ragingyoghurt

Category Archives: kid

5

they’ve changed the tables (and chairs) since i was last at messina. the stools are now handsome bentwood affairs, and the tables are shiny oversized metal trays set precariously on spindly tripods (all the better, i suppose, to see how you look as you gorge yourself on the product).

the gelati, of course, is as delicious as ever. i still think about the triple chocolate extravaganza i had on my birthday last year. sigh… there are always more flavours on display than i know what to do with, and late this afternoon, barely two hours after weed strudel and exotic cream cake, i thought it might be unwise to have more than, ahem, two.

we were meeting with the artist formally known as “the little matchboxgirl” for a gelato date, and by coincidence found ourselves on the same bus hurtling out of the city towards darlinghurst. the kid rummaged in her handbag for a comic she had made specially for the occasion, and was quite matter-of-fact when sonya immediately handed her a baggie full of tiny tchotkes in exchange. a little later at the shop, maeve sidled up to me and offered, sotto voce, “i like sonya.”

the kid is mostly guided by colour when it comes to icy desserts. sometimes she will surprise me with a left-of-field request for passionfruit or green tea, or — once, confoundingly — mint-chip, but more often than not, it’s a choice between this pink one or the other. this time she picked the only pink available: raspberry.

i always want a scoop of coconut and lychee at messina, but there is always something new i want to try that won’t match, and so i have spent the last few years coconut-and-lychee-less. this time i picked burnt fig jam, walnut and mascarpone because i thought i ought to, for research, and pavlova because it looked so cheery. you may argue that those two flavours do not match, but anyway.

it wasn’t surprising that the fig, walnut and mascarpone gelato was figgy, and walnutty, and extremely rich and creamy from the mascarpone… truly it was a proper grown-up flavour with undertones of seriousness. by comparison, the pavlova gelato was light and charming, milky with highlights of tart berries and tangy passionfruit.

in a cruel twist of fate, sonya did choose the coconut-lychee, but began by eating the chocolate fondant. i’ve had that chocolate fondant gelato; it means business! it fills your mouth with a voluptuous chocolatiness, and once you eat it, you can’t really have anything else in the same sitting. and so it came to pass that the scoop of coconut-lychee sat forlorn in the paper cup as the kid and sonya merrily swapped ballet stories in the balmy breeze.

next time, coconut-lychee, i promise i’ll choose you.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 24 March 2010 at 9:26 pm
permalink | filed under around town, ice cream, kid

5

i made a drawing a couple of weeks ago. did some picture research on the internet, sketched a rough on paper, redrew all the components in a loose and scribbly fashion on the back of some official letter i’d been sent, scanned them in, then pieced it all together in photoshop. i was pleased that day to finally figure out how to drop colour into a tonal greyscale drawing, without the colour layer obscuring or compromising the pencilled outlines.

layers > multiply

that’s all it took. for years i’d wondered. i sent it off then, to where it was needed, and not an hour later, received a two-word reply: oooooh! beautiful! how warm and shiny i felt.

the kid works much quicker. she takes a sheet from my tray of one-sided printouts, and draws directly in any shade of felt-tipped marker. a few days ago she grabbed the nearest biro and made my new favourite drawing: a joyous supermarket excursion with a cat, a mouse, and a family of tiny kittens. it really sums up the happiness i feel when i’m at the supermarket.

(though not the bit where i stand in a queue for 20 minutes because my woolies refuses to put more cashiers on, grumble, gnash.)

something else that makes me happy is the super speedy three day sydney zine from dawn at handmadelove, full of drawings of smiley food to eat around sydney (in three days, oh the pressure!). just look at the lovely watercolouring, and the cheery lettering. here’s one of my favourite cafes, badde manors, #3 in glebe. it’s true: they do have a way with potatoes.

