Easy As Falling Off A Bike pt 1164.

Printer-friendly version
The Daily Dormouse.
(aka Bike)
Part 1164
by Angharad

Copyright © 2010 Angharad
All Rights Reserved.
  
-Dormouse-001.jpg

“D’you enjoy helping me change the baby?” I asked Trish, who as I’ve mentioned before is more Mister than Dr Spock.

“I do when it’s just you and me, Mummy.”

“And the baby?”

“Well, yes of course, can’t change her if she’s not there, can we?”

I couldn’t fault her logic. “I suppose not. Are you coming to collect the others?”

“I could do,” she said diffidently.

“Don’t put yourself out, will you?”

“Oh all right,” she sighed, “I’ll come with you.”

We got to the car and realised the shopping was still in the boot, including a now molten tub of ice cream of a well known make. I grabbed the bags and ran back to the house, asked Stella to shove it in the fridge and then I dashed back to the car.

“I suppose you’re going to blame that on me?” Trish said as she got into the car.

“Of course.” I wasn’t but she can find that out the hard way. We chatted as we drove to the convent and I was pleased that the girls were waiting for us when we arrived, it meant minimal exposure for Trish. They all made a fuss of each other and hugged.

“You’re face is okay then?” asked Billie.

“Yeah, Mummy blue lighted it.”

“Did it hurt?” asked Mima.

“Like mad, ’specially when I did it,” Trish replied.

“Did you go to the hospital?” Livvie asked.

“Yes, but Mummy fixed it.”

“C’mon, girls, we need to get home.”

“Yeah, Mummy forgot to take the shopping out of the car, like the ice cream was all runny.”

“Eeeuuuch,” squealed three little voices in the closest thing to harmony I’d heard for a long time.

“Enough! In the car, please,” I asserted myself and to my surprise they complied–probably because they wanted to see the runny ice cream.

When we got home, Stella had shoved everything in the refrigerator except the Haagen Dazs, which she poured down the loo. She’d washed out the tub in case I wanted to use it for something else. I shrugged, all the children were too big even if we used the blender first–nah, it still wouldn’t work.

“I could just eat some ice cream, too,” sighed Trish.

“There isn’t any besides, you ate the last of the previous lot lunchtime,” I reminded her, tomato cheesecake with mushroom and chocolate mint chip, or something equally revolting. I let them choose the variety, gone are the days when it was plain vanilla, raspberry ripple or Cornish. Now you can choose from cat litter to enraged potato or maybe that was wild cashew–can’t remember. The bigger supermarkets like Tesco and Asda and even some Sainsburys now stay open twenty four hours during the week, mainly so you can actually see the full range of revolting ice cream: chocolate sewage with sea salt–oh, that might be the crisps. I let the kids choose, I don’t have the time to waste deciding which variety of cholesterol I want clogging my arteries.

We’ve had hedgehog flavoured crisps, so it’s only a matter of time before we have dormouse or weasel, I wonder if the Americans have skunk flavoured ‘potato chips’? I half expect to see, Road kill, flavoured, with the full taste of bashed badger, bent bunny and flattened fox–no artificial preservatives or colourings added except for the macerated maggots–no extra charge for the increased protein level–all fried in recycled engine oil to help save the planet. Okay so my imagination ran away with that one.

Essentially, I suppose we’re all so spoilt in the West, that we can demand almost anything that is saleable and expect to get it. I wonder what will happen when China and India really get their acts together and dominate global markets and also start selling to their own internal markets.

I listened to someone talking about a new MG car, which is nothing like the roadsters we in the UK expect from such a marque. However, it’s aimed at the Chinese market, where the new emerging middle classes want cars and the chap on the radio suggested they’d sell half a million a year there. Apparently the reason the Chinese bought MG-Rover, was to enable them to sell to their home market. To have started up a brand would have taken a generation and cost billions, so they bought an ailing British company for peanuts and its exotic name will catch on very quickly in China.

How the world changes. It’s going to change even more, and we might have to get used to the idea that as the Asian economies boom over the next ten or twenty years, the West will become the poorer nations. I suppose we’ve had our turn, but I’m mostly concerned how these developing countries will power their new cars and the consequences for the environment–not just the fuel to run them, but also the power to manufacture them–loads more pollution, and will they care if their biggest markets are home ones, about flooding through a rise in sea levels unless it stops them selling goods?

