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Monday, February 28, 2022

Strange Tastes To Tackle: tricks when trying unfamiliar Fresh Fruit, Yogurt, Indian Food, Chinese Salted Duck Egg

 


I have found foods which I love. Even though I didn't like all of them at first bite. Such as yogurt.

Yogurt

I didn't like yogurt the first time I tried it, as a student in London. My boyfriend, Bob, told me, "Try yogurt sweetened with fruit." Yes, that was the secret to starting yogurt. 

Eventually I came back to natural yogurt. Progress. Now I love natural yogurt and prefer it to yogurt with bits and unnatural colours. Admittedly, plain yogurt is sour. I like the creamy, Greek style yogurt. Not the set yogurt. 

What about fresh fruit? Sweet tastes.

Peaches

I had the same setbacks with unfamiliar fresh peaches. Peaches came later. First we had bananas.

Bananas - the perfect food?

As a child, post World War 2 (I am a baby boomer), there was rationing until 1952. My mother talked for years about it: "I had to join a queue to buy bananas. In the queue I got talking to another mother." They became lifelong friends. 

Bananas. Perfect. Except for that skin left behind.

But the food which disappointed me was peaches.

Peaches - Perfect Peaches?

I recall was being told about how delicious a fresh peach would be. I was used to tinned peaches. 

My first peach was a great disappointment. It was not sweet like the tinned peach. It was white instead of bright orange. It was not cut into neat slices. It was not soft - you had to gnaw at it, though the skin. It was big and heavy for my little hands. Worse still, the juice got all over my nose and mouth and down my clothes and over my hands.

Then when I was a teenager we went to Italy on holiday. For dessert, we had fresh peaches. No effort by the chef to make something interesting to look at, or a filling pudding. It was summer. 

But everybody in my family said they loved the fresh peaches. So I tried peaches. Okay. So far so good. Then disaster struck. A worm - in my peach. Aagh! A year must have passed before I forgot and tried again.

Naturally, now I feel the opposite. Tinned peaches? Artificial colour. Too much sugar added. Not fresh. I do inspect them carefully and wash them for myself and others.. I am now back to fresh peaches. 

Another challenge I recall was durian.

They say that the Chinese eat anything. They chop their food up so it is easy to pick up with a pair of chopsticks. 

No fighting through steaks with knives, holding  up the conversation, distracting you from eye contact with others at the table. No knives which could be used to threaten others. Like handshakes, designed to prove you have no knife in your hand, the chopsticks prove you are not about to attack. You could probably have a fight with chopsticks, but they don't look as threatening as a steak knife, not the same threat as a knife. 

Durian - Dreadful Smell But Delicious Taste



What other foods have I grown to like? Durian, a flavour like chestnut and banana and eggs combined. I first tried it as durian ice cream. Mm! I love durian in ice cream or dessert or cakes. I don't go for smelly, yucky fresh durian. But I like it as a flavouring.

Therefore, I would not be upset by the smell of a fresh durian. Durian is known as the king of fruit. But it is banned on the MRT (railway) in Singapore.

What about sour flavours? Pickled cucumber. Olives.

Olives

Olives - as a child, I would not eat them. Now I like them. You pay more for the ones without stones, and for those which have contrasting colour stuffing such as red pepper in green olives.

Tomato

Cooked tomato. I can now tolerate them.

At university I encountered Indian food for the first time. My two girlfriends took me to an Indian restaurant. They and the restaurant owner suggested, "Try a biriani. It's rice with vegetables or chicken on top. You can have sauces and spices on the side." I loved the biriani. Nowadays I try something more adventurous, unless I am faced with a menu which has red chili signs alongside all the other dishes.

To deal with spicy Indian food you have three solutions: water, rice, yogurt.

Purple Boiled Eggs

Purple eggs, Chinese style, cooked in tea. Highly recommended. I ate three. 

Therefore, I was willing to try salted duck egg.

Salted Boiled Egg In The Shell


But salted duck egg! Like eating solid salt. Much too salty. 

I went onto the internet to ask Chinese friends: How do you eat salted eggs?

They told me with porridge made from rice or other cereals, or in soup. Or just with rice.

Finally, I added it to green beans and broccoli, baked beans, and lentils. I turned the microwave to one to two minutes, three times. Finally, it was edible, in fact I ate to the last morsel, liking it more and more.

The Moral Is ...

Ah, now I know. Now, you know. That is the joy of trying new foods. 

If At First ...

If at first you don't succeed, try again. 

Don't Try The Same ...

Another saying springs to my mind. From Einstein. Don't try the same thing again and expect different results. You have to vary the experience of a food just slightly, add fruit, or cake, sugar, or salt, or cereal, or soup, or water, or freeze it, or heat it, or put it in a sandwich, or try another colour. 

I still have three more salted eggs in my fridge. Hm. Another chance to expand my repertoire. 

Question: 'When Did You try something new?'

I recall a popular question asked during Toastmasters International meetings, during the impromptu speaking sessions called table topics. (Impromptu speeches - long ago taking topics from papers face down on the table top.)  The question is: When was the last time you tried something new? 

My latest answer would be: Salted duck egg. 

What was the last new food or experience you tried? You either have a joy, or a dramatic story.

About the Author

The next meeting is a Language Workshop by Angela Lansbury, native English speaker from London, England. Wednesday March 2nd at 6.45 pm login for 7 pm start. The workshop with include some British English and vocabulary from America, Australia, New Zealand, and India. Also a look at common errors and easy ways to remember spelling and sentence structure.

Also enjoy the usual features of a Toastmasters' International Speakers' Training meeting, a chance to introduce yourself, speak on the theme of the day, hear speeches, and evaluations of speeches. Contact us for the Zoom ID and passcode. Note the date in your dairy and set your alarm. And tell all your friends and family. Be sure to be there!


