Thanksgiving

The Bistro will be closed this Thursday, in Observance of Thanksgiving.
Relax, spend time with family, watch parades, run the Turkey Trot….
Please enjoy some home-cooked food, and loved ones to eat it with.

On a personal note, Thanksgiving has been my favorite holiday for as long as I can remember. It has the things I like about a holiday–a day off work, time spent with people I love, and slow cooked food–but it doesn’t have the high pressure merryness of Christmas.
Don’t ruin it for me, observe it.
Saturday is a perfectly fine day to shop, and an especially good day, since it is “Shop Indie” day.

In observance of the holiday, I would like to quote a short prayer by Robert Frost:

Fence

“Forgive, O Lord, my little jokes on thee

    and I’ll forgive thy great big one on me.”

 

Happy Thanksgiving from all of us here at the Bistro:
Peirce, Wode Toad, and Dr Bear.

Pirate Muffins (aka Krakenmuffins)

Just a reminder:
NTLP Day 2012 - CopyYom Kipper may be Friday, but National Talk Like a Pirate Day is a week from tonight. Now, I could have waited and posted this then–that will be when we will be leaving them unguarded on the counter at the Philosophy Bistro–but then ye filthy bilge-rats would not have the time to be bakin’ yer own.
Should I dress up again?

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup TVP
  • 1 cup rum (approximately)
  • 2 cups flour (Whole wheat, white, both, as you wish)
  • ½ cup of sugar
  • 2 tsp baking soda
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ½ cup brown sugar
  • ½ tsp cinnamon
  • ½ cup rolled oats
  • ½ cup walnuts
  • 1 cup diced apples
  • ½ cup chopped golden raisins
  • 2 cup cooked sweet potato (I like it baked, but I assume canned will do)
  • 3 eggs
  • ½ cup buttermilk or Greek yoghurt
  • ½ cup oil (it might work without this; I liked making it with coconut oil.)
  • 2 tsp. vanilla

Step 1: the TVP: This can be done earlier. Measure out a cup of TVP, and cover it with the rum. Let it soak, so the TVP absorbs the fluid. If you are a teetotaler, substitute something interesting.

Step 2, Prepare Ye the way: Preheat the oven to 350°, chop the apple, either grease the muffin tins or put in the cupcake liners (I usually spray a little canola oil in the bottom of these to make things come out easier). I get 2 dozen medium sized muffins out of this mix.

Step 3, sifting the dry ingredients: In one bowl crumble up the brown sugar and the oats, then sift (mix if you don’t have a sifter) in the flour, white sugar, baking soda, cinnamon, and salt. Mix thoroughly.

Step 4, mixing the wet ingredients: In another bowl, mix the TVP, the apples, the raisins, sweet potato, vanilla, oil, eggs and buttermilk.

Step 5, combining the big mess: Add the dry ingredients to the wet ones and mix well. You want to make sure the individual bits of apple are each coated to keep them from getting too clumpy. The consistency should be much firmer than batter, but a little more liquid than cookie dough.

Europe 2013 007Step 5, baking: Fill two dozen or so muffin tins. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. See how they look. Stick a toothpick in one and see if it comes out battery.

Step 6, gratuitous pirate joke: What is a pirates favorite letter?
You would think “Rrrr,” but no; a pirate’s heart belongs to the “C.”

MuffinsStep 8, sharing: Oh, make them work for it. Bury the muffins on a deserted beach, leaving the only map in possession of a drunken, cursed first mate. or just tie them to the parrot.

April Foolishness

My Dear Abby–
Your recent facebook post intrigued me.
Dr Bear in Vest facing rightYou asked “What fiction narratives shaped your life, and how?”
Strangely enough, the first book that came to my mind was Uncle Wiggily and his Friends, which I read–or, rather, which my father read to me, my head against his chest and his baritone voice vibrating through me–when I was 4 or 5. Of course, I admired Uncle Wiggily’s  stalwart adventurousness, and the rabbit gentleman’s unfailing courtesy, kindness, and old world charm. He certainly did have a sense of fashion and personal style, as well. But what really changed my world was how each story would end.

And, if the loaf of bread doesn’t get a toothache and jump out of the oven into the dishpan, next time I’ll tell you about how Uncle Wiggily Learns to Dance.

And in the next story, if the moving picture doesn’t run so fast that it jumps out of the window and scares our cat soshe falls into the milk bottle, I’ll tell you about Uncle Wiggily and the Snow Plow.

And if the snow man doesn’t come in our house and sit by the gas stove until he melts into a puddle of molasses, I’ll tell you next about Uncle Wiggily and The Red Spots.

These statements were just so absurd, so silly, and there they were—in black and white! A book could be silly and crazy! Now, I was used to silliness: my dad and his brothers were silly and witty and droll, as were many of my relativies on both side of the family. However, if I book could be silly, if words on a page in black and white could be silly, then anything was possible. I could be just as silly as my uncles, I could be just as silly as Howard R. Garis or Jim Henson; Life could be relished with a hint of absurdity, its pain dulled with its inherent ludicrousness.

I memorized a book of 101 Elephant Jokes:

What’s the difference between an elephant and a plum?
The color!

What did Tarzan say when he saw the elephants coming?
“Here come the elephants!”

Why do elephants have wrinkly knees?
From playing marbles.

What did Jane say when she saw the elephants coming?
“Here come the plums!”
(She was colorblind.)

