A few kilometres from my home the urban sprawl recedes, the land and fields open up and rolling country hills emerge. As you crest the hill from which this view unfolds, you feel your shoulders fall, your lungs exhale and the rat race fall away. A belt of bushland and hobby farms scaped with eucalypts borders the divide between greater Melbourne and rural and agricultural valleys. As you emerge from that winding bush road at the top of the hills, your first glimpse of the valley reveals a grid like pattern of vineyards and orchards unfolding, like a mosaic of jade and emerald toned tiles enriched by red volcanic soil. It’s the route we take most often when we head out exploring both for camping trips and weekend getaways. The one that draws me out rain hail or shine.
The divide between metropolitan Melbourne and regional Australia is just over five kilometres from our front door. Whilst it’s a well-worn and loved path for us drawing us out like a magnet it’s one that was, for a while, beyond our reach in recent years. That ‘while,’ the one Victorians endured during those most recent unmentionable years, the ones where we were asked to protect ourselves by remaining within a perimeter of a 5km radius of our homes. It was a period that the world over changed things for us all, some good, some not so good, some temporary some enduring. It’s a subject we could talk and write about infinitely. For us though one of the biggest ones that’s remained has been my husband’s work from home routine. In my own work this is a mostly normal thing but for him it’s been a big change. His work life has taken him around the world, to oil rigs, mines and major infrastructure sites, so shrinking his professional life to a 10 square metre home office with a view of our letter box has been a radical shift. During the period in which this was mandated and necessary it was acceptable and one we could all swallow. In the post lockdown world in which hybrid work arrangements are the new norm, living and working within the same four walls interminably can be a little harder to justify to yourself and therefore tolerate. The benefits do indeed outweigh the negatives like commuting and the like but sometimes those benefits still need balance.
The restlessness created, by a life lived in one location, sometimes needs attention at the end of the work week. If you’ve been reading my thoughts for a while, you may remember we’re now empty nesters which makes the weekends quiet. Perhaps the hubbub of living with young adults made our hours outside work fuller, they were certainly busier, nonetheless they’re quieter and makes the hours spent at home feel endless. Harking back to our pre-kids life where weekends were always busy in other ways, we’ve been trying to venture out a bit more. The lack of commuting fatigue we used to feel makes the prospect of a Sunday drive far more inviting than it used to. Living as close as we do to beautiful countryside is a privilege that affords a huge range of beautiful places to explore. We’ve been taking advantage of that and exploring more, tourists in our own ‘backyard’ if you will. We’ve taken a few misty drives in nearby rainforest lined hills recently. Some where we’ve ultimately found some sunshine and some shrouded in gorgeous fog. As much as I love the hills in winter and all that gorgeous mist you really can’t beat a day trip in spring. One where you can head out somewhere new and undiscovered and find a spot to park the car and take a walk, find a new spot for lunch or set up somewhere scenic for a picnic.
All that talk last week of salads and sunshine made me think about a picnic or two in the coming months. I quite like the idea of whipping something up quickly on a Sunday morning after waking to sunshine and a good weather report. Nothing too tricky, just something that ticks all the boxes and can be packed in a basket quickly with a few extra bits like fruit and a thermos of coffee (for me, I’ve still not converted him) and a cosy blanket to spread out and relax on. Something like Savoury Pizza Muffins, a fluffy, oozy combo wrapping up all the traditional flavours of a classic ham pizza. They’re pretty handy too for little fingers, hungry during school holidays and easy for said little fingers to make too…winning!
Ingredients:
100 gm butter melted
300 gr self-raising flour
1 tsp salt flakes
1 ½ tsp dried oregano leaves
100 gm fresh ham roughly chopped
200 gm grated hard cheese. I use a combo of sharp cheddar and parmigiano, but you can use anything you like that’s flavourful. It’s a good way to use up ends in the fridge.
4 spring onions/scallions chopped
2 eggs beaten
¼ c/60ml extra virgin olive oil
200 ml milk
¼ c pizza sauce. I just use a bought one usually and freeze the remaining if I don’t expect to use it quickly. Any remaining homemade sauce you have in the fridge to be used up is also fine.
Method:
Preheat oven 180c. Line a muffin tray with 12 liners and spray them with cooking spray. I don’t use spray very often but the cheese makes these a little sticky even with the liners.
Melt better in the microwave and set aside to cool while you prepare the rest of the ingredients.
In a large bowl combine the flour, salt, oregano, cheese, ham and spring onion. In a smaller bowl or jug combine the cooled butter, milk and eggs. Make a well in the centre of the dry ingredients and pour the wet mixture into the centre. Gently, with purposeful strokes, fold the two together until almost combine. Drop spoonfuls of pizza sauce on the mixture dotted around the top then complete the folding process with only a few more folds. The pizza sauce should be like marble threads through the mixture not completely mixed through. This will give you pops of tomatoey richness in random bites as you eat. You don’t want to over mix like with regular muffin methods or they’ll be chewy and tough.
Spoon into prepared muffin cases and bake 20 minutes, until golden brown and a skewer comes out clean. Allow to cool to at least warm. As tempting as it is, eating them fresh out of the oven when the cheese is oozy and the sauce steaming is a sure fire ride to burned mouth hell.
Store in the fridge if there’s any left over and warm briefly in the microwave if you want them that way or leave to return to room temp for ten minutes before eating. They’ll also freeze well.
Finds and Forays
In keeping with the theme of picnics this dip platter By Molly Baz looks the goods. I’m imagining that with a cold crisp bottle of my favourite. If picnic moods have hit you too you might like to try this one. My mum used to make it all the time and in turn I did for the boys lunch boxes. And of course everyone needs a blankie to relax on and while away the day. I spoiled myself with one of these for xmas last year and it’s never far from my side. I snuggle under it on cold nights and picnic on it on sunny days. Oh and they’re having a little sale at the moment so…hop to it.
You guys know how big a book lover I am. It may or may not be a problem, depending on your perspective I guess. I’m also a big fan of supporting local small business. I was particularly excited to find this one via Sophie Hansen’s brilliant newsletter. Cleverly acting as a bookshop portal it allows you to search a book and shows you indie book stores who currently have your selection in stock. Such a great way for book lovers to support local if you’re able.
In my ongoing obsession with raspberries this one caught my attention, containing raspberries and yoghurt so that makes it breakfast, right? Doesn’t it? Surely.
Wishing you a lovely weekend, one hopefully including some down time with something yummy or time in the sun.
S x
I love picnics. It's one of my favourite things to do with husband and dog, so I completely get where you're coming from. The basket, the bush, peace. These muffins sound beautiful - I suspect they'll be in our picnic basket for the next adventure. Thanks, Sally.
Delicious Sally! My children will love these. Thanks for sharing