Entries from November 21st, 2010

Our First Thanksgiving Turkey

November 28th, 2010 · 3 Comments

This year for Thanksgiving Dallas and I decided to try to make our own Thanksgiving dinner. I’d made Thanksgiving dinner with Kelly and Jeff and Aunt Sue many times (2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006), but I never made the turkey before. We started out by brining the turkey overnight in a mixture of salt, broth, orange juice, and spices.

Jeannette used to make a pre-Thanksgiving feast when I lived in New York, so I asked her for some turkey guidance and she delivered! She sent us all kinds of tips, mostly from Cooks Illustrated.

We quickly learned that the big secret is….. BUTTER! Buttering the skin. Dallas also lifted the skin a little and shoved butter between the skin and the meat.

After the first check, this is what the turkey looked like.

We rotated it on all 4 sides to get even browning. Each time we rotated, we applied more butter.

And then one time we cut off some fresh sprigs of rosemary and stuck them in.

More butter!

Finished. Perfectly browned skin.

We stuffed the turkey with onions, carrots, celery, thyme and rosemary.

I made some gravy with the giblets.. another recipe from Jeannette. Dallas browned the bits in the pan so I could add them to the gravy. By the way, this gravy was kind of a pain and took a long time, but it was like the best gravy EVER.

Dallas then carved the turkey.

And we could see that it was cooked perfectly all the way through.

This was our whole Thanksgiving dinner.

I’ll have a few recipes to share in the upcoming weeks. As for the turkey? It was SO good. Very moist and flavorful. All in all, we agreed that this was one of our favorite meals we’ve ever cooked together. I know we won’t cook Thanksgiving dinner every year, but it’s nice to know that we can!

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OMG WTF LULZ

November 24th, 2010 · 3 Comments

I have to post the following images just because they have been open in my browser tabs for weeks. Every time I accidentally click one of the tabs I start laughing. I don’t want to lose them!


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Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson, David Oliver Relin

November 23rd, 2010 · 1 Comment


finished 11.21.10

The first chapter of this book was really rough. I set it down several times and almost didn’t go back, but I’m so glad I did. Once I got past the first chapter, I loved this book. It’s about the American Greg Mortenson who has devoted his life to building schools, especially schools for girls, in the most remote and isolated villages in Pakistan. It’s an inspiring story, but also, I liked how it gave good insight into the people and cultures of Pakistan and Afghanistan both before and after 9/11.

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Kauaian Visitors

November 22nd, 2010 · 2 Comments

Last week Dallas’s Uncle Dee, from Kauai, was in town for a conference downtown. Aunty Kathy and cousin Casey, who now lives in Seattle, came along for the trip. They were all staying in a hotel not far from my office so we got to see everyone a few times. We went to dinner at Harry Carray‘s, Dallas took them to lunch at Revolution Brewing in our neighborhood, and these photos were taken out at Aunty Gail’s, in the suburbs, where we ordered in Portillo’s Italian beef sandwiches.

It was nice to see everyone again. I’d only met Casey one time before – at Tandy & Chris’s wedding in 2005. I think she has lived in L.A. (for college) and Seattle (working at an indie record label) the whole time that I’ve known Dallas. We’ll be seeing Uncle Dee and Aunty Kathy again soon, when we go to Kauai in a few months. A FEW MONTHS!!!

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Hammock Time, A Weaving Collective

November 21st, 2010 · 1 Comment

Yesterday I was walking in Palmer Square and noticed all these hammocks hanging from the trees. I looked closer and saw they were marked with info tags saying they were the work of Hammock Time, a weaving collective. I guess they just weaved and hung these hammocks for fun? Kind of the like knitted graffiti you see around town?

As I did my laps I noticed one little girl trying to get into the chair hammock, but otherwise no one was really interacting with them. Maybe if the collective had done this in warmer months people would be more inclined to hang out in a hammock in the park? I saw a homeless guy hanging out on a park bench. I bet that hammock hanging nearby him would have been more comfortable… Hammocks for the Homeless!

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