An Afghan Feast!

Our Wonderful Meal

Last evening I was invited to dinner at the apartment of one of the two new Afghan immigrant families I am helping learn English. The occasion was a thank you to the group who sponsored them to Canada, including me for the time I spend with them each week.

The apartment is small, but in traditional Afghan fashion they had laid out the feast for 11 people on a tablecloth on the floor with plates etc. arranged around the perimeter. Two rice dishes, one with delicious lamb hidden beneath, the other with saffron and pistachios, kofta (tasty meatballs in a tomato sauce flavoured with spices I couldn’t name).

I just looked up a recipe:

For Meatballs (Kofta)
– 1 lbs ground beef
– 1 large onion, chopped in big pieces
– 2 green chilies, chopped
– 1 cup cilantro, chopped
– 1 tsp garlic paste
– 1 tsp salt, or to taste
– ½ tsp black pepper
– ½  tsp coriander powder
– ½  tsp cinnamon powder
– ½ tsp cumin, ground

For the Sauce (curry)

– 1 medium onion, chopped
– 2 medium tomatoes, pureed
– 2 Tbsp tomato paste
– 1 tsp garlic paste
– 1 tsp salt, or to taste
– ½ tsp black pepper
– ½ tsp turmeric powder 
– ½ coriander powder
– ½ cup Yellow split peas/chana daal, cooked 90%
– ½ cup oil

https://www.heratkitchen.com/post/kofta

There didn’t seem to be the yellow spit peas in this version (although I’ve had Kofta that did). The tastes I didn’t recognize: turmeric/coriander in the sauce, the coriander/cinnamon/cumin in the meatballs. Delicious on the saffron rice.

There was also:
A minty bowl of finely diced salad
A spinach dish – Sabzi – I could see finely chopped spinach and onion, I assume garlic
Some potato fries – which seems to be a common companion dish
And a custard dessert with cherry jello on top

A lot of work for these young people to undertake.

The challenge, of course, was getting down to sit on the floor – none of us guests are young. At 80 I can get down and up again – I do it a lot when I’m laying out quilt pieces on the floor – but I’m past sitting on the floor, let me tell you! I could not find a comfortable position other than with my legs stretched out in front of me with my back supported by the sofa behind me – taking up too much space for this group and my feet in everybody’s way! I tried sitting on my feet, on my bum with my feet tucked in on my right, on my left, lotus position – I could sustain no position for very long.

I loved the meal and the conversation and friendship. I paid for sitting on the floor – this morning when I got out of bed, I could hardly move. Once my morning dose of Tylenol and Lyrica kicked in and after an hour of Aquafit in the pool I could finally move.

In spite of the sitting challenge, I will certainly do it again!

Closing Down Of Summer

August 20 2023
There comes a day each year in August, in Nova Scotia, where you sense the impending arrival of fall. The smell in the air, the slight change in temperature, the shift in colour of the day, all signal the closing down of summer.

That was yesterday – Sunday morning, just past the middle of August. There is still a third of the month before September. There will be many more summer days – sunny, hot and humid, or overast and muggy, or brilliant sunshine with a more bearable temperature, but interspersed with them will be those slightly crisper days which will become more frequent as September turns to October.

The loveliest time of the year, here in NS, is mid-August ’til end of October. Who knows what awaits us this year – it’s been an unusual year of weather from the get-go. Our winter had less snow than we’ve come to expect, spring was the wettest we’ve ever seen with continuous rain. Summer seemed to start late and with unusual heat came torrential rain that extinguished the uncommon forrest fire conflagrations raging in a number of locations but also resulted in destructive flooding.

Will we experience a more “normal” transition to fall? We all hope so. In gardens, flowers are past their prime, grass (in spite of the rain) is showing brown spots, soon trees will hint of changing colour. That natural progression will occur, but the weather? It’s anybody’s guess, this year!

Earlier today it was cloudy with a bit of sun shining through, but as I walked from my car to the pool, I was aware of the slight chill in the air. This afternoon, it’s warm and very muggy – the air is heavy with moisture and the forecast calls for rain this evening.

