Monday, December 26, 2011

Christmas Day 2011

Like Christmas Day 2010, my day started shortly after 6.30. I turned on the water heater, drank my coffee, read a little and sat quietly, thankful that we had cooked the turkey on Christmas Eve. 

I looked at the tree, with parcels beneath, and switched on the lights:


I remembered to turn on the steamer for the Christmas puddings, which needed another few hours, and then I finished cleaning the kitchen, which I had abandoned around 11pm the night before after making a double-sized chocolate pineapple fudge pie as an extra dessert, as well as another dozen mince pies. 

By the time we were all up, and had breakfast (if wanted) etc, it was 9.00. So we set to work to open the various parcels. Here's Richard looking at one of his new books, with a pile of mine (and a DVD) on the sofa next to him:


 It's always hard to know what to get Tim; he seems to have everything he needs, and his wants are few. However he finally suggested that we could get some extra RAM for his laptop. We had it sent to his UK address and he brought it out here for me to wrap up so he could open it on Christmas morning:


Shortly after 9.30, Tim and I departed for Larnaka Community Church, as the service was due to start at 10.00. It was remarkably short; despite several people wanting to chat with Tim afterwards, we were home again by 11.05. 

With the majority of the food preparation done the day before, Tim's role at Christmas is to pull it all together so that everything arrives on the table at around the same time. This shows the food (with the turkey and stuffing in the covered roasting pan, carved and arranged by Richard, and reheated for an hour).  


It was only when I looked at the photographs today that I spotted that we'd forgotten to put out the juice we had bought, and hadn't put dessert spoons on the table either. Oh well. At least Richard remembered to offer the adults some wine, which we were given free at the supermarket when we picked up the turkey. 

Oh, and that vast quantity of food wasn't just for the three of us. We had invited our friends with six children again. Once again, the sausages appeared to be the most popular item with the children, closely followed by potatoes. Tim had prepared an enormous number, and there were quite a few left at the end of the meal. 

Then, when we were all pretty full, we cleared the plates and brought out dessert: 


Not that most of us were hungry, but Lukas was excited by the dried fruit:


None of the children like Christmas pudding, so although I had made three - and steamed two - we only served one of them. Richard thought it might be fun to try setting it alight, but we had never done that before and didn't know that we should have heated the brandy first... 


There was a sort of flicker of flame when we looked hard, but most of the brandy (about a thimbleful in all) dripped onto the plate. It tasted good, anyway. 

After lunch, most of the children opted to watch our DVD of 'The Sound of Music', and the rest of us decided to play a game of Settlers of Catan:


After that we had a couple of rounds of Rummikub. I don't THINK Elisabeth understood what it was about, but one never really knows what's going through the mind of a toddler:  


Sophia usually escapes upstairs when the children are here. But the smells were evidently too tempting, and she has become a bit braver recently. Still, she kept out of the way most of the time:


We weren't really hungry by 6.30, but the film had finished and we had plenty of tea-time food, so we loaded the table once more, with bread rolls - made on Christmas Eve - and veggie sausage rolls - which I'd made a week or so ago - and cut-up vegetables, and a small gammon joint which I boiled on Christmas Eve, and which Richard sliced. Several of the children ate cold potatoes too... but there were still quite a few left.

Then out came the mince pies, and the Christmas cake I decorated on Wednesday, and the rest of the chocolate fudge pie... and some dark chocolate Cadbury fingers, which Elisabeth liked very much. She had at least four: 


Then she wiped her face on my convenient trousers, and Tim took the camera when she climbed on my lap: 


It didn't take long before we had all eaten our fill: 


By 8.00 our friends had gone home to put the younger children to bed, and we had done the initial clearing up. We were pretty tired, so decided to watch one of my new DVDs, 'Driving Aphrodite'. It was light, and amusing in places, and just the thing to end another enjoyable Christmas Day.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Happy Christmas, one and all (with link to our annual newsletter)

It's been quite a long day. Before 9.00am I made more batches of almond milk, granola, and lemonade because I didn't want to have to do so tomorrow. I put a loaf in the breadmaker for lunch, too. 

Then we went to Metro pick up the turkey we had ordered, and some sausagemeat, and some potatoes and veg... and various other bits and pieces that had appeared on my list. It wasn't anywhere near as crowded as I had expected, so that was good. 

Tim has made two sorts of stuffings, and he and Richard organised the turkey to go into our guest flat oven, to be carved later this evening and re-heated in a roasting pan tomorrow. They've just peeled what looks like half a ton of potatoes, and Tim is preparing other vegetables. 

Meanwhile I've made some bread rolls for tomorrow afternoon, and will do some more mince pies when Tim's finished in the kitchen. One of us will probably make cranberry sauce this evening, and I need to prepare an alternative dessert for those who don't like Christmas pudding. And then clean the kitchen and mop the floors. 

Oh, and I have a few presents to wrap.

