21 September 2005
Barbecue Sauce
On the other hand, many condiments I just buy. Take mayonnaise for example. I know how to make it, I have made it on occasion, but generally I find it more convenient to put a jar into the shopping cart. I've never made mustard or ketchup, and while they're easy enough, they fall into the same laziness category as mayo.
One condiment that I love is barbecue sauce. There are a few I like out there, but on the whole, commercially made barbecue sauces aren't all that great. For the past few years I've been experimenting with my own recipe. Lest anyone think I've devoted huge amounts of time to this enterprise, my consumption of barbecue sauce is quite small, and a 1 litre batch lasts me quite a long time. That disclaimer aside, I've dabbled with barbecue sauce making about half a dozen times.
I needed some earlier this week, and I decided not only to make a batch, but to be bold and experimental and just wing it.
Well, hot damn, if I didn't make the best barbecue sauce I've ever made. I wrote the recipe down in my kitchen journal and it's now my official canonical barbecue sauce. Sweet yet spicy with just the right amount tang and smoke (and for the record, I didn't use any liquid smoke), and best of all, the right consistency. Previous sauces were on the runny side. This stuff is perfect.
No, I'm not going to post the recipe. :-)
Zut Alors!
There are many reasons... but the main one is money.
The course, three weeks in Scotland, is $3,800 per person. This was only a little bit more than I expected (I was expecting in the realm of $3,200-3,400 for the whole thing, but the $3,800 figure would have included a rental car at my family's disposal so my wife and daughter could do something off-tour).
The $3,800 includes the following: all travel within Scotland, all accomodations, all breakfasts and dinners, most lunches (but the places we would have stayed in had kitchenette facilities), and admissions to all the various sites on the itinerary. Not bad value for the money! I must hasten to add that SFU travel study is run on a cost-recovery basis - that is, there's no "profit" margin built into that price. If I went out to replicate the itinerary day for day, I would probably even end up paying more since I wouldn't be getting any group rates.
But outside the base price, the costs started to escalate. Airfare, what's currently available for the dates in question, was going to add about $3,400 to the mix. I know that you can get $600-700 flights to Glasgow from Vancouver right now at flightcentre.ca, but that's for travel in the very near future. Come May, those fares might still hold, but I'm not willing to take the risk.
Then there's the unfortunate surprise that in order to get course credit for it, I would have to pay the tuition equivalent to one course, which, factoring in textbooks, adds another $1,000. I should have expected the need to pay tuition above and beyond, but still...
A $12,000 commitment before even buying one dram of whisky in a Scottish pub.
$12,000 is "trip of a lifetime" money.
I'm sure Scotland is a beautiful country (and my wife assures me it is), but it's not a trip of a lifetime destination.
So no travel study this year. As I won't be done my MA until 2008, there's always the summer of 2007's travel study trip, wherever it might be. Last year's trip was four weeks in Italy and Switzerland; this year is the Scottish trip; next year's is yet to be announced, but will undoubtedly be somewhere in Europe again.
20 September 2005
Teacher Teacher, What Can You Teach Me?
Indeed, from the newpaper headline hyperbole level and the shrieking harpies on radio call in shows, you'd think they were already on strike when they haven't even had the vote yet; a strike vote is being held by the BC Teachers Federation BCTF starting today, we should know the results by the end of the week.
The only thing missing is parents on the human interest segment of the evening news wailing "Think of the children! Oh, won't somebody please think of the children!"
I've been following this story a little more closely than I might have in the past since my daughter would be starting school around the time the next contract would theoretically be due to expire, assuming they have a three year deal in place like most public contracts tend to be.
Some facts first. For over a decade now, there has not been a negotiated settlement between the BCTF and the Public School Employers Association (PSEA). Every single contract has been legislated by the provincial government. Yesterday, the government appointed a "fact finder" to hopefully find some middle ground, as the PSEA has said they and the BCTF are at an irreconcilable impasse.
The PSEA is offering 0%, 0%, and, no drum roll required, 0%. A friend and classmate in my grad program is a teacher in Burnaby and she said that she has not had a raise in 5 years. I'm not going to dig into the details to see if there were some benefits improvement in that time, but I think that this fits my recollection of the past few teacher deals. The PSEA claims the BCTF is demanding over 35% in wages and benefits increases.
The BCTF for its part says that the figure is both ridiculous and contrived, seeing as they haven't even tabled their demands. They did say yesterday that they are looking to get a cost of living increase and also some level of parity with Alberta and Saskatchewan, both of whom pay a fair bit more than BC does.
I know it's popular to bash the public sector as both lazy and greedy, but a 0-0-0 offer sucks. I got a 2% raise last year, and about the same the year before that, and will probably get something along the same lines next year. If I can get a 2% raise, then why can't they? Oh, right, I forgot, these are lazy greedy public trough feeders. Never mind that it would probably mean fewer opportunities for the government to give tax cuts to the rich.
Those who are facing the possibility of a strike from the student side of the equation are trotting out the same tired old arguments: teachers shouldn't be allowed to strike because they're an essential service (like nurses I guess - someone might die!); the burden on families who suddenly have to take care of the kids because there's no school (and what did you do this summer?); and the best one I've heard, "there are no other options, the school system is a monopoly!"
The last one is no joke, I heard that one this morning on my way in to work from none other than the parents association (what was once called the PTA, but I don't recall offhand what the acronym is these days). They should know better - with the number of home-schooled children on a steady rise and the availability of private schools (albeit for those who can afford it), it's a bald faced lie; it gets good headlines though.
I also love the statements you often hear that teachers don't work that many hours and have all those vacation days in the summer. I'm not a teacher myself, but I know several people who are or have been, and they work harder and put in more hours than I do. Another argument that's been popular, especially on the facile yes-no radio call in shows is that if the teachers don't like it, they should quit and get another job.
You know what? The best, brightest, most creative, and most talented teachers have been doing just that. They're leaving because they've had enough and they're smart and talented enough to get something else. Some might even have stayed in teaching in a private school, but most will have left the profession entirely.
Great! The best and brightest are leaving because they can, leaving the average ones, the truly dedicated ones, the fresh from university ones, and the ones too close to retirement to quit. Need we mention the thankfully small minority who might love to leave but can't because they aren't one of the best and brightest?
This isn't the system I want for my daughter, or for the people who will be teaching her. We pay a lot of lip service to how important teachers are, and how important our kids are for the future. I guess lip service will have to do since there doesn't appear to be any cash coming.
19 September 2005
Arr Me Mateys!
If you need help getting into the mood, head over to fidius.org and get your Pirate name.
I'm Dirty Roger Kidd. Y'arr!!! My daughter's Iron Ethel Flint, and my wife's Mad Dog Flint. Flint's they may be, but they're part of the Kidd clan now, y'arrrrr!!!
16 September 2005
Advanced Education Redux
While I wrote here yesterday about the UCFV press release, one thing I did not mention is that I wrote to the UCFV communications office. In my email to them, I said essentially what I wrote here yesterday – that they could have phrased things a little better.
Jane Jacobs in her book Dark Age Ahead writes about what I’ll dub credential creep; what used to be elite education (a university degree) has increasingly become mass education. With the societal push for everyone to become a certified whatever, the piece of paper has almost become more relevant than the skill it’s supposed to certify.
It’s only reasonable that universities (and university colleges, and community colleges, and anyone who can hang out a sign saying “get a certificate in …”) are trying to get a piece of the action.
I won’t reproduce the entire UCFV response here, but I will highlight a few passages.
“The evolution of universities from university-colleges is not unprecedented. UBC was once a university-college under the auspices of McGill University; UVic was once a university-college under the auspices of UBC. …. We believe that this natural development will increase the credibility of our degrees, including those that have gone before.”
That, ladies and gentlemen, is what how I feel they should have said it in the first place.
One other excerpt:
“Over the years we have had to verify the value of our degrees to various places that did not know what a university college is. For example, President Bassford has written to graduate schools explaining that we are full members of AUCC, that we are a public BC institution and that our programs are all vetted and approved by the province's ministry of advanced education. There simply is a tendency for many people to rate a credential more highly if it has the "university" name attached to it. This is truly unfortunate, because the situation is one of perception rather than reality.”
I wish them success in their campaign. Hopefully they'll come up with a suitable name - anything except Fraser University!
15 September 2005
Advanced Education
My Alma Mater, the University College of the Fraser Valley (UCFV) had a press release today stating they wish to ascend to full university status, much like the former University College of the Cariboo is now Thompson River University. The full text of the press release is here.
