Friday, December 13, 2019

Antifa rioting in London

Maybe they're just protesting. Hard to tell.

We lost so badly we must now protest. Okay, you asked for it. Here goes:

Boris is not the boss of me
Stand up to racism
Stop Islamophobia
Defy Tory rule
Uckfay Orisbay
Flounce like this
Mask your face
Stomp the ground
Scream at the sky
This sign is heaver than I thought
This is the worst date ever
Does green hair make me look fat?
Migrants and refugees welcome here
I thought riot was going to be comedy
Thith tongue pierthing tathtth like metal.
Where was I. Oh the election. You're all racists.
We never did like you very much.
Redo the election



Austria, St. Nicholas parade, Krampus, migrants

In some fer'ner countries the character Krampus accompanies St. Nicholas to punish bad children. It's a Yurpean thing. It's the whole good cop/bad cop routine.

Muslim immigrants to Austria decided it was a good idea to disrupt a St. Nicholas parade somewhere in Austria. Several men in Krampus costumes routed them. Actually, the Krampus characters beat the Muslim parade disrupters with sticks.

It's fun!

Everyone had fun. In their way.

"Hey you guys let's go disrupt the infidels' parade. We must teach them our ways."

      "That's a great idea!"

"Hey Krampus guys, let's kick these disruptive guys' butts. We must teach them our ways."

      "That's a great idea!"

It's all so controlled. Notice they avoid blood.

 
I'm glad I was born in the one normal country.


Macronomics

Trillions are at stake.

Trump did not create all of it, but he is instrumental in most of it and he reads the national and global vibes brilliantly.

When the m-o-o-o-o-o-o-n is in the seventh house
And J-e-e-e-w piter aligns with Mars
Then p-e-e-e-a-c-e will ≈ guide ≈  the ≈  pla-a-nets.
And l-u-u-u-h -- u-u-u-h-v will steer the stars.

Like this:


I would say let's go back to a gentler time when Democrats sang of a new age of peace harmony and when liberals accepted the results of national elections and didn't resist to 100% to thwart America's will to becoming great again and presidents weren't impeached only because Democrats simply cannot handle being pushed out of power and when given the smallest majority in the House they didn't distort all the parliamentary mechanisms available to them and further distort the functioning of all government departments wherein they exist deeply ensconced to accuse their adversary of abusing power, the precise thing they are doing themselves. But then I realize, looking back on it, the situation was even worse in 1969. It was a period of extreme high anxiety.

Let's sing.

I loved this song so much.


Four years of Primitive Technology

Indy, basketball cat

Thursday, December 12, 2019

Pie crust

Sarah Sanders bragged about her pumpkin pie and was roundly mocked by her detractors because the pie crust was obviously mass produced. Without tasting it, they insisted the pie was mass produced too.

She made the filling, not the crust.

And the weird thing is a pie crust for that kind of pie is often easier than the old farmhouse method.  It can be graham crackers and butter pressed into a pie pan and baked for ten minutes.

It can be animal cracker, or nearly any cookie, broken up and held together with butter.

One day a girlfriend came over to make pies. I poured oil into flour as I saw my mother do and the girlfriend asked me what I doing. I said "Making a pie crust. Duh."

She told me that is not the way to do it.

Well, it's how my mother does it.

"How does your mother's pie crust come out?"

     "Like cardboard."

"See? Oil is wrong."

     "Fine then. What should I do?"

"First, dump that out."

Always just that tactful. That is, full of tacks.

She taught me to go cold. To cut fat into flour. To freeze everything, flour, bowl, water, implements, your own fingers.

The idea is to avoid developing gluten. She didn't know about low-protein flour. And she didn't know about cloths to cover rolling pins and cloth mats to roll out the dough. Simply chilling the fat and using ice water will do. You don't have to go to extremes.



Farm wives use their fingers to smash small pieces of fat into a bowl of flour. They keep doing that until the whole bowl of flour is loaded with fat. They're basically creating flakes, small smashed bits of fat coated with flour brought together at the end with as little ice water as possible. Cold vodka works nicely because it burns off resulting in a dryer flakier crust. 

