Friday, November 28, 2014

Friendsgiving 2014

Another year. Another Friendsgiving ...

Friendsgiving Part One with American friends @ Buitengeluk

photo by Ricardo Palomar
 photo by Will Perry

Thanksgiving tree

photo by Ricardo Palomar
Friendsgiving Part Two with South African friends @ Valley Lodge

A couple of weeks before Thanksgiving, the New York Times published an article featuring a list of recipes which they felt represented every state in the US. I looked at our traditional Thanksgiving menu and found that with very little massaging, it would be easy to incorporate a sense of place into this year's Friendsgiving menu.
tables set with Maasai shukas and shweshwe

We found that every one of our favorite recipes were actually attributable to every state that Vince and I have lived in and even the ones where we regularly vacationed and even sometimes spent Thanksgiving. In fact about all we had to do to our traditional menu was to add cheddar cheese to our Thanksgiving mashed potatoes to represent Vermont.

If we were back in the US, we would have used real Vermont cheddar but we're not ... so our cheddar came from the Karoo. And our wines would probably have included at least one California wine from our cellar, but our wine is back in the US and we are in SA ... so we served exclusively Cape wines.


roasted, fried and braaied


Of course we had all-American Turkey, Dressing and Giblet Gravy. We had three turkeys actually. One roasted, one fried, and one Vince cooked on the braai. And we made fresh pumpkin pie completely from scratch.








write something you are thankful for ...

... and hang it on the Friendsgiving tree

make a wish

blurry action shot of pinky-pulling the wishbone

In South Africa, they do this with an ostrich wishbone! Using their pinkies!
















a toast

Lou & Serge have a new BFF
post-it timeline
We always forget to serve something. Even with Vince's elaborate post-it reminder timeline. This year it was whipping the cream for the pumpkin pie. Nobody noticed.
after 16 guests and 3 turkeys ...

Thankful it didn't rain! (The weather report called for thunderstorms all day.) Thankful we didn't have a load shedding power outage. (It's that time of year.) Thankful for friends on Thanksgiving! (It makes being without family on Thanksgiving palatable.)


Thankful for leftovers for turkey soup.













Our Thanksgiving tree is full!

Just so very thankful!

Making Pumpkin Pie for Thanksgiving

raw pumpkin
You cannot buy Libby's pumpkin pie filling in South Africa. Full stop.

So in order to make our Thanksgiving pumpkin pies, we had to go old school and make our pumpkin pie puree from scratch.

Luckily we were able to find these bags of already cut up pumpkin at Pick n Pay. Phew!
100% pumpkin puree - just like Libby makes

And just as luckily, we were able to get Libby's famous pumpkin pie recipe on-line. The internet makes expat life so much easier!

We made homemade pie crust too. (You can't get pre-made frozen pie crusts here either!)





yum ... leftovers



The pies were actually the best we have ever made. Happy Black Friday!


Thursday, November 27, 2014

Tom Turkey @ Babylonstoren


This is one turkey who is very happy he lives in South Africa. Especially in November.










Happy Thanksgiving!

Monday, November 24, 2014

Drumming Circle

Djembe drums from West Africa
Last week I participated in my first Drumming Circle. At Klitsgras. It was a blast!


Words cannot express so I will let the pictures do the talking ...


the circle

Didgeridoos from Australia


Jonnie and me; Bob (behind me) was done by now.

Vince was into it too!
Fire Dancers



They offer lessons which Jonnie and I are planning to take advantage of in the new year. I will leave the fire dancing however to the professionals.


Sunday, November 23, 2014

"You are an Angel"

checking out the student photography exhibition
That was the secret password phrase that gave us entree into last night's SecretEATS dinner. Not sure what the phrase signified and I forgot to ask. Maybe the host at the door just liked to be told he was an angel.

Once again, the welcome cocktail included some Bombay Sapphire gin - and once again, it was good. Dinner was prepared by Chefs James Diack and Matthew Wright, both from Coobs restaurant on 4th Avenue in Parkhurst (yet another restaurant I have been wanting to try!) Coobs sources their produce from local suppliers and organic farms to create unique modern bistro-style food. Close to 75% of ingredients come from our organic farm ‘Brightside’ in the Magaliesburg.



The secret location? The College of Digital Photography in Saxonwold. I didn't even know there was a local college of digital photography. But now that I do, I am going to take some classes there. And there was a 25% off voucher in the goodie bag - Woohoo!








photo studio turned dining space
clever centerpieces
the brew of the evening was Innis & Gunn ale aged in Scottish whiskey barrels
Radford Dale wines from The Winery of Good Hope
Merlyn M from Piece de Resistance 0835707795





I met a milliner ... or as they say in South Africa, a hatterer.














Vince chats with Chef James Diack

Vince met a chef. Maybe he was the angel in question. Dinner certainly was divine.











And because it was a photography school, they had a photo booth:

I love photo booths!!

The Gardens of Babylonstoren

Like the garden's inspiration - the Hanging Gardens of Babylon - the gardens of the Cape wine estate Babylonstoren are a wonder to behold. The estate is located in Franschhoek in a valley below a mountain called the Tower of Babel (Babylonstoren in Afrikaans) and when the estate was purchased by its present owners six years ago, the gardens and vineyards were in ruins.

garden plan

The new owners turned the gardens over to our tour guide Gundula who has transformed them into a veritable garden of Eden.

Fruit orchards and organic vegetables, herbs and berries, ponds of waterblommetjies. There are chickens raised for their eggs and roaming ducks who act as a natural pesticide by eating the predatory snails. There is an apiary and a hedgehog orphanage too. Paradise!

organic vegetables and herbs for sale
vegetables
espaliered quince fences
close up of the quince

the road to the Tower of Babel
the oldest tree on the property
it is a mulberry tree
interesting way to protect the pears from pests

a variety of berries

peach orchards provide fruit and ...

.. the peach pits are used as gravel for the garden walks

chamomile lawn

This may have been my favorite part of the whole garden. A chamomile lawn!

Gundula encouraged us to take off our shoes and walk around. It was heavenly. I want one.














sleepy time


And next to the chamomile lawn was another lawn made of ...
thyme

prickly pear cacti "orchard" for jams

cactus flower

fresh eggs
bread fruit trees
entrance to the apiary
albino hedgehogs




When Gundula and her crew were first digging up the garden, they found tons of Chinese porcelain buried under the soil. In the 17th century when the Dutch East India Company was at the height of its trading power, they would transport their spices to market in blue and white transfer ware. After the spices were used up, the jars were trashed!
buried treasure

A blue and white ware flower has even become one of the symbols of Babylonstoren. The flower represents the garden. The pipe represents the farm and the bird represents nature.




A serpentine shaped tunnel creates shade for tender plants.









trees provide extra shade too!


Our tour finished up in the Green House Cafe where Gundula served us homemade rose geranium tea and fresh peaches from the orchard.















inside the Green House Cafe
rose geranium
fresh peaches


You can stay overnight at Babylonstoren too. They even have a fully equipped spa that uses Africology products. We loved our visit so much that Vince and I made reservations to stay over in January!















In addition to their casual Green House Cafe, there is the celebrated restaurant Babel.









inside Babel

the spring menu on the wall
Babel sources locally from their own gardens as well as local farmers and dairies.

farm to fork

And let's not forget Babylonstoren produces fine wine too!