Thursday, November 16, 2006

Definitely Dark

Weekend Assignment #139: It's time for Thanksgiving dinner! Which do you prefer -- white meat, or dark meat? Explain your answer. Because it seems that most people have a preference one way or another, and sometimes they can get testy about it.

For those of you who for some reason disdain the whole turkey scene, answering "neither" is acceptable, but you need to explain why and offer an alternate dish for consumption.

Extra credit: Being Thanksgiving, note one thing you've been thankful for in 2006.

2004. It looked pretty nice, didn't it?The pictures here are all reruns from a 2004 entry on Musings, "Thanksgiving Before and After." In that entry I gave a fairly detailed account of that Thanksgiving, in which I stuffed the turkey with fresh carrots and celery for a relatively low-carb holiday spread. Under the terms of the Blocher Holiday Compromise, I cook either at Thanksgiving or at Christmas, not both, because John hates the mess involved. Funny thing, though. Because we went to Disneyland for Christmas last year, I haven't cooked a turkey at all since this Thanksgiving one from 2004.

But Scalzi's question is about what kind of turkey I like to eat, not whether we roast turkey at every traditional opportunity. Actually, I'm lucky in this respect. I like dark meat. Always have. John prefers white meat. Since we're the only two people eating the darn thing, that works out fine, except for the fact that it's hard for two people to eat a whole turkey before the remaining leftovers become inedible. More than once I've popped the last of the white meat in the freezer a day or so too late, only to throw it away nine months later.

looks more traditional than it is.Why do I prefer dark meat? John Scalzi's own answer to this question pretty much matches mine. Dark meat is almost never dry, and white meat almost always is. Dark meat has more flavor than white meat, and a much better texture. White meat breaks apart into stringy hunks of edible cardboard. Dark meat doesn't. And finally, dark meat comes in handy natural packaging - the thigh and the drumstick. Turkey wings are honorary dark meat.

the aftermathExtra Credit: I'm thankful that John still puts up with me after all these years. Nearly three decades after we first met, he's still my best friend, my inspiration, my confidante, my travel companion, my main source of intellectual stimulation, my personal humorist, my sounding board, the thorn in my side, my connection for news about Doctor Who and other media, and most of all, the love of my life.

Karen

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Pumpkin Pancakes and Looney Lamp

I've been distracted all night by TV and Wikipedia, when I should have been commenting on everyone's RR entries. Now it's late, so I'm just going to pop in a couple of photos, explain them, and go to bed.



First of all, congratulations to Barbara for figuring out the pancakes. They were indeed pumpkin pancakes, with cinnamon apple topping. When I saw them on the menu, I could not resist the temptation to resume my quest to try "pumpkin everything." Barbara wins...umm, something!




Second, I thought you might like a closer look at the lamp full of Happy Meal toys. That's Marty McFly on the pink hoverboard in the first shot, and Doc Brown is wearing orange and driving a blue DeLorean in the lower photo. The blue thing with the red and white spiral wheels is Doc Brown's time traveling locomotive. These were all issued in connection with the Back to the Future cartoon series.

Good night!

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Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Too-Light Sausage in a Too-Dark Kitchen

Jessica, of the photoblog QuickSilver Dreams, gave us this week's Round Robin Photo Challenge topic, "In the Kitchen!" Now I'm sure that, for a lot of people, the idea conjures up visions of domestic bliss: kids setting the table, something wonderfully aromatic coming fresh from the oven, a cat on the rug and grandmother's old glass gleaming in the sunshine from the kitchen window.

My kitchen is never, ever like that. My motto comes from the 1990 film Sibling Rivalry: "I don't cook. I reheat." Good little movie, that. Anyway, the point is, I hardly ever do any cooking, I have no kids to set the table, no cat to lie on the rug, and the kitchen window is just a pass-through into the den.



But occasionally I have to actually cook something. Tonight it was Italian sausages. I peeled the casings off, put them in water, and added a lid that isn't nearly big enough to cover the entire frying pan. But at least it covers the sausages.

Then I cut up the peppers, one of which had a cameo role in last night's entry as floating food.

I have a bad habit of burning sausage after leaving the room for just a little too long. Hence the water. That cooks the sausage and peppers most of the way. Then when the water runs out, it browns - or burns. But tonight I didn't leave the room. I turned down the heat when the water ran out. The sausage didn't burn. It barely browned before we ran out of patience and ate it anyway. (There was more green pepper than this, by the way. What you see here are the slices that didn't cook as quickly as the rest.)

Recently, as part of the same extravaganza of failing technology that took our old refrigerator and my mouse, we lost the use of an old combination fan and light fixture that we always hated anyway. It's a wiring issue or bad sockets or a short or something. John went to buy something cooler and more modern, but the store didn't have anything good. We'll get it eventually.


A week after that, we lost the use of another old fixture, one that we actually liked and put there. It's not attached at the moment, but this overhead light has a nice white glass cover with a gold wheat pattern. The old cord on this late 1950s or early 1960s lamp has stopped working.


