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Awards

Childrens' books

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Which book

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How to buy books mentioned

Complete(ish) list of books

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Wombat Dreaming



Jackie's November message . . .


Intro
Mothball News
Book News
Awards
Schedule for this Year
Wombat Jokes!
Some Recipes: Wool Wash and how to wash woollens now winter is done
A Bombe (with an 'e', not an explosive one)
Ancient Roman Chicken Salad
Not King Alfred the Greats Lemon Coconut Slices
Rose and Lavender Biscuits
Some Different Tucker to Try.....rainbow chard, Warrigal spinach, yacon, loquats.

Introduction
           
It's rained. And rained. And rained.
         Actually it hasn't been a lot of rain - just three or four showers every day, and cold grey days in between. I don't suppose much has soaked into the soil.
         But it is all GREEN- and weedy. We have the Open Garden workshops this weekend and for once will actually have to mow the grass, instead of waiting for the wombats, wallabies, roos etc to eat it, or no one will be able to see anything. including each other.
         The trees are all weighed down with fruit and the avocadoes look like they have punk haircuts- covered in the yellow spikes left from 10 zillion flowers- and the roses have a million buds waiting for the sunlight that never comes..
         It is so different from last year that it is quite weird. This time last year the ground was hard and the grass was brown- what there was left of it- and there was bushfire smoke already over the hills.
         The really weird thing is that it is still drought, more or less- plenty of grass, acres of weeds, but still no moisture deep in the soil. Two hot weeks would dry us out again.
           
This is a wonderful time for eating- asparagus of course, and the first strawberries- strawberries don't travel well, so unless you grow your own you'll never know what a scented luxury a real strawberry can be. The ones in the shops are like juicy cardboard.
         And the first loquats, except the fruit bats are getting most of them, and the first tamarillos, banana passionfruit, rhubarb, and the last of the navel and blood oranges, mandarins, grapefruit, tangelos, cumquats, calamondins and limes, and of course lemons and avocadoes but we have them all year round.
         We grow Eureka lemons that DO bear for 12 months of the year- and are by far the most cold tolerant of the lemons, despite what everyone says about Meyer lemons- Meyers hate the cold and they taste too sweet and not lemony enough anyway. And if you grow about 10 varieties of avocado you can eat them all year round, though you have to race the currawongs for the last of the big ones in January. Currawongs love avocdaoes and as they can fly and I can't it's easier for them to get the ones 20 metres up.
         And any day now there'll be the first of the cherries and peaches, then the apricots and then the.... yes, it is a stunningly good time for eating!

Mothball News
           
It sounded like a burglar with a saw, cutting through the door to my study- about five minutes after I put out the reading light to go to sleep. I was just about to wake Bryan - or at least yell 'go away you dumb burglar I am trying to sleep!' when there was another noise- the familiar grrk grrrk grrk of Mothball scratching her back on the floor beam under my bed.
         Not a burglar then. Just one stroppy wombat eating the... actually I'm not sure WHAT she was eating. I think it may have been the posts that hold up our bedroom, but as they are metal even Mothball can't chew through them.
         (After three decades of living with wombats there is no way I'd have a house on wooden posts- it'd only take a dedicated wombat a week to have you crashing down!)
         I thought Mothball had deserted us for a while- there is so much grass that the wombats are munching the best and lushest and ignoring the shorter stuff around the house. But it seems she is back- or else she's taught another wombat where the best scratching post is.
         Hark has moved on too- he's a good size wombat now, very fat and healthy. I think I have worked out who his dad is too- Totally Confused, the wombat near the front gate. Most wombats know exactly what they are doing- make sure you never stand between a wombat and its hole if it decides to race back to it, or it'll send you flying.
         But Totally Confused can never decide anything. If he's on the road when you drive in he'll decide to go right- then left- then right- then left again- which means he goes round and round in circles for twenty minutes or till you get out of the car, pick him up and place him firmly in the wattle trees on the other side; or give him a gentle boot in the backside...no, this is not cruel. Wombats LIKE a gentle boot in the backside, as long as you turn it into a long booted scratch.
         But to get back to Hark- he did the 'running in circles' trick in front of my car last week, and as I have never seen any wombat do it except for Totally Confused, I have a feeling they must be related!