The world went mad years ago when advertising developed using psychological theories of the Freudians, and turned us from citizens into consumers. From then on, it’s got more and more stupid creating a financial model which is ultimately built on sand or fantasy. It has to one day come crashing down and the price of everything will presumably fall with it. It’s unsustainable, the earth isn’t capable of producing all the raw materials we need for everyone to have a four bedroom detached house with double garage and enough parking for the family’s four or five motors. I mean one point three billion in China alone would use up an enormous amount, plus all the fuel to run the cars and heat the houses. By the time that happened most of Africa and Southern Europe would be desert or under water and half the species of mammals and birds we have now, would be extinct–although rats would thrive–they always do.

05Dolce_Red_l_0.jpg

up
215 users have voted.
If you liked this post, you can leave a comment and/or a kudos! Click the "Thumbs Up!" button above to leave a Kudos

Comments

No fireworks

I must confess I'd half-expected something of a bang in this Bikesode.

Thanks A+B+I (melted ice cream): you certainly delivered a rocket at the perils of the consumer economy spreading to less-developed parts of the world.

Pyrotechnic Shots


Bike Resources

Ninety-Seven Dozens of Episodes

Puddintane's picture

Ninety-Seven just happens to be the very largest two-digit prime number (in base 10 at least). Isn't that fireworks enough?

Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

-

Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

Cornish?

I'm from Canada and I've never heard of the flavor as an Ice cream. Cathy should invest in an ice cream maker for the home, It's a great way to control what the kids get.
Good episode.

Bailey Summers

Cornish?

It is a kind of vanilla ice cream, but made with rich daiy cream, so it is much more yellow and very rich
poppykin

Ice Cream flavours

Would this "Cornish" be like the "French Vanilla" we can get here (Canada)? Sounds like it by your description.

PB

One would think so...

Puddintane's picture

French Vanilla Ice Cream Recipe

Clotted Cream Recipe

One can also buy this ready-made, either locally or on-line.

"Cornish" Clotted Cream Ice Cream Recipe

Note that this uses Clotted Cream as a flavouring ingredient, not as an integral part of the cooking and freezing process, so you can use the same technique in almost any ice cream recipe that works for you. I typically prefer recipes that use an ice-cream maker, but that's a rather large investment just to try it out for taste. If you wanted to be really simple, just spoon a dollop from a jar into a bowl of your favourite vanilla ice cream. Add and stir to taste...

The big difference seems to be the clotted cream, which ought to make it a bit more buttery and very slightly caramelised, but cows are cows, all around the world, so the basic bits are ready to hand in most places this note is likely to see, although local laws may make it rather awkward to find unpasteurised milk or cream. Locally, they carry it in "natural" food stores mostly.

Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

-

Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

Cornish Clotted Cream

The Celtic county of Cornwall—the far South-West pointy toe bit at the bottom left of the map of UK—is famous for it's rich dairy tradition, and in particular, Cornish Clotted Cream. It is made from unpasteurised cow's milk and has a “Protected Designation of Origin”, enforced by the European Union, meaning that Cornish Clotted Cream can ONLY be produced in Cornwall, and it has to be made using the traditional Cornish receipt. Clotted cream is made in other parts of the South West, particularly Dorset (where Angharad lives) and Devon, but they are not allowed to use the Cornish designation.

For a more detailed description see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clotted_cream

It is also possible to get so-called Cornish Ice Cream.

Clotted cream is yummy, particularly with strawberries or raspberries, but with a MINIMUM fat content of 55% it is not very good for my somewhat over-inflated figure.
Gabi.


“It is hard for a woman to define her feelings in language which is chiefly made by men to express theirs.” Thomas Hardy—Far from the Madding Crowd.

Gabi.


“It is hard for a woman to define her feelings in language which is chiefly made by men to express theirs.” Thomas Hardy—Far from the Madding Crowd.

