It was with great sadness today that I read that Brugge Brasserie - one of our favorite blog meet restaurants has gone out of business after 15 years. They will be missed. We had some good times there - this post is from June of 2012. Can't believe it's been 8 years. Good times.
Broad Ripples is home to a number of "hippie owned" businesses. I stopped in this place to buy blue cornmeal, as they have a great collection of bulk grains for the healthy or the "preppy". But when it comes time to meet some of my favorite people for an impromptu dinner afterward with my weekend house guests, everyone voted to pass on the tofurkey pizza.
First, it was off to Penzey's where a few spices were picked up for friends, then off to Artesano's for some Alderwood smoked salt and 18-year-old Balsamic Vinegar.
Future cooking ingredients in hand, it time to head off to Brugge Brasserie for food involving meat.
Why?
Tam had a T-Shirt that explained things.
The conversation was good as always, books, Amazon publishing, more books, the Delta mileage perks of being an internet rock star, shotguns, geese and Old World Style charcuterie, good writers and bad writers . . .
"Brigid - "so why the fuss about this new bestseller about farm outbuildings (wink to D ) . . '.Fifty Sheds of Grey".
"Tam - "I've not heard of it"
Miss D - " It's Twilight Fan Fiction with BDSM".
Tam - uncontrollable snickers
We started with the usual "would you like large fries with that", with all their dipping sauces (Dijon with Poplar Syrup was a new favorite), followed by an assortment of roast beasts, steak and eggs (Roberta X's excellent looking choice), Le Canard, more frites and cheese plates with all kinds of sausage/pate things. There was in-house microbrewery IPA, good coffee and lots of catching up as I'd just met Peter briefly once at a previous blog meet and his new bride Miss D. and I hadn't seen each other in a year, though we chatted airplanes all the time.
This was a duck confit sandwich with dried cherry and lambic compote, spicy mustard, and crispy fried leek (somewhere under that mound of hot, pepper coated frites).
Miss D ordered one of the buckets of mussels with blue cheese, bacon and white wine (they were steaming too much to get a good photo). While her husband had one of the cheese plates.
Soon it was time to leave to get to the gun store before they close to get ammo.
Finally, home to make a phone call to my Dad and a friend far away and of course, some playtime with Barkley.
"Yo Mom - you smell like Duck - you and I need to have a little chat. . ."
Thursday, April 30, 2020
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Pieces of Home - Pieces of History
In the declining season of the year, I'll make a stop at some of the local thrift and antique shops, looking for various tools and things that might be useful in the coming winter, or just perusing items that people have discarded as part of a big Spring and Summer clean.
There's often some junk, valuable only to the person that originally purchased it, for reasons unknown. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder they say, and for every Popeil Pocket Chainsaw (with Cap Snaffler), there's someone that would buy one. There are also treasures, marked up accordingly, there are small things, that only a certain individual will be drawn to. There are things that were once worn, things that once graced a home, things in small jars, the buyer peering into them as if inspecting some curious small life form preserved in alcohol.
In my kitchen are a number of things from such places, a bread box, a scale, glasses and some dishes. In the shop, even more so, things that previous generations used as they cleared and planted the pitiless earth, crafting what they needed to survive out of the materials at hand, doing so as they endured, the tools, straight, yet nicked and worn, much like the men that held them, twins of the same travail.
So much of what's left in my kitchen, and likely yours, is new, shiny, useful perhaps, but NEW. It likely will not work as long as the appliances I have, like grandmas stand mixer at Dad's house, still working after 60 years. When I downsized, I donated a ton of stuff to AmVets but not everyone does. A lot of people simply "pitch it. Looking at the many little things that remain, I wonder, fifty years from now, when I'm gone, will it grace another home, or will it be discarded in piles of trash and forgotten?
I came back from a short trip a lifetime ago to find a housecleaning had occurred, during my presence, not of the dust bunny round up, but the purging of "things", of which there really weren't very many in a young couple's home. But things of value were suddenly missing, or in the process of being hauled away, including a baby grand piano that I bought before we'd even met with a small annuity I got when my Mom died. It was being hauled off on a farmer's old truck with other things. Things that would bring money that would pay off the debts of one who gambled, not just with dice or cards, but with generous nature of man or machine, taking risks that could prove costly, and typically losing. The $5000 piano sold for $500.
I wanted to speak out, knowing I would only be met with the voice that had that quality at once, both dismissal and coldness, as though it had no interest in what you would say, or what the words even meant. Speaking up meant consequence upon soft flesh, bruises hidden under stiff cloth and within a stiff heart. I kept quiet, breath simply taken in, a small gesture of self-preservation, but a part of me left that day on that truck, next to a garden that filled with darkness.
I don't have much now, by choice, but what I have means a lot to me. Notes from grad school, the chronicles of the disintegration of the human body, what it can endure, and what it reveals, the legacy of flesh, the hardness of bone. Mom's cookbooks, some of Dad's books, on history, on warfare, this big rock with fossilized shells Big Bro found target shooting with Mom and I as kids, which he kept, kept for 40 years, then gave me not long ago. It had been hidden in a little spot in Dad's workbench. He knew I wanted it then, he knew I still was fascinated by such things, and I pretended it was allergies when he gave it to me 30 years later.
There are things I have that others would look at and simply scratch their head. A Lollipop with a dried scorpion in it, an old beaker, a small stuffed Hedgehog, a blue uniform type shirt that hangs in the closet, a tiny ceramic skunk. An old violin, one that pales in comparison next to Partner's, one he played in a symphony orchestra in Austria when he was a young man. It's like sitting a 1986 Saturn next to a Lamborghini.
