
Here's another tree that blooms in early spring. It's out in our back yard. It was here when we arrived more than
20 years ago. It's a cherry tree, I believe, but it doesn't produce any fruit. It's just decorative.
For yesterday's noontime meal, Walt and I made an Italian rice dish called risotto.The rice for it is not boiled but sort of steamed and sautéed at the same time. The first step is is to start cooking the rice grains by filming the botton of a non-stick pan with a little bit of olive (or other) oil and tossing them in it over medium-high heat until the grains start to become translucent. Then you start adding hot meat broth (beef, veal, chicken, turkey...) to the pan over high heat and letting the rice absorb the liquid. Keep stirring the rice and scraping the bottom of the pan to keep it from sticking. You repeat that step as many times as necessary for the rice grains get tender — no longer crunchy — and for all the liquid to be absorbed or evaporated. It takes 15 or 20 minutes.
One day I want to go over to the Saint-Aignan train station, just three or four miles from our house, and take to train to Bourges, a small city with a long history. The ride takes an hour. I've been there before, but I've never spent enough time wandering around in the town's historic district, where there's a fantastic cathedral.