CARROT GREEN-ONION LEEK CINNAMON SOUP
I invented this soup yesterday. It surprised me - and even surprised (the famously fussy) Christine! Give it a go!
Rating: A +++ This makes a thin-brothed soup with just the right amount of cinnamony sweetness—meaning not too much—combining perfectly with the savory zestiness produced by the tomato, leek, garlic, and cumin, all of this going smashingly well with the carrot pieces. Just very, very good.
Ingredients (for 2)
2 fat cloves garlic
1 fat bunch green onions
1 fat leek
1 big fat carrot
2 tomatoes
1 small carton vegetable stock
Balsamic vinegar
Soy sauce
Cumin
Cinnamon
Directions
Heat a few tablespoons of good olive oil in soup pot - good and hot
Chop garlic into very tiny pieces
Chop green onions into smallish pieces, well up into the green
Slice leek into thin slices
Add the above to very hot oil in pot, stir a bit
Chop carrot into big fat pieces
When the garlic, onions, and leek have gone a good bit soft, add carrot chunks, stir
Slice tomatoes into medium size pieces
When carrot has cooked some - 3 to 5 minutes or so - add tomato to pot, stir
Add a healthy splash of vinegar
Add a bit of soy sauce
Throw a good dash of cumin in
Throw a bit of cinnamon in, stir, stir, stir: you are going to want to be able to taste the cinnamon properly, so do not be shy - but don't go crazy, as too much cinnamon = very bad
Slowly add vegetable stock - keep pot noisy and sizzling/bubbling - stirring as you do
Turn heat down and let it cook for a while - and here's an important note: you want the carrots to be pretty firm, but you want them to have soaked up all the goodness of the other ingredients! So use the carrots as a texture-taste tester timer!
Eat, then...victory!
(We ate it with rice.)
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Underbelly Anniversary
Yesterday late afternoon we were sitting on the veranda reading and chatting and whatnot and Christine said, "You want to go out to eat somewhere?"
I said, "Hmmmmmmm yeah no, not really."
Then I felt bad. We rarely go out to eat.
"Sorry," I said.
Christine said, "That's alright, maybe tomorrow."
Then she said something else.
"Happy Anniversary."
And then she bent her head back to her newspaper, nonchalantly.
The thing that happened in my mind at that moment is almost impossible to describe. I could still see, sort of, but none of what I could see meant anything. My mind was a kind of sharp, white blank you imagine one experiences while being attacked by a large shark. My breathing went shallow. Then it stopped altogether. I felt my mind grasping fat-fingered for something, something I knew was dreadfully important, but that I could not put a name or even a meaning on. It has a shape, I thought. It's big, and block-shaped. It's...it's a MONTH! A MONTH! What is a month? I had no idea. But I knew, deep in my blood, that it was very, very important.
I was finally able to hold this "month" thing in my mind, and determine that these things have names. "August" floated up from the depths of my horror. That's not it, I thought.
Christine was looking at me - queerly - all this time. Several seconds had passed.
Then, I rose, as if a diver, perhaps in Antarctic waters - without a suit - and, in slow, slow motion, broke the surface of the water, with a name on the quivering edges of my mind: "Oc...to...ber."
Oh...dear...
Oc...to...ber...5th...
Oh...no...dear....
"Is it," I asked, in a voice like breaking glass, a far, far away voice that didn't really want to be itself, "October...5th?"
I can only describe Christine at this point as something like a child who has just witnessed several elephants suddenly standing on their hindlegs and expertly swiveling hula-hoops around their hips. She clearly found this torture session of mine a very special kind of amusing.
I of course deserved it.
Thankfully, it was October 4. I had, I must confess, somehow not registered the coming October 5. I kick myself for this. Bad, bad husband.
Christine was of course very forgiving. Did I deserve that, too? Hrrm.
Today we are taking a long city bus ride downtown, to watch one of the largest fireworks shows ever conceived - over the Sydney Harbour Bridge and the Opera House.
Just for us.
Happy 11th Anniversary, baby. I love you more than this...
I said, "Hmmmmmmm yeah no, not really."
Then I felt bad. We rarely go out to eat.
"Sorry," I said.
Christine said, "That's alright, maybe tomorrow."
Then she said something else.
"Happy Anniversary."
And then she bent her head back to her newspaper, nonchalantly.
The thing that happened in my mind at that moment is almost impossible to describe. I could still see, sort of, but none of what I could see meant anything. My mind was a kind of sharp, white blank you imagine one experiences while being attacked by a large shark. My breathing went shallow. Then it stopped altogether. I felt my mind grasping fat-fingered for something, something I knew was dreadfully important, but that I could not put a name or even a meaning on. It has a shape, I thought. It's big, and block-shaped. It's...it's a MONTH! A MONTH! What is a month? I had no idea. But I knew, deep in my blood, that it was very, very important.
I was finally able to hold this "month" thing in my mind, and determine that these things have names. "August" floated up from the depths of my horror. That's not it, I thought.
Christine was looking at me - queerly - all this time. Several seconds had passed.
Then, I rose, as if a diver, perhaps in Antarctic waters - without a suit - and, in slow, slow motion, broke the surface of the water, with a name on the quivering edges of my mind: "Oc...to...ber."
Oh...dear...
Oc...to...ber...5th...
Oh...no...dear....
"Is it," I asked, in a voice like breaking glass, a far, far away voice that didn't really want to be itself, "October...5th?"
I can only describe Christine at this point as something like a child who has just witnessed several elephants suddenly standing on their hindlegs and expertly swiveling hula-hoops around their hips. She clearly found this torture session of mine a very special kind of amusing.