Yet that cheap violin was the first one I played, albeit badly, and in the playing came healing, and I again braved a piano bench, an accompaniment of trust as the notes of a violin rose, crystal sounds of loss and hope that swelled up out of the frozen night.
Then, there is the gun safe, lies pieces of history, protectors of our future, blued and oiled and maintained with slow deliberate pride. There are revolvers and semi-autos, an old Mauser or two, a Garand perhaps, pieces of the past, things taken up, when an individual rises out of their fear and passivity and takes hold of their future, one that is safer for that possession.
They are important to me, for reasons beyond the value of their form, the appreciation of their worth. Without them I am still strong of spirit, grown that way through time and adversity, yet against the evil of man, there in the dark, outweighed or outnumbered, I'm simply the flame of one small match and as weak, under a unforgiving moon.
Also there in the closet, various uniform pieces including the taupe colored ones known as "pinks", Dads uniform of the 8th Air Force, as crisp and ready for donning, that the almost 70 years that have passed, are but a single note. On the collar, the little wings with a propeller, still shiny, golden. How they must have glinted on that day he came home, bruises of body and heart hidden underneath stiff cloth, the intake of breath as he saw my Mom for the first time in four and a half years, self-preservation giving way to hope, there in a garden that filled with light.
In your home, as well perhaps, as in mine, uniforms of those that went before, carefully maintained, to be passed down, to along to those who will remember.
Where these things are a hundred years from now is not so important as that their stories remain, notes on the night air as laughter again fills a home, the report of a rifle, cleaving the air with the same testament to freedom as to when it was first fired. It's small trinkets and toys that make a child's eyes light up, things that uphold and repair.
It may be fifty years from now, it may be a hundred or more, the land giving birth to new people, old faiths, the blessings and curses of each passing year, bitter winters and golden days unsullied by rain, those ever-changing changeless days that look both at the past and the future. Someone will pick up that object, just as you did, hefting it up to themselves as they quietly whisper, "I will live forever".
Next time you clean out your closet, your garage, that trunk in the attic, look carefully at what you have, what it might mean to someone. If it has no emotional connection and is functional, there are many organizations that will cherish it, finding it a use among those that need it. There are students that need instruments, museums that would love the artifacts of war for those with no family remaining, and sheltering organizations that need household goods. But don't just throw it out, there in that moment when the match is lit and before it might be blown out, there is a small moment of history, one that someone may cherish.
- Brigid
There's often some junk, valuable only to the person that originally purchased it, for reasons unknown. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder they say, and for every Popeil Pocket Chainsaw (with Cap Snaffler), there's someone that would buy one. There are also treasures, marked up accordingly, there are small things, that only a certain individual will be drawn to. There are things that were once worn, things that once graced a home, things in small jars, the buyer peering into them as if inspecting some curious small life form preserved in alcohol.
In my kitchen are a number of things from such places, a bread box, a scale, glasses and some dishes. In the shop, even more so, things that previous generations used as they cleared and planted the pitiless earth, crafting what they needed to survive out of the materials at hand, doing so as they endured, the tools, straight, yet nicked and worn, much like the men that held them, twins of the same travail.
So much of what's left in my kitchen, and likely yours, is new, shiny, useful perhaps, but NEW. It likely will not work as long as the appliances I have, like grandmas stand mixer at Dad's house, still working after 60 years. When I downsized, I donated a ton of stuff to AmVets but not everyone does. A lot of people simply "pitch it. Looking at the many little things that remain, I wonder, fifty years from now, when I'm gone, will it grace another home, or will it be discarded in piles of trash and forgotten?
I came back from a short trip a lifetime ago to find a housecleaning had occurred, during my presence, not of the dust bunny round up, but the purging of "things", of which there really weren't very many in a young couple's home. But things of value were suddenly missing, or in the process of being hauled away, including a baby grand piano that I bought before we'd even met with a small annuity I got when my Mom died. It was being hauled off on a farmer's old truck with other things. Things that would bring money that would pay off the debts of one who gambled, not just with dice or cards, but with generous nature of man or machine, taking risks that could prove costly, and typically losing. The $5000 piano sold for $500.
I watched quietly as the doors to the moving truck opened up, filling the air with the smell of cold and impending snow, the piano itself sitting there, as if rooted to the ground, in the grip of some dreadful inertia. Or maybe that was me.
I wanted to speak out, knowing I would only be met with the voice that had that quality at once, both dismissal and coldness, as though it had no interest in what you would say, or what the words even meant. Speaking up meant consequence upon soft flesh, bruises hidden under stiff cloth and within a stiff heart. I kept quiet, breath simply taken in, a small gesture of self-preservation, but a part of me left that day on that truck, next to a garden that filled with darkness.
I don't have much now, by choice, but what I have means a lot to me. Notes from grad school, the chronicles of the disintegration of the human body, what it can endure, and what it reveals, the legacy of flesh, the hardness of bone. Mom's cookbooks, some of Dad's books, on history, on warfare, this big rock with fossilized shells Big Bro found target shooting with Mom and I as kids, which he kept, kept for 40 years, then gave me not long ago. It had been hidden in a little spot in Dad's workbench. He knew I wanted it then, he knew I still was fascinated by such things, and I pretended it was allergies when he gave it to me 30 years later.
There are things I have that others would look at and simply scratch their head. A Lollipop with a dried scorpion in it, an old beaker, a small stuffed Hedgehog, a blue uniform type shirt that hangs in the closet, a tiny ceramic skunk. An old violin, one that pales in comparison next to Partner's, one he played in a symphony orchestra in Austria when he was a young man. It's like sitting a 1986 Saturn next to a Lamborghini.
