28 September 2007
Magpie Needs...
Magpie needs the sparkle sparkle.
Magpie needs your help.
Magpie needs the function array change key case.
Magpie needs trees for nesting.
Magpie needs two parsers.
Magpie needs to be upgraded.
Magpie needs to be rescued.
Magpie needs to do something about its waiting times.
Magpie needs two blue.
Magpie needs no description.
Magpie needs defending.
Magpie needs to rescue the moon.
Magpie needs braces.
Magpie needs help.
A Google game, stolen from Niobe. It's found poetry.
27 September 2007
CSA Week 17 - SQUASH!
- Sunshine Kabocha Squash (1)
- Mei Qing Choi (1 head)
- Red Russian Kale (1 bunch)
- Broccoli (1 head)
- Fennel (1 bulb)
- Beefsteak Tomatoes (4)
- Juliet Tomatoes (pint)
- Mariachi Hot Peppers (3)
- Green Beans (quart)
- Lettuce
- Basil
- Cilantro
- Arugula
I will be brave; I will try to find a palatable way to prepare the squash. Otherwise, it would make a very sweet little jack-o-lantern, and Halloween is just around the corner...
We are finally at the point of drowning in vegetables. We are overrun with broccoli, awash in tomatoes, swimming in peppers, inundated with salad greens. It may be time to start putting some things (other than tomatoes) into the freezer. Like soup, glorious soup. The thing about soup is that it is generally thoroughly forgiving. And, if frozen in two-cup containers, it makes a perfect lunch for a workday - toss the frozen container in your bag, stick it in the waver at lunchtime, and ta da! Nearly instant, very virtuous lunch. Need soup inspiration? Try Mad Hatter - she wrote a delicious post with a divinely witty title: A soupçon of soup's on.
26 September 2007
Sick Chicken Update
But, I now know why sick chickens need junket: Because Mr. Hippity says so.
There was an eccentric pair of 1960s singer/songwriter/story tellers - Jim Copp and Ed Brown - who put out a series of self-produced records in which they included sound effects, hand-drawn art work, a pop-out cardboard theater, and a general goofiness. And we had at least one of the records in the house when I was a kid - though my younger sister remembers it better than me, and she still has that original LP.
Anyway, armed with a few search terms tossed out by my mother (Copp, Brown, Gumdrop Follies), I dove into Google and found that the records are still around - on LP, cassette tape and/or CD - direct from the original publisher. And, I found a gloriously peculiar site for collectors and fans of weird music, the forum archives of which pointed me towards the correct song: Mr. Hippity's Pull Toy - in which Mr. Hippity believes that his chicken pull toy is dying and requires Junket for a cure. And so, I ordered a CD copy of A Fidgety Frolic, and await its arrival to share with my formerly sick chicken.
25 September 2007
Musical Esoterica
Someone in the office is listening to music - a cacophonous non-linear hodgepodge - dubbing a CD to minidisk to use in the studio. I finally asked "what IS that?" "Xenakis" was the reply, "sounds like bad Meredith Monk".
And here's what happened in the car the other day:
Miss M. has become quite fond of the Pink Martini song "Hey Eugene". When I started the disk from the beginning, that is, not jumping directly to "Hey Eugene" as we often do, she asked "Is that Newgene's Mommy?"
Maybe you had to be there. Both times.
24 September 2007
Monday Mission: "Dear John"
When we got together a couple of months ago, I thought you were great. We fit together well, you complemented me, and you were game to go everywhere I go. But then, you started to flag in your support for me. I think there’s something wrong with you, the way that you just kept slipping away from me. And then, I caught you on the subway, with an elderly woman. It was then that I knew things were over, and you weren’t the shoe for me.
-Magpie
[This post is a Monday Mission - today's was to write a post in the form of a rejection letter. There's more at Painted Maypole.]
21 September 2007
Kitsch
I had a lot of orthodonture as a child. The orthodontist, a sadistic man named Morris, had a whole wall of tightly-spaced narrow glass shelves full of plaster casts of other children's teeth. I can still remember what it felt like to bite down into the u-shaped trough of goo, which hit so far back in the mouth that it was impossible not to gag. And then the rubber bands and wax and pain and retainers...not fun, not fun at all. W. never had to go to the orthodontist. I hope that Miss M. has inherited his teeth and not mine.
She likes to play with the plaster teeth in the bathroom cabinet. Not a squeamish child, no not at all.
20 September 2007
Thorny Thursday Thirteen
- Had a pedicure
- Traveled to the Frisian Islands
- Owned diamonds
- Eaten roadkill
- Driven cross country
- Drank absinthe
- Been self-employed
- Flown a plane
- Gotten a speeding ticket
- Played golf
- Had dinner at Per Se
- Smoked a cigarette
- Sailed to Europe on a Polish freighter
The prime numbered items I think I’d like to do. The others? I don’t think so.
