My second volunteering shift for the Sydney Festival was at tonight’s performance of “Air Time.” Rodd, Cecily, and I welcomed guests for an hour of parkour, BMX, skateboarding, and dance! 🛼🛹🚲
Intarsia
Okay, this is getting fun now! I’m sure I’ll be cursing when it comes time to weave in all those ends though. 🧶
Textile protest
Threads of Resistance: “Knitting and embroidery are laden with stereotypes of domestic femininity – and the subversive potential for protest.”
Wonderful essay by Gemma McKenzie showcasing ways textile art has been used as a tool of protest by women. I was especially blown away by the embroidered scrolls of Lorina Bulwer – WOW. The rage!
Pithy
This Guardian article on the prevalence of flaking out on plans includes a quote that really spoke to me:
“Increasingly with gen Z and millennials there is a fetishisation of introversion,” said Andrew, 23, from Brisbane who works in telecoms sales. “Web comics and memes make a moral comparison to extroverts, who are supposedly loud, obnoxious people. Introverts are [depicted as] moral people who own cats and crochet. But our generation is also experiencing record high loneliness, so I think we shouldn’t praise choosing loneliness or celebrate [extreme levels of] introversion.”
YES. As an ambivert, I’ve noticed this tendency online for a while now, and it annoys the crap out of me. Choosing to be at home alone is not more virtuous than enjoying the company of others. There’s nothing wrong with it, but introverts always seem to imply they’re better people for it. “Fetishisation” is a good word.
From the CWA “Dessert for Every Day of the Year” 1965 Cookbook
Way back in 2007, I was gifted by my mother-in-law Bev a copy of the Country Women’s Association of New South Wales cookbook “A Dessert for Every Day of the Year – 1965.”
I made two recipes from it, but then set it aside for another day. Well, I just realised that this year will be its sixtieth anniversary 🤯 so it’s a good occasion to explore some more. This time I started with January 2: SUMMER PUDDING.
This isn’t like the English-style summer pudding that I’m used to. Instead it’s more like a whipped fruity gelatine dessert. Here’s the recipe:
SUMMER PUDDING
Mix 1 heaped tablespoon of flour in one cup of cold water very smoothly; add another cup of cold water, 1 cup sugar, and 1 heaped tablespoon of powdered gelatine. Bring to boil, stirring all the time; add the juice of 2 oranges and 1 lemon. Turn into a basin and allow to cool. When beginning to set, beat for half an hour, then add 6 passionfruit and put into a mould to set.
Pretty simple, eh? I started off by boiling the flour, water, sugar, and gelatine as directed.
Meanwhile, I squeezed two oranges and a lemon.
Once the mixture had boiled, I added the fruit juice and set it aside to cool down a bit.
Eventually I poured it into KitchenAid bowl and put it in the fridge to chill. I noticed after an hour or so that it looked like it had separated a bit (as it was setting from the edges) so I gave it a good stir. After another hour or so it was starting to fully set, so I got it out and started beating.
The instructions to “beat for half an hour” gave me some pause. I mean, really?? So I asked my knitting group chat for their opinions.
Consensus was that the point is to make it thick and light and creamy, and that 8-10 minutes with a modern stand mixer would probably be sufficient. It definitely changed colour after a while and started to grow in volume, and by 9 minutes looked like a bowl of thick white fluff.
Time to add the passionfruit. I’m guessing that the expectation back then was that you’d have your own passionfruit vine. That’s not as common in the city these days, and currently fresh passionfruit are about $2 apiece. So I went with a couple of the small cans of passionfruit pulp, filtering out some of the excess syrup. I folded it in and it immediately all sank to the bottom of the bowl.
I let it chill for a few more hours. Once it had thickened to the point where it could support the passionfruit seeds, I gave it another stir so they were distributed throughout. Here’s what it looked like before bedtime (when I couldn’t resist having a little taste.)
And here’s the finished “summer pudding!”
It’s very light and fluffy, and I feel like I’m eating the foam off a bubble bath. The citrus and passionfruit flavour is lovely, but man, it’s just way too much sugar. I need to remember going forward that I should pretty much just halve the sugar in any recipe. (They really liked things sweet in 1965.) It also makes a LOT of pudding, and it’s economical in that the ingredients really don’t cost much (especially if you have your own passionfruit and lemon trees, which I expected many CWA members would).
I wonder what the second week of January will bring…?
Pub knitting
“What? This is a perfectly normal thing to knit at the pub,” I sob into my beer while untangling 28 different coloured bobbins. 😭🧶
Carbon dioxide
Mr. Snook has been after a carbon dioxide monitor for some time now, worried that our new insulated windows are actually killing us. He ordered this one in the Boxing Day sale, and it’s just arrived today. So now he’s walking around the house going “TWELVE HUNDRED IN THE LIVING ROOM! WE NEED TO VENTILATE!” Forecast today is for 33C/91F. Fml. 🤦♀️
Sydney Festival Volunteering
The Sydney Festival has begun! I wasn’t rostered on any volunteering shifts until next weekend, but I got an emergency message last night asking if I could help out at Bondi today. Why not? So I slipped on my yellow shirt, slapped on my Festival hat, and slopped on some sunscreen before making the trek out to Bondi. It was an absolutely beautiful day.
I headed to the Pavilion and found the setup area for The Whale. The folks from Spare Parts Puppet Theatre had set up the scaffolding yesterday and then blocked it off for the night. I helped take down the barriers and bollards.
The puppets – including the 10m long whale – were being prepped nearby. I got to help carry out the whale!
The talented puppeteers got to work hanging the whale and the other sea creatures
The whale was in two parts, with the lower part made of billowing netting. She also had thousands of LEDs inside that should look beautiful at night.
Once they had her hung, they spent a lot of time tweaking the position of the support ropes. “Do you need any help?” “Sure, grab that rope!” I was excited to lend a hand.
And then it was time to open to the public! There was a steady stream of folks coming to and from the beach, and we invited them to check out the whale and help her swim by pulling on the ropes. I made a little video. You can also hear some of the amazing music.
It was pretty hot. I diligently applied sunscreen and refilled my water bottle regularly. My fellow volunteer Pete bright me a much needed Zooper Dooper. 😂
A lot of people were shy about coming up to the artwork. I spent a lot of time tugging on ropes myself and yelling to passersby: “WOULD YOU LIKE TO HAVE A GO? IT’S FREE AND REALLY FUN!”
And then later I took a break and got myself a Frosty Fruits.
At 4 we put the whale to “sleep” for an hour so everyone could have a break. My shift over, I couldn’t resist taking one more photo on the beach.
What a fun day! The Whale is running for ten days, and I’ll be back for another shift next weekend. If you’re in Sydney, you should check it out.
The Whale
First day of Sydney Festival volunteering! Please endorse me for WHALE WRANGLING on LinkedIn. 😂
Sports day
We’ve had this TV for two years, and today I was finally motivated to figure out picture-in-picture. I’ve got the Aussie cricketers trying to finish off India, as well as Notre Dame (currently) beating Georgia. GO IRISH! 🍀