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People at work have been sick, and I woke on Sun with a sore throat, so I was like, ohhhhhhh crap. But by Sun night I was okay, and I don't seem to have gotten full-blown sick, even though I do feel maybe a little run down and have some sinus issues.

I have a new spiralizer and made some zucchini pasta for the first time, which was fun (and yummy). Thanks [personal profile] leigh_adams for the rec!

Some ruminations on two of my favorite Food Network shows, Kids Baking Championship and The Worst Cooks in America... Spoilers! )

I'm also starting to watch All-Star Academy, but I don't think it's as good as the others. Maybe because there isn't as much opportunity for humor, and the contestants take it way too seriously.

I am nearly done with unpacking. I have, as far as I know, maybe 4-5 boxes left. And yet I have still not seen hide nor hair of my super expensive boar bristle hairbrush, nor any of my curling irons. WTF??? I still have quite a bit of tidying to do, however, as a lot of my office stuff is just piled on my desk. My desk doesn't have drawers, which is a big pain. I might need to just keep things in boxes indefinitely. ><

I'm also at the same time trying to deal with taxes, finding the financial adviser, and now my cousin has thrown another spanner in the works by announcing that she and her family are going to go live in the wilderness of Wisconsin for 11 months. So they're trying to figure out what to do with their stuff. A lot of it involves storing it at my place, but I may also take some of their furniture, which means I'll need to figure out how to deal with the stuff THEIR stuff would replace (their furniture is nicer than mine). It's quite the ordeal.
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I have been meaning to update for DAYS but just haven't been able to find the time. :/ But now I have about 20 min, before I have to do some work stuff -- YES AT 2 IN THE FREAKING MORNING -- so I want to take down what I made for dinner tonight, because it was ah-mayyyy-zing.

I sort of cobbled together various recipes that I read online, because I had short ribs, but wasn't going to be able to start cooking until after I got home from work. I didn't have time to marinate or do a lot of prep work or anything like that, so I needed a simple recipe that would work with a pressure cooker. Well I am either a cooking genius or very lucky (I would like to think the former, but am most likely the latter), because they came out so well it was probably one of the best meals I've ever made. So I need to take it down for posterity as I can't find it anywhere else, while it's still fresh in my mind.

On to the recipe! )
sarea: (troy and annie)
Holy crap, it's been almost two months since I last posted. *dusts this thing off* There's no way I can fully catch myself up (because let's face it, no one uses LiveJournal anymore. If any others remain, hello to you, wonderful people), so I'll just tackle stuff randomly.

Another Black Friday has come and gone. I got a bunch of Blu-rays and a pasta maker and a shelf I desperately needed because I have so much kitchen crap. But my FAVORITE new purchase is this 7-in-1 Instant Pot.

Yes, that is a little ironic considering what I just said about having too much kitchen crap. >.> BUT IT'S WORTH IT YOU GUYS. It is the best thing ever, and I have only made two things in it so far. I have no idea what the "7" things are, but what I know it is: a pressure cooker (without the stress and worry), a slow cooker, a rice cooker, and a yogurt maker. I am only going to get rid of my slow cooker, though. I'll keep my pressure cooker because of its portability, and it will take me longer to get rid of my rice cooker, because I have a really good one and I don't know if the Instant Pot does it as well or as quickly, but eventually that may be ditched as well.

Anyway, I made ox-tail soup the other night using the pressure cooker function, which is really nice because there's no futzing with keeping the pressure high/low or watching the clock, or being afraid of causing an explosion of food. Then yesterday I made yogurt. YOGURT! And it's soooooooo delicious! I had to follow some instructions given by someone in Amazon's reviews and he updated them and wasn't super clear in some parts, so...

Here are the instructions for making yogurt in the Instant Pot: )

Don't let my tendency for oversharing info and verbosity make it seem like it was complicated in any way. It was basically just pouring stuff from one container to another and playing the waiting game.

