Followers

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

What I Learned in 2014

      Here goes:

1. Going to bed at 1:00 a.m. and sleeping until 9:00 a.m. is the life.
2. Charley's Other Brother went all to hell when the original owner sold it.
3. A cortisone shot in the shoulder really doesn't hurt.
4. Malcolm Gladwell is one of the coolest writers out there.
5. David Sedaris is one of the funniest writers out there.
6. Kindles are wonderful devices.
7. Elderly me is beginning to act a lot like elderly Mom.  Whoda thunk??
8. There is something called powder coating, and it makes things look pretty.

     I still don't know why they paint vacant gas stations gray.  Maybe I'll find out in 2015.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!

   
          

Monday, December 29, 2014

Significance of the Name "Tris" in the Movie "Divergent"

     We just blew $4.99 renting "Divergent."  This makes me think of 'Hunger Games,' we both said.  It wasn't that good, Mike said.  I kind of liked it, I countered.  Normally, that would have been the end of our intellectualizing about the film, but the protagonist's name was stuck in my head.
     The film's heroine is a teenage girl named Beatrice.  Like all 16-year-olds in her society, Beatrice has to choose her social group.  She can pick the group into which she was born, or she can join a different group if she is willing to walk away from her family.  The social order in this future world consists of five classes known as factions plus a sixth group who have failed to fit in anywhere, the Factionless.  Beatrice comes from the group known as Abnegation.  They are selfless, social worker types.  Because they always put others first, the Abnegation faction runs government.  The other four groups are Amity (peace loving, staring-at-the-navel types), Candor (honest, blurt-out-the-first thing-that-pops-into-the-head types), Dauntless (brave, dare-devil types), and Erudite (the brainiacs).  All the sweet 16's take an aptitude test.  They can choose their faction based on their test results  or they can go rogue and pick a faction based on their whims. Whatever they pick, they are stuck with for life.  Beatrice gets a test result that is cause for alarm.  Unlike most people who are strong in only one area, Beatrice is equally strong in three areas.  This makes her a Divergent.  Divergents are a threat to the world order, and they are exterminated.  The sympathetic test administrator lies about Beatrice's result, recording in the official records that Beatrice is an Abnegation-type, like her parents.  She advises Beatrice to pick Abnegation as her life's work and never to reveal her real results.
     Beatrice, who knows she could do equally well in Abnegation, Dauntless, or Erudite, ignores the advice of the tester to go into social work and joins the Dauntless group.  During her training phase, Beatrice discovers the Erudites want to rule the world.  They are planning to overthrow the Abnegation government.  They will accomplish this by injecting the Dauntless group with mind control drugs, turning them into zombie soldiers.  Mind control only works on a full Dauntless.  As a Divergent, Beatrice is immune to the drugs.  She and her Dauntless mentor (another Divergent personality, it turns out) foil the Erudite coup.  After their victory, Beatrice and a some others hop on a train and head for the end of the line.  I'm sure a sequel will follow for Beatrice, her mentor/boyfriend, and the others on the train.  The movie is based on a trilogy of teen books written by Veronica Roth.  The movie "Divergent" follows the first of the three books.
     Here's the thing about Beatrice's name.  When she begins Dauntless training, she is told to pick a new name.  She picks the name Tris.  Sure, Tris is short for Beatrice, but so is Bea.  I knew I had heard that word before, so I looked it up.  Tris is tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane. It's an organic compound which is used as a buffering agent.  Buffering agents keep things stable. For example, buffering agents stabilize shampoo at a slightly acidic level because that's what you need to get the cleanest hair.  Brewers use buffering agents to keep the pH of fermenting beverages stable.  Yeast needs a stable pH to do it's work - creating alcohol.  Society in this movie needed Tris/Beatrice to prevent all hell from breaking lose.  She far, she has prevented things from breaking down, though I don't know what happens in books two and three of the trilogy.
     It was all over the internet that the names Ana and Mia in Fifty Shades of Grey stood for anorexia and bulimia.  Did Veronica Roth select Tris as a nickname because she wanted to add an extra layer of significance to the character?  Did she want to appeal to the chemistry geeks?  I figured someone out there must have made the Tris connection besides me, but Google as I might, I didn't find anything.  Whatever it is or isn't, I got a kick out of retrieving some high school chemistry from the memory banks.  Thank you, Mrs. Hearon.
         