            Book News
           
A War for Gentlemen is out at the end of this month- it's based on a true story of an Australian who went to fight for the south in the American civil war. I'm terrified for it- I have been researching it so long and working at it for so many years I have come to care very deeply for the Charles and Caroline in the story. I just desperately hope I have done them justice!
         It's a book for adults, of course, not kids. The latest one for kids is the sixth Phaery named Phredde adventure- Phredde and the Purple Pyramid, suitably hilarious for Christmas! Am just about to start work on the next Phredde book, for next Christmas...
         Will Bruce finally decide that the time has come to stop being a frog and turn back into a phaery prince? Can Snow White and the seven quite short computer software engineers solve the problem with the school computers? Will Pru train Cuddles, her ancient Demon Duck of Doom, to stop eating the footballs, not to mention the goal posts and the referee? And isn't there something ....strange...fangwise about the other team?
         I think I am going to have fun with this one.

            Awards
           
Two more awards for Diary of a Wombat this month- the Koala Award (kid's choice in NSW) and YARA Award- Young Adult Readers Award. It was so wonderful to get them- and a million thanks to all of you who voted!!!!!
         Bruce Whatley and I spent the afternoon after the Koala awards with Lisa Berryman from Harper Collins going through Pete the Sheep again- the sequel to Diary of a Wombat except it's not a diary and it's not about wombats, but we are having so much fun with it- even more I think than with Diary of a Wombat. It's about a sheep, and a shearer, and being different Š and that sounds incredibly boring but I can't see a single page of Pete the Sheep without giggling, it's the sort of book you just want to gaze at and gaze again. A loveable book.
         Anyway Diary of a Wombat is happily galloping around the world- has been reprinted three times in the US in the past month!
           
Schedule for the rest of the Year
(I'm not even going to think about next year yet, but it's filling up pretty quickly, especially as I only like to go away from home once a month, for a maximum of three nights- just get too homesick otherwise, and wonder what on earth I am doing away from Bryan and the wombats and why!)

9 November Open Garden at our place to raise funds for the new Braidwood Hospital garden- two 3 hour workshops on how to grow just about everything in your back yard, even if your backyard freezes regularly, and how to grow herbs and make your own perfume, deodorant etc. plus morning or afternoon tea. Contact the Open Garden Scheme to book- numbers are strictly limited, especially as most people from last year have booked again!
         There are also another two workshops for the same cause on Sunday 28th of March- but again I'd book now as I think they are just about booked out already.

12, 13 November: at the Dubbo Zoo talking about wombats! Contact the Dubbo Zoo for more information

19 November talk at Canberra Girls' Grammar Primary School

24 November Inverell library, 2 day sessions and one evening session

25 November Glen Innes library 2 day sessions and one evening session

26 November Armidale library 1 day session

4 December (not 6th as I said last month). . Book launch of A War for Gentlemen, plus talk and dinner at the Grapevine Cafe Braidwood. Everyone welcome but you do need to book- contact The Grapevine Cafe in Braidwood or Winchbooks, Canberra. A War for Gentlemen will be on sale plus lots of the other books.

Wombat Jokes!
I'm not sure who this one is from!
Why did the wombat cross the road?
He didn't want to dig a tunnel.

From Hannah!
Q: What goes down but never comes up?
A: A wombat hole.

Q: Why did the rolled oats follow the carrots across the road?
A: Because Mothball was hungry.

Q: What do you call Mothball mixed with a cockatoo?
A: Mothball wanna cracker!?!

Q: Why did the wombat stop training humans to feed him?
A: Because his wife was a famous cook and she was coming to stay.

Q: Why did the wombat run across the road in terror?
A: Because his aunty lipstick-kiss had just arrived!

Q. Why do all wombats dig holes?
A: Because they know what is good for them when the relatives are coming!

Some Recipes

Not King Alfred's Lemon Caramel Coconut Slices
For all blokes who can't bake biscuits!

         About the only thing anyone remembers about poor old King Alfred is that he burnt the cakes- he was hiding from the Viking invaders in a marsh and asked for shelter in a cottage. The lady of the house asked him to watch her biscuits but he was dreaming of viking raiders etc and let them burn.
         Actually he seems to have been a decent king in quite a few respects, setting up a basic legal system and a few other kingly niceties. Anyway, it was 'King Alfred's day' a few weeks ago so I thought of him and then these...impossible to burn as you don't bake them! They are very, very easy to make.

Ingredients
half cup sweetened condensed milk
125g butter or margarine
1 cup coconut
1 tb grated lemon rind
250 gm crushed milk arrowroot or other plain biscuits
         Place condensed milk and butter and lemon rind in a pan; bubble till butter is melted. Stir in coconut and crushed biscuits. Press fairly thinly- about as thick as your finger- into a tray. Place in the fridge for an hour.
         Now spread on icing and leave till set, then cut into squares and keep in a sealed container.

