Mint 400: July 30, 2008

Tomato Quick Sauce

Posted by seed @ 10:43 AM

Red Wine Reduction Tomato Sauce
  • 6 tomatoes, medium sized
  • 12oz. italian sausage
  • 1 onion, medium sized
  • 4oz. mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 red bell pepper
  • 1 yellow bell pepper
  • 3c red wine
  • 12oz. tomato paste
  • 4oz. fresh basil
  • 4T fresh garlic, minced
  • 3tsp. crushed red pepper
  • 1T sugar
  • Salt & Pepper TT
  • 2T glacé poulet : If you have this, you score major points
  1. You're going to make tomato concasse. Flame a few quarts of water and bring to a boil. Take the tomatoes and remove the cores. Blanch them in the boiling water. Remove them after just a few minutes. Shock them in cold water to cool the surface. Remove the skins. Slice in half cross-wise, between the top and bottom. Using your fingers, remove the seeds from each cavity. No really, get all the seeds out. First seed I find and you fail. Medium dice the tomatoes and set aside.
  2. Sauté the sausage in a large pan. Depending on what kind of sausage you are using, you can adjust the amount of olive oil you use. If you're using a spiced chicken sausage use a bit more oil - less if you are going with the standard pork links.
  3. Add the aromatics, remaining vegetables (not tomatoes) and seasonings. Sauté everything until you get a nice carmelization - Brown and sweet, not burned and bitter.
  4. Add the tomatoes. Bring the pan back up to high heat. There's going to be a fair amount of water from the tomatoes. Reduce that out.
  5. Add the wine and reduce about 3/4. Use your own judgement here. You don't want to take this to au sec. You want it reduced to increase the flavor, but not so much that it won't dilute the paste you are going to be adding.
  6. Add the paste and mix thoroughly. Add the glacé poulet if you have it. This is the time you want to check the consistency. You can add some water/wine/cream to get it to your liking.
  7. Season to taste. Try it first without adding any salt. Then add a tsp at a time, tasting between moves. It will taste really raw initially, and then the salt will open your taste buds and it will taste more like tomato sauce. If you need to, add some garlic and onion powder.

A few notes:
This is quick tomato sauce. Normally, I would use chicken stock and pork bones. I get around this by using the pork sausage and the glacé poulet. The rendered fat from the meat is used to carmelize the ingredients. The glacé is really just reduced stock. The wine is the vinegar and is balanced out by the fat and the sweet (sugar, basil, etc).

Sugar and salt affect the color of the ingredients. Add sugar to red/orange colored vegetables; salt to green. Each will enhance the color and make the ingredients more vibrant. Try this: next time you blanch some green vegetables - asparagus, broccoli, etc. Add salt to the water before you bring it up to a boil. How much? Enough to make it salty like soup. Those vegetables will be dripping with color and will look great when you plate them.

Like all the recipes posted here, by me, this is a guideline. I don't do specifics in an effort to invite individuality. Take this as a benchmark, and adjust things to your liking. If you have a suggestion, drop a line. Hopefully, there something new in here for you


Mint 400:

The Department of Education Caused the Housing Crisis (and Probably Credit Problems as Well)

Posted by Savage Henry @ 10:00 AM

For those of you who snark with pride "Oh, jeeze, I'm no good at math. Besides, it's not like i need it..." congrats: you just bought yourself -- and the rest of us taxpayers -- up to 400,000 homes.

The country has spent billions of dollars on the Department of Education, including every idiotic attempt to recast teaching through some grand theory or another -- exemplified by the monumental stupidity of "new math" -- and gotten zilch for it. Instead, we get people with advanced degrees in "education" talking about how to let kids "explore" and be "involved" with their own learning. And since the education is free (well, directly anyway), people just let it go on. As the system got larger, parents learned they could just let the kids disappear for a few hours, and not really care what was going on. Oh, sure, not you. No, you're the special one who helped Timmy and Janie with their homework. But really, did you stop to look at the level of the homework, the mix of social studies, english, history, chemistry, and whatever else? Where did the basic math go? Or are you just pretty sure that Timmy and Janie just aren't that great at math, which, you know, is perfectly fine since different people are good at different things, and really, when was the last time you use trigonometry, or had to factor an equation?

Would it have been so easy if we were talking about reading? Sure, Timmy and Janie can do physics like a pro, but let's not worry about those english grades. Who the heck ever asked you to diagram a sentence at the grocery store?

