30 June 2007
We are in for it when she is a Teenager
29 June 2007
Anne Hathaway's Bed
This is precisely true. William Shakespeare was a wealthy man when he died with a fairly complicated last will and testament for a person of his social class. There's been much scholarship and speculation on the meaning of his sole bequest to his wife. The short story is that he knocked-up a considerably-older Anne Hathaway when he was a kid, had a shotgun marriage, didn't really love her, left Stratford for London after only a few years of connubial bliss, and never again lived with her for an extended period of time. There is no extant correspondence between them, most likely because Hathaway could not read or write. Think of it, she never saw his work performed because she never ventured from Stratford, and was unable even to read it in manuscript! The likely love of Shakespeare's life, after his son and excluding various less-significant women sexual partners, was Henry Wriothesley, the Earl of Southampton, who is possibly the "Fair Youth" of the Sonnets. This hugely-compelling love was sexually unconsummated and not homosexual in any modern interpretation. Its nature I believe is forever lost to us today and impossible to reconstruct at this distance in time, although there were economic benefits to Shakespeare and his band of players from this aristocrat-patron. It would have been a punishable crime against a rigid social status quo, and an unheard-of social and economic disaster for his family, had Shakespeare in some way acknowledged Wriothesley's place in his life, even cryptically, in his will. As such, I believe there is a bitterness at his having to remain mute in this final writ, even though he created the enduring but unacknowledged testament to Wriothesley (and a few others) in the Sonnets. So the Hathaway "second-best bed" bequest may be interpreted as a final sour slap in the face from the grave to the embodiment of a failed marriage of souls. But it is also important to understand that Shakespeare may have been advised to make at least one direct bequest to her, otherwise, had she been absent from the will entirely as was probably his wont, Elizabethan common-law practice may have applied and Hathaway could have been entitled until her death to the income from one-third of Shakespeare's considerable estate. As it was, he named his favorite daughter, Susanna, and her husband, physician John Hall, as executors of his estate for the benefit of their children. They also took care of Hathaway, I believe, until her death. Shakespeare's other daughter, Judith, was mostly excluded because he abhorred her feckless husband, Thomas Quiney, who was prosecuted for and convicted of "carnal copulation" with a woman not his wife. Shakespeare's last child and only son, Judith's twin sibling, Hamnet (ergo Hamlet), was the other truly significant love of his life. At the time of Hamnet's early death at age eleven, the insurgent Protestant social-political-economic-religious Taliban continued, in all ways imaginable, an active program to expunge the ancient, culturally-ingrained Roman Catholic power and ritual. As such, since there is little doubt that Shakespeare was a closet Catholic like many in England at the time, scholars speculate that his suffering was massively amplified by a puritanical, legally-enforced prohibition of the Catholic process of mourning and grieving to which he and his family were deeply inured. The winter voice of a father's heart broken by a son's death, unhealed by accustomed ritual denied, is made eternally present in many apotheoses of English poetry in Shakespeare's ensuing plays.
28 June 2007
Rhymes with M.
A panda
Sat on a veranda
Writing memoranda
About propaganda.
27 June 2007
CSA Week 4

1 zucchini, cut into 2" sticks
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 scallion, thinly sliced
1-2 T. butter
1-2 T. olive oil
2-4 T. white wine
salt and pepper
Heat the butter and oil in a frying pan, just until the butter foams and subsides. Add zucchini and cook until it begins to soften, stirring occasionally. Add garlic and scallion and cook 1-2 minutes. Add wine and continue to cook until zucchini is done - but not mushy! The key to zucchini is to make sure it is not overcooked. Add salt and pepper to taste. Serves 2.
This week, our share was:
- Broccoli Rabe
- Broccoli
- Salad Mix
- Scallions
- Cucumbers
- Sugar Snap Peas
- Strawberries
Since we got strawberries in last week's share, and bought and picked strawberries over the weekend, and got more in today's share, we have had fresh, juicy, wonderful, local strawberries for dessert 7 of the past 8 nights. And they still taste as fabulous as at the beginning of strawberry season; my palate is unjaded. Oh, hail the glorious strawberry!
26 June 2007
More Reviewing of the Reviewer
But the review yesterday included a parenthetical that was just over the top:
(Trivial footnote: At no point in his career have I known him not to have the most beautifully cut hair.)
Really. Misha may indeed have great hair, and may have always had great hair. But, this is a DANCE review. Not a hair review, and especially not a personal recollection that "every time I've seen him, Misha's had great hair". Doesn't Macaulay have an editor?
25 June 2007
Mrs. Astor's Mink