[ picture from handmadelove ]

posted by ragingyoghurt on 8 March 2010 at 12:40 am
permalink | filed under bookshelf, drawn, kid

5

summer took the stage for a last curtain call.

saturday, we traipsed across the lush green lawn of a historic house in a leafy north shore suburb, and watched chocolate suze get hitched in jolly rollicking fashion under the impossibly bright and burny sun. afterwards, there was coca cola, and orange juice, and fairy floss, and a fat, sprinkled krispy kreme doughnut — and that was just the kid. afterwards, her head didn’t quite spin around, but the sugar gave her enough of a buzz to carry around, for the rest of the afternoon, the enormous lollypop she charmed out of the bride.

it was still summery when we got back to the city, so we sat a while in our box seat above the town hall intersection, watching the finely-tuned ballet of crisscrossing pedestrians in the golden light. and because the box seats are actually three big corner windows in the children’s department at kinokuniya, we also kicked back, made ourselves comfy, and fashioned a small pile of books to pass the hour.

on one of the shelves, i found a book called “all kinds of families!“, with pictures by one of my favourite illustrators, marc boutavant. we sat and read it for a bit, this jaunty rhyme by mary ann hoberman, but when i got to the verse that went:

clams in the sea make a clammily family
lambs in the field make a lambily family
jams in their jars make a jammily family
and yams in the cupboard a yammily family

i knew that i would have to take it home with us. books are family too!

happy days to you and the mister, mrs noods! we are honoured to have been there to see the beginning of your own little family. may your fridge always be overflowing with treats.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 1 March 2010 at 11:29 am
permalink | filed under around town, bookshelf, kid

5

what a long, terribly hot summer it’s been. our fault, i suppose, for spending most of it in sunny melbourne. on the most horrible day, we took shelter in the airconditioning of the arts centre; my plan was to see as much of the AC/DC exhibition as the kid would allow. except that we found ourselves drowning in a deluge of pink tulle. turns out it was fifteen minutes away from the lunchtime matinee of the angelina ballerina show, and hundreds of little girls in ballet dress-ups swarmed the lobby. the kid turned her large limpid eyes my way; the temperature in the street was the wrong side of 40; i handed over my credit card, and spent the next hour or so sitting in a sea of battery-operated glowsticks, watching lithe, human-sized mice dance across the stage.

but the temperature kept climbing, and at 1.40 in the wee hours of the morning, i woke up stifled. i poured myself down the hallway, and had a cold shower, and eventually got back to sleep. later we were to find out it was hovering in the lower-mid-40s all night, and when the temperature finally dropped at about 8am, it was to a refreshing 34°C.

ugh.

so we went out in search of icy treats, often. the lemon-lime and bitters sorbet at trampoline was truly delightful. a very fetching shade of palest pink which dissolved gracefully into a gentle citrusy tang on my tongue. i liked it so much i went back for more.

there was the emergency slurpee from a hole-in-the-wall 7-eleven one afternoon in the melty city, and a golden gaytime krusher at KFC one sunday when nothing else was open in shimmery rural victoria. it was a most unappetising shade of… bilge, a pale and lumpy yellow in the plastic tumbler, that tasted better than it looked, until it warmed up to room temperature.

and then, holy moley, there was the organic cinnamon donut gelato from fritz gelato at the souf melbourne markets. lush and milky with a streak of sticky red jam all the way through. behold its majestic crest sitting atop an enormous scoop of caramelised fig and roasted almond yoghurt gelato, equally lush and milky, and filled with crunchy little fun bits of seeds and nuts and burnt sugar. good times…

and then we came back to sydney, and the holidays galloped to a close, and the kid grew up and went off to school. no tears were shed from anyone involved.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 25 February 2010 at 10:50 am
permalink | filed under around town, ice cream, kid, trip

0

we can’t get enough of cupcakes, oh no.

at the nicholson street public school halloween fair, after the painting of the $4 plaster cat, and the 20 minutes of standing in line for two rides down — screeeeaming — the giant inflatable slide (“tsunami”), we gamely crossed another four squares off our orange ticket for two adorable orange-iced cupcakes topped with ghost (me) and bat (the kid).

