Category Archives: General

Save Andrea!

We’ve been watching the conventions. We won’t be talking about that here. But Ben and I were CRYING laughing last night during the extended balloon release, as poor Andrea Mitchell tried solemnly to report while being buried under 8 trillion “Republican Balloons,” as Tom Brokaw called them. Brokaw slayed us, all “I’ve seen Andrea “Boom Boom” Mitchell report through sniper fire! She will not be stopped by balloons!”

Thank god for video clips. Unless someone can tell me why WordPress doesn’t accept the “embed code” from MSNBC, you can check it out here (sorry about the ad; it is worth it though). Sadly I don’t think the clip includes the section where they added one of those news tickers at the bottom saying “Andrea Mitchell under attack by balloons.”


(Screenshot from the video)

Two for the road

Ben and I got married two years ago today, on a cool, overcast day on the North Shore of Long Island. It was perfect. Please indulge me as I share a few favorite pictures from the day:

recessional

car kiss

close up

dinner

dancing

Next month it will be nine years since we got together (we just passed nine years since we met; we worked fast!), and I hope we get 90 more.*

(Photos by Brett Chang)

*I know, I know, that would make us really grossly old. I’ll settle for 75.

Summer wedding shower

Sorry it’s been quiet around here: It’s busy times in Kate-land. This weekend I went home to Oregon for my 10-year high school reunion (!!) and to throw a wedding shower for my oldest friend, Kathrin. My mom was incredibly generous about hosting at their house and preparing all the food, and she spent a lot of time scrubbing everything up all around the house and yard so that everything was perfect.

I wanted to use bright colors because when I think of Kathrin I think of reds and oranges. A couple months ago I went to Paper Source and found cute invitations with big abstract flowers on them, and then got wrapping paper with the same flowers, along with envelopes and flat cards and labels in the various colors from the paper. I used the wrapping paper to make a belly band holding the flat cards (which I printed as recipe cards) over the invitation text, and then held it together with the labels (I stamped them with a potato stamp, since I didn’t have a “K” stamp!):

Last week I went back to the store to get more of the paper so I could decorate with it for the shower. I also made a holder for the recipe cards, which all the ladies brought back with favorite summer recipes on them.

I lucked out when I went running errands on Friday to get ready for the shower. I didn’t think I’d find tulips this late in the year, but Trader Joe’s had them, in the perfect colors. We rented 48″ square tables and put them in the dining room, filling out my mom’s antique chairs with four rental ones. We rented the tablecloths and napkins, and I used the paper to make a table runner.

The dining table went in back of the sofa for the food, and the smaller table we usually keep there was moved to the side for drinks:

By the way, let’s take a closer look at those radishes (with butter and salt), because they are so lovely:

For drinks we had prosecco and Pimm’s Cups, which I love. I forgot to take a picture of the drink all made, but here are the pretty, pretty garnishes (strawberries are not 100% traditional but I wanted some color):

I made a whole pitcher of Pimm’s Cups (1 1/3 cups Pimm’s to 2 2/3 lemonade made enough for 12 people once the club soda and ice got involved), but the recipe scales up or down easily:

Pimm’s Cup
1 part Pimm’s No. 1
3 parts lemonade
Shake well and pour into a collins glass full of ice, filling about 2/3 of the way, maybe a little more
Top with club soda
Garnish with mint and cucumber (and lemon, orange or strawberry if you want)

Pimm’s is gin-based (which…I love gin, so that makes me happy) but honestly it doesn’t taste very ginny, and it’s worth a try even if you’re more of a vodka drinker. The drink is very mild on the alcohol front, and extremely refreshing for summer. Obviously I had to leave the bottle of Pimm’s in Oregon, so now I need to track down my own for Porch-top sipping.

Anyway, on to the food! My mom made grilled chicken (marinated in garlic and olive oil, with a bit of lemon at the end), asparagus with preserved lemon and a fantastic couscous from the Bouchon cookbook. I will try making that myself one of these days and will include the recipe then! It had more preserved lemon and mint in it and was amazing. Also a big salad. All the vegetables (and the strawberries) came from the farmer’s market that morning, and the mint was from a friend’s back yard–spring comes earlier in Oregon, even in a rainy, cool year like this one.