Pulsing in a food processor works very well but it doesn't create these same built-in flakes. It tends to over-process and produce a much finer result. When baked, more dusty and crumbly than flakey. 

I use very cold butter cut into small squares and smash them until the whole stick of butter is smashed. You can feel the chunks of butter in the flour with your fingertips, and keep doing that until there are no more chunks. It's basic as h-e-double rolling pins. 

Chill. Then roll out when cold. The idea is keep it cold until it is baked. 

It's easier to roll when it's warmed up, but it's essential to keep it cold.

The convenience of pre-made crusts separated us from this art. Now, very few people bother. Very few people know how. Everyone agrees too much trouble, and what a shame because it's actually quite easy and it's one chance to play around with food. Here is a chance to be a little artistic. To do something a little bit different.

Check out this book. Amazon $18.00 for hardcover. 


Oh man, that is awesome. I bet she used a cutter for the leaves. But it's also easy to cut your own leaves. Just take extra dough and cut out a football shape, etch a central vein and then side veins. 

You'd think browser images would give you a ton of ideas but it doesn't. This is a lost art. 

You can cut or press holes in a pattern and trigger a case of trypophobia. 


Oops. I stand corrected. My bad. I should have searched "artistic pie crusts" Tons of ideas. The art isn't lost, but the pie crust art-saving people are a bit insane. 

Cthulhu. 


Bravo! You nut.

This artist has plenty of copiers. 

The ones made from cutters are impressive but the ones cut by hand even more so.



The tree is a great idea. It shows you can do just about anything. 

Geometric patterns are attractive. Patterns made from dough strips and patterns made from dough shapes, and from holes in the dough.

I like the idea of cutting a hole then using the plug cut out for a shape on the top. Beaten egg white is the glue. 

One time a woman came over to a holiday dinner with an apple pie that she made herself. Very good pie. She troubled to cut strips in rolled dough and form a lattice for the top. She set strips apart horizontally then vertically on top of them. It was apparent she did not know how to weave the strips. She had the design, but not the weave. 

Here's how to weave pie dough strips for a lattice top. It took longer to draw in Photoshop than it does to make the top out of dough.


You could do that in the center, then leave the rest unfinished, twist the rest of the strips and drape them off to sides. Add leaves and vines and berries to combine geometry with organic shapes. Do this on top of a pie crust or directly on top of the pie. Poke holes in the top pie crust or leave holes by covering only partially. 

Man, some people are really good at this. I must say, the ones that use tools for shapes are very elegant, but a bit anal, while the ones straight out people's imaginations are intriguingly artistic. It's sort of a shame to eat them and an even bigger shame not to eat them because they're too nice. Take a picture and eat it. The pie, not the picture.


[pie crust face] Oh, the technique is to bring some of the red from the cherries up onto the features.

Oddly, the ones that are ornate look tedious, while the ones that look careless are more fun and more attractive. The idea is to have fun, not win a contest judged by the court of Louis XIV. 

You can take this simple lattice and put things on it like grapes, or acorns, or berries. 

Or snakes and lizards. 

Or lightening bolts and rain clouds. 

Or sheep. Maybe buffalo.

Or anything that you shape out of dough.

My dad used to make shepherd's pie but he didn't know what he was doing. His pie crusts were oil and just really bad. And he never quite got the idea of shepherd implying lamb, not ground beef. And he didn't understand the pie top is a mashed potatoes. He was just wrong all over the place. But I loved his pies anyway because I didn't know any better either.

Now I'm thinking of a shepherd's pie with a lamb on top made of mashed potatoes. 

Perhaps that's a bit twee.

How about a lamb shape etched into the mashed potato top. Or piped on with additional mashed potatoes. With a gravy face and gravy hooves. 

If I wrote something in hieroglyphs then everyone would say, "There he goes again. He's obsessed."


Britain: conservatives swept.

Brexit swept.




650 seats in the House of Commons
326 seats needed for a majority.

Cell phone call

* bring, bring *

"Hello."

* long pause *

     "Hello. May I speak to the head of the house?"

