Thursday 25 December 2014

BAH HUMBUG - It's December again! And today is Christmas Day!


Six Forty 2014


Get up! It’s time and Santa’s been,
Bounced boys with voices oh so keen.
Just look at that beneath the tree,
I wonder if they’re all for me?

I slipped downstairs to cook the lunch,
They might get hungry was my hunch.
Buried under paper mountains,
Sting and ribbons flew like fountains.

How did you know I wanted that?
Lego, books, and toys for the cat.
This day’s completely crammed with fun,
I sigh as it’s only just begun.

The veg are prepped and oven’s on,
We’re eating turkey not roast swan,
There’s pudding, cake and mince pies too,
I think that’s quite a lot to chew.

And when at last we’ve eaten all,
On to the sofa we’ll all sprawl.
Before we start our exercise,
I might just close my tired eyes.


Sarah Froggatt © 2014


Even the cat decided that he should be sitting at the table:


Wednesday 24 December 2014

BAH HUMBUG. It's December again - only one more day to go!

Bah Humbug, it's 24th December, Christmas Eve, again.

And just like last year, my post will probably take most of the day.

All the advent calendar chocolates have been devoured, even before breakfast - where did 'no sweets before lunch' go?

Never mind, I have other things on my mind like Shakespeare (he never wrote anything about Christmas - maybe he was a bit of a bah humbug too?). He does mention Christmas in Hamlet, but Hamlet is a tragedy and Twelfth Night refers to the twelfth day after Christmas, but I never got that much of a sense of Christmas from the play - a cross-dressing love triangle.

Maybe the Bard and I have more in common than I thought?

Or maybe not.

Which brings me back to the topic of Christmas presents and chimneys and Father Christmas.

Similar to last year, we have no chimney - who needs a fire in their home in Singapore? so I suppose Santa will have to come in through the front door or downstairs, or not at all. When I was younger, my parents would tell me that unless I tidied my bedroom up (and that included everything I had hidden under the bed), then Father Christmas would not visit because he did not like children with messy rooms.

That was probably the only time of the year my toys got a clear out.

Now it's a case of getting my children off the computer or whatever screen, or dropping whatever game they are playing thundering up and downstairs with swords and other weapons.

Stairs are extremely good for exercise, so I cannot really complain.


In recognition of chimney challenges, I have dug out my Christmas ditty from last year - maybe I shall get back to it before the day is out and finally complete it. Then next year I may just get around to illustrating it.

Down the chimney   

It’s Christmas Day, without the gifts,
Did Santa get our lists?
Dad said, ‘It’s cold, I’ll get a log,
While mother feeds the dog.’

I looked around the Christmas tree,
In search of gifts for me,
My brother searched with all his might,
There was nothing there in sight.

We eyed the mince pies on the plate,
To check if he had ate
A bite, or drunk a glass of milk,
Or if it was all just bilk.

The white moustache upon Dad’s lip,
Betrayed more than a sip,
And hard to hide the mince pie crumbs,
That sat all over mum’s.

Dad lit the logs sat in the grate,
And told us all to wait.
The chimney smoked and then it coughed
An ‘ouch’ came from aloft.

Dad stuck his head up in the chute,
And uttered a loud hoot,
‘I do believe old Santa’s stuck,’
My brother said, ‘What luck.’

‘Oh Dad,’ said Mum, ‘don’t take the mick,
That can’t be old St Nick,
That chimney’s such a boring chore,
He’ll come in by the door.’

I didn’t care where Santa was,
The why’s or where’s, because
All I wanted were my toys,
Instead of chimney noise.

The chimney spat out clouds of smoke,
It made me want to choke,
So off Mum shuffled to the door,
Then cried out, ‘Saints galore!

The door was bolted shut, quite tight,
It had been like that all night.
Dad said, ‘I hate to disappoint,
But I think I have a point.’

We all looked up the chimney stack,
And spied a large brown sack,
A pair of boots and a red coat,
All covered in black smoke.

I knew my presents were up there,
With Santa in mid-air.
I wondered how we’d get them down,
And Dad began to frown.

My brother found a cricket bat,
Mum said, You can’t use that.
Let’s face it Santa’s squeezed in tight,
He’s been there half the night.’

'But I want to open all my toys,'
I said with grace and poise,
'There must be something we can do,
To release him from the flue.'

My mum just shook her head and sighed,
'He's really lodged right up inside,
I think his rather largish tum,
Has far surpassed his bum'

My Dad then had a strange idea,
To bring some Christmas cheer,
We'd pull the sack with a large hook,
And dislodge it from the nook.

