January 2010 Archives
I just had a thought. A couple of months ago Mary and I both converted to Apple folk. You know the ones with the black mock turtlenecks and cool retro dark rimmed glasses that are always waving their iPhones around and so on. Well, we're not quite like that, though I have to admit since we dropped the Microsoft Network stuff we haven't had a single issue with the Apple equivalent so now I might think about spending a few mornings a week at the local Starbucks preaching the word according to Steve Jobs.
But really, we're not those people. Yet.
Anyway, back to my thought. Tomorrow is the big day, I-Day if I might be so bold as to suggest a marketing catch phrase, for the release of the Apple tablet computing device thingy. Or is it? See, Apple hasn't actually said they're going to release a tablet - they've just said that there's an exciting product launch tomorrow. What if it isn't a tablet?
Think about it - maybe it's a something else entirely. Like they're going to build iPods into all GM cars (which would make them like 120% better than they are today), or maybe they're going to release iJacks which are Apple branded personal jetpacks. Or iFlars - Apple Flying Cars! The future is here! And it comes it a lower case I in front of it! And an exclamation mark at the end!
I really wish they would release something different - just to screw with people's minds. No wait, I'm an Apple person now and I must have my next Apple fix so it better be an iTablet or iSlate or something like that or I will lose all faith in my technological messiah.
If you're looking for me
next week I'll be in line at the Apple store for the iSlate. And yes, I know it
won't be released till October. But I must have it! My precious!
I have a new addiction. The new addiction joins the panoply of other food related addictions such as the fried pork products, fried potato products, beer, fruit cake (that's another story - for later), smoked meat products of all kinds, and on occasion, po'boys. Though the latter is only applicable only while in New Orleans.
My new addiction, though takes me even farther afield than the po'boys. For this one I have to go to England. On our last trip I encountered something called Anchovial Alchemy while browsing food items in Fortnum and Mason. Don't you just like the sound of that - Fortnum and Mason's? You could package corrugated cardboard in some sort of cream sauce and put it in a tin - not a can, and I would eagerly devour it, if it carried the Fortnum and Mason logo.
In this particular case I came across a little ceramic container or pot, with the description Anchovial Alchemy, An Armada of Superior Anchovy. See this is why I love the Brits. First, they have an anchovy and butter spread, which for someone who loves anchovies is bliss. Second, they use product descriptions with words like 'Armada'. In America, we count ourselves lucky if they use the term 'yummy' and spell it right.
Anyhow, I bought this stuff because it sounded intriguing and I try and do something intriguing at least once a week. It's the kind of guy I am. After we arrived home it sat in the pantry for four or five months, mainly because I kind of forgot it and also because I really didn't have any idea what to do with it. Possibly also because my try something intriguing phase petered out around the holidays. Then I ran across a reference to some anchovy butter and how it was nice spread on good rustic toast. So I pulled the ceramic pot out, made some toast, and sampled it.
Nirvana.
Now I realize this isn't for everyone. If you don't like anchovies or things with a piscatorial tang, you'll hate this. If you don't like salt, you'll hate this. But if a blend of fish, salt, butter, and pepper appeals to you then man, is this a taste treat. Personally, if you spread this on wood chippings I'd probably eat it.
A little search
revealed that this product can also be found under the name, Patum Peperium, a Gentleman's Relish. Which is convenient as I
thought I would have to keep going back to London every six weeks or so as I
ran out of Anchovial Alchemy. Much as I like going to London, the recent habits
of strip searching international travelers seems a little over the top and
somewhat inconvenient. So I'll restrict myself for now to sampling Patum
Peperium and see how that compares. Besides, who wouldn't love a Gentleman's
Relish?
Via the New York Times this weekend and picked up by Gawker (We
Really Like Celebrities!), we have an article regarding the proliferation of
'young' people who are going out to dinner early in order to take advantage of
the special deals and lower prices. There being this Great Recesion on and all.
Who knew? I really need to catch up on current events. Apparently we also have
an African American president.
It's pretty much of a piece with people going out to dinner
and using two-for-one coupons because times are tough and such. To be honest
though we always did that, even back in the days when the economy was flying
high and bankers were guzzling champagne and coke cocktails from Alan Greenspan's
slippers. Oh, wait - I think they're still doing that.
Mary and I did have a discussion on what one would call an
early bird dinner here in the Springs where people tend to eat early, like
before the sun sets, even in winter. If the normal dining time is
We'll see if that takes off.