Lemon Icing
2 cups icing sugar
3-4 tb lemon juice
optional: 2 tb extra coconut to sprinkle on top

         Stir lemon juice into the icing sugar and stir till smooth. Use 3 tb lemon juice to begin with then add another few drops if it is too dry to spread. Don't add too much lemon juice at once- you need a surprisingly small amount to make icing! Use a knife to spread the icing over the slice then sprinkle on the coconut.

Ancient Roman Chicken Salad
(the recipe is ancient, not the chicken salad. At least it is almost the same as the ancient one- I've made a few substitutions )

ingredients
6 dancing virgins in a pie crust
24 nightingales in cages to sing to you
24 long haired slave girls (to wipe messy fingers on)
golden finger bowls filled with rosewater

You will also need:
1 chook
2 star anise (or 1tb anise seeds)
4 tb white wine vinegar
Water
         Put chook in saucepan; cover with water and add vinegar and star anise. Cook till tender- about 1 hour. Cool in liquid then chop up.
         Lay chicken in dish.
         Add salad ingredients:

1 cucumber, peeled, seeded and chopped
2 stems celery, finely chipped
1 tb sultanas
1 tb pine nuts
2 tb chopped onion
1 tsp chopped mint (I leave out the mint)
1 tsp chopped ginger

Mix dressing:
quarter cup white wine vinegar (I use lemon or lime juice)
3 tb honey (I use brown sugar )
quarter cup kid's sweetbreads pounded with cheese (I use quarter cup olive oil instead)

         Pour over salad. Mix. Serve within two hours, otherwise the cucumber goes gooey.

Ps It actually is a quite delicious recipe!!!


Mash o' Nine Sorts
         This is one of the traditional Halloween foods (For anyone who didn't notice it was Halloween this month.) Actually the garlic isn't traditional, and turnips were, but the swap makes it far more appealing! And anyway it's the 'nine things to mash' that is the really important bit- the three times three charm was supposed to protect you from ghosties and ghoulies and long legged beasties, and the things that go bump in the night.

Ingredients:

3 potatoes, peeled and chopped
1 carrot, peeled and chopped
1 parsnip, peeled and chopped
1 small piece pumpkin, peeled and chopped- about the same size as one of the spuds
1 small hunk sweet potato- again about the same size as a spud, peeled and chopped

6 tb butter or marg or olive oil
1 large onion, peeled and chopped
1-10 peeled chopped cloves garlic
1 - 12 tb parsley, peeled and chopped, or 1 cup cabbage, peeled and chopped, or 1 cup peas
optional: a little cream or milk

Bung butter etc in pan; add onion garlic and green stuff; stir on lowish heat till onion is soft. Turn off heat.
Boil other ingredients. Drain. mash well. Add the butter and buttery stuff and mix well. Add extra cream or milk if it looks too dry- shouldn't be.

Pile it all into an ovenproof dish and bake at 200C till the top is brownish, or just serve it as it is. Great with large juicy hunks of meat- no other veg needed. Also good by itself, especially with extra peas and cabbage in it to give it body and well browned in the oven so it's top is crisp and crusty.
         It's even better heated up again the next day.

A Lemon Bombe
         This is bombe with an 'e', not the bombe that expolodes. (I promise this one is NOT explosive).
         It sounds a lot of work, but isn't- and is wonderfully spectacular, a bit like a cheesecake without the boring crust.
         Bombe with an 'e' comes from the word bomb that explodes, because they look much the same- except if your bombe has a fuzzy wick coming out of its end throw it out because it's probably some horrible fungus living in your fridge.
         And bomb without an e is one of our oldest words...it SOUNDS like an explosion...... Boooommmmbbbbbb.... and so ancient Latin gave us 'bombus.'
         Back to the bombe you can eat....and it is a very good one.

500 gm ricotta cheese
half cup caster sugar
1 tb Cointreau
half cup cream
half cup lemon juice
optional: 1 tb grated lemon zest

         Mix with a fork. Spoon onto a CLEAN cloth. Tie up edges and hang in a cool place (I hang ours over a tap in the bathroom) overnight or for at least four. (It can be left for 48 hours if the room is cool.)
         Unwrap and place on a plate it will be spectacularly bombe shaped, and taste like cheesecake without the boring crust!
         Keep leftovers in a sealed container in the fridge.