My brother went to fetch a stool,
To reach the poor old fool,
While mother clapped her hands with glee
And went to make some tea.

Dad tugged and tugged at Santa’s cape,
To help old Nick escape,
But the cloth just ripped off in his hand,
Not really quite as planned.

We heard a rumble from up above,
And Santa gave a shove,
But all that fell was one black boot
And a shopping bag of fruit.

Where did the fruit come from? 

That will be for Christmas Day ...




Bah Humbug.

Tuesday 23 December 2014

BAH HUMBUG! - It's December again - only two more days to go

Bah Humbug, its 23rd December and now there are only two more days to go.

I suppose it will be a let down once Christmas Day is over. We don't get Boxing Day here - the concept of putting on padded gloves and smacking each other is too much for a hot, humid climate.

Actually, the thought of eating a huge meal is rather ridiculous for the tropics, but I suppose it is tradition and traditions are important, wherever you are. They create a sense of your original home as well as the new home you have chosen.

This year, as I said, I have outsourced many of the functions of cooking the lunch to the supermarket, frozen vegetables and whatever other time saving devices I can conjure up.


Turkey, the bird, not the country. Why do we eat Turkey at Christmas? My father used to detest it, "dry, tasteless meat," he would complain. Well, if you overcook it then it will be dry. I am sure that Jamie Oliver has a recipe somewhere to ensure that all the juices "stay trapped inside".

But I am not interested in a cooking lesson, I want to know why we eat a Turkey and not something else? Strictly speaking, many families eat a great many other things, ham, beef, fish (in you live in Scandinavia), capon (like an humungous chicken), pasta (if you live in Italy) and just vegetables if you are not into meat.

Everyone knows that Scrooge bought Bob Cratchit a turkey (he was going to eat a goose) in Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol (1843).  Turkeys are just larger birds and if you were a large family in Victorian England, then a turkey for Christmas lunch seemed like the best option.

Turkey was considered a luxury until around 1950s - most families ate goose, like Bob, or swan, or pheasant or even peacocks (hard to imagine that these birds were not considered a luxury!). If you wanted something really splendid then the family roasted a boar and decorated it - they did roam fairly freely in the wild years ago. Many families still eat roast ham along with their turkey.

It is reported that Henry VIII was the first English monarch to eat turkey at Christmas - a tasty bird. Once source I found, mentions that in "1526 William Strickland imported six turkeys from America and sold them for tuppence each." [Why do we eat Turkey on Christmas Day?] A cheap meal at half the price. Well maybe not five hundred years ago! Imagine being the first six people to eat turkey 500 years ago - unless of course Henry VIII bought all six and ate them all. He did like his food.

Edward VII, Queen Victoria's son also liked his turkey at Christmas it is said.

I found a wonderful anecdote from Jonny Wilkes: "Before the introduction of the railways, Norfolk farmers would dip turkey's feet in tar and sand to make 'wellies' for the walk to London, which could take up to two months.

Rather fit turkeys by the end of that walk.

Whatever the reason we gobble the gobblers, if they are free range, they are a good source of low fat protein (and no added sugar or corn syrup) and they free up the other animals, like cows to make the milk and cheese and chickens to lay eggs, and sheep to give us wool and pigs to eat the left overs.

So give a thought for the sacrifice the turkey is making for the good of animal kind as you tuck in to your Christmas lunch.

BAH HUMBUG
Gobble, gobble, gobble.

Read more from these sites:

Why do we eat turkey at Christmas?

British Turkey

Why do we eat turkey dinners?

Monday 22 December 2014

BAH HUMBUG! It's December again - only 3 more days to go!

Bah Humbug. It's 22nd December and there are only 3 more days before I have to get up early and cook a massive lunch that will send everyone to sleep.

Vegetables to peel, vegetables to roast, a bird to roast, stuffing to make, gravy, and then the Christmas pudding and mince pies that don't have meat in them.

Precision organisation is required. What a bore!


So, in the true spirit of Bah Humbug, I have decided to outsource the cooking and pre-preparation - not necessarily the healthiest of options as I cannot control what goes into what, but nevertheless an easier option and cheaper than going to a restaurant.

Funny how most restaurants tend to get the Uber disease at this time of the year. Rather like those $99.99 cherries in the supermarket.

Frozen roast potatoes and sweet potatoes.  Who cares if they taste like cardboard?


Fresh parsnips that my helper calls white carrots, will need peeling and preparing. So be it.

Broccoli and carrots - these have to be fresh - frozen stuff is just mushy.

Stuffing - thank you Jamie Oliver.

