Wednesday 7 December 2022

Kameel Stoepstorie: Political Cookies


Cuisine and wonderful stories 
This story is shared by the host of Kameel Huise Tussen Spore.
The South African cuisine has a wealth of wonderful stories.
One of my favorites is the story of our country's own political cookies.
The old people told the story that the cookies with their distinctive jam tummies were the favorites of both minister Hertzog and general Smuts. 
Every family had cookies according to the name of the leader of the political party which it supported. In one household there could be supporters of Smuts and also of Hertzog- the old people were politically insane in South Africa. 
In the Cape Malay community colored cookies were brought out when there were visitors.
Hertzoggies, Smutsies and Two-faced cookies
The Smutsies vs the Hertzogies
Barry Hertzog and Jan Smuts 
The delicacies of the two South African political parties obtained momentum during the 1924 election. This "food-fight" showed that politics also had its own delicacy.
In the present situation the party which wins is the one with the most "free" food.

In the rural areas it was easy to differentiate between the supporters of the two parties. 

The supporters of Jan Smuts and the United Party were known as the "Sappe" and they traveled around the country in "pimped out Chevy's". Thank you to the Franshoek Motor museum for the photo of the shinny Chevrolet 
The supporters of JBM Hertzog and the National Party were know as the "Nats"
They were seen in flashy Fords with shiny rims and a beat.
Thank you to the Franshoek Motor Museum for the photo of the flashy Ford 
Jan Smuts official Cadillac 
Jan Smuts Cookies (or Smutsies) is a variation which Jan Smuts' supporters baked. 
They had a jam segment and a pastry covering . 
They were named after Jan Smuts who was the Prime Minister of South Africa from 1919 to 1924 and from 1939 to 1948.
According to legend they were very popular with the supporters of general Smuts while his opponents would have nothing to do with them. 
General Smuts defeated Hertzog as Prime Minister and the Smutsies increased in popularity.
Smutsies as still part of the traditions in South Africa
Non of these photo's are ours
Thanks to Huiskok for sharing the photo's
Hertzog Cookies (Hertzogigies) were named after J.B.M. (Barry) Hertzog, Prime Minister of the then Union of South Africa. 
Barry Hertzog was a Boer general during the Second Anglo-Boer War. 
He attempted to protect the Afrikaner culture against the British influence.
It seems that the Cape-Malay community developed the Hertzoggies because of excitement when in the 1920's promised the right to vote for women and racial equality if he won the election. he cookies were originally filled apple jelly  which was later replaced with apricot jelly. 
The Hertzoggies are known for their flaky pastry apricot jam filling and coconut meringue topping.
The ever popular Hertzoggies with the coconut meringue topping
Tweegevreetjie (Two-Facers) were a protest against broken promises in parliament. 
It then happened that Hertzog was returned to parliament in 1924 and summarily broke his promise to the Malay community and gave the vote only to white women. 
To voice their dissatisfaction about this they baked the "tweegevreetjies"  with a clear message .
The protest was made clear by decorative one side with a pale pink and the other side with a brown icing. 
This represented the white man's black heart and it was called "tweegevreetjie" "two Faced.

The Tweegevreetjies contain Malay aromas like cardomon.
The tweegevreetjies with their clear message 
Jan and Issie Smuts lived in this house in Irene
It is situated in the Gauteng province of South Africa
The house is also known as the Smuts Museum 
Barry and Mynie lived in this house situated in Bloemfontein
It is situated in the Free State Province of South Africa
It is also a museum 
Imagine that it is now time to clean your house thoroughly and bake cookies.
Our favorite but no political connections
We use the apricot jam made from our garden apricots 
Just a last little morsel 
The first successful Caesarean section in Africa was performed by Dr James Barry, an army surgeon, in Cape Town. 
The procedure was completed with permission from the baby's father, Thomas Munnik, despite the disapproval of the local church. 
The baby was named James Barry Munnik after the doctor, and lived to be 78 years old. 
Coindicentally he gave this name to his godson, prominent politician Gen. James Barry Munnik Hertzog. 
Interestingly, the sex of Dr James Barry raised some eyebrows when it was revield that he/she was a woman in disguise, namely Margaret Ann Bulkley, who pretended to be a man so that she could attend medical school in Edinburgh.  

 Thanks for visiting our post and we hope that you will find a favorite. 
Sending Lots of Love from South Africa 
Sandra 

Thursday 4 August 2022

Kameel Stoepstorie: Sweet Potato Brioche

The sweet potato yield is stunning.
The village people received fresh sweet potatoes.
We filled the freezer with sweet potato and freshly squeezed orange juice.
Today was time for a sweet potato brioche.
Hennie mixed and kneed the dough for brioche.
The smell is awesome.

