T Minus 2 Days…

My oral exam (viva) is this Thursday. 3 years of effort, all down to one, single examination. It’s a bit terrifying, but I imagine that this time Thursday will be a moment of celebration – that it’s finally done, or that I have corrections to make, but that the end is well and truly in sight. Oh – and I have a new job, as well, working for a company here in town. So much change, all within such a short time. I’ve about a dozen academic jobs for which to apply, as well, and they’re in places such as Puerto Rico and New Zealand – completely random places, but where the teaching / research jobs are. We’ll see where we end up next – just need to make it through Thursday!

-D

Links

Hope you all had a good holiday, and are ready to get back to whatever it is you’re up to. 7 days from now I’ll have had my viva and will be contemplating revision, most likely.

Not much in the links these past few weeks – it appears that the only thing going, really, has been SOPA. I wonder if anybody’s making money off of the circus that is the American Legislative System. Really: they’re such a farce with this, it’s unbelievable. Of course, that seems to be an underlying theme in US Politics these days.

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Holiday Lounging!

Our Christmas decorations weren’t all that complete, as we’re not entirely sure where some of them are stored … well, in the garage, yes, but we didn’t want to open every box to find them. Nevertheless, we did have a bit of fun cutting out stars and snowflakes – from paper recycled from our Christmas Cracker flyers, pulling out the whirling pyramid Christmas thing (Weihnachtspyramide) that we got from a Christmas Market in Germany in 1999, and making a clove orange to hang in the entryway. Now T’s reading the last of her Cybils nominations and working on book reviews in preparation for tonight’s midnight (well, between 5-7 p.m. for everyone else) meeting with her judging panel, and D’s catching up on fiction reading, and generally enjoying some time off. D. has a telephone interview-ish thing today with a professor from Puerto Rico – and we’re dreaming of warm places for our next location!

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It was nice not to feel the need to do much of anything – while J. was here, we mostly sat around and chatted. J. crocheted up a flower for T.’s felted hat, D. nearly finished up another knitted-felt project (yet another hat – but an actual hat, rather than merely a cap), and T. has taken up a striped cabled scarf on her knitting loom.

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Of course, no one should visit without us using the occasion as an excuse to do some baking. We had a lovely basket of raspberries and a pair of old, wizened apples, so we made Raspberry-Apple Pasties. We also made some savory ones, with a curried lentil-carrot filling, but the filling just wasn’t as picturesque as the fruit ones. No sugar, only 4 ingredients, and they were fabulous: apples, raspberries, cranberry wensleydale cheese, and a crust. Pinch them up, bake them until golden, and you have a pie!

And if we might say so: Scottish raspberries are a blessing from God. Amen. Amazingly sweet, even for so early/late in the year. We get them from the farm folks, so someone still has them growing – and we’re really, really glad.

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Today we’re being thankful that the incessant wind has stopped (which sounded rather like the ocean, it was so loud) and working our way through those things on the to-do list which have been delayed for too long. T’s been muttering about finally trying out a faux Goldfish cracker recipe to give away paired with her painted glass jars of layered soup ingredients, and we’ll try to bake up another batch of gingerbread cookies later on, or perhaps watch a movie – although hopefully our second one is nothing like that dumb one with monsters and aliens…

Our families all have this week off as well, so we suspect there’s a great deal of lounging going on all around. Hope you’re able to kick back a little bit, too.

-D & T

Christmas Baking

The Christmas concert – which was amazing and brilliant and all things good – is over, huzzah! The weather outside is merely “meh,” and no longer frightful, so we indulged this past week in doing some hardcore baking – all new recipes, some of which were fairly experimental. This makes up for the lack of sweet baking this year: Christmas Cookies for T’s entire choral section, plus selected friends – in all, about twenty-five people, who each received a half dozen to a dozen cookies. As T. prefers not to make cards these days, this is her gift to those she loves.

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Perhaps the … most fiddly of the cookie recipes was for Cranberry Pinwheels. Basically, the pinwheel is made up of a modified sugar-cookie dough, a layer of brown sugar and milk slurry, then a layer of chopped almonds, cranberries, and orange zest (leaving a half inch of dough on one end and 3/4 inch of dough on the other end clear of any filling, so that your pinwheel center is very definite, and so your roll stays rolled). The whole mess is then rolled up and stashed in the freezer until thoroughly frozen. Yes, frozen.