Yet that cheap violin was the first one I played, albeit badly, and in the playing came healing, and I again braved a piano bench, an accompaniment of trust as the notes of a violin rose, crystal sounds of loss and hope that swelled up out of the frozen night.
Then, there is the gun safe, lies pieces of history, protectors of our future, blued and oiled and maintained with slow deliberate pride. There are revolvers and semi-autos, an old Mauser or two, a Garand perhaps, pieces of the past, things taken up, when an individual rises out of their fear and passivity and takes hold of their future, one that is safer for that possession.
They are important to me, for reasons beyond the value of their form, the appreciation of their worth. Without them I am still strong of spirit, grown that way through time and adversity, yet against the evil of man, there in the dark, outweighed or outnumbered, I'm simply the flame of one small match and as weak, under a unforgiving moon.
Also there in the closet, various uniform pieces including the taupe colored ones known as "pinks", Dads uniform of the 8th Air Force, as crisp and ready for donning, that the almost 70 years that have passed, are but a single note. On the collar, the little wings with a propeller, still shiny, golden. How they must have glinted on that day he came home, bruises of body and heart hidden underneath stiff cloth, the intake of breath as he saw my Mom for the first time in four and a half years, self-preservation giving way to hope, there in a garden that filled with light.
In your home, as well perhaps, as in mine, uniforms of those that went before, carefully maintained, to be passed down, to along to those who will remember.
It may be fifty years from now, it may be a hundred or more, the land giving birth to new people, old faiths, the blessings and curses of each passing year, bitter winters and golden days unsullied by rain, those ever-changing changeless days that look both at the past and the future. Someone will pick up that object, just as you did, hefting it up to themselves as they quietly whisper, "I will live forever".
- Brigid
Thursday, April 23, 2020
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
While you are Likely Stuck at Home - BAD Movie! No Biscuit
Abby the Lab here. Our house doesn't have a TV (we gave it away) - as when Mom and Dad are home they hardly ever watched it, mostly CD's of their favorites, Star Trek, Dr. Who, Red Green, Corner Gas, Top Gear, NCIS, Castle, Firefly and those can be watched on the big screen computer monitor Mom has for work since her office is also the family room.
She watched a lot more when she had her crash pad while she worked in Indy.
I have no say in the selection. I've requested all kinds of dog movies but Mom just surfed the SCI fi channel for whatever is free. Let me just say, we've sat through some that were REALLY bad. You know what I'm talking about. Some of your peeps have seen them, worse, your peeps may have PAID to see them, long ago.
Dreamcatcher (2003) - Sure, you can put Stephen King's name all over it but you lost me at parasitic butt weasel.
Slugs (1988) - Quick men! Get the giant saltshaker!
Gingerdead Man (2005) - Gary Busey is a possessed cookie. I say again. Gary Busey is a possessed cookie.
Sex in the City Two - Mom actually turned this one off saying there was not enough white wine in the world to watch it to the end.
Robot Monster (1953) - Put a man in a gorilla suit. Put a diving helmet on his head. Watch audiences either lose interest or completely doze off. It was so boring Mystery Science Theater 3000 never took a shot at riffing it that we know of.
Aeon Flux (2005) - It's futuristic. Like Sears was in the 70's. And not in a good way. But there IS action -watch the characters posture and argue while checking out each other's clothes.
The Neverending Story - Thank you, God. It Ended.
Laserblast (1978) - Boy goes on a rampage with a cereal box prize. The Submariners of the US Navy had elaborate methods to keep this movie off the boat where they would be stuck with it for 90 days. Why? It's not just bad, it's Cthulu Rising From the Sea bad.
American Hustle - as exciting as reading the US Tax Code
Spidermen/X-Men 3 (2007, 2006) -You know what they say about the best thing of superhero trilogies? The first two movies.
Jurrasic Park III- Watch it backwards. The dinosaurs throw up people until the pesky airplane goes away.
Battlefield Earth (2000) - Mom said she has seen a lot of absolutely gruesome injuries in her time but I never contemplated a shrimp fork as a lethal weapon before.
The Core (2003)- Let me put it this way: this is a science fiction movie about the end of the world that didn't bother to consult any real science. Let's all walk in 9,000 degrees F. Core Fluid and survive long enough to override a compartment ejection system! No problem!
Green Lantern (2011) - Nothing says awesome superpower like "lantern".
Independence Day (1996) - Sure, the single, reciprocating engine agricultural pilots can immediately strap on a fighter plane and save the world as surely as Jeff Goldblum can instantly cook up a little string of alien-compatible code that when delivered is going to end with the Alien Mothership switching to Wordpress and fleeing to outer space.
Howard the Duck (1986) - Failure goes by many names. Howard the Duck is one of them. Fans of the comic book hated it, sci-fi lovers hated it, kids hated it. I left the room as did my friend the Aflac Duck.
Transformers - Revenge of the Fallen (2009)- The dog humping scene is both a discredit to dogs AND humping.
Frankenstein Island (1981) - They called them "Amazon women" because that's where they were ordering their identical leopard skin bikinis, "Gee Your Hair Smells Terrific" shampoo, makeup and rubber skulls from.
Armageddon (1998)- Shop Class saves the world! Resolute on violating every law of dramatic unity and physics, Armageddon makes The Core look like a documentary.
Twilight (2008) - I'm an Immortal, handsome, powerful and hundreds of years old. I'm going to enroll in high school in a tiny isolated town so I can meet chicks.
Planet of the Dinosaurs (1977) - Members of what I think were the Charlie Daniels Band, crash land on a planet where they become tasty snacks for the natives.
Gymtaka (1985) - Combine gymnastics with karate and you get a particularly bad movie, though it is almost worth it for the infamous pommel horse scene. Who knew the infrastructure of most third world countries is made up of parallel bars and a pommel horse.
