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We are currently in the midst of the TT motorcycle festival which, for me, means I am making what feels like industrial quantities of carrot cake - not to mention chocolate cake, chocolate brownies, flapjack, gingerbread... We sell filled baps, hot pasty, and lots and lots of home-made cakes at church to the spectators, as our church grounds are an excellent spot to watch the racing.
So this was yesterday's baking in my house -

That was the third 18 piece carrot cake I've made, and I will make at least one more. The chocolate cakes behind, together, come to the same size but somehow, on that angle, they look a lot smaller. I know now that these are 'sheet cakes' - thank you
bojojoti - in this case dark chocolate with chocolate frosting and fudge chunks.
I've also done 3 trays of chocolate brownie, 2 trays of oat flapjack, and one of gingerbread the same size as the carrot cake. And D-d has also been turning out her specialities - cherry frangipan, fruit flapjack, rocky road and tiffin. I reckon, just between the two of us, our personal cake sales will raise about £170 - and our input is about 10% of the whole!
For something completely different, there are a few pictures I took a week or more ago, just of the sea, and a stairway to nowhere...
A nice sunny day with a bit of a breeze to put the white horses on the sea - a good day for dog walking. And a rather lonely staircase to nowhere...



Oh - and a picture I took for
photo_scavenger of a rather nice post box which serves a hamlet of about 6 or 7 houses in the west of the island;

So this was yesterday's baking in my house -

That was the third 18 piece carrot cake I've made, and I will make at least one more. The chocolate cakes behind, together, come to the same size but somehow, on that angle, they look a lot smaller. I know now that these are 'sheet cakes' - thank you
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I've also done 3 trays of chocolate brownie, 2 trays of oat flapjack, and one of gingerbread the same size as the carrot cake. And D-d has also been turning out her specialities - cherry frangipan, fruit flapjack, rocky road and tiffin. I reckon, just between the two of us, our personal cake sales will raise about £170 - and our input is about 10% of the whole!
For something completely different, there are a few pictures I took a week or more ago, just of the sea, and a stairway to nowhere...
A nice sunny day with a bit of a breeze to put the white horses on the sea - a good day for dog walking. And a rather lonely staircase to nowhere...



Oh - and a picture I took for
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Date: 03/06/2013 08:20 pm (UTC)Oh such baking! That's more baking that I can abide. I like cooking way more than baking, so I applaud your efforts most heartily.
The Red Velvet Cake for the Boyz came out well, I guess. I never had any, but it was scarfed up.
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Date: 03/06/2013 08:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 03/06/2013 08:25 pm (UTC)Pecan tree in Papacito's back yard. We have gallon bags of them in the freezer, and it always amazes me what they cost if you have to buy them.
Of course, I'm not speaking to Papacito these days, so that's moot...
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Date: 03/06/2013 08:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 03/06/2013 08:36 pm (UTC)But very impressive!
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Date: 03/06/2013 08:40 pm (UTC)Flapjack is popular right now, too, isn't it?
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Date: 03/06/2013 09:02 pm (UTC)Great pics, as always . Love the mailbox; haven't commented on PS lately, but I'm checking them out. :)
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Date: 03/06/2013 09:29 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 03/06/2013 11:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 04/06/2013 10:27 am (UTC)I've been down some days helping to sell stuff, and that is when I get tired - last week a couple of days went 'work, church to serve, home to bake, eat something, go to bed' but I am off work this week - and despite the tiredness I do actually enjoy it all.
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Date: 04/06/2013 02:14 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 04/06/2013 10:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 04/06/2013 03:31 am (UTC)As close as I am to the sea, figuratively speaking, if I stand on a ladder to peer over the fence the inconsiderate people behind us built, I can see it from the house, I have not been to the beach in years! Your pictures are lovely, not sure Miss Kitty would like to be walked there though, sand in her paws etc.!
Keep on baking, have finished squares for blanket and am now working on a little hoodie, though it seems to be doing a Topsy on me and growing!
Huggs,
Lynda
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Date: 04/06/2013 10:58 am (UTC)Here the sea simply is - most roads to most places will take you beside it, or go high enough up that it is the biggest part of the view. And the beaches are the most popular dog-walking places - I even take Mum's long-haired chihuahua on the beach for a run sometimes.
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Date: 04/06/2013 05:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 04/06/2013 06:09 pm (UTC)I really like it with some chopped pecans in it, and although I do make vanilla frosting sometimes, I think the orange version works well because of the orange in the cake.
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Date: 04/06/2013 04:38 am (UTC)I'm curious about the staircase to nowhere. It must have gone somewhere once upon a time, right?
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Date: 04/06/2013 10:18 am (UTC)As for the stairs to nowhere - yes, they certainly did go somewhere - they were the way from a large hotel down to the sea-wall where I stood to take the three pictures.
But sadly the hotel is no more - there are plans to build houses/apartments on the site, but at present there is nothing but the outdoor staircase left.
Sad in many ways, although it had reached the stage of very faded grandeur - it held a lot of memories; the windows far right are the room where both my sister and her husband and S2C and I held our wedding receptions many years ago, and the ones on the far left are where we had the afternoon tea to celebrate my mum's 80th birthday.
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Date: 04/06/2013 09:53 am (UTC)I love the spiciness of carrot cake, and there's nothing better than homemade.
Such a grand staircase to nothing!
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Date: 04/06/2013 10:59 am (UTC)I've just replied to Zanthinegirl - with a picture of the where the staircase used to go.
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Date: 05/06/2013 03:47 am (UTC)http://www.treanorarchitects.com/treanor-preservation/pioneer-presidents-place/
I was so proud of our community for coming together to save the school buildings and give them a vital purpose.
Upon reflection, I realize that I could qualify to live in the old schools! And here I thought "elderly" was a longer way to go for me.
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Date: 05/06/2013 08:58 am (UTC)I would like to think that any new blocks of flats will at least retain the air of the old building.
Your school conversion has worked very well - and as for the realisation that you could qualify to live there - I realised the same thing when visiting a 'sheltered housing' complex the other week - scary!
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Date: 04/06/2013 02:11 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 04/06/2013 07:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 04/06/2013 08:45 pm (UTC)Ooh - that sounds good...
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Date: 05/06/2013 08:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 05/06/2013 07:40 pm (UTC)I was intrigued by the hotel, it looks impressive in the pics. It was a shame that it had to go. The stairway to nowhere is enclosed on either side by cycads, which are a plant endemic to Tasmania. A British botanist brought back a lot of Tasmanian plants in the 1980's or thereabouts, and they now grace the gardens of many stately homes in Britain. I only know this from viewing a British TV show called 'Lost Gardens'.
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Date: 05/06/2013 09:57 pm (UTC)The hotel was rather past its prime by the time it eventually shut - and the company who bought it, and own the site, have built a smaller one a little closer into town, but still with nice sea views, so I guess it is what it is... The 'Manx palm trees' are Cordyline australis - which were brought here from New Zealand a long time ago, and thrive, weirdly.
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Date: 06/06/2013 02:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 06/06/2013 08:07 am (UTC)The cordylines do well in the parts of the UK washed by the gulf stream - you very rarely see them inland. They are known as 'Torquay palms' in the south of England.
Every Easter time we have to explain to the children at church that the palm trees in Jerusalem had different shaped leaves!