Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Vegan buffalo wings: Hawaii Edition!
Not as amazing as City O City in Denver, but a close second for vegan buffalo wing deliciousness, and happy hour pricing ($5.50) to boot. with a shockingly vegan friendly menu, add a Rogue Double Chocolate Stout, and an Anderson Valley 20th Anniversary Imperial IPA, and Yard House Waikiki: you WIN.
Monday, November 29, 2010
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Vegan special chili
Friday, November 26, 2010
Traditional X-Giving Dinner!
Among other items in our Tofurky studded vegan X-Giving extravaganza dinner were
homemade hummus, baba ganoush, and pita. Unfortunately, I didn't get around to taking a picture until we'd eaten most of the delicious baba ganoush, directly from the mini food processor bowl.
And here are the roasted potatoes and red onions. Real tasty, lemme tell ya.
Here is a random shot of me doing mass production tofu prep. Note the yet-unopened packages of tofu int he background. I want to live near a store that sells bulk tofu.
homemade hummus, baba ganoush, and pita. Unfortunately, I didn't get around to taking a picture until we'd eaten most of the delicious baba ganoush, directly from the mini food processor bowl.
And here are the roasted potatoes and red onions. Real tasty, lemme tell ya.
Here is a random shot of me doing mass production tofu prep. Note the yet-unopened packages of tofu int he background. I want to live near a store that sells bulk tofu.
Food porn!
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Genius
STAND BACK, FOLKS: I'M ON A ROLL HERE! Well, actually, I'm mostly done with the photos I just downloaded, so this MIGHT be the last post of the day. No promises, though.
I noticed something funny this morning when I went to make toast: the ziploc bag this was in on the kitchen counter, when I opened it, let out a noticeable puff of quite warm air. Ick. So I put it in the fridge.
Where did this delicious bread come from, you ask? Well, see, it's like this: J is a genius. Seriously. She not only is a rock star in her professional life, but she's a fantastic baker and cook.
This bread is from her 100% homemade sourdough culture (made mostly, as I understand it, from leaving it open with whatever random crap was blowing around in the kitchen air.)
I noticed something funny this morning when I went to make toast: the ziploc bag this was in on the kitchen counter, when I opened it, let out a noticeable puff of quite warm air. Ick. So I put it in the fridge.
Where did this delicious bread come from, you ask? Well, see, it's like this: J is a genius. Seriously. She not only is a rock star in her professional life, but she's a fantastic baker and cook.
This bread is from her 100% homemade sourdough culture (made mostly, as I understand it, from leaving it open with whatever random crap was blowing around in the kitchen air.)
ONIONPALOOZA!
Well, not really, but it's a hell of a good idea, no? Stay tuned!
I did caramelize a bunch of ONIONS last night:
Not great images, but rest assured, the ONIONS tasted WONDERFUL!
Cookin' em up, to go with:
Tofu, zucchini, and curried carrots (which were particularly tasty, fried with chipotle powder, garam masala, and salt.)
I did caramelize a bunch of ONIONS last night:
Not great images, but rest assured, the ONIONS tasted WONDERFUL!
Cookin' em up, to go with:
Tofu, zucchini, and curried carrots (which were particularly tasty, fried with chipotle powder, garam masala, and salt.)
Kegerators
Kegerators are great, but they do need to occasionally be cleaned:
Those are actually just footprints from the bottoms of kegs, and the CO2 cylinder. (I used to have beautiful stainless cylinders, but had to exchange them for crappy steel ones at the shitass Airgas which is the only place reasonably close to me.)
Traveling extensively makes finding time for brewing tough, so, currently pouring: Brooklyn Black Chocolate Stout and He'Brew Bittersweet Lenny's R.I.P.A.. Life is good! Dear Readers: come and get some!
Arizona food porn!
Rest assured that I maintain my readership's addiction to food porn when I'm traveling. This is cooking with friends in Tucson:
And here are said friends prepping avocados and limes:
By this time in the day, J3 and I had eaten about ten avocados between us, mashed in to guacamole.
As some of you know, I'm a big fan of brussels sprouts. And here is a picture from the brussels sprouts Throwdown! that my sister-in-law and I did last Christmas.
We both used fresh brussels sprouts, olive oil, salt, and pepper. She cut hers in half and roasted them in the oven; I halved mine, then carefully removed the stems with a diagonal cut, which took about four times as long as her process.
I hate to brag, but: I won.
And here are said friends prepping avocados and limes:
By this time in the day, J3 and I had eaten about ten avocados between us, mashed in to guacamole.
As some of you know, I'm a big fan of brussels sprouts. And here is a picture from the brussels sprouts Throwdown! that my sister-in-law and I did last Christmas.
We both used fresh brussels sprouts, olive oil, salt, and pepper. She cut hers in half and roasted them in the oven; I halved mine, then carefully removed the stems with a diagonal cut, which took about four times as long as her process.
I hate to brag, but: I won.
