Chips& stuff & things.

Stories memories and people

Moderators: Global Moderators, AnneM

joette
Global Moderator
Posts: 1974
Joined: Mon Sep 05, 2005 5:13 pm
Location: Clydebank

Chips& stuff & things.

Post by joette » Fri Oct 05, 2007 5:09 pm

I made chips this week you know potatoes from the garden,peeled them & fried them in a pan with oil.

Well you think I had crossed the desert without a camel or water.
"You really made them & not from the freezer"??

I thought back to Mum's trusty chip pan which was a permanent fixture in the kitchen & chips would be cooked in it at least twice weekly.Oh & fish in batter & my fav fritters.We thought nothing of it it was just part of daily life that you would shop daily for fresh ingredients & use them ASAP.

No fridges just the larder & in Winter the top of the coal bunker!Usually around Christmas & New Year when the larder would be full.

How the seasons would be marked by the changing of food.Monkey nuts & pomegranates it's Halloween &Autumn,Spring by Ayrshires & Summer by salad veg & tomatoes.Winter was the stored veg & jams made from the autumn/summer fruits.
Now if I want I can eat salad & raspberries on Christmas Day if I so wish.

I'm sure that it has contributed to Global warming as we fly in so much of our food stock.

I was also thinking about when Granny used to say it was a great novelty to see a motor car & how every child would come running.We were the same but vice-versa.

I can knit & sew not very well but enough to hem & sew on buttons etc & mend a seam.I could at a push turn a sheet or a collar but then why would I when things are so cheap to replace?
I can darn a hole in a sock -comes in handy for torn knees in school trousers.
Now it's almost impossible to buy wool in the nearest town & I have to buy on-line a lot.Ditto for patterns.

I guess I am feeling old & nostalgic.I know that I could if neccesarry do the wash in the sink & cook on an open fire.I could even make my own soap at a push.Not that I would want to mind you.I am happy to wake up to a nice cosy bedroom & a hot shower.

I just wonder what skills we have today will be looked back at with nostalgia?

"Do you remember when we had to type our homework & we had to cook food?"
Who knows or will a more eco-concious generation have gone back to some of the old ways?

I love to knit & cross-stitch but my family are not dependant on these skills to dress them as they may have been in generations past.I love to grow & pick my own food.I love making jam & chutney but again Tescos et al are just around the corner.
It's official I have turned into my Granny. :wink:
Researching:SCOTT,Taylor,Young,VEITCH LINLEY,MIDLOTHIAN
WADDELL,ROSS,TORRANCE,GOVAN/DALMUIR/Clackmanannshire
CARR/LEITCH-Scotland,Ireland(County Donegal)
LINLEY/VEITCH-SASK.Canada
ALSO BROWN,MCKIMMIE,MCDOWALL,FRASER.
Greer/Grier,Jenkins/Jankins

PaulaD
Posts: 216
Joined: Mon May 22, 2006 5:42 pm
Location: Born in Edinburgh, now living in Essex1

Post by PaulaD » Fri Oct 05, 2007 6:16 pm

Oh you've brought back some memories !!

My favourite job as a child was "topping and tailing" the gooseberries and blackcurrants. And shelling peas but eating the small juicy ones before handing them over.

Children today miss out on so many things we enjoyed.

I've turned into my Mother :roll:

Paula
Searching for Barclay Aberdeenshire, Stewart Edinburgh, Brown Edinburgh & Uphall, Finlayson E Lothian, Fairley & Renton E & W Lothian for starters!

Russell
Posts: 2559
Joined: Sat Dec 24, 2005 5:59 pm
Location: Kilbarchan, Renfrewshire

Post by Russell » Fri Oct 05, 2007 11:01 pm

I've turned into an old grump :(

I remember the down side too. Rubbing Cardinal polish onto the front step and wondering if the red stuff would ever come off my fingers.
Thinking similar thoughts after cleaning up the old black grate (my mood echoed the colour of my fingers - and usually my nose, forehead and cheeks too).
Clattering my legs with the enamel bucket when the ashes had to be carried out to the ash-pit on a bitter winters morning.
Scraping the underside of the slab of lard in the chip-pan to clean off the burnt, smelly bits before the next batch of fry-ups.
Crawling under the bed (with the springs digging into my back) to retrieve the wooden mushroom used for darning the socks.
Happy times just the same - or is it selective memory loss.