It begs two questions: 1. who gets the lousy mink coat(s), and 2. aren't there any beaver coats? After all, the Astor money started with John Jacob Astor and the beaver-pelt trade.
What Hawks Eat
We saw a hawk circling, soaring, looking for lunch. We talked with Miss M. about what hawks eat: chipmunks, mice, squirrels, bunnies, snakes. Later, back in the car, we had the same conversation again, but it went on...
"Why do hawks eat snakes?"
"Because it's a bird eat snake world out there."
Miss M. sat up and looked around.
"Where?"
I forget sometimes that she takes everything you say so literally.
Should we worry that she's a narcissist?
"Mommy, I have to tell you something."
She comes all the way down, and whispers "I love you" in my ear.
"Daddy, I have to tell you something."
She slides around the coffee table, climbs on top of W. and whispers "I love you" in his ear.
She sits down on the floor and announces "I have to tell me something. I love me!"
24 June 2007
Twelfth Anniversary
In the weeks before the wedding, we made a bunch of little appetizers and froze them, to be baked off on the day of the party. The wedding was on a Saturday, and we took off starting Wednesday to prep for the party. We made lots of side dishes (including potato salad with a vinaigrette and lots of fresh herbs, steamed sugar snap peas, white bean salad with bacon, coleslaw with red and green cabbage and blue cheese). We bought many dozens of assorted rolls from Orwasher's. We grilled beef tenderloins and butterflied legs of lamb. We made a mess of crunchy chicken (dipped in a yogurt/mustard mix, rolled in herbed bread crumbs, and baked). My sister made trays of goat-cheese-filled nasturtiums.
I made the wedding cake the night before the party: a yellow cake with a lemon mousseline buttercream, and fresh raspberries between the layers, using recipes straight out of The Cake Bible. I intended to pretty it up with piping, but I had some icing issues on the morning of the wedding, so I just used candied pansies - it was not the most beautiful cake ever, but it tasted damned good. We had a huge bowl of local strawberries to go with the cake.
We kept the drinks simple: gins and tonic, white wine, and a keg of beer.
And we did rent tables and chairs and linens and plates and silverware. But we bought the glasses, because I found some great glasses at Crate & Barrel for 95 cents a piece; it was cheaper to buy them than to rent. And, lo these many years later, we still have a lot of those glasses and break them out for parties.
Besides stuffing those nasturtiums, my sister grew those flowers and all the other flowers for the wedding. At the time, she was working as a garden tender on an estate in Connecticut. The owners had gone away for the whole summer, but wanted a cutting garden, just because. So Pinky cut all the flowers and made posies for the tables, a wreath of thyme and a bouquet of lavender for me, and all those flower hors d’œuvres.
The wedding was in my mother's backyard. We picked the date based on when she thought the garden would look best - I originally suggested the 10th, she thought she (and it) needed another two weeks. So the 24th it was. And it was beautiful.
And everyone helped - my mother, my grandmother, my sister and her then boyfriend (now husband), my brother and his ex-girlfriend. On a videotape that the ex-girlfriend made, there's a shot of my grandmother saying "how we have worked". Just that, "how we have worked".
Yes, the party was lots of work. But the good kind of work, the kind that makes you feel happy and proud and competent. The kind that you look back on with pleasure.
I think it was a good celebration of our partnership. Happy anniversary, W.
22 June 2007
Wordplay
Anyway. Mother Reader has a link to an entertaining vocabulary quiz. My score was 78%. What’s yours?
21 June 2007
Scissors
This afternoon, I had to go downstairs to see someone, and parked in the middle of the hallway outside the costume shop was a scissors sharpener. He had a big pile of scissors, all different, and was just going at it one by one.
And it gets weirder. I ran into someone from the shop on the elevator, one thing led to another, and I learned that the ladies own their own scissors. It's a union thing. Technically, they're also supposed to supply their own hand sewing needles and their own thimbles. But the shop provides the sewing machines. In reality, this shop does provide needles and thimbles, but the ladies still own their own scissors. So that scissors sharpener? The ladies have to pay to get their scissors sharpened.
For all of my lefty-commie-pinko leanings, I just don't understand unions sometimes. I see why the ladies own their own scissors - it's a kind of personal tool. But you'd think the union would have gotten something into the contract like: "All personally owned scissors shall be sharpened by the Employer no less than once every two months."
Mishandling in Iraq
The final paragraph is a quote from Taguba, an appalling indictment of the state of affairs, all the more resonant for its source:
“From the moment a soldier enlists, we inculcate loyalty, duty, honor, integrity, and selfless service,” Taguba said. “And yet when we get to the senior-officer level we forget those values. I know that my peers in the Army will be mad at me for speaking out, but the fact is that we violated the laws of land warfare in Abu Ghraib. We violated the tenets of the Geneva Convention. We violated our own principles and we violated the core of our military values. The stress of combat is not an excuse, and I believe, even today, that those civilian and military leaders responsible should be held accountable.”
I don't know how long that New Yorker link will last, but the whole piece is worth reading.
20 June 2007
CSA Week 3

