not martha

Monday, July 18, 2005

How to poach an egg, includes the unhappy results of various methods. via Lifehacker.

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Yesterday a stroke of luck had me attending the Amazon.com 10th Anniversary Concert, a favorite part of the evening was seeing Daniel Handler, standing in for Lemony Snicket, perform a song about Count Olaf on the accordian. The stream of the show is avaible for today (Sunday) and the song starts near 1:31:00.

Friday, July 15, 2005

For dinner I made breakfast using the french toast recipe from Orangette. Almost each day at my local market I pass a rack of Shoku Pan thick sliced Japanese bread with a cheerful handmade sign saying "think French toast!", how could I resist? I also made some with a crusty French bread to, you know, compare. They were both delicious and had that nice custardy middle. Mmm.

I spotted a box of homemade graham crackers at the local market and decided it was reason enough to make the fancy s'mores dessert from The Domestic Goddess and use my kitchen torch for the first time. (I'm sorry to say I was too lazy to make my own graham crackers, though that link has the recipe for them.) I used the marshmallow recipe at Cooking For Engineers for the marshmallows:



I think I prefer milk chocolate for s'mores so I used some Fran's deep milk chocolate -- I melted a bit and put some under the marshmallow as well as on top.



They were best when you torch them slowly and let the marshmallow puff up, and if you don't burn them as much as in this picture. The torch? Very much fun.
Lavender week 6:

Monday, July 11, 2005

Kevin Smokler is in town on his book tour for Bookmark Now. Tonight we went out to the BN at U Village and surreptitiously found that the book was there, face out, on the shelves. They were very gracious and now there are signed copies on the shelves. Come out and see Kevin, and buy the book, Tuesday at Third Place Books and Wednesday at University Bookstore. I'll be tagging along, so exciting.

Wednesday, July 6, 2005

Last weekend we trekked out to find a Geocache, however for the record I do prefer the treasure hunt aspect of Letterboxing. The Geocache we found was a microcache, just a small paper log curled up inside of a capsule keychain and tucked into a small space in a fence. I was charmed.
how to make a wire hanger work for spaghetti-straps, using paper and tape
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