Saturday, February 26, 2022

Slippers and Thongs - What Not To Wear Or Say in India, England, Australia and Worldwide

 

Flag of India


When Indians say slippers, they mean what people in the UK call flip-flops. Catalogue companies can them toe-post shoes. I was in a Toastmasters International contest for speech evaluation The speech I evaluated was about a pair of slippers.

UK flag

The test speaker for a speech evaluation contest held in London, started his speech by holding up what we in London, England, call flip-flops.

Indians call these slippers.

 Both I and a friend of mine, one of the other contestants, said that we were waiting for the slippers to appear in the speech.

To me, in hte UK, slippers have an enclosed front. They keep you warm in winter.

In the UK, you take off your boots in winter, especially wet boots, heavy boots, dirty boots. You put on soft-soled slippers. I would not even call them house slippers. I might call them bedroom slippers But why? They are just slippers.

 Because the shoes which the Indian speaker held up as props, to us, were not slippers, but flip-flops.


Flag of Australia


Australians call these sandals thongs.




In Australia these items of footwear are called thongs. That confuses the British. To us, thongs are underwear or swimsuits with a vertical string at the back.

I was in Australia at a beach and walked into a bar. The barman said to me, "No thongs allowed." I was surprised. What make him suspect that I was wearing thongs? I assumed he meant underwear. 

Thongs - we say in the UK.


I replied, "I am not wearing thongs."

He pointed down at my feet. "Yes, you are. On your feet. Those are thongs."

I looked again, frowning. Light dawned. I asked, "Are you calling these thongs?"

Now you know what not to wear when you see a sign in Australia which says, No thongs.

Useful Websites

https://www.theflipflopshop.com.sg/


Friday, February 25, 2022

How to roll your r in Spanish, Italian or Indonesian and dialects


Flag of Spain

First the bad news. There are two kinds of rolled r. Second the good news. Once you can do it, it will help you sound right when speaking Spanish, and Indonesian. And several more. Italian. Russian. Arabic. Also regional dialects of several countries.

The advice is quite simple. Pull your tongue back from the right behind your teeth and blow. Just keep doing this several times a day for several days and one day you will find you have relaxed and are doing it right.

If you want to locate articles and demonstrations, it is called a rolled r, or an alveolar trill. The alveolar is the ridge in the roof of your mouth behind your top teeth.

Other systems include practising saying pot of tea.

Pull your tongue back saying three,but pretend you are falling asleep, open your mouth wide and hardly touch the roof of the your mouth with your tongue.

Even if you cannot yet say it, listen out for it. You will be able to identify people from Indonesia speaking English. It is a handy conversation opener that you know which country they are from or that you want to learn how to roll your rs.

You could also visit a bilingual Spanish speaking Toastmasters Club. Or and English speaking Indonesian club such as Empire.

 Useful Websites

A jolly couple

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTR6gYYW5xU

A cute girl

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Sid6MQvTRQ

https://www.toastmasters.org/Find-a-Club/04634690-spanish-bilingual-sf

https://www.toastmasters.org/Find-a-Club/01491511-empire-toastmasters-club

https://www.quora.com/Whats-a-good-way-to-practice-the-alveolar-trill-rolling-R-that-is-present-in-many-Romance-languages

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiced_dental,_alveolar_and_postalveolar_trills

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Australian English and British English

 


 

Australian - British

barbie - barbecue

doona - duvet

dunny - toilet

medicine (pronounced like med-i-sin) - medicine (pronounced like medsn)

rain is sprinkling - rain is drizzling

sheila - female

thongs -flip-flops

Yogurt (first syllable like yoyo) - yogurt (first syllable like yacht)

Useful Websites

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Australia

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Scotland - Scottish songs, sights, places and people




The Flag of Scotland

The flag of Scotland has a diagonal white cross on a blue background. The x shape has equal length arms. The cross is called a saltire, which means diagonal or X shape. The word saltire comes from the French word for a stile which has an x shape wooden pieces for hikers to clamber over or push back and forth, whilst keeping the sheep or cows inside in a fenced field.

Shall we visit Scotland, at least online, for the sake of auld lang syne?

Scotland is known for sheep which provide food, meat, milk, cream and butter, and wool, as well as goats in the mountains. The deer are another feature.

This Author's Personal Stories

When I met my husband, he was a lecturer at Aberdeen university. We went to the Scottish opera week. Since then we have returned to Scotland for the Edinburgh Festival. 

My favourite memory from the Edinburgh Festival was when we ran up to join the crowd in the street around a street performer. he ran up to me and shouted, "Mother!" He had done the same to my husband a moment earlier, addressing him as "Father!"

You can imagine our expressions of shock and surprise. The audience was in hysterics. They had seen this happen several times during the performance. Later I learned that the performer did the same every year.

The UK flag


Traditional Scottish Songs

Auld Lang Syne

A Gordon for me

Banks of the Dee


Famous Scottish Writers and People

Bonnie Prince Charlie (now you know one local word, bonnie)

Robert Burns Birthplace Museum -  in Ayr

Dr Livingstone - museum

Authors' flagstone trail - Edinburgh

For Sherlock Holmes in his deerstalker hat, go to London, England, and the statue outside Baker Street station, and the shop cum museum in Baker Street around the corner.

William McGonagal - an inspiration to aspiring poets, bad poets poor poets. Famous for his poem about the dreadful Tay Bridge disaster. 

Mary Queen of Scots

Events

Edinburgh festival - August, annual

Edinburgh tattoo 

New Year's Eve


Food

Scottish oats (Oats are served for breakfast in Scotland, with salt; whereas, in England, hotels and homes serve oats with sugar.) 

Scottish shortbread biscuits


Drink

Whisky - distillery visits. (Irish whiskey spelled with an added e.) 


Clothes & Gifts

Scottish tartans

Buy a tartan which identifies you as from your family clan, a Jewish tartan, or a popular multi-purpose pattern tartan which is for tourist use.

Scottish wool

Deerstalker hats

Lock Ness Monster Museum and souvenirs of triple arches of pottery


Blog post being researched and written. Come back later to see more pictures and text. If you have any information to add, please send it to me. 