There is one part of the press release that irked me, namely the statement from Skip Bassford, president of UCFV, that “changing the name would increase the credibility of degrees earned by our graduates, [emphasis mine] enhance our reputation nationally and internationally, and simply make it easier for people to understand what we do.”
Now hang on a minute. What exactly is being said here? Is the implication that somehow I wasted my tuition money and school time by not going to a “real” university? Good thing I’m getting a masters degree at Simon Fraser University! Who knows what would have happened to my education if I’d attended a school that wasn’t “credible”.
Ok, I am engaging in a bit of hyperbole here, but the point remains. I went to UCFV for many reasons, not the least of which being that they were a degree granting institution covered under the University Act. The importance in attending a recognized institution is to ensure yourself and others that you didn’t get involved with some fly-by-night organization that may not give you a worthwhile education.
A Ministry of Education website says, “Students in British Columbia have many institutions and programs to choose from. Whether you decide on a public institution or a private institution, it is your responsibility as a student to ensure the program and institution you choose is a good fit with your educational priorities and expectations.” [emphasis mine]
I agree wholeheartedly with this. Apart from getting the education you want in the first place, I don’t see why college vs. university-college vs. university should be a make or break issue.
A former professor of mine at UCFV also puts this spin on it, “While I do think that there is modest attention paid to the place in which one studies, in my opinion, the real value in becoming a degreed person in our society has more to do with the qualities of the person one becomes through the process, than does the name of the institution that one attended, or, for that matter, with whom one studies. It is not that these latter things are of no consequence. But attending a 'recognized' institution or program is often a 'sufficient' condition for one's future, but a more 'necessary' condition is the judgment about who that person became through the process. Some of you who have been with me in class may recognize my distinction between ‘getting a degree’ and ‘becoming degreed’.” [emphasis mine]
Of course, I’m probably getting irked for nothing. UCFV is trying to become a full-fledged university with all its attendant trappings. The comment that somehow this will make their degree more “credible” is just marketing spin, plain and simple. Still, they could have at least tried to spin it without demeaning the alumni and the institution!
UCFV is a great place, really. I enjoyed my time there even if the commute from Vancouver was sometimes tedious, and the quality of instruction was fabulous. I wish them every success in continuing to serve the needs of BC students.
14 September 2005
Lamb
I was told today my lamb is at the butcher's, and that I'd be getting a call soon for cutting instructions.
The cutting's being done by Davis Meats on Mt. Lehman Road in Abbotsford and they are splendid. They know their meats, they know their cuts, and if you want the "offal", namely the liver and bones and all that, they're more than happy to package it all up for you (unlike many places).
$3.49 for whole lamb, top quality, cut the way I like. YUM!
I can hardly wait for my side of pork, coming next month!
13 September 2005
The Sweet Smell of ... Smoke?
I can’t abide cigarette smoke (although pot is far far worse on my scale of unpleasant scents), yet I generally like the smell of pipe smoke and a very small selection of cigars. In general, I find smoky hazy places uncomfortable and unpleasant.
I mention this in passing because Burns Bog is on fire and a pall of smoke haze and a gentle rain of ash is settling over the lower mainland. It has irritated the asthma of several people I know, and has been quite irritating to those colleagues of mine who live in the vicinity of the bog.
Still, when I went out at lunch yesterday I couldn’t help thinking the aroma, while cloying, was not unpleasant. Indeed, there was certain sweetness in it, and I found myself smacking my lips a little and thinking food thoughts.
It wasn’t until last night that it struck me – of course! Single malt! The sweet peaty aroma reminded me of scotch.
Figures. Most people find the smoke from the fire annoying, and here I am finding something pleasant about it.
Into the culinary realm, I like many smoked foods, from pretty much everything available at the JN&Z Deli, to my dad’s smoked salmon, locally available apple wood smoked cheddar, and I’ve even made tea smoked chicken. On my list of things to build, buy, or find is a smoker I can use in my back yard.
Maybe I can sneak some peat and test it out on a batch of sausages.
09 September 2005
Singing All Day
Singing all day, singing 'bout nothing,
Singing all day, singing 'bout nothing,
Oh, my, my, my, oh, my, my, my.
Jethro Tull, “Singing All Day”,
from the album Living in the Past
Last night was the first class of my Opera in Context course, and it was a lot of fun. The professor, Rodney, is absolutely passionate about music and it’s a joy and a pleasure to listen to him. It’s going to be a great semester.
One thing we talked about, tangential to opera per se, but relevant even so was – when and why do we sing? After all, in opera, there is a lot of singing (and dialogue, and melodrama, and recitative)
If you think about it, we seldom sing at all anymore. We sing to children (although Rodney mentioned on his last trip to Toronto, he saw advertisements for a course for new mothers to learn how to sing to their children). We sing “Happy Birthday”. We might sometimes sing at a funeral or a wake or similar situation.
But in our quotidian lives, we hardly ever sing.
For myself, I like singing, even though I have no training and possibly sing off key – still, I don’t see why I shouldn’t indulge in such a simple pleasure. Maybe more of us should!
06 September 2005
"New Orleans is sinking man and I don't wanna swim"
One of the nice things about my summer vacation was that I missed most of the news, had no internet access until I got home, and only was peripherally aware of what was going on in the world.
The hurricane that has simply become known as the disaster named Katrina did a lot of damage, including to the levies that protected New Orleans.
New Orleans was once a beautiful city. It's too bad that I didn't have the opportunity to visit before its essential destruction.
But here a comment; to the mayor of New Orleans, the governor of Louisiana, and the US feds, who have all said "we will rebuild!", don't.
Don't dig out the mud and toxic sludge that was once a city. There are times to wipe the slate clean and start again, and this is one of them. The New Orleans of old is gone. The French Quarter is destroyed, rebuild it above sea level.
It won't cost any more to build anew than to rebuild, and it will be better. Let the sea wash away what's left and build on higher ground.
05 September 2005
What I Did On My Summer Vacation
Ah, summer vacation. It’s a time when you get to flee the city and the domestica that commands your time even when you're not actually working. In theory, you get to decompress and enjoy yourself.
We were all more than ready for a break. It had been far too long since we'd fled the confines of the city and home and we started our trip with several days in Logan Lake.
Logan Lake is a small town about half an hour from Kamloops. It was originally built to house the workers at the Ashcroft mine, but nowadays only 10% of the residents work at the mine. Many people are starting to flee the rising real estate prices in Kamloops and looking to Logan Lake a bedroom community. What might have been a $150K home as little ago as March would now sell in the $200K range, although that's still cheap by Vancovuer standards.
We went to visit my friend D, who retired there from Victoria and is really enjoying the rural life. It's close enough to the "big city" (Kamloops being the 3rd largest city in BC after Vancouver and Victoria) for all the amenities one might need, and far enough away that two or three cars is a lot of traffic. It's also higher up in the hills so even though it can get almost as hot as Kamloops during the day, it cools off quite nicely at night. Even so, it seldom snows in winter and doesn't get much below -10C.
It's really a nice small town, and I hope that by the time I want to retire and flee the large city for something a little quieter, that I end up in a place like that.
There are several provincial parks in the area, including many lakes, and the amount of wildlife to be seen is quite lovely. I had some fun trying out "quadding" for the first time ever - riding one of those 4WD ATV's. They have a lot of torque and can take you over some amazing terrain, and they don't behave one bit like motorcycles...
On the subject of provincial parks, there are several of them between Vancouver and Kamloops off the Coquihalla highway, but there are no signs! We had thought it would be nice to stop for lunch in one of them along the way to visit Logan Lake. Perhaps some of the tolls could be rolled into some signage? Hello!
My good friend is working on a travel photography book, and I think he's eminently qualified – he’s been shooting between 125-150 rolls of film a year for about 40 years now, and if anyone has an opinion about photos and their relative quality, it'll be him.
He's broken down and purchased a digital camera, a Canon D20, which he considers, compared to his Leica film cameras, a piece of junk. However, he knows that just like VHS won over Beta, digital photography has won over film. Indeed, he is finding it difficult to get film processed these days; it’s very quickly becoming a niche market. Many of the premium films have vanished, B&W film is becoming hard to find; in short, an era is passing (if not already gone).
My good friend C, who was best man at my wedding, is also a shutterbug. He says that every time he spends a few days with me, he has an overwhelming urge to cook for about two weeks afterwards. I take it as a great compliment. Similarly, D has the same effect on me with respect to photography. I sometimes regret not buying that used Leica he had for sale.
Having recovered from city life in the country, we spent a pleasant half-day traveling to Summerland on Lake Okanagan. My daughter had a delightful time at the beach, and we bought some “eat now!” plums and pears, more than we could possibly eat, for only $1 per bag.