There is another food

which we here in the UK associate with the lovely county of Cornwall, And that is of course the Cornish Pasty filled with beef, sliced potato, turnip or swede (also known as a rutabaga) and onion, and baked in the oven, It is when made properly one of the most satisfying snacks you can have ....Trouble is that like a lot of things you can buy now days, Buy a cheap imitation and you will regret it, Filled with what can be best described as a brown gloop the best place for it is in the nearest bin !

Good to see Trish is back to normal, Maybe now Cathy will stop being so hard on herself, About the cause of it, And accept that it was just one of those things that happen to children.....Unfortunately!!

Kirri

I hesitate

erin's picture

I hesitate to tell you what horrors are committed on this side of the Atlantic in the realm of baked meat pies and pasties. Have you ever heard of a pizzarito? :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Bedfordshire Clanger

"I hesitate to tell you what horrors are committed on this side of the Atlantic in the realm of baked meat pies and pasties".
That goes for this side of the pond, too.

Roughly speaking, a Bedfordshire Clanger is like a Pasty at one end, and a Jam Roly-Poly at the other. Either is good; it's where the fillings meet...

Thank you

In a mad and culinarily challenged moment of synchronicity, I have been trying to remember exactly what that delicacy was! I lived in Bedfordshire for seven unfortunate years.,..

Seven years hard labour?

I am no fan of Bedfordshire, save a sneaking admiration for the bit of it which that seceded - Luton.
(Conversely, IMHO Bucks 'proffed-out' by ridding itself of MK.)

About a year ago, the L&D's A&E was very very good to me.

It's always simply "the L&D", but for non-locals it's the local hospital for Luton and its conjoined town of Dunstable. It has a socking great A&E because the M1 almost runs through the grounds and it is right next to a Junction (J12). And at the moment of need it was the only A&E within 15 miles. That doesn't sound a long way - within the family on branch is 30 miles from an A&E - but if you draw the 15 mile circle from where I was it takes in about 1.5 million people. (In fairness that circle has two other hospitals on its rim.)

Teas

There is also the real Cream Tea, in which a pot of tea accompanies scones, served with a pot of strawberry jam and one of the food of the gods, clotted cream. Small wars have been fought over whther the cream should preced the jam onto the scone, or vice versa.

Devonshire Cream

erin's picture

Dairies here in the States sometimes use "Devonshire" as a designation for their very richest creams. It comes in a tub instead of a bottle, though I don't think it's clotted cream. I also don't think they are importing the stuff from the UK; it's just like calling cheese from Wisconsin "Cheddar" when it ain't from Cheddar.

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Yes...

Andrea Lena's picture

...it's like calling Swiss cheese from Bayonne Swiss Cheese when it's certainly not Swiss and it's dubious as to whether it's actually cheese or not.



Dio vi benedica tutti
Con grande amore e di affetto
Andrea Lena

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Only thing i can think of

Cornish is - Cornish Game hen - while personally I detest them (broiled) many folks love em.

super powers

I think like cathy, that the up and coming Chinese and Indian nations are very soon going to be the new super powers and we will be taking a back seat. Maybe we'll get our turn again in the future.
After all both the Chinese and Inidans have had previous dominant civilisations.
Keep up the good work
poppykin

I wonder ...

... if the Chinese owners realise that the iconic letters MG stand for something as dull as Morris Garages :) The only car I ever enjoyed owning was an Austin-Healey Sprite (a badge engineered MG) which we drove into the ground after 100,000 miles, before the perils of climate change appeared on the horizon.

Bit of a polemical chapter tonight, Ang. Me? I've given up bothering. If the climate change sceptics want to take a chance on a miracle then why should I bother? If the energy and food last for 10 more years (15 tops) then I'll have no further interest and we have no children anyway. In the meantime we are as frugal with resources as possible by rarely driving anywhere (walk, bus or bike mostly) and wear lots of clothes rather that using the central heating. No food is wasted - we eat everything edible that comes into the house.

Being young and having loads of foster children I suppose our fictional heroine is a bit more concerned.