When D. first tried to cut the things, he went looking for his cleaver and mallet, they were so solid … but, in about 15 minutes, the roll had started to slump and ooze a bit, and it was time to slice cookies off of the roll as quickly as possible! We’d suggest using a nonstick cutting surface (if you have a Silpat you don’t care about), as the dough really does get quite sticky and if the kitchen is warmed from a pre-heating oven, it can all go to stickiness pretty darned rapidly.

The cookies themselves hardly spread at all – they simply settle. We had to bake them twice, as we’re a bit uncertain of our oven and pulled them too soon the first time. DO let them bake all the way – the sugar turns to caramel and is just wonderful with the cranberries and nuts (D. thinks they could have used far more cranberry, while T. thinks the orange zest was too tame, but were following the recipe for once. Next time it’s no-holds-barred experimentation).


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Of course, no Christmas Cookie bake-off could take place without the requisite sugar cookies and gingerbread men. We picked up a lovely set of circular cookie-cutters last year, and had thought to make wreaths out of the sugar cookies. By the time came to frost them with bows and all, we’d lost a bit of our drive: we went with tinted frosting, sprinkles and dragees. Of course, we didn’t want to use too much color, so the greens for the wreaths were a bit pastel in the reds and greens, and then with the added sprinkles, the wreaths look quite a bit like … donuts. Le Sigh.

The gingerbread men were made using our pre-bitten (ABC) cookie cutters (thank you Sarah). We’d planned to ice those as zombies & then paint the edges of the missing parts with gore, but just never got there either (you can see how this is going). Also, the wonky oven situation meant that half of each pan was over-baked, so some of them are going to be turned into ornaments, or hung out to share with the birds, as they’re just a bit too crunchy to eat. Oh, well – the rest of them are tasty, including the monster one made from the last of the dough (he’s already mostly gone, having been easily dismembered due to how he was constructed).


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At Christmas, naughty children get coal the world over, we understand. In that spirit, we needed to make coal in quantity, because are we not mostly naughty around here? We baked some round coal – really, Chocolate Crinkle cookies – made with real grated 70% dark chocolate, but then thought, Hey, why can’t we make them oddly-shaped, as coal probably is in real life (never having burned the stuff, nor seen it in person really, we used our imagination about what a flammable rock would look like when chipped from the earth)? The Crinkles are a rich, chocolate-butter cookie which is rolled in confectioner’s sugar and supposed to crack and look as if they were slightly charred on the outside but solid black in the cracks. Whether it was because of the stupid oven or the odd shapes, they didn’t crack as much as expected – possibly because we supplemented cocoa powder instead of using all grated chocolate – but they are quite tasty regardless.

And, for that special someone in the bass section who cannot seem to resist pestering T. (he knows who he is), causing her to snicker inappropriately during rehearsals, we whipped up a whole dozen lumps of coal – no other cookies for him, no, not with that behavior (T. remains blameless in all of this). We put to good use a burlap sack of the sort one gets when buying a quantity of rice. Two simple cuts removed the bottom quarter of the bag; T. stitched it up, lined it with a sandwich baggie, and we had the proper bag for coal. (The naughty certainly deserve nothing elegant like a stocking for such a delivery!)


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The good children received mostly pretty cookies (with a few lumps of coal thrown in, because we, of course, KNOW the “good” children). Everyone also received a hunk of peanut/almond brittle, which this time turned out more glassy like a hard candy than opaque like the usual brittle. We’re bewildered by this – we followed the same recipe as last time, but everything came together a bit differently. Was it because we poured directly onto a Silpat placed on the glass-topped table? Was it because we didn’t brush the sides of the pot with oil to prevent the sugar sticking? No idea. It could have been, though, that our fluctuating gas (along with the wonky oven, the hob isn’t all that predictable) actually raised the sugar to a hotter temperature than last time (still can’t find those candy thermometers): we definitely had “hard ball” stage fairly quickly. A single drop of sugar lava, when dripped into a glass of cool water, actually sounded as if we’d dropped a glass bead into the water rather than just a hunk of sugar! Clink. Definitely “hard ball” stage!

A cookie that only J. and Axel’s darling parents – all of whom actually bought tickets to our show without being coerced! (Though we know P. only came for the ABBA sing-along) – received was Cranberry Shortbread. It’s just too easy to OD on sweet desserts this time of year, and so we sought out a recipe for a cookie with a little more subtlety and flavor.

