I Scream you Scream we all Scream for Icecream

Two days ago, on one of those tremendously hot days, Daisy launched herself into the milking parlour. She always pours through the door at speed, she has never and will never be a gentle giant of a cow.  The moment she hears the bell she takes two steps backwards to accomodate the opening half barn door, and the moment it is open enough she propels her one ton body in through the gap.

That day I moved around to the side of her head to click the tether onto her collar and oops.. no collar. She had lost it. Already her head was deep in her treats tray so, after a pause, I just clicked the leather catch beside her ear, patted her, saying the usual things, and proceeded with the milking. She behaved exactly as she always does. As though she were actually tethered. Later I looked for the collar but she has hidden it out there somewhere.  So I have just continued to pretend clip her ON and pretend clip her OFF. 

Last night I forgot to pretend clip her OFF.  Yhe last steps of our routine are always the same. I take off the cups, apply the iodine, open a side door and take out a small handful of the extremely popular lambs quarters hay, then open the barn door to the yards  and place it out there, leaving the door open as I return. I come back in, unclip her and slap her on the rump in a friendly way and say, ‘There you go, Boss. Off you go, Daisy.  Off you go’  And she turns herself completely around and out she goes.  Last night  I did the door, I did the hay, I opened the other door, popped the hay out, walked back in, slapped her on the rump,  said,’ There you go Boss,  off you go, Daisy Off you go.’ And she did not move.  Her four big feet stayed firmly planted in the same place and she continued to stare at her empty tray, heaving a great sigh  and waiting.  I patted her again. ‘Off you go boss. Off you go, Daisy.’

Still no reaction. I raised my hand to pat her again and move her off when she turned to look at me.

Keeping all four feet in exactly the same place, she turned her head at an angle and looked at me standing at her rump. She reached her head around to the exact length of her pretend tether and quite clearly said. ‘You have not unhooked me you stupid blond.’

‘Oops, I said sorry Daisy. I forgot to pretend Unclip you.’  I moved to the correct side, picked up her tether from its ring on the wall,  clicked the clip by her ear then dropped it back with its usual thunk.

Thank you, she said, you can carry on now.  And she turned her massive body around and out the door she went. Muttering about how it is hard to get decent help nowadays and don’t be giving too much of that good milk to those no-good lay-about  cats. 

It was significantly cooler yesterday. We all breathed a continuous sigh of relief. I love that word sigh. There is such gentleness in that word. We also exhaled a glorious sigh of relief when it rained too. Just a little rain but wet.

Good morning. Daisy has been giving so much beautiful milk with cream that yesterday I made icecream. The Tall Teenager has returned too, so this is a wee welcome home treat. This is French Vanilla icecream.  And just out of the shot is the Tall Teenager, muddy from filling the water troughs (thank you God), with his spoon poised, saying hurry up already, it is melting. It may be cooler but it is still hot enough to melt icecream in a hurry.

The guttering needs repair.. ah well.  On the list.

French Vanilla Icecream made with raw milk.

In a pot I heated  2 cups of whole fresh milk and 1 split vanilla pod until hot. Turn off the heat when the first bubble breaks. Do not boil. Allow to sit.

  • In a bowl
  • Whisk 5 egg yolks
  • 1 cup of sugar (brown or white)
  • 3 tablespoons of honey
  • big pinch of salt

(I made this sweet as a treat for the boys.) Slowly combine the egg mixture into the hot milk. Back to the stove and heat stirring until 180F(82C) and thicker.

Strain and add 2 cups of cream. Refrigerate until cold then proceed to your ice cream maker.  Freeze the ice cream afterwards to let it harden.  This icecream was the best I have ever eaten and I do not have a sweet tooth.

If you want to make icecream to have with your  high tea, start it in the morning. It all take a while.

Good morning. Yesterday was a wonderful day of the most tremendous support and care.  All day comments poured in from you, encouraging me to look after myself and growling me for staying out in the heat too long.  There were many stern voices!  I think what you all created yesterday was a bubble of loving and encouragement so strong that it will have encompassed you all as well.  We are now more together in this enterprise than ever before.  You and I. Thank you.  I will be good I promise.

As I was meant to be resting, I spent a fair part of the day (when I was not making cheese and ice cream)  trolling about reading many of your blogs, confident that you would go and find my comments should they tip over into the Spam Can.  My internet connection even sped up to a crawl which was helpful. There is so much lovely work out there. Thank you.

It is cooler again this morning. We will have a good day.

I can hear Minty calling.  Time to begin.

celi

83 responses to “I Scream you Scream we all Scream for Icecream”

  1. I have been obsessing about ice cream makers, and you may have sent me round the bend with this post! I’m so glad you’ve gotten some cooler weather and rain to boot! We had about two minutes of rain the other night but that was enough to create the most glorious smell.

  2. I just want to tell you that yours is one of the few blogs I read nearly every post. If I miss a post, I usually go back and read it. I will put you on my humble little blogroll if you like. I really enjoy reading about your life. – Chris

  3. Daisy story is a hoot!! I sent my sister the link for your blog. LL Bean sells an ice cream ball in pint and quart sizes. v Glad you have recovered from the heat!

  4. I love the daisy story. I had no idea that cows were so smart!
    Your ice cream sounds marvelous. But as it’s made with whole raw milk, we’ll never be able to copy the flavor. Do your boys know how lucky they are?

  5. It’s true the farmy has a wonderful array of caring & interesting commenters. I often have a quick read of your post and return later, re-read and enjoy all the comments (also by way of explanation why my comments are later, it’s not just a time zone thing). Also, I read on another blog a comment that with the WP stats change over people were experiencing stats glitches, http://en.forums.wordpress.com/topic/stats-details-not-showing?replies=13, so it may be the case with you also.

    • Thank you ella, firstly for reading all the comments with me, (we are surrounded by a rich resource of information and care.).. stunning and also for this stats glitch thing, there are a number of people with the same problem i shall zoom over for a read! well done hon..good skills c

  6. What a smart one that Daisy is! That’s really incredible. We can all be such creatures of habit. Your ice cream looks fantastic!!!! French vanilla is my favorite. 🙂

  7. That Daisy is one smart girl! How clever of you to continue to “tether” her. Loved this story, and am glad you are getting some weather relief. We finally got a wee bit of rain here today.

  8. I have only just discovered you, through Chris King. I need to know why nobody has mentioned this wonderful blog before…look at all that I have missed…but now I have pressed the ‘follow’ button so I shall not be missing anymore in the future. It is never too late to put things right !

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