just over bite-sized, with the optimum cake-to-frosting ratio of 1:1, they were tasty, moist cakes with a slightly grainy buttercream. i saved my fondant ghostie for last, then watched the kid spend about 10 minutes trying to catch a numbered tugboat on a hook at the end of a very long pole for a very small prize.

the cupcakes, i believe, were from the cupcake factory, which has just opened up a little nook of a store right next to the zumbo cafe in the ugly brown mall on darling street. when i went by the other day, the glass cases were piled high with rather extravagantly decorated cupcakes. the frosting looked magnificent though the cakes themselves only came in either chocolate or vanilla. clearly, a little more research must be carried out.

halloween in sydney, 2009, is still sorta lukewarm. no trick-or-treaters darkened our doorstep this year, although making our way home from the fair, we did see a trail of gummy worms all the way down the pathway. perhaps a cunning local witch was using them to lure greedy little children to her gingerbread house.

the scariest thing we encountered was a pair of boys on the main drag, fourteen years old maybe, who weren’t so much dressed in costume as in regular black street clothes. one had a bandana obscuring the lower half of his face, and they both carried supermarket plastic bags full of… treats? it looked like they were soliciting… something… from businesses along the street.

oh no, wait. no, the scariest thing was the girl gang who swanned through the fair close to witching hour, all fifteen year old long limbs and long hair, dressed up as playboy bunnies. bloody, bloody hell, kids these days, etc, etc.

well, i am turning 37 in a week.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 5 November 2009 at 10:26 pm
permalink | filed under around town, cake, kid

2

the kid turned five over the weekend. FIVE!

no, i lie. the kid turned five the weekend before last, while we were living it up in melbourne. how’s that for time flying eh? last weekend was the party.

so this is the way it goes… four years of casual family-type functions, and then the kid goes to preschool, and suddenly i am looking down the barrel of a princess party with actual school friends.

princess party, of course, meant that half the class — the boy half — was automatically excluded. the task of whittling down the remaining girls to a more manageable number (four) was only a teensy bit harder.

and so, at ten thirty on saturday morning, with the dining chairs swathed in pink tulle and sparkly ribbons, and the cucumber sandwiches stacked daintily on the top tier of the serving dish (heart-shaped fairy bread on the bottom), we welcomed a host of visiting princesses for crown-making and morning tea.

there were plastic wineglasses of fizzy fruit juice, melon balls on frilly-tipped picks, sugar-crusted fruit gummies, and it all went without a hitch — hitchless — with the only frisson of anxiety during a round of old skool pass-the-parcel. (you know, in which there is just one prize in the heart of the layers of pink and purple tissue, instead of multiple little prizes all the way through. the attending parents squirmed uneasily, and said things like, “remember, it doesn’t matter who wins”, and “they’ll learn about life’s disappointments”. so true…) pin-the-tiara-on-the-princess was much less fraught, so much so that the girls gamely played it three times in a row before losing interest to the newly unwrapped polly pockets.

and there was cake. a lovely, moist and crumbly cake that i baked the night before — with a smattering of experimental raspberries — before frosting in the morning amidst the last-minute pottering.

now, let’s talk about frosting. here is a genius recipe, in which cream cheese is beaten with sugar, and then folded into whipped cream. you get a light, cream-cheesy taste with a voluptuous, dollopy texture.

more importantly, you get quite a lot left over, and, as a result, the desire to eat it straight out of the bowl. the only way to prevent this is to make more cake, so we did. monday afternoon, straight out of school, we baked the same cake recipe into cupcakes, emptied the last of a bottle of blue colouring into the leftover frosting, and voila.

cake for days, i tells ya.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 28 October 2009 at 10:21 pm
permalink | filed under breakfast, cake, kid, kitchen

