Showing posts with label product review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label product review. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Seriously?!

I did something. Something I never in a million years thought I'd do. I...I...<sigh>...bought ..vegan hot dogs.


I was researching hot dogs online. I love hot dogs. But I'm not supposed to eat hot dogs. Actually. I don't think anyone is supposed to eat hot dogs. But once in a very long while...I mean, maybe once or twice a year, I'll have a couple of hot dogs. I generally have the Applegate Farms dogs. I think most people agree they're probably the least bad for you.

But I just happened to stumble on a review that included vegetarian hot dogs. Oh, I don't really remember the site but they had some positive things to say about the Smart Dogs.

And...truth be told...I tried tofu bologna several months ago. I was really just curious about it. I didn't expect it to be good. But at least I'd have my own first hand opinion.

Not bad. Really! Not bad.

There are lots of different bolognas out there. This stuff wasn't bad and..was even better than some of the bad tasting bologna I've had.

It even looks pretty convincing

So..the bologna helped open my mind to the possibility..and..the Smart Dogs not only tasted like hot dogs, they tasted like good hot dogs! I steamed them. I've read they're not quite as good grilled or fried. They overcook easily on the grill and the texture just isn't quite right when they're fried. But steamed? Very good dogs!

Mind you both of these are more highly processed than the food I normally eat. Really. We're talking hot dogs and bologna here. Just because they're plant based just necessarily make them good for you. But the nutrition information is quite impressive and even though I'm not an expert in these things I'm sure they really are less bad for you.

Monday, February 12, 2018

The year in ice

This will long be remembered as the season in ice. The property doesn't drain well. A little rain. It freezes. A lot of snow. More rain. Snow melts. Property floods....and freezes...

11 February

And that's *nothing*. That's after several days in the 40s and 50s and some rain. I really should have taken pictures last week.

The kids were literally playing hockey in the ring I train in

It was a 12 acre ice skating rink.

Of course it just kills me keeping the horses in the barn. I think we've had 3 days outside since before Christmas. And two of those days were strictly in hand. But there's just no way a horse can navigate that. It was much worse this year than last and the only relief will be to find another place to go when the weather permits.

And of course meanwhile...there's work to be done! And every one of us fell down on that ice at least once and by the middle of last week it was just downright dangerous.


Product Review!

This is a Yaktrax

It's a hard rubber frame with coiled stainless steel wire wound around the framework. Making for "traction cleats". You stretch this rubber frame around the sole of your shoe or boot.


They're marginal in the snow. At least this model which is the one I have. On snow covered ice they clog with snow and you have to stomp your feet a lot and shuffle. If you don't? They're not worth much. But. On ice? On clear ice? They work *really* well on clear ice, no question at all.

Monday, January 29, 2018

Chicken soup!

Well. Chicken noodle soup.

I make soup all the time. Soup is the one and only good thing about wintertime. But...hard as it is to believe..I've never made chicken soup! I'd had chicken quarters for dinner ending up with a leftover quarter. The light clicked on! I decided I'd make chicken with that leftover quarter.


I picked the chicken from the leftover quarter, boiled all the bones for an hour and a half. I had roasted the quarters in garlic and parsley so there was enough seasoning there.

I sweated some onion, coarsely chopped celery and carrot in some olive oil, added some garlic, the broth and some Hodgson Mill whole wheat egg noodles. Product review! I don't know how they did that but those are really delicious egg noodles! Then I added the chicken I'd picked off the leftover quarter. Oh, and I splashed in the juice from half a lemon. It still needed a couple pinches of salt for it to really come to life. Managed to prepare two servings.


I don't have much room in my freezer so I freeze my soups in quart sized zip lock freezer bags. It's easy when you put the bag in a measuring cup and then just dump it in.

Friday, June 2, 2017

Easy keeper?

Um.  Not so much.  "Easy Keeper" is an expression describing horses that don't need a lot of food.  And Canadian Horses are well known for being easy keepers.  Air ferns actually.

This presents some challenges however.

My fat girl

L has become seriously overweight.  I'd say...maybe...2 or 300 pounds overweight.

