Archive for October, 2007

Cop story of the day

October 30, 2007

2:30 a.m. Interstate 30, near the Hunt County line, Texas. A Royse City policeman pulls over a truck for speeding. Driver is acting suspiciously. Police searches vehicle. Driver is transporting human heads. He is detained for eight hours while a judge tries to find something wrong with carrying human heads around.

Judge called to the scene: Apparently upset that heads were packed unceremoniously. “It was completely and wholly inappropriate in my view.”

Police lieutenant’s rule of thumb: “When you are carrying human body parts, it’s good to have some documentation that they are legitimate.”

Canning adventuress

October 29, 2007

1996. My sister, my mother, my father and I descended into the cellar after Grandma Elizabeth died to see a tree trunk, about 10 inches diameter, holding up the house, wedged between the kitchen floor and the cellar dirt. In the darkness beyond, the shelves were lined with fruits and veggies my grandmother had canned, probably in the 1970s. I don’t remember what any of them were. I only remember my father warning me to keep my distance, because they could explode at any moment. The projectile bacterial goop would give us botulism and we would likely die. Botulism was a popular tactical topic in our arguments, as well as an endless source of jokes. My father took it the most seriously. Later it got worse, when he wandered away from physics and toward bioremediation, that is, cleaning up anthrax or other bad microbes for governments or hospitals, and learned a bunch of biochemistry that cannot have been good for his mental health. Worse for us, because there are few ways one can fight the kind of convincingly solid scientific evidence my father uses in his arguments about why we should not eat the toast that fell on the ground. “Hantavirus! Hantavirus!” he would yell, snatching the toast away. My preferred method is bravado. “I have an amazing immune system,” I’d reply, suggesting that if I died, science was welcome to name this new strain of the virus after me.

Hantavirus kategoldenii.

Nonetheless, my father successfully indoctrinated me and my sister with a fear of jars of food with handwritten labels, the year smudged, harboring who knows what. So it was with more than a little bravado, conjured from the past, that this week I ventured into Home Canning.

The first catalyst was that last week I moved into a cottage in the hills that sparks my domestic instincts. It is an adorable cabin, lots of trees, no roommates. I have also begun reading Walden.

The second catalyst was that my grocer was selling almost-overripe strawberries at 79c for a quart pack when usually they are at least $3.99. I bought six of them, congratulating myself for my frugality. And a pack of jars, and the Ball Blue Book on Preserves, which, at $1.79, seems to me an excellent deal for what (so it says on the back) has been the authority on home canning for the last 50 years.

The Ball Blue Book briefly explains the difference between conserves, jams, jellies, preserves, and butters. I have read it several times but I cannot keep it straight. The recipes for strawberry jam, preserves, heirloom preserves, and conserves, seem to me almost identical. I embarked on what was called “Heirloom Preserves,” mostly because it sounded expensive and prestigious and fancy, as opposed to “jam,” which just had another cup of sugar and no lemon juice. What I ended up with was delicious, but it tasted and looked an awful lot like jam.

In the end, it took me two days to get all the jam off the wall. I smashed the strawberries down to compact them, with some difficulty, into 12 cups. I had three pots going. The recipe said to boil “rapidly” until the sugar was clear and the stuff was a thick gel. Trouble began after about 10 minutes, when the stuff really did start to boil. Bubble, bubble, toil and trouble: the foam rose quicker than I could assuage it. I was lifting one pot, stirring another–wait, the third’s boiling over–now the second’s doing nothing, turn that up–fuck, it’s hot–is that my HAIR in the pot? The gel became messier as it thickened, but it never thickened to the point at which it would slide off a spoon in a sheet. And just what was that foam? A disgusting light pink scum that I couldn’t get rid of. After a few hours I stuck it in a big pot in my closet, where, according to the directions, it was to sit for 24 hours. A day later it was nearly solid. Amazing. Still covered with foam, though. What is that foam?

One month later. I light a candle and make a PBJ in honor of dear departed Grandma Elizabeth. As of yet, no apparent botulism.

Autumn salad

October 26, 2007

red beets, roasted for hours
broccoli raab, sauteed
brussels sprouts, cauliflower, steamed & sauteed
whole-wheat pasta shells (not too many)
pine nuts, roasted
parsley and tarragon, chopped
grana padano
pomegranate seeds
coarse salt, black pepper
fruity-buttery olive oil, tiny bit of balsamic

My new pen pal

October 26, 2007

They sent me this:

Harpers Requests Money That Is Rightfully Theirs
Response:

Shawn Green
Circulation Director
Harper’s Magazine

Dear Shawn:

Thank you for your recent letter.

Of all the people who regularly write me to ask about the money I owe them, you have the nicest manners. You don’t even mention late fees.

I commend you and your magazine, and enclose a hefty $19. Please consider my leap to an 18-month subscription an endorsement of your graceful correspondence.

I regret any concern my silence may have caused you.

Sincerely,

Kate Golden

Aspire to Asperger’s

October 25, 2007

Regarding the Jena 6:

Last week John McWhorter of the Manhattan Institute read a rational and eloquent commentary on NPR suggesting that the best way for society to deal with a noose is to ignore it.

Big response. An uproar from people who did not ignore the nooses of Jena.

This week McWhorter went live on NPR. He told the nation that if someone put a noose on his door, he wouldn’t get mad or scared or anything at all. He would ignore it.

It’s hard to imagine this reaction in a human with a normal emotional range. The noose’s symbolic power is undeniable. I aspire to ignore it. But I wonder if perhaps McWhorter does not have a normal emotional range.

Slate.com: Keep on swinging, kids

October 19, 2007

I’m humbled by Slate reporters’ orneriness on pretty much every subject in the news (today’s example: the genre of edgeless indie rock). They’re like that guy in your freshman seminar who insists on disagreeing with everything, and ends up rousing even the most hungover classmate to fiery retort. I imagine it must tax the mind to be always looking for a fight. The whole’s effect is farcical, so I limit myself to little bits, just when I need to sand off some cynicism.

Accounting for ill will

October 14, 2007

The BBC reports that someone wants to assassinate Vladimir Putin next week. I assume there are plenty of people who are actively trying to snuff him, and many more who wish something nasty would happen to him. I wonder how many murder plots are afoot in the whole world right now? How many of them are mere death wishes and how many are in the planning stage? How many will succeed?

Eos greets the world!

October 13, 2007

You have to set out the rules in the first post. I know as you know that blogs are better when they stick to a topic, like ostrich husbandry or life as a polygynist. So a brief sigh, everyone, as I toss that idea and relegate myself to mediocrity-at-best. If I get ideas about ostriches, or about ostriches with multiple partners, or opossums with multiple partners, they all go here, as long as they happen before coffee. It’s because I’m insane in the morning — I haven’t used an alarm clock for years — but I always feel the morning vigor pauses, and then slides irretrievably away, by about 10:30 a.m. So I like to think of this as my mental compost pile, It can bubble, bubble the rest of the day without me. And then I can use it as fertilizer.How to Compost