Parking FAIL
I kid you not, after spending half an hour laughing until I cried at the FAILblog, I walked out of the house and saw this.
I kid you not, after spending half an hour laughing until I cried at the FAILblog, I walked out of the house and saw this.
It didn't even cost Allan 5 grand!
...because it's, like, summer the weekend here and I'm not getting paid to write this crap I have about a billion things I'd rather be doing. To tide you over, because I'm generous that way (and YES, I know I haven't answered your comment about my being old), here's a little exchange between Allan and me:
Me: (calling from kitchen) Hey Allan? I hate to tell you this.
Allan: What?
Me: You're going to have to marry me.
Allan: Why? Because you rock?
[OK, I'll give you a minute to stop retching]
Me: Yep. I rock, because I just made MAYONNAISE!
I've known how to make mayo for years. I've just never done it. But I figure if I can emulsify mustard, vinegar, salt, and oil into a vinaigrette (merci, J.), I can make mayonnaise.
I will have to keep working at it, though. My mayo was very yellow, and I don't know if that's because of the beautiful farm eggs I used, or a lack of oil.
Anyway, I have Michael Ruhlman to thank for the inspiration. Click that link. Donna Turner Ruhlman's photos are beautiful.
Because we just got in from seeing Blind Melon at The Dame.
The band still rocks, and the singer they chose to replace Shannon Hoon (RIP) is really a perfect match. I'm impressed.
We have Sirius satellite radio in the car, and mostly listen to the first five presets we programmed: Classic Vinyl, Classic Rewind, The Vault, The Spectrum, and First Wave. Having come of age in the 80s, I'm partial to First Wave, but after that, Classic Vinyl is my favorite channel.
Today I had to drive somewhere (gasp!). Imagine my surprise while listening to REM's "The One I Love" to find out I was listening to Classic Vinyl.
REM. Classic Rock. Does. Not. Compute.
Then I wrapped my brain around it, and suddenly felt very, very old.
This afternoon I planted some herbs we bought the other day into hanging "baskets." The rosemary seems to be best suited for the situation. It's already living up to its name.
In the rosemary planter, I also put chives and lime thyme. (Can I get a hoo-rah for assonance?)
Heheh, she said "ass."
In the other pot I planted cilantro, lime basil, and tarragon.
Yes, I have a thing for lime. I put the dill and spearmint in their own separate pots.
I've already made a chive vinaigrette, and I've got mint water chilling in the fridge. Here's to a summer full of fresh food and fresh herbs!
...is very fun.
I'm a HUGE fan of Raiders of the Lost Ark and The Last Crusade (Temple of Doom, not so much), and I was quite worried that this would be overkill. Not to mention lame.
I can safely recommend it. You'll laugh, you'll cheer, you'll jump in your seat, you'll grit your teeth. Lather, rinse, repeat.
And you'll
Indiana Jones.
(And that's all I'm saying. No spoilers, no analysis, no deep commentary. I ain't Pauline Kael, people.)
(Also, forgive the animated gif, but that's as good a way to express it as any.)
My boyfriend Harrison Ford has a new movie coming out today, and WE'RE GOING TO SEE IT TONIGHT!
I now direct you here* for a little history about the thrilling "Raiders March" by John Williams. We played this in concert band** in high school, and I got goosebumps. every. time.
*a tip of my fedora to drjonboyg
**yes, I was in band. Shut up. I wasn't in marching band.
Today I get to vote!
That's all I have to say about that.
EDIT: I know Hillary Clinton is going to trounce Barack Obama in Kentucky. I am interested in seeing the geographical breakdown of the votes, though.
RE-EDIT: No surprise. Clinton takes Appalachia; Obama takes the metro areas.
Last week we picked up our first CSA share of the season. You may have already seen Allan's post about it; go there to see the bounty.
We've still got food. Tonight we're grilling the last of the asparagus, and we still have a pound of ground beef in the freezer. Wednesday we'll pick up our next share.
I don't mean to imply that we've only eaten the CSA food since last Wednesday; we've eaten a couple of meals out, and there was only one meal that was completely composed of CSA food.
What I do want to say is how good the food is. And it was produced less than 20 miles from where we live. Can you say locavore?
While the initial investment might seem hefty, I think it's worth it for the quality of the food. Add in the lower cost of transport, the lower fuel expenditure, the fact that it's organic (and the meat is raised humanely), and it's a win-win-win thing.
And I should have blogged about it two or three months ago, so that you could get in on a CSA share in your area.
Recent Comments