The 2008 Irish Blog Awards are now open for nominations. Nominate your favourite Irish blogs here!
Technorati Tags: Irish Blog Awards, Awards, Irish, 2008
The 2008 Irish Blog Awards are now open for nominations. Nominate your favourite Irish blogs here!
Technorati Tags: Irish Blog Awards, Awards, Irish, 2008
I wish all a very happy, sweet and prosperous 2008 from Dingle, Ireland!
Here are a couple photos of the fireworks that they set off last night by the harbour in Dingle town…
Last year was far too stormy for the fireworks display, but this New Year’s Eve was still and warm here in Kerry.
The calm weather and lack of rain put everyone in an elevated mood and made the celebrations a little more special.
Let’s hope it’s a good omen for the New Year. We deserve one that’s warm and dry!
Athbhliain faoi mhaise daoibh.
Technorati tags: Dingle, 2008, New Year, fireworks, Kerry, IrelandÂ
As we go into the New Year, I’m sure that many people have weight on their minds, so I thought I’d write about it. Of course, personal weight doesn’t interest me much, but using weight in recipes is another matter!
Specifically, I wanted to pass on an important tip going into 2008 and that is to:
Always use weight as a measure for dry ingredients.
If recipes offer both volume and weight measures for things like sugar, chocolate, etc., use weight! If recipes offer only volume measures for dry ingredients, convert it to weight and make a note on the recipe.
A basic kitchen scale is a very cheap investment that will pay huge dividends, since the weight of dry ingredients doesn’t vary. Volume measures do (much more than you might think) and that could spoil a recipe.
A cup of sugar, for example, depending on how packed it is, can easily make a recipe too sweet (or not sweet enough). If you want to measure out a cup of sugar, you most likely will give the measuring cup a little shake to level the sugar for an easier reading. That shake settles the sugar and means you will need more to fill the cup. Top it up, and the recipe will turn out sweeter. Give it another shake, and even more sugar will fill the cup. The size of the sugar granules also vary in different regions, and smaller granules mean that more fit in the measuring cup. All of this goes away as an issue if you use weight.
Other dry or solid ingredients have similar problems – for example, I’ve never known how to pack butter into a cup! Also, what’s a cup of chocolate? You can buy chocolate as a bar, little drops, or big pieces, and each will fill a cup differently. So the easiest thing is to use weight!
In our production, we use metric when we weigh ingredients, because it’s so much simpler. If you like using ounces, you should know that an ounce can be almost as confusing as a cup (I’ve written about the problems of using non-metric volume measures here).
There’s the scarily named avoirdupois ounce (most common), troy ounce, and apothecary’s ounce, to name just a few, all weighing different amounts. For liquid weight measures, a UK liquid ounce is different from a US liquid ounce.
If you want help with conversions, there’s a very handy website here.
Happy cooking in 2008!
Technorati tags: measure, recipe, Imperial, metric, conversion, weight
I thought, after two years of the same design, it was time for a new look for the blog. I wanted something a little more white and fresh. I’ve adapted it from Azeem Azeez’s White as Milk WordPress theme. I’ll probably be tinkering away at it (and ironing out the bugs) for a while, but I hope you like it!
There are a lot of tired people in West Kerry today after yesterday’s Wren’s Day festivities. It was great fun as always. Here’s a bit of footage for you!
Technorati tags: wren, day, St. Stephen, Dingle, Kerry
Here’s a little bit of video my father took of the Christmas charity swim in Dingle. I’m in the last frame running out of the cold water as quickly as I can! I hope your Christmas day is much less severe than the Kerry sea in December.
Merry Christmas!
This is always a hectic but fun time of year for me, since yesterday is my Aunt Carol’s birthday, today is my mother’s birthday, tomorrow, of course, is Christmas, and then there is the wren on the 26th.
Today, despite dire weather forcasts, the sun shone brightly, the wind was slack, and the afternoon was much more like May than December.
With the shops closed and the deliveries done, we all went for a stroll on Ventry beach, including Ivan the ice cream dog (above).
What an absolute delight. I might have ice cream and chocolate on the brain for most of the year, but for these few days it’s great to relax and spend time with family. I hope this day was as enjoyable for you!
Happy Christmas!
There seems to be some disagreement as to whether the Irish or the Scots invented whiskey, although the first written account (in 1405) is Irish – a monk happily distilling away. It’s very likely that whiskey pre-dates this record, and there are even some who say that none other than St. Patrick brought the method of distilling when he arrived on this island.
We’re happy to claim it, and there are few better uses than with chocolate. The earthy flavour and alcoholic tang of a strong whiskey add a great deal to chocolate, whether it be in truffles, in a sauce or in ice cream. We call this flavour “Fuisce.”
I think it is especially great at this time of year, when the weather is cold and the body craves comfort. This is my brother’s favourite flavour, and I do hope you enjoy it as well, especially over the holidays.
Ingredients:
What to do:
Yield: 8 servings.
Notes:
Technorati tags: chocolate, whiskey, Irish, ice cream, recipe