We only stayed one night in Summerland and then headed south to Oliver, with a shopping stop in Penticton on the way. Penticton is home to the best used bookstore in BC in my opinion. I haven’t encountered any other shops with as much selection as they do. I bought a biography of Orwell, the complete works of Oscar Wilde, and a book called The Turk about a mechanical chess playing machine from the early 1800’s.
Oliver is a beautiful small town; we’ve stayed there several times on getaways. It bills itself as the wine capital of Canada, and given the plethora of vineyards in the area, it would be hard to argue with them.
The treat of the entire trip was staying at the guesthouse at the Tinhorn Creek Winery. We had a gift certificate for a two night stay there – a good friend gave it to us because she doesn’t drink wine, but I think had she known she might not have cared. The house was beautiful! Expansive views of the valley, nestled right among the vines (Syrah was closest to the house), a pool, and more square feet than our place in Vancouver, even though it was a one bedroom. Just to make things complete, our names were on the sign as you entered the winery tasting room, “Tinhorn welcomes its special guests…” If that weren’t enough, there were two bottle of wine for us in the house – their pinot noir, which is good, and a chardonnay.
Now, I’m not a huge chardonnay fan; indeed, as a rule I avoid it. Tinhorn’s was very drinkable though and I daresay I liked it! One of the few chardonnays I like.
Tinhorn does make my favourite BC Gewürztraminer, and their reds are also very nice. I particularly liked the Oldfield Collection Merlot and bought some for the cellar. I signed up for their “Crush Club”, which means I get a 15% discount on all their wines (and any merchandise with their logo) and twice a year I’ll be getting six bottle of wine delivered to my house – whites in spring, reds in fall.
Dinner, with a gorgeous view, was accompanied by the pinot. The next morning, after a leisurely breakfast (with a gorgeous view!), we spent the day in Osoyoos at the beach. It was a delight to let my little gal play in the sand, and the water, and then the sand again, and then the water. She’s a real delight.
That evening, we went for a walk among the vines along the trail that runs through the winery and encountered two of the dogs who live there. Zoe, a friendly border collie, accompanied us up and down the hill and at one point wandered on ahead, went into the vines and started barking. She then scampered back to us and stood beside us as a black face popped out among the rows of syrah – a bear! A cute fuzzy, um, wild, black bear. It was pretty small and given there was a notice that a bear and her cub had been spotted along the trail, it was a good bet this was the cub.
The bear didn’t like our singing so went off into the vines and Zoe walked us back to the house (good dog!). It was splendid.
We also saw other wildlife including a brown and green praying mantis, a pileated woodpecker, quails by the dozen, and many other birds.
The second morning we had pancakes and bacon for breakfast on the deck with a gorgeous view.
Did I mention the view? Spectacular.
We found out during our sojourn that the guesthouse is not available for rent. The absentee owners use it when they’re in town, and they also make it available to folks in the wine trade (by invitation only). Sometimes, they give a gift certificate for a stay to a charity auction – that’s what we had. Maybe they’ll invite us back.
The trip back was uneventful. We stopped at the always interesting Grist Mill museum in Keremeos and had a chance to enjoy a nice picnic lunch and see the latest discoveries on the site. The grist mill was on the Klondike gold rush route and is a mill constructed with belt and pulley systems instead of gears. It was all for the sake of expediency! It's truly a worth a visit if you're in the area. My one disappointment is that they no longer sell the flour they mill there - instead they have flour from ... Chilliwack!
We spent the weekend at my parents place and let them get their fill of playing with their granddaughter. She pulled out all the stops and was her delightful charming best.
We arrived back in Vancouver on Sunday, late in the afternoon, and unpacked an astounding amount of stuff from the car. Who knew you could pack so much into a small car?
Now if only I had more vacation time. Another 48 weeks would suit me fine!
26 August 2005
Wine Country
Part of the pleasure of going to wine country is sampling. One blog I particularly enjoy reading talked about wine tastings and asked "what wine tasting type are you?" I laughed when I read it since I've seen all those types at various wine and food events I've been to; it was the laugh of recognition. I myself like to live in mostly in the Happy Drinker category, but I also have enough interest about wines and personal edification that I am also frequently to be found in the Student group.
I don't know how many wineries we might get to with a 16 month old in tow, but I will at least be able to report back on Tinhorn Creek as we'll be spending a few nights in their guest facilities.
BC has come a long way with their wines and indeed, there are some truly spectacular wines to be had.
22 August 2005
Soup!
As I mentioned yesterday, I made veal stock. I ended up with 17 liters of it when all was said and done.
Stock is a wonderful thing. It’s amazingly versatile. You can cook rice or vegetables in it and they will taste richer without having added any fat or many calories. It’s a great base for sauces of all kinds, and I love what Bourdain calls dinosaur sauces (the old fashioned kind with a roux base).
Best of all though, I now have plenty of stock to keep me going this fall and winter with soup; nothing like a nice bowl of hot soup on a cold wet rainy slimy day in late autumn.
I won’t even resist the pun – my freezer’s well stocked!
Memphis Blues
If you like barbecue, as in slow cooked southern style ribs and all the fixings, then run, don’t walk, to Memphis Blues. They have two locations, one on Broadway near Granville (east of Granville), and one on Commercial Drive north of 1st. I live closer to the latter and although the former is the original restaurant, I think the latter does it better. Don’t know why that should be, but there you go.
Memphis Blues is not a place to be a vegetarian. Everything has meat in it. The collard greens (the one thing I’ve tried there I haven’t liked) have meat in them. The beans have meat. The coleslaw and potato salad don’t have meat, but I wouldn’t risk feeding it to a vegetarian even so. It’s a carnivore’s paradise!
If you’re on your own, I highly recommend the classic pulled pork sandwich with all the trimmings. If you’re feeding a small group (4 say), get the Memphis platter, which has a sampling of everything – sausage, ribs, short ribs, roast chicken, pulled pork, beef brisket, beans, corn bread, seasoned fries, coleslaw, potato salad, and barbecue sauce. Larger groups, say 6-8 will get by with the Elvis platter, which is the Memphis platter with double the meat.
The food there is delicious! Serve with lots of beer and a stack of napkins.
21 August 2005
M^HTaking Stock
It's funny, but having taken the trouble to attend my 20th high school reunion, I've been thinking about what the heck I've managed to accomplish since those days of potential, when theoretically all options were open to me...
I started an engineering degree, which turned into a comp sci degree, which turned into giving up on the university experience altogether, although that in itself took several years and many thousands of dollars. No surprise really; although I had graduated high school with honours, looking at my transcript from those days, all my A's were in literature, French, German, English, ... and all my B's were in computer science, math, physics, chemistry... Let's just say that my undergrad grades from those days were atrocious.
I had a series of part and full time jobs doing things that were interesting and fun; at one point I had one full time night job and two extensive part time jobs at the same time. There was one week where I went literally from one to the next with no break in between followed by a scant opportunity to sleep, and culminated with a sleep of the dead.
I muddled along happily enough.
But then I had enough of just muddling along and decided to go back to school. I'd picked the program I wanted to do at UCFV in Abbotsford, was making plans on how I was going to pitch it to my parents whose basement I would have had to live in for the duration, even though it would have meant a commute from their place in Chilliwack.
That was right around the time opportunity knocked and I damn ripped the door off its hinges to let it in; I was hired by a high tech company in Vancouver in the winter of 1998, a balmy west coast February, and they required me to have a BA but as part of the benefits package, paid for it.
Life's been pretty rosy ever since. Finished the BA with honours in 2002. Got married a month after graduation to TOIL (the one I love :-). Was laid off by the company that brought me to Vancouver in September and was still an official employee there the day my current employer hired me. Bought a home in Vancouver four or five months after that. Delighted father of a beautiful daughter a touch over a year after that. Started graduate school when she was four months old. I'm looking forward to her being one of the cute little kids that hands their parents flowers when they walk off the podium after getting their degree.
So here I am, making a lovely veal stock, living a modest lifestyle in the beautiful city of Vancouver, working for a high tech company with an education degree and working on a liberal arts masters.
La vie est belle.
18 August 2005
A Poetic Salad
This little gem popped into my mailbox today…
Recipe for a Salad
Sydney Smith
To make this condiment your poet begs
The pounded yellow of two hard-boil'd eggs;
Two boiled potatoes, passed through kitchen seive,
Smoothness and softness to the salad give.
Let onion atoms lurk within the bowl,
And, half-suspected, animate the whole.