       
                 

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Winner, Winner Pot Pie Dinner

     I love pot pies.  My grandmother always had a beef roast on Sunday.  She made beef pot pie on Monday with the leftovers.  I usually managed to "miss" the bus on Monday afternoon so I could walk to Grandmom's house, located across the street from the school, and have dinner with her.
     I love chicken pot pie, too.  I just tried a recipe that is to die for.  I followed this recipe exactly, but the next time I make it, I'll try some cholesterol lowering substitutions.

Chicken Pot Pie

About 1 pound skinless, boneless chicken breast cut into bite sized pieces
4 medium carrots, sliced
3/4 cup frozen peas
2 ribs celery, sliced
1/2 cup chopped onion
4 small potatoes, cubed
5 Tbs. butter
1/3 cup flour
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. black pepper
1/4 tsp. celery seed
1-3/4 cups chicken broth (that's a 14.5 oz. can)
2/3 cup whole milk
2 - 9" unbaked pie crusts, store bought or home made

Method:

Preheat the oven to 425°.

Get a pot of water boiling and add carrots.  Boil for 5 minutes, then add chicken, celery, and potatoes.  Boil 5 more minutes, then add frozen peas.  Boil 5 additional minutes for 15 minutes total cooking time.  Remove from heat and drain.  Set meat and vegetables aside.  The recipe says you should reserve the liquid in case you need to extra for the sauce.  I used a small amount of the liquid to replace what boiled away in the next step.

In the same pot melt butter.  Cook onion in the butter until it is translucent.  Stir in salt, pepper, and celery seed.  Finally, add flour a little at a time while stirring.  Once the flour is incorporated into the butter, slowly add milk and chicken broth.  Simmer over medium-low heat, stirring frequently, until the mixture is thick.  Remove from heat and set aside.

Put one 9" pie crust into a 9" pie plate.  Don't use a deep dish pie plate if you use store bought crusts as the bottom crust might be a little too small to come to the top edge of the deep plate. Mix the meat and vegetables with the sauce.  Spoon the mixture into the crust.  Cover with the top crust and seal the edges.  Make some slits in the top of the pie for the steam to escape.

Place the pie on a baking sheet (to catch drips) and bake 30 to 35 minutes.  I baked for 30 minutes.  Cool for 10 minutes before cutting.  Makes 6 servings.

     This is not a quick meal, but it is so good that it's worth the effort.  Using store bought crusts cuts down preparation time.  Using leftover chicken would also save time.
     Next time I make this, I will substitute two tablespoons of olive or canola oil for two of the tablespoons of butter.  I might also cut the milk back from whole milk to 2% milk.
     If I'm feeling really adventurous, I might try this with leftover turkey and a can of turkey broth.  I might also switch out the peas for green beans.  I'll let you know.

It was just as good warmed up.

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Home Made Christmas Cards

     I used to get up early the day after Christmas and scout around the stores for half price Christmas cards.  The merchants must have caught on that the masses were stock piling cards for the year ahead.  Now they pack up all things Yule on Christmas Eve and take it who knows where.  Any cards offered at clearance prices are usually ugly or damaged.
     Now, since retirement leaves me with time on my hands, I make most of my Christmas greetings.  You can do it the expensive way (with rubber stamps and color coordinated paper and inks from Stampin' Up)  or the inexpensive way (with discounted card stock, a greeting card program, and your printer).  Naturally, I take the frugal route.
     Here are two of this year's cards:

This reindeer border was perfect.  The sentiment starts out innocently enough...

but takes a turn - "Crap! There go the solar panels."  You can get the template for the reindeer pop up at:
http://wp.robertsabuda.com/pop-make-reindeer/

This card is so simple.  Cut out squares or rectangles in several sizes.  Tie a bow with embroidery floss.  Glue the "packages" on to a piece of card stock that has been folded in half.

Simple and appropriate for almost anyone.

      If you use 8.5 X 11 card stock (called a half fold card), you can buy boxes of envelopes in just about any color at office supply stores.    

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Mixing Up the Reading List

     I pointed out in my August 25, 2014 blog entry that I read mostly non-fiction.  Since then, I have tried to add some fiction to my library borrowings.  I wasn't really moved by any of the following novels.  They were just okay in my book.

