STS-133-1

The family is going to attempt to see the second to last shuttle launch this week. Mom, Eileen and Wes started driving there Saturday and I’m flying out today to meet up with them. I’m sitting in DFW right now enjoying a cup of coffee and waiting for the connection to Orlando. The original schedule for the launch was Monday but it’s been pushed back two days now which necessitated changing my return. I went ahead and pushed it to Saturday and while it cost me another $150, it also included a magic bump to 1st class so that’s nice I guess.

The tmobile hotspot keeps harassing me for some reason but it’s not free so it will be the G’s for me. I’m going to see if the telephone will post the completely terrible picture it just took of me. Turns out no. The uploader in wordpress doesn’t seem to want to play nice. Thank goodness for dropbox. I guess I’ll go back and clean up the image source later. For now, enjoy my up-too-early deer-in-the-headlights visage. More when I get to Florida and find out what we’re planning to do until Wednesday. Boarding now. Time to go.

Ok, phone photo weirdness. The picture looks fine on the phone but on the computer is rotated 90 degrees. Fixed now?

Party food

A friend threw a boat party this weekend and I volunteered to wrangle the food once I heard there was a grill and it wouldn’t just be making sandwiches for a bunch of people. It seems to have gone over well. We had beef and chicken fajitas, blackened fish and grilled vegetables and some cookies. I thought I’d put the recipes in here along with some valuable life lessons from the party in general.

Lesson 1: When you get kegs of beer, before you leave the store, make sure that the tap they gave you fits the kegs. The keg will generally have a plastic cap over the tap port. It is ok to remove it to test the keg. You have already bought the beer and you can open it when you like so you might as well do it there so you can test the tap.

Lesson 2: Just go ahead and assume that no one will have an appropriate adapter for your iPod to talk to the boat’s sound system. They may say they have the adapters but they are most likely wrong.

Lesson 3: Make sure the grill lights before you leave dock. New taps and iPod adapters can be shuttled in via waverunner. Tanks of propane cannot. A lighter is useful as well since the little clicky thing is not super reliable.

Lesson 4: The waverunner is fun and also incredibly useful.

Lesson 5: When someone asks you if you want to ride on the waverunner with them you say yes. (This is a corollary to the Ghostbusters rule)

Lesson 6: People who are swimming and drinking eat more that you might expect. You should have at least 1/3lb of main course per person and it wouldn’t kill you to have 1/2lb in case there are extra people.

Ok. Recipes. First off, these are basically straight from Cook’s Illustrated. I bought a subscription to their website and Mom got me a subscription to the magazine for my birthday. It is surprisingly good and while it initially irked me to pay for web content, after this weekend I think it was worth the small expenditure. Particularly because they have a free iPhone app that interfaces to their web content very well and has things like built in shopping list creation and timers embedded in the instructions. High quality all around. If you like to cook it’s a pretty good return on $35. Plus there’s a free week trial so you can browse the recipes if you like.

Blackened Red Snapper
Ingredients
2 tablespoons sweet paprika
2 teaspoons onion powder
2 teaspoons garlic powder
3/4 teaspoon ground coriander
3/4 teaspoon table salt
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper
3 tablespoons unsalted butter

4 red snapper fillets , 6 to 8 ounces each, 3/4 inch thick (I got some really big fillets from Central Market so there were only two but it was still almost 2lbs)

Vegetable oil for grill rack
Serving dish

Instructions
Combine paprika, onion powder, garlic powder, coriander, salt, and peppers in small bowl. Melt butter in 10-inch skillet over medium heat. When foaming subsides, stir in spice mixture. Cook, stirring frequently, until fragrant and spices turn dark rust color, 2 to 3 minutes. Transfer mixture to pie plate and cool, stirring occasionally, to room temperature, about 10 minutes. Once cooled, use fork to break up any large clumps.

Pat fish dry and score the skin in a one inch grid. This will keep it from curling and will allow you to spice the fish on both sides. Rub with the spice mix. If you find any bones you should go ahead and try to get them out now. You will forget about it when it’s time to serve. Wrap in aluminum foil and keep cold until it’s time to cook.