When we were competing we'd work a couple of hours every single day.  And in peak shape she'll take your breath away.  Sometimes we'd ride 6 or 8 miles just warming up.  L has a very large capacity for work.  She'll just go and go.  And go.  We were going to start endurance riding at one time.  But that's another story.

She barely gets a third of a cup of grain for breakfast and dinner.  We have no pasture so the rest of her diet is hay.

It's hard to keep her fit and I certainly don't have the stones anymore to do it under saddle.

So I'm putting her on a program.  She'll get some more disciplined ground work.  I'm talking about my discipline here.  I need to more actively supervise her exercise.

And I got this:

Tough-1 Hay Hoops slow feed haynet

Product review: So far it's just perfect! She's been eating too fast. And that's why she's getting as much hay as she's been getting. So I got that slow feed hay net a week or so ago and I'm just thrilled. She figured it out easily enough. It's slowed her way down so I can give her less hay and not only does it keep her busy she's also spending less time with an empty stomach. All kinds of wins. I have read that the net will break down and tear apart in 6 months to a year so I'll have to get a spare net to keep around.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Beer in a can?!

Apparently there's a whole craft beer in a can movement I never heard of. I stopped at the store last week and, as I often do, just kind of wandered around looking for stuff that I thought "looked good". Of course "looks good" is wholly spontaneous and wildly dependent on my mood.

There with the chilled wines is a variety of 6 packs in cans! I don't ever remember seeing them before.

I'm shaking my head when..wait..I see Baxter Brewing Company. Now, Baxter State Park is in north central Maine and anything with "Baxter" in its name and a moose on the can has to mean..well..north central Maine. That's bona fied wilderness country out there. The towns have numbers rather than names. I'm quite sentimental about it. Fished there for years. Besides. The terms of its use as property of the state of Maine as a gift from former governor Percival P. Baxter make it a very special place. Downright unique actually.

Ok, enough about that. Turns out Baxter Brewing is in Maine sure enough but not hardly north central. More like "not far from here". Maine's a big state as far as New England goes. But it caught my attention. So I grabbed a 6 pack of their IPA. That's kind of a brewery's benchmark, I think. But after a few strides I decided no, I *always* drink IPA. So I went back and got this:

Baxter Brewing Pamola Xtra Pale Ale

What am I leading up to? This is the very *best* beer I've had in I don't know how long. And I'm just amazed it came from a can. I haven't had beer in a can since I was a teenager! I have no idea what it looks like. It just doesn't seem right somehow to pour it into a glass.

Now, after making that comment, I'll have to go over and read the review on Beer Advocate. For all I know they all agree it's the worst beer ever. I like to make up my own mind before I read reviews. As often as not what I think is *great* the beer snobs rate somewhere around "meh".

Edited to add:

Baxter State Park September 1986

Awesome fishing there!

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Warming trend?

No.

8:00 AM 26 January

I think it got colder during the day. At least it felt like it did! I just hate the cold. There's nothing good about the cold. It's been like this for a week now.

L is really crabby having been barn bound a few days because of the footing. It's hard for everybody.

Get away from me!

What happens is the mud gets all churned up when it's mild and then it freezes that way. The footing is very treacherous.

The property is abundant with life even in the cold. Along with bunnies and the mice I see a lone coyote happened by within the past few hours.

Fresh coyote tracks

The wind and the sun distorted those tracks. But not by much. They're just a few hours old. We have some good sized coyotes pass through! We've seen them. As a matter of fact L has, more than once, wanted to chase them down and stomp them.

Last week while in the woods we came across this.

Holly?

The green as you can see was quite conspicuous. I was very surprised to find holly out there. Apparently some species are native to eastern North America but I've *never* seen holly growing wild. That's a male holly tree. It had to have been planted by somebody. It appears to be thriving.

I would love to know more about the history of the property. Oh I've looked. The grounds are criss crossed with stone walls and brooks have been diverted with sophisticated dams that fell into disrepair decades ago. One of these days I'll have to see if I can find something at the local historical society.


Product Review!

My hands have been like blocks of ice at the ends of my arms this year. So I got these.

