Monday, 28 January 2013

Your own Eco-friendly earthworm farm in your apartment!

If you haven't visited http://www.bestforreading.com yet, you are missing out on great deals and thousands of books and other items at discounted prices! Remember to do your on line purchases at http://www.bestforreading.com.

I am reading a very interesting book at the moment. A friend popped it into my hands last Friday. I am reading another book, but while I was waiting for my friend, I started reading and since then I cannot put the book down. It is called "Spanner in works" by Pat Fahrenfort and published by Umuzi.

It is the life story of a young girl of mixed race who had to leave school at an early age to supplement the household income  during the apartheid years. She managed to get a job at a printer company here in Cape Town. Eventually she worked herself up through shear determination and self study from a floor worker to the corridors of power in South Africa.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apartheid_in_South_Africa   

"South Africa's negotiated transition to democracy is heralded as a miracle the world over. Fahrenfort's story captures the daily struggles by ordinary working class people who had to negotiate their way through an unforgiving system" - Cyril Ramaphosa. Deputy leader of the ANC.

This makes great reading!

I always wanted an earthworm farm, but to spend about a R1000/$80 to $90, was ridiculously expensive. I decided to improvise my own. At the end of the day it cost me less than R100/$9. If you use a smaller container, it can even be cheaper. The advantage of this is that if you are living in an apartment, you can even keep it in your kitchen as it is odourless. Your main problem is to get hold of only a few earthworms. I started off  with only a few and now I have a few hundred, if not thousand. I will explain step by step how to build your own container.

I bought two air vents from my local hardware store and placed it on either side of the plastic container

The placing of the vents is near the top. I have made a hole by cutting out an area slightly smaller than the vent itself  and screwed the vent on. 

My container, but you can even use an old paint drum. It all depends on your needs!  

Odourless and the healthy contents.

I have also placed two vents at the bottom. This is very important as you want to catch the liquid  in a container. This liquid is the actual ingredient you need to fertilise your plants in your house. This is odourless as well!

I use any kitchen scraps as long as it is fresh. DO NOT use cooked food, onion or range peels as this is too acid. You can however, use teabags, egg shells, peels of  anything as long as it is fresh and not cooked.  If your fruit or vegetables goes off, you can use this as well. Use wet egg holders (the card board type) and newspapers. Wet it before tearing up and placing it in the container. Don't throw your pet's hair away after you have brushed it. Use this as well.    

Healthy earthworms

Happy earth worm farming. It gives one so much fun!

My winning recipe for the week will be Old Fashioned Chicken Pie from the Cape 

I large chopped onion
30 ml cooking oil (two dessert spoons)
350 g chopped mushrooms
2.5 kg raw chicken portions
2.5 ml (1/4 t) mace
2 bay leaves
2 cassia sticks
6 cloves 
12 black pepper corns
5 ml salt (1 t)
little bit of powder nutmeg
250 ml ( 1 cup) chicken stock (you can use the blocks you buy)
250 ml white wine

Sweat the onions in the cooking oil. Add mushrooms and stir fry. Take out. Fry chicken in same pot until brown . add onions and mushroom. Add all spices, the stock as well as the wine. Cook until meat is tender and remove bones. Cut meat smaller if it did not cook finely. 

15 ml sago
Luke warm water to cover
1 egg yolk
Juice of one lemon
30 ml (2 dessert spoons) brandy

Soak sago in water until it swells. Add to chicken. Cook slowly until sag appears glassy. Take pot from stove. Mix egg yolk, brandy and lemon juice add to chicken and place chicken in basted dish.

Optional:

4 thin pieces ham, diced
2 hard boiled  eggs
Puff pastry
Another egg yolk
15 ml (1 dessert spoon) milk.

Place ham over chicken,  followed by sliced hard boiled eggs
Place puff pastry over dish. You can make your own, but the bought one is as good. Press sides firmly down. Cut extra pieces off. Make holes in pastry for steam to escape. 