Rose and Lavender Biscuits
         Okay, these taste a bit odd till you get used to them. They are very delicate and good BUT your tongue will not be used to rose or lavender flavours! But once you stop being startled you realise they are good.

250 gm butter
5 tb icing sugar, flavoured with flowers- see below
OR 1 drop rose or lavender essential oil NB MUST be suitable for consumption-and say so on the bottle- avoid rose or lavender scented oils!!!!!
OR 2 tsp vanilla essence (which also comes from flowers- the vanilla orchid)
1 cup cornflour
1 cup plain flour

Mix all together with your fingers. Roll into very small shapes; bake at 200C for about ten minutes, or till just turning gold at the edges. Leave to cool on the tray- they are very fragile till cool. Store in a sealed container.

Scented sugar
Dry 3 cups scented rose petals till leathery, not crisp OR 3 cups jasmine flowers ( the spring blooming pink and white J officinalis, others can be very very toxic!!!!)
To use: shake out the sugar and use in cooking. If you want to store longer just store the scented sugar- the petals may absorb moisture and rot.
Layer with 1 cup castor sugar for two days to two weeks. Throw out if petals start rotting or go mouldy or look or smell odd!.

or Mix 3 cups English lavender flowers with 3 cups castor sugar. There is no need to dry the lavender first. Keep for up to two weeks then remove flowers; use sugar at once or store for a few months. Throw out if mouldy, fermented or looks odd!

Eucalyptus Wool Wash
         (Also good for greasy overalls, fur rugs and stains)
Ingredients:
4 cups Lux soap flakes or grated yellow soap
1 cup methylated spirits
1 tablespoon eucalyptus oil
         Mix soap flakes or grated pure soap with the methylated spirits and eucalyptus oil in a jar. Put the lid on and shake well. Store till needed.
         Shake again before use. Add one tablespoon for every ten litres, or small bucket, of water. Dissolve the mixture in a little hot water first.
How to wash wool
         Use Wool Mix (see above), use lukewarm water and WASH gently - vigorous washing turns wool into felt;. you can't turn an omlette back into eggs - and you can't turn felt back into wool.
         The quicker woollens are dried the less they shrink - only wash them on warm sunny days. Try to wash them often - very dirty woollens need more scrubbing and too much rubbing spoils the texture.
         Only use lukewarm water.
         Lather the warm water with a little soap - make sure it's quite dissolved. Add a little borax to soften the water for white woollens. Knead the clothes very gently - don't rub them as it will spoil the shape and the texture.
         Turn inside out and repeat.
         Rinse in two lots of lukewarm water to remove all soap (if the woollens are coloured add two tablespoons of salt and two of vinegar to the last rinsing water to help set the colours). Roll in a towel to squeeze out the final moisture. Shake well and hang in a breezy place to dry. Shake them just before they are dry and just after to raise the pile. Press on the wrong side with a moderately hot iron.
Shrunken Woollens
         If wool shrinks try soaking in one cup of Epsom salts and one bucket of warm water for ten minutes. Don't rinse. Lay out on a towel in light shade and gently pull into shape - don't stretch too much. If necessary repeat this several times - if you pull too much at once the whole thing will go floppy and ridiculous.
         If wool has thickened and felted however there isn't anything you can do about it - it's like trying to turn that omelette back into eggs.
Prickly Wool
         If you find wool too prickly for your skin, rinse woollen shirts or underwear in one part vinegar to ten parts water.
Yellowed Woollens
         Soak for one hour in one part hydrogen peroxide to ten parts water and three drops of cloudy ammonia. Rinse well, adding a little washing blue ( from the supermarket) to the water. (if you can't get washing blue, use this recipe anyway) Turn inside out and always dry in the shade.

Some Different Tucker to Try.

