Posts Tagged ‘Random’
May 9, 2013
A few weeks ago, I spent a day helping a friend traitor to the cause pack her kitchen for her move to Austin. Since I’m one winged, the most I could do was clean out her fridge. We started talking about all those parts of/left over items that you use a few times and they get shoved to the back. We both can, shop farmers markets and generally try to minimize our carbon foot print (her husband makes a wicked beer by the way). Fast forward to a get well soon gift from a college friend who knows of my love of canning and quirky gifts. The result ? 2 jars of beer jelly (you read that right, beer jelly) from a Brooklyn company called Anarchy In a Jar. I have to admit, I was a bit perplexed. I like beer, I like jam/jelly. But along the lines of I like chicken and I like peanut butter cups, I’m not seeing how they work together.
The only thing saving me at the moment is the Food Network. I’m sick of daytime television as I am recovering from this Bankart repair. On a whim In a moment of insanity, I decided to do my very own Chopped challenge. Mostly to alleviate the fear of opening the jar of beer jelly. For the record, beer jelly has a heavy beer taste with a sweet undercurrent along the lines of apple juice (which makes sense since they are the top 2 ingredients). I didn’t know any of this before deciding to use what was in my fridge to make dinner using the beer jelly as the gotcha.

Beer jelly, walnuts, spinach, horseradish sauce, pork chops, soy sauce
So there are my mandatory items: all selected before the opening of the jelly (or reading the label). Knowing that jelly can be a bit sweet, I went with something salty to try to balance it. I prefer a bit of a kick so went with the horseradish sauce. The meat is from the absolutely fantastic 8 O’clock Ranch (really, if you are in their delivery area and don’t buy from them?). The walnuts and spinach are from Wegman’s. The horseradish was rescued from my friend. I used the gluten-free soy in my fridge but needed the smaller one for the pic.
I created a marinade of the jelly, 2 tablespoons of horseradish and a tad too much soy (I had to cut it with 2 tablespoons of local honey). It probably should have been a jar of jelly and 2 tablespoons each of the horseradish and soy. I had to use the honey to kill a bit of the salt.
I seared the pork on both sides on a very hot grill pan turning 4 times (these were completely thawed boneless chops). In what would cause the Chopped judges to take off points for creativity, I opted for a variation of a spinach salad.

Local honey, madeira vinegar, hard boiled egg, pancetta, Dijon mustard
With the meat resting, I chopped the egg and added it to the spinach and walnuts. I cooked the pancetta (points off, it was a bit saltier than I expected). Then deglazed the pan with the vinegar (around 2T and 1T of Dijon mustard).

Frying pancetta

Deglazing with mustard and vinegar
I tossed the warm pancetta into the salad to get a bit of a wilt, tossed in the dressing platted I’m sure I would have been axed (I forgot a starch; you know how those judges are). But a ton of fun when trying to figure out how to use beer jelly. And yup. I contacted Anarchy in a Jar to see where I could get a few more bottles. I’m really not in the mood to start making beer jelly. But it is a great base for fun cooking.

