My last head cold was in February 2020. I’ve been boastfully rejoicing that the pandemic has proven that if we as a community, if we as a society, observe some simple hygiene principles, we can reduce the number of circulating respiratory infections.
There is so much evidence now for the truth behind the importance of physical distance, hand hygiene, respiratory etiquette, and staying home if unwell.
As a society, as a community, we must encourage business owners and leaders to begin the next task, which is changing infrastructure to be safer. By that, I mean increasing the number of no-touch approaches to our everyday lives, such as using sensors for doors, taps, toilets, and lifts, making better use of smartphone apps to avoid touching things.
Anyway, as we’ve opened up more and people are relaxing their observance of the mechanisms for reducing communicable respiratory infections, we see more upper respiratory tract infections. I’ve been trying to maintain my observance of physical distancing, hand hygiene, and respiratory etiquette as much as possible. But success relies on everyone doing the right thing.
This week I was infected with a respiratory viral infection. I developed nasal congestion and rhinorrhoea, and then a cough. I didn’t have any fever or headache. Given the advice I freely share with everyone, I went to the local drive-through collection centre to have specimens collected by sampling my throat and nasal mucosa for SARS-COV-2 RNA RT-PCR in ACT Pathology.
I received my result by text message within 12 hours of the collection time, which is excellent.
Ingredients
Butternut pumpkin (1 diced)
Potato (1 diced)
Extra virgin olive oil (a good number of glugs)
Clive of India Curry powder (1 tablespoon)
Mapuche spice Chilean spice blend (1 tablespoon)
Cream (1 cup)
Sour cream (1 tablespoon)
Onion (chopped)
Bacon (diced)
Rye sourdough bread (1 slice)
Instructions
Turn on your oven to about 180 °C.
Smear some oil on the inside surfaces of a large baking tray.
Lay the pumpkin pieces into the baking tray.
Add a few good glugs of EVOO over the pumpkin.
Sprinkle the curry powder and spice blend over the oiled pumpkin.
Mix everything with a wooden spoon or if you like scratching your baking tray, use a metal spoon.
Put the baking tray into the oven for 20 minutes.
Remove the baking tray and pray to the Lord that the pumpkin has started to colour without sticking to the baking tray.
Move everything around with the spoon of your choice.
Put the baking tray back into the oven for a further 20 minutes.
Remove the baking tray and again pray. This time, add in the diced potato and mix everything around. By now, the pumpkin will be soft, and the spoon you choose will deform the pumpkin.
Put the baking tray back into the oven for a further 20 minutes.
While the pumpkin and potato are in the oven, sautée the onion and bacon pieces in a large saucepan on low heat.
When the baking tray has completed a total of 1 hour in the oven, remove it and mix everything up. By now, the pumpkin will be mushy, and the potato will be soft. The beauty of this method is there is no excess water in the soup; this means the soup is rich and unctuous.
Add the mashed up pumpkin and potato into the saucepan with the onion and bacon.
Mix everything around and process with a stick blender.
When the mixture is smooth, put the saucepan back on the hob and add the cream and sour cream. Stir until the soup begins to simmer.
Toast the rye sourdough bread.
Plate up the soup with some chopped chives, garnish with basil and serve with the toast.
Sit down with your plate, give thanks to the Lord for all things work together for good to those who love God and are called according to His purpose. Then enjoy your soup.
Final thoughts
I think this soup would have been nice with some anchovies stirred through during the oven phase.
In the early 2000s, when I lived in Darwin, I would make a cauliflower soup on a Saturday night for my family.
My youngest daughter didn’t like it. So, as a reasonably stern father, I’d patiently sit with her at the dining table, waiting for her to finish her bowl of soup. I remember one night we sat at the table together until about nine o’clock.
To this day, my youngest daughter expresses a distaste for cauliflower soup.
I regularly comment that one day I want to make a cauliflower soup that she will like. Experiencing her enjoyment of my cauliflower soup is a dream I have.
Cauliflower, white onion, and bacon pieces.
Ingredients
Cauliflower
Bacon pieces
White onion
Iodised salt
Vegetable stock
Cream
Rye sourdough bread
Butter
Extra virginal olive oil
Chilean spice blend/Mapuche spice
Red hot chilli flakes
Instructions
Break down a whole cauliflower with a paring knife to release the florets.
