  These are sold everywhere.  




That's a steak and cheese on the left and a steak and kidney on the right.  There is a generous portion of meat in each and the gravy is thick enough that you rarely lose any of it.  
To someone like me who grew up on pasties, the public's love of these pies makes perfect sense.  


Every bakeshop here sells scones, either plain, or like this one, with dates.  They always warm it for you and add a pat of butter.  Very good, but I like Jeanne's homemade ones with Tasty cheese and a little chili powder even better.  





New Zealand loves sushi. This is a picture of a few of the offerings at Ko & Ki's Sushi on Railside Avenue in Henderson. Jeanne and I often treated the boys to their favorites here when they were little. This was our favorite sushi place. The people here are friendly, helpful and patient. They always made sure the boys were comfortable. The quality is excellent.  Each piece is a miniature work of art, besides being delicious.  There are lots of chain sushi places around town, but none can match the care with which Ko and Ki run their shop.   



We like both these versions of mince (hamburger). The premium topside is very lean. (I think mince is ground slightly finer here than hamburger is ground in the States.)  The steak mince has a higher content of fat, but the flavor is great and I think it has been ground a bit coarser.  
Just to give you an idea of the sizes of packages here, the steak mince package would probably make three good-sized patties.  


Jeanne thought that the gardeners among you might be interested in some of the vegetables that are popular here.  

On the far left are two green bush beans, which New Zealanders call dwarf French beans. Next are yellow bush beans, or dwarf butter beans. Next, we find the hands-down favorite bean here at the village, scarlet runner beans. These are the beans that can climb up to 8 feet, and are popular in the U.S. for making bean teepees. Finally, the climbing butter beans, which are flat and curly. They are also very favored here. The bush beans, not so much. Even though the scarlet runners can get stringy when they get over a foot long, they are still the favorite. "They have more flavor. Those dwarf beans have hardly any flavor at all." I took the initiative of growing the two colors of bush beans, because I like them. But I may hold off doing that in future, because it is back breaking work to bend over and pick them! It is much easier to make a trellis and stand up while picking beans. 


Above are the two most popular tomatoes we grow in the gardens. The Italian or Roma on the left, the beefsteak on the right. They are both low acid, which our elderly population seen to prefer, plus the beefsteaks are really meaty, just like the name implies. (-jmf)


Well, that's it for today's look into the popular foods of New Zealand. This is a picture of a display case at our local Pak 'n Save.  



I hope that you feel slightly more knowledgeable about Kiwi food after digesting my post today.
We've just started on this topic.  I'll be showing you lots more.  Stay tuned.     -djf

Tuesday, 25 January 2022

The heron's stream

 

A white-faced heron has made its hunting grounds a stretch of the Opanuku Stream which flows past our retirement village.  I have often seen it hunting in the shallows around the old Henderson Mill. A water wheel there provided the power for the sawmill that started operation around 1849. Only a smaller, replica wheel now rests in the river, unmoving, and causes the heron no concern.


     

The heron has chosen well.  The shallows provide the perfect place to snap up the small fish that make up much of it's diet.  

I've seen the heron many times as I crossed the bridge and have watched it often, if only for a minute or so.  It's a beautiful bird. 

Today's post will show you some photos I've taken of it, and of a few other birds as well, which stop by this stretch of the stream fairly often for a bath or a drink or to peer at a photographer....

These pictures were all taken during the first two weeks of January, 2022.  





I like this next photo of the heron especially.  It reminds me (sort of) of the three views mechanical drawings require.


But mine is more exciting...Life, reflection and shadow fully describe this heron.  


Just upstream, this log looks to me, when I squint a bit, like a snake entering the water and gives the place a wild feeling.  (There are no real snakes in NZ)



I am very pleased to have captured the next two pictures.  
Just before I started taking pictures of the heron, I saw the water in the stream suddenly start to 'move'. I looked closer and could see thousands of tiny fish darting around just under the surface. (These fish are actually about two hundred yards downstream from the shallows and the birds shown in this post)  


I did some research later and learned that these are very likely to be whitebait. Whitebait actually describes five species of fish that move up streams like this one in the spring/summer, usually during the day and on a high tide, exactly the conditions I was seeing today.  



Our friend is on the hunt...



I was lucky to get some shots of fish in its beak.  




After feeding for a while, it moved across the stream and worked some shadier spots there.  





While the heron went off to do some grooming, I took a few shots of these red-billed gulls. That is the adult in the background and the juvenile up front.  



Another juvenile took a bath while the adults looked on.


A myna stopped by momentarily for a drink. You know, mynas never look happy.  Maybe  if I tell it a joke?

A myna walks into a bar.
He sits down and asks the bartender, "Hey, you got any bread?"
The bartender replies, "No, sorry."
The myna waits for a few seconds and again asks, "Got any bread?"
The bartender says angrily, "No, we have no bread."
The bird asks again, "Do you have any bread?" 
The bartender replies furiously, "No, we have no bread and if you ask again, I'm going to nail your beak to the bar!" 
The myna pauses for a minute, then he asks, "Got any nails?" 
The bartender replies, "No, we have no nails."
So the myna asks, "You got any bread?"  



Nope, didn't work, couldn't get a smile out of him. Maybe he's heard it before. (He could at least have chuckled politely, like you do.)  What a grouch....
...And by the way Mr. Myna, that's a really dopey haircut you have there. Looks like a bad toupee.  




Here is a Muscovy duck hybrid that paddled by one morning about 8 a.m. (This one injured a foot/leg some time back.  I've watched it hobble very slowly along for a couple of weeks now, when it's out of the water. I hope it improves/survives.) 




I took this picture about a week after the first one. It is almost unable to walk at all now.  I wonder if its going to make it.   




Later that morning, mom pukeko and her pukekettes strolled the bank.  (I am just assuming this is mom. Male and female look very similar, so I can't really tell. The male is slightly larger than the female.)


A few days after I took the pictures above, I got the chance to see the whole family at meal time.  Dad had apparently just come home and had picked up an apple takeaway for dinner. 



Pukekos aren't much for polite dinner conversation.  



This is I think, a juvenile tui.  He is a little out of focus because he thrust his head forward just as I clicked.  




He's holding still for this one, but you can't see the Jimmy Durante 'nose' as well from this angle.  





Our visit with the heron is almost over. 



The heron seemed to sense that I was about to pack up my camera and leave. It gave me a final very formal bow.  I had not realized herons had so much of the performer in them.  
"Bravo, bravo....."  



As I shot picture after picture of the activity on the stream bed below, this pigeon landed on the railing of the bridge.  I saw it first as it landed about 10 feet away from me, and then slowly but surely it approached.  I took its picture when it was about a foot away. It seemed curious.  After I snapped this shot, I turned my camera down to the stream again and the pigeon stayed where it was for about another 30 seconds. Then flew off.  (Too bad it doesn't have a computer, I could have sent it this picture.)  
The little shed in the background houses some gears connected to the water wheel.   -djf


Wednesday, 19 January 2022

Two bees, or not two bees

In this post, I'm going to show you more bees, but this time, will start the wide angle shot and then the close-up.  (macro) 

This is the second of three in my current bee-series.  I'll show you even better pictures in the third installment, but I'll put that off for several weeks.  And, I have a post with photographs of bugs in the works.  (I can hear the cheering out there for that one.)  

Did you know that the 'pollen baskets' on the bees are called corbiculae?  You'll see several of them in these photos.  


































-djf