25 June 2025

Un « cake » aux bananes et aux noix de pécan

Yesterday I made what we in the U.S. call banana bread. It's a "quick bread" and is made with baking soda (bicarbonate alimentaire) and/or baking powder (levure chimique) rather than with yeast (levure de boulanger). I had several bananas that had been ripening on the kitchen counter for a few days. The weather turned very hot, and the bananas were completely ripe before I even noticed. The riper the banana, the sweeter it is, even if the yellow banana peel has started turning black. You peel the banana and mash the banana flesh. Then you mix it into a cake batter and bake it. Here's how my banana cake looked:

You can bake the banana bread batter in a round or square cake pan, a loaf pan (called a un moule à cake in French), or in a mold like the one you see above, which is called un  moule à financiers. Financiers are little loaf cakes made with almond powder. Oh, after filling the financier mold, I had some batter left over. I baked it in a round ceramic ramekin. That's how my finished banana bread turned into a flower for serving or for snacking.

24 June 2025

Weather etc.

Weather bulletin: we've been having significantly cooler weather this week compared to last. However, all next week we're supposed to see highs in the upper 90s F again. The good news is that that kind of heat is only supposed to last until about July 4 and then for the rest of July and the first week of August we'll have highs in the 70s and low 80s.That's what Accuweather's long-range forecast says. I hope it's right.

 
Yesterday morning the neighbors' goats came out to greet me when I walked by the fence that keeps them from wandering around the hamlet. The goats seem to be less and less afraid of Tasha. Meanwhile, the bird in the photo above was keeping an eye on me and my camera.

 
Daisies come up in our back yard every year at this time. They're not invasive but are perennial.

23 June 2025

Vues inhabituelles de Saint-Aignan


These are two views of Saint-Aignan that we hardly ever see. I took both photos in late June of 2010, one two or three hours later than the other. Back then, we knew some people who lived on the eastern side of town, and we were having dinner with them in their front yard. Both of them have now passed away.


 

22 June 2025

Moving air and an elusive cat

Soon after I got up this morning (at 5 a.m.) and opened all the windows to let some cool morning air into the house, the air started moving for the first time in about a week. Yesterday everything was perfectly still and the temperature reached 35.5 degrees Celsius — that's about 95 F, and was lower than predicted. It wasn't unpleasant, actually. This morning the sky is gray and there's a cool breeze blowing.

The yellow flowers above are the non-invasive wild millepertuis variety that grows out in the vineyard.
These are photos I took in June 2015.

At six a.m. I went out on the terrace to see if it was raining or just gray. I looked out toward the back yard and saw a cat lying on the ground near our oregano patch. I think it was the neighbors' cat named Ulia that went missing on May 12. If it was, that's the third time I've seen her over the past month. I sent a text message to the people Ulia belonged to. I'm waiting to see if they answer me again. I wonder if Ulia might be living near the pond out back, where she can get water to drink and maybe small rodents to hunt and eat. Or maybe it was a different cat. Maybe Ulia returned home one way or another. I hope so.

21 June 2025

Happy Solstice

Accuweather predicts that our high temperature today, around 6:00 pm, will be 38ºC (that's 100.4ºF).
The weather guy on our Télématin morning show is predicting the same.

Here's a photo of the blackberry bramble that is taking over the pond out behind our back gate.
The village owns it, but nobody seems to be trying to keep it under control.

 
Meanwhile, our hydrangeas (hortensia) have enjoyed all the rain we've had for two years now.
They have doubled in height and are threatening to take over the front of our house.

 
Another invasive plant, though not as aggressive, is what we call "hens and chicks" (sempervivum or joubarbe). They are easier to contain than the millepertuis is. I've also been collecting rocks. For years. I found pots and pots of them in the greenhouse. As part of the "let's empty the greenhouse" project I hauled all the pots of rocks outdoors and then decided that rather than paint the window sill on the back side of the house, I'd just store rocks up there this summer. I think I'm fascinated by rocks because where I grew up on the North Carolina coast, we didn't have any rocks. The land was all sand.

20 June 2025

Progrès ?

                                    Yesterday                                                             Today

I think you'll have to use your imagination because my photos don't reflect reality. We (Walt, really) made great progress on getting rid of the millepertuis yesterday. If you look closely at the top of the Today photo, you can see that the plants' stems there are taller than the ones toward the bottom and middle of the photo. Walt got out our electric hedge clipper and went at it. It's the clipper he used to use to trim our bay laurel hedge every autumn until 2012, when we engaged a lanscaping contractor to do that annual chore. Yesterday, we raked up millepertuis trimmings that filled a wheelbarrow to overflowing. More later.