19 September 2007
CSA Week 16 - Tomato Tart
- Italia Peppers (4)
- Potatoes (1 quart)
- Juliet Tomatoes (1 pint)
- Beefsteak Tomatoes (1 quart)
- Broccoli Rabe
- Tatsoi
- Garlic (2 heads)
- Sweet Corn (3 ears)
- Salad Mix
- Basil
- Arugula
Last night's dinner was a splendid tomato tart, though the recipe called it a "pie". But it was open-faced and baked in a tart shell, so I think it's a tomato tart. Besides, I'm the queen of tarts, not the queen of pies. It's got better prosody.
Tomato Pie*
(Adapted from From Asparagus to Zucchini: Madison Area Community Supported Agriculture Coalition)
Pie crust
6 plum tomatoes, cut 1/4 inch thick
Salt (optional)
2 cups shredded cheese**
Olive oil
1/3 cup minced fresh basil
1/2 t. ground pepper
Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Fit pie crust to a 9-10" tart pan. Do not prick crust. Partially bake 9-11 minutes or until golden. (If crust puffs up, gently press back with back of wooden spoon.) Remove and cool crust. Reduce oven heat to 375 degrees. Sprinkle tomatoes with salt, if desired, and place in single layer on paper towels; let drain 30 minutes***. Pat dry. Sprinkle cheese evenly in cooled pastry shell. Arrange tomatoes over cheese in an overlapping circular pattern, covering surface. Drizzle tomatoes with olive oil. Sprinkle with basil and pepper. Bake 30-35 minutes. Let stand 10 minutes before slicing. Serve hot or at room temperature.
* The recipe called it a "southern" tomato pie. I don't know what's southern about it, but I'm from the Northeast.
** The recipe called for mozzarella or swiss; I used cheddar because it's what I had. I think almost any cheese would work, except maybe Velveeta or Brie.
*** I did this draining thing, but I think it was unnecessary. Maybe it would be a good idea if you were using beefsteak tomatoes instead of plum...
18 September 2007
The Coffee Truck and the Pink Medicine
Miss M.: Look, the coffee truck!
Me: Actually it's UPS.
Miss M.: The one that brought my sleeping bag?
Me, to woman laughing nearby: Yes, four months ago.
Miss M.: What's it doing?
Me: Bringing stuff to the doctors.
Miss M.: Sleeping bags?
Little does she know that every month the UPS truck brings us four pounds of Peet's coffee. It is indeed the coffee truck, more so than the sleeping bag truck.
She's a little better today - but didn't want to take her (pink) amoxicillin, demanding instead the (red) acetaminophen: I want red medicine, the pink medicine doesn't match my plate!
I've unsuccessfully tried logic: But the pink medicine matches your pajamas.
And I've tried bribery: You can't go to Grandma's unless you take your pink medicine.
Finally, I pretended she was a cat, stuck the medicine syringe in her cheek and clamped her jaw shut.
17 September 2007
Sick Chickens
I feel terrible that we were at someone's house just before she showed any symptoms, because she was likely contagious.
But here's the question: why is it that I think sick chickens need junket? Was there some old advertising slogan along the lines of "junket is for sick chickens"? Or did I once invent that in a feverish moment? Or did my mother make it up?
I thought of making her some junket - but I think I may make rice pudding instead.
Edited to add: Junket is a brand name for a rennet tablet. It's used to make a dessert by coagulating sweetened milk. Rennet is also used for cheese making.
16 September 2007
The Owl and The Pussycat
Wow. These digitized books are an amazing thing. They're all supposedly out of copyright, so once it's out there on the web, it's available to me and to you and to anyone else. I found that the New York Public Library's copy of the Lear was up there, so I downloaded the large pdf - it turned out to be the same book as mine. But their copy has had the spine taped back together (with what looks like Scotch tape) and mine has a color illustration up front that differs from theirs. So that the internet is complete (hah!), here's the illustration variant - a very whimsical color plate of the owl looking lecherous and the pussycat simpering alongside. The piggy-wig (with a ring at the end of his nose) and the turkey (who lives on the hill) are in the background.
15 September 2007
14 September 2007
What Should I Be When I Grow Up?
- Personal Financial Planner
- Certified Public Accountant
- Corporate / Commercial Lawyer
- Research Analyst (Financial)
- Lobbyist
- Economist
- Economic Development Officer
- Customs Broker
- Special Effects Technician
- Judge
I am rather appalled at how boring that all sounds, while at the same time, kind of bemused - I'm neither #1 nor #2, but not all that far off. And I'd be a great judge, but I'd have to be a lawyer first. But, what is #9 doing in there? Does that speak to my penchant for tossing water balloons off the deck?
