Category Archives: Poodles

April

apple blossom buds
Apple blossom buds appear…

April with her sweet showers is supposed to pierce the drought of March to the root – well it hasn’t done that so far. It has been the driest March for years here. On the plus side it means clean dogs when you come back from a walk, remarkably few snails and slugs, on the minus side the fruit trees blossom time has been exceptionally short, though very sweet.

…three days later the apples are in full bloom, humming with bees

There are blizzards of falling magnolia and cherry petals on the paving stones of Bristol;  Zeb has been coming in from the garden looking like he has been on a film set with fake snow in his curls.

crab apple
The crab apple is presented at court

Last weekend saw the temperatures soar well above the norm and the English jumped into their hot pants, dug out their BBQs, dug their gardens and allotments, walked their dogs, pulled muscles if you were me,  and generally got into the swing of a sudden change in season, dusting off their summer clothes and thinking about holidays, opening up their caravans, hastily sowing seeds, dividing perennials, greeting the plants that have survived the winter and so on. We didn’t get as far as BBQs, I dragged all the chairs out, Brian mended the parasol and we had a Gardeners’ lunch instead, sitting squinting into the bright new Spring sunshine!

Gardeners Lunch

In the raised veg bed some plants with feathery tops have been resolutely growing all through the winter. I vaguely thought they were chervil or something from a packet of mixed salad seeds. Brian dug them up and to our surprise found they were a clump of carrots that had somehow survived the frost. Our elation turned to disappointment very quckly as they were woody and inedible, so they have been added to our compost maker.

The most inedible carrots in the world

I owe you a bread post, and it’s almost ready, but as Zeb says, sometimes it’s just nice to snooze in the sun.

Zeb Bakes
Where’s the hurry?

Feed the birds, tuppence a cake

These silicone moulds are pretty good for making your own bird cake.

Melt fat and pour over a mixture of the things your local birds like eating. Mine have sunflower seeds and hearts, niger seed for the goldfinches, chopped peanuts, and an assortment of seeds and bits and pieces. Fill your silicon mould up. Leave in a cold place. Outside the back door in our case. They froze so fast they have got this cute snowflake edge!

Pop the cakes out and serve on your raised veg bed, or punch a hole through and string them up somewhere and keep putting out water, the birds will really appreciate it.

The dog food company where we order the dried dog food decided to send Zeb a free advent calendar. This is a new one on me!  He of course, thinks it is a great idea! What will the pet food industry think of next?

 

On the first day of Christmas there was tripe for me!

Chicken Giblet Breadsticks

Chicken Giblet Bread Sticks or Motivational Aids

Just a quickie from she who panders to poodles…..

  1. Simmer chicken giblets, (the ones you weren’t expecting to find tucked inside your organic chicken) in half a pint of water while poaching your chicken in big pan for soup. Reserve the stock for a gravy and another meal.
  2. Find saucepan with giblets on stove the following day. Whoops! Strip meat from neck, puree liver, heart and neck meat in useful small kitchen gadget thing
  3. Add one egg
  4. Mix in 4 tablespoons of runny yoghurt
  5. a pinch of salt
  6. enough bread flour to make a dough suitable for rolling out, about the consistency of pizza dough.
  7. Roll out dough to a 1/4 inch thickness in a rectangle
  8. Cut into very thin strips with a pizza wheel
  9. Place on a baking sheet
  10. Bake at 170 C for about 20 minutes, then turn the oven off and leave the trays in the oven for another 15 minutes

and there you have chicken giblet bread sticks

Preparation time : 10 minutes (not including the original giblet cooking time)
Cooking time : 20 minutes  (plus 15 minutes oven off time cooling)

Cost per dog treat: less than a penny a stick, maybe two a penny. Compare that to the rubbish they sell for completely outrageous prices in the doggy superstores.

And the dogs love them and will do almost anything for them, apart from clean the house, pick up their toys, answer the door, draft blog posts…

See also Sourdough dog biscuits – they don’t get homebaked treats that often!

And a random and unconnected extra – thanks to my sister and Claude who found it on YouTube! Well loosely connected in that it has animals and stuff being used up in it…