Burra Maluca

out to pasture
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since Apr 03, 2010
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Burra is a hermit and a dreamer. Also autistic, and terribly burned out. I live near the bottom of a mountain in Portugal with my partner, my welsh sheepdog, and with my son living close by. I spend my days trying to find the best way to spend my spoons and wishing I had more energy to spend in the garden.
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Recent posts by Burra Maluca

Well I tested the new stove-top oven with some 'biscuits', and they cooked exactly the same as they did in the old one. Which isn't very surprising as they are virtually identical.

And then we decided to test it on the cook-top of the rocket-mass-heater.

We suspected it wouldn't work as well as on a gas flame as the funnel thing is designed to capture the gas flame and shoot the heat up into the oven and away from the bottom of the pan. Or it might turn out that the hot surface of the stove top will make the bottom of the pan overheat anyway. But we figured there was only one way to find out, so I made up a batch of biscuit dough while Austin lit the rocket mass heater up and we had a go...

We put the funnel on the hottest bit of the stove and popped the stove-top oven on top.



The base of the pan doesn't directly contact the stove-top so in theory the biscuits won't burn on the bottom.



The stove top was nice and hot but it seemed to take the oven much longer than usual to warm up. When I was convinced it wasn't going to burn, we left it to do it's thing and checked it thirty minutes later. Then another thirty minutes.



And finally after an hour and half we got hungry enough to declare them to be cooked.



They didn't brown properly, and were just a touch doughy inside, but good enough.



So we had wheat-and-flaxseed biscuity roll things for tea, slathered in butter!



And they were delicious!

So, the verdict. The stove-top cooker does work on the stove-top of the rocket mass heater, but only just. If I was lighting it in the summer because it was our only cooking option I would choose another way to cook the biscuits, probably in a cast iron skillet. At this time of year though when it's running for a few hours a day anyway, it would be an easy option to light it, quickly put some biscuits in the stove-top oven and leave it on there for about two hours and eat them when they're ready.

We could experiment taking some of those discs out so the funnel fits directly over the hot gasses rather than the hot cast iron stove top, but it might spoil the draught of the stove. We must might experiment with that in the future. Not sure yet...
11 hours ago
I use a haybox, made from an old brood box from a beehive, spare insulation sheets and bags of polystyrene beads.

It is the best way ever to cook rice and lentils! And can be used for loads of other things too of course...



Here's a link to a thread you might find useful - How do you make a hay box?
1 day ago
Well we're half way through sawing and splitting and stacking that load of wood. Most of the bigger pieces are eucalyptus and there was a fair bit of bark around the place, presumably having fallen off the timbers after they were put in place. We call it woof rather than bark as burns so readily and I've stashed it separately to use as fire-starters.

I will have to sieve the ashes at some point to remove old nails but for the cost of the fuel to go and fetch it, it's a bargain! And it needed to be cleared anyway...

I also asked my son about the bags of clothes he was given. It turns out he still had two bags left as people just aren't very interested in used clothes, so I had another rummage through them and found a brown sweater. It's acrylic rather than lambs-wool but it fits and it's useful so I'm not too fussed, and a pair of shoes which will do for walking the dog, a pair of cotton sweatpants and, somewhat unbelievably, what I thought were two pairs of jeans turned out to be jeggings. Which are big enough and stretchy enough to actually fit me! I never thought I'd wear anything resembling jeans again but I'm happily pretending I'm in my twenties and hauling wood wearing denim.
2 days ago
We've had a few frosts, and the blood oranges are just starting to develop a bit of colour on the skin.



And apparently inside too!



They are still quite sharp but they have an awesome flavour. And they are nice and big and juicy. And free of pips.
3 days ago
We managed to blag all the old roof timbers from a job site to feed to the rocket mass heater.

That lot should keep us warm all winter!
3 days ago

Burra Maluca wrote:So I think this year I'm going to see if I can do a complete no-buy when it comes to clothes. I'm not so active any more, so it's not like I'm wearing them out like I used to. So for me, it's a make-do-and-mend year!


Ah, so I didn't manage the complete no-buy I'm afraid. I succumbed to temptation and bought a dress! Nothing fancy, just something I can throw on very quickly if I need to go outside where I might be seen during the summer when I've pottering around indoors in just undies. And then I found a pair of full-length curtains for 50 cents in a car boot sale in lovely rustic colours and couldn't resist them so they came home with me and one of them got turned into another very basic dress. Next, my son showed up sporting new jackets and carrying bags full of clothes from 'from a client as a thankyou for doing a delivery', which I admit totally freaked me out but it turned out he was delivering wood for construction and the clothes were being cleared out from a deceased relative. I had a rummage through the bags of clothes and selected a nice black jacket and an apple-green lambs-wool sweater. So rescued rather than bought, but new-to-me regardless. And then the boys took me to a second-hand warehouse as a pre-christmas treat and I bought all sorts of stuff for the house and an olive-green chunky knit infinity scarf for 50 cents.

So I didn't manage the no-buy, but I came pretty close!
4 days ago
Christmas biscuits and gravy!

The boys are out on an emergency digging job so I'm on cheap and cheerful comfort food for lunch, and finishing off the annual bag of brussels sprouts!

I'm testing the 'new' stove top oven, which unsurprisingly is just like the old one but with less danger of the glass in the viewing window falling onto the food as it cooks. The biscuits were made with half wheat flour and half linseed meal and worked very well. It also helps me use up my enormous stash of linseed... And I changed the method of making the biscuits, mixing them up in a saucepan then using the pan to make up the gravy so that the bits of flour left in there end up as part of the gravy-thickening. Which also means less washing up!

4 days ago

Ian Graham wrote:mine looks like this, I see the reply button but on the long threads it is impossibly far away from the post I want to reply TO.



Whichever post you are replying to, your new post will show up at the end of the thread and it's generally better to read until the end of the thread before replying anyway in my experience.

I generally use the scroll bar to get up and down the page faster.
The boys took me on a pre-christmas treat to a second-hand warehouse thing a few days ago.

I came home with all sorts of stuff..



An old camo tent-bag that's going to be converted into a harvesting bag. A load of silk flowers. A pretty Chinese vase. An olive green scarf that needs a bit of TLC. A ceramic divided snack-plate in lovely rustic colours with leafy designs. Some bowls. A nice glass for orange juice. And a spare stove-top oven, for a euro!

It didn't have heat-funnel thing with it but it was in much better condition than the one Alan found for me in the rubble heap and it was only a euro so I thought it was worth taking a risk that the funnel we already had fit.



Austin did a bit of panel-beating on our original one but the new one still looks better.

No dragon logo on the new one, and no heat funnel either but they look about the same size so I'm hopeful.



It fits!



The glass window is intact on the 'new' one too!

And to be fair, it's worth a euro to not have to fix the broken glass on the original.



Nice and clean inside too.

The hole looks a little narrower but that's hardly a problem. And I think my shiny new-fangled but a bit in need of a wash silicone insert should fit too.

I might need to test it by making something. Corn bread rolls, maybe?
1 week ago
That chicken stock got itself turned into leek soup yesterday.

Served in a giant mug with corn-bread croutons cooked in chicken fat.

Simple and delicious!



I couldn't resist just dumping all the croutons right on top of the soup. Much better like that...

1 week ago