A Good Day For Custard!!

Food.MunchkinIt has been really cold lately with temperatures reaching as low as 15C (60F) down here in Toledo, Belize.  We have been freezing and Gnome is walking about with his woolly hat on indoors which makes him look even more gnomish!  Over the last few days, Gnome has been craving hot custard and has requested it on numerous occasions.  A few days ago I attempted to make custard and it went all lumpy and I got rather upset about it because I had used some of our delicious duck eggs.  Yesterday, when we went into Punta Gorda to do some shopping, we even looked for custard powder to buy.  But alas, there were none to be found.  And the Chinese shop-keepers gave me a befuddled look when I asked them if they had any.

Nevertheless, I still felt the need to make hot custard for the Gnome and today I finally succeeded!  We were so happy that we had a double helping of hot custard each:

Hot Custard.
Hot Custard.

The custard turned out silky and smooth…I was soooo pleased.  I found that the trick is to take it off the heat as soon as it starts thickening and to whisk it for another five minutes after removing it from the stove.

Yeah…we are both warm and toasty now.  Custard Crisis is over!!

Soap-making, Selling, Doctoring and Waiting!

Munchkin.WailingToday we did a combination of things; the first thing was making soap which actually spans through the entire day.  We begin by mixing and pouring the soap into molds.  Later in the day, once the soap has hardened and done its magic, Gnome cuts it one by one with a wire implement; this is actually the longest part of the procedure and can take him about 2 to 3 hours to cut a whole batch of soap.  The soaps that we made today are Chocolate Vanilla which involved the addition of essential oils.  At first, you will see that the oils actually cause a lack of uniformity of colour:

Freshly Made Soaps with Essential Oil.
Freshly Made Soaps with Essential Oil.

As the soap ages, the blotchy appearance does fade and it takes on a smooth finish as you can see from the next picture:

Cured Soap.
Cured Soap.

This soap is a custom order and will be hand-stamped one by one over the next few days.  Phew..making soap actually requires time and dedication!

I had to put on my “selling hat” today and show samples of our products to hotel management.  Honestly…I don’t like this part because I feel like I am going through a script and I feel so automatic and robotic.  You can see that I have not been to marketing school and what I would like to say is, “buy my stuff, it’s good ****!”

In between all of that, we saw some patients and did some doctoring.

Also, I had to queue up in a bank and a post office and it was painfully slow!  This was actually the worst part of the day. Remember that every person in front of you is an additional 15 minute wait.  Aaarrghh!!

Lastly, we saw a Fridge on a Pick-up, which is worth a 1000 points!!  Donum Bonum!

Busy Day.

Munchkin.ShoutingWe have had a very busy and productive day on the farm.  I have started to pick pigeon pea (Cajanus cajun) which is an edible legume…

Pigeon Pea Plant with Green Pods.
Pigeon Pea Plant with Green Pods.

I harvested the brown pods as you can see:

Pigeon Pea in Pods.
Pigeon Pea in Pods.

This is the time of the year to pick this bean and if I keep up with the harvesting, the plant usually flowers two or three times making it a very prolific producer.  Once we have gathered all the brown pods over a succession of weeks, we shell them all at the same time with a gnome-mechanised contraption.  The pigeon pea tastes similar to lentils with more of a bite.  Watch out for some recipes later on!!

Gnome.SmilingGnome has been working hard.  He is not in a very talkative mood  right now so I will tell you what he has been up to today:

He has been cleaning the coconut plantation:

Coconut Plantation Mowed.
Coconut Plantation Mowed.

He has been grating coconuts:

Grating Coconut.
Grating Coconut.

Gnome attaches a grater onto the end of a hand drill.  We use the coconut in cooking and the animals like it too.

He has also been busy making a batch of soap today and right now, as I am writing, he is cutting the soap.  No pictures yet…maybe later!!

Basmati Rice with Chinese Sausage and Shiitake Mushrooms.

Munchkin.with.BagI found a 20lb bag of Basmati rice in Belize City and I grabbed it off the shelf quick-smart!  Usually you can only find Basmati rice in pathetic little 400g (not even a full lb!) packets and it is enough for one measly meal.

So, today I cooked Basmati rice with Chinese Sausages and Shiitake mushrooms…you could say that it was Chinese-style.

Chinese Sausage with Basmati Rice.
Chinese Sausage with Basmati Rice.

Basmati rice has a lovely fragrant aroma.  It is so much better than the ubiquitous long grain rice which is found in Belize; I find this rice really gummy and starchy.

I will have more Basmati rice recipes in the future since I have to work through a 20lb bag!

Tropical Italian Sauce with Roselle and Star Fruit.

