WHERE IN THE WORLD?

I want to take you on a journey around the world in text, pictures and linked articles and hope very much that you enjoy them!

Monday, 9 December 2013

Easy Chocolate Truffle Recipe: Great for Homemade Xmas Gifts


Making handmade gifts for Christmas or any other occasion can be a wonderful activity with kids or friends. This chocolate truffles recipe is quick and easy to make and requires no baking. You'll only need to melt the plain chocolate used to make your basic truffles and perhaps melt any additional chocolate you may use for coating your sweet treats.

Presenting your homemade chocolates in paper sweet cases and packaged in pretty presentation boxes makes them look fantastic and the gift recipient will really appreciate the time and trouble taken to make a handmade gift.

You'll only need plain chocolate, icing sugar, evaporated milk, vanilla essence and dessicated coconut for this easy chocolate truffle recipe and then you can let your imagination go wild with flavorings and additional coatings, so you can create really personal and attractive truffles for family and friends. You can add alcohol, fruit extracts or nuts to your basic truffle mixture and coatings could include dipping individual truffles in melted white or milk chocolate, dipping in chopped nuts and even decorating the top of each candy with little sweets, colored sugars or tiny nuts or coffee beans.

Kids will adore the opportunity to make gifts for friends or family members and this recipe is an ideal option for children, even small kids will be able to mix the truffles and make them into little balls. And they'll love the chance to make individual decorations for each sweet.

This inexpensive recipe makes about 30 truffles but the ingredients can be doubled and multiplied to make larger amounts if necessary. The article also contains a couple of video demonstrations showing different chocolate truffle recipes and mixtures.

You can check out more confectionery and sweet recipes on the BBC website.

Image from Wikimedia Commons



Sunday, 8 December 2013

6 December 2013 UK Weather & Tidal Surges


The UK had severe weather conditions from 5 December 2013, with two killed and several injuries reported on local news. High winds and driving rain battered most of Britain but the worst areas affected were the East coast seaside towns and villages. Tidal surges caused flooding and damage along the East coastline and crumbling cliffs due to rising of sea levels even caused some homes and a lifeboat station in Hemsby to collapse into the sea. Many seaside towns were under water and thousands of people evacuated from their homes.

Check out these YouTube videos for visuals of the tidal surges happening, the first one shows just how powerful and frightening the ocean can be:







Links to some news reports:
BBC
The Independent

Image from Wikimedia Commons

Friday, 6 December 2013

Visit the Yorkshire Dales when you plan UK Travel

The Yorkshire Dales are in North Yorkshire and closest towns and cities are Harrogate, York and Leeds. Visiting the Dales in fall or winter reveals stark scenery and golden-brown heather on the moorland.

I stayed in Harrogate, which is about 40 minutes drive away from Malham. Malham is a very popular tourist attraction in the Yorkshire Dales as Malham Cove is a spectacular limestone cliff that's ideal for climbers and towers over the surrounding countryside.

The paths winding their way up and around the Malham Cove rocks are part of the Pennine Way, a 268 mile walk that starts in Edale, Derbyshire and finishes in Scottish borders. Some of the scenery you'll observe on the Pennine Way is the most beautiful in the UK as much of the trail is across hills and peaks of the Derbyshire Peak District, the Yorkshire Dales and Lake District. Malham Cove is one of the many upland highlights of the Pennine Way, which was the first National Trail opened in the UK in the year 1965.

I hope you'll enjoy this selection of photos depicting some of the area around Malham!

All photos are my own work and all rights reserved, they are not for public copying or use without permission. Please contact me if you would like to use copies of these images.  







Thursday, 5 December 2013

Planning Your Christmas Dinner & Making Traditional Christmas Pudding

Preparing for Christmas when you have family and friends to cater for can be stressful if all the jobs are left to the last minute.

Many of the dishes you'll be serving on Christmas Day can be prepared in advance and frozen or prepared in the couple of days before and kept in the refrigerator.

Check out this article on planning Christmas catering in the weeks leading up to the big day and this piece on scheduling tasks on Christmas Day to ensure your meal is cooked to perfection and all dishes ready at the same time!

You may also like this recipe for traditional Christmas Pudding - from my mum - but will need to get it made in the next couple of days if you're planning on preparing an Xmas pud as it needs time to relax and mature prior to a final steaming on Christmas Day. It's an easy recipe, the only hard part is the mixing of all the ingredients to make sure they're all combined to perfection!

