Month: March 2006

  • Cauliflower Recipe

    My mother-in-law had us over for dinner last night and made a crackin' good meal.  The cauliflower was incredibly good.  So you have your basic cauliflower and it needs something. I mean, really, does anyone eat it plain?  I used to make a white sauce and add lots of cheddar cheese and pour that over cooked cauliflower.  The recipe below is infinitely better - lighter and brighter.  It looks elegant, and no one needs to know that it has something so low brow as potato chips in it.  I've made it before with Ritz crackers but the chips are truly an improvement over Ritz crackers.

    Cooked cauliflower (in the microwave is easy)
    I Tablespoon butter
    crushed chips (potato, corn or Doritos)

    Wow, it's good!  My MIL used regular Doritos and it gave a pretty burnt orange color.  So good.  Try it!  The next time I make it, I'll take a picture and post it. Enjoy!

  • Hrrmmmph!

    Deer are not the sweet little puppies portrayed in Bambi. Really, I don't mind if they leave little piles in my yard, but eating the tulips down to the ground is going TOO FAR.  Is there any hope for tulips which have been bushwacked?  Any hope?  Puleeze!

  • Hurray for Libraries!!

    [this post is written with a sleeping 1 year old boy draped over my shoulder: =) ]

    I think one of the great gifts a parent can give a child is a sense of familiar comfort in a public library.  If they know how to get around the stacks and computer card catalogs they have quite a  horizon before them.   My local library has its limitations, but all the same it has blessed me.   Here's a short list of things I love about  my library.

    1.  My son and I are on a first-name basis with all the staff.

    2.  They welcome my recommendations for purchases to their collection. 

    3.  I get an email reminding me of upcoming due dates three days before an item is due.

    4.  They are adding many Teaching Company courses to their collection.  I am currently listening to How to Read and Understand Poetry.

    5.  Our library is an original Carnegie library.  This year a new building is going up.  For all its issues, I shall miss the red brick building, the steps up to the main door, the high ceilings, the charm of an older building, and the legacy behind it.  Thank you, Andrew Carnegie!!

    6.  I have saved many $$$ by borrowing books from the library for curricula.  It's not optimum, but I believe you could give a child a decent education from preschool through high school using the public library.

  • Working Out With Willa Cather

    The Song of the Lark is the story of a musically gifted young girl.  She is on vacation near Flagstaff, AZ after a grueling year of studying voice in Chicago. She spends time alone in the Cliff-Dwellers' ruins.

    She could lie there hour after hour in the sun and listen to the strident whirr of the big locusts, and to the light, ironical laughter of the quaking asps. All her life she had been hurrying and sputtering, as if she had been born behind time and had been trying to catch up.  Now, she reflected, as she drew herself out long upon the rugs, it was as if she were waiting for something to catch up with her.  She had got to a place where she was out of the stream of meaningless activity and undirected effort.

    A few pages later Thea finds fragments of pottery and reflects on the role of water and pottery in the lives of the women who once lived there.  "Their pottery was their most direct appeal to water, the envelope and sheath of the precious element itself."

    One morning, as she was standing upright in the pool, splashing water between her shoulder-blades with a big sponge, something flashed through her mind that made her draw herself up and stand still.  The stream and the broken pottery: what was any art but an effort to make a sheath, a mould in which to imprison for a moment the shining, elusive element which is life itself--life hurrying past us and running away, too strong to stop, too sweet to lose? The Indian women had held it in their jars.  In the sculpture she had seen in the Art Institute, it had been caught in a flash of arrested motion.  In singing, one made a vessel of one's throat and nostrils and held it on one's breath, caught the stream in a scale of natural intervals.

    I am enjoying this book immensely.  It is not a breeze through book.  I read it pensively, and often lift my head and just think about the words.  I come home from working out and want to read on, but I restrict this book to the elliptical machine.  It keeps me going back!!

  • Sailing Into Greece

    Here I am, trudging through the end of Herodotus.  I have 100 pages to go.  Collin finished last week. Sigh.  It's actually more interesting at the end with the battles and all.  I made it through Marathon, we're crossing the Hellespont with Xerxes and I figure Salamis will be coming up soon.  It's been great to listen to Doug Wilson's sermons on Ezra and Nehemiah while we've been studying Persia.  A lovely dovetail.  I'm glad that I'm reading from the Father of History (I guess) but except for some excerpts, I don't think I'll be going through it again in my lifetime. 

    The point is that we're leaving Persia and coming into Greece.  Now that is exciting! Isn't that one of your favorite historical periods, Bonnie?  In anticipation I checked out Thomas Cahill's book Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea, Why the Greeks Matter.  Other books about Greece are popping out at me from my bookshelf and reading.  Where are the Kalamata olives?  It's taking discipline, a quicksilver element in my life, to finish the Histories before I start another book. 

  • Vernal Equinox 2006

    Hello, Spring!!  I love the early croci (or crocuses, Webster's allows both) that bring  shades of purple and yellow to a dun-colored earth.  I talked to my friend in Wyoming last night and she's trying to be a brave soldier in the ubiquitous wind and snow. She talked to her friend on the west side of Oregon (read warm) who reported that her daffodils are done and tulips are up.  Daffodils are done?  Nurse!

    That reminds me of a saying I grew up hearing, "Bloom where you are planted."  We all live in different climates, metaphorically speaking, don't we?  Which means our seasons are timed differently from others.  Something to think about.

  • Eschatology in Three Movies

    Carson and Taryn wanted to talk theology on their last visit, in particular eschatology.  In a drive to Wallowa County we talked through three positions on end times: amillenial, premillenial, and postmillenial.  A few days later my husband suggested a different way of looking at things.  "Think of three well-known movies.  Each portrays one of these three positions."  Much discussion ensued, but I'm asking you, "Which movie do you think illustrates which view?" Wait a minute!  Think of the entire Narnia series of books, specifically The Last Battle, not just the first movie. I found it to be a fascinating exercise. 

       

  • Bone Tired

    It's Sunday night and the house is utterly silent, perfectly still.  My son and his fiancee left around 5:00 p.m. back to the university.  A full week of bustling busy-ness, family meals, bubbling laughter has reached its twilight.  My husband is zonked on the couch, my son snoring in his bedroom.  Sigh.  It's been such a change to have a girl, a female, in the house.  The high pitched squeal, a willing helper, an erudite conversant on English literature, the lovely smile.  I know why my Carson is in love.

    I love communal cooking:  chopping vegetables, a second opinion on the guac, the easy flow of conversation as we work towards putting delicious food on the table.  There is such a joy in working together.  I never, NEVER, turn down help in the kitchen.   And I'm almost never on schedule, so if you come for dinner, be prepared to toss the salad.

    This point in the week has always perplexed me.  Since we've moved toward making the Sabbath a set-apart day, a day of celebration and rest, we have seen the rhthym of the week change.  The blessings abound, but that is a topic for another post.  This is what I find confusing: if Sunday is the first day of the week, why does Sunday night always feel like the end?  I'd guess that I have much residual thinking from the old days: the week started with Monday, and Sunday was the perfect "catch up" and "catch all" day. 

    It's time to go to bed.  Otherwise I'll get weepy and maudlin. How do you normally spend Sunday evenings?

  • Listening or Talking?

    "Have you realized that most of your unhappiness in life is due to the fact that you are listening to yourself instead of talking to yourself?" 

    Martin Lloyd-Jones in Spiritual Depression

  • Love Is

    "Love is an exploding cigar we willingly smoke."  Lynda Barry