Not exact matches
Whisk together first 3 ingredients
along with 1/2 cup of the non-dairy milk,
in a
small pot over medium high heat.
In a
small pot add the extra virgin olive oil
along with the thinly sliced garlic and using the lowest possible heat on the stove, start warming up the oil.
Heat up water, the second amount of rice syrup listed
in the ingredients
along with the seeds from roughly 10 cardamom pods
in a
small pot.
** If you prefer a thicker sauce, place all ingredients
in a
small pot,
along with 1/2 cup of water.
Once I've made these two things, I then take out a big
pot and put into it about 2 - 3 cups of tea, 1 - 2 cups of this cream and a litre or so of half - almond milk, half coconut milk,
along with some sugar - free chocolate, cocoa (or cocoa and cacao butter), sweetener, spices (like chai spice), flavorings like vanilla or caramel, salt (I always add a little salt to most sweets, it balances the flavor)... basically anything you think will be good
in a [quote] mocha [/ quote] type drink (I even put
small amounts of maca and other medicinal mushroom powders to up the nutritional value - but just a little, to avoid bitterness).
Sometimes there are arresting juxtapositions — a
small 1943 still life of a gnarly shell and a
pot by Giorgio Morandi, hung between two late Philip Guston paintings which might be taken as still - lifes as much as occurrences
in a brooding wasteland — but the sheer number of works sweeps you
along too swiftly to take much account of the niceties.
These include things like
pots and pans to put things
in and pour with, low walls to walk
along, cushions to crawl over, pegs to put into
small holes and sort into colours, everyday clothes to dress up
in, and brooms and garden spades to practise being grown up.
I would make the yearly pilgrimage to the local garden centre
in mid-May and purchase some easy - to - grow impatiens and a few other annuals and then set about stuffing them
in a few
pots along with a
small garden plot out
in front of the pool shed (mainly to try and disguise the big, ugly pool shed) and voila — instant garden!