20100216

Why Pancakes on Tuesdays

#pancakeday is a popular topic on Twitter right now.
In the Christian Anglican calendar, today is Shrove Tuesday also known as Pancake Day. It is customary to eat pancakes on the day preceding Lent because they were a way to use up rich foodstuffs (such as eggs, milk, and sugar) before the 40 day fast. (Feb. 16)


So that's the world news version apparently, but ours began with Bruce listening to Ricky Gervais podcasts and was inspired by Karl Pilkington talking about Pancake Tuesday.  You'll have to ask him to get the fun details and hear how great Karl is since he's a big fan.

As for Pancake Tuesday updates, we are taking a hiatus to spend time at the Big Sky Doc Film Fest and to travel a bit.  Ciao!

20100214

What Would Mabel Do


They say necessity is the mother of invention.  I am leaping onto my soap box to shout out that it really, truly is necessary for the world to stop using styrofoam packing peanuts.  For anyone who has wrestled with them, or maybe walked around with a rogue static clinger on their ass until they turned in their chair to squeak it around and discover it, it's totally self-explanatory and obvious. For many reasons, not just a squeaky ass.  Hands down, they are the most unsatisfying packaging material.  Just plain wrong.

I shop.  I shop online.  Many things come to me in the mail.  eBay, Amazon, Etsy, and so on.  I could confess my shopping addiction here, but I'll save that for another post. Seriously, the shopping would not be as embarrassing if I could hide the evidence of bags and boxes of styrofoam piling up in my closets and basement.  Hear me now:  I avoid buying merch from people that I know or learn use styrofoam packing peanuts.  Yeah, you know who you are, but do you know that you are driving me flipping crazy?  I'm seriously considering compiling a list and advertising it.  Hell, I  might form a non-profit with that as the only agenda.  Now, that small bit could seriously be a good thing for the world.  I found an organization that recommends alternative reuse like filling your pet's bed with them.  Ick.  Squeaky toys I can see but squeaky dog bed?  Forget it.  Oh, and my fav of recommendations: scrapbookers can creatively use them with ink to print on paper.  With the mountain I have accumulating, I could wallpaper the Eiffel Tower.  And, dare I ask, then what do I do with them when I am done with my craft project?

Even Mabel, as patient and tolerant as she is (and a mighty fine shopper to boot), doesn't approve of them and hardly ever uses styrofoam peanuts.  The woman is thrifty and the queen of reuse.  If they come to her, she will reuse them and even then, she puts them in a plastic bag to contain them before sending them out again.  Considerate.  That's what Mabel is.  Now, for all people who ship things, try to be more like Mabel.  Would ya?

Consider - the root of considerate - a green alternative like Cushion Cubes made of recycled paper,  or Paper Nuts which are 100% recycled, and finally the water soluble dealios by Starch Tech.  Pick one or all three.


A society for the reuse of them does exist with drop off sites.  I also take them to shipping stores for reuse, but truly, even though it's better than the trash, that's just passing the buck. They MUST just get out of circulation entirely.  Before I lose my mind.

20100212

Pancake Tuesdays




Pancake Tuesdays continue even if my posts are sporadic.  The last two were very successful recipes, creative toppings and fun friends!  I took photos on Potato Pancake night and sometimes used the flash and sometimes didn't.  And my trigger finger was fast and slow, always catching someone in the frame when they weren't ready.  Ai ai ai!

Anyway I had avoided the potato pancake idea even though I have eaten yummy ones at restaurants, I still had it in my head that they would just be hash browns.  Now after making them, the key difference, I think, is draining the grated potatoes.  A simple, easy step with high return to get lighter texture and more flavor. We made recipes for traditional and spicy potato pancakes that I found on Epicurious.  Oh, and since we had a friend who is allergic to gluten, we substituted flour for cornmeal (polenta, actually) and they were fab!  

We had toppings of fresh cilantro, onions and a curried yogurt that I highly recommend.  Basically take a couple cups of yogurt and mix in a teaspoon or so of curry and the juice of half of a lime.  It was so yummy, I made it again the next week when we had Johnnycakes and used a recipe from my friend Nici at Dig This Chick! I'll definitely make more of both!

20100203

A Light Read

Beyond games, I want apps to make my life more organized or lighter - literally minimize the stacks of bound leaves of processed wood pulp that collect in every room of my house until I trip over them, then eventually haul them out to recycling.  Publishers may cringe or jump up and down depending on how they see this, but apps hold enormous tidiness potential.

McSweeney's has a subscription iPhone app that they call Small Chair. If you know McSweeney's, you know they are solid.  If you don't, McSweeney's is a reputable publisher with varying content from whimsical to heady.  Just one example, "An Open Letter To My Artistic Potential" by Jamie King is a great tongue-in-cheek creative kick in the ass.  They publish great interviews with top notch creatives.  Check them out through the built in links. My point is that you can trust McSweeney's to pull together good collections of works.  Plus, they aren't sell outs for advertising (so far) so you can rely on a clean, uninterrupted read (at least on their end - you can't blame them for the neighbors dogs barking incessantly).

With Small Chair, Russell Quinn and McSweeney's did a beautiful job building a simple, smart interface that bridges the distance between a conventional magazine subscription and a virtual one.  Because it is in my pocket, I can pull up the app and read a bit of fiction while I'm waiting to meet a friend at a cafe or watch an art video when waiting at the dentist or what have you.  And because it is in my phone, it's with me most of the time but not as cumbersome as a collection of magazines.  Further, if I like an author and am interested in their other works, I can pop over to Google seamlessly without need for scraps of paper for jotting web addresses that eventually wind up in that recycling pile.  And if I do want to make notes for follow up, I put it in my iPhone and get this: my notes are kept more in order by being in one place.  It's a revolution, I tell you.  Not to mention a purge from the guilt acquired by physical magazines not fully read that lay under foot waiting to be 'finished.'

It works just like conventional subscriptions.  You pay a six-month subscription rate that includes the app purchase (right now the whole deal costs only $5.99) to receive weekly uploads of articles, stories, interviews, and videos culled from their publications plus additional exclusive content. I picked a combo of two of their magazines, Believer (more literary) and Wholphin (art & video).  With conventional hard copy subscriptions I would have had to commit to just one.  And I would have had a magazine and a dvd to dedicate my attention to separately.  And because the app is always on the run with me, I get more reading done this way.

Finally, I am not advocating that all printed material belongs in an app or is by any means better than gripping a hard cover, nose down and turning pages of a novel.  Nothing truly replaces that kind of experience.  Subscriptions like McSweeney's are perfect for apps probably because they are ongoing and short format plus they also have videos and music combined with the 'printed' word.  I'm not so ready to see The New Yorker do this. Partly because I can't picture it.  (They have an app for their cartoons that apparently reviewers feel is overdone with ads but don't have a full blown subscription deal like Small Chair.) The sequence of how you read a New Yorker is so important, I think.  Even if you start with the cartoons, as many of us do, the structure, scale and layout are integrated into that reading experience.  But hey, if they put Russell Quinn to work on it, no doubt they can figure it out.  And I'd be thrilled to give it a go, especially if it is as lean and smart as my Small Chair.