Bites & Pieces (Saturday Night Food Edition)

We’re having our usual slightly schizophrenic fall weather here in Salt Lake City. . . it was in the mid-to-upper 60s Thursday and Friday, and then I awoke to snow this morning. Not too bad–nothing what like Scott and Brent got last weekend–but enough to actually break out the shovel and get rid of it from the driveway and front walk. I live in a neighborhood called “SugarHouse” here in SLC, so called because one of the first things that the Mormon pioneers did when they started to settle the valley was to designate a site for a sugar mill and this is the neighborhood that sprang up around it. One of the things about SugarHouse that makes it stick out is the trees–since the sugar mill was sited here there is, of course, a stream that runs year-round running through this general area of the city, and we have some beautiful mature trees that line every street of the area. Unfortunately, many of them are non-native horse chestnut trees (otherwise known as, ahem, buckeyes)(yes, quarterback, buckeyes) that don’t drop their leaves until after there is a serious frost and several below-freezing nights. . . which don’t happen until well after the first snow here at altitude. Luckily today’s snow was “shovel-able” but not terribly heavy, so no limbs have come down yet.

Whenever the weather really starts to turn like this (many of you will remember that we had our first snow here over a month ago) I start thinking of stews, and even though lamb is traditionally a spring dish, it makes a lovely fall stew also. Plus, the eggplant puree has enough heft to it that, if you’re serving a mixture of carnivores and (non-fussy) vegetarians you can serve them both this dish and everyone will feel full. Score!
Lamb Stew with Eggplant Puree
(Adapted from Williams-Sonoma Mediterranean Cooking by Michigoose
Serves 4 – 6, and both the stew and the puree are even better the next day (just don’t combine before storing)
For the eggplant puree:
4 – 5 lb Eggplant
4 T Unsalted butter
4 T Flour
2 c Heavy cream, warmed
1 t Nutmeg (freshly ground)
1 c Parmesan cheese, grated
Preheat an oven to 450. Prick each eggplant all over to vent, then place in a baking pan and bake, turning occasionally so they cook evenly, until very soft (45 – 60 minutes). Remove from the oven, place in a colander to cool, and, when cool enough to handle, peel them and leave the flesh and seeds in the colander. Let stand for 15 minutes to drain off the bitter juices, then transfer the flesh to a food processor fitted with the metal blade and process until smooth. Set aside.
In a saucepan over medium-low heat, melt the butter. Add the flour and cook, stirring constantly (i.e., make a roux) until thickened but not browned (i.e., a blond roux). Add the warm cream and whisk until thickened, 3 – 5 minutes. Season the cream sauce to taste with salt and pepper and add the nutmeg. Add the pureed eggplant and Parmesan cheese to the cream sauce, mixing well. Heat through before serving.
For the lamb stew:
2 T Unsalted butter
1 T Olive oil
3 lb Boneless lamb shoulder, cubed
2 ea Yellow onions, chopped
1 t Allspice, ground
4 t Thyme, chopped (fresh, preferably from your herb garden [it survives under the snow here in SLC])
4 cl Garlic, minced (I really like garlic)
2 c Tomatoes, peeled, seeded and diced–I use two cans of good quality peeled tomatoes for this, rather than fresh, and break them apart with my fingers
1 c Chicken stock
In a heavy pot with a lid over medium-high heat, melt the butter with the oil. Divide the allspice and thyme in half and toss the lamb with the spices. Add the lamb and brown well on all sides (working in batches if necessary). Add the onions and salt and pepper to taste and saute, stirring, until the onions are soft and pale gold.
Add the remainder of the allspice and thyme, garlic and tomatoes to the pot and cook for about five minutes to combine. Add the stock, reduce the heat to low, cover and simmer until the lamb is tender, 45 – 60 minutes. Stir from time to time and add more stock (or water) if needed; when the lamb is done, there should be enough sauce to coat the meat and spill over onto the eggplant. Taste and adjust seasonings.
To serve, place a mound of eggplant puree in the middle of a bowl and heap around with the lamb stew for the carnivores, or just drizzle with some of the juice from the lamb stew for the vegetarians who aren’t fussy about it. This is about twice the ratio of puree:lamb stew than the original recipe (along with a fiddling of the original spices) since I’ve discovered that it is virtually impossible to have too much of the eggplant puree. . . even for those who think they don’t like eggplant. Enjoy, and stay warm!