Munchkin.Eating.BunSince we are in the Tropics it is great idea to use exotic fruits and vegetables in an Italian sauce.  In this recipe, I have added starfruit, roselle (sorrel) and malabar spinach.

Sliced Starfruit.
Sliced Starfruit.
Sorrel Plant with Flowers.
Sorrel Plant with Flowers.

Here is the yummy Tropical Italian Sauce with Pasta…

Tropical Italian Pasta.
Tropical Italian Pasta.

It tastes great and is really easy to make.  For the full recipe click on this link: Tropical Italian Pasta.

Ok guys, have a great Monday and hope you are all eating something yummy for dinner!!

On The Road.

Munchkin.Another.Look Hello Everyone!  We haven’t written for a while because we have been on the road traveling to Belize City and back.

As usual, we played our Pick-em Up Game and we saw 3 fridges this time.  That means 3000 points!!  Did not manage to get photos so you have to trust us on the numbers.  However, here is a freezer which gives us 850 points…

Freezer on a Pick-up.
Freezer on a Pick-up.

We also spotted tractor wheels…

Tractor Wheels.
Tractor Wheels.

And, here is a side view when we passed them…

Two Tractor Wheels.
Two Tractor Wheels.

Tractor Wheels are 500 points each and it was a bonus to over-take the truck and realise that there were two wheels.

Total number of points: 4850.

Here is a nice picture of Hummingbird Highway with the Maya Mountains:

Maya Mountains.
Maya Mountains.

More Gnome and Munchkin stuff next week!

Rorscharch Soap Test and Gnome Messing Around.

Munchkin.Feeling.RightousThe Rorschach Test is an Inkblot test created by a Swiss Psychologist called Hermann Rorscharch.  This test involves the psychological analysis of a subject’s perception of inkblot images.

We have transferred this same concept into our soaps since the swirls and blotches can form distinct images.  Have a look at the following picture…I see mirror images of a toucan.  What do you think…have I just got “Belize” in the brain!!

Chocolate Swirl Artisan Soaps.
Chocolate Swirl Artisan Soaps.

What do you see in the next Rorscharch Soap?  How many birds do you see?!

Artisan Soap.
Artisan Soap.

On a different note, I just wanted to tell you that Gnome hasn’t got round to writing anything this week because he has been messing around with well, gnome stuff.

Gnome.EmbarassedHere are some pictures; maybe he will explain them to you at some point.

Fermenting Bananas.
Fermenting Bananas.
Squeezing something into a bucket.
Squeezing something into a bucket.

As I write this, he is still messing around!  And by the way, that was my nice lilac pillow case!

Gnome says this is a Gravity Press.
Gnome says this is a Gravity Press.

Munchkin.ConfusedGnome now refuses to explain what he is doing!!

Sweet and Sour Roselle Sauce.

Food.MunchkinThe Roselle plant (known as Sorrel in Belize) can keep on producing fruit if you pick it regularly.  I am on my third picking and still drying the sepals for tea.

Fresh Sorrel For Sun-drying.
Fresh Sorrel For Sun-drying.

In my research, I have not seen much culinary use for this hibiscus except for teas, drinks and jams.  Because of this, I have decided to come up with a few ideas of my own.

My first invention is Sweet and Sour Roselle Sauce with Chicken Bites:

Sweet and Sour Roselle Sauce with Chicken Bites.
Sweet and Sour Roselle Sauce with Chicken Bites.
Serving Suggestion 2: Sweet and Sour Roselle Sauce with Chicken Bites.
Serving Suggestion 2: Sweet and Sour Roselle Sauce with Chicken Bites.

The chicken is seasoned with cinnamon and cumin which compliments the subtle berry-tones in the sweet and sour sauce. Wow…look at the colour…it is such a gorgeous red!!

If you are interested, read my full recipe in Sweet and Sour Roselle Sauce with Chicken Bites.

Soap Marathon!!

cropped-cropped-rainbow1.jpgLiving in Paradise sometimes isn’t all it is cracked up to be especially when it starts getting very buggy.  Right now the weather is cloudy and rainy and it is bringing out the biting bugs; the no-see-ums (sand-flies) are the worse because you can hardly see them until you start getting an antsy, itchy feeling.  They are coming out in swarms and as a result, we are staying indoors!  So, this is the perfect time to do a soap-making marathon.

We started off by making our Artisan Chocolate Soap.  This time we opted for a more blotchy appearance as opposed to our usual swirl.  It turned out well and it is amazing how one batch can make such a variation in designs!

Splotchy-Designed Chocolate Soap.
Splotchy-Designed Chocolate Soap

Since some designs can be very unusual, interesting and unique, we have come up with an idea to pick 12 of the best looking soaps and offer them packaged in a Special Edition Silver Tin.  So, when our Apothecary finally opens, look out for our specials.