Lunch was perfect–light and summery. Everyone seemed to have a lovely time! And we finished with a goblet of strawberries, butter cookies and chocolate-covered pretzels while Kathrin opened presents.

Oh, and more Prosecco. Lots of Prosecco.

Possibly Related Posts

Hmm. I am feeling a little puzzled over what to do here. WordPress has released a new “feature” that adds a section to blog posts where they link to what they think might be related posts. The problem is that in addition to linking within my blog, it links to other WordPress blogs but doesn’t give me any choice in the matter. I am sure many of the links will be great, but I also don’t love the idea of having readers click away to some random site that may have a terrible recipe or be offensive or who knows what. I might just disable the feature completely, but it does seem to be sensible to link back to related posts I’ve written. What do you think? In the meantime, the bold links are within this blog, while the non-bold links go outside the blog.

Other WordPress users, are you keeping it turned on?

Bon Voyage, Tom!

I spent this weekend back up in Hanover helping my brother Tom get ready to leave for a two-month trip through Europe to absorb great works of architecture. He’s a smart puppy who won a travel grant to fund this trip. Since graduating from Dartmouth last June he designed and built a new timber-framed sugarhouse for the Dartmouth Organic Farm, worked at various timber framing jobs, and worked as a cabinet maker. He’s also a great cook!

I got up to Hanover Friday evening (after my first solo highway drive longer than 15 or 20 minutes–whee!) Tom was getting ready to grill dinner for me and for the college’s current Artist in Residence. We enjoyed sirloin, grilled asparagus, pasta with pesto and a delicious cabbage slaw.

He says he made the slaw using vegetable oil and cider vinegar with quite a bit of sugar for the dressing. I will experiment, since he wasn’t very precise with quantities! We ate leftover steak and slaw in great sandwiches the next day.

Tom has been working on a gorgeous custom fly-tying desk for a couple months, using many of the techniques he learned in timber-framing. He finished it on Friday and on Saturday we went to the woodshop to attach the top to the base and do a couple other final tasks.

Hardware and two doors will be added after he gets back from Europe. Pretty impressive, huh?

We also picked up some great book deals at the Five Colleges Book Sale, hung out with lots of Tom’s friends, finished packing up his stuff and figured out what he needed for this trip, which starts in Istanbul and finishes in Helsinki in late June. He’s packing very light (annotated version here):

Finally, almost a month ago Tom stayed at our place while we were gone for the weekend. When we came back I found this lovely handmade cutting board waiting for me–I can’t bear to use it yet; it’s leaning up against the wall in the kitchen, looking pretty:

Good luck, Tom! Safe travels…

Fast and easy

More than a year ago, when I was young, I blogged about Mark Bittman’s “Cheesy Pasta,” a quick recipe he ran in the Times. I made it again last week and it’s still quick and easy and good, though I still am not the world’s most enthusiastic lover of gorgonzola.

Pretty, though:

(That’s gorgonzola, grape tomatoes, chopped arugula and a cup of milk/cream.)

Since this literally comes together in less time than it takes to boil the water and cook the pasta, it’s a great weeknight alternative to cracking open a jar of sauce. I want to try out some different types of cheese in it, and I’d use more arugula than the recipe calls for, since it wilts down very small.

Other fast things I’ve been preparing for dinner lately:
-Salad with TJ’s frozen pizza (Total prep time: 15 minutes to pre-heat oven, 10 minutes to bake)
-TJ’s Lentils Punjabi with a package of naan (Total prep time: 2 minutes in the microwave; 4 minutes in toaster oven for the naan)
It’s been busy times, kids. HOWEVER. I am reading The Omnivore’s Dilemma, which pretty much just coincides with everything my mom did anyway when I was growing up, in terms of local farmer’s market produce and the least industrial meat available and a balanced diet with animal protein only a few times a week, etc. It does make me even more paranoid about what I’m buying, though, which I actually don’t need. As a result I’m frozen in place and can’t figure out what to buy *at all,* and am pretty much sitting on my hands and wondering when CSA sign-up time is. Gah.

