Category: Crushes

  • It’s all about the Granola – and a Horse Fly

    It’s all about the Granola – and a Horse Fly

    Last time I wrote about food it was my unhealthy obsession with grilled halloumi, specifically the M&S halloumi kebabs intended for the BBQ. You could get them in either the sweet chilli version or the pesto. Both are delicious.

    After gorging myself all summer on the damned things I can no longer look a halloumi kebab in the eye. Life became bleak. There was little of interest on the TV, the nights were beginning to draw in and I had to face the consequences of a carefree summer eating the contents of the M&S chilled aisle.

    The treat cupboard was emptied. Grim lists of vegetables, salads, fruits, and healthy meats were drawn up. The weeks stretched joyless ahead.

    Until I remembered my chocolate hazelnut granola.

    Five years ago when I was in the thick of my journey to knock off the weight and bring down my blood sugars it was the only thing that kept me going.

    As long as I didn’t inhale the whole jar and accompanied it with some thick, creamy and delicious full fat greek yoghurt it kept my blood sugars stable. It’s not a low fat dish but the fats are relatively healthy ones and it’s packed full of nuts and flax seed so lots of omega oils too.

    I don’t usually approve of that very very dark low sugar chocolate (cheap box of Milk Tray will do me) but it works in the granola giving a chocolatey richness without being too sweet.

    Chocolate and Hazelnut Granola Recipe

    So this afternoon I spent a few hours mixing it all together and it was delicious. Now all I have to do is keep the children away from it. Rob keeps coming in saying, ‘they’ve eaten a kilo of Greek yoghurt. A KILO … I only bought it this morning…’ before shaking his head and walking into town to buy more.

    Dog, it turns out, adores Greek yoghurt too and watches every mouthful consumed with unnerving intensity. Woe betide anyone who leaves their bowl unattended …

    Rob and the Blog

    I started this blog a good while ago now. It doesn’t seem possible but my first post was in December 2017 – almost five years ago! Well, in that time Rob, my darling husband, never read it. He wasn’t my target audience to be fair, and with the loss of his father and his struggles with depression, he never got round to it.

    The good news is Rob is much, much better. Off the meds and is happy and purposeful. It’s fantastic and joyful and I am remembering the fun we had when we first met before tragedy hit, and the children reached that ‘difficult’ teenage phase. A side effect I wasn’t quite expecting is his guilt at not being more involved in my writing and this led to him reading my blog.

    Every.

    Single.

    Post.

    Rob has steadily worked his way through nearly all of them in the past week, This is a tremendous feat of tenacity as there are almost a hundred on here. He also had to put up with me saying ‘did you like it?’ ‘What was the best bit?’ ‘What line made you laugh?’ every time he reached the end of one.

    We did have a slightly awkward conversation about my Norman Reedus articles. I’d forgotten all about them so seeing Rob read an article where I wrote about my inappropriate middle-aged crush on a B movie actor from ‘The Walking Dead’ was a little uncomfortable, but we got through it.

    It wasn’t like I tried to hide anything, I hasten to add, in fact Rob is such a fantastic husband he actually paid for me to meet Norman Reedus at a Comicon event for my birthday. I had a blast and thought it brilliant he trusted me so much, but hadn’t quite taken into account that Rob hasn’t read the article.

    I think this proves how strong a marriage we have, and I was delighted when Rob then read his way through all three of my books offering insight and tremendous support.

    The best bit was it made him realise how brilliant I am (Ha! About time!) and reading posts like this helped him to understand how difficult it can be to live with a partner with depression.

    He felt bad, which he didn’t need to do as I love him, of course, and I think we have learned to forgive each other for our flaws and weaknesses, but I was very pleased that he wanted to buy me something beautiful – two bracelets that I accepted with great grace. He showed real taste and I adore them – what do you think?

    They are from Missoma and made of a gorgeous green stone called malachite. I’ve never heard of it before but it is now officially ‘my stone’ and I want lots of ‘pieces’ made from it.

    The Horse Fly

    Less good news has been the effects of a particularly nasty horse fly bite on my foot, I will spare you the photographs but be assured I have an entire album of photos on my phone tracking the progress from initial, innocent looking ant-bite to huge swollen trench-foot like monstrosity. It still hurts now, four weeks later.

    I started thinking something was wrong when I woke up to find a strange puffiness around my toes. By the end of the day the whole foot was throbbing angrily around the innocent looking dark red spot left by (I presume) a horse fly.

