Sunday, October 4, 2009
The Boston Shaker moves to Davis!
H-Mart re-cap
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Korean recipe blog
Which reminds me, I plan on posting a review of H-Mart in the near future. I went there the other night and spent far too little time there...
Friday, September 25, 2009
H-Mart opens today!!!
There also might be a food court in the store, but the Globe didn't mention it.
Monday, August 31, 2009
The Old Fashioned, as seen on Mad Men
Don Draper made his Old Fashioned a little differently, but I am sure it was the way they were made in the late 50's early 60's. He tossed a sugar cube in the glass, added a dash or two (or three - the bf thought Draper added a lot of bitters). In a separate mixing glass Draper added lots of ice, followed by rye whiskey (it looked he used Old Overholt), and soda. He then did a quick muddle of the sugar and bitters in the glass. This was followed by a quick stir of the whiskey, ice, and soda* in the mixing glass. He then poured the whiskey mix into the glass.
One thing that caught my eye was the muddling. I doubt the sugar was dissolved when he finished. I'm not sure if his quick muddle followed the method use in the 60's, or if it was a case of TV expediency. It wouldn't be good TV to have him muddling for several minutes, waiting for the sugar to dissolve. Or, perhaps the sugar was dissolved because it sat in bitters while he was pouring the whiskey and soda in the mixing glass. Or maybe Draper was just impatient to get his drink... Or maybe I am just an inefficient muddler ;)
I've made Old Fashioneds at home using the first method, and they taste great. They have a nice smooth, rich taste with just enough sweetness to make me happy. I'm not a fan of soda, but now I'm tempted buy a small bottle and try an old fashioned Don Draper's way.
*I suppose it could have been tonic, but I have a feeling it's soda. I vaguely remember an Old Fashioned recipe that used soda water.
Saturday, August 29, 2009
Bertolli Bags
Silent Order
Friday, August 7, 2009
And so it begins...
The Boston Globe is going to start charging to read its content on boston.com.
I suspect this is the beginning of newspapers charging readers to web access. Otherwise, they're going to fold. It'll be interesting what the Globe charges. I'd be willing to pay a small amount.
I also read a suggestion a while back that newspapers should use an iTunes model - a small fee/article. I think that could work financially. After all, I don't read the entire boston.com site, and if I subscribed to the paper edition I certainly wouldn't be reading the entire paper - which is why I don't subscribe to the paper edition. Maybe if I was retired... But, from a public good standpoint, a fee/article model would increase the trend of printing news that people are interested in as opposed to news that's important - I could see entertainment drivel on celebrity gossip getting more emphasis than real news.
Another thought I had was a cable TV model. With Kindle becoming more popular, readers could subscribe to an internet news delivery service that might provide them with access to different papers, e.g., NY Times, WSJ, Boston Globe, etc. And, to be even more hopeful, the service could be more a la carte than the cable TV. I could get my local papers - The Globe, The Herald, The Boston Phoenix, and any other local newspaper (e.g., The Brookline Tab) as the basic service - and choose X number of extra publications.
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Heroes @ TT's in August
This month Heroes will be on the 8th, 15th, and 22nd.
So, if you're into 80's new wave, punk, goth, and techno, you might want to check it out!
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Mad Men Yourself
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
I want a flowchart to my heart, too!
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Sip & Shop @ Grand, Saturday, June 27th
In addition to trying out a cocktail made with an excellent gin, you can buy cocktail gear, cool clothes, and hip furnishings for 10% off.
And, no, I am not employed by Grand... or The Boston Shaker, the cool cocktail store within a store. I just shop there.
No need for an extension cord here
The world needs more punk ice cream shops
Monday, June 8, 2009
A few good reads
So, for those of you who are much, much better and finding time to read, here's a small list of books I liked. None of these are beach books. In fact, you would probably find them to be varying degrees of depressing, but that's because they're not fluffy chick lit, which is probably why they had enough of an impact on me that I remember them years after reading them.
Anyway, in no particular order:
The Last Days of Dogtown by Anita Diamant
Set in the early 1800's the novel follows the lives of an informal community of castoffs - almost all women - who live in a part of Cape Ann, MA known as Dogtown.
Breaking the Tongue by Vyvyane Loh
Loh depicts Singapore during World War II and its fall to the Japanese. The hero of the story, Claude Lim, is a schoolboy of Chinese descent who was raised to be British by his Anglophilic father. As Claude is brutally interrogated by the Japanese, he recalls his life and we see his struggle to determine whether he is British or Chinese, and the effects of colonialism on him and those around him.
Leaving Tabasco by Carmen Boullosa
Using magic realism, Boullosa spins a tale of Ulloa's life in a small Mexican village during the 1960's. As Ulloa grows older, the magic begins to disappear and the reader witnesses the events that lead to Ulloa's permanent departure from her birthplace.
Waylaid by Ed Lin
Countering the image of Asian Americans as the Model Minority, Lin tells the story of a 12 year-old boy who's family runs a seedy hotel on the Jersey shore. It's bleak, but I liked it.
Yellow: Stories by Don Lee
A collection of short stories about Asian Americans living on the coast near San Francisco. For some reason, I think the town in the book is based on Half Moon Bay, but I could be wrong.
A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving
A novel about fate, religion, and relationships set in small town New England. It is also one of the few books that made me laugh out loud while reading it - there's a scene involving a headmaster that had me in tears I was laughing so hard.
The Welsh Girl by Peter Ho Davies
Like Breaking the Tongue, The Welsh Girl examines colonialism and identity against the backdrop of World Ward II, but without brutal torture. Set in Wales, Davies tells the stories of a German POW and the daughter of a Welsh farmer.