Saturday, 1 May 2021

Farm murder, man (54) overpowered in his home, shot dead, Kraaifontein, CT

South Africa: Farm murder, man (54) overpowered in his home, shot dead, Kraaifontein, CT

Oorgrens veiligheid

Farm murder, man (54) overpowered in his home, shot dead, Kraaifontein, CT
Farm murder, man (54) overpowered in his home, shot dead, Kraaifontein, CT

A farm murder took place on Thursday 29 April 2021, at 22:25, on a Mikpunt smallholding in Kraaifontein, outside of Cape Town, in the Western Cape province of South Africa.

Five armed attackers wearing balaclavas overpowered an man (54) in his home and shot him dead.

The attackers fled the scene. The police are investigating but it is unclear what exactly transpired.

The story is unfolding.

There have been no arrests.

There is no other information available at this stage.

Read about more farm attacks here

Information supplied by Oorgrens veiligheid

South Africa Today – South Africa News

https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/western-cape/farm-murder-man-54-overpowered-in-his-home-shot-dead-kraaifontein-ct/

Farm attack, 3 elderly sisters beaten, stabbed and robbed, Tierpoort

 

South Africa: Farm attack, 3 elderly sisters beaten, stabbed and robbed, Tierpoort

Crime Correspondent

Farm attack, 3 Elderly sisters beaten, stabbed and robbed, Tierpoort
Farm attack, 3 Elderly sisters beaten, stabbed and robbed, Tierpoort

A brutal farm attack took place on Thursday evening 29 April 2021, at 20:00. Three elderly sisters, aged 79, 74 and 71 respectively, who stay alone on a farm in the Tierpoort area outside Bloemfontein, in the Free State province of South Africa, were attacked and brutally assaulted.

Three balaclava clad black males invaded the home and started beating the defenceless women with knobkieries and also stabbed them with knives that they found in the house.

The attackers robbed six cell phones, cash and a Ford Ranger bakkie registration number FGP718GP before fleeing.

Two of the women had to be hospitalized because of the injuries they sustained in the attack.

The Parkweg Police are investigating. There have been no arrests.

Read about more farm attacks here

https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/free-state/farm-attack-3-elderly-sisters-beaten-stabbed-and-robbed-tierpoort/

Escape from Egypt🐪🗻 moment on The Coconut Whisperer: Israel's wild boars push Haifa couple to file for divorce

Israel's wild boars push Haifa couple to file for divorce

A married couple from Haifa are planning on getting a divorce, after wild boars infiltrated their private garden. The couple seems to disagree about the proper way of addressing the issue.

 🐪🗻🐪🗻🐪🗻🐪🗻🐪🗻🐪🗻🐪🗻🐪🗻🐪



🐪🗻 This has been an Escape From Egypt  moment on The Coconut Whisperer blog in honor of the former Escape from Egypt channel on the Disqus channel  network 2018-2019 with 34K followers and was the absolute weirdest, wackiest and strangest news channel ever on Disqus !🐪🗻


This page was posted by Sputnik One of the Sputniks Orbit blog

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Sen. Tim Scott Exposes the Democrat Party’s War on Black America

 

Nolte: Sen. Tim Scott Exposes the Democrat Party’s War on Black America

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
4:35

Tim Scott, a black United States Senator who in 2016 won 61 percent of the vote in the conservative state of South Carolina, who earned more raw votes and won by a wider margin than Donald Trump, has done more in just a few days to drag the racism of the Democrat party out into the sunlight than the feckless Republican party ever has.

On Wednesday night, during his brilliant rebuttal to His Fraudulency Joe Biden’s congressional address, and through the simple act of stating a truth, Scott smoked these racist monsters out and proved once again that racism is still very much a part of the Democrat party’s DNA, a DNA that stretches back to their creation of the Jim Crow South and their willingness to go to war to stop a Republican president from taking away their slaves.

“Hear me clearly,” Scott said. “America is not a racist country.”

With those nine words, Scott undermined everything that motivates today’s organized left, and to prove Scott wrong, to prove America is indeed a racist country, Democrats hurled the worst kind of racism directly at Scott.

Instead of addressing the substance of his argument, Democrats took direct aim at his skin color. For hours, “Uncle Tim” — a play on the slur “Uncle Tom” — was allowed to trend on Twitter, and the only reason it trended at all was Democrats, including countless members of the Blue Checkmark Mafia, who ensured it trended.

