nanila: wrong side of the mirror (me: wrong side of the mirror)
( Dec. 28th, 2021 09:04 am)
This is my list for keeping track of the recipes I try out from my slow cooker Christmas present recipe books. We'll see how long I can keep this up next year once I'm not on holiday!

BBC goodfood "Slow Cooker Favourites"
NB: This book is a little annoying because quite a few of the recipes only seem to involve the slow cooker as an afterthought and suggest a considerable amount of prep either prior to, or after, putting the ingredients in the slow cooker. I plan to largely ignore such instructions so my versions of these are going to be modified.

Recipes tried:
  • Better-than-baked beans, p. 10. Made on 26 December 2021. This called for cooking most of the short ingredient list in a pan on the hob before putting it in the slow cooker, which I found ridiculous, so I just browned the onions and bacon and dumped everything else in straight from the can/chopping board. Made it with butter beans, ate it for breakfast with fresh bread. It was great. Next time I will crumble in the stock cube instead of dissolving it in 200 mL of water, to make the sauce thicker.
  • Herby bean-sausage stew, p. 22. Made on 08 January 2022. This was a very simple recipe so I added some stuff to it, including a crumbled stock cube, garlic granules, thyme, salt and pepper (!!), and a splash of Worcestershire sauce. I suspect it would have been quite bland otherwise as the only herbs were basil and oregano. It was pretty tasty. Humuhumu ate one of the chipolatas as well, which I count as a win because normally she won't touch anything that's been in homemade tomato sauce. 
  • Goulash in a dash, p. 112. Made on 10 January 2022, 08 February 2022 and 04 March 2022. This was awesome. The first time, I had no potatoes and a larger quantity of stewing beef than the recipe called for, so while I mostly followed the ingredient list, I deviated on quantities. I also added caraway seeds, chilli powder and a spoonful of corn flour on the advice of a different recipe. Served with couscous. Keiki yummed it up, as did the adults. 
  • Big batch bolognese, p. 80. Made on 13 January 2022 and 26 March 2022. Left out the bacon, mushrooms and glass of red wine (dry January), and two-thirds'd the recipe because of the amount of mince we had to hand. It was really good, we ate it over rice rather than pasta.
  • One-pan chicken couscous, p. 46. Made on 23 January 2022. I tripled this recipe because I had 700g of chicken. This meant using 3 tablespoons of smoked harissa paste, which felt like a lot and as turned out, was. It was very spicy and even the bloke needed to add buttermilk to it when eating it. I didn't add the couscous directly to the slow cooker as the children would never have eaten that if I did. Very tasty though, will make this again. Possibly with a little less harissa paste, and a tub of natural yoghurt for serving, so we don't have to use the buttermilk that we normally keep on hand for soda bread.
Recipe planning:
  • Spiced carrot & lentil soup, p. 26.
  • Mexican chicken stew, p. 48.
  • Five-a-day tagine, p. 144.

Miss South "Slow Cooked"
Miss South takes the view that most prep is unnecessary apart from caramelising onions or garlic. She is also very keen on using the cheapest  ingredients, especially meat, because everything gets tender in the slow cooker, and takes the trouble to describe where it should be possible to obtain those ingredients. She's fortunate enough to live in London where she can easily acquire unusual ingredients, herbs, and spices, but recognises that not everyone does and suggests alternatives. I like this positioning.