We first cooked down two and a quarter cups of cranberry, three tablespoons of orange juice, and 2/3 cup of sugar. Already you’ll note that’s not a lot of sugar for such sour and bitter berries. While that was boiling down, we made a quick shortbread crust – butter, cornstarch, flour, vanilla, salt — and 1/3 c. of sugar: again, not very sweet at all. When the filling was practically cranberry jelly, cooked down to a thick syrup, we lay it on half the shortbread crust, which had been packed down into the bottom of the pan. We sprinkled the remaining half on the top, and patted it down. A half hour later, we had kind of a …seething, cranberry-lava pie. But, as it cooled, the cornstarch did its job, and the whole thing came together as cookie bars. T. dusted the top with confectioner’s sugar, and sliced the bars into one-inch squares. These bars were really GOOD, and enjoyed by those with sophisticated palettes – and they were consumed before M&P got back to Largs, which makes these bars a Do Again recipe.

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All of the cookies were packaged up, tied with ribbon, and set aside with a sigh of relief. The house smelled wonderfully of baking, there wasn’t so much of a mess as we’d anticipated (thanks to the fact that we don’t have as many cooking vessels as we had in California, and actually have to wash them to keep baking new stuff – we got on autopilot, after awhile), ‘though there were quite a lot of sugar-coated utensils, and much sneezing due to powdered sugar. It was a lot of fun, and though T. was really uncomfortable with all of the effusive thanks she received – one girl curtseyed to her for the cookies! Do people our age really not bake!? Or is it more an urban v. suburban thing? – D., at least, enjoyed playing Uncle Christmas and handing out good eats to all. That’s us done with cookies, though, ’til at least Valentine’s Day!


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And now we really must get on with house decorating. J. will be coming to visit at the end of the week, L. will be coming to visit after the new year, also to spend a few days. and then C. will be along to celebrate receiving her marks on her Master’s dissertation and finishing with all of that nonsense. We’re hoping for good weather (READ: No ice, please), so that J. (who is a veterinarian) will get to visit our local flock of sheep, and so that we can take L. up to the castle for some photography. Of course, if it’s “just” raining as usual, we’ll happily wander around in our boots, doing our thing.

For now, we’re snuggled in, enjoying the freedom from schedule and routine and just being home. We’re listening to a lot of orchestral music, jazz, World Music and the like to eradicate songs from Grease, ABBA, Hairspray and carols playing full-time in our heads. So far we’ve been moderately successful – although T. still hums the theme to The Midnight Cowboy from the John Barry tribute occasionally, unable to stop herself (the orchestra did a beautiful job with it; a clarinet played the plaintive harmonica solo. Our show even got a review in the Glasgow Herald, which made us quite proud – and amused; the reviewer said the musical choices were “random.” Hah). Loves of freshly baked whole-wheat bread are on the agenda for either today or tomorrow (we’re still just not able to plug in our ambition just yet), and some stollen — based on Elle’s recipe — is on the agenda for probably Friday morning. And the house will smell like a holiday at home all over again.

Wherever you are, in the far-flung corners of the world, we’re wishing you peace and hoping you’re enjoying some time off from the madding crowd as well.

-D & T

Links

There aren’t many happy links this week, unfortunately. Perhaps I need to slow down on paying attention to the censorship news, and the copyright / patent news. Either that or I’m going to have to rename this section “dark links” rather than just “links.” I need to add some more positive technology feeds to my reader, and perhaps drop a few of those which are focused on security, information law, and hacktivisim. I don’t know, though, because those areas are of interest to me, and they’re also very important not only to me but to the world as a whole. Will give it some thought. Meanwhile, here’re your links for the week.

Continue reading “Links”

Probably Even Glaswegians Are Wearing Sweaters…

Let us take a moment and be exactly like most people we meet, and talk endlessly about the weather:

Reports of a hurricane have been greatly exaggerated. Or, mostly exaggerated. The bit where there were Category 5 winds was real enough. The bit where it would knock you off of your feet if you went around corners incautiously was a bit too real. The part where it was 85 mph in our neighborhood alone was viciously real. But the Met Office won’t agree that it was a hurricane, despite the whole spinning clouds on the Doppler thing. Oh, well. Twittering Scots have deemed it a hurricane, and have given it a cheerfully derogatory name (which, since this is a family blog, and you have Google at your house, too, we won’t repeat), showing that they are cooler than any Category 5 storm. “Nature, bring it on!!!” is the general attitude. (Of course, those were not the actual words. We believe they were something like, “Come ahead, ya dobber!” You get the idea.)