Cable news anchors smeared him for throwing “white Republicans” a lifeline, which is just a dog whistle screaming “Uncle Tom.”

It was a grotesque display but an illuminating reminder of just how far Democrats and their allies in Big Tech and Big Media are willing to go to, as they see it, keep black people in line.

For centuries Democrats have used these tactics against any black American who, as Scott himself said, dares to “step down out of your lane according to the liberal elite left.”

Today’s terrorist weapon wielded by Democrats is no longer a burning cross (the KKK was founded by Democrats). Instead, Democrats and their billion-dollar media, tech, and entertainment corporations use smear tactics and racist bullying campaigns. Black apostates are attacked as “Uncle Toms” as “sellouts” and “house n****rs” engaging in ”minstrelsy” and as “not really black.”

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is such a threat to Democrats that for 30 years he’s been smeared by one of the most racist stereotypes of all: the scary black predator. Over his support for former president Trump, Kanye West was relentlessly demonized by billion-dollar media corporations as insane. The examples are endless: Herman CainBen CarsonCondi Rice, etc…

The disease of racism has never left the Democrat party. It’s still there and as toxic as ever. Scott accurately describes it as “liberal oppression.” Think about this, because I’m sure Scott has: it is modern-day Democrats who:

  • encourage riots in predominantly black neighborhoods.
  • believe white people should be allowed to smoke the brand of cigarettes they enjoy while black people should not.
  • oppose school choice in favor of herding inner-city children into failing government-run schools.
  • allow something as blatantly racist as “Uncle Tim” to trend on Twitter.
  • disappear” documentaries about esteemed black Americans because that particular black American dares hold beliefs Democrats will not allow blacks to hold.
  • encourage black youth to give up on their dreams with racialist propaganda about how it’s impossible for blacks to succeed in America.
  • call for the kind of boycotts that rob a predominantly black city like Atlanta of $100 million in business revenue.
  • whose idea of criminal justice reform is to release violent criminals who prey disproportionately on black Americans.
  • are desperate to flood the country with the illegal labor that takes starter jobs away from the inner-city kids who need them most and undermine the wages of the black working class.

And most damning of all…

“I get called ‘Uncle Tom’ and the N-word, by progressives, by liberals!” Scott said in his Wednesday night speech, and within minutes Democrats were attacking him as “Uncle Tim,” Twitter was promoting it, and today no one has paid any kind of social or professional price for these overt acts of racism.

Well, hear me clearly: The only “systemic racism” that remains in this country comes directly from the Democrat party

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2021/04/30/nolte-sen-tim-scott-exposes-the-democrat-partys-war-on-black-america/

Thursday, 29 April 2021

The truth about the April 1994 election

 

South Africa: The truth about the April 1994 election


This week marks the 27th anniversary of 27th April 1994. This date commemorates the first all-race election that brought the African National Congress (ANC) to power with a decisive 63% majority and – according to the organisation – a ringing confirmation of its enormous popular support.

The real story about the election is different and worth recalling: if only because ANC propaganda has been so effective in suppressing it, especially among the born-free generation with no independent memory of what occurred.

From less than 50% to close on a two-thirds majority

In October 1992, an internal ANC assessment concluded that the organisation, even on a 100% turnout, would at most obtain 50% of the overall vote in the first general election. The document noted that ‘while it might be “objectively correct” for black South Africans to vote for the ANC, their “subjective inclinations” might be otherwise’.

Why then was the final election result so different? Support for the ANC might have increased in the interim, as various opinion polls in late 1993 and early 1994 in fact indicated (though these results were tempered by large ‘won’t say/won’t vote’ responses). However, there were other assessments from that period that put ANC voter support at still below 50% – and which suggested that the election outcome was influenced by factors other than a growing enthusiasm for the ANC.

A pervasive fear

A pervasive fear was the first key factor. Political killings had soared since February 1990, when President FW de Klerk had thrown open the door to democracy by unbanning the ANC – and authorising the return of some 13 000 trained Umkhonto we Sizwe insurgents whom the ANC then refused to disband or disarm.

Some 5 500 people had died in the first five years of the ANC’s people’s war from 1984 to 1989. But roughly 15 000, or three times as many, were killed between 1990 and 1994, as the ANC intensified its attacks on its main rivals in the lengthy run-up to the first all-race election.