Playing with the “Doctor” theme, Gnome has come up with an idea to select some of our soaps as Rorschach Soaps because they have that ink-blot look which is associated with this well-known psychological test.  So, keep an eye out for the Rorsharch Gallery devoted to possible interpretations of pictures on our soaps!

An Elixir Tasting For Today.

Liqueur.Tasting.TogetherToday turned out in such a way that we ended up having a Soursop Elixir Tasting between the two of us.  A few days ago, we sold a few bottles of Soursop Elixir to somebody who, we subsequently found out, was a repeat customer who had bought the same Elixir before.

I reprint his comments below to show how we handled the situation (Italics and spacing are mine for easier reading).

I was at your gate last friday to receive an order of soursop liquor/elixer . The road was blocked on the way out of Barranco so we spent the night there were I tasted the elixer on which I fell asleep very fast.

It took me a long time to come to Toledo to be able to find you after several friends talked about this extra ordinary soursop drink. Soursop has been my favorite fruit and drink for years ever since I was in Suriname in the 1960’s.

To tell you the truth I did not taste very much soursop at all and if you had made me taste it before the purchase I would have thought it would be some sort of Grappa.

My questions are now : Did you taste the specific batch? Because other people who had tasted your soursop elixer before asked themselves if you had changed the recipe or that it was filled with something else.

My input was that it was made of the seeds because I did pass out very fast after the consumption of one small shotglass.
Because in drinking a soursop shake years ago in Honduras were they mixed the seeds in the shake I passed out about the same way as I did in Barranco. Later I heard that the seeds are like a sort of Valium/relaxant. Or did you make it of the leaves as a sort of medecine because I don’t taste any soursop fruit.

Looking forward to your reaction!
Kindest Greetings!

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We find this type of feedback very useful as it allows us to review our quality procedures and make sure that we are not missing anything.  I mean, we think our stuff is the best because we make it, it is good to get real opinions in order to make sure that our bias is not clouding our ability to see reality.

Anyway, in response to this, we sat down and “did” a formal tasting of our Soursop Elixir and proceeded to write the following:

Thank you for your feedback, it is nice when somebody gets back to us.

I hope that the following answers some of your questions and clarifies some issues. With specific regards to the Soursop Elixir that you had: the batches; there is only one batch. Making soursop elixir is a huge amount of work compared to some of the other elixirs we make and because of that we only ever made one batch, once we finish drinking or selling it, we will not make any more. This means that if you or anyone had tasted a previous bottling you are now still tasting the same batch. The elixir is stored in 6.5 gallon carboys and sealed until bottling is required. It is allowed to age in the carboy with repeated rackings to clarify it (soursop takes a long time to become clear) every three to six months. The soursop you had at this stage has aged for four years and next year will be bottled as a special 5 year reserve (until it runs out).

I am surprised at your comment that you cannot taste the soursop flavour. The only thing that I can think of saying is that the maturation process has mellowed the in-your-face flavour of fresh soursop and as I am tasting some of the elixir right now I can discern a honey-flowery aroma with hints of butterscotch. The flavour hits the front of the tongue first…sweetness with very mild banana and some passionfruit and then moves to the back with the heat of alcohol and some very subtle bitter, like orange pith. The heat then passes into the belly while the whole tongue is covered quite unctuously. I would not mix it with anything as the flavour is too subtle and I would drink it warm (room temperature) in a brandy snifter in slow sips over half an hour to forty-five minutes. That would be my tasting opinion. I would hazard a guess that other soursop liqueurs you might have tasted are a different drink made with a different technique and maybe not aged as long. I am quite sure that the flavour is different if you tasted an earlier bottling and are comparing but I would add that the flavour has improved and matured with the aging. I am also surprised that you think it tastes like grappa; grappa is a completely different drink, a distillate, usually with the unmistakable flavour of fusil oils still in it, drunk from a small glass in one go. It is really quite the opposite of drinking the soursop elixir.

So, to answer your questions: yes, it is the same batch; yes, we taste it all the time and love it; no, it is not possible that the recipe has been changed because it is the original material. No, seeds were not used and neither were leaves, only ripe pulp with the seeds strained out is in this batch.

Now, the most interesting part that you have mentioned is the elixir’s effect on sleep. I never noticed that before but I will look out for it specifically now that you have mentioned it. I am wondering if the aging process has produced some soporific substance within the chemical reactions that occur during maturation. Thank you specifically for that piece of feedback, we will look into it as such an effect would allow us to use this elixir directly as a natural medicine alternative for insomnia……..

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I hope this is helpful to other people that have tasted our Elixirs and answers some questions that everybody is likely to have.  The important thing is that we got to have a tasting!!  Yum, yum!