Monday, October 31, 2011

Halloween triage

--The first bag that goes is the Starburst.

--The second is the Reese's.

--The third is the Kit Kat (although it's pretty hard to decide between Reese's and Kit Kat).

--Next out is the bag of Take 5.

--The last ones out are the Butterfinger Crisp.

For what it's worth, I still hand out cold Dad pops.

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Vampire Circus

Yesterday, the bare branches and colored leaves were shrouded in a cold gray mist as I walked. The effect was utterly captivating. I love it when daylight is eerie. Since I cannot deliver unto you the strange color of the light cast upon northeast Ohio on this eve of Halloween eve, behold one of my favorite scenes from Vampire Circus (1972):



Pay no attention to the cheesy voice over at the beginning of the clip--you MUST watch the tigerwoman dance. And is she nude/painted or is that a body stocking? I have watched this countless times and cannot tell. I swear Vampire Circus may be my favorite horror flick of all time. Yes I own it on DVD, but you can view the entire original English version online. Is that legal? Dunno.

Despite today's ubiquitous sex and violence, I contend that the opening of Vampire Circus could never be made today: Anna, a beautiful young woman frolics with a little girl (Jenny) in a sunny meadow. They laugh and romp as Anna leads Jenny into a castle and up to a bedroom where the entrancing Count Mitterhaus awaits. The little girl smiles sweetly as he loosens her hair. Anna watches on, obviously aroused as the Count bares his vampire fangs and descends upon the child. After Jenny's murder, Anna and the Count enjoy some unapologetic sex.

Except for a few cheesy gore shots, the cinematography is strange and sensuous. Add haunting calliope music, blood-dripping fangs, utterly surreal carnival scenes and loads of taboo sex and the result is one of the best efforts from Hammer Film Productions. I can't understand why Vampire Circus didn't make this list.

Please do leave your horror film suggestions in the comment section. Who knows? I might even be moved to finally ramp up and get a Netflix account.

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Perfection, methinks

Take some leftover sauerkraut (as in previously roasted with pork), bagged bread and a healthy squirt of Sriracha sauce. Fold it up and call it lunch.

To use I term I normally detest, that's how I roll.

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

The good ol' days

The next time some oldster starts talking about how there was never any of that sort of business when we were kids, you show them this clip from Baby Doll, a 1956 film that features a teenage virgin bride.



That there is Caroll Baker starring as the title character. Her middle aged husband has promised her father that he will wait for her 18th birthday (which is just days away) to consummate the marriage. In this scene, she's sucking her (ahem) thumb in a day bed that looks a hell of a lot like a crib.

Look at her mouth, people. That is pure taboo eroticism and it ain't even all that subtle.

Considering Baby Doll debuted over a half-century ago, I say this to the codgers who get all uppity-duppity about the purity of yesteryear: Uh-huh. They were doing that sort of business back then and then some. They were doing this, that, and the rest of it. They were doing all of it.

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Thanks to Kirk Jusko for turning me on to Baby Doll.

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

It was a beautiful and unique way to get to know someone



I could not stop watching this captivating footage featuring two positively darling newlyweds: Doug Hutchison (51) and Courtney Stodden (17). You will remember Hutchison's disturbing role as sadistic prison guard Percy Wetmore in The Green Mile.

A few notes:

--2:57 "There is a joke: sixteen will get you twenty ... " I was so mystified by the weirdness of Hutchison's mouth movements that I paid no attention to his response.

--3:42 "I was a virgin when I married him." How inspirational to learn that Courtney protected her chastity all those years so that it could be tenderly gifted to her virile groom on their holy wedding night.

--4:46 Did she just eat some gummi bears or is that a fellatio preview? Dunno.

--5:00 "Courtney's plastic surgeon was God." Clearly, the Lord's breath inflates every part of this charming new union.

Good luck to the happy couple. They were married in May.

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Monday, October 24, 2011

An Irish Hungarian and four-potato creamed potatoes

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Dear readership, your humble hostess hereby announces her forthcoming book, The Irish Hungarian Guide to the Domestic Arts, (Red Giant, December 2011). Your humble hostess could think of no better way to celebrate this blessed event than by posting a recipe, so here: enjoy a steaming bowl of creamed potatoes.

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Get four goddamn potatoes.

Regular size, maybe a little bigger than regular. No, I have no idea how big regular is, maybe about the size of your fist. Use red potatoes for chrissake. That's your best potato. Yes, I know the price has gone through the roof. No, I don't want to hear about it.

Peel your potatoes and cube 'em into about 1/2" pieces.

This is where the beauty blooms: For one thousand years, I was making a version of this recipe with about seventeen pounds of potatoes in my huge industrial-size pan. I was grating cheese. I was slicing those spuds with surgical precision. I was layering and measuring. I was dotting with butter and sprinkling with flour.

I'd fool around making all those spuds For. Eh. Ver. in order to have a mountain of leftovers we'd be eating For. Eh. Ver.

It sucked.

