Wednesday, June 5, 2019
Parsley by Rosemary Morris
Click on the cover to learn more about Rosemary Morris' books.
Parsley
I spend hours in solitary confinement writing romantic historical fiction and reading historical nonfiction to research my novels. After long periods of physical inactivity work in my organic garden. where I grow delicious produce, provides fresh air and exercise.
Parsley is one of my favourite beneficial and tasty herbs. It provides essential minerals including iron and calcium and the vitamins A and C. This herb acts as a valuable carminative, tonic, aperient and diuretic and has many uses in the kitchen. It is difficult to grow from seed, but plants bought from a garden centre or supermarket thrive planted as an attractive border along a garden bed, in a herb bed or in containers. If it is not allowed to self-seed parsley produces abundantly and survives the winter
In times past herbs were depended on for culinary flavour and for their medicinal properties far more than they are today. I am as passionate about their use in an age when fast food is popular as I am about writing historical fiction.
Parsley is one of my favourite low maintenance herbs. It acts as a valuable carminative, tonic, aperient and diuretic.
During the First World War, after dysentery soldiers frequently suffered from kidney problems for which parsley tea proved useful. This herb has many medical uses and is particularly helpful for women. According to my research and practical it stimulates the appetite, helps digestion and elimination, soothes the nerves and helps with premenstrual tension and bloating. Taken every day it is useful during the menopause.
Some Vegetarian Egg Free Recipes
Souper A La Bonne Femme
To promote women’s good health.
3 tablespoons butter.
6 tablespoons flour
1pint/600 ml full fat cow’s milk.
1 vegetable soup stock cube
Half cup single cream
100 grams/four ounces finely chopped parsley leaves.
Melt the butter stir in the flour. Slowly add and stir in the milk and water. Add the soup stock cube. Bring to the boil. Remove from heat. Add the cream and simmer the soup gently without it coming to the boil until it thickens. Before serving add the parsley, and salt and pepper if needed. Serve at once.
Parsley Sandwiches
Sliced wholemeal bread
Butter
Cream cheese
Finely chopped parsley leaves
Sea salt or table salt
Black pepper
Spread half the slices with butter and the other half with cream cheese. Sprinkle the cream cheese with parsley, salt and black pepper on the other half of the slices. Cover them with the buttered slices, Cut the sandwiches into quarters and serve
Parsley Butter
3 ounces/75 grams of butter.
3 tablespoons finely chopped parsley
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Sea salt or table salt and black pepper
Use cool, firm butter not taken straight out of the refrigerator. Mix the ingredients in a food processor or blender. Chill the parsley butter until it is firm.
* * *
Author’s Note. There are many recipes for parsley e.g. parsley dumplings, parsley tonic, fried parsley etc., to enjoy.
Novels by Rosemary Morris
Early 18th Century novels: Tangled Love, Far Beyond Rubies, The Captain and The Countess
Regency Novels False Pretences, Sunday’s Child, Monday’s Child, Tuesday’s Child, Wednesday’s Child and Thursday’s Child. Friday’s Child to be published this month.
Mediaeval Novel Yvonne Lady of Cassio. The Lovages of Cassio Book One
www.rosemarymorris.co.uk
http://bookswelove.net/authors/morris-rosemary
Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Strange 17th Century Thoughts by Katherine Pym
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| Buy Here |
During the
17th century in England an explosion of thought dominated. King
Charles II blessed the establishment of the Royal Society after his Restoration
and men enthusiastically dove into scientific experiments.
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| Plague Doctor's Headgear |
For medicine, plague doctors almost had it when they said all dogs and cats
must be killed to stop the spread of plague. They just did not realize rats
that penetrated wattle and daub walls, women’s kitchens and family bedchambers
might also carry the disease. Physicians bold enough to enter a plague house
wore protective coverings made of soft leather or canvas when visiting the sick,
their bird mask beaks filled with disease preventative spices, the types
generally unspecified. One master of his house contrived a system of pulleys
and tubes that would bring food and stuffs up to a family, with a blast of
gunpowder at the onset of sending or receiving goods. The wise patriarch quarantined
his family in their upper rooms and barred their doors in June of 1665. They
did not leave for months, even as the plague died down with colder weather. My
sources say the family lived to write of their experiences.
Women’s
reproductive process provided enthusiastic discourse. If virgins were pale and
listless, they had the green sickness, and the only cure, according to a 16th
century German physician, was to have sex. Once they conceived, their ailment would
go away.
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| Robert Hooke's Microscope |
If a woman was
sexually active and did not conceive, physicians considered her womb had lost
purchase and wandered about her body. One learned fellow declared a female
patient came to him complaining of severe headaches. He determined her womb had
wandered and lodged in her brain. He performed surgery on the luckless lady,
cutting into her skull. There is no evidence she survived.