Fleece lined double ragg mittens from Fox River

Love 'em! Two thumbs up!

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Fool me once

shame on...shame on you..fool me..You can't get fooled again. Or something like that.

I'm probably over-reacting I'm sure.

I always keep a little thing of Andes chips in the refrigerator. A generous pinch usually satisfies a pressing need for chocolate. Which can happen almost anytime. So I see these a couple weeks ago while I'm shopping.


Who doesn't love Reese's Peanut Butter cups? The "perfect combination of peanut butter and chocolate". I figure that's brilliant. Little tiny peanut butter cups! I think it over and I ...buy a bag.

Imagine my shock when I opened the package and found...peanut butter chips?!

Yes. Peanut butter chips!

Excuse me? If I was paying attention I would have noticed that...

Really. Reese's is peanut butter and chocolate. Would I have expected an orange bag with the signature yellow "Reese's" logo to have been a bag of say, chocolate chips? No, of course not. I wasn't expecting a bag of peanut butter chips either.

Here. To the gaze of a busy shopper this even implies there's some chocolate around here somewhere!


So Hershey's. Shame on you. I'm not gonna buy your bag of peanut butter chips again. And if those peanut butter cups weren't so good I wouldn't buy them anymore either!

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Lazy Days

The past few days have been downright uncomfortable. Not so much hot, although it's been hot, it's the 70 degree dew point. You can't do much of anything without being soaking wet in minutes.

A couple of weeks ago we enjoyed the most perfect summer weather. I like this picture a lot.

Saturday 21 July. Lazy Summer Day

And finding our way back through the brush. L always knows where she is!

She always looks so much better than I do

Nice as it was the bugs were ferocious. I tried her new Bug Out Fly Hood. See?

Product Review!

One thumb up. I think they run a little big. It's a Large and it's a little big for her. I think when I bought it they said a large would be for say a Quarter Horse. I imagine an X-Large is huge. It has a couple of springy cords to tie the neck off to a saddle which works well. It doesn't work so well bareback. It slides all over the place and the neck slips upwards when it's not tied off. It's open under the cheeks and I think bugs could get inside. Which I think would suck. But it seemed to work well enough. You wouldn't use this for turnout. It wouldn't last 10 minutes. This is strictly for riding.



I'm done with nice glasses. I had this really beautiful art glass martini glass.


I broke it. Long time ago.

Now today I broke this nice crystal one that I've had for nearly 20 years.

From now on it's dollar store glasses!

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Everyone's Summer Favorite

Summer is a little over a week away (the 20th, 7:09 pm) and I'm looking forward to one of my most favorite things of the season.

Lemonade. Of course!

I have a funny story. Some years ago I'm at a party. A Summer pot luck. A very highly regarded foodie was there and everyone, including me, was *crazy* for her lemonade. People still talk about that delicious lemonade. At the time she had leaned over to me and whispered "It's ReaLemon. The recipe on the bottle" :)

And that's how I've been making my lemonade ever since. Everyone is just as crazy for my lemonade. I don't think ReaLemon is a bad thing. I've even used it in dressings on occasion when I've come up short on lemons. Or maybe I'll use a spot in berries to brighten things up a little.

Over the years I've tried different bottled lemon juices. I've found the major store brand juices are indistinguishable from ReaLemon. The stuff in the dollar stores is just positively horrid. Read the label. If it's just lemon juice and preservative it's fine.

Lemonade

The basic recipe for lemonade (from the ReaLemon package) is 2 parts lemon juice, 2 parts sugar, 13 parts water. Interestingly enough, since ReaLemon and fresh squeezed lemon juice are interchangeable, that's a universal recipe.

So 2 cups of lemon juice, 2 cups of sugar and 13 cups of water make a gallon of lemonade.

Sometimes I use club soda instead of water. Livens it up a little. Sometimes I squeeze in a lime too. Dropping in a maraschino cherry reminds me of Bermuda.

Sometimes I squeeze some fresh lemons for a treat but that's really because I like having pulp in my lemonade. I can't otherwise tell the difference.

Nothing refreshes like lemonade on a hot summer day. No not even beer!

