Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Stop BSL!
This issue isn't just applied to pitties; German Shepherd Dogs, Dobermans, Rotties and many other breeds are banned. Places ban the dogs based on their breed, not on the individual dog. It's like saying that every person from France should be banned from the US because one mugged you only this is resulting in animals being killed.
I am begging everyone I know to register at the following website and vote to ban BSL. The idea of this site is that the top three issues will be passed on to Obama once he is in office to change the US. Right now, BSL is in 4th place and voting ends tonight at midnight.
http://www.change.org/ideas/view/ban_breed_specific_legislation
Saturday, December 27, 2008
So.Much.Anxiety!
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
I'm leavin' on a tra-ain . . .
Sunday in Portland was snowy. Portland got about half an inch of snow or so. Of course that pretty much means that the entire city got shut down. Because you know, Portland doesn't get snow. They don't have snowplows. I don't think they even salt or sand the roads. People run to the store and fight over things like bread and milk and toilet paper. It's like NC all over again. So Jeff and I left a little bit early to get to the train station thinking it would take a bit of extra time.
The smart handled very well in the snow. But it wasn't really that bad, all things considered. I'm sure Portland-ites think it was bad. I know that for a fact, actually, because once we got close to Portland there were signs saying that chains were required in the metro area. Jeff and I laughed the whole way into town after seeing four wheel drive trucks pull over to put tires on their trucks with the whole half an inch of snow on the ground. *snorts* It seems I'm still giggling about it. :)
So right now I'm just outside of Grand Springs, Colorado. The ride has been absolutely amazing so far. It's pretty much been snowy everywhere I've been, except for Sacramento. Portland is beautiful without snow, but it's amazing with snow. The Sierra Nevada Mountains and plateaus and canyons and gorges are beautiful without snow. But they're incredible with. I can't wait until I get into Denver tonight. Going through the Rockies is going to be fun!
I would like to thank my awesome Jeff for rigging up a method of making my phone work as my modem for my laptop. As long as I have cell service I have dial-up speeds or faster internet for the most part. It's not perfect and doesn't always work. But it's been good enough so far!
Monday, December 1, 2008
My decorating skills of awesome
So here's Mitzie, pretending she was alive when Jesus was born. She's always been sad that there aren't cats in Nativity scenes.
And here's our tree. I dislike artificial trees a lot. So the only one I'll ever have is one that doesn't try to look like a real tree. I think ours fits that bill.
We're meeting our new petsitter today at noon (which it nearly is). So enough blogging for me!
Oops! I forgot these!
So about that cheesecake . . .
I made it.
It was amazing.
It was a brownie mosaic cheesecake.
Here is the recipe.
You should try it.
It looks hard and time consuming, but it's not. And it goes even faster if you use a brownie mix. We used a Whole Foods brand one that was completely amazing. It had chocolate chips in it. And little crunchy yummy bits. I highly recommend it. Plus I'm pretty sure it called for butter instead of eggs and oil. How do you go wrong with butter?
I'm copy and pasting the recipe in so I'll never lose it. But it came from this blog that one of the Amazing Ladies found.
Brownie Mosaic Cheesecake
Adapted wildly from A Piece of Cake, by Susan G. Purdy via Eat
Part One: One Bowl Brownies
Adapted from Baker’s One Bowl Brownies
4 ounces unsweetened chocolate (Baker’s chocolate, optional of course)
3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) butter
1 3/4cups sugar
3 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup flour
Preheat oven to 350°F. Line 13×9-inch baking pan with foil, with ends of foil extending over sides of pan. Grease foil.
Microwave chocolate and butter in large microwaveable bowl on HIGH 2 min. or until butter is melted. Stir until chocolate is completely melted. Stir in sugar. Blend in eggs and vanilla. Add flour and salt; mix well. Spread into prepared pan.
Bake 30 to 35 minute or until toothpick inserted in center comes out with fudgy crumbs. (Do not overbake.) Cool in pan on wire rack. Remove brownies from pan, using foil handles.
Cool brownies, then cut* them into 3/4- to 1-inch squares for use in the cheesecake. You will have more than the two cups of cubes, loosely measured, than you will need, and I’m sorry, you’re just going to have to decide for yourself what to do with the extra. Add cubes to cake batter as directed below.
* I find that brownies are fantastically easy to cut once they’ve been refrigerated–you end up with nice clean lines, and in this case, a sharp pizza wheel was especially helpful. Also, brownies taste better cold. I’m just saying.
Part Two: Crumb Crust
Recipe adapted from Gourmet, 1999
I like a doubled crumb crust. I can’t get enough cookie. Below are proportions for one crust with the amounts to double the recipe in parentheses. You know you wanna.
