Archive for May, 2009

Home Made Ginger Ale and Problematic Sublimation

Okay so none of my mom’s cooking genes got passed on to me.  Fact is, I’m no more of a foodie than I am a competitive sports person.  I love Ginger Ale, though.  Love Ginger Ale so, so, sooo, much yet I rarely have the opportunity to drink anything other than the processed fructose/gluctose supermarket crap.  Alas!

Time to does something about.  The results of my research are as follows:

NY Times Ginger Ale Recipe

Simple Recipes Recipe

Epi curious

Food Network

Berlin’s Whimsy

Suite 101

My boyfriend, who is about as culinarily inept as I am, is now offering to try and figure out how to create this concoction on my behalf.  He explains to me that the sublimation would be a good way to go about making Ginger Ale.  Sublimation being “the state change from solid to gas that skips liquid”

gingerale

“Hannah’s Ginger Ale” photo by Marcelo Teson

He says that adding dry ice to water and ginger extract might be a good way to make Ginger Ale because this is how Root Beer is made.

He also says he’s not really sure whether or not this is actually how Ginger Ale is made.  None of the recipes I’ve found online seem to advocate the use of dry ice to make Ginger Ale.  But still like the idea.  Hmm…


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Memorial Day Politiku

Different sources make different claims regarding the origin of Memorial Day. Southern hymns, Union Generals and United States Presidents all claim to have officiated the holiday that my great-grandmother from Omaha used to insist on referring to as, “Decoration Day.” While I’m still not quite clear on whether “Decoration Day” was the predecessor to our contemporary “Memorial Day” or whether they both emerged simultaneously, post Civil War, the challenge of pinpointing an origin could easily keep a team of historians busy through Memorial Day 2010 at least.

Scrolling back through my personal associations with the holiday is considerably less daunting. I was born and raised a Beltway brat. This means that the memorials for honoring the people and events of the past were a routine fixture of my perpetual present. I was six years old when my parents first took me visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery. Not only was it the first military ceremony I ever witnessed but it was the first time I ever saw real soldiers. The fact that they could stand so still and move so precisely, made the experience seem all the more supernatural. The clicks of the taps of the shoes of the round the clock guards was utterly miraculous.

Who was this soldier who remained “unknown?” No answers would satisfy me. The questions I bombarded my parents with were, in fact, almost exactly the same questions that I was recently bombarded with by eleven-year-old cousin, Max. “It’s many soldiers — not just one” I am now able to explain. “They’re from different wars and could belong to any family that lost someone.” Through the process of trying to explain I am reminded of the impossibility of defining, quantifying or comprehending a loss of this magnitude and this loss that will continue to remain.

Frankie Clogston’s Politku

All over the Mall.
Memorial City, this.
Crowded memories.

Don Bassman’s Politiku

bold untouchable
implacable impartial
honor code of Death

It’s Finality.
The whistle blows but no cheers
- must be a tie game.

The war was over.
A state of peace was declared
on the State of Mind.

Irene Gravina’s Politiku

West End hot brick walks
Hit your bare feet as you ran
Into the cool Charles

No sense to be made
Down on the grass by your grave
Green bug on my wrist

Thirteen red petals
Fallen like you and a plaque
BRONZE STAR KOREA

In the meeting house
People have space to gather
And speak openly

Tavern floor awash
With hard cider all night
At dawn dew splashed with blood

Gun across his knee
The metal cast Minuteman
Rests.  His job is done.

Our flags rim this Green
People wander in to see
Kids playing Frisbee

Musket to musket
Farmers met waves of Redcoats
As Americans

Peter Orvetti
’s Politiku

Thousands of lost souls
Fallen soldiers, orphaned young
For rights we squander

Mathilde’s Politiku

On May 4th, ever
silence, two minutes
for ALL Dutch who died.

Richard Speier’s Politiku

Ten thousand troops killed.
Honor. One million plain folks
killed in crossfires. What?

(The soldiers who die in the service to their country
deserve honor. But, typically, a war results in 10 to 100 times as
many civilian deaths as soldier deaths. During and shortly after a
war, civilians perish from crossfires — and from the deliberate or
accidental targeting of populations, from genocide, from disease, and
from starvation. Why isn’t there a holiday to remember them?)

Susanna Speier’s Politiku

Tomb of the Unknown
shoes that shine, that tap, that click
Beltway kids, watching…

To view Memorial Day Politiku as a featured Huffington Post Living selection  click here.

For coverage on Obama’s visit to Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day Ceremony, click here.

TombOfTheUnknown

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An ENFP’s Facebook Network Meets the Meyers Briggs

I’d taken the Meyers Briggs Personality Test my first year of college when, a friend who was obsessed with the test, made it a pre-req for camaraderie.  A recently laid off INFJ friend credited the Meyer’s Briggs for guiding her through an agonizing, yet successful, post-layoff job quest.  After a grueling three month search, she managed to land a vast improvement over the previous gig.  A champion for the Meyers Briggs, she guessed, before I even told her, that I was an ENFP.  ENFP, that is, with a particularly strong “E”.  And for those of you not familiar, ENFP is Extroverted, Intuitive, Feeling, Perceiving.
Yesterday I took another slightly different version of the test online.  ENTP.  Interesting.  The “feeling” variable had switched to “thinking” but the rest was the same.  Went and found a third version of the test online in order to break the tie.  ENFP.  Yep, feeling, extrovert that I am, my entire Facebook was told and is now all buzzing Meyers Briggs.
A couple of my ENFP friends had announced themselves within minutes and others soon followed.  Eventually, even an INTJ (Introverted, Intuitive, Thinking, Judgmental) shared his Meyers Briggs category before retreating back into his cave again.  A couple of other “I” friends discussed the Meyers Briggs with me privately but requested that I withhold their names from any blog entries or “Wall to Wall” Facebook chats.

ENFP - “Journalist”. Uncanny sense of the motivations of others. Life is an exciting drama. 8.1% of total population.

Free Jung Word Choice Test (similar to MBTI)
personality tests by similarminds.com

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Kudos for Politikus

Thanks to all the stellar contributions to the last round, the Politikus I posted on Huffpo got three write ups:

SmithMagazine

Allen County Democrats

Hollie Does Hollywood

The bulk of responses, of course, were not structured as blog entries or web pubs.  And a couple of responses actually arrived in 17 syllable format:

Loved your seder-ku.
Me too.  No matzoh prize claimed.

Kids grown in this crew.

- Jerome Coopersmith

Susanna’s method
to chart the current admin

and cut through the din
-Irving Gregory
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