Recipes tried:
  • Macaroni Cheese, p.107. Made on 27 December 2021, 15 January 2022, 29 January 2022. This was really good. Even Humuhumu liked it without dumping an inordinate quantity of ketchup on it, and it involves mustard powder and white pepper. She asked me what was in it and I told her I had made it "as simply as possible". (Muahaha) It calls for evaporated milk, which I didn't have, so I substituted double cream that was left over from making Christmas trifle and that was fine. I also love that it didn't require doing anything to the 500g of dried macaroni other than coating it in corn flour prior to putting it in the slow cooker. The crunchy bits at the bottom of the cooker went down well with Keiki and me. I may butter the slow cooker next time as it did require some elbow grease to remove.
  • Tarka Dal, p 102. Made on 03 January 2022, January 2023. This is AWESOME (capslock fully merited). I doubled the recipe apart from the caramelised onions (I used 2 instead of 4), and I didn't have fenugreek seeds so I used ground fenugreek and didn't double the amount of that either. It was absolutely delicious and I will make this regularly. Additional: I'm finding that I don't seem to have to cook things for nearly as long as Miss South recommends. She said to put the slow cooker on high for 8 hours. I put mine on low for 5.5 hours and that was plenty. I turned it off and let it sit (another 2 hours) until dinner time, and it was just the right temperature for eating with fresh basmati rice and steamed mangetout. Perhaps I have an overpowered slow cooker?
  • Spiced Carrot and Parsnip Soup  p. 151. Made on 16 January 2022. I'm not very enamoured of this. It is quite a healthy recipe. Possibly too healthy. It needed a lot of salt to make it palatable (to me, anyway), and I ended up dumping in the leftover sauce from making chicken adobo, which gave it chicken fat, soy sauce, and sesame oil, all of which helped. It was a little weird, ultimately, as the adobo flavours didn't quite match the Indian spices from the recipe, but at least I enjoyed eating it. I won't make this again. 
  • Saag Aloo, p. 180. Made on 22 January 2022, 07 February 2022, 04 June 2022, 21 October 2022, 20 December 2022. This was so easy, I actually bothered to caramelise the onions, just because I like caramelised onions. The recipe didn't call for this. I didn't add the grated coconut because I didn't have any (!) but I did add a leftover half of an avocado. It's super tasty, but this is the second of Miss South's recipes that would benefit from a good deal more salt. I didn't add it to the pot directly this time but sprinkled it on top in the form of adjika spice mix.
Recipe planning:
  • French onion soup, p. 142.
  • Cuban style black beans, p. 88.
My recipes
  • My usual chilli. Made on 04 January, 27 February, 2 May, 5 June 2022, 28 October, 19 November, 3 December 2022, 5 February 2023, 11 February 2023.This consists of browning a 500g packet of mince (either beef or vegetarian depending on what I have to hand) in a pan on the hob, then dumping it into the slow cooker with the following. I use a teaspoon to scoop out the spices from their jars but I would hesitate to be accurate about the actual quantities.
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  1. Books or movies?

    There was a time in my life when hands-down this would have been books. I’m at a stage of life, however, where reading dense text is a LOT of what I have to do for work. When it comes to relaxing time, I’d rather watch something these days.

  2. Indoors or outdoors?

    See above. I love being outdoors, but the demands of working life force me to spend most of my time inside.

  3. Morning person or night owl?

    I have always been a morning person. Unless I’ve had insomnia the night before, I happily bounce out of bed with the sun.

  4. Online messaging or physical letters?

    I used to love physical letters, both writing them and receiving them. But online messaging is so convenient and also quite a big job to keep up with, as are multiple personal and work email accounts. I do still send postcards and special occasion cards through the post, but almost exclusively to family members.

  5. Dragons or unicorns?

    Dragons, because they exist. Unicorns are just fake land narwhals.

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We're together for 25 years now! Thank you!


I'm a little bowled over by this. I’ve officially been journalling online for more than half my life. Not quite weekly at minimum, but not far off. I'm not sure if anyone would ever want to re-read the contents (including me), but what a community it has been and continues to be. 💖
Before we left Washington DC after our brief but packed visit, my colleague and I paid a visit to the Smithsonian’s National Air & Space Museum. We decided to walk from where we were staying, forgetting that the park around the capitol was completely blocked off for the fair. This turned what would have been a 13-minute walk in the sweltering heat into 35-minute walk in said heat. By the time we got to the museum queue, which stretched beyond the shade of the building, we were melting.

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At least we had an odd aerobatics display involving parachutes and upside-down flags to entertain us while we queued.

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Happy, happy nerds, who have successful achieved museum entry. And air conditioning. Blessed, blessed air conditioning.

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Lunar module LM-2 feet. Gold on the outer side, black on the inner side facing the main engine exhaust. Thermal management!

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Aforementioned LM-2 main engine.

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LM2 from above.

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Pioneer!

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CubeSats.

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The excellent little Sorato rover, developed by the Japanese company ispace, which sadly hasn’t flown.

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IceCube neutrino observatory.

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So many treasures in the space hall.