The computer is still broken. I haven’t had a chance to take it in for a check-up.

I’m brooding over shallots, onions and pancetta; there is a pasta recipe brewing in my head. Also there is beef stew in the slow cooker at home, and I have one more dinner’s worth of food photos uploaded to post soon! Sorry for the slow period…

Systems meltdown

Oh sad. My beloved 12″ powerbook is….not happy. It’s has been overloaded (despite offloading thousands of photos to an external hard drive) and slow and so forth for months, but the other night it froze up and finally I forced it to restart and now it stays on the startup grey screen with the twirling circle of death forever, until I shut it back down. I “zapped the PRAM” (?!) which accomplished nothing. I let it rest overnight and tried again–nothing. We are about to go away for the weekend (to Vail for a Tuck informal-reunion-ski weekend) but next week I think I have to take it to the computer hospital, wherever and whatever that means.

I did manage to get a few photos uploaded before the meltdown, so I’ll try to do a quick post later to leave you on for the weekend. Meanwhile, please think Cheap Fix thoughts towards my poor computer!

Sigh.

7 things

Emily tagged me to post seven random things about myself. This is so much tougher than you’d think!

1. Cooking chicken makes me nervous. I’d rather deal with pork or beef.

(epicurious.com)

2. I still re-read my childhood favorites when I need comforting. In the last six months I’ve read all the Little House books, all the Elizabeth Enright Melendy Family books, Howl’s Moving Castle and A Little Princess. I also re-read all the Austen books regularly (I’m currently in the middle of Emma, my least favorite), and the Dorothy Sayers Lord Peter Wimsey books, as well. I love re-reading books; the characters have been my friends for decades and it’s always relaxing to dip back into favorites scenes.

(awesome t-shirt (which I own) by Bookshelves of Doom)

3. I played violin from fourth through ninth grades and I loved theater. One term in eighth grade I was in the spring musical, the top orchestra and choir (I’m an alto). I haven’t performed in anything since my senior year of high school, when I played Ophelia in Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead. I also love to paint and want to take art classes.

4. Nine out of ten evenings that Ben isn’t home for dinner I make myself a fried egg sandwich and eat it in front of the tv.

5. I loathe cilantro. I once read an article that said there’s a chemical in it that you either can or can’t smell, and the ability to smell that chemical is what makes it smell like soap (or much worse) to me. My mom doesn’t believe me that the article existed, and I never was able to find it again.

(Ihatecilantro.com)

6. I have terrible trouble with shoes. My feet are wide and I tend to either be squeezed into shoes that are the right length but too narrow, or falling out of shoes that fit my toes but flop off the heel. I hate shoe shopping and I usually have multiple pairs of brand new shoes that hurt too much to break in lying around making me feel guilty. I will admit that I end up wearing a lot of Aerosoles.

7. (Following in Emily’s footsteps…) My middle name is Kehrl, my grandmother’s maiden name. It sounds like it should be spelled Carol. I regularly mixed the H and R up until I was about 11.


Front: My grandmother’s brothers and my grandmother; Back: My great-grandparents and a friend

I tag Germi, Laura and Mrs. Limestone.

Keeping warm

We went to Florida this weekend to visit some dear friends and their 15-month old baby, and it was a shock to the system to get back to Boston, a mere 8 hours after leaving the white-sand beach on an 80-degree day, and walk out of the airport to frigid 18-degree winds. Yikes.

Sigh.

Maybe tonight’s the night to break into the fancy peppermint-infused hot chocolate mix I bought on a post-Christmas sale at Williams-Sonoma? In the meantime I’m looking at a photo of last week’s tulips and thinking about Valentine’s menus. We’ve given up on going out; it’s like New Year’s in terms of overcrowded, rushed restaurants serving so-so fixed menus… Last year I made a classic steak and potatoes dinner, along with those overplayed molten chocolate cakes. Ben loves them and I admit they are very tasty. This year I might do something lighter–maybe a fancy pasta and a really great salad, and then something rich for dessert?

What are you guys cooking for Valentine’s Day?