There's a little light over the stove and a small track light over the sink, but they don't do much to light the room. So John brought in this lamp that's been sitting in the bedroom closet for years. The clear base is filled with old Happy Meal toys, circa 1990. There are at least three Back to the Future vehicles in there: a DeLorean, the modified locomotive, and the hoverboard with Marty on it. As you can see, through, the lamp itself doesn't do an adequate job of lighting the room.

That's it for now - probably the least impressive kitchen and kitchen activity on this whole Challenge. Care to top me? Then click this link! And check out everyone else's entries below.

Karen

Linking List

Jessica - Posted!
QuicksilverDreams
http://www.thewatersedge.us/QuickSilver/

Karen - Posted!
Outpost Mâvarin
http://outmavarin.blogspot.com

Carly - Posted!
Ellipsis...Suddenly Carly
http://ellipsissuddenlycarly.blogspot.com

Gattina - Posted!
Keyhole Pictures
http://gattina-keyholepictures.blogspot.com

Kerrin - Posted!
A New Day A New Photo
http://kerrinsdailyphoto.blogspot.com

Danella - Posted!
Deep Red Style
http://deepredstyle.com

Suzanne R - Posted!
New Suzanne R's Life
http://newsuzannerslife.blogspot.com

Julie - Posted!
Julie's Web Journal
http://www.barrettmanor.com/julie/journal.aspx

Janet - Posted!
Fond Of Photography
http://fondofphotography.blogspot.com

Teena - Posted!
It's all about me!
http://purple4mee.blogspot.com/

Robin - Posted!
R's Musings
http://rs-musings.blogspot.com/



Linda - Posted!
Blah Blah Blog
http://blahblahblog.wordpress.com/

Becky - Posted!
Where Life Takes You
http://ryanagi.blogspot.com

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Tuesday, November 14, 2006

If She Weighs the Same as a Duck...

Your Monday Photo Shoot: Snap a photo of something that floats. If it's buoyant, it's in!

John Scalzi photographed "devil ducks" for this, and admitted that they don't float upright very well. I was immediately reminded of my own rubber duck, which is sealed on the bottom and therefore doesn't squeak, and which has an unfortunate tendency to float upside down.

The second thing this photo shoot brought to mind was the following:
BEDEVERE: So, why do witches burn? [pause]
VILLAGER #3: Be... cause they're made of... wood?
BEDEVERE: Good!
CROWD: Oh, yeah. Oh.
BEDEVERE: So, how do we tell whether she is made of wood?
VILLAGER #1: Build a bridge out of her.
BEDEVERE:Ah, but can you not also make bridges out of stone?
VILLAGER #1: Oh, yeah.
RANDOM: Oh, yeah. True. Uhh...
BEDEVERE: Does wood sink in water?
VILLAGER #1: No. No.
VILLAGER #2: No, it floats! It floats!
VILLAGER #1: Throw her into the pond!
CROWD: The pond! Throw her into the pond!
BEDEVERE: What also floats in water?
VILLAGER #1: Bread!
VILLAGER #2: Apples!
VILLAGER #3: Uh, very small rocks!
VILLAGER #1: Cider!
VILLAGER #2: Uh, gra-- gravy!
VILLAGER #1: Cherries!
VILLAGER #2: Mud!
VILLAGER #3: Uh, churches! Churches!
VILLAGER #2: Lead! Lead!
ARTHUR: A duck!
CROWD: Oooh.
BEDEVERE: Exactly. So, logically...
VILLAGER #1: If... she... weighs... the same as a duck... she's made of wood?
BEDEVERE: And therefore?
VILLAGER #2: A witch!
---from Monty Python and the Holy Grail
So, logically, I need to find out what floats besides witches. And ducks.



I had to go to the grocery store anyway. I returned home with a number of items that might or might not float.

Trident gum: yes.
Jello sugar-free cherry gelatin: yes.
A plastic-wrapped stick of Colby Jack cheese: yes.
A green pepper: yes.


Frozen crinkle-cut carrots: mostly, yes.



Orange-flavored cranberry raisins: not so much.

But enough with the food. What about witches, and wood, and ducks, and bats, and mice, and Eastern holy men?

For the first time in the 25 years I've owned it,
my rubber duck floated upright.
Rubber bat: yes.
Small jar of Play-Doh: yes.
Holy man with cell phone: yes, but only on his back.
Green skull: yes.
Orange spider ring: yes.


I don't have a witch to weigh, but I have a vintage troll, who floats.
Hollow rubber rat: not at all.


And yes, the villagers were right about one thing.
Wood: yes. Except it doesn't fit in the bowl.

I'm very tired tonight, so I'll postpone anything else I wanted to discuss tonight, except for two brief items:

  1. The Round Robin Photo Challenges topic "In the Kitchen" begins midnight Tuesday night/Wednesday morning. Click the link for details.
  2. Hint: begins with a P.

Karen

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Monday, November 13, 2006

I Should...

