Wednesday, 14 November 2012

All Blacks in the kitchen.


NZ Rugby Kitchen : celebrating the love of food, family and rugby 
by the New Zealand Rugby Foundation. 

Take several All blacks, add over 150 recipes, combine with a charitable foundation. Mix well.

Featuring recipes from the likes of Richie McCaw, Piri Weepu, Dan Carter, Jerome Kaino, Ali Williams, Colin Meads, Andy Leslie and Graham Henry this book is sure to please a whole bunch of Kiwis. 

All the girls in the office have just agreed that an All Black cooking is extremely attractive so you should get this book out even if it's just to look at the pictures.

 I should probably point out the food looks really good too.

Good food, great All Blacks and it's for charity. I smell a best seller.

Tuesday, 13 November 2012

Review: Psychic Blues

Do you believe in psychics? Ever been to a mind, body, spirit fair and had your fortune told?

I'll put my hand up here - I used to be a believer. And in recent years, I've come to feel I've been conned. I once wrote two crime novels featuring a medium as detective. Now, I'm not even sure they exist.

Psychic Blues: Confessions of a Conflicted Medium, by self-confessed fraudster (and renowned psychic) Mark Edward, hasn't helped matters.

In an unusual take on the psychic autobiography, Mark Edward doesn't set out to convince his followers that supernatural powers are real and available to all. He freely acknowledges that he doesn't know anyone who's genuine, out of his vast range of contacts in the spiritual industries - including himself. Instead, he exposes the tricks and tactics used by tarot readers, mediums and psychics alike. Edward himself started out as an illusionist, branching out into psychic predictions when he saw it made more money. People are far more impressed when the trick is about them, than when you saw yet another screaming beauty in half. They know magic isn't real - but they're not sure about The Other Side.

Edward talks of those who are convinced they have real abilities, simply because they begin to believe their own stories. It's hard, he says, to withstand the constant adulation of your public, simply because your techniques happen to strike a chord with them. If you're good enough at psychology, and research, it's not hard to predict something eerily close to the truth. There's a fantastic story in here, of an Englishman of Mark's acquaintance, who once challenged a psychic who gave a reading for his wife, and told the psychic he could do an equally good job. The man was so successful he became a well-known medium himself - and doesn't believe in the other side at all.

This is bound to upset some of you. Disagreements over faith always will. And I admit, some of Edward's confessions are a bit hard to take. He talks about making up stories for gullible people, mocking them by performing readings using bananas, then announces he is not unscrupulous, as he will not keep people coming back for months, merely to milk them dry. He is a man with "integrity". Hmmm.

If you're considering visiting a medium, or want to know more about how things are done, however, Psychic Blues is well worth a read. The book is certainly amusing, especially when it discusses the foibles of the kooks and dollars-can't-buy-me-sense Californians who regularly cross his path. Edward's recommendation is to treat psychics as mere entertainment - if you go in without expecting to learn anything about your future, but to receive a bit of flattery and validation, that's the best course.

That needn't stop you pursuing an interest in the other side. There are a lot of shysters out there - but maybe, just perhaps, you have to rub a lot of crystal balls to find the diamond...

How about you? Are you a believer?

If you're interested in this book, I also recommend:
Attack of the Unsinkable Rubber Ducks by Christopher Brookmyre
Haunting Violet - Alyxandra Harvey (a bit of fun)
Talking to the Dead: Kate and Maggie Fox and the Rise of Spiritualism - Barbara Weisberg
We Hear the Dead - Dianne K. Salerni
The First Psychic - Peter Lamont

Monday, 12 November 2012

Planning your summer feasts #1

With summer heading our way, and various holiday plans being hatched, now is the perfect time to pour over the cookbooks, plan some easy-to-put-together meals, write a shopping list, and maybe even think about giving great cookbooks for holiday presents.

I'm going to tempt you over the coming weeks with delights from some new Kiwi cookbooks.

Peter Gordon : everyday

I've long been a fan of Peter Gordon's food, so I was very happy to read through this one and be inspired several times over. The recipe for Banana and Coconut Fritters with Passionfruit Sauce is definitely on my list of recipes to try out this summer.

My favourite section of the books has to be Tea Trolley & Desserts. I'll be trying out Chocolate Ganache and Membrillo Tart with PX Cream (though I probably won't make my own sweet short-crust pastry) and Strawberry & Ginger-Beer Jellies.

The Food truck cookbook by Michael Van de Elzen.

I thoroughly enjoyed the TV series earlier in 2012 (the DVD is currently on order) , so am eagerly awaiting to get my hands on a copy of the book so that I can recreate some of the healthier versions of takeaways and fast food.

Let's see what I can tempt you with next week ...

Thursday, 8 November 2012

Rock On Supernaturally

"Driver picks the music.  Shotgun shuts his cakehole."  Dean Winchester from Supernatural.

You just knew that I would get around to doing this eventually, a post dedicated to Supernatural or least one aspect of Supernatural. 