The other night for dinner, I made a bean salad with the divine Goat's Eye beans from Rancho Gordo, and into it I tossed in some diced turnip for crunch and flavor. Alongside, we had turnip greens, sautéed with olive oil and garlic, sprinkled with kosher salt, and served at room temperature. I'm not sure that I've ever bought turnips, much less prepared them for dinner two ways. And they were good.
This week's haul:
- Komatsuna
- Turnips
- Arrowhead Cabbage
- Salad Mix
- Scallions
- Strawberries
- Zucchini (1)
- Summer Squash (2)
- Parsley
- Cilantro
W. is in the "cilantro tastes like soap" camp, so I'm not sure what's going to happen with that cilantro. The arrowhead cabbage is a thing of great beauty (see photo); I have to find something wonderful to do with it. Scallions and parsley are going into some potato cakes tonight (made with leftover mashed potatoes). I've never been a squash fan (winter or summer), but W. has been known to produce lovely zucchini before, that I've eaten with pleasure, so I'm hoping he finds a way to make magic with the squash.
And gilding the lily? I bought local blueberries and local cherries at the greenmarket today.
It's a locavore's feast time.19 June 2007
FB in Nose, redux
18 June 2007
The Cooking of Potatoes
THE COOKING OF POTATOES
For sauté potatoes cook the potatoes in their skins; peel, slice and sauté them gently in dripping or butter, adding a little chopped onion and parsley at the end.
Potatoes for salad should also be cooked in their skins, peeled and mixed with the dressing or mayonnaise while still warm.
For Pommes Pailles, Allumettes and all variations of chips, the raw potatoes should be plunged into plenty of water to wash away the outer starch which otherwise makes them stick together in the cooking.
Put new potatoes into boiling water.
Go to the extra trouble of mashing potatoes through a sieve and adding warmed milk.
To keep boiled potatoes hot cover them with a clean tea-cloth instead of the lid of the serving dish. This absorbs the moisture and results in dry and floury, instead of sodden, potatoes.
Mashed fried potatoes should be done in bacon fat, very little of it, and watched constantly.
Rub the outside of potatoes for baking with a coating of salt.
Baked potatoes are delicious eaten with aïoli instead of butter.
My husband, who makes fine mashed potatoes, always does that trick with the dish towel over the pot, instead of a lid. I'm not quite sure where he picked it up, but he's in good company.
17 June 2007
FB in Nose
Friday night, she and I were wandering around the garden before dinner. I broke off a mint leaf for her to smell, and wandered down the hill. Next thing I know, "Mommy I have a leaf in my nose!" Okay then. I guess she really wanted to smell it.
It turned out that she'd put some up one side and some up the other. I managed to get the piece out of one nostril, but the other piece was way too far up for non-professional removal. I called the pediatrician's office - it was too late to go there, so they sent us to the ER. The ER was great - it's a kind of sleepy little hospital, and while there was a steady stream of people in there, and all the ER bays were full, we were in and out in an hour, sans mint leaf and with squeezy ice pop. And no one laughed at us - unless of course they laughed when we left.
The best part of the whole trip to the hosta-bull? I think she's finally gotten the concept of blowing her nose!
15 June 2007
Final Exit

