Margaret Thatcher
READING:
After I finished reading Baking Cakes in
It is set in grandchildren. Pius,a man of retirement age, has been appointed as Special Consultant to KIST a new university which has been established in the city. They are living in a compound of flats where the other residents are also ex-pats employed by aid agencies and non-governmental organizations. As Angel says “You know how it is when a war is over, dollars begin to fall like rain from the sky and everyone from outside rushes in to collect them.”
Angel loves cooking and baking, and decides to set up a cake baking business. She turns out cakes to celebrate anniversaries, weddings, christenings, a homecoming, an engagement, an escape, an inspiration, and a rising up. With each cake, the reader learns more about life in
Priding herself on her professionalism as a businesswoman, Angel copes with raising her grandchildren, ethical dilemmas with her clients, and the indignities of the menopause. Slowly Angel’s own family life is revealed, and how the scourge of AIDs has devastated African society.
At first glance this book might seem to be of the same genre as Alexander McCall Smith’s books about Mma Ramotswe and her 1st Ladies Detective Agency, but Gaile Parkin has created an endearing heroine and yet doesn’t shy away from depicting the problems besetting the continent, poverty, female circumcision, HIV/Aids and corruption, but these are all handled with delicacy and woven into the lives of real people in a way that makes it possible for the reader to enjoy the book as an entertainment whilst at the same time being made to think.
If you like eating cake, feisty women and anything about
Rated 5*
RANTING:
Do we know what propaganda this Government is disseminating in our schools? I think not. This week it has come to light that a fairly new Government department - the Equalities Office established in 2007 under the leadership of Harriet Harman - has produced a "fact" sheet for schools ( which we taxpayers have funded) entitled 'Women In Power: Milestones'. It also features on their website. It has got me absolutely outraged, and wondering what else is being twisted to fit a Labour-view of history.
Whatever your view of her may be, you must agree that Margaret Thatcher
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The other glaring omission from the Women in Power list is Shirley Williams,
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I never thought I'd be doing this, but find myself chanting
Maggie, Maggie, Maggie - In, In, In.
and I urge you all to join me.
RECIPE:
Last night two girlfriends and I went to see the movie 'Julie & Julia' starring Meryl Streep as Julia Childs, and we thoroughly enjoyed it. Mind you with food featuring so much on screen we all came out of the cinema ravenously hungry and promptly dived into a nearby restaurant where we wolfed down risotto! Tomorrow I have 10 for dinner, and thinking of the rich French cooking that Julia Childs promoted I have decided to make some pre-dinner canapes which are in that style as a little homage to the great lady. A friend gave me the recipe a year or so ago after I had them at a dinner she
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CASSIE'S CANAPES
First of all you have to go shopping and buy the following items which will all keep for ages in your store cupboard:
A packet of Rahms Mini Croustades - stocked at Waitrose, Sainsburys and most good food shops.
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Ten minutes before your guests arrive pre-heat the oven to 180 C.
Set the mini croustades out on a baking tray and break one quail's egg into each one. Top each with a tiny blob of Hollandaise and bake in the oven for approximately 4 minutes (check that the egg white has cooked).
Put another small blob of Hollandaise on each canape and then a blob of lumpfish roe to garnish.
Serve whilst still warm. Yum.
4 comments:
Glad you are back!!! I love the rant. We get that kind of idiocy over here all the time. I remember the history text that gave FDR a paragraph and Marilyn Monroe a full page and a half (or something outrageous like that, it has been a while.)
I can't wait to read the book - someone else told me about it a while back but I'd forgotten the name.
I agree about Maggie Thatcher - we all hated her at the time, but at least she was memorable and deserves to feature in history books, unlike subsequent prime ministers, whose names I probably will have forgotten in a few years time.
The Gaile Parkin book looks good, must look out for that one. I totally agree re Women In Power. The sort of nauseating, mean-minded partisanship that makes the Labour Government more and more unpopular. Of course Maggie and Shirley Williams should be in the list. The latter of course not only helped found the SDP but has held any number of influential public positions. Among other things, she is a professor at Harvard and has helped draft constitutions for Russia, the Ukraine and South Africa.
The Gaile Parkin book sounds really good, I did my undergraduate dissertation on the Rwandan genocide and so like all fiction and non-fiction books related to the subject. Thanks for the review.
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