Although I am not fond of green beer, I love Saint Patrick’s Day. Just to remind everyone, Saint Patrick’s Day, colloquially St. Paddy’s Day or Paddy’s Day, is an annual feast day which celebrates Saint Patrick patron saints of Ireland, and traditionally celebrated on March 17.
How did this escape me? Why was I not ready? I blame myself!
Click on the picture above and you will find a very simple recipe on how to make your own corned beef, However, this isn’t the end of the process as you will need to cook the beef and the best way is very slowly.
Whether making my favorite my ‘el magnifico’ CHIMICHANGAS or Corned Beef Pie, cooking over a long slow heat makes all the difference.
I can’t resists a little sherry, rye whisky and brandy to help sweeten the final effort…
Stay tuned, we bake on Saturday! ( recipe to follow)
Laura has done a wonderful job on keeping herself trim and fit. However, every once in a while her weight falls too far and emergency steps need to be taken. It is what the Polynesians call “going thin.”
After a week on Jenny Craig, we like to have a special Saturday Lunch to enjoy, celebrate and plan for the week ahead. However, before preparing lunch, we make the 2 mile walk to Farmer’s Market in San Luis Obispo to buy tomatoes, pistachios, onions and …. artichokes! Laura took this picture of me at our favorite local coffee shop, the Nautical Bean.
This will be Sunday’s lunch served with Garlic Butter!
Well, I don’t know how many times Lou Dobbs ‘called out’ the aging President of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo … but it wasn’t pretty.
I’d like to say that Cal Poly doesn’t deserve it, but you can’t help to wonder how many times Cal Poly has to screw up before they finally put the old guy out to pasture and find some reality based thinkers to run the organization rather than a group of ideologues.
I don’t know about you, but in these tough times, most of us want to see our public institutions perform. BTW, if I were a student, I’d be asking Cal Poly,” Is there a prize for playing this game?”
No one can read ‘Oliver Twist’ and not want to help the young urchin boy who asks, ‘more gruel, please.’ The word ‘Gruel’ ,and rhymes with cruel, has been used as a derogatory term — I have heard — one chef using to describe a competitor’s culinary efforts.
Be this as it may, a bowl of gruel has come to us down through history as a dish served during tough economic times and depravation. For most recipes, gruel consists of a mixture of grain and water, but sometimes milk. Like ‘bread pudding’ it has been maligned and ignored , but it can be so much more.
If like my bride Laura and your tastes move away from hot breakfasts of oats, you may leave now.
It has been discovered that in the days of David Copperfield and Oliver Twist, Gruel consisted of three main ingredients: rolled oats, boiled milk and cooked onions. I am sure there was some salt as salt has been inexpensive throughout the ages. I find this an interesting base from which to develope a variety of recipes…. ranging from hearty stews to soups to a very pleasant breakfast. I’ll let you know how it finally turns out.
So next time someone asks you to try their recipe for Gruel… it just might surprise you!
California Universities area mixed bag right now, some are holding their own in this tough economy, others are like the General Motors of academia and they are cutting classes and turning away students. Why is it that two universities in the same state or city — for that matter — could have dramatically different circumstances? What is one doing to better their position and succeeding while the other is less successful or failing?
All educational systems are being affected and the survivors will tell you that it is due to offering students their ‘unique skill sets.’ Although this may be true to some point, the key seems to be in how people and organizations adapt to changing circumstances. In California, it seems that the private colleges and universities are adapting faster and smarter. While one public university is adding administrative staff with one hand, it is laying off faculty with the other. How does this make sense?
In order to improve my education on the subject, I studied every college and every university’s web page in California for a clue. Let’s just say that there were far more web sites than I could imagine! The difference between those who were adapting and those who were falling behind was like night and day. One successful school had a link asking prospective students to meet them on Facebook, while others facing increasing troubles haven’t updated aspects of their sites in years carrying links to defunct organizations and former employees years after they have left.
Not all great ideas are just in the private universities, the Florida university system announced that for about $22,000 you can pre-buy your child’s education at birth! I love it, a ‘stock option’ on education!
In our challenging environment, those who have the best chance of success of thriving in the world ahead are those individuals that have learned to adapt and find and develop skills of value. If I were planning my college choice , I would follow those who are winning already in this tough economy.
Roger
Let me say that I have always been a supporter of Public Schools; however, faculty are not running the university anymore and it shows.