Mix egg yolk and milk and paint it over pastry. Bake for 10 min at 200 c and then for a further 30 minutes at  180 c until golden brown.

Home made chicken pie


Enjoy! recipe from "die groot Boerkosboek" by Dine van Zyl; ISBN 978-0-620-50278-8

Remember, for other wonderful recipe books, to visit http://www.bestforreading.com           





Sunday, 20 January 2013

The Bushman Quiver

I have updated http://www.bestforreading.com again last week since I have last written my blog. Under the pet section I not only have added new books, but wonderful pet products as well. Have a look at this book which is available at http://www.bestforreading.com  


Cats Can't Shoot: A Pru Marlowe Pet Noir (Pru Marlowe Pet Mysteries) [Paperback]


Clea Simon (Author) Available at $14.36.



Book Description

April 3, 2012 Pru Marlowe Pet Mysteries


When Pru Marlowe gets the call that there's been a cat shooting, she's furious. Animal brutality is the one thing that this tough animal psychic won't stand for, and in her role as a behaviourist she's determined to care for the traumatised pet. But when Pru finds out that the catdidthe shooting - accidentally setting off a rare duelling pistol - she realises something else is going on. Could the white Persian really have killed her owner - or did the whole bloody mess have something to do with that pricey collectible? With the white cat turning a deaf ear to her questions, Pru must tune in to Beauville's other pampered residents - from the dead man's elite social set to their equally spoiled pets - and learn the truth before her ex, a former New York cop, gets too close. In a world where value is determined by a price tag, only Pru Marlowe and her trusty tabby Wallis can figure out if this was a case of feline felony - or if some human has set the Persian up to be the ultimate cat's paw.

Visit http://www.bestforreading.com for more books and products!

By know my regular readers would have noticed where my interests lay and over the past weekend, when I was cleaning out my cupboards, I came upon this original quiver set. I obtained this many years ago when I  was a student. In those years I went touring in South West Africa, known today as Namibia.

Map of Namibia

While I was visiting friends in Thsumeb (his town you will find in the north on the above map), a person who was working in the Tsumkwe area with Bushman tribes gave me a quiver. 

This link will give you an idea of Tsumkwe; http://www.namibian.org/travel/namibia/tsumkwe.html

A short video on Bushman: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4sjbIKDw7Xw

My Quiver

The quiver itself is made from bark. This hollow inside and bound together with small strips of sinew. The ends are hide which has been dried on the bark. 

An indication of the inside of the quiver

The quiver with the sling. The sling is made from hide as well

Here you can clearly see the sinew strips  that was used to bound the bark together 

The dried hide

Four arrows. The arrow consists out of  three parts as well. The shaft,  a connection and the  arrow itself.  Each part is linked with small strips of sinew and bound around the shaft or arrow point. 

The front part of the arrow. This pulls out of the shaft when an animal has been shot and  is running through the bush. Only the arrow point remains in the animal.

The three parts with the metal arrow at the bottom

Close-up

The middle section

A fire stick. This made out of a light wood and the shaft at the top is turned by hand until the wood starts burning due to friction.  

Poison. This heated up and smeared on the arrow. The poison is the dark spot in the middle.
http://www.detectivekubu.com/Mantis/The_dreaded_Bushman_poisons.html

The sticks to make fire with .  A close-up view

My recipe of the week is very traditional Afrikaans recipe called  Vetkoek (Directly translated Fat cake)  

1 cup cake flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 beaten egg
1/2 cup water
Oil for frying

Mix all the dry ingredients together. Mix the egg and the water and add it to the dry ingredients. it must form a soft dough! Pour just enough oil in a pan and heat oil to hot. Fry dessert spoons of dough both sides until golden brown. You can fill it with any type of filling, but it is delicious with butter and jam.
It freezes very well.



.  

Sunday, 13 January 2013

The white tribe from Africa

Of course I have updated my website, http://www.bestforreading.com  since I have last written my blog. I try to update http://www.bestforreading.com as often as possible to keep up to date with new publications and to inform you of HOT NEW RELEASES. 