Update: Post renamed per okie’s suggestion. Why didn’t I think of that???

Climate Change Carried Forward

A long discussion of climate change continues on a two-day old thread, so I figured I would bring it forward and link to this, an article that appeared in yesterday’s WSJ about a project out of Berkeley attempting to clean up the rather messy historical records on temperature.

Calculating a global temperature is necessary to track climate trends because, as your TV meteorologist might warn, local conditions can differ. Much of the U.S. and Northern Europe has cooled in the last 70 years, Berkeley Earth found. So did one-third of all weather stations world-wide, while two-thirds warmed. The project cites this as evidence of overall warming; skeptics aren’t convinced because it depends how concentrated those warming sites are. If they happen to be bunched up while the cooling sites are in sparsely measured areas, then more places could be cooling.

The risk with models is that scientists can become enslaved to one they have chosen, says Mr. McIntyre. “The best antidote is for authors to make all their data available at the time of publication together with scrupulous documentation,” he says, crediting Berkeley Earth with attempting to do this.

The Concept or the Leader? The Substance or the Process?

Occasionally I read a story like THIS.

First, I find these success stories very cheering.  Whether they are about schools, or entrepreneurs, or business organizations, or a governmental program, or charitable efforts, when a comet lights up the firmament I applaud.

Then I wonder.  Was it the idea, itself?  Was it the motivation from the leader?  Was it the substance of what was done or the process by which it was assembled?

AND WHY CAN’T THIS RESULT BE REPLICATED?

Bits & Pieces (Friday Night Tiger Blood Edition)

Winning! I asked yesterday Autotune The News basically rebranded themselves as Songify This. Here’s a much more recent piece: they Autotune Charlie Sheen.

Speaking of news. Epic news fails. Some don’t merit the lead up. Still . . . worth watching once. 
“Dana is off tonight. He was murdered and set on fire while celebrating his birthday!” I’m so glad my job doesn’t involve being on live television.
•••
Some days, I miss Drew Carrey’s take on Whose Line is it, Anyway? 

The Bad Lip Reading people do music videos, too, where they take real music videos, mash ’em up, and write a whole new song. I love this song. I think I’m gonna by the actual song on iTunes. “Morning Dew”.

Have a good evening, my friends. — KW

Morning Report

Vital Statistics:

Last Change Percent
S&P Futures 1250.6 -5.1 -0.41%
Eurostoxx Index 2336.5 -11.440 -0.49%
Oil (WTI) 94.22 0.150 0.16%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 76.824 0.094 0.12%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 2.08% 0.01%

Stock Index futures dropped dramatically after the IMF and G20 failed to come to a deal over IMF resources. EURIBOR / OIS (a measure of stress in the European banking system) hit a post-crisis high yesterday, although some of that may have been due to MF Global. LIBOR / OIS (a measure of stress in the US banking system) has been steadily rising since August.

Lots of economic numbers released this morning. The unemployment rate came in at 9.0% vs expectations of 9.1%. October payroll numbers were a touch light, but September numbers were revised higher. Average Hourly earnings and hours in line with expectations. Markets are rallying slightly on the news, as investors focus on the revisions and bet that the disappointing Oct payroll numbers will end up being revised upward in the future.

The MF Global saga is interesting on a number of fronts. At the moment, it appears that $633 million of customer money is missing. Co-mingling customer and firm accounts is a big, basic no-no. In addition, it looks like they moved customer funds around in order to fool the auditors. CEO Jon Corzine has resigned this morning and chosen to forego his severance package. If the Occupy Wall Street really wants a perp walk, here is a golden opportunity. It will be interesting to see if the Obama Administration decides to go after Corzine, a well-respected Democrat. So far, they have exhibited zero interest in going after ex-Clinton Budget Director Franklin Raines who paid himself tens of millions or dollars in salary and bonus based on fraudulent accounting, so I am not optimistic. But hey, you never know.