Today, it begins to look and feel like fall.

Closing Down of Summer 2022
Closing Down of Summer 2020
Closing Down of Summer 2015

Barbie “Pink” (& other stuff)

Pink Outfit

It was sunny earlier today. Warmish. I pulled this pair of pants and this t-Shirt from my closet to wear. I stopped at a friend’s house for iced tea during the afternoon and her comment,

“Oh you’re wearing your “Barbie Pink” outfit!” stopped me in my tracks.

Barbie Pink! Really!

I’m never going to be able to wear either of these garments again. I’m not a “Barbie” fan. I didn’t grow up with Barbie. I was 16 when Barbie was released – well past the playing with Barbie age. Barbie is simply not part of my cultural heritage.

I have no interest in seeing the film – although I’ve read reviews describing the feminist underpinnings of the movie. I just don’t see myself showing up in public again in what others obviously identify as a “Barbie Pink” outfit!

Another Face

I pulled up behind this convertible yesterday afternoon – the “face” was unmistakeable. I grabbed my phone and took a photo – not a perfect image but the face is definitely visible.

More Shoes

What do you suppose went on here – both socks were stuffed into the right sneaker. Both covered in mud, left on the grass.

The Gals

Two of these gals are 89, one is 92! We were taking a leisurely Sunday afternoon drive along the Noel Shore yesterday. Visited Burntcoat, sat at the lookoff for a bit.

Noel Shore

Stopped for ice cream in Kennetcook (good ice cream, BTW). One of those just moseyin’, taking side roads, not worrying about “getting lost” day trips. We had a nice time. Lots of laughter (I’m the “baby” in this group.)

Yard Sale

We encountered this old fashioned yard sale. Someone had emptied the house, and EVERYTHING was sitting out for the taking – there was a small locked cash box (a slit in the top) and hand-written sign above saying “Pay Here!”. All on the honour system (nobody about). We weren’t the only curious visitors.

I found a box of power line insulators – I have owned one for years – I use it as a weight to hold patterns in place when I’m cutting fabric – been looking for more. I picked out three small size ones, left a toonie (a Canadian $2 coin) in the box. They’re in my dishwasher waiting to be cleaned. (Bernice picked up a small toothpick mug for her collection.)

Ahead Of The Curve

I’ve been making clothes for myself for decades. I stopped being able to buy pants that fit without alteration since my early 40s; hence my long-term quest for pants patterns and techniques for fitting pants that would yield me something that fit me. My top measurements are closer to a single size although for the past decade I’ve avoided fitted shirts, t-Shirts, etc. because my waist has slowly, but surely, increased and that affects how any top I might make will fit.

I was laughing a couple of weeks ago with MaryAnn (a sewing pal) about a FBA (Full Bust Adjustment), saying what I need more is a FTA (Full Tummy Adjustment). She got up, went into her sewing room and returned with a book:

Book Cover

Everything you want to know about fitting patterns is here and if your question isn’t answered in the book, it will be found in Jenny’s blog: Cashmerette Sewalongs + Tutorials. Her foray into garment making for largish women is very informative. Her learning to make garments for herself led her into pattern making for curvy women. She’s recently introduced pattern sizes from 0-16 (the original sizing was 12-32). These simple, generally unadorned garments are suitable as a place to start for anybody. She wants women to look good in their clothes and to feel somewhat stylish.

While the book explains the complete range of adjustments in great depth, Jenny starts by describing “grading” – how you use today’s multi-size patterns to fit the different parts of your body. My challenge is I’m right between her smaller sizes and the larger sizes. With a size 12 bust, a size 20 waist, a size 8 bum, I can’t actually work within a single size range. I’m about to write Jenny to ask her advice concerning which size range I should be working in. I’m guessing because I’m a smallish person she’ll recommend working in the 0-16 range and grading my waist beyond the pattern rather than working in the 12-32 range and grading beyond the pattern to fit my bum. I’m going to take the basic pants pattern from the back of the book and size it to fit me (it’s a 12-32 pattern) to see where I get with it. If I’m able to get a fitting muslin using a graded sloper based on this pattern, I’ll be able easily to design whatever features on want on my pants from there.