Signs - actually the movie wasn't that bad but the science was, specifically the moment when the heroes discovered the invading aliens' weakness after they'd already shown up at the door. Water.
Imagine you're in that little alien landing party
Captain: Ensign Ricky do you have the readouts.
Ensign Ricky: Yes Captain: 71% of the planet is covered in a substance that will kill our species. As well there is 2 million cubic miles of that same substance stored within a half-mile of the earth's surface, which is inhabited by animals and fauna also composed of the same substance. Oh, and there's 3,100 cubic miles of that substance in vapor form in the atmosphere at any time, waiting to rain down upon us. I'm thinking we should turn a. . .
Captain:(turning to the landing party with upraised arm (tentacle, whatever) in full battle cry: FREEDOM!!!!"
Terminator 3 (2003) - No matter how many of them you kill, another one shows up naked in a little glowing ball of energy just as you got the kids down for a nap.
The Giant Claw (1957) - Cold War Jet Pilots and obnoxious teenyboppers are menaced by a mutated Gonzo from the Muppet Show.
Night of the Lepus (1972) - Quick! Release the 200 foot Elmer Fudd! Through the special effects of really bad editing, weird camera angles and tiny little houses and trains from the hobby store, little domestic bunnies appear as giants galloping across your house and eating Aunt Daisy (actually for the attack they use a man in a rabbit suit). Deforest Kelly's mustache was the scariest thing in this flick. Be vewwwy vewwy quiet.
And lastly: Reservoir Dogs - It's NOT ABOUT DOGS!
I wish someone could find the remote for me so I can change the channel.
She watched a lot more when she had her crash pad while she worked in Indy.
Here I am on the couch looking SO excited to watch Captain Kirk again.
I have no say in the selection. I've requested all kinds of dog movies but Mom just surfed the SCI fi channel for whatever is free. Let me just say, we've sat through some that were REALLY bad. You know what I'm talking about. Some of your peeps have seen them, worse, your peeps may have PAID to see them, long ago.
Dreamcatcher (2003) - Sure, you can put Stephen King's name all over it but you lost me at parasitic butt weasel.
Slugs (1988) - Quick men! Get the giant saltshaker!
Gingerdead Man (2005) - Gary Busey is a possessed cookie. I say again. Gary Busey is a possessed cookie.
Sex in the City Two - Mom actually turned this one off saying there was not enough white wine in the world to watch it to the end.
Robot Monster (1953) - Put a man in a gorilla suit. Put a diving helmet on his head. Watch audiences either lose interest or completely doze off. It was so boring Mystery Science Theater 3000 never took a shot at riffing it that we know of.
I fell asleep on the grey dog bed right after the Robot Monster attacked.
Aeon Flux (2005) - It's futuristic. Like Sears was in the 70's. And not in a good way. But there IS action -watch the characters posture and argue while checking out each other's clothes.
The Neverending Story - Thank you, God. It Ended.
Laserblast (1978) - Boy goes on a rampage with a cereal box prize. The Submariners of the US Navy had elaborate methods to keep this movie off the boat where they would be stuck with it for 90 days. Why? It's not just bad, it's Cthulu Rising From the Sea bad.
American Hustle - as exciting as reading the US Tax Code
Spidermen/X-Men 3 (2007, 2006) -You know what they say about the best thing of superhero trilogies? The first two movies.
Jurrasic Park III- Watch it backwards. The dinosaurs throw up people until the pesky airplane goes away.
Battlefield Earth (2000) - Mom said she has seen a lot of absolutely gruesome injuries in her time but I never contemplated a shrimp fork as a lethal weapon before.
The Core (2003)- Let me put it this way: this is a science fiction movie about the end of the world that didn't bother to consult any real science. Let's all walk in 9,000 degrees F. Core Fluid and survive long enough to override a compartment ejection system! No problem!
Green Lantern (2011) - Nothing says awesome superpower like "lantern".
Independence Day (1996) - Sure, the single, reciprocating engine agricultural pilots can immediately strap on a fighter plane and save the world as surely as Jeff Goldblum can instantly cook up a little string of alien-compatible code that when delivered is going to end with the Alien Mothership switching to Wordpress and fleeing to outer space.
Howard the Duck (1986) - Failure goes by many names. Howard the Duck is one of them. Fans of the comic book hated it, sci-fi lovers hated it, kids hated it. I left the room as did my friend the Aflac Duck.
Transformers - Revenge of the Fallen (2009)- The dog humping scene is both a discredit to dogs AND humping.
Frankenstein Island (1981) - They called them "Amazon women" because that's where they were ordering their identical leopard skin bikinis, "Gee Your Hair Smells Terrific" shampoo, makeup and rubber skulls from.
Armageddon (1998)- Shop Class saves the world! Resolute on violating every law of dramatic unity and physics, Armageddon makes The Core look like a documentary.
Twilight (2008) - I'm an Immortal, handsome, powerful and hundreds of years old. I'm going to enroll in high school in a tiny isolated town so I can meet chicks.
Planet of the Dinosaurs (1977) - Members of what I think were the Charlie Daniels Band, crash land on a planet where they become tasty snacks for the natives.
Gymtaka (1985) - Combine gymnastics with karate and you get a particularly bad movie, though it is almost worth it for the infamous pommel horse scene. Who knew the infrastructure of most third world countries is made up of parallel bars and a pommel horse.
Signs - actually the movie wasn't that bad but the science was, specifically the moment when the heroes discovered the invading aliens' weakness after they'd already shown up at the door. Water.
Imagine you're in that little alien landing party
Captain: Ensign Ricky do you have the readouts.