List of places to visit>

Edinburgh

National Gallery of art and portrait gallery

Scotts monument

Glasgow

Art Gallery (Rennie Mackintosh)


Useful Websites

http://www.rampantscotland.com/songs/blsongs_gordon.htm

http://www.rampantscotland.com/songs/blsongs_dee.htm

https://travelandy.com/the-scotland-of-sherlock-holmes/

The author

Monday, February 21, 2022

Prepare for St Patrick's Day - March 17th - When Irish Eyes are smiling





March 17th every year is St Patrick's Day, celebrated in Ireland and all over the world, with green clothes, green hats, shamrock patterns and flags.

In Ireland you have a day off. Plenty of time to drink Guinness, which is sold everywhere, even in tailors' shops!

In Northern Ireland, it's a day to relax, before or after seeing the Giants' Causeway dramatic beachside rock formations, the Titanic museum in Belfast, the movie set sights.

In Dublin, so much. Where to start? Some great statues and authors. And songs. In Dublin's fair city, where the maids are so pretty ...

In London, England, expect the tube trains (underground railway trains) to be packed with good-natured revellers dressed in green and singing songs.  https://www.rotita.com/St.-Patrick's-Day-vc-1043-1.html

When I first went to Singapore we lived near an Irish pub in the central Orchard Road area - Orchard road being the main, wide shopping street running East-West, like London'd Oxford Street. I recall being surprised at seeing so many people wearing green hats toppling out into the street. tTe hats were given away free by the pub to patrons.

A year later I was in London and went to a Toastmasters meeting in Watford on St Patrick's Day. The restaurant where we met before the meeting had a restaurant and several bar areas with green and themed decorations. On our way from lunch to the meeting we passed an even busier pub, packed with revellers. I could not get in because a good-natured doorman told me that tickets were sold out and the place was already full. Fire regulations limit the numbers of people allowed in buildings so that in an emergency you can evacuate in a hurry. (If you look carefully, you will see that lifts (Americans say elevators) as well as buildings and rooms often have a displayed sign telling you the capacity of the building. 

You might be lucky and find an abandoned item in the street or in a wastebin. (Americans say trash can.) A pub or restaurant might be throwing them out at closing time and be happy to give you something which you can keep for next year or display on your travel blog.

But there's no need to rely on the hope that a put or restaurant will give away paper or fabric seasonal souvenirs. Online you can buy not just flags and hats but whole outfits, tee-shirts, dresses and even swimwear with a large shamrock or repeating pattern. 

I find the advertising that tracks your interests is a blessing. I hunted for St Patrick's Day online to find make a poster for the meeting of one of my Toastmasters' International speakers' clubs, Braddell Heights Advanced, which had meetings on the evening of Wednesday March 2nd, before St Patrick's Day, March 17th, and after Patricks Day March 17th, our meeting being March 19th. 

Up popped a plethora of advertisements for swimsuits and swim dresses and dresses in St Patrick's day patterns and themes.

Useful Websites

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Patrick%27s_Day

https://www.rotita.com/St.-Patrick's-Day-vc-1043-1.html

Prepare to Celebrate St David's Day, Tuesday March 1st, with Welsh cakes (recipe)

The flag of Wales

Wales is easily reached by train from London, England. At Paddington station you can see the statue of Brunel who built the railway from London to Wales, all the way across Wales, and the ship to take passengers on to the USA. In the other direction, passengers from the USA could travel from America to England on Brunel's ship, board the train at Fishguard, and travel on to London, England.




When the train from London reaches Wales, you will see the bilingual signs on the platforms. And above the station ships and kiosks.

(The trains were not running during the great storm, storm Eunice, in February 2022. But if you cannot get around or cannot get there at all, you can celebrate all things Welsh at home and online to friends worldwide.

The Welsh flag has a jolly red dragon walking on a grass green, which makes me think of  the best selling novel set in Wales, How Green Was My Valley.  The white sky reminds me of those wonderful white sheep. 

Listen to wonderful Welsh music. From Wales, the land of Welsh harps, and Welsh male voice choirs. 

Or a recording of Dylan Thomas's Under Milk Wood. If you are in Wales you can follow a Dylan Thomas trail.



If at home listen to a recording.

 Or recite it yourself.

Portal:Wales/Selected quote/16

It is spring, moonless night in the small town, starless and bible-black, the cobblestreets silent and the hunched, courters'-and-rabbits' wood limping invisible down to the sloeblack, slow, black, crowblack, fishingboat-bobbing sea.

What can you eat in the interval? Welsh lamb. Welsh rarebit. And Welsh cakes. 

As I spoon out the food I think of Welsh wooden love spoons. Carved for lovers.


In Wales, I could not afford to buy Welsh love spoons. But my budget did run to a tea-towel. I was hunting all over the net for a picture of love spoons. Then I recalled that I had a tea-towel featuring them in my kitchen!


Welsh Cakes

They are filling little pancakes filled with currants and quite delicious served hot with melting butter on top. I feel hungry just thinking about them.

If you have flour, salt, butter, an egg, some currants, and sugar, you can make these small fat pancakes, cooked both sides in a frying pan (or griddle if you have one). Basically, you mix your dry ingredients, add the butter to the flour and salt, lastly the liquid egg. Optional milk. Cook both sides. 

I like to add butter on top. Others add sugar. Why not both? Sprinkle on sugar. Then a dab of butter whilst they are still hot, to melt in. Yummy. 

Easy to remember in ounces. 8432. 8 for the flour. Four for the butter, Three for the sugar.  2 for the currants. Add an egg. Add salt to your flour. 

I first had these at the Fishguard Bay hotel, on the Writers Holiday which I hope will take place next February, run by the helpful Hobbs family, who zoom down to the station to collect you when you phone to say, "Hello, I'm here!"  if the hotel opens up again, refurbished. 