Let you know how I get on!

The Story Here?

My sister Donna knows I’m interested in stray shoes/boots. A couple of months ago I came across a pair in the middle of the sidewalk. She came across these on her morning walk in Point Pleasant Park the other day.

The Story?

What’s goin’ on? The boots were small, in good shape, Donna thought about trying the on – she didn’t – she just took the photo.

My theory: the boots hurt; the owner wasn’t walking one more step in them; left them for another walker/hiker (of which there are many in Point Pleasant Park) that they might fit.

The remaining question, of course, is how did the owner get home? The paths in the park are gravel – pretty difficult to walk on in bare feet, even in sock feet! So how did that person get back to the parking lot and their car? No idea!

Other Mothers

Watch this video of a mother raccoon teaching her baby to climb – it has lots to say about how we might think about learning and teaching, ourselves!

Watch the mother problem solve, watch the kit figure out how to climb the tree.

Mother Raccoon can’t actually “teach” the kit to climb – she supports the young one, she positions and repositions her, supporting the kit’s efforts so the young one can figure out she has to use her claws to hang on. Mother’s persistent, she doesn’t give up; the kit finally gets the hang of it and starts climbing the tree on her own.

It’s how my grandmother taught me to make bagels, and how to knit, when I was very young. I was invited into her activity, shown how to participate. I learned to watch and try myself, figuring out what was essential in the process, what I could ignore.

Making bagels, I learned what the dough should feel like when it had been kneaded enough, how to shape the bagels by rolling a small piece of dough into a “snake”, picking up one end, rotating my hand, bringing the other end to the first, then rolling my hand to make the join. I learned how to tell when the bagels were ready to come out of the pot of boiling sugar water, what they look like when they’re baked enough. I don’t recall her teaching me these things directly, but I certainly learned them.

Knitting, the same thing – in the end I became a right hand knitter (my grandmother knitted “european” – left-handed) but the principles of how to cast on stitches, how to hold the needles, how to bring the yarn around the needle push it through a stitch and bring it back through to form a new stitch, I learned from her. After I developed carpel tunnel syndrome in my right hand, I actually switched to knitting as my grandmother did, with my left hand – it wasn’t difficult – I’d learned the technique by watching how she’d done it. I came to understand that our relationship had always been a mentoring one – I was invited to participate in her world and to learn from her many important life skills!

Interesting, I don’t remember my mother engaging with me in this way. She never shared her natural ability to play piano (which I always envied). I took piano lessons but I never learned to improvise the way my mother could. I didn’t learn to sew from her. I taught myself to cook. She aborted my passion for ballet when she refused to let me replace lost ballet shoes. I don’t remember her ever having an encouraging word for any challenge I took on.

I do remember her allowing me to read whatever novel she was reading (which transitioned me from children’s books to adult literature at an early age). The first grown-up novel I remember was “Peyton Place” – The “novel tells the story of three women who are forced to come to terms with their identity, both as women and as sexual beings, in a small, conservative, gossipy town. Metalious (the author) included recurring themes of hypocrisy, social inequities and class privilege in a tale that also includes incest, abortion, adultery, lust and murder.” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peyton_Place_(novel))

At eleven I certainly didn’t understand a lot about what took place in the novel but I knew there was something illicit about this book which my mother and my aunts whispered and giggled about. My mother and I never talked about the book. She never talked about any of the books we actually both read over the years. She went to the library; I read the books after she finished them.

Consequently, I looked for other women to help me become an adult – my Aunt Helen (who lived in London, ON), Mrs. Milligan (my friend Marlene’s mother), Bobby Ballentyne (my friend Marion’s mother), Ruth Marks (whom I regarded as a big sister), many others, all who shared their lives, inviting me into an adult woman’s world. I referred to them as “my other mothers”. I actively sought out mentoring when I wanted or needed to learn something new.

Today, I frequently turn to YouTube as a source of information and technique but it’s not quite the same – the two way act of sharing is absent. There is no subtle feedback letting me know whether my approximation is getting better or not. I’m pretty much on my own as a learner.