6

it was about 1 by the time we got back home. that’s a.m. i put the kid to bed, which took about half an hour all up, from the wiping of vomit from her lips, and the cutting of hospital bracelets from her wrist and ankle. i was hungry, then, and ploughed through two, then three, then four slices of vegemite on rye. and then as an afterthought, a yoghurt popsicle.

around 9pm, in the waiting room outside the operating theatre, i’d made a cup of black tea from one of two teabags left in the communal trough, and rationed out the two green tea caramels from the bottom of my backpack. and before that? well, i’d been lucky enough to have a delicious brunch of justin north’s best salad nicoise (and tea and pudding after) at the alliance francaise. a little before two.

when i picked the kid up from school, she spent a good twenty minutes playing chaseys around the preschool playground with her new chasing-tickling buddy, and then a good three minutes skipping merrily on the concrete stepping stones over in the main school yard. and then there she was, slumped over a mis-stepped stone, screaming. these things happen often enough, but when i turned her right way up, her face was awash with blood, and there was a cut, a gash, a hole that seemed to go in a distance, just above her right brow.

“blood,” she cried. “blood. i can see blood.”

i reached past her, into her schoolbag. chose in a split second the green stripy hoodie over the pink one. pressed it to her head. there was a lot of blood, but the bleeding stopped quickly.

here’s the weird, spooky, lucky thing. the careflight demo helicopter had been at the school that day, and they were just finishing up their last session. the paramedic ran over with her bag of dressings, and in three minutes had doused a gauzy pad in saline, wrapped the kid’s broken head in a length of bandage, and directed us to the most appropriate hospital. the careflight demo helicopter, you see, has neither propeller nor tail. i called my cousin, who recently moved into the next suburb, and took her up on a previous offer of a ride when i needed one. in the time it took us to walk home and retrieve medicare card and coriander cat, she was at our door.

the kid’s head is in my lap, in the car. she is stretched out across the back seat. she is adamant that no one will be sewing her up, mostly, i think, the bitter memory of watching “coraline” some weeks back. and sometimes her eyes shut, and i make inane chatter as we zoom up anzac parade just so she will respond.

after ten minutes at triage, we are sent to an inner sanctum, labelled — somewhat reassuringly — ‘fast track waiting room’, where we wait for a doctor who is all lighthearted until she undoes the bandage. silence. a quick inhalation. the hole in the kid’s head is beyond the spectrum of ER. we wait then, in the fast track waiting room, for a plastic surgeon to come and see us.

then the waiting, and waiting, and around five, the plastic surgeon tells us that eight o’clock is when we could be scheduled for stitches; the procedure will need to be performed under general anaesthetic, and the kid must not have eaten anything for the preceding six hours. we wait, mostly cheery and chirpy, unless anyone mentions the word “stitch”.

and eventually, the kid is suited up in the children’s hospital’s best puss-in-boots print gown, and given a shiny pink sticker, and a brisk walking tour though the labyrinth of corridors, and fitted with a tiny rubber mask, and made to breathe, slowly. and her eyes roll back, and shut, as she struggles against the sleep. and i am dispatched to the waiting room, with her black cat and her pink sandles, to two teabags in a communal trough.

but it only takes a little more than half an hour, to sew stitches in three layers of tissue. the doctor comes by to say that the cut didn’t go all the way to the bone, as he had expected, and only the muscle and two layers of skin had to be repaired.

when i finally get to see her, she is extremely surprised that they sewed her up after all. “but i didn’t feel it!” she says, eyes wide in wonder, and then she asks for apple juice. later, in the ward, she scores a lemonade icy pole and a jam sandwich, and chats, snug in warm blankets, about how it is way past her bedtime. and some hours later, when the nurse is happy, we are released into the dark and silent hospital corridors. we pad silently across the shiny floors, just us in the world, but for someone’s dad sitting alone in the pale light of an internet terminal. my good cousin drives across town to take us home, and only stops once for the kid to vomit up her paltry dinner.

