Monthly Archives: February 2024

Numbers Game #10, Feb. 26, 2024

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Numbers Game # 10, Feb. 26, 2024

 

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Welcome to “The Numbers Game #10”  Today’s number is 131. To play along, go to your photos file and type that number into the search bar. Then post a selection of the photos you find under that number and include a link to your blog in my Numbers Game blog of the day. If instead of numbers, you have changed the identifiers of all your photos into words, pick a word or words to use instead, and show us a variety of photos that contain that word in the title.

This prompt will repeat each  Monday with a new number. If you want to play along, please put a link to your blog in comments below.

Nightmare II: The Sunday Whirl Wordle 643, Feb 25, 2024

                         

                           Nightmare II

Anchored in this groggy dream, unaware of passing
of time or space or anything that I am amassing.
Triggers from the past float by, pale and half-recalled.
Corridors of memories––narrow, densely walled.
No way to check these stories from a cursed past.
How could we have  known how long past memories might last?
The cattle stir, the hoot owl hoots and night birds sing their song––
accompaniment to nightmares that draw us, too, along.

 

The prompt words for The Sunday Whirl are: aware passing stirred check groggy trigger pale dream space anchor cursed low

Window Shopping, Feb 25, 2024

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For Lens Artists Challenge 288: Window Shopping.

Mother of Thousands for FOTD Feb 25, 2024

I couldn’t resist publishing another photo of this amazing plant. I meant to get a start from it and forgot. Photographed in my friend Pamela’s garden earlier this month. The Mother of Thousands is a variety of kalanchoe. Never met a kalanchoe I didn’t like!

For Cee’s FOTD

Sate´d, Shaken and Stir-fried (For Resurrected Prompts)

For years, beginning in 2013, I did the Daily Post Prompt.  That prompt  ended long ago and led to the myriad of prompts posted by different people that we now follow, but I thought it would be fun to resurrect some of those old prompts. If you’d like  to play along by answering the same prompt, post it on your blog and give a link to your response in comments below  or use the pingback given at the end of this post.

The Prompt: Shaken and Stirred—What’s the most elaborate, complicated meal you’ve ever cooked? Was it a triumph for the ages, or a colossal fiasco? Give us the behind-the-scenes story.

Sate’d, Shaken and Stir-fried

When I was in Thailand, age 19, I discovered a teak-handled brass cutlery set of 154 pieces—twelve place settings of 12 pieces each and 10 serving pieces. It was a beautiful set in a heavy teakwood case with handle and I purchased two—one for me and one for my sister! I was traveling by ship and so had no weight or luggage restrictions. Once I got back to the reality of the U.S. and realized what a pain it was to hand wash and polish all of these pieces, I never used them (and neither did my sister)—except for once. I decided to plan one grand meal for 12 and to plan a menu that made use of every knife, spoon and fork. Although I’m sure I won’t be able to remember every course, I’m going to try, but as a memory aid, I first need to remember all of the pieces. Here goes. The place settings were shrimp cocktail fork, salad fork, dinner fork, cake fork, demitasse spoon, teaspoon, soup spoon, ice tea spoon, steak knife, butter knife, table knife, cheese knife. The serving pieces were sugar spoon, 3 large serving spoons, salad serving fork, salad serving spoon, meat carving knife, meat serving fork, bread knife, pie server. Phew! I can’t believe how easily I remembered the pieces. It renews my faith in my memory and as an exercise, probably staved off Alzheimer’s for a few more years.

So, what I served, if I recall correctly, was an Indonesian meal and it probably included: shrimp cocktail in a sweet chili sauce, lemongrass sweet and sour coconut milk soup, cucumbers and sweet onions in yogurt and dill sauce, nasi goreng (Indonesian fried rice) with mixed fresh vegetables, chicken sate in peanut sauce, kecap manis (sweet soy sauce), deep fried rice noodles with scallions  (to replace the shrimp chips usually served with the nasi goreng), more sweet chili sauce to put over the rice and noodles. coconut ice cream (I believe we used the demitasse spoons for the ice cream) green tea ice cream, some sort of cake (This must have been so, to enable us to use those cake forks.) Tsing Tao Beer, iced tea and wine. I don’t know how I worked the cheese and butter knives in—probably during the hors d’ oeuvres course.

I had set all the tables elaborately, using sarongs purchased in Bali as table cloths as well as batik napkins I’d had made there. Unfortunately, a friend who didn’t quite realize the planning that had gone into this, arrived late, just as we were sitting down to our meal, with four uninvited friends in tow! I am afraid I was less than gracious as I tried to gerrymander an extra table with regular stainless cutlery. The best-laid plans!!!! Many years later, I served a 13 course Chinese meal where I had guests bring the ingredients for one dish, which I sent them a list of. (I had on hand the unusual ingredients they would have had a hard time locating.) I think I was responsible for most of the dishes, but wanted them personally involved. When they arrived, I had a Chinese chef there who helped each to prepare their individual dish. Some of mine, I’d already made, but had him help me with one more complicated dish.

Most of the evening was spent cooking, but it was so much fun and by the time we sat down to our late meal, everyone’s mood had been elevated by numerous large-sized bottles of Tsing Tao beer—a vice I’d discovered in China and found a supply of in the trunk of the car of a drapery salesman whom I dated once—just long enough to buy the entire case of beer. I don’t know why he had it and why he was wanting to get rid of it, but it was another case of the synchronicity of those years in L.A. when all of life seemed to get sorted out and when I finally got on my way to becoming closer to who I wanted to be.

*As a footnote, when I moved to Mexico, I sold the entire set, but years later, seeing just the shrimp cocktail  forks  that exactly matched my lost set in a second hand store, I bought them. They are pictured above on a cookbook. Beneath the book are batik sarongs and napkins I purchased in Bali.

So, if you want to play along, post a post to this prompt: What’s the most elaborate, complicated meal you’ve ever cooked? Was it a triumph for the ages, or a colossal fiasco? Give us the behind-the-scenes story. Please post your link in comments below.

Poinsettia for FOTD

Not just a Christmas flower in Mexico.

For Cee’s FOTD

For Travel With Intent: Teal

 

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For Travel With Intent: Teal

 

“Best Attempts” for Fibbing Friday, FEB 23, 2024

1.  What is an orderly? The opposite of a chaotic.
2. What is an auxiliary? A hospital for sick oxen.
3. What is a clip? A fingernail shaving.
4. What does ECG mean?  Eat Carefully, Girl! (Mother’s parting instructions to her daughter leaving for her first dinner date.)
5.  What is The Crash Team? Every college student the night before a final.
6.  What is a candy striper? Someone responsible for adding the red to candy canes.
7.  What is an IV? The Roman numeral after III and before V.
8.  What is a call button?  A shirt closure for hire.
9.  Why is everything white? Because you are in a hospital.
10. Why don’t they have biscuits on the tea trolley? Because they just donut!

FOR PENSITIVITY’S FIBBING FRIDAY

Succulents: FOTD Feb 23, 2024

For  Cee’s FOTD