Welsh singers include Shirley Bassey and Tom Jones. Names which sound Welsh, Jones, Evans, Lloyd. As in the politician Lloyd George. The double l sounds as if you are clearing your throat.

Sights to see in Wales include the Severn Bridge which you drive across from England. 

The capital, Cardiff, has a free museums, and Cardiff castle. Other notable castles are Castle Coch, just outside Cardiff, with an oriental, colourful interior room. 

Castell Coch, outside Cardiff.

Caerphilly has a huge moat. I went there and a a food festival was taking place.

Fishguard is literally the end of the line, where the trains end and you can catch a ferry from Wales to Ireland. The Fishguard Bay hotel is on the cliff top above the station. (Currently closed for renovation.)

The bay was the site of the filming of two great movies, Dylan Thaomas's Under Milk Wood, and Moby Dick. Liz Taylor and her twice husband Richard Burton stayed in the hotel whilst filming.

After the celebration of Wales,  you could go across on the ferry from Wales to Ireland ror St Patrick's Day in March 17th. Start learning the words of Molly Malone.

Useful Websites

IRISH

https://www.irelandbeforeyoudie.com/who-was-molly-malone-what-we-know-from-irish-folklore-and-songs/

WELSH

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wales

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Wales/Selected_quote

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dylan_Thomas_Trail

https://recipes.fandom.com/wiki/Welsh_Cakes

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_castles_in_Wales

Author Angela Lansbury

BIOGRAPHY

Angela Lansbury B A Hons ACG ALB PM5 EH5 DL5 VC5 
The Author of several books including  Etiquette For Every Occasion. Wedding Speeches & Toasts. How to be the Best Man. Quick Quotations. Who Said What When. (See Amazon.com Kindle and lulu.com)

Blogs travelwithangelalansbury.blogspot.com

dressofthedayangela.blogspot.com

translateforfun.blogspot.com

Braddell Heights Advanced Toastmasters Speakers Club Vice President Public Relations (VPPR), Previous President

Join BHA 1st Wednesday 7pm and 3rd Saturday 2 pm Singapore time 

Vice President Public Relations (VP PR) of Tampines Changkat Advanced;

Secretary of weekly online Singapore International Dynamic Toastmasters Speakers’ Club;

Member and past president of Harrovians toastmasters club, UK; Past member of HOD Toastmasters, London. Past member in Singapore of: Toastmasters Club of Singapore (TCS); Tiarel; and Senja Cashew.

More details from Toastmasters International find a club.

Regular attendee at annual Swanwick Writers’ School, England.

Regular attendee at annual Writers’ Holiday, Wales.

Contributor to poetry readings, and after tea courses on: Speaking On Radio To Promote Books; and Plots And Character.

Winner of many club and area speaking contests in the UK and Singapore.

Language advisor to Empire Toastmasters club in Indonesia.

Language and speech workshops in Singapore.

Speaker on radio and TV in England, Scotland, the USA, and Australia.

Compiler of a school course on public speaking for teachers to prepare pupils for school open days with attending ceremonies before government ministers, Singapore.

Former member of Harrow Writers’ Circle, London, and two writing groups in Singapore.

Angela is on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Twitter. She would be delighted to link up with new friends.

 Please share links to your favourite posts.


Books by Angela Lansbury
How to be the best man. (Ward Lock / Cassell.)
Wedding Speeches and Toasts.(Ward Lock / Cassell.)
Unforgettable British Weekends.
Poetry Workshop Workbook.
The Tailor and the Spy. (Lulu.)
Larry The Talking Labrador. (Lulu.)
Writing Poetry for fun.

Quick Quotations

Who Said What When

Next BHA meetings




I bet you didn't know you could read the Dutch language! Polyglots pages!



Flag of the Netherlands 

I didn't know I could read Dutch. Until I logged onto a Dutch newspaper article from a link in Wikipedia. I was asked to sign up to read more and recognized these words:


Dutch - English

account - account

automatisch - automatically

digitale - digital

e-mailadres - e-mail address

gratis - free

hier - here

inloggen - login

registreer - register

stopt - stopped

vergeten - forgotten


English - Dutch

account - account

automatically - automatisch

digital - digitale

email address - e-mailadres

forgotten - vergeten

free - gratis

here - hier

login -inloggen

register - registreer

stopped - stopt

Should I check some more words, one by one in Google translate? It would be quicker to grab several off a wikipedia page.

I went to the wikipedia page and found these similar sounding words:


Dutch - English

bakken - to bake

breken - to break

geven - to give 

klimmen - to climb

niet - not

u - you

wegen - to weigh

werken - works

zenden - to send

zitten - to sit

It's like easy German, or English with simplified spelling. This year I am learning Spanish. Next year I could learn Dutch. Not a very common language. But probably a reinforcement for my beginner's German. 

Also it will impress other people to say that I can speak English, French, German, Spanish and Dutch. If I count English as one of my languages, in two years time I could speak six languages, and genuinely call myself a polyglot. 

How about you? Isn't Dutch easy! https://www.facebook.com/Hyperglots/olyglot page

I just logged into Facebook to find the link to my favourite polyglot page, where people ask questions, so handy for me and for you, dear readers. I found another polyglot page, geared to learning languages. 

Why would you want to learn Dutch? Where can you use it? In the Netherlands of course. But why would you go there? To see Anne Frank's house, and the Jewish museum, Rembrandt's house, and the Rijsmuseum with more Rembrandts. Delft pottery, windmills. Tulips. The Wikivoyage page has updates on the Covid situation.

Useful Websites

https://translate.google.com/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_language

https://www.knack.be/nieuws/belgie/twee-schepen-op-drift-in-windmolenparken/article-news-1836453.html?cookie_check=1645375421

https://www.facebook.com/polyglotclub.world/

https://www.facebook.com/Hyperglots/



Sunday, February 20, 2022

The Great Storm Eunice in London, England


O2 Arena tent damage. Picture from Wikipedia.