14 June 2007
No Green Paint

And it came to pass that they made a green as green as grass.*
We should have had Brush and Hush around the other day. W. spent the better part of two weekends painting our closet sized downstairs bathroom. When we moved into the house, the kitchen was freshly painted in a really pleasant just-right green. But the previous owners had put nails in the wall in a few places, and we wanted nails in different places, and so for nearly three years there have been a couple of spackled but unpainted patches in the kitchen. Since he had the paint stuff out, and the sellers had had the good sense to leave their leftover paint, well marked, W. thought he'd touch up those few spots. Perfection!
Then he decided to touch up a couple of dings in the adjoining green breakfast nook.Oops. The breakfast nook is a different, darker shade of green. Observant folks that we are, WE HAD NEVER NOTICED THAT THERE WERE TWO SHADES OF GREEN HAPPENING. The two colors meet at an outside corner, and the difference is hard to see - you really have to think about it because you assume that the difference is due to the variation in light conditions. Those spots in that picture? It's the lighter green paint on the darker green paint.
Luckily, the clever sellers had also left the Benjamin Moore paint strip in a pile of house information, so we know that the kitchen is "van alen green" and the breakfast nook is "sherwood green" and we were able to get a quart of the "sherwood green". But still.
*Someday, when I'm feeling up to it, I will write a paean to Margaret Wise Brown. I do so love her books, The Color Kittens being one of them.
13 June 2007
CSA Week 2
- Red Russian Kale
- Broccoli Rabe
- Komatsuna
- Turnips
- Radishes
- Salad Mix
- Arugula
- Parsley
- Strawberries
The salad mix included purslane! I wonder if they grew it specially, or just harvested the weed (which is what I did out at my mother's house a couple of weekends ago). For dinner tonight, we had salad with radishes and diced turnip (along side a grilled steak). The strawberries may be my breakfast tomorrow. For dinner tomorrow, we'll do a stir fry of chicken with the komatsuna tossed in at the end. And Friday will probably be pasta with broccoli rabe. I have to figure out what else we can do with the turnips.
But, so far so good.
Search, but you may not find
- How to Train A Baby Magpie
- What would happen if I lost 3 liters of blood
- How are Don and Deirdre Imus these days
And what's more? I have no answers for any of them. I'm terribly sorry, guys.
12 June 2007
Beastly Mispronunciations
(The sunscreen isn't really expensive, but it is sitting on the refrigerator because otherwise the small child tries to smear it all over herself by herself.)
11 June 2007
Reunion Rambling

The campus looked wonderful and particularly well-kept. The weather was spectacular on Friday and Sunday, but it rained most of the day on Saturday. Even that was okay, though, because it reminded me that it had been raining when I'd visited the campus as a high school student, and that even in the rain the campus was so lovely that it was the only college I wanted to attend and so I applied early decision (and got in, luckily, because I wasn't prepared to mail off any more applications). I think it is the most beautiful campus in the United States, and if anything, it's only gotten more so in the past years. Or is that just the vaseline covered lens of history? Really I don't think so.
Some good friends weren't there, but plenty of others were - catching up was great. Miss M. rather pined for companionship of her own age, but because I'd had her so late in the game, there weren't many child peers in our class. She latched onto anyone smaller than an adult, and to some adults who were delighted to take off their shoes and "skate" with her through through the bubble machine bubbles at the Saturday night dinner. She was also pleased to climb into the top bunk of the bunk-bed in our dorm room, though I refused to let her sleep up there. And she loved hailing a golf cart for a joy ride - though I thought the young woman driving the cart was going to have a heart attack when Miss M. ran full speed ahead at the cart, yelling. Luckily she tripped and fell in the grass, impeding her forward progress.
The Sunday parade is always a festive and heartwarming display of community. This year, the oldest of the alumnae were from the class of 1932 - celebrating their 75th reunion - which means that they were 96-97 years old. None of them marched in the parade (they got the cool old cars), but some of the class of 1937 marched. Awesome, feisty old ladies. I look forward to being one of them.
08 June 2007
The Synchronicity of Ducks
Because once upon a time, I did make a duck. While in college, with my roommate, and likely fueled by Bruce Springsteen and vodka. And I had completely forgotten about said duck, until I recently examined a box marked "treasures" in the closet of my room at my mother's house and discovered the duck (and a lot of strange detritus).