Place the florets onto a baking sheet and cook in a hot oven for about 20 minutes. Cook until there is a slight browning of the surface of the florets.
Dice the white onion.
In a saucepan, heat some EVOO with low-intensity heat.
Sautée the bacon and onions until the onions become translucent and fond forms on the bottom of the saucepan.
Deglase the fond with a bit of vegetable stock.
Add in the Mapuche spice and chilli flakes and stir around with the bacon and onions.
Add the cauliflower florets to the saucepan and the rest of the vegetable stock.
Bring the liquid to a slow boil.
Simmer until the cauliflower is soft enough to allow the tip of a paring knife to penetrate the stalk without any feeling of resistance.
Blend the soup with a stick blender.
Add some cream, and bring the soup back to a simmer.
Season the soup with salt to taste.
Toast some bread and add a layer of real butter.
Thank the Lord for the meal.
Enjoy the soup while reminiscing about my daughter’s resistance to cauliflower soup when she was a young child.
Final thoughts
My daughter tells me part of the reason she doesn’t like the soup is the colour. I used to make it without any spices apart from salt and white pepper along with the stock. She didn’t appreciate the pale colour.
This soup made with the Chilean spice blend/Mapuche spice plus the red hot chilli flakes gives the soup a reddish-brown hue.
The spiciness of the soup had the mucosa of my buccal cavity excited. The sensations were terrific. I rejoice in having a party in my mouth!
Thanks again to my work friends for the Mapuche spice.
Chilean Spice Blend Mapuche Spice
Cauliflower, white onion, and bacon pieces.
Diced white onion, bacon pieces, Mapuche spice, and red hot chilli flakes
It’s been a while since I’ve opened a can of Spam. I was watching a Bon Appétit video on YouTube, and Spam was the featured ingredient.
I shared the video with a Facebook friend who also likes Spam and played on my mind overnight.
Ingredients
Spam
Pineapple
Eggplant
Capsicum
Red onion
Broccoli
Garlic
Paprika
Parsley
Iodised salt
Whole black peppercorns
Extra virgin olive oil
Sourdough bread
Grated cheese
Instructions
Turn your oven on and set the temperature for between 180 and 200 °C.
Sharpen your cook’s knife and think about Proverbs 27:17.
Cut pineapple into quarters, trim off the skin and cut away the fibrous core. You can use as much or as little pineapple as you like. I used a whole quarter and diced it.
Peel the eggplant and cut it into bite-sized cubes.
Dice the Spam into small pieces.
Thickly slice the capsicum.
Cut the florets off a head of broccoli and cut the stalks into small lengths.
Smash your garlic with your fist and peel the papery skin off.
Put everything into a large mixing bowl and splash with extra virgin olive oil. Get your hands in there and gently fondle everything to ensure everything gets touched by the oil.
Season generously with the flaky iodised salt.
Spread everything onto a baking tray leaving enough room for a slice of sourdough bread.
Pour EVOO over one side of the sourdough bread.
Place the baking tray into the oven.
Cook for 10 minutes.
Remove the baking tray and turn the bread over and use a pair of tongs to separate the vegetables and turn them over.
Cook for 10 minutes and remove the bread.
Return the tray to the oven and check the vegetables regularly over the next ten minutes to ensure everything is tender.
Remove the tray and allow everything to rest for a few minutes.
After the Spam and vegetables have cooled, season with freshly ground black pepper and drizzle some Old Bones smoked garlic chilli sauce over the Spam pieces and vegetables while the food is warm.
Transfer everything to a dinner plate and add the toasted sourdough on the side with some spicy mango chutney spread on the bread.
Sit down with your meal and gives thanks to the Lord for dinner.
Final thoughts
I know Spam isn’t popular. Spam isn’t healthful. That said, Spam is delicious.
Spam and vegetable traybake with fresh pineapple and rye sourdough toast.
Spam and vegetable traybake with fresh pineapple and rye sourdough toast.
Spam and vegetable traybake with fresh pineapple and rye sourdough toast.
Spam and vegetable traybake with fresh pineapple and rye sourdough toast.
Spam and vegetable traybake with fresh pineapple and rye sourdough toast.
Spam and vegetable traybake with fresh pineapple and rye sourdough toast.
Birthday gifts from GC, MG, DTSL, LP, and MR from The Essential Ingredient.
As you can see in the photograph, some friends at work gave me some food-related gifts.