Of mordant mustard add a single spoon,
Distrust the condiment that bites so soon;
But deem it not, thou man of herbs, a fault
To add a double quantity of salt;
Four times the spoon with oil of Lucca crown,
And twice with vinegar procur'd from town;
And lastly o'er the flavour'd compound toss
A magic soupcon of anchovy sauce.
Oh, green and glorious! Oh, herbaceous treat!
Twould tempt the dying anchorite to eat;
Back to the world he'd turn his fleeting soul,
And plunge his fingers in the salad-bowl!
Serenely full, the epicure would say,
`Fate cannot harm me, I have dined today.
16 August 2005
Pondok Indonesia
I can say I'm sorry I waited so long! While three dishes (satay chicken, a spicy beef stew, and mixed vegetables, plus two orders of rice) came to almost $40, it was an ample quantity for the two of us and it was all delicious.
The satay particularly impressed me - this was no simple peanut butter based peanut sauce but rather a rich complex sauce that kept my palate guessing as to the next flavour that would burst onto my tongue.
The beef stew (Rendang Sapi) was hot, but not the burning heat of chilis like you might get from Szechuan cuisine; while it packed the same punch, the other herbs and seasonings in the dish mitigated the chili oil and left a pleasant taste and feeling behind.
Even the mixed vegetables were exceptionally flavourful and cooked just so.
Highly recommended and a new favourite local locale!
14 August 2005
"You haven't changed a bit!"
As we were heading out, J's daughter asked "why do you have to go out again?"
J: We're going to a reunion.
E: What's a reunion?
J: Your mother can tell you all about it, but it's a meeting for people who knew each other once upon a time.
The event was at Swans, which is one of the brewpubs in Victoria.
I had a great time. I reconnected with a few people who were in the "I wonder what happened to..." camp, and had my general curiosity satisfied about how everyone turned out. Of the roughly 50 people who turned up, most were married, some were divorced, many had kids but not all. Several people were, like me, doing a masters degree of one kind or another. In short, results you might expect from a random group of people if you were to do a study.
Kierkegaard said "Life must be understood backwards; but... it must be lived forward."
What surprised me the most was how far some people had come to attend. From Vancouver, it's a plausible trip, but people had come from various cities in Alberta and as far away as Saskatchewan.
Of course, despite being 20 years older, everyone kept saying, as they recognized yet another face "You haven't changed a bit!"
That's why we go to reunions. Because for just a brief slice of time, we get to revisit the fork in the road...
12 August 2005
To Boldly Go...
Tonight I’m heading to Victoria for my 20th high school reunion.
If you asked me why, I would be hard pressed to give you an answer save perhaps “I missed the 10 year reunion”, which happened while I was still living in Victoria.
So why am I going?
There’s a series of documentary films, the first of which is called “7 Up!” In 1964, the filmmaker took a group of children, all age 7, and has since revisited them every seven years to see where they are. I watched “35 Up” and it compelling viewing, even though I didn’t know any of the people being documented.“ 42 Up” is the latest and possibly final installment.
So, if nothing else, I’m curious as to how other people turned out. High school at the time I experienced it was a pressure cooker. Every situation was the Most Important Life Event Thing Ever™! Everything that happened was writ large; of course, the perspective of time makes one realize that high school is merely a phase in life, and a rather insignificant one at that.
Of the 203 grads of 1985, there’s only one with whom I have anything one might call regular contact; I was best man at his wedding oh so many years ago (1990? 91? See, I can’t even remember), and we exchange Christmas emails and birth announcements. That’s roughly the extent of it. My good friend S who’s back in town at Emily Carr is a friend from high school days, but he graduated the year before me.
The woman who was our student council president in 1985 is organizing this 20th reunion; as I browsed through my yearbook last night before bed, reading the little blurbs beside photos of the grads of 2005, I noticed next to her entry that she hoped to become the first female prime minister of Canada. I said I wanted to “design a popular computer” and “make gobs of money”.
And yet, here I go, to meet people who are essentially strangers to see how their lives turned out. I wasn't one of the popular kids in school; indeed, I was one of the nerdy geeks in the enriched program.
Oh well; it’s being held at Swans, a fabulous brewpub I frequented while I was still living in Victoria. If nothing else, the beer will be good!
11 August 2005
Cheese Please!
“How can anyone be expected to govern a country with 325 cheeses?”
– General Charles De Gaulle
I love cheese. Among the many things my ancient French genetics have contributed, it’s my liking of all kinds of cheese, everything from hard cheeses like Gruyere and Gouda, to runny Camembert and soft Brie and the deliciously creamy Brillat-Savarin, to the really smelly cheeses like Roquefort and Livarot and Munster.
A couple summer ago, I made an off hand remark that my wife may never let me forget; I said BC cheeses “weren’t there yet”.
She took this to mean I didn’t care for the cheese she had asked me to purchase, but that was not it at all. At the time, the artisan cheese industry in BC was still in its youth; in start up mode you could say. They were producing all manner of things, experimenting and developing flavours for consumption by an eager public. While it was all a lot of fun to try these early efforts, compared to what you could get in Quebec (not that you can buy Quebec cheese here by and large, and a pity it is too) it was nothing special; and in terms of bang for the buck, it was hard for a BC soft cheese to compare to a soft cheese like Le Coutances from France when the latter not only tasted better but also cost less than the former!
Today, two summers later, I am happily eating those words – BC cheese has arrived. Every Saturday at the Farmer’s Market I’m buying curd (as good as anything I ever had in my youth in la belle province) from Little Qualicum Cheeseworks, who also make a very nice Brie and what they call Qualicum Spice, which is a Gouda style cheese infused with garlic, onion, and bell pepper. I love the Tiger Blue from Poplar Grove in the Okanagan. I like the sheep and goat cheeses that are available now too.
Prices for the local cheeses are also now very competitive with the imported stuff, the effect of both maturation of the industry and the strength of the Canadian dollar relative to the Euro.
BC truly is a foodie's paradise.
The Trout Lake Farmer’s Market on Saturdays usually has two cheese makers on site, but most of these cheeses are available from either La Grotta del Formaggio on Commercial Drive or at Les Amis du Fromage on 2nd between Fir & Burrard.
08 August 2005
A Liberal Education
One of the joys of a liberal education, and the term is being used here in the classic context of an interdisciplinary broad based schooling, is that you get to explore ideas, topics, and places that are not part of ones usual quotidian experience.
In the GLS program at SFU, they usually have a travel-study course during the summer. This year, a group went to Italy and Switzerland following the trail of the poet Shelley (among other things).
Next May, a group is going to Scotland – Islay, Isle of Skye, and Edinburgh (and points in between). My wife is keen on the idea, the prof escorting the trip has said my family is welcome to come along, my boss has said I can take the time off, and I get credit toward my degree. Three weeks sampling scotch, talking about literature, visiting sites with a professor who's contributing erudite lectures, I don’t think a liberal education gets better than that!
The Hundred Mile Diet Part Three
The Tyee has an ongoing series called the Hundred Mile Diet; they recently posted the third installment.
The third installment was one I quite enjoyed and could feel kinship with – YES! Finally talking about what’s possible and available locally instead of ranting about the evils of fossil fuels and globalization (both of which are facts of life, like gravity).
Peach season is finally upon us, the tail end of cherry and blueberry season is overlapping this nicely, and there is a bounty of fresh local produce available.
It’s a great time of year!
And once the local fruits and vegetables fade into fall and winter, we’ll start buying bananas and oranges again. Because they’ll be in season, even if they’re not local.
As I Please II...
After nearly a month of houseguests, first my friend S who stayed with us for two and a half weeks followed quickly by my in-laws for the past nine days, we finally have the house back to ourselves. I think it’ll take the next two weeks to recover enough to be fit to go on vacation at the end of the month. Sociable as I am, I am at heart an introvert and need some away-from-everyone time to recharge…
Why I Hate Buffets
Last Wednesday, there was a BBQ held at MOA for the ChemEd 2005 conference. Since my father in law and my wife were both presenting, and my father in law’s friend had a booth at the show, yours truly was a “registered participant” at the event so we all went.
ChemEd is an event for Chemistry teachers. From the outside looking in, I can’t say I was impressed with the event – the session my wife participated ostensibly for two hours when in fact it ended up only being booked for one hour and she had to do all the running around to change rooms an so forth when it wasn’t even her responsibility to do so. However, nobody else seemed interested in taking up the torch… Sigh.
Anyways, the BBQ…
The BBQ was of the usual variety – many buffet tables set up with food and a server at the end doling out the freshly grilled salmon.
