Category: Everything Else

  • We Make Pasta

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    No man is lonely eating spaghetti;
    it requires so much attention.

    -Christopher Morley

    We eat pasta once a week, one of two weekly vegetarian dinners. I like this arrangement because it basically means I’m off the hook for dinner that night- just boiling water and opening a box. Jeff, however, always moans and groans on pasta night. Recently he commented that he likes freshly made pasta, and he’d eat it all the time if we made it. As long as he had freshly grated parmesan. And a loaf of bread on the side.

    OK then. I bought a pasta machine.

    It was a pain at first, the pasta wasn’t cutting all the way through and so I was having to separate each strand. Thinking all the while, there is NO WAY it is worth the time to do this, not when a box of pasta can be had for a dollar. After our first few trials, though, we got the hang of it and everything went much more smoothly- I think maybe we just didn’t let it rest long enough. (I can hear my Italian friends laughing at me. Keep quiet, you.)

    Jeff had started a loaf of “rustic bread” earlier in the day, and as we finished up rolling and cutting our fettucine he checked on the dough, ending its second rise. I don’t know if it was overproofed or whether he just handled it roughly, but it just went pfffft– deflated into a pancake. He was ready to toss it- angrily, I might add- but I suggested that he knead it one more time and leave it alone for a bit and maybe it would rise again.

    It did, and he brushed the top with some butter seasoned with a witch’s brew of god knows what- I suspect steak seasoning- and put it in to bake.

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    It was better than any of our breads thus far- the crust was both flaky and chewy, the seasoning was yum, and the texture was perfect.

    Lesson learned: never give up, never throw anything away.

    The pasta was delicious- we topped it with Mr. Newman’s red sauce, I’m all out of the stuff we froze over the summer. We were worried it wouldn’t be enough- it doesn’t look like a lot, does it?- but had leftovers for lunch the next day. They really “plump when you cook ’em.” Fully organic meal, too.

    We really felt like we had done something productive with our day. As opposed to the leaf raking, which today’s high winds have completely undone.

    Lesson learned, part two: Don’t leave raking half done.

    I think next week we’ll show the boys how to roll and cut the pasta, and let them cook on Sundays. It’s really not hard and I think they’ll enjoy being responsible for a weekly meal.

    Anyway, that’s something I learned to do this week. Did you learn anything new?

  • Snowdrop

    snowdrops 2009
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    If you’ve never been thrilled to the very edges of your soul by a flower in spring bloom, maybe your soul has never been in bloom.

    -Audra Foveo

    My new favorite flower: the delicate snowdrop, who only yesterday was yet covered by a thin blanket of snow.

    Tiny and unassuming, modest and hiding its face. Sheltered in the shade, uncovered by a young hand desperately seeking spring, and seeming to whisper: Thank you for your patience, for weathering the cold and the storm. I am here, take heart, gather hope. Soon, soon. The best is yet to come.

    I am thrilled to the very edges of my soul.

  • Many, many thanks to reader Linda who let me know that the following can be recycled at certain recycling centers in Delaware:

    Computer components and/or parts
    Main frame computers
    Mini computers
    Terminals
    Printers
    Personal computers
    Monitors
    Keyboards
    Mice
    Cables
    Laptop computers
    Notebook computers
    Notepad computers
    Copying equipment
    Electronic typewriters
    Calculators
    Telecommunications Equipment
    Telephone systems
    Terminals
    Telephones
    Telex
    Facsimile
    Pay telephones
    Cordless telephones
    Cellular telephones
    Answering machines
    Radio, Television, Electro acoustic Radios
    Televisions
    Video cameras
    Video recorders
    Tape recorders
    Audio amplifiers
    VCRs
    Cassette players
    Record players
    Toys
    Game boys
    Electronic toys

    The list of recycling centers that accept these electronics can be found here.

    Now the hard part: convincing everybody we don’t need to hang onto the Atari or Sega Genesis.