Well, here's what you get: people too ill-equipped for life to figure out how much a monthly payment is going to be. People who cannot understand the consequences of their financial actions. And now that means we all have to shell out money so that these people don't suffer the consequences. This housing bill is, for all intents and purposes, a tax on smart people. At least, people smart to enough to look at their paychecks and figure out how much they can pay while still having enough to live on.

Yes, you in the back? What's that? Unfortunate circumstances, you ask? Can't plan for everything, you say? Ah, yes. The safety net thing. Well, fine. If you were a reporter I'm sure you could trot out one, three, or a bunch of well-meaning people just caught up in the swirl of life who just couldn't afford the house once things got bad.

My answer: meh.

This isn't a "sudden" problem, like a health crisis could be. You don't find out one day that your house is beyond your means. Including people who lose their jobs. Firings may happen quickly, but if you have a job where layoff is a real possibility, it is your responsibility to factor that into your calculations. Will you have enough money on hand to do a job search for up to six months? If you have kids, did you plan beforehand so that you'd have enough money or insurance in case your Little Snowflake has something seriously wrong with them?

Not understanding the possible future position you may be in is simply another way of saying that you're living paycheck to paycheck. And your parents should have told you that such a way of life is pretty much not a good idea once you're out on your own. But you know what else could have helped? Right. Math.

Math isn't simply geometry or figuring out how to take square roots. The point is to be able to frame a quantitative problem in such a way as to understand not just the answer, but how one might arrive at an answer. Life isn't just "I make X, my expenses are Y, thus I have X-Y at the end of the month." You have credit, and loans, and unexpected costs. What do you spend on average? What has been your median spending for them month? How much is the service charge on your credit card and how do you add that to what you already owe if you only pay the minimum?

None of this simply "happens" to people. Someone had to -- quoting Alec Baldwin's second greatest bit (and only second because I think comedy is harder than drama) -- sign on the line which is dotted. I just went through this in selling my old home. The woman who was buying it admitted that she had neither a real estate agent nor a lawyer. There was no way she understood the documents she was signing. Is this my fault? Not in the least. But it just got made a problem for all of us by the sheer multitude of people who did the exact same thing.

And what did the government tell all of them? "Don't worry, we'll take care of it. We'll just secure your mortgages using the assets of all the people who were able to figure out how to buy a home and not put themselves into a hole. Thanks for playing." But it doesn't end there. The idiots who made these mortgages are thus shielded from the full force of the fallout. It's been bad for some, but we've already seen the government bail out major firms as well. What message could you take away from that? How about "Get really fucking big, do whatever you want, and the government of your country will be here to step if it goes badly."

Please, make sure to feign surprise when we go through all of this again.


Mint 400: July 27, 2008

Time to stretch

Posted by seed @ 11:27 PM

I got an invite to the Cubs Sky-Box this weekend. Hands-down it is a five thousand times better experience than the Sox' Sky-Box. And that doesn't even consider that you have to watch the Sox. Views at Wrigley were pretty good. Amenities were above average. And, you get to interact with the game and fans. Where Wrigley puts you hanging above the crowd with the ability to mingle with neighbors, US Cellular Field puts glass barriers in between your neighbors and makes you want to watch the game on the closed-circuit television.
















All of these were taken with a 70-200mm f2.8 Canon L series glass
4000-3200s : f2.8-3.5 : ISO200


Mint 400: July 24, 2008

Positive v. negative rights

Posted by seed @ 10:05 AM

Federal minimum wage rises to $6.55 today

"It will help out a little," said Jasper, who with his fiancee support a family of seven, and who earns the minimum plus commissions when customers order premium car-wash services."

Negative right: You are allowed to have as many kids as you like without interference.

Positive right: You have the right to extort extra earnings from employers in an effort to support your excessive behaviors.


Mint 400:

Slurp

Posted by seed @ 7:26 AM


Mint 400: July 23, 2008

Honorary Rider: Tom Coburn

Posted by seed @ 1:46 PM

Say what you want about his other opinions. Tom nails it with this.

That bill is coming about because myself and several other senators have refused to allow those bills to go without debate on this floor and without the ability to amend them. Now, some of them are very good things we ought to be about. But we should not be about it until we are going to inculcate and act as senators the same way every other family in this country has to act; that is, by making a decision based on priorities. ...

