Jun. 16th, 2008

bellinghman: (Default)
Well, that was quite a full weekend.

... freecycle ... )
... car ... )
... Royston ... )
... Cambridge ... )
... Peking (restaurant) ... )

So, a day in which we keep bumping into people we knew.

... Wimpole Hall ... )
... evening ... )

And finally this morning, packing them off to the train station for the trip back down to Gatwick.
bellinghman: (Default)
Well, that was quite a full weekend.

... freecycle ... )
... car ... )
... Royston ... )
... Cambridge ... )
... Peking (restaurant) ... )

So, a day in which we keep bumping into people we knew.

... Wimpole Hall ... )
... evening ... )

And finally this morning, packing them off to the train station for the trip back down to Gatwick.
bellinghman: (Default)
I am amused (though not totally surprised, considering their population) to note which country is now apparently the world's largest producer of potatoes.

China.

It may be a while before it overtakes rice (if it ever does), but the potato appears to be ever more popular as a crop, since it gives relatively high returns for relatively low input.

It also has some advantages: the current rocketing price for rice and wheat is thought to be more due to commodity speculation than to any underlying real shortage. But to be able to fill a warehouse with something that you want to hoard for a year or two, you need to know that whatever it is will keep. Rice keeps. Wheat keeps. Potatoes don't. So though potato surpluses can be traded, they can't be hoarded.

This can also be a disadvantage: the Biblical story of the seven fat years followed by the seven lean years couldn't have had the same result if the granaries had been filled with potatoes. So for safety, you would need a mixed agronomy: potatoes for the bulk, but some rice and/or wheat to store for the lean years. (And not to be grown as a cash crop that carries on being exported willy nilly: the island of Ireland is still rightly aggrieved about that policy.)

I've never yet encountered the potato in a Chinese dish (unlike Indian, where Sag Aloo and Vindaloo are strongly potato-based.), but I await recipes with interest.
bellinghman: (Default)
I am amused (though not totally surprised, considering their population) to note which country is now apparently the world's largest producer of potatoes.

China.

It may be a while before it overtakes rice (if it ever does), but the potato appears to be ever more popular as a crop, since it gives relatively high returns for relatively low input.

It also has some advantages: the current rocketing price for rice and wheat is thought to be more due to commodity speculation than to any underlying real shortage. But to be able to fill a warehouse with something that you want to hoard for a year or two, you need to know that whatever it is will keep. Rice keeps. Wheat keeps. Potatoes don't. So though potato surpluses can be traded, they can't be hoarded.

This can also be a disadvantage: the Biblical story of the seven fat years followed by the seven lean years couldn't have had the same result if the granaries had been filled with potatoes. So for safety, you would need a mixed agronomy: potatoes for the bulk, but some rice and/or wheat to store for the lean years. (And not to be grown as a cash crop that carries on being exported willy nilly: the island of Ireland is still rightly aggrieved about that policy.)

I've never yet encountered the potato in a Chinese dish (unlike Indian, where Sag Aloo and Vindaloo are strongly potato-based.), but I await recipes with interest.
bellinghman: (Default)
As noted in another, longer post: this last weekend my sister came to stay with another, older, woman named Cheryl. However, there was one piece of information that we didn't pick up on until last night.

Bringing a potential husband to meet your family is one thing.

But bringing the potential mother-in-law instead? So it seems - it looks like my sister has her cap set at Cheryl's son.

If the alliance between mother- and daughter-in-law is this close, I really pity the poor potential groom. He won't have a chance.
bellinghman: (Default)
As noted in another, longer post: this last weekend my sister came to stay with another, older, woman named Cheryl. However, there was one piece of information that we didn't pick up on until last night.

Bringing a potential husband to meet your family is one thing.

But bringing the potential mother-in-law instead? So it seems - it looks like my sister has her cap set at Cheryl's son.

If the alliance between mother- and daughter-in-law is this close, I really pity the poor potential groom. He won't have a chance.

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