My Christmas pudding (shown above) has been steamed and soaked in brandy for a final time and is now wrapped up in a kitchen store cupboard all ready for the big day.

Merry Christmas and happy preparations!

Tuesday, 3 December 2013

Christmas Musings from Leicester, UK

As December draws in Christmas and festive celebrations are becoming more of a focus for thoughts. Last year I managed to spend a week on the Costa del Sol in the week just prior to Christmas week. Unfortunately, I won't be able to do that this year.

I'm expecting my two daughters back from University around December 20th and want to make our celebrations really special this year. My middle girl only left home in September and I miss her incredibly. I'm sort of beginning to wonder how I'll manage in a couple of years when my son leaves home and I'm living alone. It's so strange facing up to the departure of the kids I've raised for the past 21 years and a little frightening really.....

For the first time in my life I've actually made traditional Christmas pudding and two Christmas cakes. The steamed Christmas pudding is shown above and now it just needs maturing for a few weeks. On Christmas Day I will douse it in brandy and set light to it and then serve it with brandy butter, cream or custard. I prefer cream but brandy or rum butter are the traditional accompaniments. At present I'm lavishly pouring brandy over the pudding and cakes on a weekly basis. Hopefully by the time we come to eat them they'll be super tasty. The Christmas pud looks really moist and smells delicious already and I've posted an image of it above. The Christmas cakes were slightly overdone. Unfortunately my oven temperature goes a little random and I didn't check them soon enough. I moved them lower in the oven and covered the tops with foil and they're not too bad. One is slightly more singed than the other but as I keep adding brandy it does look like it's getting more moist so hopefully I won't have to cut chunks off it before I put the icing on.

My mom is helping with a homeless shelter over the next few months. It's something the churches do in the UK on a regular basis. This is the first year her church has got involved and every Saturday she's going to be up there at 6am and preparing breakfasts. She's volunteered one of my Christmas cakes for the shelter so I hope I do manage to make a good job of the cakes as I want them to enjoy it.

Mom did invite our family over to her place for a restaurant meal on Christmas Day this year but I've turned the invite down because I really want to spend the time with the kids and prepare a traditional Xmas lunch and relax in my own home. At the moment I'm frantically decorating a bedroom for the girls and hope they'll be prepared to share a room over the holiday.

We'll have a family get together on Boxing Day at this house and I hope to use some of the cocktail recipes that I'm posting on my new website for some of the guests. It's difficult though, unless they stay over for the night it's just not worth drinking and driving and running risks of accidents or getting caught by the police. I suppose I can drink the cocktails if nobody else does though.....

For some reason my local city council have decorated our Town Hall Square with Wombles Christmas decoration tableau this year and there's a couple of images below of the lights in the Town Hall area of Leicester for 2013.




Try Mixing Sidecar Cocktails: Another Classic Brandy Cocktail Recipe Ideal for Christmas Parties

Sidecars are classic sour cocktails using a mix of Cognac or brandy, Cointreau or alternative orange liqueur and lemon juice.

Check out this article on Merrimentz! for the classic French recipe for Sidecar cocktails. The English recipe is also noted and the mix you choose will depend on the quality of liqueurs used to make your cocktails. Bourbon Sidecars are alternative popular cocktails you may want to try out.

Hosting a cocktail party is a great option for the festive season and frosting glasses is traditional for many cocktails like Sidecars. Offering guests chilled and frosted glasses with rims coated in sugar and filled with delicious cocktails proves your abilities to host successful parties every time.  

Thanks for reading!
Enjoy a merry and festive season.....

Monday, 2 December 2013

Brandy Champagne Cocktails for Perfect Christmas Parties



Champagne is the perfect drink for celebrations and this brandy champagne cocktail recipe is absolutely fantastic for Christmas. Whether you're celebrating with a partner, hosting a party or just entertaining a few friends you'll find this champagne and brandy mix is a surefire winner.

All you'll need is chilled champagne, brandy, Angostura bitters and a sugar cube.

As the sugar dissolves into a myriad of fizzing champagne bubbles you'll feel the Christmas party spirit begin to rise, no matter where you are!

Merry Christmas!