Your name & the internet

Personas

Up until today I wished I made a more unique name than Simon Cook, there’s shit loads of them out there! I could never get near the top of the google rankings, although I’m now slowly making my way up there, currently 5th :)

But I’ve seen 2 things today that made me happy that I’ve got loads of other namesakes. First up is this Personas site by Aaron Zinman from MIT it searches the internets for you and your namesakes and creates a visual aggregation of their online identities. I think the final result is a bit of a let down (I’m sure Jonathan Harris could do some much more interesting with the data). But watching the other Simon Cook’s and things they are up to flashing across the screen was quite fascinating.

Craig Robinson

Then I randomly went to see what Craig Robinson (Flip Flop Flyin’) was up to. He’s snapped up CraigRobinson.com when it became available, and rather than use it himself, he’s made a site linking up all the Craig Robinsons out there!

I love the idea, I think there should be a law that ‘name URLs’ should link up everyone that shares the name. I would definitely do the same if SimonCook.com ever became available.

Let’s get pickled

Winter Chutney Recipe

This is a first for me, never done a recipe before, but don’t worry, Made in England isn’t going to turn into a cookery site, it’s just that I’m quite passionate about that tastey tastey chutney :)

I’ve made chutney on and off over the years, but I must say this last batch is easily the best to date. Also it’s a proper winter/Christmas chutney which needs at least a couple of months to mature, so if you’re going to eat it over Christmas/winter you’ll want to be making it now.

You’ll need (not far off the ingredients of a Christmas cake, make both!):

  • 2 Grapefruit
  • 1 Orange
  • 1 Lemon
  • 1 Lime
  • 300g Raisins
  • 500g Prunes (I used dried & without the pits)
  • 500g Figs (I used dried)
  • 2 Cooking Apples
  • 1 Stalk of Celery
  • 2 Onions
  • A bit of Red Cabbage (make the rest into pickled cabbage, yum yum)
  • 1kg Molasses or the darkest sugar you can find
  • 1l Malt Vinegar
  • Shit load of Spices (that you like). I used – ginger, chillies, garlic, mustard Seeds, citrus peel, black peppercorns, allspice, cloves, cardamom pods and cinnamon. Or you can get this sort of thing from a supermarket.
  • Brandy – I didn’t, but in retrospect I think this should probably be in there, maybe towards the end so you don’t boil off too much of the booze. Whatever, improvise!

First up you’re best making the vinegar. Spicing vinegar was a big revelation for me, I’d previously bought pre-spiced pickling vinegar, but making your own is satisfying and a smell sensation, if you’ve never had your face in front of a bubbling pot of vinegar and spices, you should, it’s quite an overwhelming experience. Put your litre of malt vinegar in a pan and add all your spices. You can put them in a muslin bag if you like, or just pour everything through a sieve into another pan at the end. Heat it up and simmer away for 15 min or so, let it cool down then get rid of the spices.

Next cut a bit of the citrus fruit peel off (trying not to get too much pith) and slice it into strips like marmalade, stick it in a pan. Cut the rest of the peel/pith off the grapefruit & orange, chop into bits and blend it to a pulp in a mixer or just stick in the pan if you don’t have one (it’ll soon get mushed up). Juice the lemon & lime and stick those in the pan.

Should look something like this:

Chop apples (personally I can’t be arsed to peel them them), celery, onion and stick them in with the juices. If you’ve got dried figs and prunes like me, just give them a quick chop into smaller bits and stick them in the pan along with the raisins. Otherwise you might need to take the pits out of the prunes or something?

By this point you might realise that there’s way too much stuff in your pan (remember you haven’t put any vinegar or sugar in yet), I had to divide everything into 2 more pans. Pour in the spiced vinegar and wack on the heat.

Should look something like this:

Chutney chopped up in the pan

Your going to want to simmer that away until everything is soft and squishy, I think I had it going for at least an hour, but I wasn’t timing.. I thought it was looking a bit dry so added a bit more vinegar, but that was probably a mistake. When it looks pretty much like chutney you want to put the sugar in. The colour will change too an amazing rich dark brown, once all the sugar’s dissolved you crank up the heat and get a rolling boil going (prime sticking to the bottom of the pan time, so keep stirring).

I noticed that the addition of sugar made the chutney seem more runny, felt because I’d added more vinegar it now needed more veg to soak it up so I had the brainwave to stick some of the red cabbage I was dry-brining (dry-brining means covering the chopped cabbage in shit loads of coarse sea salt and leaving it overnight) for some pickled cabbage I was making later in the day.

Looks much like this:

dry-brining red cabbage

So I rinsed some off and stuck that into the mix. I really liked the dark brown and purple colours mixed, would highly recommend this late addition.

Now it looks like this:

Chutney Cooking

So now all you have to do is reduce it down until it looks pretty much like chutney consistency (maybe another hour, still wasn’t timing), it’ll thicken up a bit once you put it in the pots, so leave it a bit on the runny side.

In the meantime stick your jars in the oven, I set it to 120 degrees, and stick the rubber seals (if your jars have them) in some boiling water. Essentially sterilise them. This amount of ingredients filled five an a half 500g jars for me.