Cranberry sauce - thank you Wilkin & Sons.

Turkey - no legs and wings, because no one eats then and I think the cats are quite fat enough this year. Roasted by the supermarket - thank you Cold Storage. All that will be needed is a whizz in the oven to warm it up on the day.

Gravy - easy, a few lightly sautéed shallots and some chicken stock.

No Christmas pudding as no one eats it apart from me, so maybe I shall make a rich chocolate cake tomorrow - not rich in the sense of having lots of money, but rich because it has copious amounts of dark chocolate melted in to it.

A sliver of smoked salmon, a morceau of pate de fois gras de canard, some cheeses and mini pizzas (thank you Waitrose, you allowed me to be lazy) for those who really do not want to eat turkey and vegetables.

Perhaps I may manage a lie in on Christmas Day?

Probably not.

BAH HUMBUG!


Sunday 21 December 2014

BAH HUMBUG! It's December again and now only 4 days to go

Bah Humbug, it's 21st December.

That means two things.

Only 4 more days to Christmas, and

IT'S THE WINTER SOLSTICE!

I should be sitting wrapped up in a million coats and blankets watching the sun rise over Stonehenge. But I am not. Instead, I am wrapped up listening to the rain beating against the windows and the glass roof and running around with buckets to collect the dripping water because the man never came back to reseal the roof.

Well, I can water the plants later with the bucket water. Only, that does not quite make sense as the plants will probably be a tad tipsy from their over indulgence in rain water over the past few weeks.

Back to the Winter Solstice. Strange to talk about Winter when you live in a place where the seasons are rainy and hot and rainy and rainy. I never thought I would say this, but I miss the darkness of getting up in the morning, the short days and the cold.

Christmas lunch in shorts simply is missing something (unless of course your are from the Antipodes).

The Winter Solstice, an astro phenomenon that marks the moment when the North Pole is furthest from the sun and therefore results in the shortest day of the year. It is the time when druids descend on Stonehenge and await the rising of the sun so they can celebrate the turning of the short days and long nights into earlier sunrises, longer days and shorter nights.

Ah, ha! but the sun does not immediately start to rise earlier! All this logically explained in the BBC article: Why do mornings still get darker after the Winter Solstice? - All to do with the fact that a normal day is not exactly 24 hours long. That's why we have to have a leap year every four years.

So why on earth do we celebrate the idea that days will be getting longer?

Mistakenly, many people celebrate the Winter Solstice all through the day. This is not correct. The solstice in Winter (and in Summer) happens at a specific time of the day and will vary depending upon where on earth you are located. When the sun is exactly over the Tropic of Capricorn marks the exact moment of the solstice. So if you want to make sure you get this correct for where you live, here is a link to help you calculate what time you need to wave at the sun and say: "Happy Winter Solstice me old plum!"

The Winter Solstice has been celebrated in many cultures for longer than time can remember (I made that bit up!).

The Romans celebrated the festival of Saturnalia, honouring the father of the gods, Saturn. They gave gifts of fruit and toys and decorated their doors with greenery - ah ha! that's why we hang wreaths and green and red garlands on our doors - a sigh of festivity.

The Scandinavians celebrated the Feast of Juul - God Juul. This was a pre-Christian pagan festival when people lit fires to celebrate the return of the sun. A Yule log was burnt to honour Thor. (Lots of god honouring at this time). The same was done in England and other parts of Europe where some countries kept the ashes and used them as fertiliser or charms and medicine.


That explains the chocolate Yule log!


The Incas celebrated the solstice worshipping the sun until the Spanish conquistadors banned them, in Pakistan Kalash Kafir celebrate Chaomos and in Iran, Yalda is a celebration of the shortest day and longest night when family and friends eat and drink and read poetry together.

I suppose for all those who Bah Humbug or counter Christmas for being a pseudo pagan Christian festival, this time of the year is a moment when those who wish can worship, but more importantly it is a time for bringing people together, being kind and giving.

So, whether you are religious or not, whether you want to sit under the standing stones of Stonehenge in the cold watching the sun rise, give someone a smile and some happiness, a mark of warmth and sunshine.



BAH HUMBUG

Some interesting sites about the Winter Solstice:

December Solstice

Calculate the time of the Winter Solstice 

Winter Solstice, what is it?



Saturday 20 December 2014

Bah Humbug. It's December again - and the NASA countdown!

Bah Humbug, it's 20th December.

That means one thing - NASA countdown time - 5 (days to go).

Being a Saturday, I was ready to go out to tutor in the afternoon, but it was cancelled. Maybe my pupil needed to do some urgent Christmas shopping? After all, the Saturday before Christmas has now got a name: Panic Saturday.