eyes open or shut, i see the gaping wound. i saw it, right after it opened, and then every time the bandage was unwrapped while assessments were made. i may see it for some time yet, although a day later, the horror has lessened. in the early hours, when the house was quiet, i had four slices of vegemite toast, and watched an episode of “buffy the vampire slayer”, so that i could go to sleep.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 18 September 2009 at 12:04 am
permalink | filed under kid, snacks

3

let’s call this a soft launch, in between the importing of archives and the lying down on the couch in the middle of the day watching james bond (i have been coughing and dizzy for three weeks now, and need to lie down lots. perhaps it’s consumption?).

a movie we’ve seen quite a few times of late is “the sound of music”. sure, i’d been playing the LP of the soundtrack for the last three years, so the kid was familiar with the quirky charms of “the lonely goatherd”, and was not immune to the educational pointers in “do-re-mi”. but as soon as the shiny, digitally remastered von trapps marched (and then danced) across the screen…

well! the songs have taken on new life. the so longs and farewells, the waltzing, and maeve’s favourite, “sixteen going on seventeen”.

why, just this morning, getting ready for school, we sang: your life, little girl, is an empty page that men will want to write on…

the kid had a quick think in the beat, and then asked: “are they talking about facebook?”

posted by ragingyoghurt on 26 August 2009 at 12:42 pm
permalink | filed under at the movies, kid

0



sometimes the kid gets all excited about going to the supermarket. because she cannot yet write most cohesive words, she will draw our shopping list. today we are going to chinatown.

clockwise from top: soy milk, noodles, rose syrup cordial, nanami togarashi, dumplings, chili bean paste, sesame oil.

– – –
this was originally posted to the ragingyoghurt facebook page,
while the blog lay dormant.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 20 February 2009 at 12:12 pm
permalink | filed under drawn, kid, shoping

0

it’s the morning after the night we poured ourselves through the chinatown new year night market. every year we go, and every year we say how insane it all is, and then a year passes and we forget, and we do it all again. the kid spent two hours in someone’s arms, buffeted, or on someone’s shoulders, above the crowd, so she basically did ok. the rest of us stopped when the crowd did, moved when it moved, and if we were sweaty enough at a certain point in time, we slimed past whoever was in the way.

me, i seemed to be sweatier than most, because we had thought it prudent earlier in the evening to dine on bowls of bakut teh and steamed buns; my body temperature was already up by a couple of degrees. eventually, when we tired of seeing the same exotic delicacies being peddled by every third shop (this year’s new inclusions appeared to be a range of flavoured taiwanese rice cakes, and fig jelly), we insinuated ourselves into a quiet crevice between two stalls, and replenished our sweat glands with icy cold sour plum drinks.

“will we go again next year?” i asked my mother.

“no,” she said, most decisively. “except maybe to buy mushrooms.”

right now i am fortifying myself with a mug of almond-flavoured soy milk. i had seen an ad for it on the back of a bus on the way home from the airport a week ago, and had rushed out and bought a carton the very next morning. see how effective an 8-ft high photograph of a carton of soy milk can be?

but i am particularly susceptible to soy beans this week. so far i have acquired:
• enormous rice crackers embedded with whole roasted black soy beans
• black soybean hot cocoa mix
• some sort of roasted soybean snack, which i really bought for the carton
• soft serve soymilk ice cream

the last of which i would be quite overjoyed to eat every day, but which would leave little room for the bakkwa-on-white-bread sandwiches, or the sambal prawn rolls, or the mangosteens/duku langsat/jackfruit trinity.

if only this could be my only quandry, rather than the pathological fear the kid has developed, of public toilets which flush automatically. in this city, that is the most tiresome thing of all.

– – –
this was originally posted to the ragingyoghurt facebook page,
while the blog lay dormant.

posted by ragingyoghurt on 24 January 2009 at 11:40 am
permalink | filed under around town, kid, snacks, trip
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