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Giraffes, our tour guide explained, drink rather rarely, so she suggested we take a good look at this baby giraffe who was taking a drink.
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"Even by 1945, only 20 per cent of British homes had an electric cooker 15 per cent had a water-heater, 4 per cent a washing machine, and a mere 2 percent a fridge. ... some might have a fitted cabinet with a fold-down flap, but most kitchens still had a table in the centre and a dusty dresser for the crocks. Equipment mostly dated back to the last century. There might be aluminium pans rather than those heavy iron or copper ones, and a sink that whas white enamel rather than cement, with a few white tiles for a splashback if you were lucky." (p. 181-182)
"Over the years she graduated to making soups, pies and roasts, rice pudding, curry; sometimes she'd rustle up a scratch supper -- 'macaroni cheese and bacon fry' -- baked haddock was a favourite standby." (p. 233)The author does a fascinating job of connecting the domestic life depicted in Virginia Woolf's diaries, her letters, and many more general sources with the content of her works and with her approach to writing. It also creates a wonderful account of her relationship with a wide variety of people in her life -- including the often ignored servants, who receive individual biographical sketches. If this fascinates you as it does me, I recommend the book most strongly.
Though the word "caramelized" is associated with sweetness (it refers specifically to sugar browning, after all), you don't want to do this with so-called "sweet onions" such as Vidalias or Mauis. That's because those onions aren't actually sweeter than regular onions.
That might sound weird, but it's all part of the peculiar world of onion chemistry. The flavor of onions derives primarily from two factors -- the amount of sugar they contain and the amount of sulfuric "burn" they give you.
The so-called sweet onions actually just contain less of those sulfurous compounds than regular onions. This makes them taste sweeter when they're raw ... But they also contain less sugar than regular onions, and because those acrid sulfurous compounds pretty much go away when heated, sweet onions turn bland as water after cooking.
The bottom line is, regular brown storage onions will make better caramelized onions than pricey sweet onions.