 London had a great storm. Luckily flights were able to arrive from Europe to Heathrow when a member of my family flew from Paris to London. His main concern was whether trees would be blocking roads when the hire can took him from Heathrow to his home.

Fortunately, no major trees had blown down. However, when he got home, he discovered that a tree had blown down in the back garden. (Americans say back yard.) 

Fallen tree in London, England. Sharot family photo.

He was on the phone to me discussing it. He said, "There's no chance of getting a tree surgeon to cut it up. They are all out already fully booked. Other, bigger trees are the priority. Especially the ones on major roads.

"I supposed I could hire a tree-cutting saw from a hire shop."

I was not keen on that idea. A DIY accident waiting to happen. Leave roof work and sawing to the experts. They have experience. And assistants. And insurance. And probably first aid kits in their van."

I didn't want to get into an argument about something which would probably not happen - the hiring, rather than the accident. I said, "The tree-cutting machines will also already be out."

The tree had already been dead some time. It was a pushover. Literally.  

We were lucky the house was not damaged by Storm Eunice. Another family in Brentwood had an old oak tree destroy their house and car. 

Public buildings damaged included the O2.

The weather in London is cold.

By contrast, the weather in Singapore is hot and humid.  A huge thunderstorm all day, like London. This prevented us from swimming in the outdoor swimming pool under the palm trees, whose topknots were blowing in the wind.


Useful Websites

UK News

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/home-destroyed-brentwood-essex-oak-tree-b983457.html

Reports of trains stopped in Wales, cancelled flights and more>

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/man-killed-county-wexford-storm-eunice-b983348

UK Weather

https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/

UK and Europe Damage

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storm_Eunice

Saturday, February 19, 2022

Oddments of the week - the upside down house, disappearing pictures on a sandy beac


 Tassenheide, Germany. Built 2008 in Germany, on the northern coast, as a tourist attraction. 

The town also had a giant red sneaker.





Sneaker Attribution: Löwe 48


USA

WonderWorks, Orlando, Florida, USA



Huashan Upside down house. From Wikimedia Commons. A
uthor 吉爾


Friday, February 18, 2022

Savoury Birthday Cakes: from Singapore Chicken Rice Birthday Cakes, or Pork cakes in Thailand

Pick Pork cafe, Thailand. Pork cake from their Facebook page. 

 

Here's a blessing, brought to you by covid-19 and an inventive Singapore marketing man. 

William Soh is credited with rescuing a business with the idea of a chicken rice birthday cake.

When non-essential birthday cakes and bakeries were banned, and only essential food shops were open, up came an entrepreneurial adviser who invented the chicken rice birthday cake. Chicken rice is the national dish of Singapore.

Two things happened. To attract the customers looking for birthday cakes, shops not allowed to sell sweet ones made savoury ones. The rice is made into a mound topped with boiled or fried chicken and vegetables. 

Have seen those lunch boxes designed for picky children by inventive and creative mothers making faces and animals out of slices of tomato? Then you know that miniature tomatoes on sticks and all sorts of sliced vegetables and whole peppers can be arranged decoratively. 

Add Happy birthday, or Happy Mother's Day, or Happy Anniversary or any other message on top. Instant birthday cake.

We already have discussions about too much sugar and cake in our family. I want cakes featuring fruit and flowers. My husband and son are not keen on birthday cakes, which mean too much over-eating for themselves and everybody.

If you are looking for a dessert with less sugar, or more fruit, consider cheesecake, carrot cake, banana cake, apple strudel.

For low carb, gluten free, and no sugar, options are available. From locaba.sg

Also look for fresh rose cakes.

Useful Websites

https://www.asiaone.com/lifestyle/singapore-cake-shop-offers-chicken-rice-and-zi-char-dishes-shaped-cakes-your-next

https://www.todayonline.com/8days/eatanddrink/newsandopening/hilton-chef-turned-hawker-sells-birthday-cakes-made-chicken-rice

https://locaba.sg/bakery/blueberry-yogurt-cake/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugar_substitute

https://jajabakes.com/korean-fried-chicken-cake/

http://www.celebrate-with-cake.com/2013/12/chicken-rice.html

https://www.facebook.com/pickporkcafe/

https://thewhiteombre.com/bakery/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=201

https://www.foodline.sg/cakes/shops/Twenty-Grammes/14100-Cakes-N-Desserts/AlaCarteOrderP/62990-Single-Rose-Cake/

Edible cupcake toppers (won't ship to UK)

https://www.amazon.sg/Cupcake-Toppers-Wedding-Birthday-Decoration/

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/business-connect-collaboration-innovation-lab-tickets-268315507907

Thursday, February 17, 2022

Maurice Chevalier & Sophie Tucker sing I Remember It Well - Travel Diaries, Lists Packing

From 1958. An interview with the two singers, Starts with them recalling their first meeting, then the humorous song.
Also singing Mimi, and Once Of These Days.

Useful Websites
Bullet journal with stencils (tiny wine glass and so on), patterned sticky tapes, highlighter-writers pens.
https://www.amazon.com/Notebook-Fineliner-Stencils-Stickers-Schedule/dp/B07PNKTK6C?ref_1

How to keep track of your travels



I am filling in the pages on vacations in my record book, Our Family Tree, A History of Our Family. It cost about 12 to 16 dollars, plus postage - unless you are already a member of Amazon prime. 

How can I check the dates I visited places? I have photos. It will take hours to churn through hundreds of photos, then fill in the dates. Photos are such a distraction. 

In Google I turned on location history. It shows you places you have visited and which year.

That is good, because even when we remember dates, we often disagree. It was two years ago. No, it wasn't. It was three years ago. Does this mean one of us is forgetful. Or both! I am glad to find that this is not a problem unique to our family.

Maurice Chevalier and Hermione Gingold sing, the humorous song, I remember it well, in the film (movie) Gigi.

Useful Websites

How to find your location history and activate it. 