Do you like celebrating your birthday?
I love birthdays, especially the birthdays of my friends and family. I love hearing from friends and family each time I complete a circuit around the sun.
This year, Mum and Dad called me and sung Happy Birthday. I loved it. I loved it more because Dad sings as well as I do, that is to say, when I was in Sunday School, I was asked to mouth the words and later as an adult in the church I was attending, a friend said, “…it’s a good thing God gifted you with brains because He didn’t give you decent vocal cords”.
It was excellent hearing from friends and family, and while I’m not huge on the whole gift thing, it is nice to receive gifts that have had some thought put into them.
I chose this meal after reading a post from Lorraine at Not Quite Nigella this week.
Rather than potatoes, chorizo, and halloumi, I went with eggplant, sausage and mozzarella. I also used some of my birthday gifts to add some extra flavour to the dish.
Specifically, I chose the Mapuche Spice (Chilean spice blend) to rub my sausage. I splashed the Old Bones smoked garlic chilli sauce over the finished traybake at the end. I served a little of the spicy mango chutney on a piece of toast with the traybake. I also used the bottle of Rosemary and thyme extra virgin olive oil.
Ingredients
Sausage—Sicilian style pork sausages
Eggplant
Capsicum
Brown onion
Broccoli
Garlic
Paprika
Parsley
Iodised salt
Whole black peppercorns
Extra virgin olive oil
Sourdough bread
Mozzarella La Casa Del Formaggio (Tradition of Italy)
Instructions
Turn your oven on and set the temperature for between 180 and 200 °C.
Sharpen your cook’s knife and think about Proverbs 27:17.
Peel the eggplant and cut it into bite-sized cubes.
Slice your sausage into some bite-sized pieces.
Rub your sausage bites with some of the Mapuche spice, you know, one of the gifts from amazing friends.
Thickly slice the capsicum.
Cut the florets off a head of broccoli and cut the stalks into small lengths.
Smash your garlic with your fist and peel the papery skin off.
Pull the ball of mozzarella from its bath and gently break it apart with the tips of your fingers. Drain the pieces of mozzarella with a sieve.
Put everything into a large mixing bowl and splash with extra virgin olive oil (perhaps some of the gifted Rosemary and thyme-infused EVOO made from Canberra district olives). Get your hands in there and gently fondle everything to ensure everything gets touched by the oil.
Season generously with the flaky iodised salt.
Spread everything onto a baking tray leaving enough room for a slice of sourdough bread.
Pour EVOO (I used Cobram Estate EVOO) over one side of the sourdough bread.
Place the baking tray into the oven.
Cook for 10 minutes.
Remove the baking tray and turn the bread over and use a pair of tongs to separate the vegetables and turn them over.
Cook for 10 minutes and remove the bread.
Return the tray to the oven and check the vegetables regularly over the next ten minutes to ensure everything is tender.
Remove the tray and allow everything to rest for a few minutes.
After the sausage and vegetables have cooled, season with freshly ground black pepper and drizzle some of the gifted Old Bones smoked garlic chilli sauce over the sausage pieces and vegetables while the food is warm.
Transfer everything to a dinner plate and add the toasted sourdough on the side with a little of the gifted Spicy mango chutney spread on the bread.
Sit down with your meal and gives thanks to the Lord for dinner and your amazing friends.
Broccolini, eggplant, capsicum, fennel, and onion.
Sicilian style pork sausages
La Casa Del Formaggio Fresh Mozzarella
Old Bones smoked garlic chilli sauce, Spicy mango chutney, Mapuche spice mix, and Rosemary and thyme EVOO
Sausage and vegetable traybake and Sourdough bread with EVOO
Sausage and vegetable traybake with sourdough and spicy mango chutney.
Sausage and vegetable traybake with sourdough and spicy mango chutney.
What did it all taste like?
I reckon the traybake without the addition of my birthday gifts would have been good. Adding the Rosemary and thyme EVOO, rubbing the Chilean spice blend on the sausages, shaking on some of the Old Bones smoked garlic chilli sauce, and spreading the spicy mango chutney on the toasted sourdough, made my mouth feel like it was dancing with joy. My tongue and lips were on fire but in a good way. No tears, just lovely flavours and spices.
Again, thanks to GC, MG, DL, LP, and MR for your kindness in selecting such wonderful accompaniments for my special meals.