The food was quite good, but it was definitely cattle call. There was a rush for seating and we didn’t sit with anyone we knew (not that we knew anyone anyways), there was a line for the food, there was negotiating two plates of food among the gaggle to get back to where my wife and daughter were. URGH!!!
I far prefer table service. I like to relax at my meals.
Culinary Capers
Saturday was a great day from a culinary perspective. My folks came for lunch to see their granddaughter (and visit with us and my in-laws) so I made pizza on the grill.
Pizza on the grill is really quite easy. You need pizza dough (of course), and whatever toppings you care to put on the pizza. We had pepperoni, green peppers, mushrooms, grated mozzarella, pizza sauce, thinly sliced onion, slivers of smoked side bacon from the JN&Z deli and sour cream with nutmeg. The latter three ingredients are for a favourite of mine, the classic Alasace tarte flambée.
To make pizza on the grill you need to make small pizza crusts about half a centimeter thick. Get your grill nice and hot, brush the crust with olive oil, and put it on. It will puff up, so be prepared to deflate it by poking it with your grill tongs. After a few minutes, brush the top with olive oil, flip it over, work quickly to put on your toppings (and only use a thin layer of them, otherwise they won’t cook) and then close the lid. After a few minutes, you have lovely thin crust pizza.
It’s easy, delicious, and will impress your guests. It’s also rustic enough to make a nice communal meal outdoors.
Deep Fried Turkey
Saturday night, I finally made use of the Cajun Cooker I’d bought at Magnet Hardware (it’s the Home Hardware on Commercial Drive) and deep-fried a turkey.
Let me begin with the end result – it was DELICIOUS!!! I’ve never had turkey that moist and juicy before. It was not at all greasy.
Now for the sequence of events… I bought everything I needed, oil, bird, potatoes for fries, and prepped it all. I started heating the oil a little after 4pm, anticipating a 5:30 or so frying… Well, it didn’t work out that way.
I think I need a more powerful burner – the one that came with the kit is a 70K BTU burner, and full out, the oil was rising about 2F every minute. One error was blanching the fries (using the approved Anthony Bourdain Les Halles method) since that caused some water to get into the oil and it took a lot of heat energy to evaporate it off.
It then took a while for the oil to get hot. Once it got to about 330F, the room temperature turkey was lowered into the oil. The oil bubbled happily around the turkey, but the temperature dropped and dropped and dropped some more until it got to 225F and stayed there.
The end result of all this was that the turkey took the 3-3.5 minutes per pound to cook, as advertised; it browned beautifully; it was absolutely delicious! The skin was only crispy in some places, but also fabulous.
There were nine of us feasting that night. Much Riesling was drunk, a beet and potato salad was devoured, a green salad likewise, and the fries, well, they’re an experiment for another day (and in small batches on the stovetop methinks!)
More importantly, it was a lot of FUN! Who knew you could entertain so many people with a boiling pot of oil?
Cats and Turkey
My cat is profoundly fond of turkey, and so, it turns out, was the young female kitten that came to visit while we were sitting outside on Saturday night.
I can only assume she is the cat of someone who moved into the neighborhood recently, as the 1st would have been moving day and it’s common practice to keep your cat indoors for a week to get used to its surroundings before you let it out. However, she had no collar.
Last night, she came to visit again, and even snuck into the garage, apparently to settle for the night, and after we managed to extract her, found an open window to climb through (sneaking past my cat who’d chased her off Saturday morning when he saw her on the deck) and found my wife and I upstairs!
I put her out, but if she’s around again tonight, I’m going to fill the litter box in the garage and keep her safe until her owners can be found…
Taking Stock
Now that the Great Turkey Experiment has been completed, I need to figure out how to clean the pot – a 30qt pot doesn’t exactly fit in the sink. I have over 40lbs of veal bones and about 10lbs of chicken backs taking up space in my freezer and I’m out of stock of any kind! Inconceivable!
Stock is just convenient to have around. It’s easy to make, but it takes time to simmer and do its thing. It’s also summertime and it’s been very hot lately. Finally, stock is something that is best made in big batches.
As time permits in the near future, I’ll be making stock, outdoors, where it can simmer away happily without turning the house into a sauna.
Veal stock is particularly good as it has a very neutral flavour and is fabulous in both soups and sauces. With such an excess of riches in veal bones, I’m even going to make some demi-glace.
Vancouver’s New Landfill
On Sunday morning I went for a ride around the Stanley Park sea wall. As the summer’s progressed, I’ve been getting fitter and able to sustain a better speed; yesterday I managed to shave 10 minutes off my usual time (admittedly, I was in “workout” mode rather than my usual sightseeing one). Since I was driving my in-laws to the airport later that morning, I was underway before 7am.
As I went past English Bay, it occurred to me that Vancouver doesn’t need to find new landfill site, they could simply use the beach. The amount of garbage on the beach and sidewalks was absolutely disgusting. Even though the city crews had already been working for an hour, they had barely put a dent in the massive amounts of plastic bags and empty 7-11 cups and Subway wrappers.
And on a tangential note, how long does a “temporary detour” need to be in place before it’s actually deemed permanent? More importantly, how long should one tolerate private interests usurping public property?
On the stretch spanning roughly from Plaza of Nations to a little past the Granville Bridge, the Seawall cycle path has been on permanent “detour” for over a year now. The latter stretch is understandable as there has been ongoing condo tower construction. At least there, when they finish various phases, they have made the path accessible and they have even installed pavement to link up a segment that’s currently blocked by construction fencing.
Plaza of Nations is more disturbing however. The Edgewater Casino is there now, and the event planners there have seen fit to extend the modular fencing right to the edge of the retaining wall, thus forcing any pedestrian and cycle traffic out onto Pacific Boulevard. I want my public space back!
06 August 2005
Deep Fried Goodness
After spending the time and effort to acquire all the bits, we're going to have some friends over to join in on the silliness and eat turkey and pommes frites.
25 July 2005
A Fine Weekend Indeed
This past weekend was quite pleasant. The weather cooperated in being nice and warm without actually being very hot and I managed to get a lot done.
The ongoing trucker strike is keeping a lot of the containers at the Port of Vancouver idle including some of the produce imported by the local grocery chains; what is in the stores looks a little tired. Fortunately, on Saturday morning we got to the farmer’s market at Trout Lake and stocked up on lots of fresh fruit and vegetables for this week.
Saturday evening, we managed to get out for the evening and enjoy the Illuminares at Trout Lake. My daughter was particularly captivated by the fire weaver show, shrieking with delight and clapping with glee. It was way past her bedtime by no way she was going to be missing any of the fun! Public Dreams is a group that promotes and puts on public spectacles. They have been very successful with their events at Trout Lake and it seems to be getting larger every year.
Sunday was a good day for getting things done. I slept in, despite good intentions of getting up early, but went for my bicycle ride around Stanley Park along the seawall and back and had a nice late brunch of croissants, generously dosed with the Straßbourg terrine from Oyama on Granville Island. I then went out to Magnet Hardware on Commercial Drive. This is an independently owned Home Hardware, and the staff there is fabulous! They know their stock, and if you go in and say, “I need a ___”, they will take you to the right spot in the store and show you their selection. Anyways, I finally spent the money on a turkey deep fryer! For $139, I got the complete kit with outdoor burner, 30qt pot with insert, turkey stand, and the all-important deep-frying thermometer. I’m not sure exactly when I’ll do a turkey, but in the interim I have a lot of veal bones and chicken parts waiting to be turned into stock, and when I do canning later this summer, there’s no reason I can’t do it outside.
After the shopping trip, S and I went to La Casa di Gelato over on Venables. They boast over 168 flavours of gelato – everything from vanilla to pear & Gorgonzola and back again. My favourite flavour of ice cream has always been pistachio, and they make a nice one here. I also like many of their other flavours, including the aforementioned pear & Gorgonzola, basil Pernod, and, yes, dill pickle! Of course, these novelty flavours are best as samples – I’ve never had an entire scoop of them.
I managed to clean out the garage and get all the recycling down to the depot and most importantly get our lawn furniture! My reward was I spent part of the afternoon sitting outside under my pear tree, reading my latest issue of Gastronomica, listening to the birds at the feeder, enjoying the shade and drinking wine spritzers; when you make your own wine, making spritzers out of it is a fine thing to do on a hot day indeed.
Tonight, we’re hosting a barbecue for H&M and our good friend T who’s visiting from Montreal with her beau; we haven’t seen T since she moved to McGill to take up a professorship, almost two years! It will be nice to see her again and to meet V, of whom we have heard many nice things.