Really glad I was kicked off before the dessert round. :)
Tags:8 o'Clock Ranch, Anarchy in a Jar, beer jelly, Chopped, cooking, csa, food, Food Network, fun, gluten free, local business, Random
Posted in Cooking, CSA, Gluten Free | 2 Comments »
May 7, 2013
Truth: I hate physical therapy. I’m probably going to hear from everybody I’ve ever known who is related to, married to, thought about becoming a PT. I like my PT. He’s quirky. I’m quirky. It’s a good fit. He makes his own beer and apparently made some huge tap/kegging system in the basement of his house.
PT is the test of patience. I’m not patient. I’m beyond not patient. I’m like I had surgery 3 weeks ago and why can’t my shoulder be normal now not patient. (Never mind it took a solid 90 minutes for the surgeon to clean OUT the debris before he could repair the labral tear). I’m frustrated and bored.
There is a downside for taking those mid-day appointments. I’m surrounded by the Real Housewives Of crowd and people old(er) than my grandmother. I was laying there letting my pt stretch my shoulder in the limits and one of his other patients came in and was waiting with her ankle encased in a heat pack. I wasn’t talking and trying to remember that key idea of exhaling on the stretch and he asked her how she was because I sure as hell wasn’t in the mood to talk.
PT: How was it last week after you left.
ROP (random old person): Well, I had a touch of food poisoning from something. And then, let me think, on Friday I had a root canal. Oh, and yesterday was the worst I
PT: (obvious this was not the right answer). Uh, xxxx, when I say how was it after last week, I’m talking just about your ankle.
ROP: Oh, my ankle? It’s fine. I just am having issues with (something even I won’t put on a blog).
Ok, I *get* that when you drop a few anchors in to the labrum, the not so patient patient has to wait for the anchor to secure to the bone. I get that I’m wildly lucky that the swelling has decreased a ton and there is more and more passive range. I’m somewhat twisted in that I’m happy that I get to line up an excercise ball that has Dora’s face on it and give her a few black eyes. I’d prefer Barney but apparently those kept disappearing.
I have no patience. I leave my 2x pt sessions frustrated because although the guy next to me who is 16 weeks out his Bankart repair was telling me the progress ramp and I can ‘see’ I’m on target (which for shoulders is the key . . . there isn’t an acceleration curve) and he’s there one day a week the same time as me. I get the creaking is normal. It doesn’t hurt it’s just sort of unnerving.
The little steps of using the arm bike with my left arm (holding on only with my right arm) is progress. I’m on a short(er than normal in PT) fuse. I wanted to rip the cell phone out of the hands of a scantily clad ring heavy enough to break a finger trophy wife of the metro-west. I get you are busy and have to take child to-from some random event. But I don’t need to hear about it. Text. Or better yet: that sign that says “do not use cell phones in treatment areas” follow it. (Her PT corralled her drama).
As much as I enjoyed the conversation with the guy who had a similar surgery, he’s facing two more months of PT. I wanted to cry. That’s my life right now. PT, ice, walking around the neighborhood if the shoulder is ok enough, icing. I don’t think I realized how much my non-dominant shoulder is involved in so much of what I do on a daily basis.
And I keep telling myself: Bankart’s are 6 months to return to pre-surgery. One month (almost) down; 5 to go.
Tags:Bankart repair, health, ice, musings, physical therapy, PT, Random, rehab, shoulder, things that aren't common sense but should be
Posted in Shoulder | Leave a Comment »
May 1, 2013
Along Boylston

Make shift Memorial at Copley.





Also at Copley.

Re-glassing of Marathon Sports.

For the first time since the marathon, I had to be in the Copley area. I snagged a few pictures. I’ve always thought that make shift memorials were weird. As I wandered around the one that has sprung up on the Boylston side of Copley, looking at random pictures, quotes, I understood. New Englanders in general don’t show a lot of emotion. There were tears shed. The ever-present car horns that are Boston were absent, nary a Duck Boat in site and the street musicians were absent. Copley has changed. We are still struggling. We need the satellite trucks gone. Our farmer’s market needs to open on time. We will heal. We are changed. But we are #oneboston.
I’ve lived here longer than anyplace aside from my native Chicago. I’m proud to call Boston home. And our city will only be better. Because, to quote the incident commander, “It’s what we do. We are better than them.” We are #bostonstrong.
Tags:#bostonstrong, #oneboston, 4/15/2013, anger, Boston, Copley Square, diversity, healing, local business, marathon, musings, people, Random, Reflections, religion, social media, tolerance
Posted in People, Politics, Popular Culture, Reflections, Sports | 1 Comment »
January 1, 2013