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This still blows my mind. These holes are where the debris impact craters were drilled out and studied when Hubble’s original Wide Field Camera was removed and replaced, and the flawed camera returned to Earth.

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Delighted colleague with Hubble’s backup mirror.

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Dava Newman’s spacesuit.

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The aftermath of 16 years in space.

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Telstar. Fantastic little spacecraft. Most excellent cat (RIP Telly).

Epilogue: I didn’t end up replacing my SR-71 blackbird hoodie, because I thought most of the designs in the shop were rather tacky. Everything’s gone to these big screen-printed images that take up the entire front or back (or both) of the item. My old hoodie just had an attractive sewn logo on the top left side on the front. I settled for a t-shirt that had a similar printed logo on the front.
nanila: me (Default)
( Jul. 7th, 2026 11:19 pm)
While my colleague and I were speaking about Srs Bsnss with our industrial partners last week, we heard a roaring noise outside the window. The 250th anniversary flyover displays by the fighter jets had begun.

We grabbed our hats and sunglasses and went onto the roof to have a closer look.



It ended up being a very close look indeed. (I would like to point out that none of us were the ones clapping.)



This was a more comfortable view of the formation flying.



Here they are coming from t’other direction.

This continued for around 10 minutes before they all zoomed off, presumably to base for a little rest from the heat.
nanila: (me: art)
( Jul. 5th, 2026 10:18 pm)
I have had to omit some of this DitL, but this collection of random photos provides reasonably complete coverage of the informal bits of it.

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Entrance to Chinatown, next to the Walgreens where I bought the laptop charger I forgot to bring with me. I never fail to omit packing something important when I travel. It used to be underwear. These days it tends to be either toiletries or electronic accessories (much more boring).

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Maman’s bakery pastries: S’mores Croissant Cube (rating unknown, but watched a small girl trying to get through it with a fork and it looked a little dense) + Orange Pistachio Olive Tea Cake (5 stars out of 5, ecstatic breakfast experience).

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Fanciful crockery design at the breakfast venue.

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Delicious oat milk cappuccino in fanciful crockery.

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Hang on, isn’t there some sort of special occasion happening fairly soon?

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Ah yes, that was it.

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Never mind, let’s have some whisky and not think about this, or indeed anything else, for a short while.

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Such a shame we don’t have a bit more time to sample more than 1/1000th of the collection.

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Bed, who needs bed when you can go on the rooftop and drink wine?

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Also, watch the moonrise and try to spot satellite trails.

Epilogue: After a 19-hour day, I did go to bed.
nanila: me (Default)
( Jul. 4th, 2026 01:23 pm)


Very late, this video. But it has Humuhumu drawings in it, and snippets of garden flora and fauna.

I got back from DC this morning. The trip home was the smoothest flying experience I've had in a long time. I guess no one leaves the USA tye day before Independence Day. Both flights weren't even half full. I walked out of the airport, got on the shuttle bus to the car park, and was driven with a grand total of one other person to our cars.

I've had a grand total of about 9 hours’ sleep since Tuesday. It was also 9000 degrees in DC. Okay, touching 40 C, but with the humidity it was “feels like 45 C” which is just brain-meltingly hot. Discovering that the DC metro is air-conditioned may have caused us a disproportionate amount of joy. I think it was a successful work trip but only time will tell.
nanila: me (Default)
( Jul. 2nd, 2026 11:31 am)
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The only thing missing from this photo is the constant soundtrack of "nee naw nee naw nee naw".

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Anyway, check out my dinner from last night! That's right, it was cocktails and tater tots.
  1. What is something you like to do that other people would consider weird?

    I’ve genuinely no idea. I am very poorly calibrated for what the average person in society would consider weird. I work with very smart people, many of whom are weird, and my friends are smart weird people.

  2. What's the best piece of advice you've ever gotten?

    It was from a former work colleague, about parenting. Before Humuhumu was born, she said, “Just remember, everything is a phrase. It will end.”

  3. What is your most memorable birthday?

    Uh…my thirtieth, probably. I had split up with my previous partner and was finding my feet again. It was quite a scary time, deciding I still wanted to stay in the UK on my own, and finding support from some truly wonderful and generous people who helped me make that happen.

