Daily Archives: March 8, 2010

“Bring Out Your Dead”

Nasty title, but it comes from Monty Python’s “Holy Grail” movie. It was funny at the time. Last year a stoat/ermine lived beneath our empty hot tub for a couple of months.

He was so darned cute.

Well, we saw him bring a dead mouse by and leave it for a few moments because Zoe flustered him behind the glass doors. The story is that our neighbors fired their hot tub maintenance man because he raised his prices so they hired a new person. The new maintenance person kept finding rats and other critters in the hot tub. The owners, who don’t live here, thought the old maintenance guy was sabotaging their hot tub by putting dead stuff in there.

A couple of months ago we met the owner and pieced together the real story. The stoat/ermine was living in our hot tub and keeping his extra prey a few feet away, and the old maintenance guy was re-hired on our recommendation.

And no, thank you, I don’t want a recipe for par-boiled two week-old rat, nor will I give you one. We told a real cowboy that story and he liked it. Cheers, Dee

Editing

aka “Why I Don’t Twitter.” Yes, I edit myself and try to provide you with the best copy/stories I come up with. But hear this. I’ve been bothered by a recent episode of Rick Bayless’ One Plate at a Time.

Permit me a setup. Twenty years ago I slaved in the kitchens of Margaret Fox at Cafe Beaujolais, in Mendocino, CA. It was a month-long unpaid internship and I wasn’t even allowed a portion of the kitchen’s share of the tip money, which I could have used for firewood because it was freezing in my unheated cabin. I’d spent all my savings on cooking school and a rental car to drive to and from work. Luckily the subletter left a mattress and several blankets, and flying termites by the thousands.

The infamous Diana Kennedy was coming to visit, doyenne of Mexican cooking. One cook was caught rinsing a painstakingly roasted chili to rid it of seeds and skin. NO! Diana Kennedy is coming! She came and went, I got to spend three hours driving her to the airport (I was the only one with a day off, new car and insurance) and she made us some lovely shrimp with garlic, and picked fruit and made us berry ice cream.

I very much enjoy chef Rick Bayless, can’t wait to go to Chicago to visit his restaurants, and am a new devotee of Create. I love Mexico: One Plate at a Time. He makes his dishes sound so easy for the home cook. Recently I watched him rinse off a roasted chili pepper to get rid of seeds and skin. I was told 20+ years ago that was a no-no because you lose all the flavor you imparted through the roasting process.

So I asked him, and congratulated him on winning Top Chef Masters. If there’s any top chef I’d like to apprentice with, it’s him, because he’s a perfectionist, an innovator, a classicist and seems to value the people who work for him. And his website made me make it 300 characters. That took four edits. Perhaps they just want to weed out people without the patience to whittle down to 300 meaningful characters. Anyway, this is MY blog and hopefully you’re still reading.

I love getting inspiration from others, moms who bake, cooks/chefs with other styles of food and ethnic traditions. Right now I just wanted to know if it’s OK to rinse the pepper and retain the flavor! It’s a pain not to use water except to get the skin pieces off my hands. I’ll let you know if he answers. In advance I’ll say Thanks, Rick Bayless, for being the creative chef you are and I’ll see you in Chicago! Cheers, Dee

p.s. 452 words, and I do this as a hobby! I would’ve been horrified to get this assignment in high school…

The Dude

You did it! And my favorite song won as well. Although I must admit that the melodies of others from Crazy Heart run through my brain, even in dreams, as I begin the mental process of taking up the guitar as a rank beginner at my age.

You can see from my postings over past months that this isn’t the traditional post-Oscar blogger as I’ve even e-mailed the producers to get the movie out earlier here. It’s next door and I’ve seen it twice, bought the CD and while the movie was tough for my husband he loves the songs.

The book brought me home to my neighborhood and the lights of the city. Author Thomas Cobb should be commended for his work, also T Bone Burnett, Ryan Bingham and all the songwriters and musicians.

Congratulations to all, you’ve earned it. Cheers, Dee