Nahant Beach
Cross the first one off the list. Not often a fur clad, Uggs wearing woman and a bagpipper encourage me to take a plunge into the ocean in winter with some friends! Happy New Year!!
Tags:friends, fun, lack of common sense, New Year's Resolution, ocean, people watching, pictures, Random
Posted in People, Popular Culture | Leave a Comment »
December 31, 2012
Some will take 5 minutes, some a few months. . . . just a list of random things I thought I’d try to do in 2013.
1) Polar Bear Plunge
2) Read 50 Shades of Gray
3) Read Team of Rivals
4) Read In the Garden of Beasts
5) Read Fall of Giants
6) Read The Great Influenza
7) Read Book #6 (Title: TBD)
8) Read Book #7 (Title: TBD)
9) Read Book #8 (Title: TBD)
10) Read Book #9 (Title: TBD)
11) Read Book #10 (Title: TBD)
12) Read Book #11 (Title TBD)
13) Read Book #12 (Title TBD)
14) Participate in the SNAP challenge (one week, $25 all 7 days)
15) Run a 5K
16) Write a letter instead of shooting a long email
17) Walk the Freedom Trail
18) Go to a Red Sox/Yankees game
19) Participate in the USPS 3K challenge
20) Unplug from social media for a week.
21) Walk, run, jog 500 miles (I mean, I’ve got a YEAR)
22) Go to Walden Pond. (Such a bad local tourist)
23) Get over my fear of needles and go to the dentist
24) Take a yoga class
25) Volunteer 50 hours
26) Go to Northern California
27) Go to New Orleans
28) Go to Puerto Rico
29) Learn to cook tamales
30) Make an intentional collage
31) Go vegetarian for a week
32) Menu plan for a week . . . and follow it!
33) Bike 1000 miles (see the I’ve got a year note)
34) Walk away from an argument
35) Work a 44 hour week
36) Make sure all that dang adult paperwork is taken care of
37) Pay off the remaining credit card debt
38) Go to the MFA once a month
39) Go to NYC just to go to MOOD!
40) Walk the Freedom Trail
41) Prehab my shoulder in an attempt to avoid surgery
42) Organize guest room
43) Organize kitchen
44) Find new homes for orphaned socks.
45) Start to learn Spanish.
46) Finish my holiday shopping by October.
47) Hollins Hanukah II
48) Journal more
49) Sending my 2012 Christmas cards by oh, St. Patrick’s Day.
50) Go fall camping
51) Take a fun class at one of the zillion extension centers
52) Try to be more zen.
Tags:2013, food, fun, health, Kitchen, musings, New Year's Resolution, organization, personal responsiblity, Random, reading, Reflections, resolutions, social justice, social media
Posted in Popular Culture, Reflections | 3 Comments »
December 23, 2012
Like most of us, I’ve been stumbling around the past 9 or so days trying to figure out what went so horrifically wrong in Newtown on the 14th. Of course there are not real answers, only ideas and some incredibly stupid suggestions (see the NRA). We talk about ”a culture of violence” and other such random excuses (let’s face it, most of the world sees the same movies, plays the same video games and yet there isn’t a daily news story on a mass shooting).
Layered on top of the tragic chaos of Newtown, was the absolute insanity of the Mayan prophecy. I received a text yesterday from my middle nephew “bummed the world didn’t end.” I laughed. That guilty laugh that I remember from right after 9/11. And a fleeting idea: maybe the Mayans were right. My idealistic side hopes that maybe, just maybe we’ve reached the end of the finger pointing, blame games. The senseless acts of violence. The culture of “it’s not my fault”. The community of self.
I thought about those in and around Newtown who are trying to find words when there are no words. There are no answers. I sat and thought for a moment, we created this. We created this chaos.
I’m not going to debate the merits of who should have a gun and who shouldn’t. I don’t know why one person who was haunted by what must have been horrific demons killed 27 people before killing himself. But as I sit in the darkness of the early winter, as we start to celebrate the coming of the light, I can’t help but think maybe it’s time to hope the Mayan’s were right. That the world did end and we seized the moment to create a new one.
Maybe it’s because I’m getting older. Or maybe because I’ve spoken to my 6-7 year old nephew and nieces, but I found myself thinking, the true tragedy of Newtown would be to let it become like Columbine, Northern Illinois University, Virginia Tech, Puducah, Aurora, Portland and simply a news cycle. The lives have been lost. The dreams have been shattered.
It’s time for us to build a new world: one where six year olds doesn’t calmly explain to his aunt the emergency plan for each location of his school for fire, tornado and lock down. It’s our time to lead. We finally have to say enough is enough.
I don’t have the answers. I’m not even sure I know all the questions. I know I’m exhausted of news that simply brings more heartache.
Tags:community, cranky, Mayan, Newtown, Random, shooting, things that aren't common sense but should be
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
November 11, 2012
I have no clue how many parts will be in this story. Think of it as some free form epic poem. I’m on a quest to make a piecaken for a post-thanksgiving potluck. A few minor details:
1) I don’t bake. Cook yes, bake no.
2) I have a torn rotator cuff on my non-dominant hand (that is for sympathy).
3) I don’t like pre-made mixes. I mean, if you are going to make a piecaken, seriously? Mrs. Smith meets Betty Crocker?