When you think it’s time, spoon the chutney in the jars, seal them up and put them in the cupboard for at least a couple of months. Once cooled, I actually put them in the fridge for day or two to ‘set them’, no idea if that’s what you should do, just felt like that’s what you do with jam? I started eating the half jar you always end up with straight away, even though it’s not matured I could tell, this is going to be a friggin’ awesome batch of chutney :)

Note on jars:

We had some of those flip top jars from Ikea but they were garbage, not even a water tight seal.. We’re now using 500ml Le Parfait jars and they’re infinitely better and not really much more expensive – £13.99 for a six pack from Lakeland (£2.30 each).

Well that’s definitely one of the longest blog posts I’ve ever written, I hope at least one of you makes some damn chutney and invites me round to taste it :)

Chutney not your thing? Check out some marmalade we’ve been making, nicky might let you in on the secret recipe ;)

I’m still alive!

Cartoon Crab

Blimey, it’s been over a month since I last wrote a blog post – my excuse? Well I’ve been drawing crabs of course! No that’s a lie, this is the only crab I’ve drawn recently ;) What I’ve mainly been doing is working too hard..

Taking up most of my time is a website I’m designing for Philips, with my new pals at Tribal DDB Amsterdam. I suppose it’s more of a web app than a site, it’s certainly proving to be one of the most complicated beasts I’ve ever worked on. But it’s a good brief and it’s big budget, so unless we totally fuck up, it should pretty amazing :) I don’t think they’ll be too happy if I spilt the beans, so you’ll have to wait until the end of the year to find out what the hell it is.

Skype Business Icons

Also a bit of an ongoing project this year (which I’m back on this week), is a load of illustartions and icons for Skype. Their normal (consumer) stuff was done by the talented French Illustrator Genevieve Gauckler, but they wanted a bit less crazy hands action for the new re-vamped business section. They are rolling stuff out bit by bit, we haven’t quite finished it yet, but it’s coming along.

Social Suicide Beaufort Scale Suit

And finally, the last thing I’m frantically trying to get done in the evenings this week is a series of T-Shirts for my friends at Social Suicide. My T-Shirts are for next summer’s collection, so again you’ll have to wait a bit to get your hands on them. But they’ve just opened a store on Ganton street for this summers collection, as always with them there’s a twist – “The hotter the day, the less you pay” – the temperature in London, in Celsius, at the moment, is the discount you get in percent, at checkout (both in store and online). Well we are supposed to be having a heatwave this summer, so there should be some bargains to be had :)

I’m in Holland

I'm in Holland

Well Amsterdam to be precise, I’m over here working for the next couple of weeks. This is the windmill I walk past on the way to work, it’s nice working and feeling like you’re on holiday at the same time :)

Alpine Pass Route

Alpine Pass Route

Probably the most common questioned I get asked is – what have you got planned for your next walk? Well I’ve booked some cheap flight to Switzerland (£40 return, can you believe that? – Aer Lingus), ordered some maps and have been planning the route all weekend :) Click the image for a bigger map of our planned route.

I haven’t been to the Alps since ’95 (I used to go just about every year) so it’s about time for a visit. I’ve been keeping my eye on a new series of long distance trails crossing the Alps called Via Alpina. They just updated their site with lots more info on the routes and handy download-able section pdfs. There’s 5 trails in all, the daddy being the Red Route which is 1500 miles. Also found the site of Judy Armstrong who did a loop mostly on the Via Alpina trails, crossing the Alps twice in a whooping 3,300 mile single season trip!

I’ve a picked a little section for me and Nicky across Switzerland (Bernese Alps), mostly on the Green route, but with a bit of the Red at the end. As well as being part of the Via Alpina, (most of) the route seems generally known as the Alpine Pass Route. I found a site – Activity Workshop, that has a lot of online information about the walk, they also plotted the route on google maps which I’ve found quite handy. Also there’s a Cicerone guide of the Alpine Pass Route, by the legendary Kev Reynolds.

Can’t wait till the end of June now, I’ll be blogging as we go as usual. Hopefully if Nicky enjoys herself, we might plan a full traverse of the Alps in 2010 :)

We’re in our new house

Cookie & Nicky's new house

Blimey it’s been an age since I last did any blogging, sorry folks I’ve been so busy working and then spending all my spare time moving in our new house and sorting things out, but finally we’re in! I hauled the last load yesterday and we did the obligatory trip to Ikea while we had the van. All we have to do now is throw a house warming party :)

Cookie & Nicky's new house

We haven’t moved far from Shoreditch, just a couple of miles up the road to Dalston. It’s a detached house, which is quite unusual in London, and even more unusual on our budget. It was actually built in the back garden of Landlords house! (he doesn’t live there anymore though)

Cookie & Nicky's new house

The house is certainly a pretty impressive piece of architecture, designed by Kyson (they’ve got some good pics),  it was even a finalist on Channel 4’s Grand Designs last year.

Cookie & Nicky's new house

One thing I’ve noticed since moving in is my desire to cook proper food has dramatically increased now that I’ve got a whole kitchen to myself :) Here’s me pulling the first pie I’ve cooked in ages out of our oven.

I’m sure they’ll be plenty more pics once we’re a bit more settled in, the house is due to host it’s first event this Friday – Me and Rex are going head to head in a game of Layer Tennis, but more about that to follow.

My brothers little baby twins

My brothers little baby twins

This is a post I’ve been so looking forward to blogging, but couldn’t because my site was down. It’s probably of little interest to most of my readers, but I’m so excited I want to shout it from the roof tops – My brother’s wife Sarah gave birth to twins yesterday morning! I’m Uncle Cookie now :)