I had a rejection yesterday afternoon. I’m currently at 5 and 3 with two more to go. The worst it can now be is 5 and 5, and 50% isn’t too bad. I’ve written enough on that subject recently so I will pass on to other subjects.
How about a Flying Saucer? We ate there several times when going to see Julia’s family as it used to be at the point where we turned off the A1. I was sure it was there for longer than the time frame reported in the article, but my mind plays tricks these days. I found an article about it while browsing the internet but this link is better.
I then went on to read a list of amusing rude names for British towns and villages. However, I’m trying to portray the image of a clean-living, serious-minded poet here, so I won’t provide the link as it’s not for the fainthearted and I wouldn’t want to upset anyone.
This one, on the other hand, is quite interesting. The trophy, which is even more interesting, cost £125 when it was made, which was a lot of money at the time.
We had steak for tea. Julia received two boxes of gifts for Mothering Sunday via Amazon, so I thought the least I could do was produce a decent meal. I did oven chips, as they always seem better than wedges, and I found, as usual, that onion rings at home are never as good as onion rings when eating out. We also had peas with garlic and mushrooms, so I kept the veg level reasonable. My vision didn’t extend as far as a fancy pudding so we had fresh fruit.
You need very finely chopped garlic when making the peas (a new recipe for me, if you can call it that), every time I peel garlic clove I remember an incident with a teacher. I was demonstrating on the farm and had trouble peeling one. He told me, in front of the whole class, it wasn’t even worth trying to peel cloves as it wasn’t possible. Several teachers did that sort of thing o me. I doubt they would have appreciated me walking into class and correcting them in front of their pupils.
I needed three more and prepared each of them in seconds. It’s normally that easy, and he looked like an idiot.
Whenever I peel a clove of garlic these days I think of him and regret the incident. I shouldn’t have continued to peel the cloves, but I needed them and couldn’t think of a tactful way to do it and let him save face. Having said that, much as I regret it, he brought it on himself. A true dilemma, and not really my fault, even though I do feel bad about it.
I’ll post some pizza photos from my great days as a baking instructor, such as they were.





Wishing Julia a belated happy Mother’s Day!
Passed on. She says thank you.
I read about the Megatron, and was fascinated some local residents thought it was an actual flying saucer! The Tiddlywinks article was interesting too. I think our grade school had them as one of the games that could be checked out to play at recess on a rainy day. I don’t think I ever played it, but the name is very familiar.
It was very close to a number of RAF and US Air Force bases so the locals were always suspicious . . .
He asked for it. I think I met him, he’s named after a service station near Stourbridge. 😆
Those pizzas look fantastic! Happy Mother’s Day to Julia.
Thank you. I will tell her. The pizzas, made by school parties under the instruction of a man with no experience and a week to prepare his first lesson plan, turned out surprisingly well. Mostly. 🙂
I would trust your cooking under any circumstance.
One of my specialities was reconstructing trays of pizza we had destroyed in the oven. It happened a few times and the kids never noticed because I set to and did it while they were at lunch or on another activity.
I’m going to do fried shallots this week. new recipe, so no idea how it will turn out….
If I looked the right thing up, the shallots look lovely, everyone seems to like them, and the method looks distinctly like a trap. 🙂 Good luck.
No need to feel bad about that know-all teacher
I try not to, but it keeps coming back to me. Strange . . .