Fortunately, I have a lifetime of trusting I can tackle something new and find a way to become reasonably proficient. I attribute that to the many mentors who have shared what they were able to do and supported my explorations along the way.

The reason I reminisce about this, is an article I read recently in the New York Times: He Lives in the Double Helix of My Cells, but I Do Not Know Him (by Zach Gotlieb). Gotlieb, a child of artifical insemination who has never met his father although he discovered he has 20+ half-siblings, writes about Father’s Day. He says he “realized that I’d had fathers all along — dozens of them. There were teachers, coaches, other people’s dads, family friends, my beloved grandfather. For me, these father figures are a collage of wildly diverse personalities and perspectives giving me more fathering combined than an individual dad could possibly provide. Biology is strong, but it’s also easy. The people who father me do it for no other reason that that they choose to.

He made me remember my “other mothers” – the women who took me under their wing, shared their lives with me, encouraged me to be intrepid, audacious, undaunted, adventurous. Because of them I cultivated talents and expertise I would otherwise never have discovered and honed.

I know lots of people who resist wading into unfamiliar territory – they’ve learned to avoid the new and subsequently miss the experience of expanding their horizons. I’m guessing the absence of good mentoring either at home or school accounts for their reticence. Failure, without support to continue trying, can make it difficult to take risks.

I’m always open to tackling something unfamiliar. Recently one the Afghan immigrants I’m spending time with helping learn English was applying for a job that required a knowledge of WHMIS (what’s WHMIS? – Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System – I searched for a way to explore the training myself so I could coach Ahmad through the certification. Turns out he didn’t need the certificate right now, maybe later).

I’m always interested in learning new stuff. I’m not afraid of taking on a challenge. I learned that from the women who took an interest in me.

Gotlieb says: the word “father” has evolved for me, from a noun to a verb.”

The same is true for “mother”!

Being Prepared

Last evening, while knitting in front of the TV as I always do, bedroom window open (that’s where my TV is located), I became aware of the smell of smoke. Not sure of the wind direction – could it have been smoke from the Quebec out of control forest fires?

In any case, I thought about a couple of weeks back and the fires in my backyard – the day the Tantallon fire began I was able to see smoke from our apartment building (that night neighbours on the other side of my building could see flames above the trees); the fire was close – no serious danger that it would come closer to us here, but a very real presence none the less for many days. I had friends who had to flee that fire and the Bedford fire as well.

From CBC News – Upper Tantallon Fire

The notion of “being prepared” was something everybody locally had on their minds. What do you take with you if you have fifteen minutes to leave here quickly? How do you even get out if you have to feed into a single exiting road with hundreds (maybe thousands) of other people also trying to get to safety and traffic at a standstill?

Daphne Calhoun, my massage therapist, wrote in her recent newsletter a summation of what I was considering myself.

Pretty much my list – except for the fire extinguishers (we have hard-wired smoke detectors with a sprinkler system in the apartment building, although a fold-up fire ladder might be worth considering if I could find one six stories long) and the cats. I’d already done what Daphne was organizing – my important documents are digital, I’ve got photos of the rooms in my apartment showing what I own, my contacts list is on my phone and backed up to the cloud, my emergency medical information is on both backup hard drives.

While I didn’t actually pack a bag I knew I would grab my passport, make sure I had my iPhone case (which has my health card, driver’s licence, car insurance papers, etc.) with me. Grabbing a few changes of clothes, my medications, a couple of cosmetics, toothbrush wouldn’t take long (my suitcases are in the apartment storage space, not in the garage six floors below).

Was there anything else I’d want to take? My computer backup hard drives (both of which are the size of my iPhone) – not the computer – that can be replaced, the information on it would be useful to have even if the critical stuff is already stored in the cloud and accessible. I have a gazillion password stored in a password manager on my phone – didn’t need a paper copy. Family photos? On the backup drives. My will is in the safe deposit box at the bank with the insurance papers (and my insurance agent has that information, anyway).

