09 August, 2013

Carrot Loaf (Vegan)

Ingredients: 1/4th cup of Canola & Olive Oil (Margarine); 1(1/3) Cups of white sugar; 1 Cup grated carrots, 1/4 tsp cloves powder; 1(1/3) cups cold water, 1 cup raisins; 1 tsp Cinnamon powder; 1 tsp Nutmeg powder; 1/2 cups of nuts (wall nuts); 2 cups of flour (all purpose or whole grain); 1 tsp Soda; 1 tsp Baking Powder; 1 tsp Sault; ; Some Crisco shortening to make the surface of the container greasy. Those who do not mind milk products can use ghee instead of Crisco shortening.




Procedure: Put 1/4th cup of Canola & Olive oil, 1(1/3) cups of white sugar, 1 cup grated carrots, 1(1/3 cups of cold water, 1/4th tsp cloves powder, 1 cup raisins, 1 tsp Cinnamon powder, 1 tsp Nutmeg powder in a pan and mix it well and boil it for five minutes. Once the mixture is boiled for 5 mins then allow it to cool and meanwhile get ready for flour. Mix 2 cups of flour and 1 tsp Soda, 1 tsp Baking powder, 1 tsp Salt together and mix well.





 Once the liquid mixture gets cooled add the flour mixture and 1/2 cups of wall nuts into it and again mix well to prepare the batter for carrot loaf. Grease the container in which the batter is to be put and put the batter into the container. Put the container in the oven and bake it for an hour at 350 degrees temperature. The carrot loaf will be ready.




Take it out of the oven and keep it for cooling. To check whether it has come out fine, just insert some sharp knife inside it and if batter does not stick to the knife then the baking is done well. Also, once it gets cooled the loaf loosens itself from the pan or the container and you can see the increasing gap. That is the right time to turn the container beat its bottom so that the carrot loaf comes out without getting broken. Then you can slice it. It is delicious and nutritious too.  

03 August, 2013

Lionel Venne, an Abstract Artist!!

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It was a great pleasure to meet Mr Lionel Venne, a famous abstract artist from north Ontario. You can see much of his work in various art galleries in north Ontario and here are some from Temiskaming Art Gallery. He uses various media such as water colours, oil paints, acrylics, collage, various prints, textiles and artifacts. There was a very good collection of pencils and brushes in his room. I envied it.
I and Eileen made some Indian tea for all of us while others were just relaxing and talking. He stays in a church and they have provided him space for his art gallery and school. He conducts various art courses for children and even adults. You could see his paintings displayed in famous hotels and restaurants.  He even does painting to raise funds for the church.
While enjoying some Indian tea I asked him about his journey to art. He is born in Verner, Ontario in 1936 to French mother and British father. He was raised by his grandmother. He used to draw pictures and paint since he was a small child. He never had any formal training in art and it was a natural gift to him.
None of his family members was an artist but he recalled that one famous artist in France was his distant uncle from his mother's side. Initially he painted landscapes with water colours. He was never a live painter i.e. he never paints the landscapes or any other painting by seeing it live. 
He would wander around and see the landscapes and keep the scenes in mind. then he use mixture of the scenes. He never pre-determine what he is going to paint. Painting is just like an emotional expression for him. When he begins a painting he does not know what he is going to paint.
Even the use of textures, textiles and artifacts in his paintings  is very spontaneous. The wall hanging in the left hand side photograph he described as head of some animal with horns. The fact is he has not used a single animal part in it. He mentioned that when he had an art camp for teen agers, he asked all the participants a couple of days before the camp to collect various artifacts and bring those for the camp.
While walking along shores of pacific and Atlantic oceans he had found some stones that has natural formations on it. The white lines visible on the stones and the smooth stone with a small hole in it (looking like a stand for incense stick)  are formed naturally.
He was very delighted to show and talk about his paintings. Most of the paintings were done on canvas and or thick chart paper. He is very much specialized in painting northern lights and even described to us some of the occasions when he saw northern lights in the area.

Recently he has won a first place award for his mixed media painting, "Impressions of a Northern Ontario Landscape" at the LaCloche Art Show held at Whitefish Falls Community Center. He has exhibited his paintings and art in Australia and Germany.