Also, you can make homemade yogurt without an Instant Pot. I've done it before. But you have to be more watchful and the consistency of the results will depend on temperature variations and what not.
sarea: (jesse peekaboo)
Update on Talis's eye situation: So we went to see the specialist, who was super nice -- loved her. The good news is that it's not serious. Details, plus a couple of photos. )

I didn't even know there was a new Temeraire book out until yesterday! And I've even got [profile] naominovik on my flist! Guess she's not as good at updating as [personal profile] grrm is. Then again, since she publishes more regularly, maybe it's good that she spends less of her time LJing and more of her time actually writing. Go Naomi! If you guys haven't read the Temeraire series, it's fabulous. Don't wait for Peter Jackson's TV series or whatever it is he's doing. I thought I'd be the last person who would be interested in a fantasy series about a man and his dragon, but I WAS WRONG. The general premise of the series is a reimagining of the Napoleonic Wars with an air force of dragons. Trust me, it's awesome.

When I was in SoCal, in my sick bed, I perused the shelf of books in "my" room, which doesn't really have much of my stuff in it anymore. I noticed a very old cookbook from 1968: Marguerite Patten's Every Day Cookbook. I assumed it was my mom's, but she doesn't have much interest in cooking and certainly not from recipes; she denied all knowledge of the cookbook. I have no idea where this book came from. I flipped through it, assuming it'd be outdated and irrelevant, but found myself actually pretty impressed with it. I did a search for it on the internets, and it came up at Amazon UK with seven 5-star reviews. Those people like it because it's so sensible and easy to use, and still extremely useful for cooking today, and I have to say that I feel similarly about the content, just having read through a bit of it. It's very comprehensive, with tips and tricks on common things (like gravy) that people either get way too complex with in modern cookbooks, or leave out entirely, assuming you know how to do it. It's not just 1960s casseroles and what not (though the CorningWare blue cornflower dishes do make an appearance!); it has recipes for beurre blanc and gnocchi and more complex dishes, though very matter-of-factly detailed. It's pretty darn awesome. The photos are horrendous; it's amazing how far food photography has come. But the content, the recipes, are still extremely relevant -- it really drives home that all of the cool technique and what not that's admired today isn't really all that different from what it was 43 years ago. In fact, what struck me is that apparently, this all used to be fairly well-known stuff to home cooks; what changed is that people stopped knowing how to cook, so when all that stuff came back, it seemed like some amazing thing. Another interesting detail is that people used to eat a lot more offal than we do today -- there are recipes for preparing tongue, sweetbreads, hearts, etc. You'd be hard pressed to find that in a modern cookbook unless it was a cookbook specifically about offal. So that's definitely disappeared from the modern table (unless you're in the gourmet food world, where offal is prized). But what was scarce back then that's incredibly common today -- avocados! In fact, the cookbook refers to them as "avocado pears." I had to read through a few recipes to make sure that it was, in fact, just an avocado and not some special other fruit that used to be eaten. I giggled when I read that we should be careful if serving it, because they're "an acquired taste." So yeah, I love the cookbook because it's practical and useful, but also kind of like a history book!

Life is short. I've purchased a meat slicer and an indoor smoker. REAL HOMEMADE SMOKED BACON, HERE I COME.

Did anyone watch Extras with Ricky Gervais? I don't know why it took me so long. It's BRILLIANT! Everyone on the show makes an asshole of themselves, including the big celebrities who guest star. Kate Winslet is obsessed with winning an Oscar, Patrick Stewart just wants to see tits, Orlando Bloom is in love with his own looks, Chris Martin tackily promotes Coldplay everywhere. I'm so sad that there were only two seasons of the show.

Now that I'm caught up on The Walking Dead, I've finally started watching Caprica. Again, don't know what took me so long since I love BSG. It's so good! I've only seen three episodes, but I LOVE the origin story of the Cylons and Zoe Graystone. Now I'm sad it was canceled.

I also attempted to watch the first episode of Babylon 5, which is a show Jade loves. For the first five minutes of the pilot I kept waiting for the screen to zoom out and show the 'real' characters watching this silly sitcom-like show about space/aliens... and then I realized that it WAS the show. I don't know how/if I can go on. I mean, other than looking like a sitcom, it also does that thing that I hate about so many fantasy shows/novels -- it totally throws you into the deep end of the pool with regard to the alien 'verse and the politics like you're supposed to know what's going on. Maybe if I just have it on in the background while reading my 1968 cookbook, I'll eventually get into it. O.o

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