The sooner you start an excel spreadsheet with dates, the better. You can print it off and stick it inside the front of back cover of your family history book.

https://support.google.com/android/answer/3118687?hl=en

Chevalier song

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQxM5rJ-uiY

Author

Doesn't Everybody Write Travel Blogs & Reviews? Am I the only one?

 Unfortunately not. Or fortunately not. If you write a travel blog, not everybody in your family will be doing the same. I am trying hard to get photos sent to me from England and France. What happens? 


UK

My family in London go to all sorts of places.  They visit attractions, zoos, parks, shopping malls. What kind of photos do they send? Pictures of their baby.

Yes, I love the baby photos. But how about the venues!

My son sends me a photo of the food he has eaten. Fish. No link to the restaurant, no picture of the decor, no picture of the outside. No review of whether he likes the food. 

What would I have done? The entrance showing the name of the restaurant. The menu with the name of the restaurant. An overview of the decor from the entrance door. The dish I liked. The cutlery. The manager. Myself with the chef. The food. The business card. The wine. The wine bottle. 

Check back on my review in Tripadvisor or my blog. Is it just as bad or just as good as before. Is it better, worse, exactly the same and unchanged? 

What do my eating companions think? Are we unanimous? Or do some of us love the white wine whilst others prefer the red?


FRANCE

I ask another relative to send a picture of France. He has been to a wine fair but does not have a photo of a single bottle. 

He has visited the Louvre. He says, "You are not allowed to photograph inside."

I suggest, "You could have taken the outside." 

He protests, "It is drizzling with rain. I need to go. My phone is getting wet."

I make a last plea, "Take some photos. Indoors. Anything. A sign telling you to wear a mask, in French."

He has gone. I sigh.

At least I can congratulate myself on one thing. I am a travel photographer.

Meanwhile, google is sending me messages telling me my gmail is full. I have send myself too many pictures from my phone.

About the author of this blog post


Author Angela Lansbury

BIOGRAPHY

Angela Lansbury B A Hons ACG ALB PM5 EH5 DL5 VC5 
The Author of several books including  Etiquette For Every Occasion. Wedding Speeches & Toasts. How to be the Best Man. Quick Quotations. Who Said What When. (See Amazon.com Kindle and lulu.com)

Blogs travelwithangelalansbury.blogspot.com

dressofthedayangela.blogspot.com

translateforfun.blogspot.com

Braddell Heights Advanced Toastmasters Speakers Club Vice President Public Relations (VPPR), Previous President

Join BHA 1st Wednesday 7pm and 3rd Saturday 2 pm Singapore time 

Vice President Public Relations (VP PR) of Tampines Changkat Advanced;

Secretary of weekly online Singapore International Dynamic Toastmasters Speakers’ Club;

Member and past president of Harrovians toastmasters club, UK; Past member of HOD Toastmasters, London. Past member in Singapore of: Toastmasters Club of Singapore (TCS); Tiarel; and Senja Cashew.

More details from Toastmasters International find a club.

Regular attendee at annual Swanwick Writers’ School, England.

Regular attendee at annual Writers’ Holiday, Wales.

Contributor to poetry readings, and after tea courses on: Speaking On Radio To Promote Books; and Plots And Character.

Winner of many club and area speaking contests in the UK and Singapore.

Language advisor to Empire Toastmasters club in Indonesia.

Language and speech workshops in Singapore.

Speaker on radio and TV in England, Scotland, the USA, and Australia.

Compiler of a school course on public speaking for teachers to prepare pupils for school open days with attending ceremonies before government ministers, Singapore.

Former member of Harrow Writers’ Circle, London, and two writing groups in Singapore.

Angela is on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Twitter. She would be delighted to link up with new friends.

 Please share links to your favourite posts.


Books by Angela Lansbury
How to be the best man. (Ward Lock / Cassell.)
Wedding Speeches and Toasts.(Ward Lock / Cassell.)
Unforgettable British Weekends.
Poetry Workshop Workbook.
The Tailor and the Spy. (Lulu.)
Larry The Talking Labrador. (Lulu.)
Writing Poetry for fun.

Quick Quotations

Who Said What When



 






Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Where to see Purim parties, Rembrandt's Painting of the Persian story of Esther and eat poppy seed hamentaschen and kreplach?

Rembrandt: Haman recognizes his fate. Wikipedia

 Purim in March is one of the most memorable stories which might be a myth or might be true. The story of Esther, who risked her life. It may sound a familiar story, and sounds as if it comes from the bible but is actually another book. The bible comes in several versions. 

This story is not in the classic English bible. The classic English edition which is much quoted, ifs the King James version. The language is a bit old-fashioned but very correct. (I always say, many are called but few are chosen, to illustrate grammar. 

The King James Bible and the Apocrypha

The classic King James bible was used in the school assembly when I was at a girls' grammar school, is the King James version. King James the first of England, and sixth of Scotland, united the kingdoms of England and Scotland after Queen Elizabeth I died childless. (Her cousin Mary, Queen of Scots was executed for plotting to kill and usurp Elizabeth.)

Elizabeth I, you may recall, was the daughter of Henry the eighth, famous for having six wives, two of whom he executed. 

King James united Scotland and England. That is the origin of the union Jack flag. It includes or united the red plus sign cross of England, and the blue cross of Scotland. 

King James did something else important from the point of view of biblical scholarship. He commissioned a new translation of the bible. (Which had previously been translated from Hebrew to Greek and from Greek to Latin and from Latin to English. With various errors or ambiguities.) 

The result of all these shenanigans is that we have several versions of the bible. The Hebrew version, used by Jews. The Catholic version. The King James version. And modern versions. 

Now where does Esther come into this. Right from the start there were lots of books of writing collected together to make the bible. Genesis, the origin of the world. Leviticus - laws to follow. The history books. The psalms or songs. The rejected books were called the Apocrypha.

Some versions of the bible include the extra books. Each committee decides what to include. Stories of the nativity, the manger, from the Chrsitian New Testament, and the story of Esther from the Old Testament, are excluded books. But they are such good stories that they are memorable. And children find it easy to dress up or make little figures.

