How cool, here we sit in Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Airport, waiting for our flight to Denver. Tickets all bought, reservations all made, now I’m live blogging on the wi-fi here. I hope my daughter got more sleep last night thanI did. r-u-f-f! It was something like 10 PM by the time we finished packing and left. Then there was a 2-hr drive to get in position for the ride to the airport this morning.

OK, soon time to go. Then we’ll be in Denver and environs. Tomorrow is practice for the wedding, and on Friday it’s the real thing. Then as Joe and Sheri take their honeymoon, we go do our visiting thing, stopping by my old unit, etc.

Take care friends, we’ll be back here next week!

24. November 2005 · Comments Off on YAHOO, YAHOO, YAHOO!! · Categories: Eat, Drink and be Merry, Good God, Memoir, That's Entertainment!

Happy dayze is a-comin! Yahoooo! Sweet li’l daughter is a-gittin’ married next Friday! And we are a-leavin’ for Colorado first thing Wednesday morning! After Nurse Jenny finishes work on Tuesday, we’re headed out for Hotlanta, where we will be jumping up and….wait a minute…. easing ourselves onto a great big bird for the short 3 1/2 hour ride to Denver, and we get to spend a glorious week in our favorite of all states! We’ll be renting a car in Denver and driving the rest of the way to Florence, just south of Colorado Springs, where Sheryl lives. I guess we have to make a quick stop at Monument and see our old house, and maybe visit with my old pals at the fire house, where I once was the only paramedic. A couple of miles south of there is the AF Academy, and we plan to meet our son and his family at the gift shop at Focus on the Family’s huge campus.

(A great place to visit, I was involved in some of the initial construction phases there, and it was my privilege to furnish the radios used in the dedication day festivities back in 1993.)

Sheri had one of those disasters that sometimes happens from her first marriage, but she has three of the most wonderful daughters from that time around. This time she gets another Joe…..Too many Joes in this family! Her Joe is Joe Caruso, one of those great Italian guys, and we believe she has the grand prize winner this time! Joe is a really super guy, and he’s gonna be a teriffic son-in-law, for sure. They’ve been dating for about two years now, so they should be pretty much getting used to having each other around by now. All I can say is that Joe had better mind his manners, because she’s a small package of high-explosive dynamite. I oughta know – I raised her! Whooff!

The hard part is that I gotta walk her down the aisle and give her away: And I happen to be one of those old softies with emotions on my sleeves! Somebody’s gonna have to help the doddering old man back to his seat!

We’ll be taking tons of pictures, as this will be the first time in many years that – wait a minute! This will be the first time EVER that we’ve had both our children and ALL of our grandchildren together at the same time! Wow! Last time we were together, two of the granddaughters were with Sheri’s ex, he had absconded with them, starting an eight year battle that she finally won just weeks ago. But what a happy family reunion this will be, us, five grandkids, and our two wonderful children, both with the best spouses anywhere! Who could ever ask for anything more?

Friends at the Brief, join us in wishing them all the best in the world!

24. November 2005 · Comments Off on An Ancient Holiday Beverage · Categories: Eat, Drink and be Merry

I have been meaning to research the history of mulled wine, on the internet, for at least the past two or three holiday seasons – seems I’ve never gotten around to it. But it’s something I’ve been experimenting with, to varying degrees of delight and repulsion among my family and friends, for 20-25 years now. Anyway, as my mulled wines are something of an ad hoc affair, I thought I’d take this recipe from About.com, and add my own notes (in italics):

With cooler weather swirling in and the holidays just around the corner, nothing could be cozier than a toasty mug of mulled wine. Mulled wine, the vine’s version of a classic hot toddy, is a traditional holiday treat in many Old World countries. Mulled wines have been warming people for centuries. They are a wine that has been sweetened, spiced and slightly heated – offering a delightful alternative to traditional coffees, ciders and toddy’s at holiday gatherings.

INGREDIENTS:

One bottle of red wine (suggestions: Cabernet Sauvignon, Zinfandel or Merlot). You want a really full-bodied red. Cabernet is perfect – most Zinfandels are a bit too light.
One peeled and sliced orange (keep peel to add zest to taste into cooking pot). Have a zester – trying to zest a citrus peel with, say, a cheese grater, really sucks.
¼ cup of brandy. I would go more like ½ cup. And, in the absence of a good brandy, Tennessee sippin’ whiskey works pretty good too.
8-10 cloves. I would use a little less.
2/3 cup honey or sugar. I use brown sugar, but white sugar with a bit of molasses works too.
3 cinnamon sticks. I would use 5 or 6, and pull the undissolved part out to put in each cup as a garnish – perhaps with a mint leaf.
1 tsp. fresh or 2 tsp. ground ginger (allspice can be substituted). I’ve never tried allspice.

