Wulf's Webden

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10 December 2025
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Bath Olivers – attempt #1

Bath Olivers

If you know what Bath Oliver biscuits have looked like for the last fifty or so years, it isn’t like this. I followed the recipe from last week’s post and I got disks that were thicker, more coloured and without the snap I was expecting. Furthermore the pastry was very stiff and very hard to roll out to thickness.

Failure? I think I can mark this down as a First Attempt In Learning and I’ve got some ideas for another go. Firstly, not all of my choices were optimal. I ran out of time on day one, so I ended up putting the dough in the fridge overnight which may have inhibited the yeast (although it had at least the specified hour and still felt stiff before I did so). I also cooked the disks at the same time as baking some potatoes, which might have been a misguided bit of multi-tasking. Compared to the recipe I noted down, I combined all the dry ingredients with the butter so I didn’t give the yeast a head start with sugar in the milk… although the quick bake yeast I used shouldn’t need it.

For round two, I think I might reduce the volume of flour and possibly increase the the milk (or even try to get the yeast very active in an additional, slightly sugared water mix). I don’t want it as wet as a bread dough but I do want it easier to roll. If I’m still on the stiff side, I may also consider bringing the pasta machine into play. I don’t use it very much but it applies mechanical advantage to the process of creating an even sheet of pastry.

My rolling pin rings worked fairly well to get the dough to “pound coin” thickness but, since I got a degree of rise (yeast firing off under heat, giving some good internal striations) I probably need to get my rounds starting thinner. I reckon 1.5mm might be a reasonable target – if I print off some more guides, I can roll it with the pasta machine but use the rolling pin to check it has reached my intended thickness. I’ll also try reducing the cooking heat a bit further – I’m aiming more for drying out the biscuits (snap!) than giving them colour.

So changes to make and I don’t think I succeeded in making a good facsimile of Bath Olivers as commercially produced. On the other hand, I did get some delicious rounds that have a creamy taste, almost work as biscuits and probably would go very well with port and stilton. Let’s see if round two is Perhaps A Small Success.

9 December 2025
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Conditional Rows

For a long time I’ve been aware of – and often used – Microsoft Excel’s conditional formatting feature. It is in easy reach on the Home ribbon and allows you to do things like highlight cells that contain a particular value or even to apply a graduated colour scale, allowing you to visually interpret the balance of high, medium and low scores. What I didn’t know how to do, until today, was to highlight whole rows based on the value in a given column.

You start by selecting the overall range you are applying the formatting to. In my case, it was a large table with about 15 columns and approaching 3,000 rows, structured as an Excel table. I don’t know if the formatting is clever enough to work out that it is aimed at a table but, in this case, the data set is now fixed so I’ll leave that for future investigation.

You then pick the option where you highlight rows using a formula. A suitable formula would be something like =$C2="Upgraded". That would look for any row where the content of column C matches the value. I think the number is irrelevant as long as it falls within the specified range. You can then apply a suitable set of formatting commands – for my upgraded machines, I gave them a green background.

I’m expecting that this will keep the formatting consistent. Previously, the colours I had been using often got mixed up as a updated sections of the data (for example filling a consistent department name across a filtered range) and, although the data itself was fine, the colours weren’t. Since the colouration is now derived directly from the data, this should keep things in order and I can think of a number of other situations where this will be very handy.

8 December 2025
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Today’s favourite Scrabble combo

Jane and I were round at a neighbour’s tonight for a game of Scrabble. I don’t think it was my highest score but my favourite combination was getting GLORY and LO (intersecting on the L), a good pair of words for the Advent season!

7 December 2025
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Power!

If I’d realised I’d be standing next to a double wall socket last night, I could have saved the weight of lugging my battery pack along. Still, better safe than sorry – with 16 musicians crammed in upstairs at the Needle and Pin last night I’d have been a bit stuck if I hadn’t had the socket right behind me.