We still can’t find our recycle bin. We found the lid, but the rest is blooown away somewhere…

Hard to believe, that within the same week as the wind, we had our first snow – and it had stuck around unpleasantly. There was ice everywhere, we got out our insulated boots and snow-cleats, and were hoping not to have a repeat of Snowpocalypse 2010. It was as blessing it was washed away by the rain before the wind came…

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Today, the snow is back. It’s the picturesque kind – heavy and soggy, but good for photographs, and we’ll have some soon. We expect that the rain will return shortly and wash it away, but for now, we’re truly in a marshmallow world…

The sheep are back! The farmer apparently rotates the flock repeatedly, and we’re glad to see them again, as we enjoy watching their mild antics from the kitchen table and from the office. They’re quite peaceful, and fit in with our plans for Christmas: lounging about, eating a lot, and standing still… with no choir, no work, and no obligations to do anything constructive. Well, for D., anyway. He plans to catch up on some knitting (D. has a scarf he’s been knitting now for 2 whole years, although he’s only worked on it when he’s been in lectures), but T. has a monster pile of reading to finish for the Cybils (altogether 171 books. she’s halfway through), by the end of the month, plus she’s hoping for the positive conclusion of a Super Seekrit Project which is turning out to be a lot more work and aggravation than she expected. Finally, she hopes to finish one last book before New Year’s Eve, but that might just be hubris at this point.

One last push – our big, shiny Christmas Cracker Concert next weekend – and a few more days of breakneck work finishing projects, and then we’ll have earned our rest. We look forward to overnight visits from city friends and lots of baking, movie-watching, and general laziness. If we can’t be home in the States, we’ll at least have a good time with friends.

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BIG NEWS: D. has finally AT LONG LAST been given a date for his viva voce exam: January 12th. Prayers ascending, candles lit, fingers crossed, and wood knocked upon that day, if you please. Post-exam we’ll know more about the immediate future, as after the grueling day they will inform him how much more work he has to do on the Big Paper before they let him go. After that, well. The serious feelers go out. Already D. is speaking to people about visas, and together we’re doing a bit of thinking about where we want to be. It’s actually difficult to think of, since we’ve been in Scotland for the past four years. When one takes the time to contemplate what one wants out of a community, where we’re going to make a serious effort to put down roots, suddenly the decision is a little harder…

We’ll keep on thinking, and see what turns up. Sometimes, when the weather is nasty (and the indoor temperature falls to 12°C/59°), or when it’s really dark (we’re down to 7 hours of “daylight” now), we think that D. ought to find a job someplace warm and sunny. In the Bahamas. Other times, though, we remember what we enjoy about life here – the rare clear, crisp days, the slower pace of the semi-rural environment, our weekly trip in to friends and civilization in Glasgow — and it’s difficult to think of leaving.

Well, we’ll keep you posted. Stay warm and dry and enjoy your weekend!

-D & T

Oatmeal Sourdough Bread

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Last night we set a massive amount of rolled oats (probably 4 cups) in with about 2 cups of flour, some yeast, and enough water to make a loose poolish. (No, there’s no measuring – it was all just dumped into the bowl.) Letting bread ferment overnight tends to make it nicely sour – not too sour, but just flavorful. This morning, we stirred in some more flour and some salt, formed it into loaves, and let it rise in the very cold kitchen. It rose for probably about 3 hours. I split the tops and added butter (handy tool for this is our apple-corer) because T. asked, “hey, do you remember those bread commercials where they split the top of the loaves?” They baked for 45 minutes, turning them around in the oven every 15, because our oven tends to run hot towards the back.

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The bread is moist, and stays moist even when toasted. That’s because of the oats, we think. It’s a bit on the crumbly side, but overall quite tasty! Even though it has a hint of sour, we figure it’ll be quite good with jam, not just with savory things. It’s definitely not light in texture, but who wants light bread?

To the left is some vegetarian “tuna” paté, some cheese, mustard, and avocado, on slices of the fresh bread which have been toasted and then everything but the avocado went under the broiler until it got warm and melty.

-D

A Pre-Marshmallow World

Welcome to December!

The mornings routinely hover in the low thirties, unless it’s raining, which gives us the requisite five degrees more which allows it to rain and not snow. The snow is forecast for this weekend, however, and this morning we awakened with the Dumyat and the Ochils powdered with snow for the second time this autumn so far. The light – we don’t bother calling it sunrise most days – struggles up around twenty-five past eight, and gives up wearily at around half past three. We soon enter The Great Dark, and yet our spirits are not too diminished.

(Thank God.)

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Thanksgiving was brief – D. came home from a late walk from work to a house with windows fogged from boiling, cooking, steaming, and baking (beige) things. (All comfort food is either brown or beige. It’s amazing how that works.) T. had roasted Brussels sprouts with garlic and herbs – which we’ve discovered that we really like – baked our traditional Thanksgiving haggis (well, as traditional as a faux haggis can get), pan-seared mushrooms and butternut ravioli (cheating – D. didn’t make the pasta this time), and finally, quinoa-stuffed eggplant, quite loosely based on a Michael Chiarello recipe she saw years ago.

