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16 October 2014

Things Go Moo in the Night...


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Of green fields and rubarb pie...



The sun is blazing and the wind is rippling through the emerald green fields of oats, grass and barley. The barn cats are basking in the sun on the exposed rafters of the byre while Erlend and Zeb are busy fixing fences and feeding the cattle. The flock of sheep dots the fields as they too bask in the warmth of spring. Their many lambs race back and forth across the grass as they play a multitude of silly games. We are miles and miles from any city. Several miles of sea and even more miles of rugged Highlands separate us from congested highways and the fast-paced life. All around are bonnie stone hooses, hills of heather waiting to bloom and endless fields of shimmering green.

I am sorely tempted to abandon the kitchen in favor of sitting on my garden bench next to the bluebells and sweet apple blossoms for a cup of tea and a read in the dappled sunlight under the Sycamore trees. Yesterday I was in this very spot when out of nowhere a big bovine head popped over the dyke (stone wall) and mooed in my ear! Three of our stots (steers) had managed to get loose and they were dancing and having loads of fun all the way down the driveway!! I managed to race into the house and call Erlend on his mobile because the stots ran back into the steading away from the road. As Erlend arrived with the tractor he caught a flash of me racing across the driveway and through the midden (dung compost area) in an effort to stop the stots from reaching the road. They are a tame bunch and were easy to heard back into the byre! Now most of the kye are oot so we shouldn't have many escapes from the byre noo.

We have our biggest meal at 1pm and today I've prepared broccoli-and-leek soup: fresh crisp broccoli, sliced leeks, garden peas, parsley, thyme, fresh butter and a dash of olive oil. (Every time I use olive oil I am filled with sweet memories of my rented villa in Sicily where I would gaze down the fields at the Ionian Sea whilst preparing my meals...*sigh*) All of these ingredients are then simmered until cooked, blended smooth and mixed with plain yogurt and sour cream. They are served up with a sprinkle of grated smoked cheese on a yellow gingham-check tablecloth in the sunny kitchen. The tomato plants now fill the kitchen window as they just now begin to fruit. I wish I could send you a bowl of soup and a good long sniff of the fresh sweet air...

Having a hungry farmer-man to feed makes cooking so much fun! With the soup we will have toasted bacon sandwiches: rashers of British bacon, sliced bigger and thicker then American bacon, grilled and spread on lightly buttered slices of whole-grain toast and then covered in crisp lettuce and plump red tomatoes...ahhhh! To die for! And deffinately filling for a hard working farmer and his shepherdess wife.

On the side I'll serve small white neeps (turnips) and boiled tatties (potatoes) and if we have room for desert I'll serve up some home-grown, home-made rubarb pie! (I have to get cracking on making that...so goodbye for noo! Yikes...I forgot to preheat the oven!!)

AFTERWARD:

The pie came out great! When I first moved here I couldn't even boil water - this cooking stuff is SO MUCH FUN! And it's soooo artistic. I walked out to the rubarb patch to cut me some fixins' for the pie, all the while hoping I wouldn't meet the Posty (post man) while hauling a carving knife down the driveway hehe! Brodgar stalked me as I cut a pie's worth o' fresh rubarb and then I came inside and baked away. With local fiddle music playing on the radio I rubbed cinnamon intae the dough, the rubarb softened with a wee bit o' pineapple in a pot, mixed with butter and unrefined sugar. Then baked to perfection and causing my farmer-man to drool all through dinner! (I had seen him in the byre with the boggling cattle as I walked back tae the hoose and I yelled to him whilst holding up the rubarb, "I hope thoo aire good and hungry, buey!" You should o' seen his face!)


Posted on Things Go Moo in the Night... at 09:44

Comments

Hi, I still love your posts and am tickled that your accent is starting to change a bit. Thanks for sharing with those of us longing for a wee bit o the Scottish accent.

Amy of the SOA from Maryland, USA


Your description of the meal was brilliant, I wanted to come and join you (apart from the bacon), especially for the pie. I'm going to make soup tonight, chickpea and tomato with cumin and parsley and various other bits and bobs, but excluding the saffron that's supposed to be in there as it's *very* expensive so I can live without it. It won't compete with your yummy meal, though!

Jill from EK


My wife says she would like to cook a rhubarb pie but complains that we don,t have a dish long enough to cook the rhubarb in,. I always a roo-barb was a thorn in a kangaroos foot

plough boy from primose farm


plough boy: thats no excuse-cut it into pieces!!I almost bought rhubarb wed morning at the market-saw the prices and nearly fainted!

carol from drooling over he mention of rhubarb


carol: i would rather make rhubarb wine, with an A/B/V, of 12% it is so much nicer but not so good as a highland malt.

plough boy from primose farm


plogh boy:read hermits recipe for rhubarb wine-though I agree a good malt mmm!!

carol from dying for macallan


Ooohhhh can I come to dinner at your place?! The soup and the pie sound absolutely scrumptious.

Plaid from The Outback, WA




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