Heat the grill to medium to medium-high heat. Brush the cooking surface with oil to keep the fish from sticking and then put the fish on skin side down. Cook for 3-4 minutes and then flip it over. You may want two spatulas or a spatula and tongs. The fish is floppy and will break apart if you aren’t careful. Cook an additional 5 minutes on the second side. I actually cooked them for more like 5min and 6min but that’s because the fillets were so big. It was still really moist and tender when I pulled them off.

Cut into strips and serve. If you have a fancy dish that will keep the fish warm that would be a good idea but I just had an aluminum pan and bunch of starving party goers.

Grilled Zucchini, Red Onion, Red Pepper and Mushrooms with Lemon-Basil Vinaigrette
This is modified a bit from the original.
Ingredients
1 large red onion , peeled and cut crosswise into four 1/2-inch-thick rounds
3 medium zucchini (about 1 pound), ends trimmed, sliced lengthwise into 3/4-inch-thick planks
1 large red bell pepper
6 small to medium portobello mushroom caps
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
salt and ground black pepper
1 small garlic clove , minced or pressed through garlic press (about 1/2 teaspoon)
1 teaspoon finely grated zest from 1 lemon plus 1 tablespoon juice
1/4 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon chopped fresh basil leaves

Instructions
Peel the onion down to the first moist layer and then cut it into four sections as if you were going to make thick onion rings. Put two sections on each of two skewers so that the skewer goes through all rings. The idea is to pin them all together so they don’t fall apart or cook too quickly.

Cut the zucchini into three pieces lengthwise.

Cut the bell pepper into six or so pieces removing the seeds and other inside bits. You want these to be big enough to not fall through the grill but small enough to lay mostly flat.

Put the mushroom caps on skewers, three per, so that they lay flat.

Whisk the garlic, salt, pepper, lemon zest and juice, mustard and basil together in a bowl.

This is mainly where the recipe deviates. The original has you brush the vegetables with the oil and reserve the vinaigrette to put on later. I’ve combined the oil for brushing and the vinaigrette and use the whole thing as a marinade. Put all of the veggies in an appropriately sized zipper bag and dump in the mixture. Seal the bag and then lightly toss it around so everything is coated. This works well because the mushrooms absorb a lot of the moisture and thus take longer to cook than they might have otherwise so all the veggies finish about the same time. Plus the flavors cook well and it’s less complicated when you’re on the grill.

Heat the grill to medium heat. Put all the vegetables on the grill and cook for 18-22 minutes flipping once half way through. You should check that you’re not burning them and reduce the heat if necessary. When they’re done they should have noticeable grill marks and be tender but not completely soggy.

Serve with the following Lime Ginger vinaigrette.

Lime-Ginger Vinaigrette
This has the original quantities of ingredients. I doubled them to make twice as much and I think that worked better since it was used on the fish too.
Ingredients
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice , from 1 lime
1 1/2 teaspoons minced or grated fresh ginger
1 teaspoon dried coriander seeds , crushed
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
1 tablespoon chopped fresh cilantro leaves
1/3 cup canola oil

Instructions
Mix everything in a bowl. Transfer to a glass jar with a lid or maybe a plastic squeeze bottle (that would have been super awesome, remember that for next time) and shake like a crazy person. Let stand for 1 hour before serving.

There were also cookies. The beef was tequila-lime marinaded flank steak. The chicken was lime-cilantro chicken breast. Both were pre-prepared from Whole Foods and were (I am told) very tasty. Cook the beef 5-6 minutes per side searing with high heat to start and then reducing to medium. Cook the chicken 6-8 minutes per side the same way. The thing with the chicken is that it needs to be a little firm and obviously done. You can play the is the chicken done game and then have everyone be squeamish about it possibly being underdone or you can just cook it for a couple of extra minutes and remove all doubt. If the chicken breasts are plump and well marinaded they won’t dry out while you’re making sure no one gets poisoned. Chicken. Evil but tasty.

Can't Sleep

Laying in bed thinking about work stuff. I have all of these seemingly great ideas for awesome things but all that will come of them is another night with not enough sleep. I ought to at least draw up some of the interface layout and interaction elements but tomorrow it will all look insurmountable and fantastical. I did at least manage to work through a structural issue with what I was doing today. That won’t go away or look stupid in the morning. I guess I’ll fire up the image editor and flail about uselessly until I’m tired enough to fall asleep.