Art work? If I can’t get out by car because traffic is going nowhere and I have to start walking – a small bag on wheels and a backpack is all I’m likely to manage. I thought about my impending art show in Parrsboro – if at all possible, I would have taken the large suitcase already filled with those quilts and wall art pieces. I’d certainly have packed them in the car (at least that much of my art work might have been salvaged), but the rest of the art I own (and there’s quite a bit on my walls) I’d have to abandon.

That’s about it. I was mentally prepared to walk away from everything I couldn’t easily transport on foot. If necessary, what’s important can be packed in a carry-on bag and a backpack. The rest, as George Carlin says, is “Stuff!”

What’s The Story Here?

This afternoon, with my sister Donna, I visited the newest Afghan arrivals sponsored by the Jubilee Group here in Halifax. We spent a lovely hour engaged in conversation – I was trying to asses their English capabilities so I might know how to help them out. As Donna and I were leaving their downtown apartment (just off Gottingen Street), we saw these shoes just “standing” there.

How do you suppose they got there? Why would someone just step out of their shoes in the middle of the street? There is an intriguing story here, for sure.

Second Fidget Quilt

Second Fidget Quilt

It took a couple of hours yesterday to set up the 12 blocks. This morning I laid them out on a piece of batting, added some stiff interfacing and stitched down the grosgrain ribbon to cover the joins (I didn’t sew the blocks together because I wanted the finished project to be larger rather than smaller – I gained 1 1/2″ on the width and 1″ on height by doing that).

Next, I embroidered my signature on the backing:

Back of Fidget Quilt

After embroidering a signature, I aligned the backing on the other layers, sewed the binding to the back of the project, folded it over the front and decorative stitched it in place.

I discovered when I was finished, that I’d put the backing on upside down! My signature is at the top left on the back of the quilt., instead of bottom right which I’d intended. Wouldn’t have happened had I done what I always do and hand stitched a label in place. Oh well. Lesson learned. Check backing twice before adding the binding (just hope I remember to do that checking!).

This time I focused more on texture with some velvet (which came from some pillow covers I made for my sister 25 years ago). I added a small circle of ripstop which has a crinkle sound when you scrunch it, but stitched flat it just feels “shiny” and makes little noise. I included a square of PUL fabric – that makes a sound when you rub your fingers over it.

I added a velcro fastening; a snap which is tight at the moment, and various beads and loops which move on ribbon or elastic. There is a small zippered pocket (which has a hidden object attached on the inside). The zipper with three pulls has no opening.

I made this second quilt as a prototype. I took the original quilt into my local sewing shop on Friday afternoon and the gals thought it would make a great class. Tomorrow this quilt will go to the shop to be displayed. All I have to do is prepare a description of the project and send that along with photos so the class can be advertised.

Now I need to do some actual experimenting with ideas for some 6×6 pieces. I also want to create a quilt based on the motif of the back of the last Drunkard’s Path quilt – Planets With Moons – a combination of large and small drunkard’s path blocks. I think 5 columns separated by a bit of sashing would be interesting.

Back of Planets And Moons

I’ll start on one of those projects tomorrow.

Bisa Butler’s Amazing Textile Portraits

Detail from “If I Ruled The World, Imagine That” – Bisa Butler

Carefully examine the work and the decisions in this example of Bisa Butler’s textile art. [Detail of “If I Ruled The World, Imagine That” (2022), cotton, silk, wool, metallic brocade, and velvet, quilted and appliquéd, 102 x 51 inches].

This complete piece is large 102″ x 51″ – the width of a king size bedspread and 2/3 the height. This portrait is one section of it and still you can see how amazing her decisions are regarding colour pattern and background!

As much as I enjoy creating image wall art, I can’t begin to think in the manner and scale that Butler does – notice the roller skates on the pants, the hair, and glasses frames, the shadowing on the vest, the detail on his hat. Her wild choices of fabric, her amazingly done appliqué work, the juxtaposition of patterns are simply wonderful. My works are small – hers are massive!

I’ve shared her work before. Here’s another link to Bisa Butler. It’s worth a few minutes to have a look.