Bonds & Pieces (Thursday Night Shaken, Not Stirred)

Because, of course, stirring bruises the gin. Or the vodka. Or shaking does. Or Sean Connery just sounds great saying the line.


And thus, to attempt to live up to my title as master of pop culture, it is my duty to inform you that Bond 23 now has a name: Skyfall.
Apparently, the evil environmentalist, Dominic Greene, and Quantum won’t be back as a plot element in Daniel Craig’s 3rd outing as Bond.
Speaking of evil environmentalists, Michael Crichton wrote a rip-roaring action-adventure novel about evil environmentalists in State of Fear. It would make a great movie but, alas, is not likely to ever be a movie, because the bad guys aren’t just a few guys posing as environmentalism, but environmentalists, environmental lawyers, Hollywood environmentalists, etc. These environmentalists are willing to destroy the planet (or big chunks of it) in order to save it, in Crichton’s novel, and the famous environmentalist actor (probably a stand in for Martin Sheen) ends up getting eaten by cannibals. There are a few dry bits where characters become mouthpieces for Crichton’s concerns regarding climate science, but for the most part, it’s good versus evil versus nature in techno-thriller set piece after set piece.
It’s unfortunate that the heavies are clearly environmentalists, and not just poseurs, and that the point is made on multiple occasions that Crichton sees the current state of global warming science as incomplete in some place, and flat out wrong or false in others (with footnotes). Because with the credible passes at weather control, and the use of subsonic deep-cavitation devices to carve off part of an island and create a monsoon to destroy the west coast, cell phones that can attract lightning, and a jeep stuck in a flash flood (not to mention some straight-up hand-to-hand fighting), this movie would surpass Jurassic Park in it’s techno-thrilliness. But it’s never going to happen.
Oddly, another very exciting novel he wrote, Prey, also doesn’t seem destined for the big screen, even though the only bad guys in this case are big corporations and short-sighted scientists taking short cuts to achieve results-for-profit.
Next, his last novel published before his death, may actually make it to the big screen. It’s not bad, but is not nearly as exciting as Prey, or State of Fear.

•••

Mitt Romney makes it clear that he will not stand for Winnona Ryder pissing off people with a guitar, and that he wants a cookie:


Not quite the Rick Perry video, but close.
Whatever happened to Autotune The News? Those things were awesome:

Good evening, all. — KW

This is for quarterback:

Michigoose

Mark: Have You Seen This Rick Perry Video?

You know, the guy makes a lot of sense.

Buy Here Pay Here

lmsinca brought this up in the post from last night, but it spawned an interesting discussion, so I thought we should link to all three parts of the series.

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Bombs & Pieces (Wednesday Night Smack Talk)

How do you drop bombs from an airplane?

It’s actually quite an interesting engineering problem.

“Gosh, that was loud!”

The British Air Force testing the UK’s first hydrogen bomb.

Miniature nuke set off on a table-top? No, it’s a trick. But good camera tracking.
There ya go! Merry Christmas, everybody!

FOMC rate decision

Link to the Federal Reserve FOMC statement

The Fed has noted the increase in consumer spending that has become apparent in the economic data. This is new. They anticipate moderate economic growth with subdued inflation and slowly declining unemployment levels. The Fed reaffirmed its commitment to maintain low rates through 2013.

Operation Twist will continue, and the Fed intends to continue to maintain its overall exposure to the mortgage market by re-investing cash received from maturing paper. There was no mention of QEIII.

Interestingly, we had a dovish dissent. Charles Evans supported additional monetary policy accomodation at this time. I am sure Barney Frank is preparing a statement condemning dissent at the Fed. /sarcasm.

Overall, markets aren’t reacting to the statement at all. FWIW, I take the official statement that the consumer is returning as bullish for the equity markets.