  4. When do you feel like you're the most authentic version of yourself?

    Four places: At home, lolling on the sofa with a cat on my tummy, tapping away on my laptop while something familiar and comforting plays on the television in the background.

    On the beach, searching the sand for tiny perfect shells.

    Tucked up in bed with my favourite silverback (silver noggin, really).

    Driving my car, chatting to my kids about random thoughts going through our minds.

  5. Where is your favourite place to go on holiday?

    Precise location is not important. The presence of family is.
nanila: me (Default)
( Jun. 12th, 2026 04:47 pm)
  1. What is a place you have visited, or want to visit, that starts with D?

    I have been to Denmark. Copenhagen, specifically, with the bloke. It was a work trip for him and a jolly for me, before the kids. I brought the dSLR and had a wonderful time exploring the city (https://nanila.dreamwidth.org/tag/copenhagen).

    I have also been to Dubai. Well, just the airport to transit through to India or Africa. But honestly, that was enough to assure me that that was the maximum amount of time I ever wanted to spend there. It's not my kind of place.

  2. What is a food that you like, or don't like, that starts with R?

    A lot of foods I like start with the letter R: rice, ramen, risotto, roasties, ravioli, raspberries. I don't know how to prepare risotto or ravioli myself, so they're a real treat on the rare occasions when I go out to eat. The others, we prepare and eat regularly. (He makes the best roasties.)

  3. Own anything that starts with the letter M?

    Makeup and masks. I had to think for a little while about this, and I might not have remembered the masks if this year's departmental ball had not been masquerade-themed.

  4. Know anyone whose name (first, middle, or last) that starts with N?

    Yes. Er, that's all I have. This question was rather less evocative of an interesting reflection than the others for me, sorry.

  5. Favourite movie, book, TV show, or song whose title starts with T?

    Oh goody. This lets me talk about Tom Yum Goong, one of Tony Jaa's films. I wrote a long loony fangirl post about Tony Jaa 16 years ago (https://nanila.dreamwidth.org/777069.html). He's an actor and an athlete, expert in multiple forms of martial arts and parkour. He's also 5’6”, which makes scenes like this one where he kicks the light out of a lamppost all the more impressive.


    (Tony Jaa kicks the light out of a lamp-post, YouTube, 00:14)

    I hope it's clear from this that you don't watch these films for their plots, which contain heavy-handed morals and require a level of suspension of disbelief that can only be achieved through the consumption of large quantities of popcorn. You watch them for the stunning scenery and the eye-popping action.

nanila: (kusanagi: amused)
( Jun. 4th, 2026 10:10 am)
I’ve been making overnight oats in jars for the bloke and me since the start of the year, and have experimented with varying ingredients and quantities. I think I’ve finally found the balance I like best, so I’ve carefully documented this below in case I ever stop making them regularly.

  1. Base layer is 3 medium-sized strawberries, chopped into 1cm pieces. For the bloke, 4 tablespoons of oats, for me, 3 tablespoons.

  2. Shake the jar to mix oats and strawberries. This is especially important if using the jumbo oats (as shown here), otherwise I end up adding too much milk.

  3. Add milk to just below the top layer of oats. For him, whole milk, for me, oat milk.
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  4. Add full-fat Greek yoghurt. For him, 3 heaping tablespoons, for me, 2. This helps to moisten the top layer of oats, and also gives a smooth layer between the oats and the crunchy bits at the top.

  5. Add Linwoods Milled Flaxseed, Sunflower, Pumpkin & Chia Seeds & Goji Berries. Two teaspoons for both of us. I used chia seeds on their own for a while, but I found that I didn’t much care for their crunchy texture and tendency to get stuck in my teeth even after soaking them briefly in water to activate their mucilaginous properties. This mixture is much nicer.
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  6. Add 3-4 teaspoons of pomegranate seeds. These have the right balance of juice and crunch after the yoghurt layer.
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  7. Finish with granola. I prefer the stuff that has freeze-dried strawberries mixed in. For him, 2 tablespoons, for me, one.

  8. Put lids on jars, store in fridge until morning. I find these fill me up sufficiently that I’m rarely hungry before lunch, although I often eat a banana around coffee time just to give myself a little boost.
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