You're not doing any of that. You're going to put those potatoes in a casserole, which will probably not be nearly as cool as the enameled cast iron  Descoware "Autumn Leaves" one-and-a-half-quart casserole that belonged to my Gram Soos and that you're beholding in these here pictures.

You know what? You use an old-school Anchor-Hocking covered dish glass casserole that was made in Lancaster, Ohio, and not only I will respect the hell out of that, I'll confess that I've been known to make those god-awful boxed scalloped potatoes in my own one-and-a-half-quart Anchor-Hocking casserole that I've had since time began. Yes, I would make my four-potato creamed potatoes in the Anchor-Hocking. No, I wouldn't make god-awful boxed scalloped potatoes in my Descoware.

Are you people following me?

You can add the following ingredients in any order. No one cares.


Salt,* about two tablespoons Parmesan (dry, straight from the green plastic shaker), about two-and-a-half tablespoons flour, two tablespoons butter, and a few shakes of dry parsley.

Yes, that is Penzey's parsley in a shaker that originally housed shitty discount grocery parsley. This, people, is called re-purposing and it makes me modern. It makes me enlightened. It makes me youthful. Kiss my ass.

*Yes, per the photo I use Lawry's seasoned salt. The sad fact is I use it all the time. Lawry's is my go-to seasoning. I use it in soups and stews. I sprinkle it on a chicken before roasting. I throw a few shakes into my marinades. There. Now you know.

I have no idea how much Lawry's I use in four-potato creamed potatoes. What? Maybe a half teaspoon to start? You want exact science, call Bill Nye.

Stir everything up and add some milk, enough so it starts to pool up. I don't know how much, which is why you get this picture.


Give it a stir and put it into the oven, 350 degrees, uncovered.

Check those spuds every 15 minutes. Give them a stir each time. You might need another shake of salt. Start checking for doneness* at at about the 40 or 45 minute mark.

*Doneness is doneness. It depends on the spud's moisture and starch content. It depends on how old those spuds are and how big your cubes are. All of this is part of the advanced class, but don't worry about it. Just take a cube out of there and test/taste it yourself for chrissake. These can take up to an hour to cook

You might need to add a bit more milk if it gets too thick. GO EASY. You can always add more milk but you can't take it out of there (not that I know from personal experience or anything like that about putting too much milk in and trying to correct the situation by using a shallow spoon to scoop some out from between the spud cubes to no avail and negating the "creamed" assertion all together but serving them anyway).


These glorious creamed potatoes will rock your face off. They are superfine on their own or next to a grilled steak or pork chop or barbecued chicken.

If a serving of spuds survives the meal, you can be sure your Goat will spy them in the fridge the next day and offer to "Eat down the leftovers," like he's doing you some sort of selfless favor when in fact he's thrilling over the prospect of those day-old spuds.

Okay, so maybe for him, you start with five potatoes.


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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Not candy ass

So my kid wakes up Saturday, bounces down the stairs, retrieves The Joy of Cooking and starts makin' with the pots and pans.

"Whatcha makin' kid?" I ask.

"Chocolate pancakes," she says.

"Good on ya!" I say, then putter around with chores as she measures and sifts, melts and mixes. Cocoa, flour, milk, butter. Everything's humming along until she consults the open cookbook and her brow crinkles.

She's picks up the book and recites, "Beat until the peaks are stiff but not dry then fold into the batter: 2 large egg whites." She looks up at me, perplexed.

I exhale, think of getting out the beater and fooling around showing her how to separate the eggs and do I really want to hassle with this? Why did the kid have to pick such a pain in the ass recipe ...

Then images of prepackaged sauce mixes, boxed dinners and frozen pizzas fill my head and push away the grouch.

"Kid," I say, "that recipe is NOT candy ass. Now get two eggs and a small clean bowl."

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French coffee presses are not candy ass.

Cast iron cookware is totally not candy ass.

Anything that starts with a roux? Not candy ass.

My K4-B KitchenAid mixer, which was manufactured in Troy, Ohio by Hobart in the late 1940s and weighs 23 pounds, is so not candy ass, it redefines not candy ass.


Pasta made from scratch is not candy ass, then it's more not candy ass.

Mortar and pestle: you make an aioli with a mortar and pestle? You just made an emulsion by hand. That is not candy ass.

A Chinois is not candy ass and a mandoline is not candy ass.

Making your own stock from bones, carcasses and shit like bay leaves is not candy ass.


Sriracha sauce is not candy ass.

Souffles are probably not candy ass, but I'm not sure because I never made one.

A jar of rendered bacon fat in the fridge Is. Not. Candy. Ass.

Knowing what is and what is not candy ass in the kitchen is not candy ass.

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Monday, October 17, 2011

Wheldon, Reno and Levegh

Between last month's air race tragedy in Reno and yesterday's terrible news about Dan Wheldon, I can't help but think about Pierre Levegh and what was arguably the worst sporting disaster of all time.