4) I’m not wild about apples or spice cakes which hinders flavor profiles.
5) There seems to be a lack of information on how to make a piecaken compared to what not to do and how it is a bad idea to make a piecaken because how it points towards American excess.
Lucky for me, I have to make 2 pies for work this week for a going away party (I figure it’s a good way to test textures). Right now, I’m searching for good cake receipes. And really? Why is it the only information I can find on the piecaken how to is from people who use cake mixes?
Tags:cooking, food, pie, piecaken, Random, things that aren't common sense but should be
Posted in Cooking | Leave a Comment »
September 16, 2012
In fairness, both candidates have made comments regarding no cuts for households earning less than either $200,000 or $250,000 (depending on candidate) in the recent tax plan. I’ve seen a host of comments regarding that particular line in the sand. And then I started to wonder. I randomly picked 2 professions: A RN (with a BSN) and an accountant to make up the 2 income household. According to the March 27, 2012 data release from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean accountant salary in the U.S. runs $70,130 per year. The median annual base salary for a registered nurse in the United States is at $65,918. This household would have a base salary for of $136,048. Both are professional jobs that require at least a 4 year college degree. Here are some city by city comparisons:
I used Des Moines, IA as the point of comparison: it’s fairly economically stable, Midwestern city.
To maintain the same standard of living that $136,048 would create in Des Moines, the mythical couple would need to make:
$180,527: Phoenix, AZ
$214,251: Los Angeles, CA
$217,407: Oakland, CA (live), SF (work)
$130,345: Birmingham, AL
$175,124: Anchorage, AK
$161,690: Denver, CO
$237,850: Washington, DC
$142,879: Jacksonville, FL
$131,401: Columbus, GA
$175,770: Chicago, IL
$129,273: Indianapolis, IN
$132,985: Kansas City, KS
$139,669: New Orleans, LA
$162,577: Minneapolis/St. Paul
$177,962: Baltimore, MD
$213,582: Boston, MA
$187,325: Hartford, CT
$132,839: Omaha, NE
$146,206: Albuquerque, NM
$273,400: New York, NY (all boroughs)
$134,666: Tulsa, OK
$145,961: Pittsburgh, PA
$140,326: Roanoke, VA
$254,583: Honolulu, HI
There is a real danger of a line in the sand approach to tax based on income without matrices to the cost of living factor by zip code. Randomly picking 2 “average” jobs for a family and plugging them into the salary.com conversion shows a wide array of what the income needed to maintain the same standard of living based on region for the same job. We can’t find relief for the vanishing middle class buy an arbitrary line. Part of the alleged tax reform has to include an actualization of real income by region.
Tags:2012 presidental election, economics, Obama, presidental election, Random, Romney, salary, social justice, things that aren't common sense but should be, tolerance
Posted in Election Countdown, Finances | Leave a Comment »
September 13, 2012
I am not going to pretend to be unbiased regarding this situation. I have stated my disgust in more private forms of social media for about a year. Much of the facts are shrouded in the silence that comes with a cover-up, a disgrace and most of all an attempt to preserve a reputation of what was national and is now mostly regional mid-tier academic institution.
What I know is that last fall; Dr. Mark S. Burrows was dismissed from Andover-Newton Theological School. In a letter dated on 10/21/2011 from school president, Rev. Nick Carter, it was stated that Dr. Burrows was dismissed for “due to unprofessional, unethical and immoral behavior involving failure to maintain professional boundaries with students.” As an alumna, I did not receive the letter sent to the Andover Newton Community and “close friends”; I received several copies via e-mail from alumni/alumnae.
At the close of the letter, Rev. Carter asks that “you appreciate the sensitivity of this and limit what you say to others.”
Here is the response I should have sent last year:
Go to hell. Rev. Carter is asking for silence to save the reputation of the professor involved and the institution that employed him for many years. Rev. Carter, instead of using this as an opportunity to say that the reasons for Dr. Burrows’ termination were wholly unacceptable in a public manner (asking community for silence is something that has been vilified by criticizers of Penn State, the Roman Catholic Church and other organizations that have dealt with “immoral behavior” issues.) At the time, or shortly before, Dr. Burrows was Rev. Dr. Burrows. He is no longer an ordained minister according to his personal web site. He has accepted another teaching position in Germany to begin in 2013 (his wife is German). Does this institution know of the reasons behind Dr. Burrows’ dismissal? Or has the wider community of Andover-Newton (this author included) conspired in duplicitous behavior to save an institution?
ANTS is just as much as an institution as Penn State Football. Is there a difference between “immoral behavior” between adults and children: perhaps. The underlying tenant is the same: a person in power (real or perceived) demanded something causing harm to another. The difference is in the legal aspect: ANTS did not break a law, some at PSU did.