Russell
Working on: Oman, Brock, Miller/Millar, in Caithness.
Roan/Rowan, Hastings, Sharp, Lapraik in Ayr & Kirkcudbrightshire.
Johnston, Reside, Lyle all over the place !
McGilvray(spelt 26 different ways)
Watson, Morton, Anderson, Tawse, in Kilrenny

bobbyinmelbourne
Posts: 19
Joined: Sun May 08, 2005 11:26 am
Location: Australia

Post by bobbyinmelbourne » Sat Oct 06, 2007 11:45 am

There is no taste on earth better than new potatoes and hopefully it's one that can't be 'manufactured'. 'baby' spuds ain't the same. I've been in Aus. 40 years and still miss 'em.
You know that we are upside down here, but coming up to
christmas- groan-I often see suggested menus with brussel sprouts. Now I have done my bit to promote the veg, my grown up kids love them,grandchildren, no, but Fresh, in winter, not frozen tasteless stuff :evil:
I turned into my mother several years ago, sadly she is long gone, so I can't tell her she was right about wearing vests!
Bobby[/i]
family names are McEwan,Parlan Stirlingshire;Elliot,Hyslop, Beattie Dumfries/Borders;Ferguson, Grierson Lanarkshire;O'neill, Madill Antrim

Bertha
Posts: 230
Joined: Tue May 24, 2005 6:35 pm
Location: Edinburgh

post topic

Post by Bertha » Sun Oct 14, 2007 11:20 am

I threw away my chip pan years ago, ditto the deep fat fryer after
setting my mum's kitchen on fire with the pan and my husband having high cholestrol made us get rid of the other. As a treat though we buy fish & chips from the local shop once a month.
New potatoes especially Ayrshires with loads of butter running over them are a fav of mine but hubby prefers mash/ I refuse to mash new tatties!
However, I started to knit again after 25yrs when my son told me I'm to be a granny!. However the family find it very amusing for some reason. My son said "do babys still wear that stuff, I thought you just went to the shops and bought fleeces and things?"!
My youngest (22) though looks like she may eventually take up the needles, she has been sitting alongside me knitting one row purl one row plain. Patterns I think may be beyond her for a while yet. I on the other hand learned from my mum at the tender age of 6 and could turn out an adult size jumper by the age of 8. We also got knitting & sewing at school, not these days, that's why a lot of skills were lost.
Lately I have taken to making my own apple pies/crumbles/stew/sauce as we have 2 apple trees loaded with apples and my lot refuse to eat them so I still spend a fortune every week on apples for them.
We have a pear tree which has just given us 8 huge pears my sister's comment was "You got that from a tree". I had to laugh, she is nearly 50 and had meant to say "tree in your garden". She thought fruit that size could only come from well tended orchards and you bought them in the supermarket. I much more than she will ever am turning into my mother, who at the age of 75 still bakes and makes jams with the fruit provided from my garden when available.
Well must away and get those apples cooked.
Bertha
looking for
Nelson/Neilson,Wood,McDonald,Baillie - East Lothian
McLaren,Ross,Kelly,McEwan,Nicholson,Price/Pryce,Telfer,Robertson, Dickson/Dixon, Gibson,Niven Edinburgh

sheilajim
Posts: 787
Joined: Fri Jul 01, 2005 10:42 pm
Location: san clemente california

Post by sheilajim » Sun Oct 14, 2007 7:54 pm

I have no idea into what I have turned into. My mother could not sew and was not a very good cook. I have no idea whether or not her mother was any good at these tasks. I was surprised to find that one of my GGGrandmothers was a dressmaker.

I have never been to Scotland, but I remember wild strawberries, tasty tomatoes and other fresh veggies and home made ice cream. They were delicious.

Not so great were the old washing machines and hanging the laundry out on the line. Another thing that I don't miss was putting paste wax on the hard wood floors. What a chore that was for my mother. No wonder she didn't like housework.
:evil:
Regards
Sheila

claudette
Posts: 51
Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2007 12:11 pm
Location: Suffolk

Post by claudette » Sun Oct 14, 2007 9:23 pm

Home cooking always tastes best I think - and at least you know what has gone into it with no preservatives etc.