I am not sure why, as every day seems to have been a panic over the last month when I have ventured out - as I mentioned, I hate going out and "milling around" in amongst the crowds of people who are not quite sure what they are shopping for, but they know they need to get something.

So, "Panic Saturday" - I went to the post office.

What madness you ask? I even asked myself! I took a book in case I had to stand in the queue for a long time. If you read my post about queues, you will understand why I took a book.

Surprisingly, the post office as no busier than on a normal Saturday and the ladies behind the counter as grumpy as ever until you smile at them.

Why was I going to the post office? I had sold a book from my Etsy store: The Balloon Ride. The story of the first passenger balloon flight, that took a duck, a chicken and a donkey up into the air. I could do with a balloon occasionally to fly over everyone in my way.

The advantage of not having to tutor, for my son anyway, is that I become a taxi. Not an Uber Taxi, but a Mum Taxi. And off he went to a climbing and mega-zip line party. Perfect boy stuff for the start of the school holiday and a break for my eldest son who got some "on-my-own" time.

The prospect that there may not be many people around at one of the shopping malls, drew me to go and buy chocolate and wrapping paper. I had run out of the latter and you can't have Christmas without chocolate. Fairly straight forward. Until I decided to try out the supermarket.

Oh goodness me! $99.99 for a box of cherries! $18.50 for a medium sized carton of strawberries!

How can anyone afford such luxuries?

I left in haste and went home to make myself a cup of green tea.


BAH HUMBUG
They'll just have to eat apples instead.

Friday 19 December 2014

Bah Humbug. It's December again - only 6 days to Christmas!

Bah Humbug, it's 19th December.

Last day of the school term and only 6 days until Christmas. How can 19 days have just disappeared like that?

Good job I have been organised and written a check list.

Turkey - ordered - tick 

Ridiculous amounts of mince pies, stollen, mini Christmas pudding (as no one ever eats it apart from me!), chocolate biscuits - purchased, in the fridge - tick 

Vegetables - list compiled, and it does not include Brussels sprouts! - tick  

Table cloth, napkins and decoration for the table - a semi-sort of tick 

Christmas gifts wrapped - tick - apart from the stray ones that suddenly turned up last night 

Signs and directions for Santa for leaving gifts - tick 

(Although it looks like the penguin is explaining that cook books with roasted birds on the front are not such a great idea)

Ah, last night, now I remember - we had Carol singers complete with Santa hats.

In all the years I have lived in Singapore this is only the third time anyone has visited me and how could we refuse when they were collecting for building a school in Kerala, India.

As my eldest son said as they finished, 'I wish the world was filled with more people like you.'

And they sang the bossy Christmas Carol!

We wish you a Merry Christmas
We wish you a Merry Christmas
We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

Glad tidings we bring for you and your kin,
Glad tidings we bring for you and your kin,Glad tidings we bring for you and your kin,
We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

So, bring us some figgy pudding, 
So, bring us some figgy pudding
So, bring us some figgy pudding and bring it right here.

Glad tidings we bring for you and your kin,
Glad tidings we bring for you and your kin,
Glad tidings we bring for you and your kin,
We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

And we won't go until we've got some, 
And we won't go until we've got some, 
And we won't go until we've got some, so bring some out here.

Glad tidings we bring for you and your kin,
Glad tidings we bring for you and your kin,
Glad tidings we bring for you and your kin,
We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

Maybe there are other people out there who like Christmas pudding like me?



BAH HUMBUG
Get singing Christmas Carols and make someone's day!

Thursday 18 December 2014

Bah Humbug. It's December again - only a week to go!!

Bah Humbug, it's 18th December .

Only a week left - that isn't even 7 days because everyone has a half day on Christmas Eve.

I need to order the turkey - Oh no! I haven't done that yet.

Nothing for it, I have to forego writing today and get out into the melee of Christmas shoppers.


I suppose there is only so much you can do on line, and as I proved last week, that is not very much.

Today I leave you with a cat in a bag - certainly not let out yet. Although he does have this tendency to venture next door and play with the dog. I think he has an identity crisis going on.

Nevertheless, he appears to be one member of my household who knows what he wants for Christmas.


This is the cat the likes to play with water and stick his head under the tap. I think he is hoping that I have purchased a nicely cat-scented gift for him to use in the shower.

I haven't the heart to tell him that The Body Shop is for humans, not cats, but the red bag makes a great adventure toy and it makes him think that it is Christmas every day. Rather like fresh chicken for dinner.

