Mustard, I’m looking at you

I’ve been crocheting granny circles again. Mid-morning Saturday, Spotify Radar playlist on the speaker, new music to play and colourful yarn to crochet, while Someone read his book. I really love the mustard yellow one. It draws my eye again and again.

It was time again for my friend Lucy and I to pick our next recipe book of the month. Here’s why it started last month. This time I found myself messaging her to say: ‘The recipe book of the month thing – I found myself really hoping you’d say no 5 because I’d wanted it to be At my Table by Nigella, so yesterday I decided that’s my recipe book of the month. Watched 1st ep last night as all on iplayer.’

I’ve chosen a few things to make already. It won’t be hard at all. I really like Nigella. I made her Stem ginger, walnut & carrot cake on Sunday. It’s so good that I’m ditching one of my other recipes.

I chose number 47 for Lucy, sticking to my resolution to give her a harder number to count in return for hers last month, not that I’m petty, ha! And got a ‘Whoop whoop!’ Number 47 brought her counting along the bookshelf to Fresh India by Meera Sodha. I’m pleased too, because I bought the ebook when it was a 99p KDD and so will follow what she makes with interest.

Later another message: ‘I had shedloads of pages marked in this one, just went into the living room and Theo has taken them all out.’

I laughed.

And then: ‘And I had to say thanks because he was really proud he’d been so helpful.’

Theo (of the Patchwork blanket) is coming up for 3 years now. A cheeky little tinker.

Today I met up with my absolutely lovely cousin, I mean I’ve got lots of cousins and they’re mostly all absolutely lovely (!) but she is one of my top favourites. Her brother says we’re more like sisters than cousins, which makes me feel very warm and fuzzy. We’re both lovers of wandering around charity shops, this time she donated and I bought. She gave some jigsaw puzzles, including one I bought from another charity shop when we were slowly coming out of the lockdown restrictions. There were still plenty of hours to fill when social spaces and such were still not fully open, and groups weren’t meeting. I completed the outside and then lost interest. 1000 pieces might have been 500 (700?) too many when it had been decades since I’d done a jigsaw. At last I admitted defeat, and wanted to claim back the end of the dining room table, so passed it on.

During our wander I found this beautiful looking book. When I read Nina Stibbe’s Went to London, took the dog she mentioned the author Cathy Rentzenbrink lots because they’re good friends. It also grabbed me because of the recommendation on the front: ‘I loved this book… I’m so desperate for you all to share in its wonder, Elizabeth Day.’ It made me smile because at the moment I’m addicted to Elizabeth’s audiobook Friendaholic. I’m probably one of the very few people who have never listened to Elizabeth’s hugely successful How to Fail podcast. I recently heard her for the first time on the bonus episode of the Ghost Story podcast and her articulacy, intelligence and my sense of her general likableness made an impression. Friendaholic is astonishingly honest and open. She makes me laugh out loud, but then I find myself welling up. I love her narration too. If you like a very proper English accent (I’m looking at you America) then you will love her voice. I’m going to look for some of her fiction as well.

Dear Reader cost me the non princely sum of £1! I’ll let you know my thoughts later on.

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What are you making and reading this week? Have you also seen someone you love to spend time with lately?

Linking with Kat and the gang again for Unravelled Wednesday.

13 thoughts on “Mustard, I’m looking at you

  1. Your circles look like they will make a cosy blanket.
    I’m reading the last in a series by Elly Griffiths. It’s a series of fifteen books (one a year) about archaeology and murder and she recently published the last of the series. I had enjoyed it so much that I bought paperback versions of the first, the last and my favourite one in the middle. Then decided to read the whole series through again, borrowing the rest from the library.
    For crochet: I’m making myself a top using the methods from a couple of my blanket patterns as an experiment.

    • Thanks Jane.

      I’ve added the first book in the series, it sounds excellent. Did you ever read the first Vera book: The Crow Trap by Ann Cleeves? A group of women are completing an environmental survey and a murder occurs. I think you might enjoying reading it.

      • Yes. I enjoyed the TV series so much I started on reading the books. I think I may have read them all now. I enjoyed the books so much, I read the Shetland series and now the Two Rivers series though I haven’t enjoyed them quite so much. When I find an author I like I tend to read all their books, There are more Elly Griffiths books too but I think the series with Ruth Galloway is the best one.

        • I’ve read all the Vera’s and watched all on tv. I couldn’t get into Shetland because had just watched the series, so far at the time, and the book was so similar but different murderer/victim. I could try again now time has passed I guess. I like the Two Rivers a lot. Maybe not as much as Vera.

  2. Those circles are lovely! I love them, but when I try they don’t lay flat like yours do! (I am sure it is because there are too many stitches in mine!) That book looks interesting!

  3. The little circles are lovely and I like the mustard too. I think maybe many of us in the northern hemisphere are craving the sunshine. Let us know about the book. It looks intriguing.

  4. Although Friendaholic is not available in my 54-library system (British books do not always make this far across the pond), I found the How to Fail podcast is free on Audible. Yay!

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