19 June 2025

Fruits and flowers

The pond outside our back gate — the pond is owned by the village — is quickly being taken over by blackberries (ronces in French). If the weather stays as hot as it is right now, maybe we'll soon be able to harvest some berries.

One of our neighbors has a plum tree that is loaded down with fruit. If they start falling to the ground, I'll go get some. They are the size of cherries and make a very good clafoutis.

Above left, a view of our red maple trees from the neigbors' yard. Above right, one of the roses in our yard. A lot of flowers are fading now because of the hot, dry days we're having.

18 June 2025

Working on the millepertuis

This is one of the big projects (for me) that I'm working on right now. My goal is to get rid of the millepertuis (St. John's wort) that is spreading along the south-facing wall of our house. Walt is spraying it every few days with what we are calling "the recipe" — a mixture of highly acidic vinegar (vinaigre ménager), salt, and dishwashing liquid. The spraying seems to be working, as you can see in the photo on the right below. The photo on the left below shows what the millepertuis looked like in June 2015. Here's a link to some posts I've published about millepertuis over the years.


I went out a few days ago and bought a new hedge clipper, because the old one we had was too rusty and dull to cut the millepertuis plants' woody stems. The new clipper cuts better than the old one, but it's still not easy to use. Walt tried to dig up some of the plants using a shovel, but the ground that it's growing in is as hard as concrete. Then I decided that maybe I can let heat kill the plants by covering them with a black plastic tarp and letting the sun do the job. We are expecting a heat wave over the next few days, and that might help. The tarp is three meters wide and 15 meters long. I have a lot of big rocks, bricks, and cinderblocks we can use to hold it down and keep it from blowing away if the weather turns windy.

17 June 2025

Grapes





The grape flowers we've been seeing out in the vineyard are now rapidly becoming actual grapes.





The weather this week is supposed to get hotter and hotter every day. Even today the high temperature is supposed to be around 85.





By Sunday we're predicted to experience caniculaire (dog-day) conditions. That means extreme, dangerous heat.





Since we still don't have any kind of air-conditioning, I'm not looking forward to the heat wave. We lived through the great canicule of 2003 when we arrived here 22 years ago. It was not fun.

16 June 2025

Same day, more reds...

The day I stopped on the side of the road to take the photos of fields of poppies that I posted yesterday, I was headed toward the little town of Valençay, about 10 miles east of Saint-Aignan. I was going to do some shopping in the weekly market there. Above you see The market hall, where some of the vendors display and sell their products. Other vendors have stalls outdoors on the market square or along the nearby streets. The tomatoes at the market that day in June 2010 were beautiful, as you can see.

The halle au blé (market hall) in Valençay was built about 100 years ago. The weekly market sets up on Tuesday mornings. Valençay is famous for its goat cheeses and wines (reds, whites rosés). The restaurant above right is one Walt and I first went to for a nice lunch in October 2000. We've returned several times over the years.

15 June 2025

Poppies

Red poppies are called coquelicots in French. I saw these fields of poppies when I was on my way to Valençay,
near the town of Lye (lee), to go shopping in the weekly open-air market there.

These are photos that I took 15 years ago today, on June 15, 2010, using
a Panasonic DMC-ZS1 digital camera that I still have and still use once in a while.

14 June 2025

Chinese money plant

Here's photo to show Evelyn how the plant she brought me from the U.S. four years ago is doing these days.
Those are Tasha's front paws in the background.

13 June 2025

The moon this morning

The view from our guest bedroom window at 5:30 this morning. Photo taken with my Samsung smartphone's camera.


I've never been able to find out why there is a big B on this house's chimney. I don't know when the house was built, or by whom. The people who live there now moved in just 2 or 3 years ago.

12 June 2025

A river walk

After mentioning walks along the Cher river near our house in yesterday's post, I decided on the spur of the moment to go down there for the morning walk with Tasha. I forgot how low in the sky and bright the sun shines early in the morning, making it difficult to take photos. Here are a couple, however. By the way, Tasha is at the vet's this morning having her teeth cleaned. Walt just got back from dropping her off. He or I will go pick her up this afternoon. She had to fast starting at 8:00 p.m. yesterday. She was very disoriented and subdued this morning when she didn't get her normal breakfast at the normal time.
These two pictures are of the lock keeper's house on the right bank of the Cher from different perspectives.

11 June 2025

Local scenes and colors

Down the hill and through the woods into the river valley from our hamlet... We can take nice walks along the Cher river and around the port at the western end of the Canal de Berry, the region's two main water features.





These are photos I took within two or three miles of our house. I took them on June 11, 2005 — 20 years ago today. We're having the same kind of weather today. The area around Saint-Aignan is basically agricultural (grape-growing is agriculture too).

We live on high ground about half a mile from the river and two miles from the canal. There are often big fields of red poppies all around us at this time of year.