Saturday, February 26, 2011

Bookbag Backpack

I've traveling for more than a week. As is normal for me, I brought along just a single carry-on piece in addition to my purse so that I could avoid luggage hassles and travel in the city more easily. The shitty weather lately has prolonged my stay with great friends and yesterday was a shopping day. Perhaps when normal people go "shopping in the city" they purchase extravagant items not normally available. But folks, yesterday was -50% off at the Goodwills in town - I've acquired more things in the last 24 hours than I had coming to visit in the first place. PLUS, then we went to an Asian grocery store where (bless my small-town heart) the nori and coconut milk were a fraction of the price we pay at home. Less than half. So among the thrifted clothing and books will be nestled seven packages of seaweed and four cans of coconut milk.

Titles I acquired:

Sci-fi (+ sequel):

NYT bestseller

Amazing Canadian sci-fi

Classic Hesse (for hubby)

Mennonite cookbook

Sci-fi/alternate realities

Classic gardening book

Another NYT bestseller

Canada Reads selection 2009

Replacement copy to lend again

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Playing to Type

I'm currently in an American city that is not on the water, yet I just caught myself orienting the downtown in relation to a harbourfront.


So typical.

Friday, February 18, 2011

busy folks

Last night I had a dream I was smoking cigarettes, which only happens when I'm stressed out. Funny enough, I have had this stress-relief dream even before ever having tried cigarettes in real life. There must be something transcendent about the release of the first drag of cigarette for a smoker, because it apparently transfers pretty easily.

Tomorrow morning I leave on the red-eye for a week-long trip to two wildly disparate climates for wildly different reasons, wherein I will pack only a single carry on luggage.

My boss is away in Puerto Rico at a science conference, letting the minions tend to her gigantic but needy first year biochem class during their midterm. She also dropped a giant task in my lap yesterday 45 minutes before invigilating one of her 4 classrooms of students. This mighty task was supposed to be done in October. Hahahaha!! I haven't responded back.

The website is up. The tax credit is a bust. The bonus is in limbo. The house looks much the same as it did before Christmas, just with a better bonfire pit carved in the three feet of snow and one extra cord of dried wood (which we got from some very nice people last weekend) stacked in our living room. Ghetto pre-industrial energy storage. It smells lovely though.

kitchenspiration


Friday, February 11, 2011

...reams across the screen...

Shitty afternoon yesterday at work. Boo.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

A hundred ways to eat a root vegetable

A little more than a year ago we settled into the old house we are repairing, and had some lovely people live with us for short bursts of time. Foodies. Locavores. Teachers. And boy, was I in a good spot to be taught. Doritos for lunch or the occasional chocolate-bar-breakfast was not that uncommon in my life. Instant gratification over nutrition. Blame it on youth.



This picture still makes my mouth water, Pavlovian-style.

I'm proud of how our habits have changed for the better, and the repertoire we've worked on. I'm gonna brag a bit. The biggest change was buying a share in our CSA last year. Every week we would get tons of vegetables, with some selection, chosen at the weekly farmers market. I found it easier to plan meals for the following week because at least this aspect of it (the vegetables available) reduced the possibilities. Heard of Omnivore's Dilemma? Reading that book shed alot of light on life in general but eating habits in particular. Too much choice can be overwhelming. Going to CostCo gives me a near-aneurism. Anyway, the trick is to let someone else (local farmer) pick part of your grocery, then all you have to do is fill in the rest.

We are lucky we live in a place that has a weekly Saturday morning farmer's market. It is still small enough to afford only a single/very few stands for chicken/pork/beef. And none for seafood (which is sad to me). That said, 35 km away there is a giant farmer's market that has multiple booths for all that stuff plus tons more (honey, cranberries, apples, pears). So we have a pretty basic "comfort-food" menu that can get us through the week eating locally produced goods almost all year long, especially if we supplement from our freezer and the neighbouring market. Here are some of the things we'll eat this week:

local trout/butter/flour fried up, served with an apple/carrot/cilantro salad (all local, with a dressing of imported olive oil and organic lemon juice), and our own dill pickles from the garden. Non-local rice served as a carb side-dish. Someone gave me cilantro seeds last weekend as a gift, so I'm going to try and grow those in a window over the next few months. God knows we've got enough apples and carrots in storage to last us.

Honey garlic sausage from our local vendor, fried julienned carrots in a pepper/maple glaze, mustard pickles from our garden and a buttered piece of locally made bread. Sometimes we add fried red cabbage in garlic too. Yum!

local beef stirfry: the best beef I've had in a long time combined with local root veggies (kohlrabi, carrot, red onion), local bean sprouts and local mushrooms. I added some items from my freezer, which I stocked when stuff was in season: green peppers from the farmer and zucchini from our garden. Served with some more non-local rice. Randomly thrown together sauce of tamari & ginger (imported) + garlic & maple syrup (local).

local chicken breast roasted in the oven with spiced broth, combined with mashed sweet potato and frozen local corn. Cranberry sauce from our own cranberries. I'm not gonna lie, I'm fairly addicted to Kraft Stovetop stuffing, so I may round out this healthy pseudo-thanksgiving meal with a 99 cent box of crap-laden Stovetop. Can't win them all...

Carrot ginger soup. We eat alot of meat, but I try to get in one veggie meal (usually a soup) and/or a noodle based dish over the week. The carrot ginger soup is a favorite: we can get local carrots all year long (that taste as good as the ones I remember pulling up from my grandmother's garden as a kid). Combined with some local onion and some local garlic (if we can find it....the stuff we planted this year lasted only until November. I've planted twice as much this year hoping to harvest enough for the entire winter at least), the soup is the nicest thing to eat after shoveling the driveway for the sixth time in seven days. Fried onions & garlic in local butter on the woodstove, add some chicken broth (my own if I've thought ahead to thaw some from the freezer, organic pre-packaged if it was on sale and the pantry is stocked, or regular boxed stuff in a pinch) and four cups of cut up carrots. Add some rice for texture, simmer for an hour then blend to smooth consistency. Voila!

And for breakfast this week I made a batch of the baked oatmeal. We ate it with local maple syrup and brand-name yogurt that was on super-sale this week at the grocery store. I'm still having a hard time with local dairy products. Cow's milk is easy to find and I've grown to like mild goat cheeses (which are lovely on beets. I scored some golden beets in the fridge waiting to be cooked up!). But the yogurts and mild cheddar-like cheeses I've tried so far are 1. really expensive and 2. not that great. So this is an area of improvement: we still stock up on Danone yogurt and Black Diamond cheddar when it goes on sale at the grocery store. But the baked oatmeal had tons of locally sourced ingredients: cut oats, milk, eggs (from our backyard!), dried cranberries, dried apples, dried pears. I think I put in a handful of imported organic raisins too. I feel better about the imported stuff if it's organic (like the celery in my fridge right now) but that's just because I'm a privileged white person who tries to fix the world's giant environmental problems with my grocery money. You know.

Basically, I like buying food from people who grew it/made it. I look them in the face, give them my money and thank them for their hard work. It's just kind of a decent thing to do, if you can.



Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Human Scale

Fulcrum

The pivot point of everything.

I'd like to get another tattoo, but am mulling the possibilities. Why am I so enamored with physics lately? The latest idea for permanent ink is the fulcrum. Balance. Strength. Science.