Showing posts with label Lake Ontario. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lake Ontario. Show all posts

Saturday, May 25, 2024

Brew It

 Linking up with Marg at The Intrepid Reader
Weekend Coffee Share
Sunday Salon

May 2024 - Toronto ON
Cheyenne WY

Saturday - the usual chores, laundry, blah, blah.
John had put some jars of essential oils in a kitchen cupboard. I took out a cardboard box of marrowfat (mushy) peas to soak for dinner, they reeked of eucalyptus oil! I soaked and cooked them but they were inedible. So we cleared that cupboard out, it had some unopened (gluten0 crackers that were out of date, and an opened box of stale crackers, as well as another box of peas that got thrown out. I also sorted a Tupperware drawer and some baking supplies.

Sunday - I made apple fritters for breakfast on a very foggy morning, due to the warm air and the cold Lake Ontario. I had my weekly 90 minute phone call with my friend in a retirement home.
I rearranged a couple of plants at John's suggestion (good one).


Monday - holiday Victoria Day. The Sovereign's birthday has been celebrated in Canada since the reign of Queen Victoria (1837-1901). May 24, Queen Victoria's birthday, was declared a holiday by the Legislature of the Province of Canada in 1845.
The big problem: There is no set definition of Victoria Day. Yes, it’s about Queen Victoria. But it’s also about military parades, drinking, picnicking, spring, and the British Empire. Ask three different people what the point of Victoria Day is, and you’ll get four different answers. In Montreal, where I grew up, it meant the official start of spring, and that you could finally plant flowers in your garden without having to worry about them dying of frost. Everyone in my neighbourhood spent May 24th at the local plant nursery. But in Ontario, where I now live, many people call the holiday “May 2-4,” and spend the weekend going camping with friends, opening up the cottage, and drinking beer (i.e. a “two-four”) around the campfire. In Victoria, where it’s called Victoria Day, there is a massive parade through the downtown core with marching bands, floats, and military marches. In Richmond, the holiday is called May Long Weekend, and it’s a nice perk that many people use to spend time with family.





John made omelets for breakfast. He used the golf simulator for a couple of hours.
I got up to date on filing and shredding, I cleaned out the old car papers for shredding once John checks he doesn't any. I also toke the old (more than 7 years old tax files for shredding).
We both cleaned up the balcony, there were a gazillion shad/midge dead flies out there.
He took a walk along the lake.



Tuesday we went for our covid shots and then to lunch at One York Food Hall by O and B.
Curryocity wasn't open so John opted for a taco bowl at Lala's $13 and I went to Beauty's Fried Chicken $10 one piece plus fries, good taste and prices.
John went through the old car papers and he found the proof of ownership that he couldn't and had to get a replacement last month! Everything can be was shredded.
Laundry

Wednesday John golfed and I went for a haircut. We had a severe thunderstorm warning and there were raindrops and strong winds so I decided to catch an early bus home.

Thursday we headed out after lunch and walked to Chinatown, with a stop at the 401 Richmond Museum. We walked over 10,000 steps with a stop at Starbucks for strawberry frapaccinos. Bonus it was $4 drinks today.

Thomson Reuter's new Toronto headquarters - Toronto House is 58 floors.
At its base, the building includes the preserved south and west facades of the 1908-built Southam Press Building,.


This mural has seen its better days. 


401 Richmond Art 













We happened upon this pop-up.

Sample creations from Chef Susur Lee at the Tasting Window
Inspired by the wine windows of Florence, Tostitos® is welcoming Toronto to enjoy a taste of local, multicultural flavour – free of charge. As per Tostitos web page.

These guys were soliciting for people to sample. He suggested the only gluten free one - Thai Coconut and Pineapple Dip - lemongrass, pineapple, coconut cream, onion, turmeric and chili.




He calls in the order, you ring the bell at the tasting window and it opens with your tostito.




Chinatown on Spadina is quickly disappearing to construction.
Two buildings that have sat kitty-corner at one of downtown Toronto's busiest intersections for decades are now being gutted and razed, respectively, for a new station on the forthcoming Ontario Line subway. 
The CIBC that was located in the historic banking building on the northeast corner, which was originally built a staggering 120 years ago, now, nearly without a trace of what it used to be.