Sunday, November 6, 2011

My first time

Look!
First waffle ever!

A year or so ago I decided I wanted to make waffles. So ever since then I've been shopping around for a waffle iron. I live in a shoebox and I swear I hardly have room for one more pan never mind a waffle maker, so I didn't want an electric waffle maker.

So I find cast iron waffle irons. Camp cookware, basically. But I like the looks of them. I *love* cast iron. Nothing cooks like cast iron. But the cast iron waffle irons are surprisingly expensive. So I've been waiting for a bargain. I finally decided one of these days I'm gonna drop dead without having made a waffle trying to save 3 bucks.

So I got a waffle iron off the web.

Rome's #1100 Old Fashioned Waffle Maker

This is a basic 6 inch cast iron waffle iron. It doesn't come pre-seasoned. Because of the obvious way in which batter will stick here I was very careful to season it well.

How do you season cast iron?

I scrubbed it good with soapy hot water. Twice. Then I dried it thoroughly. Then I heated it up on the stove top just a little bit. Then I painted it liberally all over with canola oil. I let the excess drip off and put it in a 350 degree oven for an hour. I turned the oven off and took it out the next day.

Seasoned waffle iron

I based my batter on this recipe. I used half all purpose flour and half whole wheat flour, I used canola oil instead of butter and I used powdered buttermilk instead of milk.

I had no idea how to evenly heat both sides of my waffle iron. I decided to put it in a 400 degree oven. When it was well heated I painted the cooking surfaces with canola oil and used maybe a cup of batter. I lightly oiled it every other waffle.
  • Cast iron tip: oil a hot pan. Always wait until your cast iron is hot before oiling it.
  • Another cast iron tip: oil the food. When I do steaks, chops or fish I usually rub the food lightly with some oil before I season it. Then I put it in a hot dry pan.
I baked it for about 7 minutes and got good waffles. I'm sure butter would have made better waffles! Butter makes everything better. And nothing came close to sticking. I got 5 waffles from that recipe. They freeze really well.

Ready for Winter

Product review: Love the waffle iron!

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Results are in!

The shocking results.


On the left is (an expensive) small bottle of hand made organic extra virgin olive oil from a medieval village in Tuscany.

On the right is a domestic extra virgin olive oil (gasp!) from California.

In a blind taste test, straight up, using a baguette, my hands down favorite was the domestic oil from California Olive Ranch.

By the way, it's also interesting to note that I couldn't tell which was which by looking at them.

The shocking part is not that I liked the less expensive product. That's happened before. For many years Colavita was my favorite daily use olive oil. Then one day when I had several bottles of olive oil around I did a blind taste test and, much to my surprise, my favorite was Berio. I've been using Berio up until a year or so ago when I took a liking to Greek olive oils.

I've also found that I'm just as likely to prefer a $6 bottle of wine to a $60 bottle of wine.

I highly recommend doing your own blind taste tests!

But no, the shocking thing is I preferred a domestic olive oil! Who ever would have thought!

It was rich. It was pungent and flavorful. It was spicy. I like strong, bold flavors. Maybe the Volpaia was just too subtle for me. It's a premium product and it's made using a cutting process rather than a pressing process and its highlights include exceptional purity and notably low acidity.

The Volpaia oil, by the way, is roughly 14 times the price of the California Olive Ranch oil. California Olive Ranch boasts a very high level of automation to reduce its costs while claiming to be a superior product.

The California Olive Ranch extra virgin olive oil at my local supermarket is dirt cheap. The first time I looked at it I thought someone had made a mistake. And the first time I tasted it I wished I'd bought a case.

Yes, I'm raving about the product. Try it!



Easy Marinated Mushrooms. Restraint is the secret here!


I don't know how long I worked on this recipe. A very long time and it turned out to be more about technique than ingredients. I needed an unusually light hand (for me) with the herbs to finally make it work.

Clean 8 ounces of button mushrooms. White or crimini. Cut the bigger ones in half. Sometimes I take the stems out and cut them up.

Finely chop 2 or 3 cloves of garlic.