Recipe for Sweet Potato brioche
Sweet potatoes, peeled and cut up to measure 2 cups (500 ml) cooked and mashed finely. 
(Keep the sweet potato water in case you need some liquid if the dough is to dry}
6 cups (720 g) bread or cake flour
10 g instant dry yeast
1 T (15 ml) salt
Measure all the dry ingredients into a large mixing bowl.
Toss with your fingers. Make a hollow in the centre and add the watery sweet-potato mix.
Working from the outside in, blend the ingredients together using your hand.
Knead until the dough is smooth.

Cover and leave to stand for 30 minutes. 
Spray the necessary baking pan with butter or oil a baking pan.

Knead the dough again.

Shape the dough into balls and pack into baking pan. Leave the pan at room temperature to allow the dough to rise slowly. When double in size, dust the top with a little flour.


Adjust the oven rack to the middle position. Preheat the oven to 180°C.
Bake in the oven for ± 45 – 50 minutes.


Till next time 
Sandra 

Sunday 26 June 2022

Kameel Stoepstorie: Face Cloths



Have started to knit some face cloths using only organic cotton.  

We are using 100% Bamboo and natural Cotton to knit with.  

Vinnis Serina 100% Bamboo 

A different colour in Bamboo 

Premier natural Cotton 


“Winter is the time for comfort, for good food and warmth, for the touch of a friendly hand and for a talk beside the fire: it is the time for home.” 
Edith Sitwell



Till next time 
Love from Kameel 
Sandra

Friday 10 June 2022

Kameel Stoepstorie: Marmalade with a Christmas twist.

Think about marmalade and Christmas 

My old and trusted recipe normally gets a good handful of lemon verbena leaves and flowers into the pot when cooking marmalade. This time around it was time for a tangy, zesty citrus fruit with cinnamon, cloves, star anise and cardamom.

I used my old and trusted recipe as published in The Practical Cookery Book for South Africa by S van H Tulleken with the preface written by Issie Smuts and printed in 1923. 

Slice the oranges without peeling them, refusing the pips only. They should be very thinly sliced. Measure 3 cups of water to one cup pulp, and leave it for 24 hours; then boil it up till the fruit is quite tender and the water gluey (it is well to boil it thoroughly, otherwise it will take too much sugar, and will be very sweet, instead of doing the boiling without the sugar, it will have to boil so much longer after the sugar is added to bring it to the proper consistency, and will then be much darker too. After boiling leave it for another 24 hours. Weigh and add 1 cup sugar to 1 cup pulp.

Boil rapidly till it will jelly when tested. Care should be taken not to allow it to burn; it must be stirred frequently when it begins to thicken, but stir it as you would for porridge; just scratch the marmalade from the bottom of the pot to prevent it from burning, stirring the fruit about as little as possible. Sterilize bottles by putting them in the oven for 15min before using them. 

A nice twist is to add a dash of brandy on top of the marmalade in the bottles before you seal it.  

Christmas twist: 

I add cinnamon sticks, star anise, whole cloves and bruised green cardamom pods, bruised tied in a piece of muslin cloth to the water when boiling the fruit in water. 

I use three lemons to five oranges. 


Till next time 
Sandra 

Thursday 12 May 2022

Kameel Stoepstorie: Kameel Huise Tussen Spore

We do not have mountains or highways but we do have trains and silo's

We invite you to visit Kameel, on the R377 in the North West Province.
Situated between Delareyville and Stella.

What is on offer

Cottages for rent in a long term lease agreement in our complex. It was once an old railway accommodation complex.

Lang-tafel celebrations. Call us for more information

Die Platform venue 

Bird-watching

Train-spotting

Pre-arrange tours to visit the social weavers' nests. 

 Excellent food at the Loadmaster Cottage but booking in advance is essential.

 Information and history about Kameel

Kameel Huise tussen Spore

There are six cottages next to the railway line at Kameel. These cottages were part of the railway housing complex at Kameel. In 1999 my father bought the property as it was part of the original farm, Kameelbult.

Hennie en I moved to Kameel, after the passing of my mother, and we started to create a new beginning in this little village.


We named the cottages using the different railway job titles. 

Porter cottage 

Ploegbaas cottage 

Conductor cottage 

StationMaster cottage 

Foreman cottage 

Loadmaster cottage


There are still two vacant stands and we named them:

Fireman 

Roepman 


We are busy developing a venue site which will be known as Kameel Platvorm 


We reside on the property known as Foreman Cottage. Originally a corrugated iron hostel and we erected a timber cottage.