Scroll through my website at http://www.bestforreading.com. Not only do I have books on sale, but travel packages, discount furniture and many more. Anything under the sun is available at http://www.bestforreading.com.

I am an African, a white African and belongs to the only White Tribe in Africa. I am of mixed European heritage, but the person whose surname I am carrying today arrived in this country from Leipzig in Germany.       


My forefather arrived in Cape Town aboard the Borsselen in 1723. This ship belonged to the Dutch East Indian Company (DEIC), who ruled the Cape Colony at that time. To find out more about the DEIC, read more in this link; http://www.sahistory.org.za/topic/dutch-east-india-company-deicvoc. In 1725 my forefather received citizenship in the Cape Colony and settled in Drakenstein Valley (Dragon) near Paarl.

By 1727 he owned a horse, a slave (http://www.sahistory.org.za/south-africa-1652-1806/history-slavery-and-early-colonisation-sa) and a weapon. Most likely an old musket gun of some sorts. 

Although not my forefather from 1723, this is a photo of my grandfather  (top right) and my great  grandparents. 

I hope you click on all the links given. I think it gives a wonderful insight of another world out there. A world you can discover at http//www.bestforreading.com.... 

My book choice of the week taken from my website at http://www.bestforreading.com is a historical book   



The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies? [Hardcover]

Jared Diamond (Author)
Book Description
December 31, 2012

Most of us take for granted the features of our modern society, from air travel and telecommunications to literacy and obesity. Yet for nearly all of its six million years of existence, human society had none of these things. While the gulf that divides us from our primitive ancestors may seem unbridgeable wide, we can glimpse much of our former lifestyle in those largely traditional societies still or recently in existence. Societies like those of the New Guinea Highlanders remind us that it was only yesterday—in evolutionary time—when everything changed and that we moderns still possess bodies and social practices often better adapted to traditional than to modern conditions.

The World Until Yesterday provides a mesmerising firsthand picture of the human past as it had been for millions of years—a past that has mostly vanished—and considers what the differences between that past and our present mean for our lives today.
This is Jared Diamond’s most personal book to date, as he draws extensively from his decades of field work in the Pacific islands, as well as evidence from Inuit, Amazonian Indians, Kalahari San people, and others. Diamond doesn’t romanticise traditional societies—after all, we are shocked by some of their practices—but he finds that their solutions to universal human problems such as child rearing, elder care, dispute resolution, risk, and physical fitness have much to teach us. A characteristically provocative, enlightening, and entertaining book, The World Until Yesterday will be essential and delightful reading.



My recipe of the week is a different version of the sauce bean recipe I posted last week


The ideal bean for this recipe is the black-eyed bean, also known as the black-eyed pea.This popular bean was most probably first cultivated in West Africa, but these days it can be found in many cuisines across the world. There are many beliefs and rituals associated with the black-eyed bean but the most common one is that eating black-eyed beans on New Year will bring prosperity and good luck. 


I am not a very superstitious person, but I do know that replacing some of your meals with a vegetarian bean option will not only benefit you health wise, but you will save a whack on groceries every week and that is a step in the right direction towards prosperity.



Curry Beans

serves 6 



Ingredients

1 x 500 gr dry black- eyed beans

1 tbsp vegetable oil

1 medium onion - chopped

2 cloves garlic - chopped

1 heaped tbsp curry powder
2 tsp ground turmeric
1tsp fennel seeds
1tsp gara masala
1 tbsp sugar
2 tbsp white vinegar
water
1x sachet tomato paste
salt
125ml coconut milk - optional 



Heat the oil in a heavy based pot and add the onion, garlic and all the spices. Stir for a couple of minutes until the onion becomes translucent and the slightly browned. Add the beans and cover with water. NO SALT ( the salt will prevent the beans from softening). Cook the beans until they are soft, about 40 minutes, adding boiling water if needed. After about 30 minutes, take a bean from the pot and press between your fingers, if it is soft, reduce the cooking time, if not keep cooking. What you want is a pot of soft, but not mush beans with a little liquid. Now add the tomato paste, salt, sugar and vinegar and cook for another 3-5 minutes. Taste and adjust to your liking, adding more sugar or more vinegar as required. The vinegar will thicken the beans slightly, but if you feel your beans are too watery, take a potato masher and mash some of the beans, it will help thicken the beans some more.. Add the coconut milk if you are using it.




