1.
We have been doing the Christmas draw for a few years now,. It works well and Christmas is a lot less expensive and stressful as a result.
2. The Monday/Thursday family dinners have been on the go since the very first week of the new millenium, rain or shine, fights or not,through all kinds of traumas and happinesses.
3. The Hallowean ‘trick or treat’ punch party, with me dressed in a red and orange (gaudy!) witch outfit is pretty much established. It’s a chance for silliness on my part.
4. The Easter morning family brunch is a routine function.
5. Broader family ‘lady teas’ have been on-going for about 15 years.
Feb 01, 11:05PM PST | 3 cheers | 1 comment
We are having a Christmas morning tea with our two children, my mother, my sister and her husband and one of their children.
We are planning a classy tea, as follows:
Mother is providing a small glace-fruit covered Christmas cake; I am making rich shortcrust pastry cranberry, orange and frut mince mincepies soused in brandy, and cheese and sundried tomato hot pastry whirls; my sister is making a tier of beautifully decorated cupcakes as well as one other item. We are setting a lovely table with the Royal Doultan china and a small posy of clear yellow roses.
The gift exchange involves each person drawing one name only. This is kept secret, and we may only spend the equivalent of $10 or about £7.50. We are supposed to wrap the presents artistically and in a disguised fashion, and accompany this with a suitably cryptic and humorous rhyme.
Our Christmas dinner will be in the late afternoon whem it is a little cooler, and this only for the four of us and my mother, so unusually small.
Dec 24, 2008, 02:45AM PST | 4 cheers | 0 comments
More neighbourhood children
Nov 02, 2008, 11:04AM PST | 1 cheer | 0 comments
The children in our enclosed suburb dressed up and came around for ‘tricks or treats’. We had signs up, pointing them down te woodland path in our garden to the large deck on the side of the house, where we had punch, crisps and sweets for the children and chilled red wine and berry punch for the adults. I wore a dress of my daughter’s – red velvet and orange silk with draped sleeves(far too hot for 32 deg celcius).
Afterwards, the neighbourhood all joined in a braai (barbeque) together.
Nov 02, 2008, 10:57AM PST | 4 cheers | 1 comment
on a Thursday. Planned an easy meal because of walking.
Made spaghetti bolognese for the carnivores and had a bought tomato sauce for myself.
Served it with a lovely mixed salad and hot garlic bread. Had Italian wine with it.
Pronounced good by all.
May be able to start enjoying family dinner on the deck soon as it is warming up.
Oct 04, 2008, 08:03AM PDT | 1 cheer | 1 comment
will be waiting for daughter (who arrives from London on 14 December) andson (who arrives from Kofu,Japan on 22 December). They will contain information about Christmas plans, a break at a tented bush resort, sunscreen,(as they are both coming from northern hemisphere winter).
Any suggestions about what else should be inluded?
Sep 27, 2008, 03:21AM PDT | 5 cheers | 1 comment
She is a naturalised American (Nashville, Tennessee), having emigrated in 1977 after the riots here. She has returned to RSA to celebrate a’significant’ birthday, and will be visiting our home (after several functions over two weeks) for dinner with her husband. I have decided to appoint a young aspirant chef to cater the dinner.
She will prepare a South African menu, based on the rich flavours of the Cape Malay influence. All I have to do will is tidy up a bit, set the table(and disperse a few cobwebs around) – but that is another story.
I will have to decide what to do with a couple of nude paintings -as they are very strict southern baptists. No, on second thought, I will leave the nude paintings exactly where they are.
My husband’s Muslim friends did not flinch, so why should they?
Aug 25, 2008, 09:06AM PDT | 0 comments
Mother turned 77 yesterday, the 13th. We had family dinner and made a meal of her choice. She did not want birthday presents (although we disobeyed her dictum).
What she asked for was jams, spreads, condiments that she can take to an old age home where people have to pay over most of their income for their accommodation and meals, and don’t have much left over for little ‘luxuries’. She ended up with a load of things to deliver today, literally to ‘spread’ her birthday blessings.
Good on you, funny granny.
Aug 14, 2008, 12:32AM PDT | 2 cheers | 0 comments
Our family dinner was simple, a hearty winter meal, but wonderfully lighthearted, because I was complaining about my husband who makes comments and wolf whistles while we are doing our warm up stretching exercises and warm up lap for ‘Fit for life’.
We were all roaring with laughter.
Jul 10, 2008, 12:45PM PDT | 2 cheers | 0 comments
near St Andrew’s day. Made: delicious vegetarian moussaka, greek salad, served with rough crusty bread, purchased (lazy) dainty individual servings of baklava.
No Ouzo: don’t really enjoy the taste.
Apr 30, 2008, 02:11AM PDT | 1 cheer | 0 comments