The story of Esther goes like this. 

The King Ahazueros, had numerous pretty young wives or concubines. One of his favourites was Esther, who was Jewish, but he did not know or had forgotten. 

His chief minister, or vizier, Haman, wanted everybody to bow down to him. A prominent Jew, Esther's guardian, her uncle, refused to bow down because he only bowed down to God in the temple. (Frankly, I feel this was not a sensible move. I am not surprised that the king's chief minister was annoyed.)

Like the Russian king who expelled all the Jews because a Jew had been involved in assassinating his father, and Hitler who attempted to wipe out all the Jews because his mother had a Jewish boyfriend, Haman (and Ahazueros) didn't just kill one rival or enemy, nor even their family, to prevent revenge, but the entire religious group or race.

What was Esther to do? She fasted for three days. Then she went to see the king Ahazueros, who was dining with his minister Haman. 

The king saw her and was pleased to see her and beckoned her in. Why have you come to see me? What has made you unhappy. Haman - leave us alone please. (I have condensed the story.)

Esther revealed that her whole family and clan were to be wiped out by the chief minister. One can imagine poor Esther sobbing, and the king sympathising and wanting to console her.

The king Ahasueros, calls his chief adviser, Haman, and asks, 'What should I do to honour a man, and what should I do to his rival?'

Ahasueros, thinking he is the person to be honoured, says the man to be honoured should be paraded, given gold, and his entire family elevated. The rival should be executed (and his entire family wiped out).

And so it was done. Haman was gone. Esther, who could have kept quiet to save herself, and let her family and clan be murdered, had courageously gone to the king, who had power of life and death, to appeal, and saved her people.

The festival tells the story of courageous Esther, the celebrates the joy of everybody being saved. it is  a festival of dressing up as the characters and eating symbolic foods. Triangular pastries in some communities are known as Haman's ears. It is the one party of the year for children to dress up, the Jewish equivalent of the Nativity play at Christian schools. With, as at every Jewish festival, and every festival worldwide, Muslim, Hindu, Chinese, lots of good food.

 

The story of Esther is totally of its time, not politically correct. Firstly, Esther was one of many wives, or concubines. Secondly, the women could not approach the king until they were called, or summoned. On pain of death!

Sounds dire. However, since there were so many of them, rivalling each other, understandably they were not allowed to walk in and out and try to accost the king of the country when he was holding important business meetings. (Or maybe entertaining a rival lady.)

Never mind that. As the saying goes, why let the truth get in the way of a good story.  For me as a child, the story was scary. So was Easter, so is the cross, even though the story ends with resurrection. But adults like stories which face up to the fear of death and end with the hero or heroine surviving (or being resurrected).

So there you have it. Now you know the basics of what it is about. You can research the story more, and go out and look for good food nearer the date.

In 2022 Purim starts the evening of March 16th and ends on the evening (sunset or sundown) of March 16 th.

If you are not Jewish and don't have a bible with the story of Esther at the end, and don't live near a Jewish delicatessen or supermarket stocking Jewish or kosher food, how would this affect your life, travelling or travelling around the internet?

The story is set in Persia (Iran) in the city of Shushan. It supposedly happened about 400 years B.C. (BCE). Look in Wikipedia and you find extensive analysis of the origins and various versions of the story, including as far back as Josephus, a Jew who switched sides and wrote for the Romans.

Wikipedia also points you in the direction of various paintings as well as films (movies and TV miniseries).

The Netherlands - Paintings of Esther

You can see paintings by Rembrandt and others featuring the story of Esther in Rembrandt House in Amsterdam. Rembrandt lived alongside the Jewish area of Amsterdam. You might combine a trip to Rembrandt House with viewing Anne Frank's house and the Jewish Museum. 

 Michelangelo also featured the story of Esther.


Purim Foods

Kreplach 

Triangular pasta, often served in chicken soup, containing ground meat, either chicken or beef. Delicious. Available all year to eat in or take away at B & K in Hatch End and Edgware, in London, England.

Hamentachen

Haman cakes or triangular pastries - filled with poppy seeds or dates.

Where to go, what to see, what to do

The Netherlands

Rembrandt House

Painting of Mordecai on horseback

Useful Websites

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purim


About the author of this blog post


Author Angela Lansbury

BIOGRAPHY

Angela Lansbury B A Hons ACG ALB PM5 EH5 DL5 VC5 
The Author of several books including  Etiquette For Every Occasion. Wedding Speeches & Toasts. How to be the Best Man. Quick Quotations. Who Said What When. (See Amazon.com Kindle and lulu.com)

Blogs travelwithangelalansbury.blogspot.com

dressofthedayangela.blogspot.com

translateforfun.blogspot.com

Braddell Heights Advanced Toastmasters Speakers Club Vice President Public Relations (VPPR), Previous President

Join BHA 1st Wednesday 7pm and 3rd Saturday 2 pm Singapore time 

Vice President Public Relations (VP PR) of Tampines Changkat Advanced;

Secretary of weekly online Singapore International Dynamic Toastmasters Speakers’ Club;

Member and past president of Harrovians toastmasters club, UK; Past member of HOD Toastmasters, London. Past member in Singapore of: Toastmasters Club of Singapore (TCS); Tiarel; and Senja Cashew.

More details from Toastmasters International find a club.

Regular attendee at annual Swanwick Writers’ School, England.

Regular attendee at annual Writers’ Holiday, Wales.

Contributor to poetry readings, and after tea courses on: Speaking On Radio To Promote Books; and Plots And Character.

Winner of many club and area speaking contests in the UK and Singapore.

Language advisor to Empire Toastmasters club in Indonesia.

Language and speech workshops in Singapore.

Speaker on radio and TV in England, Scotland, the USA, and Australia.

Compiler of a school course on public speaking for teachers to prepare pupils for school open days with attending ceremonies before government ministers, Singapore.

Former member of Harrow Writers’ Circle, London, and two writing groups in Singapore.