I wrote funny plays and drew cartoons in elementary school. I acted all the way through High School and College, my favorites still being Shakespearean Comedy. Although teaching may seem like the ideal stage for stand-up, baby-sitting other people’s kids and then parenting my own daughter were the ideal situations for being silly. The fact is, kid’s are not really that funny or imaginative. However, they can become funny and imaginative if you set a good example. I spent a lot of time clowning and miming and being silly so that my daughter could also grow up to be silly. Besides The Sweet Potato Song, Grace also grew up with tunes like:

Oooooooh The needles are prickley, but the water is fine;
that’s why squid don’t live in the pine!

Oooooooh Opposible thumbs is what they lacks;
that’s why grizzly bears don’t file income tax!

I don’t generally tell jokes–they seem like other people’s stories. I prefer witty or absurdist commentary on a specific context. Occasionally, things like singing about 19th century to a Johnny Cash tune. Or remembering a college friend with a kids’ story. When I do tell a joke, it’s generally something simple like:

Two men walk into a bar. The third man ducks.

It is simple, elegant, almost Haiku-like. It plays on expectations and ideas. And, of course, it has the word “duck” in it, which makes anything funnier.

I also like to tell the story about the unluckiest man in Ireland, but I won’t tell it here because it is too long. It also is the closest I come to saying anything theological, so I only tell it to close friends.

Humor is how I deal with things. By treating big things with a great deal of silliness, it makes them smaller, and takes away some of the fear and power that they have. At my Grandfather’s funeral, my dad and his brothers told old family stories and did Marx brothers routines until we were all crying.

“Talcum Powder, Sir? Walk this way.”
“If I could walk that way, I wouldn’t need the talcum powder.”

I still use it to deal with whatever the world throws at me. Humor has gotten me through grad-school, losing jobs, losing friends, dialysis, heart-break, and might just get me through the current economy.

Tennessee weather: seldom arctic, but often bi-polar.

On the average, Tennessee drivers are the best in the world–on the average.
Of course, that means for every driver going 90 there is one going 15, and for every driver who never signals, there is one who never turn their signal off, and for every driver who cuts you off, there is one who can’t even merge.
But on the average….

Chicago? It has Hipsters the way new York has rats, which I mean, of course, as another point in New York’s favor.

The Little Red Hen?
It’s a children’s version of Atlas Shrugged.

I told my doctor I was depressed. She asked if I had suicidal or homicidal thoughts. I said: “I’m in retail; of course I have homicidal thoughts.”
She said: “I’ve been in retail; that’s perfectly normal.”

Yes, I do specialize in artisan-made hand-crafted snark and free-range organic wit. Yes, I have co-workers and students who show up just to see what crazy thing I am going to say that day. Yes, it sometimes gets out of hand, and I apologize for that…
But only when it gets out of hand and I forget to be kind. Being funny is no excuse, either.

So, don’t be afraid of being silly. FindSmall Arms 001 humor where you can, and make somebody laugh. Making somebody in elementary school giggle is best, but even if you can make a co-worker smile with a silly visual joke like this one…….

……..that’s good too.

 

…and, unless the iPhone and android forget their social media and are reduced to silence. leaving us to communicate with semaphore ducks, next time we will discuss Slowness and Aristotolian Virtues.

Until next week, I am, and will remain, your silly friend, 44signaturedramatic but funny story-teller, misguided cattle-rustler, loyal knight, obedient camel, elephant, a person who can make you smile, and even LOL, etc.

Peppermouse Cookies

Peppermouse CookiesHey, Whovians! I am finally getting around to publishing my Tardis Cookie Recipe!

This was kind of a Christmas cookie experiment that I played with one day when I was bored. I had had a soup in a Szechuan restaurant that included these spices, and I thought it would be an exotic variation on the German Pfeffernüsse. I needed a wacky recipe because I was making Tardis & Dalek cookies for work, and this seemed good.

Ingredients:

  • ½ cup solid shortening
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • ½ cup dark molasses
  • 1/3 cup milk
  • 1 tsp ginger
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 1 tsp nutmeg
  • 1 tsp allspice
  • 1/3 tsp cloves
  • 1 tsp anise
  • 1 tsp black pepper
  • 1 tsp Srirachi sauce
  • Sift in:
  • 4 cups flour (31/2 if not in Tennessee)
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • ¼ tsp salt

Step 1, cream: Soften the shortening, then beat in the sugar. Add in the eggs, molasses and milk.

Step 2, spice it up: Mix in the various spices. Leave some out, if they don’t suit your fancy, or add some more, but I do wonder: if you don’t trust me, why are you reading my recipes?

Step 3, sifting: put the flour in a sifter and add the leavening & salt. Gradually stir this into the various wet ingredients. Mix well—it should be stiff, but sticky.

Step 4, chill overnight (always good advice): wrap in plastic and store in the refrigerator.

Step 5, roll and cut it and mark it with a tardis: Preheat the oven to 375. Roll the stiffened dough out on a floured surface, perhaps half at a time. Cut out in shapes (I prefer mice, but also have done Tardis (dredel cutters work) & Daleks (modified Christmas bells); ironic mustaches seem like a distinct possibility). Transfer onto a baking sheet. Bake at 375 for 12 minutes.

Step 6, cool & frost: Remove from pan while still warm, cool on a Dr Who Spice Cookieswire rack, and if you don’t know this should you really be in a kitchen unsupervised? I frosted these with a simple confectioner’s sugar frosting.