Serves 4-6

PREPARATION:

Combine all ingredients in either a large pot or a slow cooker. Gently warm the ingredients on low to medium heat (avoid boiling), for 20-25 minutes. Stir occasionally to make sure that the honey or sugar has completely dissolved. LOW heat is the key (I’m thinking of trying a crock-pot this year). Boiling – or even close to boiling – really screws it up. Zest to taste. Remove cinnamon sticks while they still look like sticks. I’ve tried putting in mint leaves, but they really overpower things really fast – and then don’t look as good as a garnish.

When the wine is steaming and the ingredients have blended well it is ready to serve allow to cool just a bit. Ladle into mugs (leaving seasonings behind) and enjoy! I strain it through a mesh colander.

Feel free to experiment. 🙂

24. November 2005 · Comments Off on Thanksgiving is Not For Shopping · Categories: Eat, Drink and be Merry

Just one more note as I turn in:

Today is NOT FOR SHOPPING! Some of the HUMUNGOUS stores are going to be open today and they want us to get an early start and avoid the crowds and do our Holiday Shopping before the official start of the shopping season, which is and shall remain tomorrow. If you start your Christmas Shopping today, you’ll make the Baby Jesus cry.

Today is for getting together with friends and/or family, eating until you can’t eat anymore, napping while pretending to watch football, then waiting an appropriate amount of time before eating yourself silly again. Belching and farting should be done in the vicinity of small children for maximum giggles. Yes, I’m a “Pull my finger.” kind of uncle. Tell me you’re suprised with a straight face.

Happy Thanksgiving all. Please list what you had/will have for your feast in the comments.

Our Menu

Hours d’ouvres:
Celery with cheese and/or peanut butter
Devilled Eggs
Cheetos (Boyo)

Dinner:
Turkey
Stuffing
Real Mashed Taters
Gravy from Scratch
Cranberry Chutney
Poppin Fresh Dinner Rolls
Green Beans w/Bacon.

Desert: (How could I forget desert?)
Two kinds of punkin’ pie.
Pecan Pie.

And as with all holidays in our house, it’s casual. That means shower, put on your most comfortable clothes, chill out. Stress is not allowed in our home during the holidays. We’ve already had our maximum annual amount of our dogma running over our karma. It’s time to hum ommmmmmmmmm and just chill.

23. November 2005 · Comments Off on Classic Americana: Shoo-Fly Pie · Categories: Eat, Drink and be Merry, General

(My Grannie Jessie reminised fondly about a pie like this, straight from her upbringing in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. It is really more of a gingerbread cake baked in a pie shell, but which can be as soggy as a sort of gingerbread pudding. I think I copied this recipe from an American Heritage magazine issue, or cookbook, 25 years ago. It is more on the cake side of the scale. Note to our European readers; it is named thus, because it is so good and rich, that you have to shoo the flies away from it. Please don’t make me explain about the Pennsylvania Amish. Just check out the movie “Witness”, or something.)

Combine:
1 1/2 cup flour
1/2 cup brown sugar
pinch of salt
1/4 tsp ginger
1/4 tsp nutmeg
1/4 cup soft butter

Mix until soft crumbs form. In another bowl, combine:

1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 molasses
1/2 cup boiling water

Mix liquid with 2/3 of the crumb mixture, and pour into a chilled and prepared 8 in pie shell. Sprinkle evenly with remaining soft crumbs, and bake in a pre-heated 375 degree oven for 30-40 minutes.

19. November 2005 · Comments Off on Stay Sleepy, And Shorten Your Life Too! · Categories: Eat, Drink and be Merry

This from the BBC:

Drinking decaffeinated coffee could increase the risk of heart disease, a study has suggested.

It could lead to a rise in harmful cholesterol levels, the US National Institutes of Health study found.

[…]

The US study looked at 187 people, a third of whom drank three to six cups of caffeinated coffee a day, while a second group drank the same amount of decaffeinated coffee, and the rest had no coffee.

Researchers measured the level of caffeine in people’s blood, as well as a number of heart-health indicators, including blood pressure, heart rate and cholesterol levels over the course of the three month study.

At the end of the study, the group drinking decaffeinated coffee had experienced an 18% rise in their fatty acids in the blood, which can drive the production of bad ‘LDL’ cholesterol.

As for me, put in a ground-up NoDoz with each teaspoon of sugar. 🙂

Hat Tip: Brian Micklethwait at Samizdata

16. November 2005 · Comments Off on NO – DUDE – This Can’t Be Right! · Categories: Eat, Drink and be Merry, General

I’m currently watching the History Channel’s Modern Marvels: Coffee, And it’s killing me – it’s like they are slamming it, and spitting it out – NO!!!!