On June 11, 1955, Levegh drove a Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR in the 24 hours of Le Mans. The car was constructed with a magnesium alloy frame, chosen for it's extraordinary strength and lightness. After a series of clips and miscalculations, Levegh hit an earth embankment and the Mercedes became airborne, decapitating a number of people in the crowd. The car's highly flammable frame ignited into a fireball, burning a number of other spectators to death. Although tallies vary, conservative accounts reported 84 people killed, 76 maimed and dozens more injured.

Now then, dear reader, consider this:

On that day more than 56 years ago, in an aftermath coated in blood and death and gore, the race organizers demanded that the track be cleaned up and the race restarted.



Mike Hawthorn, driving for the Jaguar team, went on to take the win.

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Sunday, October 16, 2011

Occupy Cleveland, Oct. 15 2011

We were downtown yesterday and people seem genuinely interested in this, hence the pics. Actual eob-style content to return soon.

The rally/march staging area:

I spoke with the woman on the far right. She was genuinely energized and articulate, saying that she had a great deal of faith in the movement. She excused herself to join the group when they started singing. "We shall overcome."

The sign on her back.

The area was clean. Not sure who provided the port-o-pots.


The camp area was contained across the street from where they were rallying:

One twentysomething told me he recently left his job at McDonald's because he didn't want to work for slave wages. He'd been at the rally for five days and was going home to shower and get a decent night's sleep.




And a link I like with plenty of simple graphs and numbers about monetary inequity.

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Saturday, October 15, 2011

Friday, October 14, 2011

Stupid things I own, vol. 14

"Stupid things' used to be a regular feature around here until I more or less ran out of stupid things. Then this soap dispenser arrived and I knew I had another stupid thing to share with the readership, so there you go.

Iffin' this stupid thing isn't stupid enough to kick off your Friday, there's plenty more stupid where that came from. Enjoy.

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Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Swindler



Sometimes you turn on the box and start surfing channels and you come upon a televangelist asking for money. Sometimes he starts talking about souls and how much money he needs to save the next 10 or 100 or however many souls that are up in heaven waiting to pass through the pearly gates.

That's when you start thinking about a little old lady on a fixed income whose watching the same idiot, but she's not thinking he's an idiot. She's 87 years old and she's worried one of the souls waiting by the pearly gates might be hers any day now so she goes and writes the idiot a check.

That torques the hell out of me.

Sarah Palin manipulated her followers in the exact same way. Her donation solicitations hinted that maybe a few more bucks will convince the Savior to run for POTUS; that your donation just might push Sarah over the tipping point!

Uh-huh.

I wonder if any of Palin's contributors are torqued? Particularly since Bristol Palin said her mother had made her decision back in June, but then she solicited donations and played the will she/won't she game for another three and a half months. I wonder how many of Palin's supporters will run to the checkbook for the 2016 or 2020 race when she starts slowly swiveling her hips.

For the faithful, why wait? It's still not too late to make your donation to SarahPAC!

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Monday, October 10, 2011

Inception

Dear Readership: Your humble hostess is otherwise occupied with actual work and the draft of yet another spectacular blog entry. While deep into her intrepid research, she came across the following post, "Walking the walk," which was the inaugural phone cam round up. Enjoy.

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Now that I have a camera phone, I can take pictures of things when I walk the earth for mile after mile after mile. This is a picture of some red licorice candies that were strewn about the sidewalk. They were shaped like little schnauzer dogs. I think it must take a very angry person to throw little red licorice schnauzer dogs all over the place.

This is a pair of purple underwear. I do not have any purple underwear, nor can I remember ever having any. Hence, I'm pretty sure these aren't mine, but I'm not positive.



This is a rubber glove. I run across these on a pretty regular basis. Sometimes it's just the one glove. Sometimes it's one glove, then a few yards down the pike, you find another. I had a box of rubber gloves but I used them all up. I never threw them out all over the road, though.

I've been waiting on this baby.

This is Used Condom Number Three of my whole life. That does not include condoms in which I partook of the use*. It just includes condoms I've passed by while loping around trying to think and figure out the world. Ever since I got my camera phone and this blog, I've been waiting and waiting for Used Condom Number Three. Finally happened. So here you go people, the Darwinian Imperative: stymied. You are not going to believe this, but I really and truly came across this baby the very next day after posting this. And I found it in a whole different part of town. I could have posted it then, but no one would have believed it.

I just thought this was sort of sad.

*I cannot figure out how to say that with grammaricular correctitude, so you just have to deal with it.

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This originally ran in June 2007 and garnered 21 comments.


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Wednesday, October 05, 2011

What's up doc? The Supreme Court

It is time to revive the battle for the public option, which a majority of the American people support whether the White House, the Republicans, the right or the lobbyists like it or not. --Brent Budowsky for The Hill.
So Obama's asked the highest court in the land to review his signature health care reform legislation. Although pundits far and wide believe the court will take the case during this term, it's anybody's guess how its decision will play out.

Iffin' the individual mandate is shot down as unconstitutional, I predict the public option rising from the ashes, with a single payer system looming in the shadows. Might even happen if the mandate is upheld.

Oh damn me all to hell for being a political junkie, but I am what I am.

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