It's 7.20pm, and has all felt quite relaxing so far. I don't know why we tend to make such a big thing of Christmas food; I try and simplify as much as possible, and do what I can in advance, but still there seems to be a mammoth amount of preparation. This year Tim will not be playing at any church services, nor going to a midnight one, so we'll just go to a short service at ten o'clock tomorrow morning. I will put a Christmas pudding or two on to steam when I get up; after we get back from the church service, it will be over to Tim to get everything organised so that lunch all comes together for about one o'clock. 

So, since I haven't yet posted one so far this year, here's a photo of the poinsettia we bought a couple of weeks ago:


.. and here's a link to our 2011 Christmas newsletter

Wishing anyone who reads this a peaceful and blessed day, with much love from family and friends, and time to think about the reason we celebrate Christmas.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Icing our 2011 Christmas cake, including a long-winded photo tutorial

One of our friends asked me for a tutorial on how to cover a British-style rich fruit Christmas cake with marzipan and royal icing. So, this year, I took photos of the entire process...

The cake recipe I use, year after year, is the excellent Delia's Christmas cake. I usually make it early in November, then wrap it in foil, and put it in a cake tin out of the way. If I remember, I pour a tablespoon or two of brandy into little holes in the bottom a couple of times during the following six or seven weeks.

Then, about mid December, I unwrap it.  Here it is, upside down:


Before putting icing on a cake like this, it's important to have something that stops bits of cake getting mixed up in the icing. Marzipan is the traditional first layer. I don't like it at all, but Richard does - and it certainly makes it easier to put icing on. 

I've tried making my own marzipan, I've tried using Cypriot style almond paste.. but in my view, by far the easiest to handle is the English ready-to-roll marzipan that comes in boxes, and which can be found in the bigger Cyprus supermarkets during December. At a price... but hey, it's only once a year:


So. Remove the marzipan from the box, knead it a little, then roll it out on a surface dusted with icing sugar, using more icing sugar on the rolling pin. It should roll easily, and needs to be roughly in a circle which is the size of the cake, plus a couple of inches extra all round. Cypriot almond paste tastes better (in my opinion) but turns into a sticky mess when rolled. 


Then, pick up the cake and dump it (still upside down) in the middle of the marzipan:



Note that many recipe books recommend using warmed apricot jam, brushed over the cake, to make the marzipan stick. I've done that sometimes, but as far as I can tell it makes no difference. This cake should be quite moist anyway, and the marzipan fits quite well so it doesn't matter if it doesn't fully stick. However, if you wish, warm a little jam, and then brush it lightly over the marzipan before putting the cake on it. 

When the cake is in place, slide your hand underneath the marzipan, and flip the whole thing over, and onto a plate or serving dish:


Squash the side pieces in, so it fits around the cake. Pat it down, pushing it together if any little holes have appeared:


Then use a palette knife or similar to smooth it gently to remove any major bumps. I don't worry if it's still a bit bumpy:


Then put it in an airtight container to dry out a little for at least one day, preferably two or three. 

Now comes the creative part. Perhaps. 

Make a batch of royal icing. (Yes, that link was to one of my other blogs. Some of the photos are the same as on this one). 

Pile the royal icing - or most of it - on top of the cake:


Use a knife to spread it roughly over the marzipan, and down the sides. It should be solid enough that it sticks easily without sliding down:


Pause in admiration at your cake, covered in gleaming white:


If you want to leave your cake rough-iced - in a theoretical imitation of snow - and then perhaps add on a few decorations you can then do something like this, which is what I did for our 2008 Christmas cake: 


It's probably the simplest option. The effect around the sides was done by taking a knife and flicking the icing outwards. 

However, this year  I decided to put a little more effort into it. So I smoothed the top, as well as I could, using a (clean) ruler:


Then I ran a knife around the outside, with the aim of smoothing the edges:


I haven't really found how to do that properly. You can try using a wider knife, perhaps dipped in hot water. But my experience is that it simply removes more and more of the icing, eventually leaving it so thin that you have to pile more on and start the smoothing process again. So I don't aim for anything approaching perfection. 

A couple of years ago, I came across the instructions for making a greaseproof paper icing bag - something I remembered from my high school domestic science classes.  So, since I always find myself with left over royal icing after the smoothig process, I thought I'd try making a piping bag again this year. 

It starts with a rectangle of greaseproof (or grease-free) paper, about 25 by 18.5 cm (10 by 7.5 inches): 


Fold it so it looks like this: 


Cut in half, along the longest edge of the triangles:


Now this is the bit I find tricky, but it's worth persevering. Move the papers so that the top points of the triangles are together. Then wrap one of the bottom corners around, so that the point lines up with the top points, something like this:


Of course, it's much easier if you're not trying to take a photo at the same time. 

Now take the other bottom corner, and roll that up outside the first rolled bit of paper, so that all the points overlap, something like this:


There should be a fairly tight point at the bottom. If there's a hole, adjust it until it forms a fairly sharp point. 