This is an exceptional enjoyable meal and can be eaten as is or as a complement to a main meal such as a barbecue!

Visit http://bestforreading.com  for more recipe ideas! 























         

Sunday, 6 January 2013

The Fire, potjiekos (small pot food) and no communication

Have you managed to look at my site, http://www.bestforreading.com to have a look at all the hot new releases? A few books will only be released tomorrow, 8 January 2013. And while we are on the subject of 2013; may you all have a positive, awe-inspiring New Year. Hey, look at the bright side of things, we survived 21 December 2012 when the world was meant to come to an end according to the Mayan calender. According to some this was a "mushroom" trip from certain New Age individuals!


For those of you who have been waiting for my post last week, just to let you know that I did not experience  a "writer's block". I  had a long standing friend visiting from Beijing here. He invited me to stay for a few days at his holiday home in Uilenkraalsmond (the mouth of the owl), a holiday resort just past Gansbaai (Goose Bay), but there is no translation in English. http://uilenkraalsmond.co.za/

Here are a few photo's.
On the beach with Uilenkraalsmond in the  background


The Beach
The tranquil sea


My friend's holiday house. 



Inside, the lounge area
Under water. some or other sea plant.


I have left Cape Town on Friday morning, 28 December 2012 as I was meant to meet him in Hermanus, the capital of the Whale Watching Route. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermanus. We met for breakfast and while eating, we noticed smoke bulging from the mountain peaks. I must mention that there was a strong North Western wind blowing. As I drove out of Hermanus towards Stanford on route to Uilenkraalsmond, I could see that the wind will force the flames down towards the lower slopes. On Saturday morning we woke up with no electricity, mobile reception or Internet. This was down for nearly two whole days. We being South African Afrikaners are not perturbed by this and made a fire outside in the fire place and cooked food on the fire in a cast iron pot. this is called potjiekos (food in a pot). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potjiekos This is my reason why I did not post my regular blog on the Monday morning. When I returned to Cape Town on Tuesday, I could understand while all communications and power was down. Have a look at this link. http://www.hermanustimes.co.za/982/media/photogallery/stanford-fire   

As mentioned before, I have uploaded Hot New Releases  on my website http://www.bestforreading.com. Have look at this wonderful book!

The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies? [Hardcover]


Jared Diamond (Author)



Book Description

December 31, 2012
Most of us take for granted the features of our modern society, from air travel and telecommunications to literacy and obesity. Yet for nearly all of its six million years of existence, human society had none of these things. While the gulf that divides us from our primitive ancestors may seem unbridgeably wide, we can glimpse much of our former lifestyle in those largely traditional societies still or recently in existence. Societies like those of the New Guinea Highlanders remind us that it was only yesterday—in evolutionary time—when everything changed and that we moderns still possess bodies and social practices often better adapted to traditional than to modern conditions.

The World Until Yesterday provides a  mesmerizing firsthand picture of the human past as it had been for millions of years—a past that has mostly vanished—and considers what the differences between that past and our present mean for our lives today.
This is Jared Diamond’s most personal book to date, as he draws extensively from his decades of field work in the Pacific islands, as well as evidence from Inuit, Amazonian Indians, Kalahari San people, and others. Diamond doesn’t romanticise traditional societies—after all, we are shocked by some of their practices—but he finds that their solutions to universal human problems such as child rearing, elder care, dispute resolution, risk, and physical fitness have much to teach us. A characteristically provocative, enlightening, and entertaining book, The World Until Yesterday will be essential and delightful reading.

Happy reading and visit http://bestforreading.com