Most interesting is that nowhere on the list of 40 is a job title that comes close to what I actually do. Maybe that's because "Director of Everything Else" is just too idiosyncratic?
13 September 2007
CSA Week 15
In addition, posting these lists is my little subtle proselytizing for the CSA movement. CSA stands for community sponsored (or supported) agriculture. In a nutshell, a bunch of people buy shares in a farm. In return for money provided up front, the farm distributes all of its produce to the members. In the case of the farm we belong to, they distribute at 18 pick up sites between Albany and New York City. We pick up at someone's house in the next town. The site is open from 3 to 7 one day a week, and is staffed by one of the members (my turn comes in November). The produce is set out in plastic boxes with hinged lids and there's a list of what's included for the week - how many ears of corn, how much lettuce, etc. You bring your own bags and pack it yourself. Other farms operate slightly differently - I know of some that pack each family's share into a box. Lots let you pick up at the farm.
If you're interested in finding a CSA near you, try Local Harvest or Biodynamics. We had to sign up and pay in the winter, for a share that began in June.
And now, without further ado, here's what we picked up yesterday:
- Sweet Corn (4)
- Yukina Savoy (a Chinese cabbage, loose greens)
- Mei-Ching-Choi (1 head, like bok choi)
- Broccoli (1 huge head)
- Beefsteak Tomatoes (3)
- Juliet Tomatoes (1 pint)
- Plum Tomatoes (1 quart)
- Ping Pong Tomatoes (1 quart)
- String Beans
- Garlic (2 heads)
- Red skinned potatoes (1 quart)
- Sweet Red Italia Peppers (3)
- Salad Mix
- Cilantro (but I didn't take any)
- Arugula
- Basil
I am secretly thrilled that the expected winter squash did not materialize. I'm sure we'll be seeing more winter squash than I would like to see in a lifetime. Maybe I'll be converted. I'm not holding my breath.
What I'm Reading
At least the child isn't drinking coffee.
12 September 2007
More little NY moments that made me smile
- Small boy, about 4, riding atop his smaller sister’s stroller – with his toenails painted, white on one foot, red on the other.
- Lovely tall blonde woman on the subway with the most animated baby girl riding high, facing outward, in her Bjorn – a two-toned lime and army green Bjorn.
- Biker dude on commuter train, wearing Harley vest and Harley fingerless gloves, carrying a totebag – printed all over with an image of Monet’s waterlilies.
- Two young Japanese women, sharing a tray of sushi out of a plastic bag, with chopsticks, and washing it down with chocolate soy milk – at 9:00 in the morning, on the subway.
Why yes, I do have blue eyes!
You Are a Blue Crayon |
Your world is colored in calm, understated, deep colors. You are a loyal person, and the truest friend anyone could hope to find. On the inside, you tend to be emotional and even a bit moody. However, you know that people depend on you. So you put on a strong front. |
11 September 2007
The Chatt'ring Magpie
In 1817, John Marshall, a London publisher, put out "The Hopping, Prating, Chatt'ring Magpie – A game of Questions and Commands for Children." It is described in a recent bookseller's catalogue as being a "round robin memory counting game that ends with inflicting punishment on the loser."
It lacks, most likely, the whip that was polybagged with the original edition.
The only thing is, there weren’t any plastic bags in 1817. Maybe the whip was sold separately? Seriously though, what’s with a game that inflicts punishment on the loser? Isn’t losing enough?
10 September 2007
I Know It
I had a pet mouse when I was about five. A black mouse. Named Schwartz*. One morning my mother discovered that he had expired during the night. She went downstairs to drink some coffee and smoke a cigarette while she contemplated how to tell her small child about the dead mouse. When I came downstairs, and sat down to eat my cereal, she told me: “Your mouse is dead”. I looked up and said "I know it". She knew then.
Somehow, this little tale seemed an appropriate introduction to two more bloggity awards. Mayberry Mom says I'm a schmoozer. And Oh, The Joys says I'm nice. I am verklempt all over again. I used to be crusty, and now I'm a nice schmoozer? Then again, my husband would probably say still I'm crusty, and I know that my mother would. Can't be all things to all people, I guess.
But I know how to pass my prizes along!
I hereby dub Julie Pippert of Using My Words a good schmoozer (and community builder, through her Hump Day Hmms). She is a great writer and has the best internet monikers for her kids ever: Patience and Persistence. If that doesn't describe young ones to a T, I don't know what does.
And I hereby dub S. of Rhymes with Javelin as just plain nice, not to mention kind and smart and empathetic. And she knits with fishing line! And grows her own tomatoes! And she owns a bookstore! She's pretty cool.