Until the week before the poll, the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) remained under persistent attack, to which it often responded with violence. It nevertheless bore the main brunt of the people’s war, in which some 400 IFP office bearers and thousands of IFP supporters were shot, hacked, or burnt to death, sometimes by the necklace method. This generated an enormous fear among many township residents of being labelled Inkatha supporters and suffering the same fate.

In the months before the poll, the National Party (NP) listed more than 200 incidents in which ANC supporters had intimidated, assaulted, or murdered NP members in an ‘unabated campaign of intimidation’. This soon compelled the NP to stop all canvassing in townships on the Reef and in the Eastern Cape.

In many black areas, street committees and civic associations helped ensure conformity with ANC perspectives, while an omnibus opinion poll conducted by the Human Sciences Research Council found that 20% of respondents felt pressurised ‘to vote for a party they did not particularly support’ and 46% had little confidence their vote would remain secret.

International observers seemed little concerned about the intimidation, the 165 ‘no-go’ zones across the country that the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) had identified, or the large number of political killings. Two major British newspapers thus stood virtually alone in warning that the pending April 1994 election was unlikely to be either free or fair.

The London Sunday Telegraph criticised the British media for ‘pushing the fairy tale that the peace-loving, democratic ANC…was about to come into its inheritance’. It went on: ‘South Africa is likely to become the first country outside the former USSR to elect a communist government by supposedly “democratic” means, even though this might involve tens of thousands of deaths… What is happening is the end-game of a sinister process that has been unfolding since 1984, when the ANC and its ally, the SACP, launched a deliberate campaign to eliminate by terrorism their black rivals, particularly Inkatha.’

The London Sunday Times commented in an editorial that ‘there is no way the elections are, by any standard, going to be free and fair… The ANC is determined to take power by riding roughshod over those who stand in its way…. While it preaches democracy, the ANC practises totalitarianism. It prefers to kill its opponents rather than use reason and argument. Its intolerance to criticism and its adherence to communist ideals means South Africa will be a virtual one-party state’.

Widespread electoral chaos

The election was originally supposed to take place over three days from 26th to 28th April. The first day, 26th April, was intended for the casting of special votes, so that the elderly and handicapped could avoid crowd pressures. Most voting was expected to take place on 27th April, which was declared a public holiday. A further day, 28th April, was set aside for those unable to vote on 27th April.

But millions of voters began flocking to the polls on 26th April, only to find that many voting stations failed to open at all. Chaos prevailed at others, marked by severe shortages of ballot papers, the special invisible ink with which voters’ hands were supposed to be marked to prevent them voting more than once, and the ultra-violet light boxes needed to detect the special ink. Often missing too were the stickers with the IFP name and logo that were supposed to be fixed to all the ballot papers. (The IFP agreed to participate in the election only a week beforehand – and by then the ballot papers had been printed without its details.)

The shortages and disruptions were excused on the basis that this preliminary day had been intended as a trial run – but in many areas the chaos on the 27th was just as bad. So great was the disorganisation that 28th April was declared a public holiday as well. But chaos still prevailed in many areas, with the result that voting was extended to the 29th in many areas, including KwaZulu. Though polling stations had still not opened at all in some places, a halt was then called.

Some of the turmoil could clearly be attributed to the inexperience of the IEC, which had never run an election before. However, it was also notable that the disruptions and the chaos were particularly acute in the two regions that held the key to the national result. These were the Reef, with an estimated 4.8 million voters, and KwaZulu-Natal, with 4.5 million. These were also the areas in which the IFP had long enjoyed considerable support – and in which the shortages of balloting material remained widespread and severe.

Electoral fraud

Soon the matter of electoral fraud began to loom large. At the ANC’s insistence, there was no voters’ roll and few effective safeguards against people voting more than once. All attempts to maintain proper control over the issuing and distribution of ballot papers were also soon abandoned.

Before the poll, the IEC had printed 80 million ballot papers for an estimated 21.7 million voters, of which half were to be used for the national election and half for the provincial one. But so great was the shortage of ballot papers at the end of 27th April that an additional 8.6 million papers had to be printed overnight and rushed to polling stations.

A total of some 87 million ballot forms was thus printed. This was double what should have been needed on a 100% voter turnout, and yet the shortages persisted. It was only after polling stations had closed that more than 16 million unused ballot papers were found on the Reef. Huge numbers were also discovered in other areas and especially in KwaZulu-Natal.