Designed by George Wallace Gouinlock for the Bank of Hamilton (which later merged with CIBC), the structure was completed in 1903 and received heritage designation in the early 1970s.

It is known as one of the oldest buildings in Canada, and is now almost completely gutted as work on the new transit stop really gets going, though exterior facades remain.






We picked up a few fruits and vegetables in Chinatown and then compared to prices to Longo's.
Handwritten prices are Longo's, what a difference! Yes, there are less expensive grocers than Longo's but it is very convenient for me.


Queen St. W - finally, the hoarding is gone. QRC West Phase 2 (Queen Richmond Centre West).
This extension of the QRC (2015) will link new office and retail to the grand Atrium of phase one at lobby level and by bridge and be well-integrated with the surrounding brick industrial fabric, while also offering a new state-of-the-art, highly sustainable commercial office complex.


Sitting on the patio at Starbucks I noticed the street sign and wondered who Harriet Boulton Smith was...Seems I have seen her portrait at the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO)!
Grange Park is a two-hectare green space in downtown Toronto. The park was originally part of The Grange estate built in 1817 by the Boulton family, who played an influential role in developing the young city of Toronto. The area now known as Grange Park served as the Boulton family’s front lawn. The elliptical path for carriages leading to the front door of The Grange remains as a heritage feature in the park today.


The Grange at the AGO. The brick house below the blue.


Friday John golfed and I did some shopping. I also discovered that the One York Food Hall is only open from 11:30 - 2:30 Monday to Thursday!!

Ambulance collides with moose while responding to another moose collision: OPP

COOKING


Saturday ham mushy peas cauliflower and leftover au gratin potatoes
Sunday chicken wings carrots and celery
Monday burgers and potato salad. Burger meat was delicious. Bought at the market and labelled as steak 3lbs for $20 = $1.67 per burger.
Tuesday fish we were full from lunch so we had salad
Wednesday lemon parmesan chicken Alfredo garlic bread
Thursday Asian chicken lettuce wraps I picked this one to try the sauce which was good, I added hot sauce and ginger.
Friday steak, garlic bread and sauteed onions, mushrooms and broccolini


WATCHING

I'm up to date on the latest season of MasterChef Australia, so I have to wait...

 We watched Scoop - a 2024 British biographical drama film, starring Gillian Anderson, Keeley Hawes, Billie Piper, and Rufus Sewell. It is a dramatic retelling of the process of securing and filming the 2019 BBC television interview of Prince Andrew by presenter and journalist Emily Maitlis and the production team at the BBC Two news and current affairs programme Newsnight.
The film is a behind-the-scenes story of the women who negotiated with the Buckingham Palace establishment to secure the "scoop of the decade" that was the public catalyst for the downfall of the Duke of York, in a televised interview which focused on Andrew's relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and allegations of Andrew's sexual assault of a minor. The interview was later described as less a car crash than "a plane crashing into an oil tanker, causing a tsunami, triggering a nuclear explosion."

I started watching Baby Reindeer, a British dark comedy drama-thriller miniseries created by and starring Richard Gadd, adapted from Gadd's autobiographical one-man show of the same name. This is based on a true story, here is an interesting story by the BBC, SNP MP John Nicolson has asked Netflix to substantiate what it told a parliamentary committee about the woman alleged to have inspired the character Martha from the hit show Baby Reindeer.
I was interested after I read a blog by a fellow Canadian And Then We All Had Tea And Then We All Had Tea about her encounter with the woman the story is based around. You'll need to scroll down about three quarters of the post.

The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes 2023 it serves as a prequel to The Hunger Games (2012), and is the fifth installment in The Hunger Games film series. Set 64 years before the events of the first film, its plot follows the events that lead a young Coriolanus Snow on the path to becoming the tyrannical leader of Panem, including his relationship with the Hunger Games District 12 tribute Lucy Gray Baird during the 10th Hunger Games.

Desperation Road (2023) A Southern Noir thriller, set in a tough-and-tumble Mississippi town where a woman and her young daughter are caught in the crossfire when whiskey, guns, and the desire for revenge violently intersect.

READING

While watching M/C Australia, Luke Nguyen was on as a celebrity chef in an episode. I read one of his cookbooks after that, Street Food Asia.

I read Biglaw in one day, I was fascinated, although I had figured out what would happen. It was funny and sad, as it provides an insider's view of the cut-throat world of big New York law firms.

