Saturday, October 20, 2018

Happy Ninth Birthday to I’m Turning 60…!! by Margaret Ullrich



Happy Birthday to I’m Turning 60…!!

I really want to thank you for visiting during the years, whether you have dropped in on a daily, weekly or occasional basis during the past nine years.

I especially want to thank those who have commented. I really appreciate it when you tell me that your family enjoyed a recipe, or when you ask if I have a recipe for a particular dish.

The past nine years have been full of changes - some good, some bad - and I want to thank you for sharing the years with me.

I’m Turning 60… continues to be more popular than its older ’sibling’ blog
Really!!

I’m Turning 60… - with 1037 posts - has had 689,015 visitors since July, 2010.
That's when Blogger started keeping track of both blogs.
That's more visitors than its ‘elder sibling’, Winnipeg is Better Than Chocolate, which has 2,741 posts, and received a bit over 407,000 visitors.

I’m Turning 60… has less than half the posts with over fifty percent more visitors.
Quite the growth for this little blog!
Thank you for visiting and for telling your friends!


Okay… enough with tallying the reader numbers.
Let’s get back to the recipes which deserve the credit for all these visits!

I recently took a look at how this blog’s posts have been doing.
There have been a few changes from last year’s favourites.
Here are the current all time top ten posts:
               Italian Easter Pie with Ricotta and Meat


During the past month these have been the top posts:
               / Swordfish, Mackerel, Tuna and Shrimp
Carmela Soprano's Ricotta - Pineapple Pie (Cheesecake)


Please, if you haven’t already, do try the recipes on these lists.
They’re not popular recipes because people don’t like them!


I also get a kick out of seeing how you search for my blog.
Searches include: 
red cabbage a christmas story
sopranos cookbook recipes 7 layer cookie
the hoito thunder bay pancake recipe
maltese eggplant stuffed recipe
how to fix ross il-forn maltese receipy 
italian cookies with orange
sopranos vodka sauce
cheesecake co-pckers new jersey
housefrau on twitter

And my personal favourite:
nearer and dearer anna
Ma would've loved that!

Back to the visitors...
Turkey is a new member of the top ten club, knocking Romania off the list.
So glad to get to meet you folks in Turkey!
Hope you've been enjoying the recipes.

Now the top ten countries and their visitors are:
United States………….. 328,275
Canada………….……….…. 58,917
Australia………….………… 35,126
Malta……………..…………. 33,616
Turkey………………………. 29,224
Russia…………………….…. 27,438
United Kingdom…….…. 21,412
France………….………..…. 16,942
Germany……….…..…….  14,758
Ukraine.…….…….….…….   9,646

Want to compare the numbers and recipes with those of last year? 

I'm always amazed at learning where you live.
I expected many visitors from the United States, Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom since many Maltese immigrated there, especially after World War II.

During the years there have also been visitors from Italy, Finland, Poland, Spain, 
the Netherlands, Macedonia, Mexico, Afghanistan, Thailand, Slovakia, Ireland, 
Denmark, Bangladesh, Sweden, Israel, Moldova, Malaysia, Singapore, Kuwait, 
Greece, Kenya, Vietnam, Czech Republic, Brazil, Bermuda, Namibia, Cyprus, India, 
Philippines, Japan, South Korea, Norway, New Zealand, Madagascar, Armenia, 
South Africa, Romania, Iceland, Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan, Tanzania, Argentina, 
United Arab Emirate, Belgium, Tunisia, Taiwan, Paraguay and China. 
It is a small world after all!!

During the past few months there has also been a new, mystery visitor which Blogger is calling ‘Unknown Region’.
I haven’t a clue what that means or where these readers live.
All I know is that they seem to like my recipes.


Since I don’t post on a daily basis, why not become a subscriber?
It’s easy and FREE!
Just click on the ‘FOLLOW’ link under the pictures of followers to the right of this post and type in your email address. 
After joining you will get an email every time there is a new post.
This way you won’t ever miss a recipe.

I don’t post on Facebook anymore, but I do post a link on Twitter whenever there is a new post. Just click on the Twitter link '@ImTurning60' on the side bar above the followers and we’ll be able to keep in touch that way.
Gotta love modern technology!

I'd also like comments.  Really.  
It's easy to do.  Just click on Comments and write. 
Tell me what you want to know about. 
Would you like more holiday recipes, or more easy, cheap, quick meals or…?

Thanks again for visiting!
Hope to see you again real soon!

Friday, October 19, 2018

Anna Sultana’s Halloween Barmbrack, The Orionid Meteor Shower & The Full Hunter’s Moon

Can you believe it? 
October is more than halfway gone.
That means it’s almost time for Halloween!

The holidays, especially the ones late in the year, were a hectic time for Ma.
Not only did she have a ton of Maltese recipes to prepare, but she also had to include recipes that we had learned from our neighbours and her co-workers, as well as those recipes that had become a part of Maltese traditions by way of Napoleon and the British navy.
Yes, Napoleon. 
Recipes used every way they could to find their way into Ma’s recipe files.