    As I hobbled into work a colleague asked what had happened. When I mentioned I suspected a horse fly he gave a gleeful description of how a horse fly bites. ‘It might as well take a dirty knife and fork to your skin!’ he said. ‘Filthy things, all sorts of bacteria swarming around in their jaws. They don’t sting you with a needle like a wasp, they have two blades in their mouth – they lacerate the flesh by chopping it up and then they use their labella – the softer part – to suck up the pool of blood.’ He nodded down at my swollen foot. ‘Looks nasty,’ he said before walking off. Bloody Biologists.

    Look at those blades!! All ready to chomp at your skin.

    By the end of the day I was in agony. Every time I put weight on my foot I felt the pressure would burst it open, like an over-cooked sausage. I took endless photos, much to the family’s disgust.

    ‘Urgh, Mum – leave it alone! Stop picking it!’ they would say before edging away from me. None of them seemed to be taking it very seriously.

    Happily, the next day I was seeing the Doctor for a (gasp!) face to face appointment. I’d booked months in advance and after passing through three gateways of telephone interviews, the promise of my eldest child and an hour’s tutoring for the nurse’s daughter, the receptionist graciously allowed me to meet my GP in person.

    ‘I suggest you go to A&E about that foot,’ she said as I limped to the door in my flips flops.

    ‘Oh, no really?’ I said. ‘Can’t you give me something?’

    She glanced at me from her seat at the computer. ‘It’s infected and may lead to sepsis. I suggest you get them to have a look, you may need an IV antibiotic.’

    ‘Wait. What?’ I said, immediately panicking. As readers may remember, I have slight issues with hypochondria. I was filled with visions of them sawing off my foot.

    ‘I’m sure it will be fine,’ said the Doc. ‘But better safe than sorry.’

    The treatment I’d had from the GP involved extremely strong pupil dilating drops. At this point I couldn’t walk and I also couldn’t see. Fortunately Rob was nearby to manhandle me over to A&E where they examined my foot and thought I’d be OK with some oral antibiotics.

    I was slightly alarmed when the nurse drew a line around my ankle with my biro. ‘If the swelling goes beyond that line,’ she said, ‘you must come straight back into A & E.’

    Cue me spending the next few days obsessively checking the swelling as it inched towards, but thankfully not over, the biro line. I panicked a bit when it got washed off in the shower but luckily I’d taken eleven billion photographs of my foot and ankle so could redraw the line.

    The Run

    Luckily, I was on the mend by the time I got to the long awaited Race for Life 5 K run. I’d signed up for it months and months ago and was training well but never quite got to the full three miles. ‘It’s actually over three miles,’ Rob kept reminding me, annoyingly.

    As the day approached I cursed my stupidity in encouraging some of my pupils to sign up. It’ll be great! I thought. We’ll raise some money for a brilliant cause (Cancer Research UK) and it’s a good example to set to the other pupils!

    Of course I’d forgotten they are lithe 17 year olds who do eight hours of sport a week. I started to worry when one of them said, ‘I might do the 10k, Miss, is that OK?’

    ‘Fine! Of course! Great! Good for you!’ I replied, my heart sinking. Would I get round the course? Would I be the last one to trail in as the girls failed to hide the pity in their eyes? I was old enough to be their (glamorous and youthful looking obvs) grandmother! Oh, the humiliation!

    Of course it was fine. 10k pupil bombed around the course and managed to make the top ten. The rest of us started off and I shouted ‘go on ahead, you three! Don’t wait for me!’ and lowered my head to start running up the giant hill that started the run.

    As I pounded up it, panting like an old warthog, I realised the track looped back on itself and in what felt like about 30 seconds I saw my three pupils merrily skipping back down the hill not a bead of sweat between them.

    ‘You go, Mrs Warrior!’ they shouted with a triptych of grins lighting up the grey day.

    And I went. I plodded around, blasting ‘You gotta work, bitch’ by Brittney Spears through my AirPods. I got into my stride and was powering along. I ignored the fact I was being passed by people who were walking. As far as I was concerned I was doing a steady jog, maybe they were just very quick walkers.

    Dripping with sweat I kept going, I even got into a bit of a rhythm. I took a gasp of air and inhaled a fly. It better not be a horse fly I thought grimly as I got to the final bend. I spent a good five minutes trying to hack out the fly before giving up and washing it down with a bottle of water kindly proffered by a volunteer.

    It wasn’t quite Chariots of Fire, but when I saw the finish line I sped up a bit. I took out my headphones as I realised I could hear shouting. There they were, my pupils who’d run and the others who had come to support, lined up all pink faced and cheering.