Coloured chard and Warrigal spinach
         These are both green veg- the sort that survive drought, frost, heatwaves, dust storms, plagues of grasshoppers, and probably meteor strikes.
         Coloured chard is a stunning looking silver beet with vivid coloured stems, but a rather nicer leafed one, as ordinary silver beet can be a bit coarse, like cattle food for not very discriminating cows. All silver beets are really beetroots- some beets have big bums and they are beetroot, others have small bums and are silverbeet or chard. And all are very very drought tolerant- once they are a few weeks old they'll tolerate almost any amount of heat and drying out, and will give you tucker for the next 12-14 months.
         Plant seeds or seedlings now; feed well- the more you pick the more you need to feed, but a good plant will give you a bunch a week in summer if it can get some water too.
         Warrigal spinach is a native Australian green, though some insist it's a native New Zealand green that came ashore on a floating log, bird's feet etc the odd millenia ago. But it was definitely growing here when Sir Joseph Banks discovered it.
         It grows like a weed- our biggest plant is about 2 square metres growing from a crack in the paving- extreme heat and no water at all for over six months last year, and we still had to hack it back to be able to walk around the side of the house ie very very drought tolerant. I mean seriously, this stuff is really extraordinary. One good plant will feed a family of four every night.
         Eat the leaves and stems like spinach- makes good soup or quiche especially, but boil it in two lots of water ie boil for 2 minutes, change the water and boil again, if you eat it often, as it's high in oxalic acid ). So is spinach and so is silver beet, so don't feel too nervous about Warrigal spinach).
         If you make a lot of 'spinach' quiches, or cheese and 'spinach' pastries or 'spinach' soup you'll find Warrigal spinach one of the best things in your garden. It's good in cheese sauce too- cook both separately then add the chopped cooked spinach to the sauce and brown in the oven.

Yacon
         Yacon are big fat tubers, from plants that grow about waist high- or maybe larger in milder climates than ours! You bake the roots and they taste like crunchy sweet potatoes.
         Some people love yacons- I find the flavour good but my mouth just won't accept crunch where there should be melting softness! I grow yacon just for their bright yellow flowers in late summer.
         Like Jerusalem artichokes yacon are easy as weeds to grow, except unlike Jerusalem artichokes they don't take over. Plant a tuber in full sun to quite deep shade, then leave them alone for the next few decades, except to dig up a tuber or three in winter, when the tops die down, to shoot again next spring.
         Our yacon are grown in the shade of an avocado tree- one of the few plants that tolerate such deep shade. We only get small tubers- plants grown in the sun can give massive ones, the size of a fat sweet potato, or even larger- but as I rarely cook them this doesn't matter!

Loquats

         Our loquats are ripening now, both the Japanese loquats with big seeds (Supposed to be edible when well cooked, but I have never dared in case they kill us) and the English loquats with smaller seeds and juicier fruit. (Do NOT eat their seeds!!!!)
         Why grow them?
€ they're possibly the easiest fruit in the world to grow
€creamy flowers in winter- fragrant too, but usually so high up you don't notice
€ one of the first fruits to ripen after winter (different varieties ripen at different times)
€ no pruning, feeding or tending needed - just make sure you pick them all - or encourage the birds or fruit bats to finish the job - so you don't have a heap of festering fruit to attract fruit fly.
€ possums love loquat trees- they'll leave your other plants alone and spend most of their time up in the branches eating the flowers fruit and young leaves
         Loquats are no longer common in Australian gardens, mostly because loquats don't travel well or store, so you never see them in shops, and also because older varieties were all seed and little fruit - modern grafted varieties are fatter and juicier, and a good ripe loquat is a treat.
Where to grow:     Loquats are evergreen, frost, heat and drought tolerant. They'll grow from Hobart to well north of Brisbane, preferring a rich soil but still growing in almost any conditions. They flower fragrantly in early winter and grow easily from seed, but may take 15 years to bear fruit - a grafted variety should fruit in four years.
         I grow ours in a small grove- two trees close together, or maybe there are three of them- I can't remember! They make a lovely multi- stemmed grove, anyway- usually full of possums.
Eating:
Fresh
         Cut or bite off the top; peel down the skin; gobble the fruit and spit out the seeds - or cut them in half; peel and seed, then gobble. Small kids happily sit up the tree eating them skins and all for hours, while spitting the stones down on passers by.

Loquat jam
         This is most excellent
1 kg loquats, seeds removed but not peeled
200 ml water
finely grated rind and juice of 2 lemons
1 kg sugar
         Simmer fruit in water till soft. mash well or put it through the blender. add juice and rind and sugar; boil rapidly till a little sets on a cold saucer. Bottle and seal.

Loquat chutney
2 kg peeled and seeded loquats
6 cloves garlic, chopped
350 gms sugar
300ml white wine vinegar
1 tsp finely chopped fresh ginger
1 small chilli, chopped
2 teaspoons allspice
         Simmer till thick; stir well and often. Bottle in sterilised containers. Good with curry, or Christmas ham, or turkey instead of cranberry jelly, or place a splodge in mushrooms and bake till soft. Also very very good mixed with an equal amount of natural yoghurt- use to marinate chicken before barbequing.