22 July 2005
The Hundred Mile Diet Revisited
The Hundred Mile Diet series on The Tyee has had its second installment posted, this time on the subject of trying to find chicken eggs that are not only from local organically farmed sources, but also fed from local feed – as the authors discovered, most of the organic chicken in the lower mainland is getting their feed from Alberta.
There are two items I will comment on.
One is from the article itself where the authors state:
“The strange fact is that vegetarianism as commonly practiced is, like the rest of the industrial food system, propped up by the globalization of food and everything that it entails, including a total disconnection between food consumers and producers, and the cataclysmic ecological costs of shipping food around the world.”
The statement from the article is actually several ideas rolled up into one, but let’s begin with the idea that shipping food around the world has “cataclysmic ecological costs”. Ladies and Gentlemen, we have here a fine example of hyperbole.
We live in a highly urbanized society, and the fact is that almost everything we city-dwellers wish to buy has to be transported to us; this is accomplished, shockingly enough, through some combination of rail, truck, and airplane!
It should then come as no surprise that there is a disconnection between consumers and producers. I live in an urban part of Vancouver, a block or so away from a nexus of busy streets (one of which is a trucking route) and Skytrain. The main reason I have any connection to what I eat is that I am passionate about food. I take the time and effort to make wise food choices.
In terms of the ecological shipping costs, the solution lies in educating and informing the public, and putting our money where our mouths are. I generally don’t shop at Safeway since most of their produce comes from the US; but this also begs the question of whether it is ok or not to buy hothouse tomatoes in February. Is it?
It’s all well and good to ask the questions the authors asking, but it seems to me they are taking a good idea to its unreasonable extreme.
The other item is from a commentator who goes by the handle Fiat Lux who responded to the article with the opening salvo:
“Trade is a necessary fact of life, but commerce for profits is not trade.”
Our societal model is based in no small part on the writings of the philosopher John Locke. Two of the tenets put forth by Locke are the notions of the earth held in common and the right to private property. This may seem to be contradictory at first, but they are actually complementary. The second notion, of private property, is of key importance to this discussion.
If I am a manufacturer of widgets, then I want to trade the product of my labour, widgets, for goods and services I need. As a civilization, we long ago created a very cool tool called money! I sell my widgets for money, and I spend money to buy what I want.
Ah, but then we have to address the notion of commerce for profit.
If trade is a necessary part of life, but profit is bad, then I should only make as many widgets as I need to sell to meet my needs and break even. This is ridiculous. Perhaps there is a great need of widgets and I have the capacity to fill that need. Why then should I not make as many widgets as I can sell and then keep the “profit” of my labours (being the difference between what I have earned from selling my widgets and spending on my needs)? That, my friends, is trade.
Now I return to Locke’s notion that we own the earth in common. We do. We all need to live on this fragile planet and share the resources. The best way we can do that is make sensible choices about the resources we use to minimize our impact. This includes trying whenever reasonable and possible to buy food that’s local, seasonal, fresh and raised in a sustainable manner. This includes both organic and traditional agricultural methods.
21 July 2005
Reinvention
The Oxford English Dictionary defines reinvention as a derivative of the transitive verb reinvent; according to the etymological data, the first cited use was in 1719.
Several people I know have been through or are undergoing a reinvention process.
My friend S is someone I have known since high school; of all the people I know and still keep in touch with, I’ve known him the longest.
This week he started a job at Emily Carr, doing exactly the kind of work he’s been hoping to do since he reinvented himself. After working as a programmer, a job he grew increasingly disenfranchised with, he quit. Unlike other people I know who’ve also quit jobs they didn’t like, he had a plan. He wanted to do something completely different, and the route, though expensive and time-consuming, has led him to where he is today.
It takes a lot of guts to pack up your life, with no safety net, and start afresh in a completely different career. So, kudos and congratulations my friend, you deserve it.
Reinvention is on the mind of another good friend of mine; J recently interviewed for a job that would suit him perfectly. Should that not pan out, he has a number of ideas he’s considering, among them going to culinary school.
My friend L has recently begun her own reinvention; chrysalis like, she has vanished from our social circle and gone into a virtual cocoon of introspection and sorting her life out. I’m very interested in the outcome.
My own reinvention is taking me on a meandering and enjoyable path. After taking a philosophy course (existentialism as it happens) through continuing studies at Langara, I developed a philosophically informed life plan; it’s a document that I keep with me. It details my core beliefs, my goals, my own rules for living a sane existence, and things that give me pleasure.
Putting these kinds of things in writing is actually a very difficult exercise, but ultimately it’s been very rewarding. Presently, I know what goals are really important to me, like my masters program at SFU, so I make choices about my time and effort that gravitate me towards my goals. I think part of the difficulty in writing it down is the implicit commitment it calls for. If nothing else, I'm now very interested in philosophy.
About once a year, I re-write my life plan. Things change; goals and beliefs that were important to me a year ago may have slipped down a notch or two on the priority list (or be chucked out wholesale). My current sheet has many annotations on it and it’s time for an update and cleanup. Some of my goals have been accomplished, some need adjusting, a few are going to be dropped, and a few new ones have popped onto my radar.
This weekend, I hope, I will have the opportunity to sit somewhere peaceful and quiet and tinker.
18 July 2005
The 2005 Vancouver Folk Music Festival
This past weekend was the 28th Vancouver Folk Music Festival, and also marked the fourth year in a row I’ve attended. My wife, daughter, and I spent the better part of Saturday and Sunday there, and like last year, we skipped the evening concerts. My daughter had a great time, running, dancing, going up to strangers and stealing their sunscreen, and climbing into other people’s chairs and sitting there with a smug look on her face; it was very amusing.
For the uninitiated, the Folk Fest starts on Friday night with a big concert on the main stage. On Saturday and Sunday, there are seven stages scattered around Jericho Park with music going from about 10am until almost 6pm, with a big evening concert taking place on the main stage. Of the seven stages, stage 1 is in the children’s area and has acts that cater to the younger set (but with adult appeal all the same).
I’ve always had fun at the Folk Fest, but for my wife it’s the must do event of the summer. Our best friends H&M and J&E are also in that camp, the latter having been volunteers there since forever (at least 12 years if not longer).
Once again, I enjoyed this year and last a lot more than the first two. This has little to do with the event and the artists present, but rather with time and energy. On Saturday we were on site from 10am until almost 6pm, and on Sunday from 10am until a little after 4pm. Prior to that it was an exercise in endurance: Friday from 6-10pm, Saturday and Sunday from 10am-10pm.
Some things that continue to impress me:
The Folk Fest thrives on its strong corps of volunteers. Indeed, according to J&E, if you even wanted to volunteer, you’d probably end up on a waiting list. One of the consequences is that this is impeccably well organized and run; although I will digress for a moment and admit there are often delays at the various stages, but those are de rigueur when you have three of four groups on stage at the same time and everyone needs to get their instruments hooked up and sound checked, repeat every hour or so per stage throughout the day. If nothing else, it lends a lovely consistency and continuity to the proceedings, and the volunteers have all been friendly, approachable and helpful.
There's an assortment of musicians and groups. Pretty much no matter your particular musical interest, there's bound to be something you find interesting – or, as I like to put it, "something to please and offend everyone". There's a lot of opportunity to discover artists and styles you've never heard before (and to listen and seek out old favourites too). And with seven stages, if you don't like what's going on where you are, you can go check out what's going on somewhere else!
Some things that disappointed me this year:
Two years ago, my wife noticed a baby change station near the first aid tent and she said at the time “That will come in handy”. Last year, we didn’t need to use it, as infants are neither messy nor mobile enough to really need it. This year though, we needed it. We went in search of it, but none of the volunteers knew where it was; we finally asked at information services and they said it wasn’t there anymore. It’s marked on all the maps though. Oops.
However, as irritants go, it could have been much worse.
One final note about the festival itself – the festival is in debt. Deep debt. $450K in the red. J&E and others in the know were telling us we’d better enjoy this year as it might well be their last. They do have a debt retirement plan in place, they’ve made some cutbacks in some areas that have ensured no net operating loss for this year, but it’s still not looking rosy.
Right then, the all-important part of the Folk Fest, the music!
Saturday
One of the first things we saw was a collaborative workshop between Dòchas, Karan Casey, and Le Vent du Nord. The latter was one of my favourite from last year; they’re a group from Québec who play a lot of up-tempo traditional tunes from la belle province. Dòchas is a quintet of girls and one guy from Scotland, and Karan Casey is from Ireland. They all have fiddle players in their midst and it was a lot of fun to watch them play together.
