Baker's ONE BOWL Brownies

I feel like somebody is going to take me down if I don’t post this recipe tonight. Maybe it’s just that we’re only halfway through the school year and we all need chocolate. I’ve made three batches over the course of the last few weeks and they are going like GANGBUSTERS (however fast that is…) I think the secret is that I use Rapunzel 100% organic cocoa powder (made in Germany) instead of baking chocolate squares. Also, good to use farm fresh eggs and good flour.

The recipe is very basic and very simple – and can be found on the back of any box of Baker’s chocolate at the market. I put my variations in parentheses.

4 squares unsweetened chocolate (12 tbsp cocoa powder + 4 tbsp Earth Balance)

3/4 c butter (or Earth Balance)

2 c sugar (1 1/2 c or less)

3 eggs

1 tsp vanilla

1 c flour

1 c coarsely chopped nuts (love them, but haven’t used them lately)

1. Nuke the chocolate and butter until melted. Mix thoroughly.

2. Stir in sugar. Add eggs and vanilla. Mix well. Add flour and nuts. Stir until well-blended.

3. Spread in a well-greased 13×9 inch pan.

4. Bake at 350 for 35 minutes or until a wooden chopstick inserted in the middle comes out with fudge-y crumbs.

I have been experimenting with the cocoa powders. The next tin I’ll try is Dagoba (made in the States). The brand van Houten (Dutch) also works well.

Ridiculously easy. And no. Joe, I do not have a vacuum packer… (but check out metrodad’s latest post for your vacuum packing entertainment)

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the cute and lovable side of the crazy lee

My brother is providing some good blog fodder these days. Here’s the last email I got from him, published with his (and his girlfriend’s permission):

“Donna was saying how I “poke and prod” her out of her bubble, i.e. make her think about things differently.  So she called me pokey.  So I called her gumby.  And then we realized that we are like the actual characters!”

and then Songbae included excerpts from the gumbyworld website:

Pokey: Gumby’s Best Pal

The Gumby series was successful because it presented its audience with the engaging duo of Gumby, an adventurous hero, and Pokey, a complainer, masquerading as a realist. Gumby may have his feet on the ground, but his head is in the clouds. Pokey, on the other hand, is tied to the earth.

That’s why he has the colors of earth, orange and black, which together make the color of the rich soil that is the basis for all growth on earth.

Pokey’s Personality

Where Gumby is idealistic, Pokey is skeptical. Where Gumby is trusting, Pokey asks questions. When Gumby takes chances, Pokey often gets dragged along against his will, but ends up appreciating the experience. The two save each other with regularity. In every episode Pokey gives advice, and sometimes, Gumby listens to him.

Sometimes Pokey is just plain cranky and pessimistic, poking and gibing at Gumby. He loves to be sarcastic. He mutters under his breath, drags his feet, and doesn’t like it when Gumby takes advantage of him, as in Pokey Minds the Baby. When Gumby decides he wants to find the Hidden Valley, Pokey mutters, “I don’t see how we can find Hidden Valley if no one else ever did.”

Pokey loves to have the last word. In the episode, A Lovely Bunch of Coconuts, Gumby’s trees produce watermelons instead of coconuts. Poke points out that the crop was a little different from the expected by saying, “Some coconuts”, before a watermelon falls on him and covers him with the crushed fruit. “Not bad”, mutters Pokey as he licks his lips.

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Sean Scully quote

“It is very difficult to keep doing something with a degree of fidelity that allows it to deepen and unfold during the course of a human life.”

(from the January 2007 issue of Art in America, p. 118)

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printable oscar ballot

[I’ve noticed that a number of hits have come to this post looking for a printable oscar ballot for the 80th Academy Awards. This original post was about last year’s awards – so for your trouble, here is a link to this year’s printable ballot from oscar.com. It is the same one used by the Academy. Have fun.

I posted my own Top Ten Movies of 2007 with short reviews and links to IMDb here.]

A teacher at one of my school sites came up with a good idea. She’s having a contest to see who can guess the most correct winners for the oscars (79th Academy Awards). So just for fun, I am providing a pdf of the oscar ballot here (from oscar.com):

printballot_2007_2.pdf

Btw, no superbowl snacking going on here. Drinking organic french roast cappuccino, eating leftover lasagne, and editing chapter 3 of the thesis with a friend – almost as fun as a superbowl movie day without football.

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somebody we once knew

If you went to Walt Whitman and knew Adam Spiegal, check out some of the commercials he made here. Others of you may know him as Spike Jonze, Sophia Coppola’s ex-husband, the director of movies like Being John Malkovich and Adaptation, and the producer of things like Jackass I and II.

For a pic of him in his youth, check out this previous post.

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excellent scallops and steak

Well, it looks like it will be excellent scallops and steak. The short food video that accompanies the article, “The Upside-down Grill,” by Mark Bittman in yesterday’s NYTimes teaches you how to “grill” food in your oven with a cast iron skillet. (Thanks for pointing it out to me Sara.)