The Christmas tree spat out some more gifts this evening, a fair number of which I hope will be a pleasant surprise.

Yet another reason to keep the cat in the bag, rather than out of the bag. Surprise Christmas gifts.

Good job I bought some more wrapping paper there might be a lot of bag-less cats running around
He's even put his white socks on.


BAH HUMBUG

My goodness Ikea looked like it had been eaten by locusts.

Wednesday 17 December 2014

Bah Humbug. It's December again - only 8 more days to go

Bah Humbug, it's 17th December. Doing my sums, and that's "maths" not math as maths is the short form of mathematics (please remember that if you live on the other side of the pond), then I have one week and one day - eight days!

Meanwhile, at school my eldest son's class is holding a secret Santa.

This struck me as strange for a group of 14 year-olds (my 12 year old said they weren't planning anything). He had to purchase a gift of between $5-$10. So yesterday, we went to the toy shop and he picked up two small pieces of Lego. Fair enough, I thought.

He folded the plastic bag around the toys and declared that task done and dusted.

'But you need to gift wrap it,' I protested.

'No, I don't, there's a bag around it,' he retorted.

'But it's Christmas and you can see through the bag,' I countered.

'Bah Humbug,' he sorted.

Last night, like some furtive elf, after he had gone upstairs to bed, I pulled out the wrapping paper and wrapped the gift.

How on earth could he contribute to a secret Santa when his gift was not secret?

That got me thinking about why we gift wrap presents. After all, to the bah humbug or more eco-conscious amongst us, it is a waste of paper and superfluous.

So, I delved into this. One of my pupils told me the joy of having a present wrapped is partly in being able to rip the paper off. She then admitted that one of her friends removes the paper carefully so it can be reused and that her grandmother used to keep the paper to reline drawers.

An extremely practical use for wrapping paper.

But what drives us to wrap presents?

Some reasons I found are:

- To create a festive feel (after all it is not just at Christmas we wrap gifts).

- Wrapping hides what the gift actually is, leaving an element of surprise or anticipation (and let down when we open it) - my son should take note of this.

- Shimmering wrapping makes the gift look good.

Obviously, there is a great deal of deep rooted psychology at play. Dr Daniel Howard, professor of marketing at the Southern Methodist University in Dallas published a study on the psychological effects of gift wrapping in 1992, (Guardian Newspaper, 20 December 2010), his comment was: 'Gift wrapping, through repeated pairing with joyous events in people's lives, has utility in cuing [sic] a happy mood which, in turn, positively biases attitudes.'

So gift wrap makes us smile.

But where did it all start?

Giving gifts was not just invented for Christmas. I expect even cavemen gave gifts when they returned home with a woolly mammoth.

The Roman festivals of Saturnalia, the winter solstice (I will have to explain those in another post), were a time of gift giving and in turn, the idea became associated with Christmas and the Three Wise Men. Although, in early Christianity, gift giving was discouraged - after all it was a pagan tradition.

We have the middle ages to thank, and the legend of St. Nicholas and possibly St. Swithun to thank for helping to make the giving of gifts part of the celebrations.


With the invention of paper (China 105 AD) gifts began to be wrapped. Given that the secret of how to make paper did not reach Europe until around 1000 AD, European gifts were probably wrapped in leaves or animal skin. (That's my comment ;) )

What is certain is that wrapping up gifts and items was a tradition of shopkeepers and retailers who used to wrap the packages in brown paper and tie them with that rough string that feels like hessian. This was to make it easier for shoppers to carry their purchases home.

Decorated paper was not easy to produce, and it took developments in the printing process to allow colour to be included at the end of 19th Century. However, the paper was very thick - rather like wallpaper, in fact wallpaper was often used to wrap gifts, until people became frustrated with it cracking and splitting all the time.

Tissue paper was used instead. It still is used today to pre-wrap delicate items. But one day in 1917 the tissue paper ran out in the Hall Brother's store in Kansas City. Rollie Hall, the owner, it is claimed had an idea and brought out sheets of decorative envelope liners. He sold then at 10c a piece. Within a couple of years, this decorated paper became extremely popular and Hallmark entered the gift-wrapping business.

Now most stores offer gift wrapping services and some people make a business out of it. So there is absolutely no excuse why anyone should not wrap their Christmas gift.


Whatever the origins, whatever the reasons, the act of gift wrapping keeps your gift secret and creates wonder and surprise when piles of brightly coloured boxes and shapes are piled under the tree.

As my eldest son remarked today: 'Well, the Christmas tree exploded gifts last night I see.'


BAH HUMBUG

Make sure you wrap your gifts.