    ‘Go on, Mrs Warrior! You can do it! Woo hoo!’ they yelled.

    It was the best thing. I soared to the end and managed to knock six minutes off my best time. I have decided whenever I go for a run I need a full entourage of whooping supporters. It’s a great confidence booster.

    I made sure to take lots of pictures with the pupils holding up their medals. The school wanted me to send them over to put on their webpage. I tried to hide behind the pupils but they’re so dammed slim I didn’t have a chance.

    Oh, well, I thought. There’s loads of us, I’ll be at the end – they’ll crop me off.

    Not only did they not crop me off, one of the featured pictures in the article they’d cropped all the pupils off and zoomed in on me so I appear, centre stage, hair tied back, bright pink, sweat dripping from my eyebrows and jaw with a cross-eyed grin that shows off my crooked front tooth.

    However! I ran over three miles, in my quickest time, and between us we raised £1,869 for a brilliant cause. Well done us!

    And finally … Books!

    A couple of recommendations. I really, really enjoyed these. Have a look, you won’t be disappointed.

    And I cannot tell you how lovely this is. I’ve never read anything like it – a gorgeous, sumptuous read.

  • Easter can go Suck on a (Chocolate) Egg

    Easter can go Suck on a (Chocolate) Egg

    I’ve got smears of chocolate wiped on my jeans, chocolate under my nails, I’ve spent the last few days with fingers tacky from the sweet kiss of chocolate. Is this because I have been creating charming chocolate eggs with my children? Baking Easter chocolate cake for the family?

    Um.

    No.

    Good Friday was not a Good Friday for me. It was the Hot Cross Buns that did it. Rob bought some home, still warm from the bakery. Their cinnamon-scented siren call was impossible to resist. After a short, but intense, struggle with Rob, I managed to pinch the lion’s share and threw my low-carbed good intentions out of the window. There they lay, in all their protein-laden, salad-garnished glory, ignored with determination for the next five days. FIVE DAYS!

    img_1826
    For illustration – these are from a while ago and I stopped at two. I did not stop at two this Good Friday…

    Once my head was in the trough there was no stopping me. After demolishing the Apple and Cinnamon children of the devil, I started sniffing around the house. Crumbs still clinging to my lips, butter smeared down my chin. Rob looked at me nervously, he’d seen me like this before. It didn’t end well then, either.

    He suggested a light salad and omelette for lunch. Ha! Like that was going to happen.  I kept prowling through cupboards and scouring the fridge. Stupid diet-obsessed-protein-buying-salad-loving-past-me! There was NOTHING to be found that even closely resembled a treat.

    Suddenly I spied the bread bin. My eyes lit up. TOAST! The perfect snack. Three slices later a butter/marmalade/marmite frenzy, I was briefly satiated. I flopped on the sofa and had a stern word with myself. ‘You’ve come so far’, I said. ‘You have to be careful as you have no scales here,’ I continued. ‘No carbs tomorrow,’ I resolved.

    Feeling cheered and restored, I took Dog out for a walk and immediately was drenched to the skin. It was hammering with rain. Dog kept turning round as if to say, ‘are you sure you want to go out in this?’ But at least I wasn’t eating anything.

    We had to buy building materials so a trip to Wickes was planned. This is Rob’s spiritual home. (Mine is any Marks and Spencer’s Food Hall.)

    MS-4heart

    Unfortunately, we had to take the children with us and they insisted on being fed. Once the plaster board and other mysterious bits and pieces were purchased, the children ground to halt outside a burger place and refused to move until we stuffed them full of junk food.

    Well it would have been rude not to join them, so my new resolve faltered, and I hoovered up a giant burger and a bag full of chips. I was proud to resist ordering the ridiculous milkshakes, but managed to drink quite a lot of Son’s discarded one before Rob wrestled it away and threw it in the bin.

    By the time I went to bed I was feeling the worse for wear. Not because of wine, this time, but because of the carb melt down. After the shame of the burger joint, the day was completed with fresh scones with clotted cream and jam. Damn you, bakers!

    Saturday was no better. Without telling me, Rob had purchased a box of chocolates so big he could hardly get them through the door. Instantly my ‘no carbs Saturday’ plan went out the window. ‘I never remember to get you an Easter Egg,’ he said, ‘and you always get me one, so I got you these to make up for fifteen years of no Easter eggs.’

    Bless him!