Here’s the general idea: Put the top rack in your oven as high as it goes and turn on the oven as hot as it goes. Put your cast iron skillet in for 15-20 minutes. You need the skillet to be totally preheated. Take out the skillet and drop on a handful of scallops. Get the skillet back into the oven right away, because it will be smoking. Two minutes later the scallops are done with a grilled crust!

Use the exact same technique for steak, just let it cook for 7-10 minutes. This style of cooking is called cooking a la planche in Spain.

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sibling one-upmanship

This is my brother who is single and childless:

“sorry for late reply. i was in chicago yesterday. (left office at 10pm tuesday night to take red-eye to chicago. arrived 6am wednesday. interviewed kids at business school all day. took a flight back to sf landing at 10pm. came back too ffice and worked until 4am to send materials to client. went home, slept, and then woke up for 7:30am conference call this morning). last week had first all nighter of new year. hopefully feb will be better. ”

This is me (single mom):

Stayed up until 2am typing in changes to the thesis intro. Woke up at 5:45 am (as usual) to get to work by 7am. Worked at school until 2 pm. Ran a data team analysis with the 7th grade teachers 2:30- 5pm. Shot home to meet two friends and did Bikram yoga in the living room at 5:30pm. Made dinner for everybody (matzah ball soup, turkey burgers with wilted spinach, and rice – chocolate for dessert). Stayed up until midnight to finish reading the book I promised my dad I would read by the end of January (made it).

Slightly less crazy, but still over the top. My whole family is like this…

Posted in says Songbae | Leave a comment

Theatre in the Hi-Desert

This is the last weekend for Send Me No Flowers at Theatre 29. Love the old Doris Day and Rock Hudson stuff. I’m going to try and take Bella Friday night.

GODSPELL will be running weekends from 23 February through 24 March with a Thursday performance on 8 March and a Sunday matinee on 18 March at 29Palms Theater. Saw that one for the first time in Montreal in a beautiful church on Sherbrooke. Like I’ve said, I’m a sucker for musicals. My favorite song from Godspell is “Day by Day.” Call 361-4151 for tickets.
For a very intimate, cozy theater experience, try Groves Cabin Theatre in Morongo Valley. Laurel Haines’ comedy The Dianalogues opened Saturday, January 27. The show will play four weekends on Saturdays at 8:00 PM and Sundays at 2:30 PM through Sunday, February 18.

Tickets for all seats are $10. For additional information and reservations call (760) 365-4523.

Posted in local entertainment | Leave a comment

San Diego things to do

I want to go to San Diego soon. First off, the Expanded Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD) opened downtown January 21, 2007.

And secondly, Sea World has a great deal until April 30, 2007: Buy a one-day pass for $57 and get in the rest of the year free! I’m coming Shamu! Who’s in?

I know this is a post about San Diego, but we got our tix to San Fran last night. Hurray! $113 roundtrip LAX to SFO. Bella is not going; I may put off Alcatraz until she comes with me.

AND I had my two weeks of Absence of Leave Without Pay approved – so I will be going to Thailand afterall – the first two weeks of May. (I just won’t have any money to shop… glum.) Little golden piglet will be worth it though. Although, now that my mom and dad are in Thailand they think Sue and Joss are living in the lap of luxury and it’s not really necessary for me to come. (!!!) My mom says she had her baby alone and so Sue can do it too. Sheesh. She even said I had had my baby alone. I was too flabbergasted by her about-face to remind her that just because she didn’t attend my birth didn’t mean that I was alone. I had two midwives attending, my then-husband, my friend Lisa videotaping and a pesky neighbor friend dropping by during labor. That is not no alone.

Posted in art, san diego, travel | 2 Comments

Korean flick-o-rama

We watched an excellent Korean movie last weekend. In Korean the title is Gwoemul and in English it is called The Host (imdb 7.3/10.0). Despite its unimpressive Imdb rating, this movie is now considered the all-time number one box office hit in Korea (do I sound like I should be writing blurbs or what?) I liked it a lot. Making me laugh out loud wins you points.

The movie takes place in contemporary Korea and revolves around government misinformation, a beastly reptile creature created by improperly disposed formaldyhyde, and the desperately heroic attempts by a family to find a little girl. It is a funny horror movie the same way Dr Strangelove and How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Atomic Bomb is a funny horror movie. Read the NYTimes review here.

We have been on a Korean movie streak the last couple years (along with everybody else). If you are interested in checking out contemporary Korean flicks, check out this alphabetic Korean movie list at wikipedia.

If you can occasionally stomach extreme violence or extreme melodrama, I would recommend:

Old Boy (violent)

Il Mare (melo)

Joint Security Area (violent)

The Lake House (violent and melo)

Memories of a Murder (quiet with outbursts)

My Sassy Girl (melo)

Samaritan Girl (melo and violent)

Spring, Summer, Winter, Fall,… and Spring Again (quiet with outbursts)

Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance (violent and melo)

Taegukgi: The Brotherhood of War (melo and violent)

The next ones we are going to watch: Silmido, The King and Clown, Save the Green Planet!, Crying Fist, and A Moment to Remember.

Posted in korea, movies | 2 Comments