I should...
  • Write up the next installment of my neglected Mâvarin prequel, as I promised Sarah I'd do. The New Post window is open, and a single handwritten paragraph for it is an inch from my left had as I type. Yet somehow, I can't make myself work on it tonight.
  • Put my everything-but-red laundry in the dryer, and start my red load. Okay. I'll be right back. Done. But I missed washing one white sock.
  • Clean up trash and recycling. Well, I did throw some paper away. I'll try to catch the empty Snapple bottles on my way to bed. Done. That part, anyway.
  • Put away that Starlog I photographed last week, the Dell logic problem book, three Barbie books, three L'Engle books, and Malibu Francie. Done.
  • Do dishes. Sorry, not tonight.
  • Tell you that the photo below is indeed of leftover pancakes. But what kind? Hint: the color in the photos is fairly accurate.

  • Clean out the fridge. Hmm. That gives me an idea.
  • Explain why you haven't seen new sunsets from me lately. Well, it's dark when I leave the office now, and besides, sunsets are better when there are clouds. In short, it's the wrong time of year. Done.
  • Email the church office with helpful links, and request the church bulletin in electronic form. Done.
  • Post and write about that other photo I took last night. Nah, too tired.
  • Take a bath and wash my hair. I'll think about it.
  • Go to bed. Yes, that's the best idea of the lot! This time I'll take the allergy medicine so that unlike last night, I'll actually sleep.
Karen

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Sunday, November 12, 2006

A Pop Quiz and a Teaser

First, the pop quiz. What is this? Be specific.

This came home with me after a morning spent with a friend, first attending the second half of Mass (I was late), then Confirmation class, then eating at Mimi's Cafe (hence the food), and finally browsing at an interdenominational bookstore and gift shop.

None of the items in the second picture were purchased today, but they do pertain the confirmation class. The red Bible is my favorite translation, the New American Bible, St. Joesph Edition. Like everything else to do with religion, it's a bit controversial, but I like it because it has lots of scholarly intros and footnotes and illos and timelines and whatnot. None of this, however, inspired me or kept me awake long enough to finish the reading for this morning. Still, the additional material is very much in line with the content of this morning's class. Rev. Angela talked about the different parts of the Bible, the historical context, and the idea that both reason and tradition should be considered when reading scripture, as well as the content of the text itself in various translations. The little booklets above are a guide to the Daily Office Lectionary, a two-year cycle of readings that take the reader through most of the Bible in a fairly coherent order, and give some idea of common themes between the readings in a given week. I suppose that part of the "tradition" portion of the "three-legged stool" of Episcopal tradition.

Anyway, I was pleased to discover that most of what Rev. Angela said resonated with my own past researches and my own beliefs. I am more convinced than ever that I have found my theological home. Despite my intense aversion to controversy, I have much more to say about this. But not tonight!

Karen

Current lectionary readings



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Saturday, November 11, 2006

Words and Pictures

I didn't take any photos today, but I did scan this:

It's to illustrate a Wikipedia article called List of fictional books‎. A fictional book is a book referred to inside a fictional work, a book that (usually) doesn't really exist. I say "usually" because sometimes an author creates the book after the fact - but the fact remains that it's a fictitious book by a fictional character.

In my graphic above, C.S. Lewis postulates a number of amusing titles for books owned by Mr. Tumnus the faun in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. That's one of the things I love about fictional books. Much of the time, they have great, funny, intriguing titles.

early e-book edition of H2G2Heck, a lot of the humor in the books of Douglas Adams comes from fictional books, from the text of the fictional Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy itself to the "philosophical blockbusters" of Oolon Colluphid:
  • Where God Went Wrong
  • Some More of God's Greatest Mistakes
  • Who Is This God Person Anyway?
  • Well That About Wraps It Up for God
There are other purposes for fictional books besides just making jokes. Jorge Luis Borges did all sorts of interesting things with fictional books, building whole stories around them, such as the one about a man who rewrites Don Quixote word by word, ending up with exactly the same text as Cervantes - and a book some critics consider superior to the original. Some day I'll read that story. Tolkien uses fictional books to establish the entire history of Middle Earth. Ben Aaronovitch quotes from fictional books at the beginning of each chapter of his novelization of Remembrance of the Daleks, using them as background and context for the story. Kurt Vonnegut attributes lots of book titles to his author character Kilgore Trout, thus establishing Trout's character as a prolific, eccentric, not-terribly successful writer. And so it goes.

And from time to time, people ask me about a book called The Horn of Joy by Matthew Maddox, a book mentioned in A Swiftly Tilting Planet by Madeleine L'Engle. The Horn of Joy is a crucial plot element in the novel, a book Charles Wallace needs to know more about in order to save the world. L'Engle gave it so much verisimilitude that readers sometimes wonder whether The Horn of Joy is a real book. It isn't.

I must go read five chapters of a real book now and go to bed. I've got a Confirmation class in the morning. I was already confirmed as a Roman Catholic 36 years ago, but I'm going to be "received" as an Episcopalian. But first I have to read John 13 through 17. Good night!

Karen

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