A fine coffee is just like a fne wine: you must play with it – carefully taste its aromas – then let it gently glide along your tongue. Work it around. Then spit it out, if you wish. Or drink it; it makes no matter at this point.

But don’t just slurp-slosh-spit – that is all wrong! You have to romance the bean.

13. November 2005 · Comments Off on Cranberry Chutney · Categories: Eat, Drink and be Merry

We picked up this recipe from our friend, Father Pat.

Cranberry Chutney

Ingredients:
40 Fresh Whole Cranberries
1 Cup Seedless Raisins
1 2/3 Cup Sugar (Or Splenda)
1 Tablespoon Ground Clove
1 Teaspoon Fresh Ginger (2 if dry)
1 Cup Water
1/2 Cup (1 Med) chopped onion
1/2 Cup thinly sliced celery (small stalks)
1/2 Cup (1 Med) apple, peeled, chopped

Cook:
Combine cranberries, raisins, sugar, apples and water in large pot and bring to a boil. Stir frequently. This is a good time to chop the onion, celery and apple. When cranberries start to pop stir in the onion, apple and celery and bring back to a boil then lower to a simmer for 15 minutes.

If put in sterilized jars and properly sealed may be stored on the pantry shelf for about six months, otherwise refrigerate.

Use as you would cranberry sauce on Thanksgiving and Christmas. Can also be used as you would jelly. Goes well with any meat, not just turkey. Spoon some into your hot cereal. Pour about 6 ounces over a brick of Philly and surround with Ritz Crackers.

I know the holidays are upon us when Beautiful Wife begins to make and can jars of this for our friends.

13. November 2005 · Comments Off on DWI Christmas Fruitcake · Categories: Domestic, Eat, Drink and be Merry, General

(This was a recipe from the Caribbean for a different sort of Christmas fruitcake, for those who didn’t like chewing on lumps of fossilized glace fruit, which was published (re-published?) in the European version of the Stars & Stripes sometime in the mid-1980ies. I copied it out into my personal recipe book, but did not keep or recall any information on it’s source. A very dear friend of mine loved the resulting cake very much, and kept several wedges in her deep freeze, where it remained soft and un-frozen, due to the incredibly high alcohol content.)

Moisten with a little rum from a 1-quart bottle of same;
1 lb dark raisins
1 lb dried currents
1 lb pitted prunes
1 lb glace cherries
Put the rum-flavored fruit through a meat-grinder, equipped with a medium blade, and combine with remainder of the quart of rum in a glass jar or other sealable container, and allow to steep for at least two weeks or up to one year.

Cream together:
1 lb butter
1 lb brown sugar
1 lb eggs (about a dozen)
The ground and steeped fruit.

Combine in another bowl, and stir into the butter/sugar mixture

1 lb flour
¼ tsp cinnamon
¼ tsp nutmeg

Add 3 oz burnt sugar (melt sugar until deeply caramelized, or nearly black, and dissolve with an equal amount of water to make a dark, thin syrup)

Grease and flour 2 10-in spring form pans, and bake in a pre-heated 350 deg. Oven for two hours, or until cake-tester comes out clean. You may need to cover the cakes with tinfoil to prevent burning. Remove cakes, and allow to cool. Poor ¼ of a 1-quart bottle of tawny port over each cake, and allow to absorb. (You may need to take a bamboo skewer and pierce cakes about an inch apart all over to facilitate absorbing of the port.) When absorbed, pour on remainder of port onto each cake, wrap tightly in plastic (not tinfoil!) and allow to age at room temperature for at least a week. The resulting cake is very heavy, and dense, rather like gingerbread, and might be considered a sort of “pound” cake, since it calls for a pound of just about everything but the spices. Drive at your own risk, after consuming a slice or two.

06. November 2005 · Comments Off on That Old Wino: Jefferson · Categories: Eat, Drink and be Merry, History, Site News, That's Entertainment!

Please note that this post ushers in a new category: Eat, Drink and be Merry: Foods, Beverages and the Joy of Breaking Bread. I think this is in order; we’ve done many posts on the subject to date. And, while it may just be the season, we seem to be doing more all the time.

I have just watched (with several interruptions) The Cultivated Life: Thomas Jefferson and Wine, on my local PBS station. To any lover of wine, or of history (and most know I am both), this should be considered a must see.

It is almost cliche that, here in California, wine is central to our culture. But, as I was reminded of with this comment from my dear friend, Jude, the same is true, to one degree or another, of many other regions of America. Indeed, wine grapes are grown in every state of the Union, save for Alaska and Wyoming.