Ensign Ricky: Yes Captain: 71% of the planet is covered in a substance that will kill our species. As well there is 2 million cubic miles of that same substance stored within a half-mile of the earth's surface, which is inhabited by animals and fauna also composed of the same substance. Oh, and there's 3,100 cubic miles of that substance in vapor form in the atmosphere at any time, waiting to rain down upon us. I'm thinking we should turn a. . .
Captain:(turning to the landing party with upraised arm (tentacle, whatever) in full battle cry: FREEDOM!!!!"
Terminator 3 (2003) - No matter how many of them you kill, another one shows up naked in a little glowing ball of energy just as you got the kids down for a nap.
The Giant Claw (1957) - Cold War Jet Pilots and obnoxious teenyboppers are menaced by a mutated Gonzo from the Muppet Show.
Night of the Lepus (1972) - Quick! Release the 200 foot Elmer Fudd! Through the special effects of really bad editing, weird camera angles and tiny little houses and trains from the hobby store, little domestic bunnies appear as giants galloping across your house and eating Aunt Daisy (actually for the attack they use a man in a rabbit suit). Deforest Kelly's mustache was the scariest thing in this flick. Be vewwwy vewwy quiet.
And lastly: Reservoir Dogs - It's NOT ABOUT DOGS!
I wish someone could find the remote for me so I can change the channel.
Monday, April 20, 2020
Thursday, April 16, 2020
What's in YOUR Bag - A Meme for Thursday
For tonight - since I don't have a kilt to store anything - What's in your tactical purse/man satchel? Not your range bag, but what you carry to work or to the store:
Barkley says - this ball just doesn't throw itself you know.
Mine is as follows as dumped out on the bed when I got home.
Jameson wallet (from the factory gift store).
Squirrel badge (OK, that's not our logo, but I can't show that)
dog biscuits
tactical lip gloss from Bee Naturals
Tanka buffalo bar
a Scrabble letter with Barkley tooth marks on it (don't ask me WHY that is in there)
generic menthol rub
brush
matches
tinted sunscreen (Kabuka Theater Pale Shade)
ratty picture holder with pictures of my daughter growing up - (all I have of those years)
Sunglasses
passport for work travel (if I carry it, they suddenly won't send me to some country with large spiders, that's my hope anyway)
extra digital cards for work camera
little flashlight
lots of pens and a highlighter
Brigid
Friday, April 10, 2020
Fiddling While Dinner Burns
Partner and I both own violins. Mine is about 16 years old, cheap and shiny looking. His, at quick glance, looks like it's been around.
One day, when we first starting hanging out together, I was tidying up and was being a little less than gentle with the instruments left on a table, and I heard "Hon, you might want to be careful with that..."
It seems his violin is insured for more than my first home.
He played his once in an orchestra in Austria when he was a young man. Mine was once played in an Irish bar in Canton, Ohio, badly. I avoid public performances though I once got talked into karaoke in a bar in Fort Meyers, Florida where I sang, to the tune of Willie Nelsons "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain", "Blue Hairs Driving in my Lane". I got rousing applause but only from the tone deaf tourists.
But I love music. I had many years of lessons in classical piano, and clarinet, playing both in band and orchestra, and competing in state music competitions all through high school and the first years of college, before I discovered airplanes and science. The fiddle was one of those 2 beers in--I bet I could learn to play THAT!" moments, which has been fun., though I'm not any good at it. But Partner is good, thanks to his parents support and encouragement, though he hadn't played for years, completing his degree and embarking on a career that takes him around the world, consuming much of his time.
But he did dust it off to play for a college friend's wedding when we were dating. I remember it well. I got "dressed to the nine's" as we used to say, girly clothes and everything including high heels. When I was at the entrance to the sanctuary of the church, the young man who was serving as usher looked perplexed. I was not anyone's parent he recognized and I definitely wasn't of the generation of the bridal party. He DID seem to like my legs, but didn't seem to know where to seat me. I looked at him and said "I'm with the band", at which point Partner looked over and winked.
Fun day, and good music, even if he hadn't played for a while.
While you listen to that, I'm getting supper out of the oven for our hot lunch on Friday - a bean recipe, one of my favorites, it being the "musical fruit" and all.
These aren't your Mom's baked beans. With a hot Chinese chili pepper baked in the middle of them, they have a decided kick but even without the chili, they are very good.
Add to that the large can of Bush's (my favorite canned bean) maple baked beans (about 3 and a half cups), 1 and 1/2 to 2 cups leftover cooked pintos (or one small can, drained), 2 heaping teaspoons of yellow mustard, 2 Tablespoons of apple cider vinegar, 1 and 1/4 teaspoons of Penzey's Northwoods seasoning (coarse flake salt, paprika, chipotle pepper, black pepper, cayenne pepper, thyme, rosemary and garlic) and a pinch of dried jalapeno .
If you don't have Northwoods seasoning, use your favorite all purpose seasoning plus a dash of Paprika and garlic powder. Yes, I know I don't agree with Penzey's owners politics but I still have a container of this spice around and I'm going to use it up - being a cheapskate and all.
Lastly, stir in 1/2 cup of your favorite barbecue sauce. I love Cattlemens, which is getting harder to find, but I understand Costco now has it by the gallon, online, at least ( preppers barbecue heaven). To that add 1/4 cup packed brown sugar and a tablespoon or two of beer. (You know, so you can say, "but honey the recipe CALLED for some beer and I don't want to waste the rest".)
Fry up 6 strips of extra thick smoked bacon. Remove 4 strips when only partially cooked. and continue cooking the last two. Chop the two fully cooked pieces extra fine and put in the beans. Lay the partially cooked strips on top (they will finish cooking but will be soft, but partially cooking them gets rid of a lot of the grease). Here's what it looked like as it went into the oven.