The other properties are available for long-term lease.

The hamlet Kameel is a small human settlement. Almost like a Whistle-stop. 

A small village without a church, a farming community, situated in a very dry part of our country. Agricultural activities in the area are mainly cattle, sheep and game farming. Maize, sunflower, sorghum and groundnuts are cultivated in the area. 

It’s that small settlement you pass through along a country road. The area is filled with a rich history of days gone by. Kameel is crammed with remnants from the busy railway line that runs through it.

The railway line was built in 1894 and was built as part of a dream of Cecil John Rhodes’s dream to connect the Cape to the port in Beira. The part of the line was built on a portion of our Great-Grandfather’s farm. The average elevation is 1336 meters above sea level. The signage reads 805 miles from Cape Town with a height of 4449 feet.


In Afrikaans kameel means camel. How on earth did this place get the name of Kameel.  Kameel was part of the farm Kameelbult. Referring to the little hump on which Kameel is situated.  When the railway line was built it was named Kameel. The camelthorn trees also played a huge part in the naming of Kameel. 

Granted to the Bechuanaland Railway Company, by the late Government of Bechuanaland, for the construction of the Northern line of Railway between Vryburg and Mafeking on 23rd January 1890. 

In 1891 Rhodes contracted George Pauling to extend the line to Mafikeng and beyond. It reached the Bechuanaland (Botswana) border village of Ramathlabana in 1984


Rail network 1892


A birds eye view 

The Conductor Cottage
The Conductor Cottage was built in the early 1950s.
We named the cottage the Conductor and it is a three-bedroom one-bathroom cottage. The bathroom is fitted with a bath, basin and toilet.
The lounge has a working fireplace and opens up onto a covered patio. The stoep is wonderful to enjoy a glass of wine while watching the sunsets or spot the occasional freight train going through the village.
There is one shade covered parking area.


The Foreman Cottage

We erected a wooden cottage in September 2019 on the footprint of the original corrugated iron hostel. 

My grandmother on their motorcycle in front of the corrugated iron hostel. 


We moved into our home on 10 December 2019. It is an ongoing process that we tweak to fit in with our needs. Everyone asks the question - why a wooden cottage? Well, it was the quickest way for us to build a home.

It is a new way of living for us. At the Foreman, things changed to open plan living areas which is sometimes a challenge for me as the kitchen needs to be clean. I can only smile as this is sometimes not possible. Our home is situated next to the R507 dirt road to Madibogo. The garden is is an on going progress, and the dust ends up on the inside of our house, but I believe that it is part of nature.

Hennie fitted the fixtures. He sometimes had to make do with what is available. Our crockery cupboard was once a dove breeder donated to us by my eldest brother. The kitchen cupboard was an old kitchen cupboard that he fitted with legs and antique tin ceiling boards. He found the top in a sheep pen. The handles of the doors to our walk-in cupboards are shoe forms. The vanity in the spare room was once the feeding trough of horses. Old drawers became shelves gives bragging rights to my little collections. We used sandstone to build the bay windows. Our then neighbour Jan Bouwer transported it from Harrismith. Originally it was a British Mess during the Anglo Boer War.

All in all, we love our spot between the dirt road and the rail line. Our home is situated 15 metres from the rail line. The line was very still. We would be lucky to see two trains per week. Lately, it became a bit busier due to problems with the main rail line, but the drivers give a little hoot as they pass our cottage. The trains offer new photo opportunities.

We planted lavender in mass and shaped it into hedges as borders for our rose garden and vegetable garden.

We live in a farming community and maize producing area where the maize stored in silos is part of our daily lives. We were privileged to visit the North West Grain silo and the SenWes silo. A wonderful experience to see our village from above.

Our garden is home to a lot of birds. We have spotted a long list which we will soon add to a blog post.

You can follow our Kameel Stoepstories on our blog by following the blog post link

The Forman cottage at night. 


The Loadmaster Cottage

This cottage was built in the late 1960s. 
It offers 3 bedrooms and a fireplace in the lounge area. The bathroom is fitted with a bath, basin and toilet. There is a huge kitchen cupboard and cupboard in the passage. One bedroom is fitted with a wardrobe. We are looking for a rentee that will change this gentleman into a charmer. The stand is 900m2. It is fenced. The electricity is on a pre-paid meter. We cut the lawn and remove rubbish on Fridays.





The Ploegbaas Cottage

This cottage features three bedrooms and one bathroom with a separate toilet. 