I of course deserved it.
Thankfully, it was October 4. I had, I must confess, somehow not registered the coming October 5. I kick myself for this. Bad, bad husband.
Christine was of course very forgiving. Did I deserve that, too? Hrrm.
Today we are taking a long city bus ride downtown, to watch one of the largest fireworks shows ever conceived - over the Sydney Harbour Bridge and the Opera House.
Just for us.
Happy 11th Anniversary, baby. I love you more than this...
Friday, September 27, 2013
Headbutting Sleep
Just found this video showing me headbutting sleep, slowly, again, and again, and again, then…sleep.
Think of this next time you find yourself counting sheep.
Think of this next time you find yourself counting sheep.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Absorb This: Florida AG Delays Execution So It Doesn't Conflict With Her Re-Election Campaign Kickoff
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Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi |
Basically, Bondi told the families of victims who had been grieving for 25 years that they needed to grieve another three weeks so she could break out the champagne flutes and rake in the campaign checks.
Tuesday's event was billed as a "hometown campaign kickoff" at Bondi's waterfront home, according to the Tampa Bay Times.
And, as everyone knows, lethal injection can cast quite a pall on a party. So a few weeks ago, Bondi quietly decided to reschedule … the execution.What special state of depravity do you have to molt to to even comprehend doing such a thing? For it even to cross your mind, much less to actually follow through and make the phone calls and speak the words and actually get it to happen? To delay by weeks the execution of a human being - so it doesn't conflict with the glitzy campaign kickoff fundraiser for your law enforcement position?
I didn't just throw up a little in my mouth—I threw up a little in my soul.
Bondi has apologized. As smarmily as you might expect.
Bonus:
Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi was a staunch supporter of Gov. Rick Scott's Timely Justice Act, a controversial law that speeds up executions in the state by restricting "frivolous" appeals by inmates.Isn't she special?
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Tuesday, September 24, 2013
We Need a National DNA META-Database
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NSA, DNI, DNA, LOL |
Legal Justicfication: People voluntarily allow bits of their DNA to be spread outside of their bodies and into the wider, public world - via a third party - every single day. DNA is therefore and obviously not private, as concerns constitutional protections of privacy. This is supported by long establised law.
Important Notes:
• It's just metadata!
• Haystack!
• Terror! (Extra Editor's Note: "Terror" does require a link. Terror is the link.)
• Just think how interesting a DNA META-database would make the "three-hop" system!
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Monday, September 23, 2013
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
John Oliver on Aussie Elections: Holy Crap
"He's gonna have to soak that thing in club soda for hours!"
Oh God, the dude is funny.
<
Oh God, the dude is funny.
<
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Monday, August 12, 2013
Eating With Little Australia: Tuna Fish Sandwich
Plain old tuna fish sandwich?
BORING.
Tuna with pickled onion and crushed walnuts on Turkish bread roasted sandwich?
NOT BORING.
Ingredients: Turkish bread, one can tuna, mayonnaise, pepper, pickled onions, walnuts, cheese of your choosing (we had a dry, crumbly cheese).
Don't be afraid of the walnuts. They go really well with tuna. You don't need tons of pickled onion—but it doesn't hurt. Plenty of pepper, too.
Turkish bread is the bomb, people.
DO NOT overpower with cheese. Just a light covering.
It's like a disco in here!
Very Important Step: mix extra tuna, pickled onion, and walnuts and eat with a spoon.
After a little while put in the top piece of toast. Put a little mayo on it.
Toast until toasted.
Add chips, eat next to coffee table display of seahsells, driftwood, and shark egg. For the irony.
This has been another episode of "Eating With Little Australia." You are welcome.
Remember: Your tastebuds aren't armed guards protecting your stubborn ideas about food—they're plucky little infants wanting to explore and taste the world! Yes, there are risks involved. And?
BORING.
Tuna with pickled onion and crushed walnuts on Turkish bread roasted sandwich?
NOT BORING.
Ingredients: Turkish bread, one can tuna, mayonnaise, pepper, pickled onions, walnuts, cheese of your choosing (we had a dry, crumbly cheese).
Don't be afraid of the walnuts. They go really well with tuna. You don't need tons of pickled onion—but it doesn't hurt. Plenty of pepper, too.
Turkish bread is the bomb, people.
DO NOT overpower with cheese. Just a light covering.
It's like a disco in here!
Very Important Step: mix extra tuna, pickled onion, and walnuts and eat with a spoon.
After a little while put in the top piece of toast. Put a little mayo on it.
Toast until toasted.
This has been another episode of "Eating With Little Australia." You are welcome.
Remember: Your tastebuds aren't armed guards protecting your stubborn ideas about food—they're plucky little infants wanting to explore and taste the world! Yes, there are risks involved. And?
Thursday, August 8, 2013
ATTENTION WORLD: NSA Scandal About to Fox News's BIGGEST STORY EVER
Details of a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration program that feeds tips to federal agents and then instructs them to alter the investigative trail were published in a manual used by agents of the Internal Revenue Service for two years.
The practice of recreating the investigative trail, highly criticized by former prosecutors and defense lawyers after Reuters reported it this week, is now under review by the Justice Department. Two high-profile Republicans have also raised questions about the procedure.
A 350-word entry in the Internal Revenue Manual instructed agents of the U.S. tax agency to omit any reference to tips supplied by the DEA's Special Operations Division, especially from affidavits, court proceedings or investigative files.Someone call Steve King!
NSA/DEA story here and here.
From here.
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
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