MP Charlie Angus is circulating a pledge for Canadians to affirm their support of basic core values. Please read and consider signing.
Pledge for Canada | Engagement pour le Canada
The Simple Life, Back to Basics, Urban Homesteading, Gardening, Dogs, and other Random Musings when I really should be doing something else...
MP Charlie Angus is circulating a pledge for Canadians to affirm their support of basic core values. Please read and consider signing.
Pledge for Canada | Engagement pour le Canada
It's been really cold and windy the last few days, the snow sweeping down the road before the wind like a scene out of the Arctic. The perfect day for a good, rich soup and homemade bread.
In a large bowl, put 2 cups of really hot water, 1 T. yeast (not the instant kind), and 1 T. sugar. Let it foam up for a few minutes. Stir/knead in 2 t. salt and 4 c. white flour. It will be a really wet, sticky dough. Cover the bowl with a damp towel and let sit for an hour. Oil a cookie sheet with olive oil really well and then pour/scrape the dough into the sheet. Oil your hands so the dough doesn't stick to you and spread the dough out on the sheet with your fingertips, kind of like making a pizza, but thicker. Make sure the surface is lightly oiled with the olive oil. Dust with a mix of your favourite herbs. I like rosemary, sage, garlic powder, parsley, and a little salt. Bake at 350 for 30-35 minutes until golden. Remove from the sheet before it cools and finish cooling on a rack, or it may stick to your pan. Cut into wedges.
Here's one with some caramalized onions baked in...
To My Grandchildren and Yours
World Central Kitchen, nourishing with more than food,
has created safe spaces for children---
with crayon-coloured picket fences,
perimeter of painted blue sky---
a bright border to block out the ravaged gray beyond it.
If I could wield a big enough brush,
I’d paint you a sky and sun big enough
to block out the whole world.
- K
I have found that a lot of people who read this blog aren't aware of my other blog about the renovations we're doing to an old church in southwestern Ontario. In case you're interested in following along on that journey, you can find it here:
In general, I don't post the same things on both blogs, but today is an exception, as we go into a new year.
Yesterday was relatively mild and clear, so the hubby and I took a walk around Rattray Marsh for an hour, breathing in the chilly air and gazing "out to sea" over Lake Ontario and greeting everyone's dogs as they passed. I'm glad we got that last walk in, because this morning it's snowing horizontally, big fluffy flakes, with no sign of letting up. The delicious feeling of knowing you have nowhere you have to go and nothing you have to do. I'll likely spend today writing and playing mah jhong.
This morning I watched two YouTube videos made by courageous women that I think were a good, strong way to start off the new year, and I thought I'd share them here. My newly-met friend Erin Pocock talks about trying new, hard things and letting failure strengthen you. Beautiful Unschool Life And PoliticsGirl talks about keeping hold of who you are and what you believe in when facing challenges. PoliticsGirl
I think we'll need both of these concepts in 2025. It's going to be a hard year for a lot of people, we're going to be asked to do hard things we may not know how to do yet, and we'll need to cling to our values and our supportive community to get through it. We'll also need to believe in ourselves and our ability to do impossible things.