There is a fireplace in the lounge area. The patio area is ideal for sundowners to watch the sunsets. It is also a superb spot to do train spotting and watch the passing freight trains. The outbuildings have been converted into the laundry. The property is 900m2 and is fenced. Over the years citrus trees have been planted. There is a quince hedge for privacy. The pomegranates are always a plus factor.

The Ploegbaas cottage is surrounded by orange trees and promegranates. 

The Porter Cottage 

The Porter Cottage is a three-bedroom cottage with one bathroom. There is a lock-up garage and the necessary outbuilding. 

Geraldine moved from Margate to Kameel in 2019. She calls the Porter Cottage home at Kameel Huise Tussen Spore. She is a retired teacher -- with a teaching stint in Bengazi, Libya!  

She relocates to Kameel to keep an eye on Tammy, her daughter, living on a nearby farm. Geraldine's garden is the star garden at Kameel. 

She started the garden from scratch, and today we love to watch her garden and the changes she makes to suit the different seasons. 

She works in the garden, knits, reads, hangs out with her animals. Her light-house collection is wonderful and reminds one of the seasides. She is now part and parcel a Kameeler, and like the quote says Lighthouses blow no horns to be seen, they simply shine. She simply shines.


Stationmaster cottage

The cottage was originally built as the Stationmaster house in 1945. It is a two-bedroom one-bathroom cottage fitted with wooden floors.

The bathroom is fitted with a bath, basin and toilet. 

The kitchen is equipped with a fridge, microwave and kettle.

We offer a Webber braai should you want to enjoy an outdoor meal.

There is one shade covering the parking area.

There are two stoep areas to enjoy the outdoors. The front stoep, with an old church bench, is wonderful to enjoy a glass of wine while watching the sunsets or spot the occasional freight train going through the village.

The back stoep is ideal for bird watching and early morning coffee with rusks. We have spotted plus-minus 100 species of birds and for your convenience, you will find a bird list in the cottage. Kameel is a wonderful place for star-gazing.

The garden is there for you to enjoy. 


Die Platform 

'n Klein venue is beskikbaar vir verhuuring. 
Bespreek gerus met ons vir meer inligting



Things to do

Go for a walk and visit the site where the old British Blockhouse used to stand. 

You will also find the trigonometrical beacons of the area.

There are also a lot of veldt plants that you will find on your walk.

We need your assistance to help us to locate, on behalf of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, the graves of three British Soldiers who were laid to rest near the Blockhouse site.

We can arrange for a tour to show the Sociable Weaver nest nearby.

A self-drive outing to the Anglo Boer War site at Kraaipan is an interesting site to visit. This is where the first shots of the Anglo Boer War were fired to derail a train.


Watch the most beautiful sunsets.

At night time you have to watch the satellites go past in a star-filled night.


We have spotted almost 150 species of birds. How is your bird-watching list doing?


If you are lucky we can arrange a tour up a silo. 

Take a dirt road and your camera and enjoy the day. 



A little bid of our connection to the Railway

My dad, Gerald Fincham,at the age of 24, was in a terrible train accident at Westacres, in now Zimbabwe. He was a fireman on the train. The driver was TJ de Bruyn and L Vermeulen was the second fireman. The accident happened on 9 October 1955. A day after my Ouboet's, Julian's first birthday. My dad was hospitalized in Bulawayo for almost a year. He came home for a couple of months and then had to go back to Johannesburg General Hospital. Unfortunately, he carried scars for the rest of his 80 years on earth. 

 Click on the links to read some of our Kameel Stoepstories. 

Kameel Stoepstorie: Birds in the gardens and surrounding areas.

A click on the link will take you to the list of the Birds in the gardens


Kameel Stoepstorie: Kameeldoringbome

A direct link to our blog post The Camel Thorn Trees

Kameel Stoepstorie: Stations and Whistle-stops around Kameel

Click and the link to read this blog post Stations and Whistle-stops around Kameel

 

Kameel Stoepstorie: Sociable Weaver Birds and their nest

A direct link to our blog post Sociable Weaver Nests


Kameel Stoepstorie: Lonely Hill and the Salt Pans at Stella

A direct link to our blog post Lonely Hill and Salt Pans at Stella


Kameel Stoepstorie: Devondale tot Kameel

Devondale is a situated between Kameel and Vryburg. 

My Grandparents called it home.Victor and Hester Devondale


Veldplante in die Kameel area

There is a vast variety of veld plants in the area. 

Click on the link to see Veldplants  


Kameel Rust and Vrede offer accommodation with a difference.

You can bring your tent, stay in cute campervans, overnight in a wooden cottage or stay in style in a guest room. 

This is our take on Kameel Rust and Vrede  


Till next time 
Sandra and Hennie