By historical standards, this is supposed to be the greatest deliberative body in the world. In the 110th Congress, 890 bills have passed -- 890. Fifty of them have had debate. Only 50 have had debate. And for most of those, the debate has been extremely limited and shortened through the power of the majority leader. ...

So is it any wonder that only 9% of the American public has any significant confidence in the Congress to put forward their interests? We are going to be doing this at a time when the No. 1 issue in this country is energy security and energy prices, but we are going to put a bill on the Senate floor that grows the government, that creates 70 new programs, and spends somewhere between $25 billion and $50 billion.

I would tell my colleagues that most people sitting down to their dinner table think we have our priorities messed up, and they are right. We do.

The Congressional approval rating is 9%. 9% - fucking - percent!

Mint 400: July 20, 2008

Getting Legit

Posted by seed @ 1:45 PM

I had linked to Open Congress in a previous post a few days ago. It's a real nice site that allows you to essentially create a dashboard that helps a user track items in congress. Yeah, I know... might be an acquired taste. Anyway, I created an Open Congress Page similar to the Inkling Markets page.

Both are accessible through the right-hand sidebar links.

If riders are interested in adding to the page, I can walk them through it. It's wicked easy with an editor and ftp client.

Enjoy.


Mint 400: July 18, 2008

Today's driveby : Oil IQ

Posted by seed @ 11:55 AM

Energy IQ*. This was fun. The questions change-up, so take it a few times.

The US gets most of its oil from Canada. You knew that, right?

 

* I had to switch from Safari to Firefox to get the swf to function properly.


Mint 400: July 13, 2008

Chi-town

Posted by seed @ 10:15 PM

Had a chance to stretch the 70-200mm glass on an architectural river cruise today. The weather was fantastic.













Mint 400: July 11, 2008

Say it isn't so.

Posted by seed @ 7:32 PM

Funberry as we used to know it, is dead. And it's a damn shame. It had a psuedo soft-core quality to it that I rather enjoyed. Plus, it took you to great places: like here, and here, especially here, damn and over there too.

I ran into this the other day (~wink) and thought it was a temporary joke. Then yesterday I found a posting through a search query that mentioned that the domain had expired and was picked up by someone else and had religious messaging posted. Actually, that is pretty hilarious if it was meant as a joke. If it has other propaganda-related intentions, which it might, then it's kinda sad.

Ah well, the Mint is accepting rider's recommendations to replace the sidebar linkage.


Mint 400: July 10, 2008

Iranian Defense Dept: Talking out of their ass

Posted by seed @ 6:51 PM

The Dirty Mushroom lives. I just cannot leave it alone.


Mint 400: July 9, 2008

Obama's US senatorial claim to fame: $845b of global aid funneled through the UN

Posted by seed @ 1:12 PM

No shit. Here it is: Obama wants to end world poverty on your nickel and surrender the United States to the United Nation

The Global Poverty Act (S.2433) would require the United States to spend $845 billion ($845,000,000,000.00) on welfare to third-world countries. This amounts to a tax of over $2,000 on each man, woman and child in the United States. The foreign aid budget now stands at $300 billion; the Act would add the additional expenditure to the already huge amount allocated to assist the world.

What? Nobody is talking about this? Hmmm, seems to me that tripling the budget for foreign aid is not such a fucking great idea, when you know, currently 25¢ of every dollar the Fed spends goes towards interest on previous spending we could not afford.

But hey, when you are thinking about that extra two grand, or ten for a family of five, that you don't have, remember: it feels good to give...

And receive: bend over.


Mint 400: July 1, 2008

Ads no more

Posted by seed @ 8:33 AM

I received a note from above this morning. Apparently, the boys at Google found issue with certain posts being adjacent to their AdSense content.

Remember the first time you found your father's or (*shudder) your grand father's porn collection? It was probably in a dusty cardboard box and smelled of mildew and humid ink solvents, from being stored in in the rafters of a garage. As I look back at it now, I cannot help but be amazed that all that could be from just one person. Clearly, after numerous complete years of certain periodicals, enough would have been enough. Like, if the complete archive of 1962 didn't get the job done, maybe the issue is the musty garage. Just a thought.

Anyway. Short of fumbling through years of posts, in search of the questionable content. I decided to nuke the ads all together. They never amounted to any flow of cash here. And, in considering the somewhat legit content of late, John McCain can save his ad dollars.



The Fabulous Mint 400