Also in the Times (and referenced by Gawker) was an article
on new-age cavemen or 'paleos' in

Today's
entry concerns something that can, thank god, not be found in the
But, on our
recent trip to
For those
who are not up on their chocolaty confections (and I am only because Mary is
one of the world's most unsung experts in the field), After Eight is a small rectangular
sweet with a layer of soft mint fondant between two thin layers of dark
chocolate. Interestingly enough, the company that makes these is based in
England but is now owned by Nestle, obviously as part of the sinister Swiss
plan to dominate the world's candy sector and force us all one day to sing the
Swiss national anthem and eat cheese with holes in it. Damnned Swiss. As the
name implies, After Eight is or was intended as an after dinner mint, though
here in Colorado it would be more accurate to call it After Six since that's
when most people have finished dining out. In any case, and the swipe at
Coloradan dining habits disposed of, After Eight mints are the type of thing
one might find at the type of establishment that is striving to rise above the
common ruck of Chili's and Outback Steakhouses. A little after dinner mint on
the tray with the check makes the pain of overpaying for pedestrian food go
away, because it's free and well, we Americans are just absolute suckers for
free stuff.
Anyhow,
returning back to
I have
little enough tolerance for candy in my ice cream as it is - after a brief
flirtation with Ben and Jerry's Heath Bar crunch some years ago, I went back to
eating ice cream as it was meant to be - with a single flavor and no added
ingredients. Understandably then, we avoided sampling the After Eight McFlurry
and not least because it would have forced us to actually enter a McDonalds
which we're loathe to do in this country much less some place overseas. So
you'll just have to take our word for it that the confection exists as we have
no intention of ever sampling one.

Mary came across an article in the New York Times, or The
London Times, or some type of old-school-soon-to-be-defunct media outlet (according
to all the pundits that have been mostly wrong about pretty much everything else
they've predicted, but we should listen to them this time, well, because). The
article was about the best foods for your health. Along with the usual suspects
like Swiss chard and roots that can double as building materials, they included
sardines because they have lots of healthy Omega3 fats which are the good kind
of fats unlike the good tasting fats like butter, and they also don't have
nearly as much mercury as the fishies that eat other fishies contain. Though,
someone did subsequently note in the comments that sardines do seem to hoover
up PCB's quite happily, so that's probably a wash.
In any case, a mention of the lowly sardine served as a
reminder that I had several tins sitting in the pantry, liberally coated in
dust. And why doesn't anyone say tins in this country? It sounds so much better
than 'can'. When I hear 'can' I think of something that can be kicked down a
hill or alternatively a body part that can be kicked, down a hill if need be.
When I hear 'tin', I envision someone's great aunt Sandra offering me some tea
and would I please get down the tin of biscuits? Much better than kicking
animate or inanimate objects as far as I'm concerned.
In any case since we were recently in London I'm now referring
to all my canned goods as tins, as well as mentioning, just in passing that I'm
going to pop around the corner to the pub for a quick pint, which I'm
relatively sure is raising suspicion in the Waring household as we don't have a
pub around the corner, or even in the same county, that's available for
poppage. Back again to the pantry and dusty tinned goods, I find I have not
only sardines but some kippered herring. Which leads me astray yet again as I ponder
- what is kippering - is it a verb? Via Wiki, no, apparently not. Kippers are
whole herrings that have been split, gutted and smoked. Much like my
masculinity.
Looking at my tins of herring and sardines I'm struck with
the fact that old cans with the little wind-up key are now long gone. I miss
those things. If you didn't get the key lined up just right when you started
peeling the tin's cover off it would start sliding to one side or the other and
then the lid would be impossible to fully remove. Back then they'd just scored
the lid lightly - those babies were built. I know when I was growing up, it
seemed like there were innumerable references to sardine cans stopping a 20mm
round from a machine cannon or a bayonet trust being stopped by the fortuitous
presence of a tin of salmon in our hero's breast pocket. Alas, no more. Today's
tins are actually made from thin gauge aluminum and the key is long gone. Now
they have pull tabs. It's a bit disappointing. The tins themselves are so wimpy
that I can't imagine they'd stop an enraged heiress with a hatpin, much less a
crossbow bolt. Which is another thing you don't really see much of anymore -
hatpins that is, not enraged heiresses, you see those all the time now.
Anyhow, I think I'll be off to have a nice sardine sandwich
with some mustard and raw onion. Just the thing to insure an uninterrupted
afternoon of online gaming. Toodles!
