KBS Village Show 2009 – photos

The KBS gardening club show happened the other weekend and I’ve just got around to putting up some photos – including several firsts for us!

View the Village Show 2009 set on Flickr.

Here’s a few faves:

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Campervan freecamping on Barra, Hebrides (Western Isles)

EDIT 6th April 2010:

A resident of Barra has been in touch with an update about the freecamping / wild camping situation on Barra and other islands, as campervanning has become more popular. Please read the message and follow the links below for more info:

Since last year when many of the Hebridean islands were overwhelmed with campervans and campers, there have been changes in Barra, as well as in other islands – particularly the Inner Isles.

The area at Barra airport was so damaged, that it has now been fenced off and no vehicles are allowed there at all. That includes locals who also liked to park there and walk on the Traigh.

There have been very positive moves to identify places where people can camp – in particular crofts where crofters are entitled to have up to three vans parked from May to September without needing planning.

Please see these links for Barra, Islay, Tiree, Coll and Colonsay so that you can see the conditions now restricting ‘wild camping':




Original post

We took our campervan up to the Hebrides (Western Isles) in June 2009. There aren’t many campsites so we ended up freecamping. This is where you park up at a spot and stay the night free of charge.

Luckily free camping is generally well accepted on all of the islands in the Hebrides, and we thought that we’d write a brief guide to all of the places we freecamped.

Barra is where we started our trip, taking the ferry from Oban to Castlebay, so that’s where the guide starts.

1. Vatersay Village Hall

This is mentioned in various places on the web and in the guide books. We thought it would be quiet, but it seemed that all the campers off the ferry headed for it! The village hall is located just north of the Vatersay village, on the road as you come from Castlebay to Vatersay – about 10 minutes’ drive. You can’t miss it – just as you see the beautiful white sands Vatersay east and west beaches, the village hall is on the right on a bend on the road.

View the location on our map of Barra free camping.

The hall has a toilet (open 24hrs) and an outside tap. There’s also a picnic bench. There are enough spaces for about 4 campervans in the car park, two opposite, one just a little bit away from the hall, and we did see someone parked up further down the road but this seemed to be on the machair and didn’t look like a proper space.

The walk around Vatersay is lovely, down to south beach past the old standing stone:

Standing stone, Vatersay, Freecamping Hebrides

2. Eoligarry jetty

Eoligarry is at the northern end of Barra, past the airport. There’s a jetty that was in place for the old Eriskay ferry which no longer runs. It’s a beautiful spot with views across to Funday, Eriskay and South Uist. We saw gannets and seals from the beach.

Freecamping at Eoligarry Jetty, Barra, Hebrides

The car park allows around 6 or more campers and there are two 24 hour toilets. There’s also recycling for cans etc.

The jetty is beautiful and there are beach walks down towards the airport or north towards the north of the island. You can also walk inland past fields with nesting corncrakes which you can easily hear in the summer but which aren’t so easy to see; however we were extremely lucky to observe this one making his distinctive call across the other side of a field:

Corncrake, Eoligarry, Barra, Hebrides

There’s also Cille Barra with a replica of the Kilbarr stone (the original of which dates back to the 9th century), and the peak of Ben Eoligarry.

Kilbarr Stone (replica), Cille Barra, Freecamping Hebrides

3. Barra Airport (Cockleshell Bay)

As per the message above, please don’t consider camping here. The area is fenced off.

All these places are marked on our map of freecamping on Barra on Google maps.

We have more pictures of Barra and freecamping on other parts of the Hebrides.

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June photos

Here’s some of Becs and Paul’s most recent photos:

Paul - pelvis

Paul - jellyfish

Paul - wavelet

Becs - cello B&W

Becs - mushrooms

Becs - Oxford limestone

Becs - leaf close up

Becs - aubergine plant

Becs - poppy

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Halloumi kebabs in a tikka marinade

I made this recipe up after seeing “halloumi kibi” on The Gate’s menu. I googled some tikka recipes to find one that sounded right and worked out the rest.

Halloumi kebabs in a tikka marinade

The final result

It’s delicious – enjoy!

Ingredients

For the kebabs

  • Two large courgettes
  • One red onion
  • One red pepper
  • 250g pack of halloumi

For the marinade

  • 1 1/2 tsp mustard seeds
  • 1 tsp cumin seeds
  • 1 tsp coriander seeds
  • 1/2 tsp chilli flakes
  • 2 cloves garlic, peeled
  • a thumb-sized piece of fresh ginger, roughly chopped
  • a pinch sea salt
  • 1 tbsp garam masala
  • 1/2 tsp ground tumeric
  • 100ml natural yoghurt

For the dressing

  • 250ml natural yoghurt
  • Juice of a lemon

First, make the marinade. Whizz up all the ingredients together; I used a HC Chopper attachment for the Braun handblenders.

Tikka sauce

How the tikka sauce looks

Then slice the halloumi whichever way you like so it ends up in appx 2cm by 2cm pieces about 0.5cm thick. Dab the marinade over the halloumi with a pastry brush.

Slice the courgettes into rounds about 1cm thick. Chop the red onion roughly so you end up with 2cm by 2cm or so pieces that are at least 3 layers thick. Roughly chop the pepper. Brush a griddle pan with vegetable oil and griddle the courgettes, onion and pepper, in batches if necessary. When all are nicely charred, brush on the tikka marinade and cook for a further few minutes.