If you've read any of my previous posts then you know that I am a HUGE fan and one of the reasons (and there's alot of reasons...) is that it features some of the best classic rock music around. 

I have gotten almost every song from the show loaded onto my MP3 player.  From foot-tapping, head banging rock songs to power ballads to good old fashioned blues, it's all there.

Don't you just love shows like this.  Shows that have great music that you just have to have and listen to again and again.

With Supernatural, every fan (of course) has their favourites.  My current top 5 (in no particular order) are
  • Thunderstuck by AC/DC
  • Carry On Wayward Son by Kansas
  • Wanted Dead Or Alive by Bon Jovi
  • Shambala by Three Dog Night
  • Locomotive Breath by Jethro Tull
Though if you were to ask me tomorrow this list would probably change, it's just so hard to pick just 5 as they are all so good

Strangely enough no one yet has thought to bring out an CD featuring music from the show.  I'm crossing my fingers that someday someone will.  After all if they can do soundtracks for Glee and Twilight surely a Supernatural soundtrack is a must.

Until that day comes why not try some of the following CD's to put you in that Supernaturally frame of mind and rock on.



Never really that big here, in the US Journey along with lead singer Steve Perry were mega popular, despite the fact that they never had a No. 1 single.

Their popularity, even today, can be shown in the fact that Don't Stop Believin' was the greatest selling song in itunes history.

My personal favourite is Who's Crying Now

Even though most of the band are nearing retirement age AC/DC are still considered one of the bands to see live. 

Hugely popular with rock fans around the world, their album Back in Black is the 2nd biggest selling album in music history, being beaten only by Michael Jackson's Thriller. 

Not bad for a group of Aussie boys.


I've been a Foreigner fan for a long time and it's no wonder with such great rock songs as Juke Box Hero, Double Vision and Cold As Ice as part of their discography. 

Again like Journey they were never really that big here, yet in the US they had 9 songs that reached the top 10 on the Billboard charts.


Who hasn't heard of Smoke on the Water.

Considered one of the greatest rock songs of all time and a song that pretty much every wanna-be guitarist learns, this classic rock song is familiar to many, even those that aren't rock fans, which is pretty amazing for a song that never even got into the top 20 let alone the top 10 on the Billboard charts.



I mentioned my love of this band in my very first post which goes to show how much I enjoy their music.

Still performing and producing albums, they have lasted more than 30 years in the business, continuing on after the tragic death of their lead guitarist as well as surviving alcohol addiction and a drummer who had to adapt his drum kit so he could continue playing after he lost an arm in a car accident.

Women can rock too and Heart have done this for almost 40 years.

The core of the band are sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson, Ann's the voice and Nancy the guitarist and together they have had 7 albums reach the top 10 on the Billboard charts and even had a No.1 hit song with These Dreams in 1985.



The Sound are one of the newest radio stations around.  

Dedicated to playing rock music from the 60's, 70's and 80's this compilation CD features such great rock songs as Don't Fear The Reaper by The Blue Oyster Cult, Dream Police by Cheap Trick and Keep On Loving You by REO Speedwagon.

Looking for some head banging rock?  Then look no further.  Pure Hard Rock is the CD for you.

Featuring classic rock and heavy metal songs by Alice Cooper, Judas Priest, Motorhead, Ted Nugent and many more there is something here for every fan.

The greatest hits of mullet rock has never looked so good.


Double shot blues

Blues is the grand daddy of rock.  Pretty much every rock artist and band have gained their inspiration and style from blues music.

Its changed and adapted over the years but blues still rocks on and this CD has features the likes of Janis Joplin, George Thorogood and the Destroyers, Robert Cray, The Allman Brothers and so many other great blues exponents.

If you've like some of the above you might also want to check out some (if not all) of the following bands: Black Sabbath, Aerosmith, Cheap Trick, Bad Company, ZZ Top, Jethro Tull, Kansas, Styx. Joe Walsh, The Allman Brothers, Led Zeppelin.

Monday, 5 November 2012

See the world one drawing at a time

Nowadays when I travel, I tend to buy postcards to augment my collection of not-so-well taken photographs - so that I have at least a somewhat semi-interesting collection of visual reminders of my travels. While I used to sketch things from my travels when I was a kid, I didn't really ever take it further than childhood doodling.

I've recently discovered that there is a whole urban sketching movement. While it is sometimes about travellers sketching memories from their wanderings, more often than not, it's people wanting to visually capture a snapshot of the urban surroundings where they live & work & play.

What a cool idea. It appeals to my childhood memories of sitting down for a quick sketch, scratching my pencil across the page, collecting a one-off memory of a person, place or event.

Gabriel Campanario showcases different artists and different locations from around the world, to demonstrate the subtle & unique beauty of sketched art in The art of urban sketching : drawing on location around the world. It's made me want to dig out some of my old sketchbooks and perhaps even start a new one.

What would you capture in an urban sketch of Auckland?