Bake at 250 F. for two to two and a half hours (yes two and a half hours). Note: If you want a wimpy version, remove the red chili with a slotted spoon halfway through cooking). Chop up the soft bacon on top and stir in. This will feed 4-5 hungry folks as a side dish and can easily be doubled.
Thick, rich, smoky, sweet, HOT. Sometimes the good things take a little time.
One day, when we first starting hanging out together, I was tidying up and was being a little less than gentle with the instruments left on a table, and I heard "Hon, you might want to be careful with that..."
It seems his violin is insured for more than my first home.
He played his once in an orchestra in Austria when he was a young man. Mine was once played in an Irish bar in Canton, Ohio, badly. I avoid public performances though I once got talked into karaoke in a bar in Fort Meyers, Florida where I sang, to the tune of Willie Nelsons "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain", "Blue Hairs Driving in my Lane". I got rousing applause but only from the tone deaf tourists.
But I love music. I had many years of lessons in classical piano, and clarinet, playing both in band and orchestra, and competing in state music competitions all through high school and the first years of college, before I discovered airplanes and science. The fiddle was one of those 2 beers in--I bet I could learn to play THAT!" moments, which has been fun., though I'm not any good at it. But Partner is good, thanks to his parents support and encouragement, though he hadn't played for years, completing his degree and embarking on a career that takes him around the world, consuming much of his time.
But he did dust it off to play for a college friend's wedding when we were dating. I remember it well. I got "dressed to the nine's" as we used to say, girly clothes and everything including high heels. When I was at the entrance to the sanctuary of the church, the young man who was serving as usher looked perplexed. I was not anyone's parent he recognized and I definitely wasn't of the generation of the bridal party. He DID seem to like my legs, but didn't seem to know where to seat me. I looked at him and said "I'm with the band", at which point Partner looked over and winked.
Fun day, and good music, even if he hadn't played for a while.
While you listen to that, I'm getting supper out of the oven for our hot lunch on Friday - a bean recipe, one of my favorites, it being the "musical fruit" and all.
These aren't your Mom's baked beans. With a hot Chinese chili pepper baked in the middle of them, they have a decided kick but even without the chili, they are very good.
You start with a small, chopped and "sautéed until caramelized" onion, a few strips of red pepper, and a little green pepper (I had only a dab left after breakfast eggs). Throw in a Tien Tsin chili pepper (I get mine, you guessed it, at Penzeys). Normally used in Asian cooking (from which you can make really good homemade chili oil for potstickers) these are a hot but flavorful addition to soup, stews and chili. The pods are 1 to 2 and a half inches in length. Use a smaller pod (do not cut a large one in half) for two stars HOT, use a the larger pod for 3 stars hot. (I used the largest one). And do NOT forget to remove it before serving unless you want to see a grown man (or woman) cry.
Add to that the large can of Bush's (my favorite canned bean) maple baked beans (about 3 and a half cups), 1 and 1/2 to 2 cups leftover cooked pintos (or one small can, drained), 2 heaping teaspoons of yellow mustard, 2 Tablespoons of apple cider vinegar, 1 and 1/4 teaspoons of Penzey's Northwoods seasoning (coarse flake salt, paprika, chipotle pepper, black pepper, cayenne pepper, thyme, rosemary and garlic) and a pinch of dried jalapeno .
If you don't have Northwoods seasoning, use your favorite all purpose seasoning plus a dash of Paprika and garlic powder. Yes, I know I don't agree with Penzey's owners politics but I still have a container of this spice around and I'm going to use it up - being a cheapskate and all.
Fry up 6 strips of extra thick smoked bacon. Remove 4 strips when only partially cooked. and continue cooking the last two. Chop the two fully cooked pieces extra fine and put in the beans. Lay the partially cooked strips on top (they will finish cooking but will be soft, but partially cooking them gets rid of a lot of the grease). Here's what it looked like as it went into the oven.
Bake at 250 F. for two to two and a half hours (yes two and a half hours). Note: If you want a wimpy version, remove the red chili with a slotted spoon halfway through cooking). Chop up the soft bacon on top and stir in. This will feed 4-5 hungry folks as a side dish and can easily be doubled.
Thick, rich, smoky, sweet, HOT. Sometimes the good things take a little time.
Wednesday, April 8, 2020
Tuesday, April 7, 2020
Love in the Time of Coronavirus
I think the truly tragic part of the coronavirus is that the patient dies alone. No family, no touch - only the interactions of health care providers, running out of hope with the realization that every day a sunset dies. There is no removing those barriers for one last word - their loved ones stuck outside the hospital which is like being brought face to face with something large of fang and claw, safe only as long as you do not move.
But if we could, I know there are many that would risk all for that last breath even if only in wishful thoughts. Not words for my own family member but that of a dear friend who lost her Mom to the virus on Palm Sunday, grieving outside the glass. Hugs to you Latayne - Brigid
But if we could, I know there are many that would risk all for that last breath even if only in wishful thoughts. Not words for my own family member but that of a dear friend who lost her Mom to the virus on Palm Sunday, grieving outside the glass. Hugs to you Latayne - Brigid
Love in the Time of Coronavirus
The great sunlit foyers of the hospital echo as I leave. There is not another living thing for as far as the eye can see.
Then I see the masked-men-all-business security and the barriers and the tape. I have only bent their rules because someone was dying. I could only come alone.
I have thrown away the clear visor, the sad floppy hat and gown, the sticky gloves and that suffocating stiff bowl of a mask, filled with my snot and sweat and tears.
She has thrown off that “old crate” of a body.
She was my pistol of a mother, the one of a kind honkey-tonk piano player, the lavish-beaded necklace maker, the family-loyal-to-the-death, the giver of a hundred presents, everybody’s Granny Rose.