When one
fell into an epileptic fit, the best way to revive him was to bend back their
fingernails.
For Science, the Royal Society provided a plethora of opportunities to study
nature and how things worked. There were lectures and experiments.
One such
experiment dealt a transfusion of blood between two dogs. Samuel Pepys wrote of
it in his diary: Nov 14, 16666: “A pretty experiment of the blood of one dogg
let out, till he died, into the body of another on one side, while all his own
run out on the other side.1 The
first died upon the place, and the other very well, and likely to do well.”
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| Boyle's Air Pump |
Robert Boyle
was a brilliant man, and the intellect behind Boyle’s Law: a law stating that
the pressure of a given mass of an ideal gas is inversely proportional to its
volume at a constant temperature. He created an air pump, which Robert Hooke
enhanced and performed experiments at the Royal Society.
From my
novel, The Barbers:
A tubular, metal vat sat on a tripod of sorts, and atop it was a
round glass chamber. Inside the chamber a little chick sat on the bottom,
looking bewildered. Its beak opened and closed but Celia did not hear it chirp.
To see if it was strangely dead, she tapped the glass. Its head moved.
Robert Hooke said, “Air is very important for all creatures to
live. See this here handle?”
Celia felt Deeping nod, and she did too.
“The base of it is attached to the metal cylinder. If you turn
this forward, it sucks air out of the glass chamber. Watch.”
He turned the handle, and the chick fluttered its wings a little.
As Hooke turned the crank, the chick’s beak opened and closed. The poor, little
bird sagged to the bottom of the glass, then it fell over, its little chest
pumping up and down. Soon, the chick stilled.
Hooke pointed at the glass globe. “The air has been pumped out of
the chamber. Now, I’ll reverse the action.”
He turned the handle backward, and the chick stirred. Its chest
went in and out, its breathing less labored. Hooke cranked the handle backward
until the chick gathered its wits, gained its feet, and perched once again on
the bottom of the glass chamber. It looked around, and chirped.”
NOTE: The animals used in most of these experiments died, their
carcasses thrown into the muck pile in the street.
~*~*~*~
Many thanks
to: The Barbers, Erasmus T. Muddiman by Katherine Pym, Samuel Pepys’ diary, and
Wikicommons Public Domain.
Author of historical novels set in 1660's London with one novel of the French Revolution.
Monday, June 3, 2019
The Who, What, WHERE, Why and When of Writing - Part 3
June 3 2019
When I started this series of blogs, my first thought
for Where was: Where’s the best place to write?
That question has as many answers as there are
writers.
Some people are more comfortable in their same chair
at their same desk at the same time every day from the hours of 9am to 5pm. I’m
not that dedicated to routine since I have a full time job, three kids, and my
life tends to be a bit chaotic at times. I’ve written in many places:
- At work on
lunch breaks.
- In waiting
rooms at the doctor, the dentist, the hospital, the massage therapist,
before and interview, while waiting to have lab work done, and so on.
- While cooking
dinner for three hungry kids.
- Out in the
park.
- While
camping.
- Out at the
lake.
- At coffee
shops.
- In writing
meetings.
- In my
backyard.
- With a kid or
cat on my lap.
- In a car (not
while driving!!)
- While waiting
for kids who were in karate classes or music lessons.
- Pretty much
any place, anytime, anywhere.
Where isn’t so much a restriction as just doing it. As
long as you have something to write with, pen and paper or a laptop, you can
write just about anywhere!
My second where I thought of while walking the other
day. Where do you want to go with your
writing?
Many people write for the sheer pleasure of putting
pen to paper and creating worlds that have never existed. Some writers look to
Stephen King, J.K. Rowling, Dan Brown, E.L. James and so on and see dollar signs.
Yes, it is possible to earn a living at writing. So I heard. I’m not there.
Yet.
As a single parent I’ve had to work full-time to get
my kids through school and be content with writing part-time to slowly build my
career. Now that I have eight books out, I can build a better social media
presence and work with my publisher (Books We Love!) to get more and more name
recognition.
Marketing is key!
For anyone who thinks they can write a book, upload it
to the Internet, then sit back and wait for the money and accolades to roll in –
surprise! It’s a full-time job to sell your books. Books signings, conferences,
and the like are all great for boosting your career. Word of mouth helps, but writers
want to create a fan base.
Those people who are excited to see when you’ve written
something new. But how do you do that? We’ll discuss that later….
Author of Wild Blue Mysteries, Gilda Wright Mysteries and
Glitter Bay Mysteries
Mom of 3 boys and 2 cats and a mouse we still can't find...
You can order my books through BWL by clicking here!
Prolific author, Editor, Associate Publisher, and Book Coach. Also mom of three grown ups and two fur babies.
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