1 1/2 cups or 5 ounces (3 cups or 10 ounces to double) finely ground cookies such as chocolate wafers. Or Chocolate Teddy Grahams.
5 tablespoons (10 tablespoons to double) unsalted butter, melted
1/3 cup (2/3 cup to double) sugar
1/8 (1/4 teaspoon to double) teaspoon salt
Stir together crust ingredients and press onto bottom and 1 inch up side of a buttered 24-centimeter springform pan. Fill right away or chill up to 2 hours.
Part Three: Cheesecake
Three Cities of Spain Coffeehouse
3 (8-oz) packages cream cheese, softened
4 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup sugar
Make crumb crust as directed above for 24-centimeter cheesecake. Preheat oven to 350°F.
Make filling and bake cake: Beat cream cheese with an electric mixer until fluffy and add eggs, 1 at a time, then vanilla and sugar, beating on low speed until each ingredient is incorporated and scraping down bowl between additions.
Fold brownie cubes in very gently and pour mixture into prepared pan. Put springform pan with crust in a shallow baking pan. Pour filling into crust and bake in baking pan (to catch drips) in middle of oven 45 minutes, or until cake is set 3 inches from edge but center is still slightly wobbly when pan is gently shaken.
When completely cool, top with following glaze.
Part Four: Ganache Glaze
From Purdy’s original recipe
3 oz. bittersweet chocolate, broken up, or 1/2 cup chocolate morsels
2 oz. butter
1/4 cup heavy cream
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon confectioners sugar
Grind the chocolate into powder in the food processor, scald the butter and cream in a saucepan (or in a Pyrex cup in the microwave). With the machine running, pour the hot cream/butter mixture slowly through the feed tube onto the chocolate. Blend until completely smooth, stopping machine to scrape down sides once or twice. Add the extract and sugar and process until smooth. Spread over cheesecake while ganache is still warm. Chill until ready to serve.
And in case you're interested, this is what the cheesecake looked like after cooking but before ganache-ing.
I lowered the temperature of the oven to 325, if I remember right since ours is sort of a convection oven and things need to cook lower and shorter in it. And I also put it in a water bath. I'm not sure I'll do that again. Some of the butter melted up around the edges of the cheesecake and I freaked out the whole time thinking it was water. It's terrifying thinking your foil-proof lined pan (haha, get it? pan? lined in foil? foil proof? It's OK, in the words of one of my favorite customers at CVS Mary B. "I don't think I'm that funny sometimes, either.") leaked and ruined your cheesecake.
This is what it looked like post ganach-ing.
There aren't any more pictures. For obvious reasons (eating is more important than pictures).All right, first things first.
This is Homer. He's a smart fortwo Passion. He has heated seats. See how little he is compared to a Taurus? I love to parallel park him. And that's saying a lot because normally I don't parallel park. I just keep driving around until I find a spot I don't have to do that in.
See the panoramic roof? It pretty much covers the whole top of the car. It doesn't open which is why we don't currently have two passions. Instead we just have Homer and will soon have an order in on a cabriolet. What? Homer needs a friend to keep him company in the parking spot. Did you know you can fit two smarts in the same spot? You can also fit them in a parking spot sideways. We haven't done that yet. But we did make our own parking spot the other night and probably ticked somebody off because they parked poorly and thought they could get away with it.
There's a lot of room in there. Homer is mostly Jeff's. They didn't have a smart that I wanted in stock. Not exactly, anyway. But they had one coming in that Jeff would have chosen for himself if he'd had one built so we went with it. Homer is super fun to drive. He has a manual transmission that's controlled by a computer. Which means we get over 30mpg in town and 4o on the highway. And if we want to shift we can, but we certainly don't have to. And there's no clutch or any of that rolling-backwards-down-a-hill-so-you-can-go-up-it-after-being-stopped-business.
Why is it named Homer?
Because it is a smart. S-M-R-T. That's what I hope to get on a license plate. ;)
I've been decorating!
What, you don't believe me?
That's OK, I wouldn't believe me either.
Since I don't really remember what happened in November for the most part, because it wasn't very exciting. Oh! Hey, now I remember why I haven't blogged in a million years.
Animal Crossing: City Folk (otherwise known as crack) came out. I've pretty much been filling up my spare time playing the Wii all day long. It's got a cool feature where it will take a picture and save it to an SD card, so I'll post pictures someday.
Anyway, the only other things I remember about November are food. Thanksgiving, mostly. Jeff and I drove up to Uncle J's in Spokane, Washington to celebrate with him. It was a lot of fun! We had turkey, potatoes, stuffing, pumpkin pie, corn, cheesecake and Uncle J made the gravy. I was so excited. :)
It seems I have some thought organizing and picture organizing to do, so I'll be back shortly. ;)