I started The Kings of London and it seems it is volume 2 in a series. William Shaw is a new author to me, but I will be reading more of him. It is set in London in the late 60s, an interesting piece of history.


Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Tuesday Treasures

 Tom the backroads traveller hosts this weekly meme.


Toronto ON

Click here for a history of Toronto lane naming and a list of other lanes. That post is a work in progress, and gets updated frequently.

In my neighbourhood.
I can't find any information, best guess is there was a brook from Lake Ontario.


On Lake Ontario - There is a public tennis court and the Argonaut Rowing Club.




Annie Craig Drive shares its name with one of two steamboats that ran from Toronto to the Humber River in the late 1800s.


The Annie Craig was purchased in 1882 by the Humber Steam Ferry Co. Three hotel owners (John Duck, Octavius Hicks and Charles Nurse) plus a brewer Eugene O'Keefe were the owners of the ferry company. The hotels were located in Etobicoke Township at the mouth of the Humber River. Access from Toronto was difficult as the streetcar lines did not extend that far west. Initially passengers were carried from a wharf near Yonge Street to John Duck's dock with an intermediate stop at the foot of Bathurst St. The 1885 route had intermediate stops at the Exhibition Grounds and High Park.

Friday, October 8, 2021

Weekend Roundup


1. Starts with "O"
2. A Favorite
3.ORNATE chosen by Tom

Starts with "O"
OCHLOCKONEE River 
Ochlockonee River State Park is a Florida State Park located in Wakulla County, Florida, south of the town of Sopchoppy in the Florida Panhandle.
The name is from the Hitchiti language words for yellow river.



FAVOURITE OBELISK
The Luxor Obelisks (French: Obélisque de Louxor) are a pair of Ancient Egyptian obelisks carved to stand either side of the portal of the Luxor Temple in the reign of Ramesses II. The left-hand obelisk remains in its location in Egypt.


But the right-hand stone, 23 metres (75 ft) high, is now at the centre of the Place de la Concorde in Paris, France.




ORNATE
Right outside our door you can walk along Lake ONTARIO there are various paths. One path has a retaining wall stamped with words like JOY, FLUTTER, GRACE, DANCE ETC.




Déjà Brew
A catchall for leftover beer, coffee, food, motels and whatever catches my fancy!
OKANAGAN dry pear cider



Monday, December 21, 2020

Foto Tunes

  Tom the backroads traveller hosts this weekly meme.


December 2020 - Toronto ON

Last week I began seeing snippets about a song called Gravy Day and I didn't pay any attention. Then on Saturday I went over to link up at Marg's The Intrepid Reader and Baker's weekly post, and she had posted Gravy Day.


What is gravy day? It began with a 1996 song called How To Make Gravy by popular Australian singer Paul Kelly.

Its lyrics tell a fictional tale of a man in jail writing to his family about longing to be with them at Christmas.
That letter is penned on 21 December - a date that, in real life, has been deemed increasingly worth celebrating.
In the Northern Hemisphere, December 21 is often the shortest day of the year and is sometimes regarded as the first day of winter. In the Southern Hemisphere, December 21 is often the longest day of the year and occurs during the southern summer.

This plaque is just outside our door at Humber Bay on Lake Ontario.






I had bought turkey necks and backs last week and got my Christmas gravy stock made and frozen in preparation for our Christmas dinner.






Hello Dan, it's Joe here, I hope you're keeping well
It's the 21st of December, and now they're ringing the last bells
If I get good behaviour, I'll be out of here by July
Won't you kiss my kids on Christmas Day, please don't let 'em cry for me
I guess the brothers are driving down from Queensland and Stella's flying in from the coast
They say it's gonna be a hundred degrees, even more maybe, but that won't stop the roast
Who's gonna make the gravy now? I bet it won't taste the same
Just add flour, salt, a little red wine
And don't forget a dollop of tomato sauce for sweetness and that extra tang
And give my love to Angus and to Frank and Dolly,
Tell 'em all I'm sorry I screwed up this time
And look after Rita, I'll be thinking of her early Christmas morning
When I'm standing in line
I hear Mary's got a new boyfriend, I hope he can hold his own
Do you remember the last one? What was his name again?
(Just a little too much cologne)
And Roger, you know I'm even gonna miss Roger
'Cause there's sure as hell no one in here I want to fight
Oh praise the Baby Jesus, have a Merry Christmas,
I'm really gonna miss it, all the treasure and the trash
And later in the evening, I can just imagine,
You'll put on Junior Murvin and push the tables back
And you'll dance with Rita, I know you really like her,
Just don't hold her too close, oh brother please don't stab me in the back
I didn't mean to say that, it's just my mind it plays up,
Multiplies each matter, turns imagination into fact
You know I love her badly, she's the one to save me,
I'm gonna make some gravy, I'm gonna taste the fat
Tell her that I'm sorry, yeah I love her badly, tell 'em all I'm sorry,
And kiss the sleepy children for me
You know one of these days, I'll be making gravy,
I'll be making plenty, I'm gonna pay 'em all back
Source: LyricFind