And now it’s 1:20. Awesome. Tomorrow is going to be totally sweet.

More flying

Various videos of the University of Toronto Human Powered Ornithopter have been making the rounds and I thought I would link to one here because it’s related to stuff I think about a lot but never do anything towards.

Also, a while back I posted a video of people doing wingsuit flying in Norway. I saw another awesome video of that today so that’s here too.

Let’s see, what else is going on. I’m older now. I suppose that goes without saying but there you are. I’ve been slowly getting back in shape after a year or so spent working and eating and sleeping and not a whole lot else. It is fraught with peril and not just because of the aforementioned olderness. The lifting and rowing are coming into line but how much / how fast is not really worth mentioning. I mention all this in service of me potentially buying a bicycle. It’s been a while since I’ve been on one and while I still have my old mountain bike from 1993 I’m leaning in the road bike direction. The idea is that May 26th is ‘ride your bike to work day’. This is more of a challenge for some people than others. For me it would a 54 mile round trip. Thankfully we are in the midst of an office construction and remodeling frenzy which will result in showers.

There’s a substantial bicycling community at work and it would be nice to have people to ride with. I really like the rowing machine but it gets old sitting in a room rowing by yourself staring at the wall. I don’t think that the bike will replace the rowing but it will be another option for staying active in a low-impact sort of way with potential social benefits as well.

I’ve been reading a lot lately. I won’t go through the whole list but today I finished Zero History by William Gibson and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I also read the Harry Potter books (finally) and they were entertaining as well. I believe the next book to arrive will be the fourth Terry Pratchett Wee Free Men series book. Those came as something of a surprise to me. I decided after reading Neil Gaiman’s Graveyard Book which was targeted at a younger audience that I might give the Pratchett ones a go too and was rewarded handsomely for it. Then it’s the next Stephen Donaldson Last Chronicles of Thomas Covenant book and finally, rounding out the great 2010 Amazon pre-order fest, book 13.2 of the Wheel of Time.

That’s it for now.

Labor Day

Uh oh. Look what crawled out of the garage. I have been dreading working on the car for a while now. Last time I tried to start it I was defeated. Today I decided to spend a little money and a lot of time on it and see if it wouldn’t get going. I changed the oil and filter and installed a new positive battery clamp with a quick disconnect to replace the old, cracked one that was causing problems before. I also took off the air filters and housing, put damper oil in the carbs and fed it some starter fluid. No new air filters were to be had at the autozone but, oddly enough, Amazon has them so I think I’ll just order them from there. It finally started after a few tries and more starter fluid although it sounded bad a couple of times when cranking and was a little smokey when it first got going. I let it run for a while, pulled it into the driveway, let it run some more, pulled it back in and then shut it off. At this point it made a hissing noise and spit a little coolant out of the top of the radiator. So, I guess it probably needs a flush and some new fluid now. Joy. I cannot imagine that I will be up to that tomorrow but I suppose we’ll see. At least it runs now. It also needs the brakes bled because I let them go too far when last it was drivable and got air into the lines. I also noticed that I am missing a lug nut from front passenger side wheel. No telling where that went. Yay project car. If I can get the coolant and brakes done it’s probably ready for registration and inspection at which point I could drive it to somewhere more thorough work could be done on it.

Behold

The last week has seen dramatic changes around the house. The new bedroom floor was installed and the new bed, chest of drawers and mattress arrived as well. There are many more details that will be addressed but all of the big stuff is in and done.

Before:


After floor installation:


New Furniture:

And finally, with the mattress and new bed set. Wonder at it’s majesty for it shall nevermore appear thus. Eight pillows is a bit much really and you can’t even see the headboard with all of that stuff on there.

I’ve been having a hard time finding frames for the pictures I want to put on the big wall. I’d like something that matched the furniture but only one place had anything that even remotely matched and I wasn’t really excited about them because I’d have to pay full price. I’m thinking now that I might just go for silvered wood to try to match the forthcoming silver accents. I think I’ll probably end up with the lamps I saw at Loft. They’re a bit spendy but no more than I’ve seen for reasonably nice things on the internet and I don’t need them until the night stands come in anyway. I need to decide on curtain hardware too.

I also went on vacation but I didn’t take any pictures of that.