His life, his interests, his sometimes quirky frame of mind in words and pictures. A flyover of my life.
Friday, January 30, 2009
Thursday, January 29, 2009
John Martyn, 1948-2009
Variety obituary.
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
My Favorite Updike Sentence
"It's like wood," Harry says, groping back through history, which is a tinted fog to him, marked off in centuries like a football field, with a few dates -- 1066, 1776 -- pinpointed and a few faces -- George Washington, Hitler -- hanging along the sidelines, not cheering. [Rabbit is Rich, p. 12]
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
John Updike, 1932-2009
Friday, January 23, 2009
Eye Roll of the Day
At least the reporter mentions that DWD received 254,401 calls last week compared to 56,641 during the same week last year.
So then why would you call the DWD hotline unless you had a truly legitimate need?
Quoting from the story. While some calls from the State Journal were met by busy signals Wednesday, others managed to connect to the automated phone system.
Reportage or inconsiderateness?
I know what call I would make.
Monday, January 19, 2009
Will Dump Friends for Food
Link to January 15 New York Times post, "‘Whopper Sacrifice’ De-Friended on Facebook".
Not me. My Burger King days are long gone. But back in 1969-1970, the residents at 482-A Allenhurst, UB sophomores all, ate our fill of 49-cent Whoppers. That full feeling continues 40 years later.
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It take 2 hands to handle a Whopper. Still true?
Friday, January 16, 2009
Retro Dining
I prepared this casserole for Wednesday's supper. Last year, when I first revived it, Andy must have been away at college. His reaction?
"I don't think I can finish this," he informed me, pointing to the few mouthfuls left on his plate. "I'm not a green olive person."
GROUND BEEF GRAND STYLE
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
From the Cookie Daily Calendar
Ingredients:
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
2 tbsp. rice flour
3/4 cup butter
1/2 cup superfine sugar
2 tsp. vanilla extract
2 tsp granulated sugar + more for sprinkling
Directions:
Preheat oven to 300F. Line a 7 x 11 pan with foil. Sift the flour into a large bowl and add the rice flour.
Beat the butter and superfine sugar until smooth. Add the vanilla extract and stir in the granulated sugar. Work the dough until it starts to clump together, then press it into the pan.
Bake for 45 to 50 minutes. The shortbread will look cooked before it actually is, so ensure that it bakes for the full 45 minutes. (I followed directions, sir, and left it in the oven for 45 minutes. Next time I'll cut the baking time to 40 minutes. I thought the texture was a wee bit too crunchy.)
Remove from the oven, sprinkle lightly with granulated sugar, and cut into fingers. Cool for 20 minutes and remove from the pan.
Andy and Eddie, not big fans of shortbread, gave the recipe a thumbs up.
Friday, January 9, 2009
A Christmas Tradition
For Andy, the selection usually boils down to sports vs. TV. TV won out for the 2009 calendar year.
I have to admit I'm not particularly fond of Family Guy. I've yet to sit through an entire episosde. Every time I pause to take in a torrent of wisecracks, though, I bring up the following analogy.....
Alice Kramden:Wilma Flintstone::Kitty Forman:Lois Griffin.
...only to be derisively hooted down every time.
I'm not backin' off, though.
Eddie, a big fan of the comics and graphic novels, eagerly shares some of his favorites with me. This year I rewarded him for his persistence.
I used to be a regular reader of the comics page. I have fond memories of my roommates and I reading and analyzing B.C. during our freshman year of college (a reminiscence worthy of its own post) and being a disciple of Doonesbury through the 1970s and early 1980s. (Still have the well-worn anthologies to prove it.) Then I just fell out of the habit. Until a year ago, only This Modern World was required reading.
Then Eddie suggested a certain strip found on the Wisconsin State Journal's "funny pages". (Does anyone even use this term anymore?)
'You'll like it," he insisted. "It has your kind of humor."
And so it does.
For JoAnna, I tend to use her French heritage as a buying guide, but how many Manet calendars can one person buy in a decade? This year I decided I'd get something that both of us can enjoy!
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Sunday, January 4, 2009
State Street Stalwarts
(This article would have helped had my research needed to reach back to 1966.)
Teddywedger's. Pasties. Comfort food heaven. If Teddywedgers (c. 1986) was located, say, in Middleton's Parkwood Plaza, two blocks from where I live, I wouldn't be just Retiring Guy. I'd be Retiring Starchy Guy. And I wouldn't walk there; I'd waddle. In the 1960s, Nelson family reunions took place at Uncle Harry and Aunt Svea's cottage on Lake Spread Eagle in Florence County Wisconsin. It was mandatory to make the pilgrimage, more than once, to nearby Iron Mountain, where pasties seemed to be on the menu of every restaurant. Even the drive-in A&W, if I recall. (Teddywedgers always puts me in a reflective mood.)
Probably a pretender. I assumed that Cinnamon Girl, a women's apparel store, was a relatively new business -- from the looks of the storefront, anyway -- but it shows up in the 1978 Madison city directory, though at a different address. (There's no State Street listing for 1986.) I suppose further research is in order, which might also help to answer the question: Named for the Neil Young song?
From the looks of it, Blum's Trophies has been in business here well before 1978.
Strictly window-shopping for me.