"That's me. I noticed a pause after I answered and that tells me a computer entered my number for you, and your accent tells me the call transferred to India. What do you want? Person in India."

* click *

He hung up. Not me. Whatzamatta, don't want to talk to me now?

They can interrupt your Zen-like tranquility, burst into the peace of your day via computer, and do that all day in teams, but they cannot even speak when you tell them what they are doing.

[Trump: Excuse me, you have very bad breath. Has anyone told you that?]

Buzzfeed burger price point contest

A young man named Jackson joins them from Illinois through Make-a-Wish foundation. At first I thought, man, what a crummy wish, but it turns out he's a serious fan of their show and he contributes to this one nicely.

My all time favorite Make-a-Wish is Bat Kid in San Francisco. Watching that film always makes me feel great about people and about how good things can be such as Twitter and such as the people in San Francisco that always reliably get such bad press in all the things that I read online. The contrast is stark.

And my second favorite Make-a-Wish is the boy who wanted to go hunting to kill a polar bear. He didn't get his wish but the disruption and anxiety he caused in wish-granters makes me laugh. I imagine the discussions: "Come on! You promised. I'm dying over here."

I appreciate this episode for not mentioning anything about Jackson's terminal illness. The show has a few surprises.


I love it when French people behave contrary to expectations.


Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Bill Barr with NBC Pete Williams discusses FBI institutional issues with political corruption

We're seeing Barr interviews all over the place in which he says basically the same things repeatedly in different ways. This one with NBC is good as any. Barr is driving U.S. media nuts discussing the findings of DOJ inspector general review of highly corrupted FISA process.



Barr at WSJ CEO Council, American politics interrogated in British accent. 

KAG rally Hershey Pennsylvania

Land of the chocolate candy bars. Where the street lights are Kissies. Man, Hershey looks like a fun place. Trump is on fire and if the place gets any hotter the whole city will melt.





Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Kiwico

This is one of a few companies that make project kits for children. Their website has tons of projects for all ages. Some of them look really cool.  You can also buy subscriptions of 3 months, 6 months and 12 months. They renew until you tell them to stop or until you croak.

If you buy a subscription you can switch between types of kits, in the age group I was looking at: "science and engineering" and "create and craft" and "geography and culture".

They have sales all the time, coupons online, and discounts for various things like giving them the email addresses of your friends who might be interested so they can be spammed.

This woman says her kids love the projects. The book gave them ideas. They started to see related things all around the house and they devised their own games based on what they read in the book. These books are an upgrade to the projects and they do increase the cost significantly.

Her con is that the projects are temporary. It's basically all cardboard and crap. Most will be tossed in a few weeks.

In my view that's a pro. They're projects to engage young minds constructively, not to create keepsakes that last the rest of their lives. Best to sweep it away and get on with the next thing. Plus you still have the booklet. And they can take what they learn and make something better.

She's from some place called Kanada or something. Don't let that throw you off.


This kit looks cool. I hope the boys get something like this. Maybe it's for an older group. Maybe I can call them and tell them to add to their subscription.

The man is like the Blue's Clues guy. He stops talking and the music takes over. I muted through the music then turned sound back on when the guy returned.


Tinker projects. That is the same line that goes to the boys. I hope they get this. It's a great complement to the Snap Circuits. You buy them a kit and they go through every single project in the kit. Through all that they pick up what's going on and design their own projects using parts not in the kit.

Barry said he bought them a Raspberry Pi kit. They hooked up a camera to a motion detector that alerts their cellphone when it takes a picture. They aimed it at a hummingbird feeder but misjudged. The wind moves the feeder so it was taking pictures of the feeder blowing around with no hummingbird around.

Gee. Too bad. A situation like that is impossible to fix.

Funeral procession, Pensacola Florida

The camera is inside the car of the Watson family as they drive to their son's funeral on base.

I've never seen anything like this. It seems the entire Navy showed up to line the miles-long driveway both sides to salute the families as they drive through.

It's quiet. We hear the sound of the emergency blinkers. The women sniffle and weep and whimper then sob. It's too much.

Masterclass, making an authentic New York bagel