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Water

 Cee's Fun Foto Challenge


November 2020 - Toronto ON

It was the middle of the afternoon at Harbourfront (Lake Ontario) when I took this photo.





Friday, May 15, 2020

Weekend Reflections

Posting at Weekend Reflections


May 2020 - Toronto ON

Taken by John as he walked along Lake Ontario this week. Looking west towards our neighbourhood, Humber Bay.



Friday, April 10, 2020

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Winter

Cee's Fun Foto Challenge


December 2019 - Toronto ON

Not very wintery here for the last few weeks. We did have some snow in early December and John took a walk along Lake Ontario,


Friday, December 6, 2019

Eataly

December 2019 - Toronto ON

December 2019 - Eataly Toronto ON

Saturday and we binged on series/movies. John watched Jack Ryan and Coronation St.
I watched The Hours, I had read the book years ago and may have seen the movie back then, not sure.


And a Canadian film, The Bad Daughter, kind of cute.

We started watching a new series Dublin Murders is a television series based on the first two Dublin Murder Squad books by Tana French, The story, consisting of eight episodes, is adapted from In the Woods and The Likeness. I made sure I let Tina of Squirrel Head Manor know about the series as she is a fan of French.

Burgers and fries for dinner.

Sunday looked like this. Thank goodness we have a convenience store in the building.

Winter weather warning in effect as ice pellets, freezing rain hit southern Ontario




We don't even need snow for this out our window.




Monday and I picked up some items for dinner as John's son was in town on business and coming over. I made my go to Spanish chicken thighs with mashed white and sweet potatoes using chicken stock.

Typical winter morning after a snowfall.



Wednesday and John took a walk along Lake Ontario. Looking east towards downtown, you can see the CN Tower in the middle distance.



Looking west.



There we are, on the far right.




We finally decided to subscribe to Netflixs, had been hold outs. So we are currently bingeing our way through Peaky Blinders, we had seen the first couple of seasons but decided to rewatch them.


The sun came out for a second while I was downtown.


Set up our new lamp from Ikea.



John put our new Ikea trolley together.

Dinner was pasta carbonara.


Friday was girls' day out and we went to Bay and Bloor to check out the new Eataly store.

And I was impressed!

Eataly Toronto is part of a chain of Italian food emporiums with over 35 locations worldwide, including this 50,000-square-foot outpost in the Manulife Centre at Bloor and Bay.

Three floors encompass counters for pizza, seafood, meats, cheeses, baked goods, gelato and more.

There's also several full-on restaurants, a cooking school and a basement brewery, beer bar and bottle shop by Indie Alehouse.


Bakery on ground level, there is seating everywhere.



Lots of specialized counters for eating.


Incredible cheese and deli choices at good prices.









A produce section includes mushrooms that are foraged for and farmed by local Canadian producers.



I have never seen yellowfoot mushrooms!






Then a browse through Indigo.




I picked this up for our small table.





BOOK ENDS

December 2019 - Indigo Toronto ON

Finished The Perfect Plan, I just found the plot too confusing but did have empathy for Liam and his difficult upbringing.

I started Anything is Possible but I don't think I will finish it, just not getting my attention.

I also started The Odds, my first by O'Nan and I am really enjoying his writing.


LINKING UP WITH
Beth hosts Weekend Cooking where you can post anything food related.
Sunday Salon
Seasons
Say Cheese
Monday Walks
Monday Morning Blog Club