One such recipe, along with its Halloween traditions, is Barmbrack, an Irish tea bread filled with raisins and dried fruits.
It was a popular item to enjoy at 4 o’clock in Malta, where it was served as toasted slices with butter, along with a nice hot cup or two of tea.


Barmbrack also has a Halloween tradition attached - the loaf is baked with small items mixed into the batter, and they are supposed to foretell a person’s future:
  • a bit of cloth meant bad luck or you would be poor
  • the coin meant you would enjoy good fortune or be rich
  • the ring meant you would marry within the year
  • the pea meant you would not marry that year
  • the stick meant you would have an unhappy marriage or be in disputes
  • the medal, usually of the Virgin Mary, meant you would be going into the priesthood or convent (The medal isn’t usually included any more.)

Hopefully each person’s slice would have one of the items.
Of course there was always the risk that a nice thick slice could hold a weird combination - such as both the pea and the ring - or nothing at all.
Well, cooking and holiday customs are not exact sciences!


Hints:

You can use just raisins (your choice as to kind) or a mixture of raisins, currants, cherries and citrus peel. 
This is a great recipe for using up bits left over from baking a fruitcake. 

The dried fruit should marinate for 8 hours or longer.
You can prepare the fruit the day before and bake the next afternoon for your tea time.

Some dried fruits absorb more liquid than others so you might need to add more tea. 
To be ready, have some extra cold tea on hand.

It also works fine replacing the egg with a tablespoon of applesauce.

Barmrack is best served fresh and warm but will last for up to five days.


I remember noticing that the grownups would often brush their slices with a syrup that wasn’t offered to us kiddies.
Our parents would also add a drop or two of the syrup to their tea.
Well, they needed some fortification for the upcoming holidays!

         Whiskey Syrup

Place in a saucepan
1/4 Cup water
3/4 Cup granulated sugar
Juice from 1/2 lemon (about 2 Tablespoons)
Heat over a medium burner. Do not stir. 
Swirling the pot occasionally, boil the mixture until it’s a dark golden brown. 
When the mixture is dark, remove from heat and add 
1/2 cup cold water 
2 Tablespoons whiskey
Bring the mixture back to a boil. 
Cook for 1-2 minutes, until everything is combined. 
Lightly brush slices of bread with the syrup and add a nice spread of good butter.
It's also delicious in a cup of tea or coffee.


If there was time, Ma made this special butter for us kiddies.

         Honey Butter

Place in a small bowl 
3 Tablespoons salted butter at room temperature
1 Tablespoon liquid honey
Mash together until well combined.         


                                   Barmbrack

Place in a bowl
1 1/3 Cups dried fruit 
1 1/4 Cups cold strong black tea
Place the bowl in the fridge and let the raisins soak 8 hours or overnight.
After a few hours you could check to see if they need more liquid.

Grease well an 8 x 4-inch loaf pan
Preheat the oven to 350° F

Combine in a large bowl 
2 Cups flour
3/4 Cup brown sugar 
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon ground allspice
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
4 teaspoons baking powder
the cloth, coin, ring, pea, stick and medal (optional) 
Stir in
the marinated fruit
Add
the tea left from marinating the fruit
1 egg
Stir together. If the batter looks too dry add a bit more cold tea.

Pour the batter into the prepared pan.
Bake at 350º F for 1 hour. 
If the top is browning too quickly, place tin foil lightly over the top. 
It is ready when it’s golden brown on top and sounds hollow when tapped.

Serve warm with butter and/or jam.
Don’t forget to make a pot of your favourite tea or coffee.


About the sky, thanks to the folks at The Farmers' Almanac

October 21 & 22 - The Orionid Meteor shower peaks! This shower is the cosmic dust from the most famous comet, Halley’s comet. The meteors appear to emanate from a point near the Orion-Gemini border in Orion’s upraised club, hence the name. View overhead from 1 to 2 a.m. local daylight time until dawn; you may see 20-25 meteors per hour. 
But the waxing gibbous Moon may interfere with viewing.

October 24 - The Hunter’s Moon will be astronomically full at 12:45 p.m. In this phase, the entire disc of the Moon is fully illuminated by direct sunlight. Though the Moon is only technically in this phase for a few seconds, it is considered “full” for the entire day of the event and appears full for three days so you can get out and enjoy it! Learn more about how this Moon got its name in our short video.

October 31 - The second of two Last Quarter Moon phases this month, at 12:40 p.m. In this phase, the Moon looks like a half-Moon in the sky. One-half of the Moon is illuminated by direct sunlight while the illuminated part is decreasing, on its way to the New Moon (invisible) phase.

The Last Quarter Moon is at perigee (twice in one month!) at 4:22 p.m., meaning it’s at its closest point to Earth in its orbit. The reason we’re seeing the second Moon at perigee is that the lunar calendar is 29.5 days long, which is shorter than our Gregorian calendar.