Rev. Carter and ANTS did not use this as an opportunity to have open and real discussions on the abuse of power, the damage to the reputation this can cause. Instead, they swept the matter under the rug. Any institution that has faced a situation (a family, an organization, a football program or a university) often gives the first response of “I had no idea”. This is not an act solely out of ignorance: but lack of awareness, lack of a safe environment for discussions without fear of retribution and the inherent power dynamic that tends to present itself in all structures.
Instead of saying “what can we learn, how can we educate ourselves as supposed moral/ethical/religious leaders”, the president of the nation’s oldest theological school, Rev. Nick Carter, requested silence.
The time for silence surrounding the abuse of power is long gone. If an organization wants to be a leader, wants to mold leaders, wants to demonstrate how to answer the hard questions, then speaking up is the action: not a plea for silence.
I know I will offend people with this: I don’t care. Read that again: I don’t care. I am embarrassed by my actions of a year ago: I should have spoken up then. I am embarrassed to hold a degree from this institution that publically touts itself as liberal and forward thinking, but in one of its darkest hours returned to the traditional response of get the offender out the door and ask for silence to preserve the institution.
Tags:abuse of power, Andover Newton Theological School, anger, ANTS, dismissal, Dr. Mark Burrows, immoral, leadership, Mark Burrows, musings, Nick Carter, people, personal responsiblity, Random, Reflections, religion, Rev. Nick Carter, scandal, seminary, social media, theology, things that aren't common sense but should be, tolerance
Posted in Lent, People, Reflections | Leave a Comment »
September 1, 2012
It was a busy day at the day job and then the watermelon incident : 2 watermelons + one cat = one huge sticky mess. So, convention number one is over: convention number two about to start (lies, lies and damn lies) and a twitter account about an empty chair. Let the countdown continue. . . . . .
71: The Smithsonian(s): All of them. Most are free. Yes, most of them are on the Mall in DC which is its own mess but really? Everything from The Fonz’s jacket, to a returning Gemini capsule and the Hope Diamond scattered around DC. Look, I love the British Museum, the Louvre, MOMA but the single collection of an eclectic bunch of museums dedicated from everything from Air and Space, to different indigenous populations to flat out quirky American pop culture all in one place. I hate going to DC for all of the reasons that make sense but a long weekend trip to the Smithsonian is completely worth it.
70: Dunkin Donuts. New England bias; but really, somebody has to make the donuts. There can be a raging debate (and don’t get me started on the ones in metro Boston not being open 24×7 OR making their own donuts) about what is the “best” donut (honestly, there is something insanely decadent about a hot Krispe Kreme donut). But millions of New Englanders greet the day with a regular coffee: which of course means with cream and sugar.
69: The Little League World Series: It’s our sport, but teams from all over come to compete. Did you catch the team from Uganda this year? First time an African nation won a game (sorry Oregon). Did you see the introduction of the players without subtitles? Did you see kids getting to be kids? It’s a slice of summer. And it’s a reminder that really, it’s a game. Some of those kids might get college scholarships, a lucky few might make a living out of sports but for one summer, they were on the top of the kid world. And I feel so bad for the loosing team. They really are just kids.
68: The Roll Call of States: Each convention does it. Somebody stands up and casts the delegate votes for each state, territory, commonwealth for the party nominee. It’s not just the act of voting (more later on that) but how: Alabama: The state with the 3 last national college football champions. Each state with the opportunity to proclaim something grand, funny, sometime snarky about a neighboring state casting the assigned delegates won in primary battles.
67: The Parade of Mini-Vans: aka, dropping kids off at college. Yes, every nation has something equivalent. However, I live in the Boston area where we have what is known as Allston Christmas. People moving in/out of apartments en masse: couches have been known to be stolen thinking they were for pickers. It’s a riot/terrifying/annoying/hysterical event. Parents lost, not wanting to leave their child, college students all to happy to have the mini-van turn around. And yesterday, as far as the eye could see on I-90 east…moving vans, mini vans, jam packed cars. Thankfully, I was going west.
66: Tailgating: It’s been elevated to a new level by my crazy Kansas cousins. (Beer and Oreos: breakfast of champions). Grilling out before the game be it in West Lafayette, Austin, Boise or Athens there is something about the fall ritual of donning your team colors, cheering them on and watching the sport. And Muck Fichigan: I’m for O-HI-O.
Tags:allston christmas, baseball, college, donuts, dunkin donuts, football, little league world series, museum, O-HI-O, Obama, oreos, Presidential Election, Random, Romney, smithsonian, tailgating, uganda
Posted in Election Countdown, People, Popular Culture, Sports | Leave a Comment »