Nicely charred vegetables

This is what I call nicely charred

Cook the marinaded halloumi in a frying pan, flipping so both sides are nicely browned.

Assemble the kebabs on barbeque skewers and serve immediately. Drizzle with yoghurt and lemon juice, or let your guests do this themselves. Great with salad, tabbouleh/couscous.

Serves: 2 as a main or 3-4 as a starter

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Pineapple, fig and ginger chutney

We’ve done a couple of batches of this, and are giving a few jars as Christmas presents. It’s gorgeous, especially with strongly flavoured cheeses such as Stilton, hard goats’ cheeses (such as the Ribblesdale “Superior Goats”, Northumberland Cheese Co.’s Elsdon or Brinkburn, cheddar.

The original recipe was from BBC Good Food. I’ve adapted it to include some cider :-)

Ingredients

  • 1 large pineapple (around 1kg ish), peeled/cored and roughly chopped
  • 1 red onion, peeled and finely chopped
  • One or two large cooking apples (about 500g total), peeled/cored and chopped
  • 140g of “ready to eat” figs, chopped
  • 5cm of fresh ginger, grated
  • 2 tsp of mustard seeds
  • 1/2 tsp of grated nutmeg
  • 1 tsp of salt
  • 350ml cider vinegar
  • 150ml dry cider (we used Strongbow but you might like a more traditional cider)
  • 400g demerara sugar
  1. Put the pineapple chunks in a blender and pulse blend until a mixture of puree and small cubes.
  2. Place in a large pan with the apples, figs, onion, ginger, spices, salt, cider and cider vinegar.
  3. Bring to the boil and cook fairly fiercely, stirring, until the apple chunks break down.
  4. Add the sugar and stir in.
  5. Cook, stirring frequently, for another 30mins or so until the chutney is “gloopy”. Pour into sterilised jars (you’ll need about 5 x 450g jars), seal, cool and then chill in the fridge.
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Stevie Wonder at the NIA

Went went to see Stevie Wonder at the NIA on Saturday. We’re both huge fans and it was the first time we’d seen him live. He didn’t disappoint – he and the band kicked off about 8:30 and played right through to 10:45. Two and a quarter hours of music – some great versions of songs, a couple we hadn’t heard before, and lots of banter with the audience. Great stuff!!

This a brief snippet of Higher Ground:

Here’s a clip of the bit where the band have come down to the front of the stage, pretending that they might go off. The audience start to make a lot of noise and they break into an acapella of Happy Birthday.

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Green tomato chutney

We had masses of green tomatoes this year. Becs made jam, and I made some green tomato chutney. Can’t remember where I got the recipe from but this tastes amazing!

Ingredients
2.25kg (ish) green tomatoes
500g onions
25g salt
250g raisins
250g sultanas
25g fresh ginger
4 red chillies
500g demerara sugar
500ml pickling vinegar

  1. Wash and finely chop the tomatoes, cutting out the hard bit where the stalk joins. Peel and finely chop the onions.
  2. Place the two together in a bowl, sprinkle with the salt and leave for at least an hour; ideally overnight.
  3. Bring vinegar and sugar to the boil.
  4. Roughly chop the raisins and sultanas.
  5. Add tomatoes and onion mix, with the raisins and sultanas. Put in the ginger (just as a big lump – I put it in straight from the freezer where I keep ginger) and the chillies (whole is fine – you will fish them out later).
  6. Bringback to the boil, then reduce to a simmer. Simmer, stirring occasionally, for an hour or so with the lid off.
  7. Pour into hot sterilized jars and seal. Leave in the fridge for at least a few weeks for the taste to develop.

Great with cheese!

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Photos – Portugal

Snakes at Pena Here’s photos from our trip to Portugal to see Dan, Pilar, Alex and Marco in September this year.

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Aubergines in honey and lemon

This is another Lebanese-style dish that I’ve been making for a few years but not got around to posting. Even if you don’t like aubergines, you’ll like this as the cooking removes the chewy texture you tend to associate with aubergines.

I really like it cold the day after, as the flavours come out even more. Perfect with pitta, hummous, tabbouleh.

Ingredients:

  • 2 large aubergines, firm skinned as you can get
  • 2 garlic cloves, crushed or chopped
  • 2in fresh root ginger, grated (I keep the ginger in the freezer; it’s easy to grate from frozen)
  • 1 tbsp ground cumin
  • Chilli powder or half a red chilli, chopped
  • 6 tbsp clear honey
  • Juice of a lemon
  • 1/4 pint hot water
  • Olive oil, salt

Peel and then slice the aubergines into 1cm (ish) slices. Salt and grill (in batches if necessary) until very brown on both sides. Don’t worry if they char a bit – it adds to the flavour.

In a big frying pan, flash fry the garlic for 30seconds in olive oil. Add the aubergines (again, in batches if necessary), cumin, ginger, water, honey, lemon juice and chilli (if required). Tip: mix the honey, water, lemon, ginger and cumin whilst the aubergines are cooking. Bring to the boil and then simmer for about 10mins. If you are doing batches, extract the first batch from the sauce to a serving dish, and then add the next batch. The sauce should end up being like a thin gravy in consistency – add more hot water if required.

This recipe was inspired by Claudia Roden’s Tamarind and Saffron cookbook (highly recommended).

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Mended spiderwebs

Need to see pics; words not enough:

http://www.ninakatchadourian.com/uninvitedcollaborations/spiderwebs.php

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