At least MARTA operators:
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Pharmaceutical reps, part II
Sitting in the Fuqua Heart Center at Piedmont Hospital, and just eavesdropped on two pharmaceutical reps talking, that apparently the doctor they had an appointment to harass is too busy with patients to see then this nothing. Yay!
Then the boss-looking of the two huffily stated they'd go see the head of cardiology, acting like "we'll clear all of THIS up." Except that he had to ask the receptionist where the head of cardiology's office was.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Basil!
My friends had let their bail bolt. Seriously bolt. The pile on the ledge are flowers I pinched off.
Been a long time since I had meaningful gardening porn, no? I miss having a garden. Growing in five gallon buckets on the balcony just doesn't cut it.
Back to Atlanta today, then I don't have to fly anywhere again until the 27th - what a nice break!
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Vegan hotel breakfast redux
Friday, November 12, 2010
Couldn't resist
here are a couple more bikes from Egypt. At least they're kinda like bikes.
This is a delivery vehicles for the fast-food chain Gad, in Alexandria. Though I disagree with review #2: it's actually quite easy to mess up fuul and falafel in Alexandria. Back to the bike, though: that rear wheel is even more bent than the image conveys. It's what we'd consider potato-chipped in the states. Check out those spokes!
And, uhhh, how do you ride this thing, anyway? In this case, the operator didn't: he pushed it along, muscling it into a vaguely forward line.
This is another bicycle-based delivery vehicle for a preposterously overpriced store for stupid expats in Aswan (which J and I found has even more hassle than Luxor, known as the "Hassle Capital of Egypt".)
This is a delivery vehicles for the fast-food chain Gad, in Alexandria. Though I disagree with review #2: it's actually quite easy to mess up fuul and falafel in Alexandria. Back to the bike, though: that rear wheel is even more bent than the image conveys. It's what we'd consider potato-chipped in the states. Check out those spokes!
And, uhhh, how do you ride this thing, anyway? In this case, the operator didn't: he pushed it along, muscling it into a vaguely forward line.
This is another bicycle-based delivery vehicle for a preposterously overpriced store for stupid expats in Aswan (which J and I found has even more hassle than Luxor, known as the "Hassle Capital of Egypt".)
Egypt & bicycles
I'm slowly going through the, cough, 489 pictures I took in Egypt. I feel like slogging through the post-processing is part of the deal of taking a huge amount of pictures. Otherwise, it'd just be crap to add to the, cough, 25,000+ images, totaling 53.4 GB, that I have (just on the desktop computer.)
People ride bikes all over Egypt, but they are especially prevalent in Cairo, and often used for transportation. Every bike I saw, and the ones J and I rented to ride to the Valley of the Kings in Luxor, are singlespeed. Most are in mediocre to horrible repair, but nevertheless get people, and stuff, around.
This guy is carrying a big rack of aish, soft pita-like pillows of Egyptian bread, on his head down a moderately busy sidestreet near the Islamic Museum of Art:
And here he is cutting into a very busy intersection, weaving through traffic, and jockeying for position with cars and hand-drawn carts.
This guy is riding some recycling/re-use across the 26 July Bridge over the Nile in Cairo. It's vaguely reminiscent of my own approach to recycling, though he's carrying a lot more crap. But not in -15 Fahrenheit weather!
Many more wacky bicycle pictures to come, but probably not until I'm back from Arizona.
People ride bikes all over Egypt, but they are especially prevalent in Cairo, and often used for transportation. Every bike I saw, and the ones J and I rented to ride to the Valley of the Kings in Luxor, are singlespeed. Most are in mediocre to horrible repair, but nevertheless get people, and stuff, around.
This guy is carrying a big rack of aish, soft pita-like pillows of Egyptian bread, on his head down a moderately busy sidestreet near the Islamic Museum of Art:
And here he is cutting into a very busy intersection, weaving through traffic, and jockeying for position with cars and hand-drawn carts.
This guy is riding some recycling/re-use across the 26 July Bridge over the Nile in Cairo. It's vaguely reminiscent of my own approach to recycling, though he's carrying a lot more crap. But not in -15 Fahrenheit weather!
Many more wacky bicycle pictures to come, but probably not until I'm back from Arizona.
Vegan airplane food, homemade version!
Here is my lunch for today's flight to Tucson:
Wraps with last night's leftovers (tofu, caramelized onions, zucchini, and garlic), spinach salad with onions, sun-dried tomatoes, vinegar and oil, and sauteed kale with garlic.
Flying out in a couple hours, and inexplicably, decided to update the ubuntu version on the laptop I'm taking the morning of leaving. Which takes a looooooong time, even with a hard-wired internet connection. Oh, and screwing around with a corrupted SD card that I can't delete all the old image files from. Sigh. Technology.
Wraps with last night's leftovers (tofu, caramelized onions, zucchini, and garlic), spinach salad with onions, sun-dried tomatoes, vinegar and oil, and sauteed kale with garlic.