    If Hot Cross Buns are my weed, then Chocolate is my crack cocaine. That was it. No going back now. Once sweet Mistress Chocolate and I were blissfully reunited, I knew the affair would be heady, overwhelming and passionate – but it couldn’t last. The knowledge this couldn’t, shouldn’t, mustn’t last, added an extra thrill.

    The next day was Easter Sunday and all I can remember is a sweet, chocolaty blur. Daughter doesn’t like chocolate so handed me two whole Easter eggs. TWO! They didn’t last long. Next! Two wispa bars and the accompanying egg vanishes down my gullet. Son doesn’t want his third egg, hands it over to me. GONE IN SECONDS!

    A shopping aisle filled with discounted chocolate Easter eggs

    It was yesterday I realised this had to stop. I was standing in Sainsbury’s eyeing row upon row of discounted eggs. Reduced from £8 an Egg to £2.50!

    ‘You could buy ten of them,’ the junkie whispered inside my head. ‘You could take them all home. Rob won’t notice. You could smuggle them in under your jumper and hide them in the cupboard… Go on… you might as well. You’ve eaten like a rabid walker all weekend… You’ve ruined yourself now… Look,’ the voice hissed in delight, ‘the creme egg Easter eggs are only £2 and see how big they are!’

    I started to sweat. ‘I can’t do it, man,’ I replied. ‘I’ve got to get off the chocolate. It’s not good for me…’

    ‘Come on…’ the devil went on. ‘How about just three of the best ones?’

    I really had the shakes now. I shook my head. ‘No. I can’t. I’ve got to think of the kids. They need me. Rob needs me.’

    Blindly, I stumbled into the salad aisle. I grabbed whatever I could find: Cucumbers, tomatoes, broccoli, bags of salad leaves. A pack of pork scratchings. Anything to silence that sweet, sweet call of the discounted creme eggs and the Kit Kit specials.

    So now it’s Wednesday. I have a training session booked this afternoon and rather than dreading it, I can’t wait to get in there and burn off the sugar that’s lacquering my arteries. The last few days have had a big impact on my fitbit stats. My sleep has been terrible – I can see lots of times when I woke up in the night. I’ve had awful indigestion and my resting heart rate has gone up by seven!

    I haven’t mentioned we had lovely friends and family round and so the weekend wasn’t all bad. Lots and lots of laughter, too much wine, and I got a bit sweary – always a bad sign – but beneath it has been the thread of chocolate indulgence.

    Rob’s box of chocolates are still on the high shelf. I managed to stop myself breaking through to the second layer. But it wasn’t easy.

    THIS IS WHY WE CANNOT HAVE CHOCOLATE IN THE HOUSE!

    The trouble with food addiction is that it is not like drug addiction or alcoholism. You can’t just stop buying food. Imagine the furore if you saw an advert with a woman jacking herself up with heroin, the camera zooming in on her blissed out face. There would be outrage. So how come it’s OK to do it with chocolate? I’m looking at you Galaxy Chocolate advertisers.

    OK, so chocolate isn’t illegal and heroin is, but you get my point.

    I need to stop myself associating junk food with treats. Rob enjoys his food but sees it as nice fuel, not a reward. That’s why he’s only fluctuated three pounds since we married in 2003, the skinny bastard.

    Oh well. Onward and upwards I suppose.

    The good news is I have bought a wig! I was inspired by Catherine over at Atypical 60 (She’s great, you should check her out). She has a huge collection of wigs and looks wonderful in them. I am now of an age where my hair looks awful unless it’s blow dried. If you know The Walking Dead, my hair looks like Eugene’s if left unattended.

    eugene.jpg

    Over the years I’ve lost so much hair at the front unless I have it carefully blow dried forward it just looks like this! A balding mullet. Yuk. So seeing how lovely Catherine looks in hers I’m going to give it a whirl. As she points out, they are brilliant when you are on holiday and you swim a lot and your hair just looks blah… Chuck a wig on it!

    I’m going to email her when I first try it on to get an expert review. I’ll let you know how I get on.

    Final thought, I have LOVED the last few episodes of The Walking Dead. I have been chatting with Claudette over at Writer of Words and I know she found the episode where everyone turns and bites each other – WITHOUT WAKING ANYONE UP! – very frustrating. (It really was – FFS how come nobody heard one of them falling down the stairs?) but the last one was great, and featured a bit more of my hero Daryl Dixon. Let’s hope we see more of him in the last few episodes. In fact, here’s a picture of the lovely Norman to brighten your day. He’s better than chocolate.

    Although.

    What about Daryl AND chocolate?

     

    Dary'

    What about you? What are your triggers? What can’t you have in the house? I’d love to know!