Bring to a boil:
  • 3 tablespoons champagne vinegar
  • 3/4 cup water
  • 1 tablespoon honey
  • pinch of salt
Add the mushrooms and garlic to the boiling mixture and reduce the heat. Let the mushrooms gently boil, stirring occasionally. After 7 minutes turn the heat off and let them sit a minute or two.

While the mushrooms are boiling put a half teaspoon of dried thyme and a tablespoon of finely chopped red onion in a bowl with a tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil. I like to put a couple of dried chilis in there too. That's optional.

Now here's the technique I accidentally found one night that made them just right: After the mushrooms have cooled for a couple of minutes spoon them into the bowl with the olive oil using a slotted spoon. Toss to coat them with olive oil and herbs.

You can optionally add a tablespoon of the vinegar mixture to the bowl and toss again to emphasize the flavor.

Refrigerate the mushrooms overnight and let them come to room temperature for serving.

These are so easy to fix - I often fix them when I'm just hanging around the kitchen doing other things.

I've used cut mushrooms in a pinch and they're just as good as whole button mushrooms. But they're not as pretty.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Spring Cleaning

I have this thing for silver.


Sure it tarnishes. I think that gives it a certain charm actually. And when you polish it nothing sparkles in the sun like sterling silver. The silver is soft enough to engrave easily and hard enough to keep its sharp engraving intact. Steel is too hard to finely engrave and then, even when the artist is able to get a nice engraving, sliver plating fills in the sharp edges.

You really have to hunt for sterling silver. Look for a 925 stamp on it. That's 92.5% silver. Look for Mexican silver. Mexican artists are well known for the high quality of their engraving.

Some years ago I had corresponded with an engraver in Mexico. I don't remember where exactly. This guy had sent me some samples. A language problem left him with the impression I was a dealer looking for a source of supply rather than an individual looking for pieces. The hell of it is these samples were some of the finest engraving I've ever seen and I couldn't get him to quote me on anything less than a 50 piece set. Distresses me to this day. This guy's work should be framed.



I should be ashamed. Every year I swear I'm not going to let my saddle become such a mess. I really have to get a bag to keep it in. Oh I've covered it and that helps but it seems that makes it a cozier place for the mice to hang out.

Before. Eeuuuuw.

After. Nice.


Over the years one finds things that work really well for cleaning tack. And as long as I've been doing this I always think it's not going to be that bad, only to be sitting there 2 hours later wondering what ever possessed me to clean a saddle today?! Western saddles with their tooling can be a real..er.."challenge" to clean.

For a really dirty, sweaty, mildewy saddle I think nothing works better than Effax Leder-Combi.


It's expensive. And it doesn't seem to be anything special. But it works wonders when it comes to cleaning.

I don't like the way it conditions however. So for really dirty jobs I use the Leder-Combi first, scrub with a soft nylon brush, follow with a wipe down, and finish with this stuff.


I love the smell of the Leather Therapy Wash and it does a really good job. I think it conditions better than the Leder-Combi does and I used it exclusively until I found the Leder-Combi.

When I'm done and I've let some air move around the saddle I finish it with the Effax Mildew-Free. I got lazy last year and I didn't use the Mildew-Free at the end of the year and I paid for it with a big cleaning job. It's not that bad when I use the Mildew-Free.

And finally for a really nice soft bridle I've been using this stuff for years.


People who work with leather for a living say take care of leather like you take care of your hands. And the Farnum Leather New Balsam is like hand cream. I massage it into a cleaned bridle with my bare hands. Let it sit overnight and it's clean and soft.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Equine TMJ

Have you all noticed we use a bitless bridle?


That's not because I'm heavy handed. Although my hands aren't as light as I'd like them to be. L has dysfunctional TMJ. Equine dysfunctional TMJ is rare. It's most likely the result of trauma. It's hard to say how or when or exactly what happened but we'd had some challenging bitting issues and, I think it was late in 2005, I noticed a prominent clicking sound she'd make when she was eating.

Here, turn the sound up and listen:



She'd taken on a fondness for leaning on the bit. There was no apparent discomfort and she didn't appear to be in pain. She leaned on the bit something awful. I couldn't keep her from doing that to save my life and things just weren't working for us. It was very frustrating.