But it wasn’t always that way. Grapes are not native to North America. Historians believe that what Leif Eriksson actually saw, when making landfall in Newfoundland, were cranberries – not grapes. And the early colonists found their attempts to introduce grapes quite frustrating. While Jefferson was a great lover of wine, and became quite the connoisseur during his time in France, he was never successful in his attempts to grow grapes at Monticello. I have been aware of the basics of this for some time, but I found the detail and color offered by this program quite enriching.

Update: As my readers have pointed out, I was incorrect in my statement that grapes are not native to North America. However, early Americans – on the east coast at least – did have difficulties growing wine grapes (PDF – 55 pgs.):

British settlers first attempted to plant Vitis vinifera in the U.S. in 1619, but were faced with difficult conditions and low yields. The poor growing climate of the east coast even prevented accomplished European growers brought over by the colonists from establishing any sort of sustainable venture. It was not until 1818 in York, Pennsylvania, that Thomas Eichelberger was able to become the first commercially successful grower. Still, production was rather small and wine drinkers had to rely mainly on European imports.229 The first permanent and extensive wine production came later in the 1830s with the establishment of Nicholas Longworth near Cincinnati, Ohio.230

At the same time, unbeknownst to the isolated east coast, a separate wine industry began to take root in the west. Jesuits from Spain moved north from Mexico around 1700 and began setting up missions throughout California. Father Juniper Serra set up twenty-one such missions, all of which had vineyards. Wine served a sacramental purpose for the missionaries, but had little outside use at the time. Thus, when the missions began to diminish in importance later in the century, the vineyards also fell into disrepair without any interested parties to care for them.231

The California wine industry remained on the fringe until the influx of settlers from the Gold Rush arrived in the mid-1800s. Finding mainly missionary grapes, the settlers called for something better. In 1860, Hungarian immigrant Agoston Haraszthy helped create the Viticultural Commission to oversee the development of the wine industry in California. Haraszthy brought back many vines from his travels in Europe and distributed them throughout California. When phylloxera swept through the world in the late 1800s, it was discovered that indigenous vines from the eastern U.S. were not susceptible to the disease. This led producers around the world to begin grafting western and European vines onto the roots of the eastern vines in hopes of preventing future outbreaks. Slowly producers and consumers alike began pushing for higher standards of quality, which led to the creation of the Board of Viticultural Commissioners and the State Agricultural Experiment Station to control the artistic, scientfic, and business aspects of the industry.232

Disaster struck the U.S. wine industry when the 18th Amendment was ratified in 1919 instituting Prohibition. Many vineyards were either abandoned or forced to survive on government permits to produce small amounts of medicinal, sacramental, or cooking wine.233 Other vineyards were torn up and planted with inferior grapes that were used for unfermented juices, jams, and jellies. Some wine production did go underground, however. Such homemade wines were often heavier and were fortified to have higher alcohol contents. In fact, after Prohibition ended, two-thirds of wine produced was over 20 alcohol.234 When Prohibition came to an end in 1933, the industry was in shambles. An estimated 1000 commercial wineries had been reduced to 150, many of those only having survived as a result of the government permits.

Producers also refused to replace the inferior vines that they had planted during Prohibition, claiming that replanting was too expensive and that their products had been selling adequately before.235 In 1935, the Wine Institute was created to oversee, stabilize, and monitor the regrowth of the industry.236 The Wine Institute also served as a government lobby and a publicity board for the fragmented industry, although it failed in its campaign to make Americans realize that wine should be drunk with food and not merely for intoxicating purposes. In fact, consumer preference for a higher alcohol content remained through World War II, when 75% of wine made in the U.S. was fortified. It was also around the time of World War II that the wine industry finally started to rebound.237

The 1940s marked a period of consolidation as large distillers began to buy up vineyards. Four companies Schenley, Hiram Walker, Seagram, and National, owned almost half the industry at the time. Consolidation also allowed for vast improvements in consistency and quality. By the 1970s, the rise of wine had begun, as many discovered table wine as an alternative to fortified wines. Finally, the 1980s marked another resurgence where wine became viewed as part of a healthy, civilized lifestyle, rather than a source of inebriation.238.
____________________________________________________

229 Richard McGowan, Government Regulation of the Alcohol Industry 37 (1997).
230 Oxford Companion to Wine, supra note 10, at 726.
231 McGowan, supra note 229, at 37. California now accounts for 90% of U.S. wine production. Id at 99.
232 Id at 43-44.
233 Id at 49.
234 Paul Lukacs, American Vintage: The Rise of American Wine 100-02 (2000).
235 Id at 103-04.
236 McGowan, supra note 229, at 49.
237 Lukacs, supra note 234, at 103, 108.
238 Id at 110, 128, 188. Ironically, per capita wine consumption in the U.S. peaked at 2.43 gallons in 1985. The current level
is around 2.0 gallons. Id at 188.

Interestingly though, the area around Monticello is now a hub for winemaking.