After an early lunch, we saw what was for us one of the highlights of the festival, the Danish fiddle/guitar partnership of Haugaard & Høirup teaming up with the Danish singers Karen & Helene. They’d worked together before, as was quite apparent from their musical collaboration, and it was a real delight. It’s a shame that they don’t have a CD out of their work together – I guess I’ll just have to play their respective CD’s at the same time.
We then headed for the shade at stage 1 to see a chap named Boris Sichon who put on quite the one-man act with all manner of percussion and woodwind instruments for the kids. It was a lot of fun, although if he had three or four other people on stage with him, it would have been something to knock your socks off.
3pm saw us in the shade at stage 2 to see the Jaipur Kawa Brass Band. This troupe from India were very entertaining indeed, and once their show was over, they walked off stage and held a procession through the crowd, tooting and drumming their way back to their dressing rooms.
Our final event of the day was seeing Le Vent du Nord doing a concert at stage 1. I really like these guys – they always have a lot of fun and they can PLAY!
SundaySunday morning, my wife and daughter took the bus and I rode my bicycle with a trailer in tow with all our gear. It’s only 14km, and I had someone to ride with. Towing a trailer was even more work than I’d expected, but I still managed to sustain an average of 20km/h the entire way (bike computers, gotta love ‘em!). I have to say that it was very nice indeed to have the Chariot with us on the Sunday. Perhaps next year we’ll cycle en famille.
Sunday morning at 10am, we saw a fabulous collaboration between Haugaard & Høirup, Dòchas, and Oliver Schroer (“Reely Good Tunes”). Oliver Schroer is a Vancouver fiddle player, although he doesn’t play anything most people would recognize. He is an amazing musician, very talented, and plays a very unusual 5-string fiddle, both electronic and acoustic. He is a producer and seemingly involved in any musical happenings in BC. They played tunes in turn and at the end of the show played together (of course). I couldn’t think of a nicer way to spend the morning.
We stayed at the stage for the next session, which saw Haugaard & Høirup stay on stage to be joined by Michael Jerome Brown & the Twin Rivers String Band, and John Reischman & the Jaybirds. It was a strange juxtaposition to be sure. The latter two acts are very bluegrass/Cajun, while Haugaard & Høirup are from a much more “traditional” mold. And yet – it worked. Michael Jerome Brown & the Twin Rivers String Band are a Cajun act. John Reischman & the Jaybirds is an ensemble act that reminded me very strongly of the Backstabbers, complete with the assembling together around the mic with the bass player singing and plucking away. During this set, I wandered over to stage 6 to see a few minutes of The Dhol Foundation. The Dhol Foundation feature dhol drums which have treble on one end and bass on the other with different drumsticks for each hand – strong beats and lots of loud percussion. They had the entire crowd on their feet, and I have to say that only the heat kept me from staying to hear more of them.
By then it was lunch and we went near stage 3 to get some shade and food, so we heard a good portion of the “Guitar Slingin’ Singin’” set with David Jacobs-Strain, Kate Shutt, and Bill Bourne & Eivør Pálsdóttir. I can’t say it was my cup of tea on the whole, but some of the blues numbers they played really make me want to be in a smoky bar drinking bourbon, scotch and beer.
Oliver Schroer was playing a concert after, so we stayed in our shady spot and listened in wonder as he described his 1000km pilgrimage with three companions through France and Spain, playing his fiddle in every church he could along the way with his portable recording studio. He’s a fabulous storyteller and musician. He had a limited print of 50 cd’s of the music he created on this journey, so I promptly went to the CD tent and bought one before they were gone.
The heat was almost oppressive, but there was a strong breeze and we were able to find a patch of shade near stage 6 so we finished our day with the “Pickin’ and Kickin’” show featuring Michael Jerome Brown & the Twin Rivers String Band, Karan Casey, and Le Vent du Nord. It was a rollicking way to end that day, and with the end of that show and a sleepy girl, we headed home.
Amusingly, my wife and daughter got home at the same time as I did. And for the record, the ride from Jericho Beach is easier than the ride to. To, it’s almost all uphill, from there’s a large hill at the start and then mostly coasting home.
We bought five CD’s on the weekend: Haugaard & Høirup’s Om Sommeren (In the Summer); Karen & Helene’s debut CD; Dòchas’ An Darna Umhail (The Second Glance); Le Vent du Nord’s Les Amants du Saint Laurent (The Lovers of the St. Lawrence); and Oliver Schroer’s amazing Camino.
14 July 2005
Chambar
Last night, to celebrate our third wedding anniversary, my wife and I went to Chambar, a Belgian restaurant. They’re right around the corner from the Stadium skytrain station on Beatty Street.
Chambar has a nice brasserie style ambience. It’s bright and well lit, and offers a lovely view of GM Place and False Creek.
The menu offers a nice variety of dishes. I had: filet Alsacien for an appetizer with a Mort Subite Geuze, a very fine lambic ale; the Waterzooi with a glass of Pfaffenheim pinot gris for the main; tarte tatin with the Dow’s Quinta do Bonfim 1996 port. My wife had: salade folle with a glass of Kriek; moule frite Coquotte with a glass of Pfaffenheim pinot gris for the main; Belgian chocolate mousse with white chocolate parfait and Batasiolo Bosc dla Rei Moscato d’Asti for dessert.
All the food was delicious, and well presented. Chambar goes for the tall food look on smaller plates; but while the portions may appear small, we were quite stuffed by the time we were done.
The moule frite were cooked just so and the fries were classic Belgian style fries. My wife said that Wazubee’s still wins the garlic mayo fries title for Vancouver, but the mussels were fabulous.
The Waterzooi was fantastic. It was presented bouillabaisse style with prawns, mussels, scallops and halibut, but the broth was the real winner; among the classic seasonings one might expect was a hint of vanilla that really accentuated the flavours of the seafood.
As an unexpected delight, the restaurant gave us our dessert drinks with their compliments on our anniversary.
Dinner for two, including a generous tip, was $140.
We will definitely be going there again.
Chambar is at 562 Beatty Street, dinner from 5:30 Monday-Saturday, closed Sunday.
They are having a Belgium Day celebration with a prix fixe menu - $50 per person – on the 21st of July. The menu features a roast wild boar, Belgian Beer, and other items.
13 July 2005
A Little Light Reading
Summer has always marked a season of reading for me. Growing up, summer was free of school and homework; university similarly so; even now as a working adult whose life isn’t governed by the ebb and flow of a school year anymore (although it could be argued that my part time graduate program fits the bill) summer is recreational reading time.
I’m interested by how my reading habits have changed. I used to read a lot of science fiction and fantasy, but for almost a decade now, I’ve shifted solidly into non-fiction, Nero Wolfe style mysteries, and novels that don’t fit nicely into any kind of specific niche like Timothy Taylor’s Stanley Park, or Yann Martel’s Life of Pi. It takes a great deal of persuasion to get me to even try a science fiction novel these days; my space opera days are over I think.
I’m not the kind of person who usually reads one book at a time. At the moment, I would guess I have about twenty books on the go, stacked in random order on the bookcase adjacent to my bed. They are all festooned with various kinds of bookmarks, often with whatever was conveniently to hand.
Sometimes I do read a book cover to cover. Last night I finished Dan Brown’s Angels & Demons, the novel he wrote before The Da Vinci Code; I read the latter about a year ago.
Both novels are a fun light read. Even though they’re quite long, the pacing is quick; almost reading like a novelization of a movie. Both books have inspired people to think there is truth to the symbology and secret societies portrayed between the covers. I was reading over the weekend in the paper that art galleries like the Louvre are now getting die hard fans/believers visiting all the artworks referenced in The Da Vinci Code. Even conspiracy theory books “explaining” The Da Vinci Code are starting to propagate. Hello people! It’s fiction! P.T. Barnum would have a field day.
Also read so far this summer, I finished What is Good? by A.C. Grayling, an overview of philosophy from the Greeks to the present. Grayling is a brilliant writer; eloquent and well read, he has the gift of explaining the esoteric in a format the average reader can grasp without ever “dumbing down” the material he is discussing. I also bought and read his latest collection of short essays, The Heart of Things, which I would argue is the best in the series.
If you’ve ever read and enjoyed Peter Mayle’s autobiographically inspired A Year in Provence, you’ll really appreciate Arthur Clarke’s novel A Year in the Merde. Written in the same style as Mayle’s work, namely with each chapter representing a month, Clarke’s novel is bitingly satirical of the French. In brief, this novel follows the exploits of an English ad executive who, having successfully orchestrated the opening of a chain of French bistros in London, has been hired by a French firm to open a chain of British teashops in Paris. Things go hilariously south from there.