Flying out in a couple hours, and inexplicably, decided to update the ubuntu version on the laptop I'm taking the morning of leaving. Which takes a looooooong time, even with a hard-wired internet connection. Oh, and screwing around with a corrupted SD card that I can't delete all the old image files from. Sigh. Technology.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Crappy photos
Hmmm... just confirming now that I'm on a real computer, without a clock ticking, that the HTC Incredible doesn't always like to play nice in uploading images to my blog. I'll try to fix some of those posts when I get back to ATL.
Vegan airport lounge breakfast!
Not amazing breakfast, but far better than the gross food on the long flight back from Cairo.
After some asinine security theater from TSA, we had lovely showers in the Delta lounge, and are now setting about killing the next five hours before continuing on to Atlanta.
Good to be back, and not worrying about whether we can drink the water and eat unpeeled vegetables. Tucson tomorrow. Woo!
Sunday, November 07, 2010
Egypt updates
Okay, fixed one of my image upload problems. For this post, here is what I meant to upload:
Read the sentence below this image. Makes a lot more sense now, right?
This is the pleasant if undynamic breakfast I had two mornings at the pleasant if overpriced Philae Hotel in Aswan.
Egypt remains, uhhhh, pretty good. Aswan turned out to not actually be all that relaxing, despite what the consistently inaccurate Lonely Planet Egypt claimed. What it lacked in Luxor's sheer numbers of touts, hassle and bullshit, it more than made up for with quality bullshit and some petty thievery.
Leaving a restaurant called Emy's, on the Nile, where we'd paid the price requested by the server, which was already inflated, he tried to shake us down: "My friend, please give me ten pounds." (about USD$1.80) He was totally unable to tell us why, and started reciting the things we'd eaten. And paid for. And paid a service charge for, and tax, and left a tip. When I said I'd need to see a menu to look at prices, he responded with, "Okay, okay, go."
Then for a little business-as-usual corruption: you pay the entrance fee to get into a monument (in this case, the Tombs of the Nobles) then have to pay a "guide" to unlock the tombs, that the layabout tourist police hands you off to, so he can take his cut later. Ummm, so what did we pay for here? The privilege to pay more?
Now in Alexandria, which as a city is my favorite of the four places we've been in Egypt. A little less chaotic than Cairo, and far, far less bullshit than Luxor or Aswan. And a few restaurants that are actually nonsmoking inside (very, very rare in Egypt, where the smoking repulses me daily.) And the Mediterranean is lovely.
A couple more nights here, then back to Cairo for a night, then home. I'm ready.
Read the sentence below this image. Makes a lot more sense now, right?
This is the pleasant if undynamic breakfast I had two mornings at the pleasant if overpriced Philae Hotel in Aswan.
Egypt remains, uhhhh, pretty good. Aswan turned out to not actually be all that relaxing, despite what the consistently inaccurate Lonely Planet Egypt claimed. What it lacked in Luxor's sheer numbers of touts, hassle and bullshit, it more than made up for with quality bullshit and some petty thievery.
Leaving a restaurant called Emy's, on the Nile, where we'd paid the price requested by the server, which was already inflated, he tried to shake us down: "My friend, please give me ten pounds." (about USD$1.80) He was totally unable to tell us why, and started reciting the things we'd eaten. And paid for. And paid a service charge for, and tax, and left a tip. When I said I'd need to see a menu to look at prices, he responded with, "Okay, okay, go."
Then for a little business-as-usual corruption: you pay the entrance fee to get into a monument (in this case, the Tombs of the Nobles) then have to pay a "guide" to unlock the tombs, that the layabout tourist police hands you off to, so he can take his cut later. Ummm, so what did we pay for here? The privilege to pay more?
Now in Alexandria, which as a city is my favorite of the four places we've been in Egypt. A little less chaotic than Cairo, and far, far less bullshit than Luxor or Aswan. And a few restaurants that are actually nonsmoking inside (very, very rare in Egypt, where the smoking repulses me daily.) And the Mediterranean is lovely.
A couple more nights here, then back to Cairo for a night, then home. I'm ready.
Monday, November 01, 2010
Welllllll, yeah.
Image upload fixed. Here is the correct image:
And here is the previous upload:
To paraphrase someone I detest, but who said some pretty funny/useful shit, you don't go to a hotel room with the beer that you want, you go to a hotel room with the beer that you have .
And this is, by far, the best beer brewed in Egypt. Yikes.
Aswan tomorrow, which will be a relief after Luxor, the Hassle Capital of the Known Universe.
A little creepy
Kind of fun, but a pretty strange thing to find in your room, left by housekeeping, when you come back from breakfast.
They also brought a bigger receptacle for the air conditioning unit to drain in to than the 1.5 liter water bottle that hugely overflowed last night, leaving a big puddle that ran under the door and into our room, soaking a comforter.
Today: renting bikes, riding to the Valley of the Kings, and more of the Hassle Capital of Egypt.
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