/ food
Tuesday, September 29
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Wednesday, August 05
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That's why I married you and you married me!

posted 3 months ago

Home for the holidays in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, on a quiet Christmastide morning, a young man rises early to make sticky buns. He makes a triple batch with extra pecans. He likes sticky buns that way. This is before the man had children and learned that children do not like nuts on stuff, even on sticky buns.

But this story takes place years ago. These sticky buns were made before the kids were made. These buns were the kind that make your mouth water. The man’s mother and father and his brother and sisters, his wife, they would all enjoy them with breakfast.

The man’s father gets up to take another sticky bun. He wants to melt the dab of butter he’s put on top of it. And there, at the Amana Radar Range, he makes the kind of mistake a man makes when he has forgotten himself. Enjoying his family, the father forgets himself, forgets his wife’s instructions on how he is to use the microwave. And he is detected.

The mother says, “Oh Bud, that’s not how you do that!”
The father’s countenance falls. “Oh Ann” he pleads, “this is too how I do it. And what difference does it make?”
[The mother takes the cup of coffee out of the microwave, places a napkin over the cup, sets a saucer beneath the cup, and puts it back in the oven.]
“The difference,” she says, pointing her finger, “is that I’m a perfectionist and you’re not!”
“You’re right, Ann. You’re a perfectionist and I’m not. And that’s why I married you and you married me!”

This is as quick-witted as any repartee between Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn in Bringing Up Baby or in Holiday. His father’s retort sounded like something Mr. Grant might have said to Irene Dunne in The Awful Truth.

“That’s why I married you and you married me!” the father said, hopping an inch up in the air as he said it. He put the exclamation point on the sentence not the way you do when you are angry. He put the exclamation point on his sentence the way you do when you tell the punch line of a joke.

The father tries to wrap his arms around his wife. He tries to kiss her. She is vexed, not ready to quit a fight she knows she cannot win. She gives up in his arms and gives in to his kisses. And the young man who did not yet have children laughs so hard he spills his coffee.

Sunday, August 02
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ate the following five flavors of ice cream over the course of his day today: lavender, asparagus, grape, wasabi, and tofu. Yes, ice cream. No, not a joke. Yes, the tofu was particularly delicious. You’ve got to love Hokkaido!
• Gabriel Ellsworth’s current facebook status. He’s finished his course at the IUC and he’s traveling throughout Japan. See his blog.
Monday, March 02
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A camera records its trip around a sushi conveyor belt at a restaurant in 苫小牧市 Tomakomai-shi, Hokkaido, Japan. Note the woman decked in Haute couture at minute 1:40. ブルー行く!

Tuesday, February 24
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Worcester Cathedral Shrove Tuesday Pancake Race 2009

Wednesday, December 03
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Blendie is an interactive, sensitive, intelligent, voice controlled blender with a mind of its own. Materials are a 1950’s Osterizer blender altered with custom made hardware and software for sound analysis and motor control.
People induce the blender to spin by sounding the sounds of its motor in action. A person may growl low pitch blender-like sounds to get it to spin slow (Blendie pitch and power matches the person) and the person can growl blender-style at higher pitches to speed up Blendie. The experience for the participant is to speak the language of the machine and thus to more deeply understand and connect with the machine. The action may also bring about personal revelations in the participant. The participant empathizes with Blendie and in this new approach to a domestic appliance, a conscious and personally meaningful relationship is facilitated.
Amusing. See the video here. Is it a worthy blender? No, silly. Only the Vita-Mix with sound abatement chamber is cut to that measure.

Blendie is an interactive, sensitive, intelligent, voice controlled blender with a mind of its own. Materials are a 1950’s Osterizer blender altered with custom made hardware and software for sound analysis and motor control.

People induce the blender to spin by sounding the sounds of its motor in action. A person may growl low pitch blender-like sounds to get it to spin slow (Blendie pitch and power matches the person) and the person can growl blender-style at higher pitches to speed up Blendie. The experience for the participant is to speak the language of the machine and thus to more deeply understand and connect with the machine. The action may also bring about personal revelations in the participant. The participant empathizes with Blendie and in this new approach to a domestic appliance, a conscious and personally meaningful relationship is facilitated.

Amusing. See the video here. Is it a worthy blender? No, silly. Only the Vita-Mix with sound abatement chamber is cut to that measure.


Friday, October 17
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The I-Roast2. My preferred green bean supplier: Sweet Marias.

The I-Roast2. My preferred green bean supplier: Sweet Marias.


Saturday, October 04
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What you can get at the Google headquarters’ cafeteria: a bacon cheeseburger with two Krispy Kreme doughnuts in place of a bun.

What you can get at the Google headquarters’ cafeteria: a bacon cheeseburger with two Krispy Kreme doughnuts in place of a bun.


Monday, August 11
Monday, July 21
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Song in my head when I woke up this morning

  • J Alfred: Hiatt, right? What you thinking about?
  • Rod Clapp. Rod put me on to Hiatt twenty-some years ago. Had some terrific guacamole and quesadillas with Rod in my sleep last night.
Sunday, April 06
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