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  • Pi Day: What’s a Piebird?

    Pi Day: What’s a Piebird?

    piebird

     

    It could be argued that there is an element of
    entertainment in every pie,

    as every pie is inherently a surprise by virtue of its crust.

    ―Janet Clarkson, Pie: A Global History

     

    Happy Pi (Pie) Day!

    Some random thoughts about pie…

    I don’t actually care for most pies, and the ones I do like don’t have a top crust (pumpkin, coconut custard). Since I don’t like normal pies, I don’t eat them, and therefore I have no real concept of what makes a good & tasty pie. This upsets my pie-loving husband to no end, and in recent years he’s given up on me and gone ahead and made his own pies.

    Pictured here is a pie of his own making. It’s stuffed with a variety of apples picked from the local orchard, and he was particularly proud of his little nest & leaves accenting the piebird.

    …and thoughts about pi

    I really like the symbol for pi, but feel the number itself is ugly.

    I have not read The Life of Pi, and never will, simply because too many people have told me I should read it. They said that about The Kite Runner too and I’m still pissed.

    Did anyone else see Pi the movie? It came out in the late 90s, was shot in a really stark black & white and was mostly about obsession and trying to find patterns where there are none, trying to solve the mysteries of the universe using logic and math. It was something I really wanted to like based on the themes and it was really excellent in parts, but what I really recall is squirming through the trephination scenes (the main character suffered blinding migraines, presumably because of the pressure of all this profound knowledge he was unraveling, and he would drill holes in his skull to relieve the pressure). Maybe it’s partly because I can understand how you might get to that point as a migraine sufferer myself, but those images stuck with me in a baaaad way. Pi is one of those movies that could do with repeated viewings to really “get” what’s going on, so I am doomed to never quite understand it. Because you couldn’t pay me to see those scenes again.

     

    piebird-baked

     Pretty, yes?

    What’s a piebird?

    To Jeff’s eternal chagrin, I love little single-purpose kitchen gadgets and collectibles and doohickies. I picked up this piebird forever ago (thinking maybe it would inspire me to bake pies. Nope).

    Piebirds were preceded by funnel-shaped steam vent crust supporters, going back to Victorian times. The piebird vents steam during baking so the juices don’t seep out or boil over, like they are wont to do with a top crust with slits cut in. Redirecting excess moisture also keeps the bottom crust from getting soggy. So in theory, you’ll wind up with flaky crusts, a top crust that won’t fall, and a spill-free oven.

    You lay down your bottom crust, then your piebird on top. Fill in around the bird. Cut a slit into the top crust, then place over the piebird (threading it through the slit) so that the crust is supported. Crimp around edges and around piebird. Bake as directed.

    I’m pretty sure that when I bought this, I thought the bird would sing while venting steam, like a tea kettle. Maybe some do but I haven’t seen any evidence to support that, and mine didn’t.

    Did it make the crust more flaky or the pie more tasty? Honestly, I don’t recall, sorry. I’ll take better notes next time. But it makes for a pretty presentation and it makes me smile to see it perched on a kitchen shelf… that counts for something, right?

     

    Thoughts on pie? Or pi?

    What’s your favorite kitchen gadget?

     

     

  • Wordless Wednesday: Crocuses

    Wordless Wednesday: Crocuses

    crocuses

     

    It takes courage to be crocus minded.

    God, I would rather wait till June, like wise roses,
    when the hazards of winter are safely behind, and I am expected
    and everything is ready for roses.

    But crocuses? Highly irregular.
    Knifing through hard-frozen ground and snow, sticking their necks out,
    because they believe in Spring
    and have something personal and emphatic to say about it.

    ―Jo Sorley

     

    Not sure how I’ve never seen this quote before, but I love it very much.

    May we all be brave like crocuses.

     

     

  • March. Half Marathon Training. It’s the New “New Year’s Resolution”

    March. Half Marathon Training. It’s the New “New Year’s Resolution”

    photo(34)

    Hoe while it is spring, and enjoy the best anticipations.

    It is not much matter if things do not turn out well.

    -Charles Dudley Warner

    I read somewhere recently that March is the New Years’ Resolution of fitness. That is, more people newly commit to the idea of a fitness regimen, particularly when it comes to running, in March— presumable because the weather is turning, making it more inviting to be outdoors and reminding folks that shorts/ tank top/ bathing suit season is in the not-so-distant future.

    It does seem to bear out in practice— this past week was the busiest I’ve ever seen my gym. There was, and I kid you not, NOT A SINGLE MACHINE AVAILABLE. I’ve never seen that happen before.

    Since I did such a craptastic job of adhering to my New Year’s resolutions in general, I’m thinking of Daylight Saving as a reboot, New Year 2.0, try again, friend. My resolutions had less to do with fitness than they did with time-management and trying-new-things, but hey, this seems as good a time as any to post an update on what I’m planning for the next few months.