She was diagnosed and treated in 2006. Basically you treat equine TMJ problems with either massage or chiropractic treatment. Chiropractic treatment was preferred for her and I've had the chiropractor visit her monthly since. Often enough she's just fine and she doesn't need treatment every with every visit. I have him come anyway just to assure me she's fine if nothing else. Besides, sometimes something else needs adjusting anyway. And he fixed my wrenched elbow once too.

And I did some research. I was sure I just had to use the lightest touch with the right bit. There isn't very much information out there, at least there wasn't at the time and what I found was discouraging. What I learned was the more the way bit is supposed to work, no matter its design, the more stressful it will be on a horse with TMJ problems. And of course, not every TMJ "problem" is the same. But the fact is her just holding a bit in her mouth is a problem and she'll never ever go in a bit.

Product Review!

My trainer suggested we try a bitless bridle with her. So late in 2006 we tried Dr. Cook's bitless bridle.

It's rather a shame I think Dr. Cook comes off as such a nutbag. I think his bridle is a quality product and I think his point of view is rather offputting.

And..it's a good thing that, by late 2006, I'd learned some horse sense. I long lined L with her new bridle in a training ring just to see what she thought of it. Good thing. She pitched a perfect fit looking for her bit. For 20 minutes at least I got one hell of a workout. She tossed her head and she tried to spin and she kicked out and she just wanted no part of it.

Then, like somebody threw a switch, she settled and we've never looked back.

The next day we'd gone out and had a very nice ride in the ring. I was taught to ride mostly with my seat anyway and my hands, while they're not like I'd like them to be, aren't all that bad either. L is light and responsive going bitless. I think it's a quality bridle. If you use one you'll want to have spare cross-under straps and I find the cross-under straps do tend to flip upside down in the attachment rings and while it's harmless enough it still irritates me.

I give Dr. Cook's Bitless Bridle a B. It's a quality product and it works, but I'm left interested in other products as well. Oh, and while it is a quality product I do think it's a little pricey for what it is. I think the one I have was over $120.

Oh! The rules require a bit be used for Dressage, English and Western pleasure so we can't compete in those disciplines. That's not where my passion lies anyway. One can do competitive trail and show jumping without a bit.

Edited 13 February to add: By the way, the single best thing in the world for treating equine dysfunctional TMJ is grazing. So I've read.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Tying troubles

The footing went bad this past Sunday. Everything froze. And we don't have an indoor. It's snowing now and hopefully the snow help re-establish some footing.

Back here I described some problems with L and cross ties. She likes to break them. She's a big strong girl and she learned she could break cross ties at will. Either quickly or slowly. Sometimes I could see her doing a slow lean and I knew within 30 seconds the cross ties were just going to pop. When she did that I had time to smack her in the butt and get her to knock it off. But other times she'd be fine and the next thing you know I had some broken cross ties.

So of course the obvious question here is what did I do about this?

I'm not a trainer. Smacking L in the butt was my trainer's advice and it worked but I wasn't always quick enough.

I learned about tying. Learn the quick release knot and practice it until you can tie it in your sleep. I didn't always use cross ties. Sometimes I'd use a rail or a post and of course sometimes I'd have to tie her off to a trailer. I wanted her to learn that she couldn't break loose so she had to be tied hard and fast. With a bull snap. But of course I didn't want anyone getting hurt either. If you've never seen a horse trying to break loose from a tie that won't break it's very scary. And of course you always want to have your wits about you when you're handling horses.

Now this actually worked. L's a smart girl. She learned she couldn't break a one inch cotton rope with a bull snap and she quit trying. But she still broke cross ties and...there's no reason I shouldn't be able to cross tie her.

Then along comes...
The Clip

Product Review!

The Clip from SmartTie Products. This Clip is designed to let a 1/2 or 5/8 inch nylon line to pay out with some resistance when it's pulled hard. It has some give. The rule of course is pulling your horse is just going to make your horse pull back. So this thing gives when the horse pulls and the horse stops pulling.