The disappearance of these ballot papers not only created shortages that prevented many people from voting but also ‘produced the possibility of the large-scale “manufacture” of votes’, as author RW Johnson pointed out in a book on Launching Democracy in South Africa.

When the counting of the votes began on 30th April, another vital safeguard against electoral fraud was jettisoned. At the end of that day, the IEC announced that it had scrapped the requirement that the number of ballot forms issued to a polling station should be reconciled with the number of votes cast there. This process was so longer possible because presiding officers – many of whom were known ANC supporters – had failed to keep adequate records of ballots cast.

In addition, close on 9 million additional ballot papers had been printed and issued in great haste and none of these had serial numbers. Besides, said IEC chairman Judge Johann Kriegler, ‘the election is about national reconciliation, not ballot reconciliation’.

But dispensing with this requirement made it impossible to check whether ballot boxes had been stuffed with manufactured votes. It also made it impossible to tell whether all the ballots legitimately cast had found their way back to counting stations.

Complaints by all the parties

Soon all the major political parties began to question whether the election could be accepted as free and fair. The NP lodged a long list of complaints and demanded that close on 1.7 million votes be set aside. The Democratic Party (DP) said it wanted 1.5 million votes declared invalid, along with the decision to dispense with ballot reconciliation.

The IFP described the IEC as ‘a surrogate’ of the ANC and said the commission had ‘employed card-carrying ANC members to put the ANC into power’. The Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC) said it was receiving reports from many areas of ‘irregularities and downright fraud’. Nor could these be blamed on administrative bungling, as ‘IEC apologists’ made out. Rather, they smacked of deliberate and pre-planned manipulation of the poll results, for ‘up to 90% of IEC monitors were ANC sympathisers or members who were bent on sabotaging the PAC’s electoral chances’.

A negotiated outcome?

As the complaints intensified and the count dragged on, so rumours began to circulate that the IEC had abandoned all attempts at computing an accurate result – and that the outcome would effectively depend on bargaining between the parties.

An editorial in the Weekly Mail & Guardian was scathing. The IEC, it said, had ‘bungled the election wholly and completely’. As a result, Judge Kriegler had been compelled to admit that ‘counting, accuracy and care had given way to horse-trading among the parties’. Instead of adjudicating on the accuracy of the outcome, he had become ‘a mediator, desperately negotiating a result that all parties would accept’.

Judge Kriegler repeatedly denied this. ‘The parties had entered into discussions on irregularities’ and on whether to ‘withdraw objections’ to disputed votes, and there was nothing wrong with that. In addition, the final results were ‘totally and wholly based on our count’, he said.  

The ‘prime prize’ of state power

In the end, the IEC accorded the ANC 62.6% of the vote in the national contest, giving it 252 of the 400 seats in the National Assembly. The NP was accorded 20.3%, the IFP 10.5%, the Freedom Front 2.2%, the DP 1.7%, and the PAC 1.2%. The percentage poll across the country was a surprisingly high 90%, while the proportion of spoilt ballots was an astonishingly low 0.75%.

As the ANC was later to put it, the 1994 election brought it ‘a critical new instrument of struggle, ie state power’ – the ‘prime prize’ it had been intent on securing through the decade of the people’s war. This in turn provided it with ‘immense possibilities to use the new situation as a beachhead to fundamentally transform society’.

In pursuit of this ‘transformation’, the ANC and its ally, the South African Communist Party, have for 27 years been implementing a national democratic revolution (NDR), aimed at taking the country by incremental interventions from a predominantly capitalist economy to a socialist and then communist one.

The NDR is the key reason for the ANC’s determined erosion of non-racialism, property rights, and other constitutional checks and balances. This in turn has fuelled cadre deployment, wastefulness, corruption, and an upsurge in public debt over the past decade. It has also brought about a steady implosion in investment, growth, employment, skills, and public sector efficiency.

The NDR is the predominant factor in the ANC’s reversal of the Midas touch, in which everything it handles turns to dross instead of gold. However, like the truth about the people’s war and the April 1994 election, the NDR is a reality the media chooses largely to ignore.

  https://dailyfriend.co.za/2021/04/29/the-truth-about-the-april-1994-election/ 

POPE TIGHTENS VATICAN'S ANTI-CORRUPTION RULES

 

POPE TIGHTENS VATICAN'S ANTI-CORRUPTION RULES

Senior managers and administrators at the Holy See, the central governing body of the Catholic Church, will have to declare they have no convictions or are not under investigation for corruption, terrorism or exploitation of minors.

