Maia was
building the snare, Mairen was raiding the garden for lettuce and Gracie was
racing between the two looking for a job—she wanted to help make dinner.
When you
find a book like this:
It’s hard
not to get inspired and begin to dream of dinners like this:
Actually,
unless you’re under twelve, what you do is flip though the book from front to
back, laughing, and hoping to find something to make that doesn’t involve a
kangaroo tail, skinning a rabbit, or a medium sized camel.
John, our
intrepid Woop Woop host, knew this. So he thumbed through the book—double checked the
ingredients for damper—then headed into town and picked up flour and baking
powder. Meanwhile we amused the kids by sending them to the orchard to see if
they could find any sort of fruit that they recognized.
They didn’t.
Buddha's Hand |
Tomato Tree |
But they
did gather eggs, and picked strawberries from the garden, and when John
returned they mixed, and kneaded, and wrapped dough around sticks, and cooked,
and waited, and savoured.
They never
even missed the rabbit.
4 comments:
That Buddha's Hand .... is it a squash, or a pepper? I've never seen such a thing, and it's beautiful. :)
It's a type of citrus--smells like a super-powered lemon. Really amazing.
My Uncle James cooked rabbit once and it smelled terrible. Found out many years later that it was 'chitterlings' - pronounced 'chitlins' where I'm from. Gag me!
Oh, yuck, Meri. Serves me right for googling it...
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