The third one probably approves it as well, but was too busy gorging on food.
Category: uncategorized
Pavel is getting ready for Christmas
[recipe] Christmas Ham
Whole ham 1, about 4kg
Mirepoix, a selection of roughly chopped carrots, onions, celery and leek
Faggot of herbs, containing celery, bay leaf and strips of orange peel, bound with strips of leek
Spice bag, containing a few each of fresh ginger pieces, whole cloves and mace blades, and 1 cinnamon stick
Brown bread 300g
Clear honey 150ml
Water 300ml
Butter 50g
Salt
Dijon mustard 50g
Christmas spice mixture 5g (see below)
For the Christmas spice mix
ground nutmeg
ground cinnamon
ground ginger
ground clove
If using a proper dry-cured English ham, soak it for 2 hours before poaching gently in a large, snug pot for 20 minutes per kilo with the mirepoix, the herbs and the spice bag. When the time’s up, remove from the heat and allow to cool for half an hour in the cooking liquor – this will allow the flavours to really penetrate the meat.
Preheat your oven to 160C. Carefully remove the ham to a board and remove the skin. Depending on the breed and quality of the pig, you should have a nice layer of fat. Remove some of this fat, leaving about 1cm.
Meanwhile, for the Christmas spice mix, combine the ingredients to taste. Score the fat left on the meat in a criss-cross fashion and, while it’s moist, season generously with the Christmas spice mix.
Cut the crusts off the brown bread and rip into small pieces. Melt the butter over a medium heat until it begins to brown, add the clear honey and the bread and season with a little salt. Lightly toast until golden and let cool before blending to a fine crumb.
Place the hot ham into a roasting tray with 300ml of water and brush with the mustard, dust with spice mix and coat generously with the honey breadcrumbs before placing in the oven.
Roast for 20 minutes per kilo. When the time is up, remove from the oven and transfer the ham to a clean dish to rest for 30 minutes before thinly slicing with a razor-sharp ham knife. Serve with classic roast garnishes and reserve any leftovers for cold cuts on Boxing Day.
Cat face
Grey windy day
The tao of stupidosity
House guest
Sleep is good for productivity
Scrum redux

Scrum: way of working to maximize value
Scrum Master: maximize efficiency – remove impediments (manage & delegate)
Product Owner: maximize effectiveness – customer value (stakeholder relations)
Story points: time estimate x impediments –> these don’t show up if only measuring time
Vertical slice: always define the stories with the user in mind. Will the PBI be demoable?
Always work according to priority –> not, “does everyone have something do to?”
You can have it good, fast & cheap if you change what IT is. There are 4 variables in that sentence, not 3.
Project brief: identify value, don’t define “it”. Describe scope in terms of how to give value, but not exactly on how you plan to do it.
Canada Vignettes
Canada Vignettes are a series of short films by the National Film Board of Canada (NFB), some of which aired on CBC Television and other Canadian broadcasters as interstitial programs. The vignettes became popular because of their cultural depiction of Canada, and because they represented its changing state.
The idea for Canada Vignettes began in early 1977, when CBC’s children’s programming department at the CBC approached the NFB about producing short films, five minutes in length or less, to use as interstitial programming.
80 filmmakers from across the country worked on the project over a three-year period. Many of the films were animation vignettes offering amusing portrayals of Canadian history, while others were produced from excerpts from NFB documentaries. The NFB decided that no film credits would be included, only a title.
I used to love watching the Vignettes on TV. My favourites were the dance (this one) and the Log Driver’s Waltz.
The NFB YouTube channel has a playlist of vignettes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upsZZ2s3xv8&list=PLHerjfWGX0CWsOBQGf7vlpWJdkq8MokGx
And the NFB website itself has more: https://www.nfb.ca/channels/canada-vignettes/














