Craving a special treat…

Hawaii never ceased to amaze us with its gorgeous flowers.

This morning, I awoke thinking of pies. Usually, I don’t spend much time thinking about pies. Still, after dreaming about cooking for a large dinner party and making pies for dessert, I put together a comprehensive grocery list from Whole Foods on the Amazon website while still lying in bed, switching back and forth between my favorite two pie recipes, neither of which I’ve made in a long time.

For Tom, seasonally relevant, I’ll be making pumpkin pies. Since I don’t have a food processor to make my usual Martha Stewart pie crust dough or a rolling pin for a suitable alternative, I purchased four ready-made pie crusts and enough ingredients to make four pies. The organic pie crusts, a unique brand from Whole Foods, should be good.

I’ll most likely make four pies from the ingredients for Tom’s pie, keeping one out for him to savor and freezing the rest, already baked and carefully wrapped in foil.

Also, I’ll make my favorite dessert, a low-carb cream cheese pie with a homemade almond flour crust. I’ll only make one of these since they don’t freeze well. Lately, going through all of this medical stuff, I’ve wanted to treat myself with this pie, which I’ll savor in small pieces over the next several days.

With no opportunity to dine out without a car, no willingness to pay the premium prices in nearby restaurants, and the cost of an Uber each way, we’re trying to enjoy a few treats based on how I’m feeling and motivated to bake. When I awoke this morning, although still feeling an irregular heart rhythm, I decided I needed to become more active instead of sitting and waiting to feel better. 

I’ve pampered myself long enough, and it’s time to get in motion. Yesterday, for the first time in weeks, I could do one corridor walk, albeit slowly and tentatively. Today, I will try for two walks, and in the days to come, I will gradually increase the pace and distance. Since we’ve been here for over a month, the most corridor walks I have been able to do have been five walks in one day. We’ll see how it goes.

Carefully monitoring my heart rate is crucial while I hope to regain stamina and strength. Cooking is a suitable means of getting used to standing on my feet for a few hours here and there. Plus, it’s comforting to have special meals, and in this case, desserts, which add to our enjoyment during this confined situation.

In the past few minutes, I completed one walk, about 500 steps. It wasn’t easy since my legs didn’t want to cooperate. The problem is more with my legs, which feel like lead, than my heart beating too fast. Plus, I am unsteady and stay close to a wall in case I tetter along the way. I refuse to believe I will need to use a wheelchair for the remainder of my life.

Walking around in the hotel room is relatively easy. It’s a short distance from room to room. The living room, dining area, and kitchen are one spacious room, and the bedroom and bathroom are separate. Every hour, I make a point of getting up and moving around to avoid sitting too long. It’s easy for hours to pass without getting up, which is ultimately bad for everyone’s health.

Hopefully, I’ll feel well enough to make the pies by tomorrow. We’ll see how it goes.

Be well.

Photo from ten years ago today, October 2, 2014:

Here we are at Liliuokalani Gardens in Hilo. Sam, our friendly taxi driver, took the photo. For more photos, please click here.

Another pie making day from hell…Thanksgiving dinner tonight with friends…

    The cherry pie crust ended up thick due to the awful heat and humidity today. Hopefully, it will taste good.

Kathy and Don are hosting an early Thanksgiving dinner for their American friends, Rita and Gerhard, and the two of us. Kathy managed to find a small turkey in Nelspruit. Turkey isn’t often consumed in South Africa and is usually purchased only for visitors from the USA.

The last time we all had Thanksgiving dinner together was in 2018 when we lived in the Orange house. The day before the event, I made eight pumpkin pies, which I described in this post. It was a hot day, with temperatures running at 102F, 40C, and pie crust dough. See that post here.

Pie crust dough should not get above 70F, 21C and although I got up to make the crusts at 6:00 am this morning, it was already above 80C, 27C in the kitchen. Here is an interesting article about making pie crusts in too cold or too hot temperatures.

Of course, I waited to turn on the oven until I’d made and rolled all the dough and placed it in the tins. But, like in November in 2018, once again, it was challenging, and my crusts had to be thick to put them in the pan without them falling apart.

On top of that, I was making Don’s favorite cherry pie, which requires a lattice top. Rolling and cutting those strips to keep them from breaking apart as I placed them on the pie was, once again, very tricky. Finally, I resigned myself, again, that the strips would have to be thick to prevent them from breaking. Fortunately, the crust is flakey and delicious, so eating big strips of dough won’t be so bad.

The pumpkin pie’s crust wasn’t perfect in appearance, but we’re expecting the flavor to be good.

If we had planned this Thanksgiving dinner for Sunday instead of today (my fault when Kathy asked which day was better), the temperature would only be a high of 70F, 21C, which would have been perfect pie-making weather. Oh, well, history certainly does repeat itself.

Right now, the pumpkin pie is baking after Tom helped me get the cherry pie out of the oven. With no regular pie tins, I am using tinfoil pans, which are flimsy in South Africa. I used two tins for each pie to make them slightly sturdier. We’ll see how that works out when we drive the pies to Kathy and Don’s later today on the very bumpy dirt roads in Marloth Park.

We’re scheduled to arrive at Kathy and Don’s home at 5:15 pm, 1715 hrs. At 7:00 pm 1900 hrs, Eskom, the electric company, will be instituting the second load shedding (power outage) since last night at 9:00 pm, 2100 hrs, which started right after we got home from Jabula. We’ll be dining in the dark.

Luckily, last night, we still had WiFi when the power went out and could stream a show in the dark. Before we dozed off, the power had come back on, 2½ hours later. Once again, tonight, it will be out until 11:30 pm, 2330 hrs. Depending on how late we stay at Kathy and Don, tonight might repeat last night.

Last night we had a fun time at Jabula. A lovely couple from Scotland in Marloth Park approached us while we sat at the bar before dinner with Rita and Gerhard. This couple greeted us warmly to tell us they’d been reading our posts for a long time.

They felt like they knew us after our detailed daily exposes. We all laughed at the irony of being at Jabula on the same night. We’ve experienced this many times as we’ve traveled worldwide, especially on cruise ships when people recognize us from our photos. It is these memorable interactions that make our travels all the more enjoyable.

There we sat with dear friends Rita and Gerhard, whom we also met due to our posts who stumbled across us on the web years ago. We love this! How lucky we are!!!

We’re hoping you’ll have a delightful weekend too. Be well. Be healthy. Be happy.

Photo from one year ago today, October 8, 2020:

This photo was posted while in lockdown in a hotel in Mumbai, India, on day #200. While in Bali in 2016, the two Ketuts, our cooks, walked in bare feet in the rain-flooded road to the villa to make our dinner, leaving their motorbikes elsewhere on higher ground. For more photos, please click here.