For years she said, “I’m just waitin’ for my ride.” She never, ever, ever lost her trust in the Driver.
She got her ticket punched and left this day, this Palm Sunday. I got to escort her in my arms. The last goodbye was a whisper, a puff too soft for a dandelion.
At the end, she was completely surrounded by just her Savior and me on this holy day.
I lay my Rose among the fronds for safekeeping.
Then I see the masked-men-all-business security and the barriers and the tape. I have only bent their rules because someone was dying. I could only come alone.
I have thrown away the clear visor, the sad floppy hat and gown, the sticky gloves and that suffocating stiff bowl of a mask, filled with my snot and sweat and tears.
She has thrown off that “old crate” of a body.
She was my pistol of a mother, the one of a kind honkey-tonk piano player, the lavish-beaded necklace maker, the family-loyal-to-the-death, the giver of a hundred presents, everybody’s Granny Rose.
For years she said, “I’m just waitin’ for my ride.” She never, ever, ever lost her trust in the Driver.
She got her ticket punched and left this day, this Palm Sunday. I got to escort her in my arms. The last goodbye was a whisper, a puff too soft for a dandelion.
At the end, she was completely surrounded by just her Savior and me on this holy day.
I lay my Rose among the fronds for safekeeping.
Monday, April 6, 2020
And the Latest from China
Chinese Marketing Tips!
Be Friendly!
You don't need spell check!
Commas are best used in the "artistic" sense, placement should be creative.
If all fails USE ALL CAPS
Dear Sir and Madam!
Have a good day!
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Saturday, April 4, 2020
Waving at Neptune - For the Aviators Out There
From True Course - Lessons of a Life Aloft by Brigid Johnson (which would be me for the new reader).
How well I remember the smell of the tarmac, a mixture of cold air and decomposing dinosaurs that hits your nose as soon as you get away from the lights of the hangar. Off at the far end of the airport, on another ramp, some old Jetstars, their bones jutting out from what was left of the primordial ooze, fallen victim to time and perhaps a mechanic's lien.
We were parked off in some dark pool in the corner of the airport, where we had circled the wagons of aircraft, one crew chief left to fend off Rustlers during the remaining daylight, while we tried to catch a few hours of shut-eye as our flight would be an all-night one.
The ancients said the greatest of things to be seen are the sun, stars, water, and clouds. But flying at night we see mostly well . . . dark. Tonight, the stars may only come out after enough altitude to get over a cold front that had been following our planned route.
I never minded the night flying, the air for the most part, smoother, lighting flashing off in a distance warning you of convection, well before you eyes went to the radar. I don't think of the earth below, and it doesn't think of me, but for perhaps some kid laying in the backyard on a blanket, pretending to camp out, as I did at that age, tracking the blink of our strobe as we climb out of the airport, wondering to what far off lands we are going, dreaming of flight and the stars.
I went on my first flight at age six. I remember it as it was my birthday and I also I got my very first watch that day. It was pink. It had Cinderella on it. I made the appropriate thankful noises and then proceeded to try and barter it for a Johnny Seven action toy to no avail.
So, in my watch and my little sailor dress, off we were marched to board Pan Am to San Francisco. We kids were going to be picked up there by my Aunt and Uncle, who had a farm in Hollister, while the folks went to Hawaii for their 25th anniversary. I remember looking in the cockpit as we boarded and deplaned and saying " I would like to do that". I remember well the Flight Engineer, first in my line of vision, who not only looked handsome and smart in his military-style uniform, he didn't have to wear a Cinderella watch.
Months later, my Mom, Dad and I, sat in stunned silence in our family room, that of the shag carpeting and orange curtains, as Virgil Grissom burned to ash with Roger Chaffee and Ed White, there on a launch pad of Cape Canaveral. They were like heroes to those who dreamed of flight and space and glory, jockeys of a race to the Moon, an event that would mark my childhood, and indeed, my generation. Good men, destroyed by the absolutely unforeseen, there still upon the implacable earth.
Needless to say, my parents met my later career aspirations of being a pilot with less than excitement, but neither did they make demands that I live my life just to suit them, as long as they didn't have to pay for it. So, as I got older, the toy airplanes gave way to real ones, and the dangers of a headfirst tumble over the handlebars, replaced by that little section of the performance chart that says "Here be Mach Tuck" where I drew little dragons.
Thirty years after that first flight, there I was, but not as the engineer, I'm the skipper, and we're headed out for a night flight. The payload is calculated, we've fueled and preflighted, the cowling of the engines looming over us, Greek amphoras containing brusque and ceremonial violence, air and fuel, combustion and fire.
With a short salute, we're away from the chocks and on our way, out into the night. I have no regrets that I'm missing happy hour or Jeopardy or whatever people do to occupy their evening. For I have the warm drowsing air of late summer, empty of geese and full of stars, hands upon the wheel casually, yet within the fingers, wrists, and elbows slumbering forever the capacity for flight, as we head out across the gulf
The sea is a broad expanse that neither eye nor voice can span, and when it's calm it lulls you into a false sense of comfort as the engines hum and you gaze out the window with clear, unconscious eye. You are not pondering thoughts that come to you poignant and silent, the order of your conscious, the conduct of life if there really is a proper way to die. You are not thinking of the operational capacities of a Vickers Pump or your own limitations. No, you are thinking about the really cold beer you will have at the end of a day and the laughter of companionship. That is when you hear it, or think you hear it. That sound.