FILE: Soon after being elected leader of the world's 1.3 billion Catholics in 2013, Francis vowed to continue efforts to fight corruption begun by his predecessor, Benedict XVI. Picture: Andrew Medichini/AFP
  • about an hour ago

VATICAN CITY, HOLY SEE - Pope Francis on Thursday announced new anti-corruption rules for top officials as part of his drive to clean up the Vatican following a series of scandals.

Senior managers and administrators at the Holy See, the central governing body of the Catholic Church, will have to declare they have no convictions or are not under investigation for corruption, terrorism or exploitation of minors.

They will also be banned from certain investments, while all Vatican employees must no longer accept work-related gifts worth over 40 euros ($48).

"Faithfulness in matters of little consequence is related to faithfulness in more important ones," the pope wrote in the new "motu proprio", a legal document issued under his personal authority.

Soon after being elected leader of the world's 1.3 billion Catholics in 2013, Francis vowed to continue efforts to fight corruption begun by his predecessor, Benedict XVI.

The Argentine pontiff has closed thousands of suspect accounts, has reformed laws, fired top financial officials and sought to streamline the administration of the Holy See.

Under the new rules, top officials will have to declare they have never been convicted, tried or are being investigated for participation in organised crime, corruption, fraud, terrorism, money laundering, exploitation of minors or tax evasion.

They will also be required to declare that their assets are from legal sources, are not held in tax havens, or invested in companies whose policies are against the church's doctrine.

This declaration must be made when someone is hired, and thereafter every two years, with the risk of dismissal or a fine if someone is found to have lied.

The Vatican has been dogged by scandals in recent years, including the 2017 conviction of the ex-head of a Vatican-run hospital for funnelling a fortune from a foundation to renovate a cardinal's apartment.

And the Vatican bank, known as the IOR, was for decades embroiled in controversies, with one of its former presidents ordered to stand trial on charges of embezzlement and money laundering in 2018.

In September, the pope forced the resignation of Italian Cardinal Angelo Becciu, a close adviser who has been accused of syphoning off funds destined for the poor to family members - a charge he denies.

https://ewn.co.za/2021/04/29/pope-tightens-vatican-s-anti-corruption-rules

China doubles down on coal plants abroad despite carbon pledge at home

APRIL 27, 2021

President Xi Jinping has pledged to wean China off coal but a top climate official said Beijing will continue to finance such plants abroad

China will press ahead with its multi-billion-dollar financing of coal plants in developing countries, a top climate official said Tuesday, despite Beijing's stated aim of slashing carbon emissions.

In 2020, China opened three-quarters of the world's newly funded coal plants, according to the UK-based monitor CarbonBrief, and accounted for more than 80 percent of newly announced coal power projects.

At home, however, President Xi Jinping has pledged to wean China off coal with a peak carbon emissions target of 2030 - and achieve carbon neutrality thirty years later.

Those ambitious targets have been met with international praise.

But China's overseas drive shows the complexity of untwining the economic drivers of coal power from environmental concerns.

"We cannot simply say that we'll stop supporting coal-fired electricity plants in developing countries," Li Gao, head of the climate change office at the Ministry of Ecology and Environment, told reporters.

"Combating climate change is also about letting people in developing countries live good lives."

Echoing Xi's comments at a recent climate summit hosted by US President Joe Biden, Li said poorer nations still need coal to power their economies.

"This is wholly in response to (foreign countries') actual needs, and we use very high standards (to build the plants)," he said.

Li also suggested that these countries were not sufficiently developed to be able to use renewable energy as their main sources of power.

China is the world's biggest polluter and emits a third of greenhouse gases globally.

It has also continued to fund dozens of coal plants abroad, from Zimbabwe to Indonesia, and environmentalists say they are set to produce more emissions than major developed nations.

China is making the overseas coal play as part of its trillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative, a plan to fund infrastructure projects and increase its influence overseas.

In contrast, officials have pledged to "strictly control" coal use domestically to reach ambitious climate goals.

Just under 60 percent of power in China still comes from coal, but a new five-year national development plan unveiled in March set a target of generating 20 percent of energy from renewable sources by 2025.