     The Wind Is Not a River by Brian Payton - In 1942, a Canadian born journalist loses his pilot brother to the war.  Said journalist leaves his lovely young American bride to go traipsing off to the the Aleutian Islands to get the story of the recent Japanese invasion of American soil.  An exceedingly improbable tale follows in which our journalist assumes his dead brother's identity, dupes the American military into flying him to the Aleutians (because the Americans would not necessarily know that a Canadian pilot was dead), survives crash landing in the icy Alaskan waters, and eludes the Japanese on the island of Attu by living in a cave (all the while stealing their food and coal).  In the meantime, his wife, who hasn't sung since appearing in a high school play, manages to get a job in a USO show that is going to Alaska.  She lets a few people know that her husband snuck into the Aleutians before the show disbands.  In the end, the journalist is rescued and reunited with his wife, but he dies from his ordeal three days after their reunion.

     Boy, Snow, Bird by Helen Oyeyemi - Things are not what they seem.  Boy is actually the name of a young woman.  Snow is the name of Boy's step-daughter.  The child is named Snow because of her lovely white complexion.  Snow, Snow's father (Boy's husband), and all of the in-laws that Boy knows are really black people passing as white.  This secret comes out when Boy gives birth to her daughter Bird.  Bird comes out looking like a mixed race child, so the whole family has to own up to their genes.  Here's the real spoiler:  Bird discovers that her grandfather (Boy's father) is really a woman who has masqueraded as a man since the rape that caused her to conceive Boy.  Yikes!

     The Blue Girl: A Short Story of Scotland Yard's Murder Squad by Alex Grecian - Short stories are nice.  Usually they are found in collections, but this one was a stand alone.  I added the work "bespoke" to my vocabulary as a result of reading this piece.

     The Wives of Los Alamos by Tara Shea Nesbit - This is a work of fiction but the book was inspired by the  World War II Los Alamos, New Mexico atomic testing facility.  It's the story of how it might have been to be a wife in that place, during those times.

     The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls by Anton DeSclafani - In the 1930's Thea Atwell is banished to boarding school after her part in a family scandal.  I doubt I would have handled things the way Thea did.

     The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian by Sherman Alexie - You might have heard of author, Sherman Alexie.  He is a native American poet, writer, and film maker.  In the 1990's, he published a collection of short stories titled Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven.  This collection inspired the all-Indian 1998 film "Smoke Signals."  He also published the novels Reservation Blues in 1995 and Indian Killer in 1996.  I "discovered" Alexie in the 90's when he appeared on "Sunday Morning" or "60 Minutes" or maybe both of those shows.  I grabbed up this latest book, a young adult novel, because I wanted to see what Alexie would write for a younger audience.  In my opinion Diary is just a reworking of his old stuff - the same semi autobiographical stories.  I also think he could have edited out a lot of the cussing since the audience for this tome is supposed to be of tender years.

     My non-fiction reading included:

     How I Became Hettie Jones by Hettie Jones - Hettie Cohen married LeRoi Jones (now Amiri Baraka) in 1958.  Her Jewish family cast her out for marrying a black man.  Her black husband cast her out when his work as a civil rights activist was hampered by having a white wife.  This is Hettie's struggle to find her own identity.

     The Lost Child of Philomena Lee: A Mother, Her Son, and a Fifty Year Search by Martin Sixsmith -  Ireland was not the place to be an unwed mother.  The nuns, who seem to have run all the homes for unwed mothers, enslaved young mothers and sold their children to couples who could not conceive.  Philomena's son came to the United States.  He looked for her, but he died of AIDS before he could find her.  His partner buried him in Ireland.  Philomena, finally able to admit to having a child out of wedlock, began searching for her son.  She found him in his Irish grave.  The movie "Philomena" was based on the book.

     Before I Burn by Gaute Heivoll - This book was translated from Norwegian.  It is about a series of arsons committed in the 1970's.  The author was a baby living in the community at the time the arsons occurred.  The stories he heard his whole life compelled him to write the book.

     Last of the Blue and Gray: Old Men, Stolen Glory, and the Mystery That Outlived the Civil War by Richard Serrano - This book tells the story of two men who were still alive in the 1950's, when the federal government began making preparations for the Civil War centennial celebration.  Both men claimed to be Civil War veterans.  Only one old soldier is telling the truth.  You have to read the book to find out who is the impostor.  It seems that the Great Depression of the 1930's drove lots of old men to claim they served in the Civil War.  It was a way to get a monthly pension check.  It was especially easy for Southerners to get a pension.  Most of their records were destroyed, so they just got someone to swear that they served.  They usually claimed to be drummer boys during the war since children as young as eight or nine years old would serve in this capacity.  Others claimed to be 15 or 20 years older than their correct age.  Once you tell a lie you have to stick to it - all the way to your 100th birthday and beyond.