Coincidentally, I am about to get on the road and drive up to my 25th college reunion. Alas, my roommate is not going to be there. And I'm leaving the duck home to hold down the fort.
07 June 2007
CSA Week 1

Today was the first pick-up. We got:
- Red Russian Kale
- Broccoli Rabe
- Turnips
- Radishes
- Salad Mix
- Arugula
Funnily enough, after we'd gotten home, I called a neighbor about something, and her husband said she was off picking up their vegetables. Turns out, they also joined the same CSA. Small world.
For dinner last night, we had a big salad with lettuce and arugula, diced turnips, sliced radishes, grape tomatoes (organic but far from local), leftover grilled chicken and some grated provolone. Dessert was local strawberries that I'd gotten at the Greenmarket in the morning. It was a perfect meal. Tonight, we'll do something like mixed sauteed greens with the kale, broccoli rabe and turnip greens.
I am looking forward to what the summer will bring.
06 June 2007
Sobeit?

Okay - you'll have to click on this here image and check out the upper right paragraph headed "Seasoning". What I want to know is, since when is "sobeit" a word? It's "so be it", people. It's THREE words.
The New York Times is going to hell in a handbasket.
05 June 2007
Will wonders never cease?
Of course, the reason I was reading the Post on line this morning was because I was looking for the review of ABT's new Sleeping Ugly, evil bitch that I am. Ah, the joy of other people's bad reviews.
Garden Mystery Solved
The house is on a hill, and the bed below the house and above the flagstone patio had been completely overrun with wild tawny daylilies, a nice small leafed hosta, and the insufferable bishop's week. Last year, I ripped out about 25% along the bottom - discarding the weeds, and repurposing the hosta (everywhere) and the daylilies (across the street on town property in my personal neighborhood beautification project). This year, I've tackled the next 25% - I'm working my way up the hill. And it's finally starting to look like something!


Bit by bit, we push back at the entropy.
04 June 2007
Ms. Morph
02 June 2007
If you wash on Saturday...
They that wash on Monday
Have all the week to dry;
They that wash on Tuesday
Are not so much awry;
They that wash on Wednesday
Are not so much to blame;
They that wash on Thursday
Wash for shame;
They that wash on Friday
Wash in need;
And they that wash on Saturday,
Oh! they are sluts indeed.
Sluts? Really? I'm a slut because I'm a working mother and Saturday is when I have time enough to do the laundry? And what about (looks about furtively) the fact that I do laundry on Sunday too? I guess I'm a slut and a heathen.
01 June 2007
Snow Leopard
My dæmon is a snow leopard, and I share that with Lord Asriel.
The first book of Philip Pullman's trilogy His Dark Materials is being made into a movie, due for release in December. I loved the trilogy - Pullman makes a complete world, bridging reality and fantasy with strong interesting characters, one of whom is a feisty 12 year old girl. I loved the books so much that I replaced two of my three mass-market paperbacks with hardcover dust-jacketed editions. I am leery about the movie. The books are so dense with intrigue and detail that of necessity will be left out of the movie, and that will be a disappointment.
I can think of only one movie that seamlessly recreated a book, so that you could see the book, read the movie, read the book, see the movie, and not be disappointed - and that was the Merchant Ivory film of Forster's A Room With A View. Heavenly movie, exquisitely done.
Nobody's Fool, with Paul Newman, was a wonderful movie. Years later, I read Richard Russo's book - and was retrospectively disappointed in the movie - so much detail in the book had been left out of the movie. I know it has to be that way, but I still expect perfection.
What other movies are out there that really maintain the density and detail of the book from which they came?
P.S. "Modest, Assertive, Spontaneous, Solitary and Shy" is a pretty spot-on description of me, if I may say so myself.