China will continue to build smaller-scale coal plants to ensure reliable power supply across the grid, but their "emissions will not be as large" as traditional coal plants, according to Li.

"We will no longer continue large-scale development of coal-fired power plants, this is very clear."


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Wednesday, 28 April 2021

'Himmler's Dagger': Nazi Artefacts Pulled from Sale by US Auction House After Complaints

 'Himmler's Dagger': Nazi Artefacts Pulled from Sale by US Auction House After Complaints

"I’m massively relieved that O’Gallerie listened carefully to the discussion around this issue and made the appropriate decision," Judy Margles, executive director of the Oregon Jewish Museum and Centre for Holocaust Education, said.



 

Members of the local Jewish community flagged the auction after noticing the "VERY RARE HEINRICH HIMMLER PRESENTATION SS HONOR DAGGER," as listed on the website. 

"We don’t believe that a business or an individual should be able to profit from something like this – it’s shameful," Bob Horenstein, the director of community relations at the Jewish Federation of Greater Portland, said.

  The auction house’s president has also reportedly changed its policy so that it won't sell Nazi memorabilia in the future.

The O’Gallerie auction house in Portland, Oregon has scrapped plans to sell a number of Nazi objects, including a dagger that was supposedly owned by Nazi SS head Heinrich Himmler.

According to The Oregonian, the auction house’s president Thomas O’Grady explained that he made the decision after receiving a number of emails from people complaining about the sale of the dagger. 

Other items that have been pulled include a bayonet and a set of "Nazi-era war medals."

O’Grady also reportedly said his auction house will not sell Nazi memorabilia in the future.

https://sputniknews.com/us/202104281082751281-himmlers-dagger-nazi-artefacts-pulled-from-sale-by-us-auction-house-after-complaints/


Pear & fig tarte tatin with green fig preserve ice cream

What’s cooking today: Pear & fig tarte tatin with green fig preserve ice cream


Here’s my newest tarte tatin recipe, and a homemade custard-based ice cream to match. It’s all about the green fig preserve.

Tony Jackman

The pear & green fig tarte tatin:

Ingredients

1 packet frozen puff pastry, thawed

4 or 5 Williams pears, peeled and cored, then halved

Lemon juice

4 or 5 preserved green figs, halved

¼ cup butter

⅓ cup sugar

3 Tbsp of the syrup from a jar of green fig preserve

Method

Melt butter in a heavy ovenproof frying pan with the sugar and fig syrup. Leave them to caramelise slowly over a gentle heat, keeping an eye on them while you prepare the pears.

Prepare the pears and rub lemon juice over them to prevent discolouration. Tilt the pan this way and that to help even out the browning of the sugar.

When it is pleasingly golden all over, place the halved pears round side down around the edge, and a few in the middle. This is because you want the round side facing up when you turn out the tarte tatin later.

Place halved green figs in between also round side down.

Let the pears cook in the syrup on a gentle simmer until they are fairly tender, about 15 to 20 minutes.

Roll out the pastry on a floured board and cut out a round just a little bigger than the width of the top of the pan. Lay it over the top, then tuck the edges underneath using the handle of a dessert spoon.

Prick the pastry here and there with a fork.

Place in a preheated 200℃ oven until the pastry is crisp and golden, about 20 to 25 minutes. Turn out onto a large plate, by holding the plate over the top of the pan and then turning it over deftly and firmly, without letting it slide off the plate once turned.

The green fig preserve ice cream:

Ingredients

6 egg yolks

½ cup castor sugar

¼ cup green fig syrup

310 ml (a cup and a quarter) full cream milk

430 ml (a cup and three quarters) cream

¼ tsp salt

Method

Beat yolks with ½ cup castor sugar until creamed and pale. Set aside.

Put the cream, milk, green fig syrup and salt in a pot on a low heat and simmer while stirring until the sugar is fully dissolved. It must not boil.

Pour this in a thin stream into the bowl with the creamed eggs and sugar, very slowly to begin with, stirring continuously.

Return to the pot and stir on a low heat until it thickens and can coat the back of a spoon. Do not let it boil.

Pour into a metal container and freeze. Serve with the tarte tatin. 

https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2021-04-28-whats-cooking-today-pear-fig-tarte-tatin-with-green-fig-preserve-ice-cream/