If none of this sounds like Thanksgiving food, this is because neither of us could face mashed potatoes – T. didn’t feel like attempting to make a turkey, and we’re saving our cranberries for later in the winter when we’re really craving home foods. We’re stockpiling butternut squash, pumpkin, candy canes and cranberries against that day…

The real culinary star this meal was the dessert – carrot maple pie. The photograph didn’t do it justice at all, so we tossed it. T’s going to make it another one, and finish roughing out a reliable recipe, but we were surprised by how well carrots take the flavor of almond and vanilla, and though the pie filling, sweetened with a liquid and made of carrots boiled and mashed, tended toward a bit of excess in the liquid category, T. plans next time to roast them. Stay tuned for a really inexpensive and tasty and even semi-healthy dessert option.


This past weekend, our chorus had a contract to sing a few Christmas carols at An Unnamed Garden Center, just south of Edinburgh. We were supposed to sing for awhile, step outside to sing a song for the tree-lighting thing, sing for a bit more in-store, and then go home. Is anybody surprised that it didn’t work out quite that way?

Indoors, we piled three deep in a dim aisle, squinting at our music (as our director squinted at his pitch pipe) and through interminable garbled store announcements (Behold, beef burgers and hot-dogs available outside at the bus! Find your places now for the tree lighting, oh, ye hapless consumers!) tried gamely to sing about the birth of Christ. A few people applauded, one woman stood in the aisle and wept, small children tried to imitate our director, but most folk looked stunned or seemed dismayed that there were twenty people harmonizing in the tree aisle as they compared prices on plastic icicles and fiber optic light show trees.

And then, we had to go outside.

Turn your sound down – the above video is of the skirling of Santa’s pipe-band, as the fireworks went off. If you’ll note, the Christmas tree itself is … swaying, a bit. This is because we had wiiiiinds this past weekend; gusts of up to 70 mph. Of course that’s the time you want to be outside with your mouth open. This snippet shows the grand finale of the tree lighting, by this time we’d been standing outside for about 45 minutes, were freezing (the girls frantically dancing to keep their blood moving), and just wanted to be done.

Well, we gave it our best, for a few hours (and in the face of £15 in cab fare plus £18 in train fare, tried to make sure the experience gave us value for the money), only to be dropped off back at the train station in Edinburgh … where there were Mysterious Goings On. On the board we saw that our train had been canceled for lack of personnel. While we pondered what that could mean, we waited around for nearly 2 hours for ScotRail to organize a coach. (Did we mention that it was freezing? And that the drunk man standing behind T. complained bitterly about the lack of toilets on buses, and then proceeded to relieve himself on the wall behind her???) We were freezing and cranky by the time we were taken by bus back to Stirling, arriving home at 8:30 – three and a half hours after we’d finished singing.

Fa-la-la-la-la…brr.

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Yesterday, the city stopped — under a general strike, so we finally figured out that many of the missing personnel just decided to start the strike early. Meanwhile, yesterday, just to make sure that the city stayed stopped, we had a deluge. The train lines, some train stations, parts of the Big City, and many villages flooded. Thank goodness our wee Cambusbarron is all uphill! We’ll struggle to reach it once it snows (heck, we struggle to reach it now), but it’ll never flood… Ah, the cold season in Scotland. It does make one count one’s blessings.

And, since it ’tis the season, we’ll be heading out into the weather again in a few weeks to sing more Christmas carols (plus some truly awful pop songs, but we’ll not dwell upon those). Meanwhile, at the University, the semester winds down. Christmas vacation is in sixteen days (not that anyone is counting), and D. is looking forward to doing absolutely nothing for hours at a time. Before the end of the month, T., meanwhile, has still a few hundred books to read (truly) for the Cybils, and many plans to force D. into baking hand pies, making pasta, and his special chocolate pudding, while working her way through our friend Mr. B’s list of Underrated Movies. (Mr. B. is a screenwriter and knows of what he speaks.)

D’s viva looks to be scheduled for mid-January, so we’ll be shelling out the funds to extend the student visas, which will have the expected effect on travel, bank accounts, and shopping for this time of year. On one hand, we’ll continue living in limbo until we can determine where to jump next. On the other – as long as we have this house and both can get some work done, we’re not quite homeless. Lots to be thankful for, so we’re just not going to obsess over the things we can’t control. Which is everything.

Roll on, vacation.

-D & T