"Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it." – Mary Oliver

Good Things Friday

This week, I’ve felt a little bit tired—I have no idea why—but I’ve managed to get my workouts done. I’m now up to 30 minutes of 1 minute run and 1 minute walk. Since I don’t want to add intensity too soon, I’m still doing my sprint intervals on the bike to try to maintain some cardio fitness. I’m so glad I can go to the gym to do that. While I’m there, I do some strength training. There’s nothing like not being able to run to make you appreciate being able to run! So I’m thankful for generally good health.


Saturday, my parents took my siblings and me, with our partners, out to Chauncy for lunch. It’s been booked for a few months, and I’ve been looking forward to it. It’s a very popular regional dining destination (click the link to read one of the glowing reviews). Louis and Tess lived down near Mum and Dad’s place at Point Lonsdale for a few years, and that’s where we got to know them. They catered a few fancy lunches for Mum and Dad back in the day, including a New Year’s Eve lunch and a joint 21st for H and her cousin, both of which featured Louis’ glorious fish pies.

Enough reminiscing … back to Saturday’s lunch. G and I picked up my sister and her husband, and then we all drove to Heathcote, which is a couple of hours from home. We arrived a little before 12:30 p.m. when the restaurant opened, so we had some time to look around the veggie garden. I love looking at other people’s veggie gardens, especially those from which we will shortly be eating the produce. One of the staff was out in the garden cutting herbs just before we went inside.

It’s a change of season here, so some of the beds were empty, waiting for their summer veggie plantings.
Check out the staff member in the black cutting herbs.

Lunch is a four-course set menu. You can add wine pairings and dessert, which we did. The wine pairing comes in a half-serve if you want, which makes it more accessible for people who don’t want to drink four glasses of wine. The meal begins with small dishes to share: Leeks, vinaigrette, shallot; Artichoke, lovage, borage; and Chicken liver parfait with pickles. This was followed by: Asparagus, ajo blanco, nettle and guanciale; Duck and morrel tortellini with broad beans; and finally Bundarra pork, soubise, carrot, apple cider jus and a garden salad. I chose the tarte tartin for dessert, and it was excellent, with the apple taking centre stage.

Duck and morel tortellini, broad beans

It was a wonderful afternoon. The food and wine were fabulous, and the company was pretty good, too. We finished up at about 5 p.m., drove home, took Riley for an evening walk, and then flopped on the couch to watch some TV.


Our current puzzle has a difficult blue sky area. The pieces in an area have a similar shape, which increases the difficulty level when they’re all the same colour—which keeps H occupied. She prefers tricky puzzles and always does the sky when we work on puzzles together. I’ve been doing the sand and water and had to pull out and redo several sections because of the similar-shaped pieces. S is working on the palm trees. I picked up this puzzle and another 2000 piece at the Kew Opshop a couple of weeks ago when we had a few minutes to kill and decided to pop in.


And a quick list:

  • I made some decisions—the broad beans are harvested, and my woman of faith will be Mary Magdalene.
  • After being away working at the Hosier concert over the weekend, E has been home for a few days now, and it has been good to catch up with him and his girlfriend.
  • The forecast for tomorrow is 34C. If all goes well, I’ll head down to the beach for a swim.
  • I’ve been reading Les Miserables. It was one of the books I bought at Shakespeare and Company in Paris. It’s a tome, but he had a sense of humour. It’s not laugh out loud, but he has a biting wit that appeals to me. Last night, when I was reading it before bed, there may have been a few chuckles. I may need to switch to reading a few chapters of this, along with something a bit less dense, so I don’t get bogged down with the lack of action.
  • I got some happy feedback at family dinner this week when I cooked Oven Roasted Chicken Shawarma. I served it on shredded lettuce, diced tomatoes and cucumber with hummus. Yum!
  • I also made garlicky sauteed prawns with creamy white beans and blistered tomatoes
  • Avocados. I remember hating the combination of taste and texture when I first tried them as a teenager, but they’ve grown on me.

If you haven’t already, you can fill out this form with any questions you have for me for an upcoming AMA post. Also, I realised I hadn’t asked for names, so now I don’t know who has asked me what. If you have already asked me a question, can you leave a comment here with a clue as to your question so I can link it to you? Thanks!

Have you had some good things in your week? Is there a food that you used to hate but love now?


Comments

14 responses to “Good Things Friday”

  1. That food all looks amazing.

    I’ve been tired too. Even though we “gained” an hour with the time change, it always, always throws me off schedule.

    The first time I tried sushi I thought it was truly awful and now I absolutely adore sushi.

    1. Luckily you gave sushi another go, imagine the happy times you owuld have missed if you hadn’t.

  2. Family dinner sounds really lovely, although I have no idea what half the food descriptions mean, haha.

    Happy weekend!

  3. It’s so interesting reading about the opposite seasons! It’s change of season here too but that means we are getting ready for winter. The gardens are gorgeous! But that puzzle – wow, looks very hard.

    1. The puzzle has been one of our more difficult ones but we are nearly finished. I suppose you’re putting your garden to bed for the winter. I always struggle with deciding when to start pulling the past season veggies out, they have usually not quite finished but I need the room.

  4. I also feel quite tired. I was yawning in the afternoons the last 2 days and had to really rally since I had more client meetings and it would be bad to yawn in a client meeting!! But I can’t drink caffeine in the afternoon or I will struggle to sleep so it’s a real problem!

    That meal looks and sounds wonderful!!

    1. I hate when you’re trying to stifle a yawn and it just gets worse.

  5. Your meal with your family sounds delightful. There are many foods that I eat now that I didn’t eat when I was younger, but I can’t honestly say that I dislike the food as a kid – it’s more likely that I was not exposed to it. My mom was a very picky eater and as a result we didn’t eat anything ‘interesting.’ Example: I’d never had a pepper. I love peppers now, not so much raw, but sauteed. I like avocado on my cobb salad that I eat every day at lunch.

    I may have missed something. Are you recovering from an injury? You say you are a runner who can’t run right now.

    Today is Coach’s bday. I made lasagna last night and have it ready to cook today. One of the younger girls has a stomach bug, so I’m worried that Ed won’t want to come here from the city tonight. I wouldn’t blame him, although I did air out the house on a chilly morning, all windows open for a few hours and I cleaned the bathrooms and kitchen. Still, ugh.

    1. I had a stress fracture earlier this year and then wanted to make sure it was right for the Camino, so I’ve just started running again since we got home, but I’m doing it gradually on a walk/run program with a very slow build. I hope Coach had a great birthday and the stomach bug has not spread.

  6. Having fresh herbs in you meals and seeing them being harvested is so fun. But I kept looking at the foxglove and wondered if everyone know what they are supposed to harvest.

    Anyways, The puzzles makes me itch for puzzling again. Of course.

    1. I’m pretty sure there was no confusion!

  7. That sounds like a really nice lunch, I would definitely be drinking the half glasses of wine! Four full glasses of wine would put me under the table.
    There’s nothing like not being able to run to make you appreciate being able to run! —–YES TO THIS!

    1. You have had your own issues with not being able to run this year os I know you understand. I’m doing a very slow and conservative comeback so it sticks and I don’t do some other injury.

  8. What a special lunch! AND, you could see the garden? So great.
    Broccoli grew on me over the years. I hope it’s the same for R- right now he gags on it poor lad.

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