Angela is on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Twitter. She would be delighted to link up with new friends.

 Please share links to your favourite posts.


Books by Angela Lansbury
How to be the best man. (Ward Lock / Cassell.)
Wedding Speeches and Toasts.(Ward Lock / Cassell.)
Unforgettable British Weekends.
Poetry Workshop Workbook.
The Tailor and the Spy. (Lulu.)
Larry The Talking Labrador. (Lulu.)
Writing Poetry for fun.

Quick Quotations

Who Said What When



 






El Alamein Shop - UK, and museum



El Alamein Military Museum, Egypt. From Wikipedia.


I was looking for the record of my late mother's first husband, Harry Godfrey, who was in the RAF (Royal Air Force) and died at El Alamein, aged 22, in 1941. He is listed on column 243. 
When I went  to add some details on the my ancestry website, the site asked me to fill in the credentials cited. 

I was filling in details in my family history book which I had bought online. I checked a report about the family of Harry. 

I had not known whether he was of any religion because my mother had married in a register office. It turned out he was Jewish. The family name Godfrey had been Anglicised by his father who was born in England but had inherited the family name Goldberg, meaning gold mountain. 

The El Alamein website has something new to me since I last looked. A shop. 

1 A biodegradable little marker you can place on a grave.

2 Several books of epitaphs.

I double whether I shall ever get to visit El Alamein, although I note that it now has a museum. 

For your own family history book, your family website, and online family tree, it is very handy to have a list of the websites which supplied information. You may find that new information has been added, or that facts and photos of people who were not previously important have now become much more relevant.

Tripadvisor has more than 200 photos. These include the Sharkmouth single-seater US plane with the teeth drawn on the front. Parked outside the museum and around the cemetery are several tanks. Plus anti-aircraft guns. 

Massive monuments honour the different nationalities. It wasn't just the British. 

The Germans and the Italians who at the earlier stages of the war were fighting on the same side, and the Japanese. 

The British monument displays the names of those who have no known grave.  

Inside the museum you see life size models of soldiers in their uniforms. In central areas, and glass cabinets around the side, are flags. Most important in clarifying the events is a map of the battlefield showing the positions of the various nationalities.

What is the significance of this previously unknown area of Egypt? It was the far east of the Mediterranean sea, the gateway to the Middle East and Asia.

My mother's husband had volunteered before the war and was trained and then sent out at the beginning. So many died because the fighting went on and on. The decisive battle was in 1942. But my relative died in 1941. 

The casualty figures are chilling. The recorded deaths, plus the missing in action. One visitor described it as a must for all Anzacs as well as Brits, because it was the turning point of WW2. You can see busts of Montgomery and the German leader, Rommel.

El Alamein was once just a village, now a small town on Egypt's north coast. The location is about 60 miles west of Alexandria. You can reach it by air-conditioned train.

In addition to visiting the museum, you can take a tour of the surrounding area.

Winston Churchill said, 'El Alamein has the best climate in the world. Resorts are being built along the coast.

About the author of this blog post


About the Author Angela Lansbury

BIOGRAPHY

Angela Lansbury B A Hons ACG ALB PM5 EH5 DL5 VC5 
The Author of several books including  Etiquette For Every Occasion. Wedding Speeches & Toasts. How to be the Best Man. Quick Quotations. Who Said What When.

Blogs travelwithangelalansbury.blogspot.com

dressofthedayangela.blogspot.com

translateforfun.blogspot.com

Braddell Heights Advanced Toastmasters Speakers Club Vice President Public Relations (VPPR), Previous President

Join BHA 1st Wednesday 7pm and 3rd Saturday 2 pm Singapore time 

Vice President Public Relations (VP PR) of Tampines Changkat Advanced;

Secretary of weekly online Singapore International Dynamic Toastmasters Speakers’ Club;

Member and past president of Harrovians toastmasters club, UK; Past member of HOD Toastmasters, London. Past member in Singapore of: Toastmasters Club of Singapore (TCS); Tiarel; and Senja Cashew.

More details from Toastmasters International find a club.

Regular attendee at annual Swanwick Writers’ School, England.

Regular attendee at annual Writers’ Holiday, Wales.

Contributor to poetry readings, and after tea courses on: Speaking On Radio To Promote Books; and Plots And Character.

Winner of many club and area speaking contests in the UK and Singapore.

Language advisor to Empire Toastmasters club in Indonesia.

Language and speech workshops in Singapore.

Speaker on radio and TV in England, Scotland, the USA, and Australia.

Compiler of a school course on public speaking for teachers to prepare pupils for school open days with attending ceremonies before government ministers, Singapore.

Former member of Harrow Writers’ Circle, London, and two writing groups in Singapore.

Angela is on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Twitter. She would be delighted to link up with new friends.

 Please share links to your favourite posts.


Books by Angela Lansbury
How to be the best man. (Ward Lock / Cassell.)
Wedding Speeches and Toasts.(Ward Lock / Cassell.)
Unforgettable British Weekends.
Poetry Workshop Workbook.
The Tailor and the Spy. (Lulu.)
Larry The Talking Labrador. (Lulu.)
Writing Poetry for fun.

Quick Quotations

Who Said What When



 



https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/El_Alamein#Q204439

https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/El_Alamein#/maplink/2

https://www.ancestry.com/account/signin

Commonwealth War Graves Commission

https://www.cwgc.org/

https://www.forces-war-records.co.uk/discover-raf-records-from-1918-1975-online

https://www.forces-war-records.co.uk/search

https://foundation.cwgc.org/shop/

https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find-war-dead/casualty-details/

https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find-war-dead/casualty-details/1809968/harry-godfrey/

https://wikitravel.org/en/El_Alamein

https://www.ww2cemeteries.com/egy-el-alamein-war-cemetery.html

https://www.myheritage.com/

https://www.rememberingthejewsofww2.co.uk/raf/godfrey-harry/

https://jewsinuniform.com/