Then fold the back part tightly over, a few times, like this to secure the bag:


You can then just cut a tiny tip off the end, and use the bag for icing directly. But, like many people, I have a selection of plastic nozzles which have long outlasted their bought piping bag:


I don't know why these photos are a bit soft. I didn't discover that until I came to write this post, and I certainly wasn't going to go back and make another bag just for the sake of sharper pictures. 

Anyway, the next step is to snip off the pointed end, and put a nozzle (if you have one) inside. I do this a little at a time until it fits rather like this - putting the simple nozzle with the small hole in: 


So far, it's been like some basic origami. Now it gets messy... 

Put a heaped tablespoon of royal icing inside the bag. It should be fairly solid, but if necessary beat in a little extra icing sugar. 


Grasp the bag at the top, and push the edges together, gently pushing the icing down into the pointed end of the bag.  From experience, I'm pretty sure it's impossible to do this without some of the icing seeping out of the top, all over your hand. But that's life - frequently messy, no matter how careful we are. 

If you want to, you can experiment with icing on a plate, or your counter top, but this year I didn't want to waste any effort (or icing) so I got to work directly on the cake. 


Two years ago, I did something rather like the Christmas cake I made at school, with a grid and some stars, and was quite pleased with the result, which looked like this:


Possibly I should have gone with what worked, and repeated the effort this year. But it was a lot of work, and besides,  I wanted to do something different. I thought I'd keep it simpler, and use our plastic decorations again... so I stuck one in the middle, and piped lines going out of it. They weren't quite even, so I put a few more decorations at one edge. All rather random - and not at all helped by my sleeve dipping in the icing nearest to me at one point - but by the time the icing in the bag was used up, the cake looked like this: 


The icing bag was a mess so, rather than trying to re-use it with a different nozzle, I made another and put a star-shaped nozzle in it. I did a few at the top, which looked all right - to make a little rosette shape, just push down the icing for a moment, then stop pushing and lift the bag away. 

The sides looked rather a mess, so I tried a few stars there, but they didn't really work. I was running out of icing in the bag, too. And I was getting pretty fed up of my hands getting so messy, particularly as I had to keep washing at least one of them to take another photo:


This is what the icing bowl looked like, with the first icing bag abandoned inside:


Inspiration struck. Everyone needs a plan B.  Here's how it works:

You need a small pot of glacé cherries, which you bought a week or two back, vaguely thinking they might come in useful:


Remove about eight of them from the pot, and using a sharpish knife, cut them into halves, as neatly as you can. Sixteen should be plenty. 

Next, take a clean knife, and get as much of the spare royal icing out of the bowl, and swish it around the sides of the cake. Try not to disturb the effect on the top, but go for a rough-iced effect which is so much easier than the smooth one:


Start to stick glacé cherry halves on the side of the cake. Just do it by eye... 

.. and then discover that sixteen halves was not nearly enough. 


Take another five or six cherries out of the tub. Six is best, just to be on the safe side. Cut them in half. Continue around the cake until they're all done. 

Discover that five extra would have been plenty, so eat the remaining cut cherries.  

Take a look at the mess nearby:


Lick the spoon absent-mindedly, and then scrape out a bit more - you don't want to waste good food, after all.

When you've had enough, dump the whole lot in the washing-up bowl, quickly wipe the counter-top, and then leave it all to soak. 

Take a photo of your completed cake:


This was the point at which I sighed inwardly, and realised that the cake I made last year, rough-iced and peaked without the hassle of icing bags, was actually just as effective and rather prettier:


Thursday, December 22, 2011

A Sunny Stroll around the Salt Lake at the Solstice

(Apologies to those who are cringing at the excess of alliteration in the title!)

December in Cyprus can be chilly, but equally it can be sunny and warm during the daytime, with temperatures hovering around 20C (68F). Yesterday morning was one such beautiful day, and I was invited by some friends to go for a walk around part of the Salt Lake trail. It's not far away, and I hadn't been for a while; I knew the Salt Lake had plenty of water after the rain last month.

We could see the flamingoes almost as soon as we arrived - probably thousands of them:


They return year by year, although it's hard to see how such a relatively small stretch of water can provide all the food they need.

The sun was out, the sky was blue, and there were some pretty clouds over the mountains:


I don't know how far we walked - perhaps a kilometre or so. We weren't walking fast. There were small children with us, who kept stopping and starting, and we were deep in conversation, as ever. We walked towards the aqueduct, until we met the other family who were joining us, then we turned around and walked back.

At one point two of the children ran toward the Salt Lake, shouting... and the flamingoes took flight:


If you click on the picture to see the larger version, you can see how startlingly pink they are.

Somehow I didn't manage to take any photos of people, other than this one of Elisabeth, who is now 18 months old:


.. and this one of the bird-watching place, where some of us walked to and then took a break: