Friday, 18 July 2025

Kiwi Recipe

 This is a question for NZers who read my blog.

Back in the 60s my mother made a marvellous curry.  Chicken, lamb or beef curry?  I can't remember.

She served it with rice of course and side dishes of dessicated coconut and banana.

It must have been quite exotic back then. It was certainly a family favourite.


I have the *Edmonds cookery book and there's a curry recipe there.  My old book, 1982 and falling to pieces, has a recipe for lamb or beef curry.

It has..... 

Meat

Dripping

Onion

Apple chopped 

Flour for thickening 

Curry powder 

Chutney 

OXO beef cube

And I've made it over the years trying to get the right taste by adding

Tomatoes

Marmalade or Apricot jam

Orange rind and

1 tablespoon of vinegar

I've never served it with coconut and banana because I thought my greek family would turn up their noses.  

My brothers Richard, Paul and Tony maybe have something to add.

I have many of her recipes books but none of them have the authentic recipe we all loved.

Nowadays it would be made with coconut milk, tamarind and heavens what else.  We want the old classic.

I'm really interested to see if anyone has something similar.  

*This cookery book was first printed in 1956.  It's still being updated and I now have a newer version. Thanks to kiwi visitors.

It's a favourite kiwi cookery book which I'm sure most NZ cooks will have in their kitchen. 

My daughters have copies too and we all use it. 




Monday, 14 July 2025

Stag Moon Rising

 A full moon party

The grandsons did a change of lock on our car. It's handy having mechanics in the family. The electronic locking system has been faulty for months.  The doors were fixed and we hoped that included the boot. It didn't.  Last week we filled the boot with 6 packs of water, got home and the damn thing would not open. We were in the middle of a heatwave and couldn't leave them there. Down came the back seats and we dragged them out.

K immediately ordered a new lock.  He wasn't going to trust the garage where the other work was done. 

Grandsons climbed in over the back seats and opened the boot, unscrewed, replaced, and sat down for a beer. Problem solved.

Thanks kiddos. 

More grandchildren arrived and Papous began bbqing.  More beers, lots of tzatziki, and Pitta bread. 

Daughter Elli and husband turned up with a bottle of Marlborough Sauv Blanc. 

She's an accountant , a good one. She has most of the island's english expats as clients and they know what to bring her when she sorts out their tax problems.

Elli and I are very happy and toast them as we drink.  This bottle was full of bold fruitiness.

We ate on our terrace, and watched the moon rise above the olive groves around Poseidon's temple 


Full moon rising


I finally remembered to give Jamie the marshmallow easter eggs our kiwi family had brought for him.  Reluctantly he let Elli and I have 1 or 2.  OMG.  The taste of Easter's passed 
They're a NZ speciality and tasted exactly as I remembered them from my childhood.
That's a street light behind him, not the moon



Full moon photos 
The Stag moon high over Poros town


Sunset the following night


2 nights later it was still a full moon and it appeared  a brilliant orange, making a moonlight pathway  over the sea

Thanks everyone for taking and sending me photos. I've trained them well.  Take photos of everything and send them to Nana for her blog.





Friday, 11 July 2025

Clearing the Forest

 A crew of municipal workers have trimmed all the tall tinder-dry grass on road sides.  The grass verges of our road were  so long it had almost narrowed to one way.

This year there is a gang of  eco cleaners cutting low branches up in the forest and clearing all the dry vegetation underneath.  They are always busy as we pass by and it looks as though they're doing a good job, trimming, cutting and hauling it away


The branches are hauled to the side of the road and this tractor comes along with a  chipper attached to its front and chops them all up into chips. The chips are piled up and taken away. 
I wonder what they do with them.  A huge compost pile?  I thought of going up and taking a bag or 2 for my garden but it was just too hot. 


All the undergrowth has been cleared

They've finished our area and are now clearing the top of the island where there's dense pine forest

Fire patrols by the Navy Base and volunteers are being carried out all through the night.  The fire brigade has a fire engine parked in our area during the day and fire trucks patrol  at night. 


On days of searing heat and high winds there is a road block where the fire risk is greater.  People are allowed to go up our mountain as far as the rural Paradise Taverna.. Further out are a few isolated houses, like ours, olive groves, a few rundown sheds for goats and pine forest.  Residents are allowed in and out but names and number plates are noted.

Everyone else, including tourists wanting to go down to the beach are turned back. 




Wednesday, 9 July 2025

Beside the sea



A social morning after a chance meeting with neighbours in the supermarket.  They were going for a beer and invited us along.   Summertime dining. Simple dishes eaten under shady trees with hopefully a light breeze.  Enough to rustle the leaves and ruffle the dark blue sea.



A long established family taverna
You can still go in and choose your meal from the trays of traditional dishes on display in the kitchen



The setting
Tables right on the sea


K with our neighbours, 86 year old Vaso and her son Vangelis
This is Vaso's favourite place to eat, enjoy a beer and smoke a cigarette or 2


K and I shared grilled sardines

Vaso likes baked aubergine with tomatoes and onion and a pile of fries
Nice and soft on old gums lol



One of the 4 (probably more) taverna cats.  We couldn't feed them because the fish bones, and most leftovers, leave an oily stain on the decking.  The owner looks after them

We take a chilly bin (eskie, ice box) with a couple of ice packs when we do serious shopping in the summer. We never know who we will meet and  shopping does not last long in this heat, and I'm not talking about icecream.   A bag of grated cheese has melted back into a block by the time we reach home. That's without stopping for a coffee or a chat. 

We are in the middle of a heatwave again but it's supposed to be a short one. 3 or 4 days. 













Sunday, 6 July 2025

Summer Lunching

A birthday lunch with friends who speak English. Do kiwis speak the King's eengleesh?  Do Americans? 
Mr Google says we both speak an English dialect.  We share a common foundation but each country has it's own unique characteristics.
Anyway, we were an international company for lunch.  England, NZ, USofA and Greece.



The setting
Looking back towards the island
It was a little windy and the sea rather choppy.  The breeze was a welcome relief from the scorching heat of previous days


Plaka beach
Local children enjoying the small waves


Here we are.  Except me.  I forgot to get the young lad who served us to take a photo. I also forgot to take a photo of the 2 pooches Winnie and Choco.   We were too busy eating and talking.
K soon moved over to the table next door to talk with some greek friends.
Our english conversation got a bit too fast and colloquial for him to keep up.
We covered everything from local gossip, what the ex-pat community are up to,  memories from years gone by, buying and building houses, dogs and other animals. 


Tomato and zucchini fritters with a yoghurt dip
Lots of fried potatoes (chips) and the ubiquitous Greek salad

Just a little of the delicious food served here at the Plaka Beach taverna.  Known to locals, not on the tourist map. 
They let K and I choose  plates of different food to share.  Enough to fill  the table, our tummies and some to take home. We finished off with cold karpuzi (watermelon). 
This was the 3rd 'party' to celebrate friend Jan's birthday.  She was working on her birthday this year, helping the Danish vets neuter a hundred stray cats.  That was over a month again.
The, possibly last, celebration for this year's birthday was thanks to good friends Steve and Judy who are far away in England.   A thousand thanks you two.
I always enjoy myself immensely when I'm with a few English speakers, though quite a few times I grasp for the right word. They understand. 



Fava - pureed yellow split peas
Pease pudding (cold) mixed with lots of olive oil and chopped onions. 

You can be sure when you let a greek order that you'll have a good variety of traditional food and lots of it



 


Friday, 4 July 2025

Grand-kids

 We had a night out with some of the family and all the grandkids.  We took them down to the Navy beach taverna/canteen where we can all eat and drink at subsidised prices.

It was a most enjoyable evening.  Naturally enough.  All the 'kids' get on well and there's a lot of laughter.  They're all on the island for the summer but it's difficult getting them together.  Most have summer jobs.  Luli is doing summer lessons to get ready for next years University exams.  



The setting.  Tables beside the sea with a view of the lights of Askeli Bay opposite



The group photo


The aftermath 
We managed to chow through 40 kalamakia, chicken and pork on a skewer, a dozen kebabs (spicy mincemeat on a skewer) a couple of salads and lots of tzatziki and fried potatoes.  Jamie is the tzatziki king, he always manages to finish one bowl of it on his own


The family


Dear Daughter Elli and me (or 'I')



Jamie, the Tzatziki King, with his Mum
In a squirmy moment......but he loves his Mum.  Of course


Best friends
Cousins George and Luli
The oldest and the youngest


George and BF Dimitri enjoying a cold Alpha or 2 or 3 or .....



Kostas and one of my lovely sons-in-law Kyriakos


Poppi and sister Nels


They always have to pull a face
Even though I yell at them and tell them to 'Close your mouth for goodness sake!!!!  The wind will change and you'll stay like that forever'.  
So we were once told by our parents 


Tuesday, 1 July 2025

Fishin the Med

 Where's the net..... 



The Med is full of fish 
Not just those
 farmed bass and bream
Dip your feet in to get them nibbled


Poros from the mainland 
The wind turbines are on the mainland hills. 
This shows the strait, the small island in front and the bigger island spreading out in the background


The narrow strait which divides Poros island from the Peloponnese
There's a line of water taxis waiting to take you across