Excellent gig by the way and the “Twelve Days After Christmas” song I contributed as a solo piece went down very well. For most audiences, the combination of the familiar with a sardonic twist is a safe bet for a crowd pleaser. The group I played with (Ho Ho Ho – a subset of the various Charnwood Concert Bands) is already booked in for the same venue in early December next year… a sure sign of a successful result.

6 December 2025
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A Two Gig Day

After last night’s successful gig in the familiar environs of Thorpe Acre church, it was time for something a bit different this morning. I joined a small subset of the Charnwood Concert Bands’ membership and spent a couple of hours busking outside The Range. Money was raised towards band funds and a cancer charity and it went pretty well although I realised there were a number of pieces I should have transposed down for easier reading on the tuba.

Tuba was the instrument I took with me for this one although I still had to nip home after the first set for my battery pack. Instead of needing power for an amp, I spotted that the cold weather was causing my iPad’s battery to drop a lot faster than normal and, since I rely on that for my scores, that was important to rectify! I also hadn’t realised how much water would build up inside the first valve. After about an hour and a half, I began to hear gurgling and I was surprised by how much gushed out when I opened the release key!

That was my first time playing Christmas carols in public on tuba in a small ensemble. This evening, with yet another subset of the bands, will be a bit more familiar. I’ll have my electric bass, we’ll be in a pub (The Needle and Pin on The Rushes) and I’m stepping forward with a solo as part of the second half. Been there and done that kind of thing many times before although not with such a wind and brass heavy group.

Time to have some tea, get dressed up and head out.

5 December 2025
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Thorpe Acre Christmas Concert 2025

Today I’ve been gearing up for this evening’s gig with the Charnwood Concert Band at All Saints church, Thorpe Acre (ASTAD). It starts at 7:30pm – free entry with donations requested. That includes a bit of practise and also some messing around to figure out which effects I might want to draw on in the little solo spot I get.

I think that’s in hand, so time to dress up smartly in concert blacks and head over to set up in place.

4 December 2025
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Souper Day

I seemed to spend an inordinate amount of time this afternoon preparing, chopping and roasting vegetables. I also put the clean peelings in the slow cooker to generate some stock. However, following a further session with the blender, we’ve now got a good supply of roasted vegetable soup so I think that’s a win overall.

3 December 2025
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Choir Gig Done

This evening’s choir gig went well, including my double bass contributions and (vocal) baritone solo. The only issue was that the heating in the auditorium wasn’t working properly although I didn’t really notice myself – lots of nervous energy, I suppose.

Term starts again on Monday 5 January, with an extended break over Easter and the next concert on Wednesday 13 May 2026. Before that, I need to start getting ready for the gigs on Friday (Thorpe Acre Church with CCB) and Saturday (lunchtime wind band busking at The Range and an evening at The Needle and Pin).

2 December 2025
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Rolling Pin Guide – in draft

Even if I don’t get round to trying out the Bath Olivers recipe, I’m still likely to be making some pastry this month and be wanting to roll it out to a consistent thickness. To that end, I’m pressing forward on my rolling pin guide idea.

The rolling pin we have is a piece of beech wood, which has a consistent thickness except for the two ends, which look consistently rounded. In other words, the ends probably have the same radius as the cylinder that links them. It is hard to accurately measure curved surfaces but I’ve taken the measurements I can and produced a draft that confirms that I’m close enough. My method for that was to intersect my design with a cuboid shape, giving me a slice wide enough to try for fit but narrow enough not to waste too much filament (1g seems like a reasonable expenditure!).

I’ve made one minor tweak and in the next day or two, I’ll try printing off a version to try in practice.

1 December 2025
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Doubling Up at Choir

It turns out that I’m not just singing bass but also playing some double bass for the LU choir concert on Wednesday (tickets on EventBrite). In the first half we are doing a piece called Navidad Nuestra by Argentinian composer Ariel Ramirez which benefits from various percussion and other parts. I’ll add a bit of regular bass playing and also exploit the percussive sounds you can get from the large wooden body to contribute to the sound. Should be a lot of fun.