Thank you Mayberry Mom and Oh, The Joys for bestowing these honors upon me so that I could pass them along.
*That’s how I’ve always spelled it – but it’s kind of a corruption. The Yiddish is “shvartz”, German is “Schwarz”. In any case, it was a black mouse, and we probably shouldn't have called it that. What did I know? I was only five.
09 September 2007
Stunted Growth
07 September 2007
I Went Out and Shot a Couch
Periodically, like most people, I go through my closet and toss, sell or donate the things I am never going to wear again. But every time I lay my hands on this jacket, I pat it, straighten it on the hanger, and put it back in the closet. I just can't get rid of it. I don't wear it. I'm not going to wear it. I haven't worn it in, oh, 15 years?
I used to wear it. I'd wear it with jeans and a black turtleneck, and I got lots of compliments. The jacket is, after all, eye-catching. And every time someone said something, I got to reply merrily "Thank you. I went out and shot a couch."
The jacket has been in my possession for at least 20 years, and if memory serves me correctly, my sister had the SAME jacket. Imagine. There were two of them. I wonder what happened to hers.
I've just had an epiphany, though. I think I'll cut up the jacket and turn it into a throw pillow. Wouldn't that be a nice karmic reincarnation? Couch to jacket to throw pillow? Too bad it doesn't go with my living room.
06 September 2007
CSA Week 14 and a neighborly pie
- Sweet Corn (6)
- Potatoes (3 big white ones)
- Broccoli Rabe
- Broccoli
Heirloom Tomatoes- Juliet Tomatoes (1 quart)
- Red Onion (1)
- Garlic (1 head)
- Sweet Red Italia Peppers (4)
- Salad Mix
- Cilantro
- Arugula
- Parsley
Several weeks ago, Julie's Hump Day Hmmm was about neighbors. The whole time that I was growing up, there was a Labor Day party across the street (or on my mother's porch if it rained). It was mostly a block party, but with lots of honorary members - people who lived across town or on the next block. The hosts provided tables and ice and wine and lemonade and paper plates and plastic cups and forks. And the food was potluck: everyone brought something, nearly universally homemade. And some of those homemade things were perennial: the plum torte from down the hill, the tabouli that my mother made every year, and the potato pie from a woman in the next block. That potato pie is divine, and it was always the first thing to be gone when the vultures descended upon the tables of food.
So, though Labor Day has come and gone, here is that recipe for the divine Potato Pie.
Potato Pie
3 pounds of potatoes (~8)
1 medium onion, chopped
2 T. chopped parsley
2 1/2 t. salt
1/2 t. ground pepper
3 T. butter
1 egg yolk mixed with 2 T. water
1 cup heavy cream at room temperature
Butter pie dough for a double crust pie
Peel potatoes, and slice thinly. Toss with onion, salt, pepper, parsley - and set aside. Fit pastry to a 11.75 x 7.5 x 1.75" pan (or 10" round pie plate). Drain liquid from potatoes. Fill pastry, dot potatoes with butter. Add top crust. Cut 4-5 good sized slits, and brush top with egg yolk. Bake at 375° until potatoes are tender - 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 hours. Take out of oven and pour cream bit by bit in the slits, letting it absorb (this takes patience!). Eat at room temperature. Or, bring to your next block party and watch it disappear!
05 September 2007
Pint Sized Grammar
How she asks for things:
Instead of using "tomorrow":
Sometimes it sounds like she's speaking English as a second language.
04 September 2007
Book Karma, September edition
Edited to add: Her Grace won!
02 September 2007
Preparing for Winter
The roasted tomatoes get a sprinkle of dried herbs, salt, and pepper and a tiny drizzle of olive oil, and go in the oven for a couple of hours at about 225°. They dry out a little and collapse a bit. We'll then freeze them on the sheet pans, and transfer them to bags when they're fully hard.
The sauce is just tomato, red onion, garlic, basil, carrot, celery and a glug of olive oil. Nothing is sauteed; it's just all cooked down at once, and then run through the food mill. It's fine over pasta as is, or can be the base for something more complicated. I don't know how big that stock pot is, but yes, that is a lot of sauce. It wasn't cooked in that pot...it was done in three smaller batches and then combined to cool before being divided up into freezer containers.
The ABCs of Suburban Real Estate
Deer eat forsythia.
Grass, hedges, insects join knotweed.
Lo, McMansion needs one patio.
Quality Realtor says to utilize visual wiles.
Xeriscape yard.
Zoysia!
It's really terrible, especially in light of the wonderous ones produced by Slouching Mom and Niobe.
But it amused me no end.
I am easily amused?