More birthday words!
As much as I love to enjoy my birthday, I tend not to make a big deal out of it. That’s just me. I think it’s marvellous when a friend says she or he will take a day or a week off to celebrate. A friend this week said she’s taking a week off for her birthday. She and her husband will leave their children with her parents, and there will be fine dining and sightseeing interstate.
Introversion
I tend to feel embarrassed when people make a fuss. Another team had a little celebration, and one of my friends made a magnificently moist and not overly sweet caramel mud cake for my birthday. I enjoyed the attention on the inside, but I struggled to do or say more than thank you, eat my slice of cake, and slink away. Thanks, CH for the cake and thanks to AB, MW, KB, and AP for the celebration as well as MH who couldn’t be there.
I did a personality test last year, and it showed my introversion was >90%. I know I’ve always enjoyed my own company, and after a busy day, I do enjoy some solitude in my thoughts. Even before I knew what introversion meant—as a teenager—Mum would say, “you prefer your own company, don’t you?“
I think my level of introversion varies. It would have been at its peak last year.
The pandemic has revealed many exciting things for me. I’ve lived alone for most of the years I’ve been in Canberra, and I’ve gradually become more and more hermit-like. It’s provided me with a sense of comfort and ease. I’ll often say at work when I attend a meeting virtually rather than in person that I don’t like people. It’s more about the physical distancing and the desire to do other work while listening to the meeting. It also suits my introversion.
Social media and introversion
Oddly enough, my escape from a sense of loneliness has been social media. Without the need to meet with people in real life and experience the full richness (and harshness) of humanity, I’ve enjoyed a social media bubble that I can tailor and curate.
Last year, with the help of an honest and complete friend, my life changed. I returned to my faith in Jesus. While I’m still shy and introverted by nature, I’m relishing the things changing in my life and the new experiences and people I’ve been meeting. Rather than saying no to social engagements, I’ve been saying yes. I’ve been attending church and a bible study. Meeting people and making friends has made an enormous difference.
So what does that mean for me and social media? What does that mean for me and blogging?
Blogging is a hobby, and I love cooking and photographing food. The desire to cook, photograph food, and eat food hasn’t changed. So I’ll still blog (probably). As for Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram? I’m not sure.
A salient point came up when I was reading a thread on Twitter from Timothy Keller. He shared his impressions on a book by Chris Bail (Breaking the Social Media Prism: How to Make Our Platforms Less Polarizing), who revealed the nature and characteristics of people who use social media platforms like Twitter.
Timothy Keller Tweets Chris Bail book on social media
Timothy Keller Tweets Chris Bail book on social media
When I read it, I could quickly identify with the persona I’d generated over more than a decade on Twitter and the various accounts I use.
I still value these platforms because I’ve made connections with people. There are people in Canberra, across Australia, and other continents with whom I have a real relationship. Unlike the commentary from Tim, I don’t tweet politics and culture. I’m more about making a connection with people. On my main account and even on my food account, I’ve made friends. People who I will unlikely ever meet in person. But they are friends just the same.
So, I’ll probably still use Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram; however, as I engage more with real people in my local community, I’ll probably spend less time on social media. I want people in my real life to know me warts and all.
Curiously, a Tweep from interstate is visiting Canberra next month and wants to meet in person!
Books and podcasts I’ve been reading and listening to
Timothy Keller
I’ve mentioned Tim Keller above, so I thought I’d share some of what I’m reading and listening to as part of this new phase of me.
Timothy Keller was the pastor at the Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Manhattan. The Gospel in life podcast broadcasts his sermons from the late 1990s to about 2017 when he stepped down as the church’s lead pastor. I only started listening earlier this year, and the series I’ve been listening to have been on the early church through the book of Acts, and currently, the series is on Tim’s sermons from the late 1990s on marriage. Why am I interested in marriage? I’m not interested in marriage per se, the sermons share so much more than about the one-flesh union of a man and woman; Tim expounds on human relationships. I’ve been learning a lot from these sermons.
I’ve been reading books by Tim on sharing faith with others.
RC Sproul on reformed theology
I’ve only just started listening to this audiobook. Many years ago, I’d read a book on the 5 points of Calvinism, and it formed part of the foundation for my thinking. I’m enjoying listening to this audiobook which uses less archaic language and gives more modern context. Here is a free alternative.
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