Robi

>> Austin-Healey Sprite

Puddintane's picture

Oooh! I had one of those as well, and loved it. It was bright red, with a black rag top which I only put up when it rained. My clueless father persuaded me to let one of his drunken friends "borrow" it, because hers was having car trouble of some sort. I tried to explain to the sorry cow that the steering was very sensitive, but she brushed off my explanations, drove it straight onto the carriageway, and straight away smashed it to smithereens. Unfortunately, she survived.

This is exactly what it looked like:

Here's a larger version off-site for fans:

Austin-Healy Sprite

...except that mine had an after-market roll bar added, which undoubtedly saved stupid Ms Marion's life, because she rolled it through hysterical steering (and probably under the influence of way too much booze). I was right ticked off. If only the bhean sidhe had wailed at the appropriate moment, I might still have my cute little car. Of course, I would have had to clout my father over the head with a brickbat, since he's the sort of fellow who would give away the clothes off *your* back at the drop of a hat, and then blame you if you caught your death of cold from it.

He blamed me for Marion's accident, of course, swearing that I must not have been maintaining the car properly, and left me the tedious process of replacing it without so much as an offer to pay the deductible. Neither did Marion — two of a kind… Of course, she was in hospital, as she richly deserved to be, so I had that to cheer me up at least.

On the other hand, the sterling examples of my father and his loutish friends were a source of two great gifts, a lifetime horror of smoking, and of hard liquor, so I've never been tempted to take up either. All in all, my lovely little Sprite was a cheap price to pay.

Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

-

Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

I had a froggie too

Angharad's picture

Lovely old car except you couldn't lock it. Mine was red. Takes me back a bit.

Angharad.

Angharad

Bike pt 1164.

Cathy forgot Dormouse flavored ice cream for Bonzi.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine
    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

Nice Episode

I always like it when Trish and Cathy go at it.

I like your assessment of the economy. A view I have long held. Eventually there won't be anything left to consume.

We do not have road kill ice cream here across the pond, but for a while we had the Road Kill Cafe, in Greenville Junction, Maine in the 1990's. It started local and expanded to a chain, which was bought out by a larger chain. The name was eventually changed as it was considered politically incorrect. I ate there once on a fishing trip. The food was quite good.

Here is the link to the menu:
http://www.frivolity.com/teatime/Miscellaneous/road_kill_caf...
Bon Apitite!

Hugs,
Trish Ann
~There is no reality, only perception~

Hugs,
Trish Ann
~There is no reality, only perception~

All I could think of as Cathy described

her ice cream flavors was the Harry Potter jelly beans. Enjoyed the rant though. Knowing how indulgent Cathy is of her brood I'm surprised she didn't go out for a replacement tub.

Sounds like someone

has been reading my mind. Has anyone else really noted that the US has no onshore clothing makers anymore? All of it is brought in from overseas somewhere. And the quality has gone so far downhill it's insane. Buy a new shirt, wash it once in cold water and cool dry it, and it has shrunk so much the kids can wear it for a night shirt instead. Almost nothing is made to fit the modern American body phenotype now. From socks, to Levis, they all fit poorly.. All beside the point. Several quiet episodes have at least given Cathy some time to catch up her working, instead of just running around putting out the daily fires she has to deal with. Now, all she has to do is write a speech for the upcoming presentation, make another movie, and save the world again. Or, has Bonzi stopped eating all that bad food that made him dream up some of this stuff?
Must have been soem of that Chinese recalled stuff that got repackaged and resold.

Raw materials running out.

Cathy needn't worry about the oil running out there are far more important raw materials due to be exhausted before oil.
Try helium, (An important commodity for manufacturing solid state micro chips,) There's reputedly only 20 years of this stuff left and it mostly comes from one single source in Texas.) Helium is vital in cryogenic activities and many many other advanced industrisl processes.
Additionally many of the rare earth metals are becoming scarce and they'll run out long before oil or coal. Cathy needn't worry too much about the earth getting overheated we'll probably be back in the stone age before then and possibly thankful that the earth is warmer. I dunno' my crystal ball is just soo-ooo cloudy and unclear.

I think I detect a large thread of cynicism and 'world weariness' in this chapter, maybe Angie's had a downer.

Cheer up kid.

Still loving your stories.
I'm off out on my bike and I won't be burning any oil.

Love and hugs.

Beverly.

bev_1.jpg