There is also nothing to beat home-grown fruit and veg. We do grow a few things in the garden - home grown potatoes are really good and very easy to grow, though my husband seems unable to produce baby ones. His new potatoes were all the size of baking potatoes! And my mouth is watering when I remember the corn on the cob he grew - it was picked, cooked and eaten within 30 minutes - so delicious :!:

And there's a lot to be said for buying fruit and vegetables in the right season - for example in winter if you buy strawberries flown over from goodness knows where I think they have no taste to them and you pay some exorbitant price as well.

My children learnt to do cross-stitch at school but that was all. However, when I was at primary school, we learnt to sew, embroider, knit and crochet while our teacher read such stories as Dr Doolittle to us - I seem to remember my apron had several small blood stains on it as a result of me giggling too much and pricking my finger! Fortunately the material was red gingham so the blood stains weren't too obvious :roll:

Maybe it's to do with age but I sometimes think I have turned into one of those Grumpy Old Women (that programme on BBC2) but I hasten to add my glass is always half full - never half empty!

Best wishes
Claudette
Searching for Grieve family

AndrewP
Site Admin
Posts: 6154
Joined: Sun Dec 12, 2004 1:36 am
Location: Edinburgh

Post by AndrewP » Sun Oct 14, 2007 11:16 pm

My Mum used to make soup almost every weekend and make jam whenever the fruit was in season. My brother and I used to enjoy winding her up with questions like "can't we get real soup out of a tin like other folk get" (or real jam from the shops). She has now retired from making jam, but still makes soup quite often.

All the best,

AndrewP

fmackay
Posts: 364
Joined: Sat Dec 31, 2005 11:40 pm
Location: East Lothian

Post by fmackay » Mon Oct 15, 2007 6:52 am

Real chips! Can't beat them :) My mum used to have a very heavy(seemed like it at the time anyway)chip pan which she used to make the chips in -she used lard not oil. As we lived in a small village, nearest chip shop nearly 50 miles away, on a Saturday night she would make these chips in the evening and we would eat them out of brown paper bags. Almost as good as the chippie :P

You always knew what day it was by what she cooked for our dinner. I too used to wish for a tin of tomato soup sometimes rather than the homemade broth etc which we used to get on a regular basis.

Now when I make a meal from scratch, spag bol in particular, I get the comment that it wasn't as good as the stuff I used to make , ie jar of supermarket best!
You can't win, so now it's back to the jars!

I also learnt to knit, sew etc at school and when my daughter was a baby I knitted a couple of things for her but I think that was the last time I attempted it - any time I got stuck I had to phone my mum and explain to her what I had done to see if she could help me. Quite a sight - hugging the phone, holding the knitting and trying to describe the mess in front of me! I gave up :shock:
Looking for
Mackay Morrison Manson - Sutherland
Bain Sinclair Gunn Henderson Levack Dunnet Lyall More Corner Miller-Caithness
Wylie Brown Louttit Banks Hourston Spence Drever Bews Irvine Whitelaw/Whitelay Linklater - Orkney

claudette
Posts: 51
Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2007 12:11 pm
Location: Suffolk

Post by claudette » Mon Oct 15, 2007 8:08 am

I regularly make soup in winter - potato and leek and also lentil and bacon are especially popular in this house. My mother also used to make a potato and carrot one which was very good. Depended on what was cheap and in season.

When I was young my mother used to make most of our clothes. She was very good at both knitting and sewing.

I used to make some of my clothes as well - I made my bridesmaid's dress and my going-away outfit when I got married. But my children wouldn't wear home-made clothes when they were young - so I went to the charity shop to buy what I could - and they didn't like that either :lol:

Another thing I remember from my childhood was how my mother was a great one for recycling anything - she was obviously way ahead of her time! Though this was more as a result of her family being very hard up when she was young because her father died when she was 7 and then of course with WWII.

I remember when we unwrapped our presents at Christmas and birthdays, we had to be really careful undoing the paper and not tear it - then she would smooth out each piece of paper, fold it up and put it away in the drawer ready to be used again next time :!:

She would also cut up the pictures from Christmas and birthday cards to use for present labels. "Waste not, want not" was her motto.

It was heartbreaking going through her house after she died - and throwing away all the bits of string, brown paper, old envelopes kept for her numerous lists etc etc.

Best wishes
Claudette
Searching for Grieve family