    The big, red letter THING is the Delaware half-marathon on May 12th: Mother’s Day. The point is to finish; I don’t have any time aspirations. This time last year I was really worried about doing the Dirty Girl 5k, since I hadn’t run any kind of distance since maybe the one-mile trials for the Presidential Fitness test in junior high. You’ve come a long way, baby.

    I can’t say I’m excited, or that “I know I can do it!” or any of that stuff. I just want to do it to prove to myself that I can. It goes through Wilmington, so I’ll be running through my old neighborhoods, which I can truthfully say I look forward to.

    Everything between then and now is scheduled around my need to prepare so I don’t hurt myself/look like an idiot. The training looks something like this:

    Running 3x a week: one long run, one easy run, one interval/tempo run. One of those happens on trails with hills that I curse a blue streak at (in my mind).

    Strength 45min 2x a week: gym circuit or kickboxing class, which incorporates strength training

    Cross-train 45min 2x a week: swimming, yoga, ice skating, biking

    In practice, that works out sort of like this at the moment:

    Monday: 3 miles easy, 30min swimming drills

    Tuesday: kickboxing

    Wednesday: yoga in the morning, 3 miles intervals, 30min skate

    Thursday: kickboxing and/or 45min laidback gym circuit/bike

    Friday: yoga in the morning, 45min gym circuit/bike/elliptical

    Saturday: long run, 45-60min swimming with kids

    Sunday: 2 hour skate, trail hiking with kids

    It sounds like a lot, and it kind of is, but I think of it the same way as I do nutrition: it’s the sum total of my week, not a strict daily routine. I don’t get to everything every day. Sometimes I’m not feeling it. Sometimes I can’t make kickboxing class. Sometimes the gym is crazy crowded. Sometimes life gets in the way.

    Sunday is technically my “rest” day but yesterday I hiked 3 hilly miles with Jeff and the kids and raced the kids across the pool for 45 minutes.

    I skate when Cass is at the rink for lessons; I hit the gym when she’s taking her swimming lesson. My kickboxing classes are a chance to meet up with a friend, so I think of them more as a sanity saver than as exercise (even though it pretty reliably kicks my butt). Yoga helps me decompress after a day hunched over a laptop and relax after a hard run, and I’m so thrilled by my new ability to move across the water without dying that my classes fly by.

    It’s not really training (for now, talk to me again when I’m running 10miles on Saturdays), it isn’t work, it’s a more active life in general. I kind of keep my eye on how much activity I should be doing for the week to keep progressing, but for the most part all I’m strictly regulating is increasing mileage so I’ll be able to run 13.1 in May.

     

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    And it’s making a difference. I can feel how my stroke is stronger; I’m not completely incapacitated after kickboxing anymore; my ankles don’t kill after a skating session. I took some time off from running during the darkest of winter, and then got hit by the flu right when I should have been beginning half-marathon training, but I’m transitioning back into a running routine fairly easily. That’s an awesome feeling to have, right there.

    I’m also really happy and relieved that my family is joining in with weekend swimming, skating and hiking, so I’m getting that extra exercise in without it taking me away from them all the time. And now that the days are longer, they’ll be more willing to go to the park after school.

     

    photo(36)

     

    Funny how you can see exercise as a selfish thing when you’re doing it on your own.

    Along those lines, I’m looking for more ways for us to be active as a family without spending a fortune. I don’t begrudge our Y membership or buying an annual state park pass at all, but skating sessions can get pricey fast. Rock-climbing, CrossFit, gymnastics etc all seem like fun options (not to mention the circus school in Philly!) but the fees add up when the kids are taking lessons and playing sports to boot. Heck, even race registrations add up quickly, especially when there’s more than just me running.

    Speaking of which, here’s the tentative run schedule for now:

    • ShamRock and Roll 5k in Newark May 16th. Just to establish a baseline 5k time for the year.
    • Cherry Blossom 5k. March 30th.Will do this one with Cass just for fun if the weather is nice. Free zoo admission after, with the Easter Bunny and all that.
    • Run for the Ages 10k. April 13th, my first 10k.
    • Healthy Kids Day 5k. April 28th. I ran this one with Jake last year, it’s a fundraiser for our local Y.
    • and then the May 12th half.

    After that, it’ll be mud runs and fun runs for the rest of the year, unless my half experience is good/bad enough to prompt me to sign up for another in the fall. We’ll see.

    LBI has a sprint tri with a relay option that looks tempting, as well as an island-length 18miler. Both of those options scare the bejeezus out of me today, but I don’t know how I’ll feel come September/October.

    …and that’s where I am with all that right now.

    And now excuse me. I’ve pretty much stopped drinking coffee most days, but the time change always screws me up and I think I’ll need at least another cup to get me through the day.

    photo(37)

    New much-needed mug from The Universe Knows.
    Check out the selection, it’s awesome.

     

     

    Gonna give your resolutions a March reboot?

    How long does it take you to recover from Daylight Saving?