I’m hoping that between now and September I’ll get through more of my reading pile. I’m still about half way through George Orwell’s collected essays and The Road to Wigan Pier, almost two-thirds through Barossa Food, and have yet to get started on Zola’s Le Ventre de Paris or Dostoevsky’s The Idiot.
London Calling
It is not my intent to comment about politics and current world events on this blog, although sometimes a news story commands enough of my attention that I feel the need to make a comment on it.
In this morning’s news, it is declared that four young men who were British-born citizens of the UK carried out the recent London bombings. Furthermore, they were not known to have any radical political affiliations, although I would expect they were actively recruited and trained by some faction.
To quote an old Pogo cartoon, “We have met the enemy, and he is us.”
10 July 2005
As I Please...
In my book of collected essays by George Orwell, especially in the latter parts of his life, he wrote a number of essays entitled "As I Please"; in homage to a great 20th century thinker, I have entitled today's prose the same way.
I have many small things on my mind today, so this will flow, as I please...
Despite my prognostication Friday that my daughter was better, she still had a fever into last night; she seemed to have gotten past the fever, but it has perniciously crept back. Some bugs are tougher than others.
My good friend DS, whom I have a great amount of respect for, not only because he is kind and generous of spirit, but also because he is wise and clever and intellectual, recommended a lovely piece of software available only for the Mac called Bookpedia. I finally had a quiet moment to download it and try it out, and within 20 minutes of startng to play with it, I forked out the US$18 for it. At that price, it's worth it for the entertainment value of having my books catalogued if nothing else. As a bonus, you can export your library collection to your iPod, if that's something one wanted to do.
I am more impressed with my iPod mini the more I use it. It is, if one thinks about it with any level of depth and detail, a marvellous piece of technology. It has also renewed my enjoyment and interest in music; I've rediscovered many albums in my CD collection.
On my bicycle ride around the Stanley Park sea wall this morning, I enjoyed listening to music on my iPod , which was safely tucked into my backpack. This weekend in Vancouver is the Tall Ships festival and on my ride, I saw four of the ships on show including a large 3-masted vessel that evoked the great age of sail; Master & Commander writ large so to speak. On the subject of riding bicycles, Vancouver has a network of bicycle routes that let one get around the city with a minimum of interaction with vehicle traffic; it's fabulous!
This coming weekend is the 28th annual Vancouver Folk Music Festival. For my wife and several of our best friends, this is the must-see event of the summer. I've been going for the past three years and I've always had a great time; it's got something for almost everyone and astoundingly well organized. This year, as last, we won't be attending the evening concerts; truth be told, I enjoyed last year, when we only went during the day on the Saturday and Sunday the best. The event is hosted at Jericho Beach in Vancouver, which happens to be on part of the aforementioned bicycle path network. We're thinking that it would be fun to take our daughter in a bicycle trailer and cycle to the show rather than driving or having to negotiate the bus.
Among my hobbies, I enjoy playing board games of all descriptions. My three favourite games are Go, EastFront, and Puerto Rico, but lately I've been playing more and more Scrabble. It was a childhood favourite of my wife's and she's the one who got me hooked. In fact, these days, she as often as not is the one who suggests we play something other than Scrabble for a change. I think it is in no small part due to our being very closely matched. We occasionally have runaway games where one of us seems to always get just the right letter tiles at just the right time and can spell no wrong, but on the whole, we have a lot of closely matched games; last night it came down to the last letter played to decide it.
Winning and losing games isn't important to me; I always play to win, and won't "throw" a game, but I am more interested in getting the best finish I can and enjoying the social aspects of gaming. There are those for whom winning is a blood sport, but thankfully the folks I play games with regularly appreciate the game well played even when they don't come out on top.
08 July 2005
Comfort Food
The stress has been incredible. It's the first time she's been genuinely sick, the two minor colds she's had in her fourteen months having hardly slowed her down. Between my wife fretting about our daughter, my fretting about both of them, and the sleep-deprived nights... I'm a bit of a zombie today.
Which brings me to the subject line; I'm going out for lunch today to my favourite diner spot in Vancouver, Risty's.
It's a classic burger and fries kind of place. Their soups are home made and tasty, the burgers are the kind you need to have plenty of napkins on hand after you lick your fingers clean, and the fries are hot crisp and delicious. I even indulge in the gravy sometimes. Even the coffee's really good, and I've had self-proclaimed coffee snobs say so.
The menu runs the usual gamut: burgers with all the extras; classic sandwiches like the Reuben, Club and Monte Cristo; meals like liver & onions, ground steak with mash and veg, turkey with all the trimmings; even classic old fashioned ice cream milkshakes. And who can forget the all day breakfast with classic french toast, fried eggs, omlettes filled to bursting... The only time you'll get in trouble with the menu is if you stray from classic diner food and go for things like the chef's salad.
Risty's is the place I go to for comfort food. They're on Granville just north of 70th. Parking out back.
04 July 2005
Canada Day Long Weekend
The 1st of July was Canada Day, a day for celebrating this beautiful country of ours. It also meant a long weekend.
It was also an opportunity to catch up with some friends we hadn’t seen in a while. On the Friday we visited J&E on their float home for an indoor picnic (the weather having not cooperated for our planned excursion to the Reifel bird sanctuary).
E and I make wine together. More accurately, I contribute physical labour by carting cases of wine grapes to the crusher, cranking the crusher, and so forth while E provides the equipment, technical know-how and skill. I’ve been participating in the process for a few years now, and it’s been educational. It’s also quite cheap – for under $5 a bottle, including the corks and chemicals for washing the bottles, we’re getting wine that you could expect to pay $10-15 for in the store. This is my excuse for buying wines that are sometimes well upwards of $25-30 – dollar cost averaging! Perhaps I have a future in flogging mutual finds, but I digress.
When he first invited me to play along a couple years ago, I chipped in for some late harvest Muscat from Washington State that produced a mighty fine wine. The year after that, we went a little crazy and produced almost 300 bottles; Gewürztraminer, “Bordeaux blanc”, “Spanish red”, Zinfandel, Zin-Sangiovese, California Sémillon, and a very late harvest Syrah that we turned into pseudo-port. The Sémillon was supposed to be cooking wine, but it turned out to be a very nice drinking wine – and less than $1 a bottle too!
On Friday, I had some “barrel tastings” of last fall’s production: Riesling; Ehrenfelser; Zinfandel; more “Spanish red”; “white” Syrah (a blush wine). The whites are… passable. I have a feeling they’ll become mostly cooking wine. On the other hand, I don’t mind pouring entire bottles of home made wine into what I’m cooking; I certainly wouldn’t want to do that with an $85 bottle of Châteauneuf! The reds though are outstanding! A year or two in the cellar and they’ll be great for casual dining and barbecues.
Saturday we managed to get a lot accomplished without wearing ourselves out and had a nice relaxing day of it. Before bed, I made my famous waffle batter to sit overnight in the fridge.
There’s a restaurant in Victoria called John’s Other Place. Many years ago, I went there for breakfast and had the waffle; what made this one different was a yeast batter. Absolutely fantastic. Thus began a quest to find a yeast based waffle batter. Well, in those days, Google didn’t exist, but I managed to find a recipe that I’ve long since tweaked to make my version of waffle perfection.
So for Sunday morning breakfast, we ate waffles until we hurt. Bliss.
Full of waffle goodness, we then visited my good friend and his family in Surrey and had a very pleasant afternoon in the warm sun (which apparently didn’t manage to burn off the cloud layer in our part of Vancouver).
I sometimes wish every weekend were a long one.
Radio Canada
I listen to the radio when I’m in the car. Sometimes I listen to music, but mostly I listen to CBC. For the past few months though, I’ve been listening to Radio Canada (CBC French) instead.
It’s been a very enjoyable experience; in part it’s also been a look at Vancouver from a minority point of view. Although I am of a francophone background, I take my ability to speak French for granted; it’s only when I encounter certain cultural markers that I’m sharply reminded that I grew up different than most of my friends and colleagues. Radio Canada has, in some very comforting ways, linked me back to my own Canadian cultural roots. The music they play is entertaining too.
As their “centre of the universe” is Montreal instead of Toronto and much of their international news items are from France Inter rather than the usual culprits (by which I mean CNN and the BBC), it has a different perspective on the world. As an aside, listening in this morning during my commute, I heard that today is the 100th anniversary of the laïcité law in France officially marking the separation of church and state.
I’m sure at some point I’ll get tired of listening to Radio Canada and switch to another station for a while, but it’s nice to have Radio Canada 97.7FM on the air.