An aircraft engine has as many variances of sound as a human. There are satisfied hums, deep-throated snarls, and the incessant whine of someone who is never satisfied no matter what you do for them. Then, there is that sound, in and of itself, the sound of an aircraft engine over the ocean at night, when there is not enough fuel to turn back, only to go forward to a far away shore
You hear it again. "Oh, that's not right," you think and then you hear it again, that asthmatic thump. As you check EPR's and pressures and temperatures, somewhere in your head are the words: "An engine driven, two-element (centrifugal and gear) fuel pump supplies high-pressure fuel to the engine. Loss of the gear element of the fuel pump will result in flameout." You feel no fear, only annoyance, at the callous outcry of machinery and cold water that has caught you unawares, making you give up your daydream of cold beer and warm skin and confirming unreasonably, your fondness for narrow escapes.Then it is gone, if it ever occurred at all except in your mind, the engine only emitting a steady, slow hum, like somnolent bees. But your senses are back on red alert, that seeming malfunction that the mind hears on such over-water trips, ministering to boldness as forged as its own pretense of fear. What is it to fly such a vast distance, one youngster asked me once? I replied, "It seems like 999 minutes of boredom and 1 minute of stark terror."
You either loved or hated your ship. Aircraft, in general, are easy to fall in love with, with their ever present potency and mysterious uncertainty. Even as a child I dreamed of them, watching them fly overhead, the contrails a heroic thread, the sun glinting on their promise. But they varied among even the same make and model, twins of different mothers.
As we cruised along we discussed which ones we loved, and which ones we hated. For there were the mornings when you went out to the flight line and there, on the tarmac, perched four large birds, three of them bright, shining, and gleaming, perfect in form. And the fourth, older than the dirt upon it, with a stain of fluid on the ground underneath, the Scarlet Letter of hydraulic fluid. Even if you got a good aircraft, there would be days they could be as unruly as a mule, refusing to start, to move, and occasionally willing to give you a swift kick. It is sometimes the smallest of things that can be your undoing.
But it's not just your own craft turning on you that you have to be concerned about on such trips. Weather over vast waters is its own continent. Perhaps not so much now, but 20 years ago, when I was a pup with four strips on my delicate shoulders that were not yet tarnished, weather planning for extended overwater operations was less meteorology and more alchemy. I think about many long flights, our course drawn out with paper, not electronic blips of a satellite fix, a small x marking a fuel stop, a small cross marking our destination, a line marking the path. where we as Pilgrims, sought out that holy place, that grail of a full night's sleep.
We fly out across a vast expanse of water, our eyes looking out ahead, from below, the silent watch of drowned sailors' shadows, water moving like breath, breathing in and out to the sea and beyond. Gravity weighs us down like anchors, our craft fighting the eddies and currents of the front's swift passing. In the windshield are the reflections of those eyes, scanning, taking in the gauges, the small tics of EPR, and fuel flow. I picture my eyes then, and they are my eyes now, the eyes of a child and an ancient, one who looks at everything as if it is new, one who has seen so much death that they will never be alone.
The years fly by, between those eyes of my youth and the eyes that shine back at me from this small computer screen. Then, one night, it is the last flight. I was hanging up my professional aviator wings and going back to school to get my doctorate and pursue the other passion in my life. I hadn't planned on being single again, I might as well be single and doing what I'd always wanted to - separating bone from ash, solving the puzzle. Part-time flying would keep food on the table during that time, but it wouldn't be this type of flying. It would never be this kind of flying again.
As we cruised along at altitude, we told some stories and reminisced, so many good memories intertwined with the days in which we scared ourselves silly and went out and happily did it all over again. As we finished our stories and the controller started that inevitable step downand frequency change that heralded the descent, the cockpit got very still, very quiet. Choice and desire was going to change my life in the next year. The thought was sobering and a little scary.
Yet in some ways I was almost exhilarated to make that step. The truth is that our finest moments are most likely to occur when we are feeling deeply uncomfortable, restless, or unfulfilled. For it is only in such moments, propelled by our discontent, that we are likely to step out beyond our experience and start searching for different ways or truer answers. Answers that will give our lives clearer meaning. I wish the airman that taught me how to fly was here to watch this, but he too had gone West, caught up in the unforeseen.
As we finished the before landing check, I noticed the tiny pinpricks of lights as cars inched along flat strips of highway, people trudging to work so very early, or coming home so very late. I wondered how they could live like that, never taking chances, never giving up that secure existence for a chance at a dream. Never having the world below them and their heart in their throat in a high G-turn at low altitude, the smell of a jet engine and everything that powers it making them feel alive and reborn. Never knowing what it is like up there, the world and all it's petty problems trailing behind them in a contrail of white as we wave at Neptune, far below.
My eyes twitch, not fighting the tactile tears which some might say are a woman's trait, of which man knows naught about, just dealing with the dust that suddenly came into the air as I look at my crew. I take a deep breath, wanting this last landing to be perfect, the delicate chirp chirp of wheels that aren't Rodan stomping Tokyo, but a small, delicate bird alighting on a small branch. Or at least no hoots or hollers from the stands about arresting cables or chiropractors.
Chirp, Chirp. Yes! Polite golf course applause from the seat adjacent to mine
After all was said and done, gear pinned, doors closed, goodbyes said, I stand on the ramp, in pools of water that rained down in acknowledgment, alone. I thought again of those that have taught us these things, skills passed on from airman to airman. Skills will translate to more than one occasion where that muscle memory in those hands and wrists and elbows kept me alive.
I think of those men and there's a catch in my throat as if there is no air, as if by their being dead and gone, they've taken all of the remaining air with them, all they had compassed and claimed; all they had postulated, the reasoning of sun, stars, water, and clouds that we later laid our own claim to. I give a little salute to the dark shadowed form of my bird and the sky and walk, out into the implacable earth.
- Brigid
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