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Lockdown 5

Lockdown 5

This sign is on our wall just inside the front door. I threw a lemon at it!

We all saw it coming but this lockdown been the hardest of all of them and to be brutally honest I’m over it. This is the first time Barry and I have been in a lockdown on our own. Last year we had family and team members with us, this year it is just us and the dogs, who are more than happy with the attention and taking rabbit patrol very very seriously.

Every morning Barry tucks himself into Cab Sav (Cottage not bottle of) to get on with his day job and I get on with the lists of jobs around the cottages. Spring is definitely in the air, with blossoms on the fruit trees and the glorious forest pansies bursting into the radiant, regal purple leaves. The Tui and Kereru are racing around the driveway loving the emptiness and apart from the odd truck going past, it’s a very quiet time at Vineyard Cottages

Over the last three weeks we have done our very best to jiggle and juggle accommodation and wedding dates around for our lovely brides and grooms. One couple were on their fifth attempt at getting married. It’s hard enough organising one wedding let alone wrangling people together for a fifth time.

I spent the first week of lockdown 5 chopping more wood. It’s thoroughly therapeutic and will keep us well stocked for next winter. We had the septic filter system replaced last month and the new tanks are ghastly garish concrete.  In a stoke of genius ‘!’ I topped them off with slices of wood and after a huge overnight downpour by the following morning the wood oils had run over the concrete creating a stunning natural stain blending it all together. 

Lemons are plentiful on all the trees, so I have been making lots and lots of cake. I have also eaten a fair amount of said cake, so it’s back to pulping, zesting and fermenting so we have stacks of citrus for the summer months. One of the easiest lemon cakes I know is here for you to have a play with. I added poppy seeds but they aren’t a necessity. This is lovely with a drizzle of lemon curd and some thick plain yoghurt.

The vineyard is beginning to crawl back into life with bud burst on the white varietals. Bud burst is an important time in the vineyard as it allows us to predict other critical events such as flowering and harvest. By tracking these occasions year on year we have more of an understanding of what will happen to the vines and when. Speaking of the vines, we had a try of our first attempt at the VC Rose – mmmmm, we won’t be entering it into the AirNZ wine awards anytime soon but it was’t totally unpalatable! We’ve decided to add strawberries and vodka and make frozé if it doesn’t improve!

Last week we were battered by the storm that hit the North West Region. After spending an hour on the Monday night digging trenches around the place to divert the water pouring from the skies, when I woke up on Tuesday morning at 4:30am the nose from the gulley was louder than waves crashing on Muriwai Beach. I jumped online to discover the catastrophe that was happening around the region was very very real. Our neighbour lost his flock of new lambs, people were wading around in waist high water trying to salvage what they could and three ponies had to be rescued from the second storey of a house.

Apart from the garage being flooded, we were incredibly lucky that the water ploughed its way noisily through the gully for the rest of the day. SH16 to Helensville was impassable, Kumeu and Huapai were impossible to get and out of and the only supermarket in our area had water inching towards the door. By Wednesday it had nearly all disappeared again. I remember the damage flood water does. We were flooded when I was a youngster in the uk and I’ll never forget the smell. It lingered for weeks. A huge thank you to all the emergency services who worked tirelessly through the night to save and help as many people as they could.

Over the next week we’ll get the vegetable garden planted for summer produce and the seeds for the summer hanging baskets are growing away in our spare room . While it feels miles away at the moment summer is just around the corner and we’re looking forward to opening the lodge up for our long lunches and high teas. Our honey is about to be harvested and jarred so we’ll have that for sale on our little online shop. The fabulous team at Earthbound Honey do a brilliant job running the hives up in the vineyard and the honey is delicious! We also have some delicious olive oil coming very shortly which I’m very tempted to call Lockdown 5!

Looking forward to seeing you all very very very soon!

Lemon and Poppy Seed Cake

Vineyard Cottages Lemon and Poppy Seed Cake

This Lemon and Poppy Seed cake is a delicious addition to afternoon tea! We have a fabulous number of lemon trees at Vineyard Cottages and of course they all ripen around the same time. We zest, juice, peel and dehydrate lots through the winter to save for the summer months. Lemon cake is always a family favourite in our house and this is a great way to use up the pots of yoghurt left over from breakfast.

Felicity O’Driscoll from the brilliant Auckland book store Cook The Books recently posted a fabulous lemon cake recipe on the ever popular Lazy Susan Facebook Page. There are so many varieties and options for great lemon cake but when I first cake to NZ I was introduced to lemon and poppy seed as a combo and I have been in love with this since.

Top tip! If you soak the poppy seeds in milk or lemon juice and water it really brings out the flavour and softens the outer casings. The poppy seeds give a subtle pepper flavour to the cake which may sound weird but it really enhances the flavour of the lemon

1/4 cup Milk
4 TbspPoppy Seeds
Rind of 2Lemons
200gButter
3Fresh eggs
3/4 cupCaster sugar
2 1/4 cupsPlain flour
2 tspBaking powder
1/2 cup (125ml) Sour Cream or yoghurt
  1. Preheat oven to 180 degrees. Grease a 25cm ring pan or loaf pan and line the base with paper.
  2. Soak the poppy seeds in the milk for a min of 10 minutes and up to an hour.
  3. Beat the softened butter, 3 tablespoon lemon rind and sugar until pale and creamy. Add the eggs, one at a time beating well after each addition.
  4. Sift the flour and baking powder into another bowl. Add flour to the butter mixture in two batches, along with the sour cream or yoghurt, poppy seeds and milk.
  5. Spoon the cake mixture into the prepared pan. Bake for 45 to 50 minutes or until a skewer inserted in the centre comes out clean.
  6. If you want to add an additional lemon zing, while cooking the cake make a lemon syrup. Combining the 1/4 cup of lemon juice, 1/4 cup of sugar and 1/4 cup of water in a saucepan. Stir over a low heat until the sugar has dissolved and simmer for 5 minutes. Add any remaining lemon zest. Spoon the hot syrup over the cake as soon as it comes out of the oven (use a skewer to poke holes for the syrup to soak into). Leave in the pan to cool. This isn’t essential. We love it without syrup, but it does all a little extra to an already delicious cake.

Serving options:

Best served with yoghurt or creme fraiche.

Lovely in the summer with raspberry or strawberry ice cream or mango sorbet.

Makes lovely muffins. Pour half into a lined muffin tin, add a dollop of cream cheese and add the rest of the mix.