My trainer thought this was a good idea.

Like magic, in my case, this works like a charm. The only real challenge was finding ropes. You see, all that nylon lead rope that's 5/8 inch? It's really 3/4 inch. A 3/4 inch rope will not give through the Clip. It's the same as tied fast. And nobody has 1/2 inch nylon lead rope. Oh, I could have bought 5/8 nylon line from a yacht supply company but they all have $100 minimum orders.

Well. Web to the rescue! I found Debbie Hanson on the web and she'll make you anything you want from any kind of nylon rope you want. Something got screwed up and she did right by me - I have nothing but good things (supplier review here?) to say about her.

So I have 3 of these Clips and a spare. I keep two around the barn and I keep one in the trailer. Rigged up with 5/8 inch nylon rope. And L and I haven't had a tying problem in ... oh... 3 or 4 years now.

I've since found there are other such tying things out there but the Clip is the only one I've used and I'm very happy with the Clip.



Here, make some seafood soup!


I made this one up, inspired by something I had for lunch in a local Chinese restaurant.

Ingredients:
  • 1/3 cup finely chopped celery
  • 1/3 cup finely chopped yellow onion
  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 1/3 cup carrots cut into match sticks
  • 3/4 cup dry white wine (vermouth or dry sherry would be good too)
  • 1/3 cup snow peas
  • 1/2 pound fish cut into ..oh, 2 inch strips. Haddock or cod, I used haddock.
  • 1 1/2 cup seafood or fish stock
  • 4 oz. clams, whole or chopped, cooked, I used canned
  • 4 oz. bay scallops
  • 4 oz. lump crab (from a package, cooked)
  • 4 or 5 medium shrimp, like 41/50
  • 1 teaspoon corn starch dissolved in an ounce or so of water
  • salt to taste
  • cracked black pepper to taste
  • chopped cilantro - as much as you like
Sweat the celery and onion in the tablespoon of butter in a large sauce pan with a pinch of salt and a generous pinch of fresh ground black pepper until they're soft and translucent. This might take 6 or 7 minutes over medium heat. Really cook them down. Then add the carrots and raise the heat to high. After a minute or two when things look like they're cooking add the wine and reduce it by almost half. This will just take another minute or two.

Add the seafood stock and bring to a boil. Add the corn starch and reduce the heat. Let the broth get a little silky. Reduce the heat to low and...

Add the fish. Let this cook for 3 or 4 minutes. Add the scallops and the shrimp. After another 3 or 4 minutes turn the heat off, add the clams and the crab and the snow peas. Taste the broth and add salt until you like it. Cover and let it sit for 15 minutes.

Add cilantro and serve. This was OMG good and makes enough for two.

The spirit of this recipe is to just load your favorite seafoods into a flavorful broth and heat them up. I think some green peas would be a good substitute for snow peas and I'll try that sometime. I think some clams in their shells, about a pound maybe, would be good instead of canned clams but I just didn't see any I liked when I was at the supermarket. Canned clams are actually pretty good. And I think some lobster would be really good in this soup too.

I had a chardonnay with my soup but I think a pinot grigio would have been a little better with it.

Friday, July 9, 2010

Hanging around the shed...

...is really hard work.

That's L on the left, and her little half sister P on the right. P is 6 years old. They share the same mother and I often call L's little sister "Baby Huey". P is *huge*. P is of course also 100% Canadian. Canadian Horse registration requires a DNA test.

They'd stay inside in this kind of weather if they didn't have their shed. They love their shed. And it's really quite hilarious. We'll bring them inside a little later and they'll be exhausted. No really. I mean like they were just given a sedative. They'll turn in their stall, heave a deep sigh, get all wobbly and droopy and just snooze away.

Yesterday the only place the bugs weren't ferocious was the round pen. So after lapping the hay field we went into the round pen and schooled for maybe 10 or 15 minutes. We really don't work hard in the heat. We were bugged by one bug that whole time. L was most awesome. She's had this "work ethic" going since she was maybe 3 and half years old and she takes her work very seriously. So much so it's really rather funny. This being a horse thing is serious business.

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