06:48:00 o'clock GMT
Playing Tag
**Please note. For some reason my buttons to add pictures or video have dissappeared so I shall have to add them later on. Hopefully they will have re-appeared then! This is the first time I have had that problem! For now you will just have to make do with my narrative. Sorry!
Ohh, I’ve been tagged by Jenny from
The Polka Dot Pixie to do a six things about me tag. I love doing these things. They’re always a lot of fun for me. I get to spill my guts about six more things about me. You get to read about six more things about me, and then I get to tag six of you to reveal six secrets about yourselves! What’s not fun about that! I always loved playing tag at recess at school when I was growing up. So much so that I didn’t even really mind being it!Here are the Rules:
1. Link to the person that tagged you.
2. Post the rules on your blog.
3. Share six non-important things/habits/quirks about yourself.
4. Tag six random people at the end of your post by linking to their blogs.
5. Let each random person know they have been tagged by leaving a comment on their website.
Six things about me:
1. I had a non malignant tumour removed from the top of my right ear when I was 18. I had to walk around with my head in a bandage for about 8 weeks while it healed, which was quite embarrassing. Thankfully at that time it was considered quite fashionable to wear a head scarf and so I did. I had to go to my technical school grad wearing one and was quite upset with some boys that were sitting behind me. They kept singing “Midnight at the Oasis” under their breaths, just loud enough for me to hear and it forever ruined my enjoyment of that song. I was also not allowed to wash my hair for that same amount of time . . . Ugh!
2. When I got my first job away from home, I boarded with a woman who lived in a huge old Victorian house, at the top of a very steep hill, in a large town called Kentville, in Nova Scotia. Her name was Mrs. Boates and she was really quite elderly. I was 18 and should have been having a good time being out there for the first time on my own, but being as shy as I was and never really having been away from home before I simply got up in the mornings and went to work, came home, had my supper and then went to bed at about 7 o’clock every night. I’d read for the couple of hours before I went to sleep and would repeat this every day. How boring is that!!! (she made really good corn chowder and my sandwiches for lunch were always made with homemade bread, yumm!!)
3. While I was still at college I was head hunted by a big Insurance Company from the big city of Halifax. They offered me a job, which was pretty exciting to me, but I turned it down. I was already engaged to be married to my first husband and moving to the big city was not a part of the plan. I often wonder how different my life might have been had I taken the job and moved to the big city anyways.
4. I could have been the first runaway bride had I not been such a chicken. Back in 1974 when I got married the first time I had the big wedding that every girl dreams of, you know . . . White dress, veil, rose petals sprinkled down the aisle, etc. etc. Quite a few of my father’s family were visiting from Quebec, just to attend the wedding, and so my father was afraid that he would get me to the church late due to his having to drive all of them as well and so he got me to the church extra early. I was there before anyone else. I can remember sitting in one of the back rooms and wanting to run away, but then chalking it up to emotions and nerves and so I stayed put. I remember thinking about how much money my parents had spent and feeling like they would be really annoyed if I just took off, not to mention all the gifts that would have had to be returned and the people who had come from really far just to see me get married!!
5. When I was getting ready to finish High School I was interested for a time in joining the military. I thought it would be a good way to see the world and to get paid a good wage. I did all the entrance tests and everything, but then one weekend a bunch of girls I knew who had already joined and were on their basic training popped up to visit on a 24 hour pass. I can remember listening to all their tales they told as we sat in my parent’s living room. It all sounded like a whole lot of fun until they told me that, at one of their mess dinners, each one of them had had to get up and give a 2 minute impromptu speech. That did it for me. I decided then and there that I was not joining the military. The very idea of having to get up in front of a group of people and talk for two minutes terrified me. Now I get up and give 15 minute talks at my church and it doesn’t bother me a bit. What a chicken I was back then!
6. I went through a stage at one point when I was a teen, where I was so painfully shy that I just could not face going anywhere on my own. Unless I had someone to go with I just would not go out at all I used to pay my brother to go to the shops with me on occasion. I’m not sure if he remembers that or not. I cannot imagine now what I must have been afraid of. I have learned in life that you cannot let your fears rule you. I sure missed out on a lot of fun when I was growing up just because I was afraid of this or afraid of that. I guess I am making up for it now because I have turned into a bit of a dare devil in my 40’s and 50’s!!
Now comes the fun part! I get to tag six of you, and so without further adieu I tag:
Gaz from
Diary of a Podgy PoofAlison of
Rock Water and LightDi of
Duda DazeThe Blonde Duck from
A Duck In Her PondJeanie of
Day To Day Life in the LakesAngie of
Can You Hear Me At The BackYou’re all it!!!
I made this lovely oven stew for Todd’s tea last night. We had it with some of my ex mother in law’s cornbread on the side. Well, not her cornbread actually, but her recipe for cornbread, lol. This was one of the first stews I used to make when I was a new bride long, long ago. It’s quite tasty!
*Oven Beef Stew*
Serves 4
This is a quick and easy stew to make. Other than peeling the vegetables and chopping them up there is literally no work to do. Your oven does it all! It’s just plain delicious too, so it’s a win/win combination!
1 pound of well trimmed stewing beef, cut into 1 inch cubes
1 large onion, peeled and chopped
1 clove of garlic, peeled and crushed
Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1 tsp mixed herbs
1 tin of condensed tomato soup (Campbells)
1 soup tin of water
2 large carrots, peeled and sliced
1 small rutabaga, peeled and cut into cubes
2 parsnips, peeled and sliced
4 medium potatoes, peeled and quartered
Pre-heat the oven to 230*C/450*F. Put your beef, onions and garlic into a deep casserole dish with a lid. Season with some salt and pepper to taste and then place the casserole (without the lid at this point) into the heated oven and bake for about 10 minutes, just until the meat is beginning to brown. Remove from the oven and reduce the oven temperature to 160*C/350*F.
Put soup and the water into the casserole dish along with the mixed herbs. Put the lid on and bang it back into the oven and let it bake for about an hour. At the end of the hour remove it from the oven and stir in the vegetables. You may need to add more water as the mixture should have reduced by then, and you want the liquid to just barely cover the vegetables and meat. Put the lid back on and return the casserole to the oven. Bake for another hour or until the vegetables and meat are tender.
Remove from the oven and let stand for about 10 minutes before serving.
You can use other flavours of soup if you wish such as mushroom, which is very good also.
*Mother in Law’s Corn Cake*
Makes a nine inch square pan
This is an excellent accompaniment for stews and soups, and goes really well with chili con carne and baked beans. It is a very old family recipe and always turns out moist and delicious. You can also make individual ones by baking it in muffin tins.
7/8 cup plain flour
¼ cup white sugar
4 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 cup cornmeal (coarse polenta)
1 beaten egg
1 cup milk
¼ cup melted shortening or sunflower oil
Pre-heat the oven to 200*C/400*F. Lightly grease and flour a nine inch square pan and set aside.
Whisk the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt and cornmeal together in a medium bowl. Whisk the eggs, milk and salad oil together in a beaker and then stir the wet ingredients into the dry. Fold them together just until the dry ingredients are evenly moistened. Do not over mix. Pour the batter into the prepared pan and then bake in the heated oven for about 20 minutes until well risen and browned on top and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean. Serve hot and cut into squares.
Written by mariealicejoan Blog about this entry
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I'll post six strange things about myself tommorow! :)
Love,
The Blonde Duck -
Looks like I got me some work to do here!
Gaz ;-) -
Goood excuse to learmevem more about you ,you always do these things so well ..love Jan xx
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13/03/08 03:52