Always check your clean dishes for burrowing owls...

if i look back, i am lost
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Xuebing Du
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Love Begins
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Not today Justin
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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@nomjar-blog
Always check your clean dishes for burrowing owls...
S'more keyboard! Nom, nom, nom...
The PS experts at Gizmodo say:
"Sadly, it is Photoshopped, as you can tell from a variety of tells and mistakes."
If only it were real...
Broccoli House by Brock Davis
"I wasn't able to build my son a treehouse, so I built him this broccoli house instead.
Made with balsa wood."
Popularity of gluten-free baked goods on the rise
Because they are good! Cakes, muffins, and bread made without gluten used to be dry, tough, and blah. But now, you can scarcely distinguish gluten-free items from their traditional counterparts. Several factors have contributed to this change:
Trial and error recipe testing by the likes of Erin McKenna and Shauna James Ahern (Babycakes, anyone?).
The increased availability of gluten-free flours and gluten-free mixes.
The growing number of gluten-free cookbooks.
The article includes suggestions for substituting gluten-free flours in your favorite recipes and a ratio for mixing your own gluten-free flour. Ready to test-drive a gluten-free recipe? Here's the one for the cinnamon sugar cake doughnuts shown above.
A quick way to peel an entire head of garlic. No tools--other than two deep bowls--required. Totally trying this the next chance we get!
Is Paula Deen getting more than her share of flak?
Paula Deen has Type 2 diabetes. (Hands up if you found this revelation shocking. Thaaaaat's what we thought.) Not surprisingly, there has been a flurry of media coverage, most of it criticizing Deen for continuing to feature/promote less than healthy food for three years before announcing her diagnosis earlier this week--now that she's a spokesperson for a diabetes program.
But of the media flurry, we think this little snowflake by John Birdsall is worth pondering. Birdsall asks whether social class and gender might not be playing a role in the way some people (particularly Anthony Bourdain) are responding to Deen's confession:
"Perhaps our notions of health and excess are rooted in class. Deen, we assume, speaks to a down-market audience who need to be lectured about nutrition and willpower. Bourdain speaks to the well-heeled traveler for whom a foie gras hot dog is an occasional indulgence, not a moral failing. Right? Or is it somehow acceptable for men to engage in extreme eating, while women have an obligation to show restraint?"
For more on the connections between gender, class, and food (particularly as they relate to body image), check out Susan Bordo's Unbearable Weight.
Beet greens with poached egg and fontina
Sometimes, dinner should just be warm and simple. We first had beet greens about this time last year and realized that we've been missing out! (Our moms were anti-greens, how could we know?)
1 or 2 eggs
1 thick slice or 2 thinner slices whole-grain country bread
1 garlic clove, cut in half
2 tsps extra virgin olive oil
1/2 cup blanched or steamed beet greens, coarsely chopped
1/2 ounce fontina or Gruyère, thinly sliced or grated
Chopped fresh chives (if desired)
Poach the egg(s) and set aside in a bowl of warm water.
Lightly toast the bread, and rub with the cut side of the garlic clove. Finely chop or purée the remaining garlic.
Heat the olive oil over medium heat in a small skillet and add the garlic. As soon as it smells fragrant, in about 30 seconds, stir in the beet greens. Stir together for about a minute, until greens are infused with the garlic and olive oil. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
Top the toasted bread with the greens. Top the greens with the cheese. Place in a warm oven or a microwave and heat just until the cheese begins to melt. Remove from the heat. Blot the eggs dry if they are in warm water and place on top of the greens. Sprinkle with salt, pepper, and chives. Enjoy.
webstartwomen:
Wanted: A few nerdy women
As we get the ball rolling in Boston and continue to grow in Philadelphia, we’re looking for instructors who love geeking out on web development as much as we do.
If you have the knowledge and the confidence to lead a group of smart, determined women on any of the following topics, we should talk!
HTML / CSS
JavaScript / jQuery
PHP / MySQL
Ajax
Photoshop
Git
WordPress
Drupal
Graphic Design
Business (as it pertains to the web, ‘course :-)
Many of the courses already have curriculum created, so your job is just to come in and teach it. For an example of our material, check out the notes from our first class in the HTML/CSS series. Other topics have not been run yet, and you’ll have the opportunity to help us develop that material (compensation will be higher).
Class commitments are usually a couple hours, one night a week or occasionally a half an afternoon on a weekend.
If this sounds like fun to you, send us some information about yourself and your background to [email protected].
And, if you don’t fit the description above, but you know a woman who does, please let her know! The more talented, awesome instructors we can find, the more classes we can run, and the quicker more women can start coding their ideas into reality. :-)
http://webstartwomen.com/gigs
Word on the street is that Web Start Women is planning online classes in the near future. Good news for those of us who aren't in Philly, Boston, or San Francisco! Check 'em out if you are a lady-person who wants to learn how to make the interwebs. :-)
OCD much?
Ursus Wehrli, a Swiss artist and comedian, tidies things up--to an extreme--and then photographs them. This shot is from his new book, The Art of Clean Up (or Die Kunst, Aufzuraumen).
Lamb's lettuce?
Mâche is one of the lesser-known greens that packs a nutritional punch. It's delightful in a salad with end-of-summer tomatoes and yogurt dressing.
1 4-ounce bag mâche (about 5 cups), rinsed and spun dry
1 Tbsp fresh lemon juice
Salt and freshly ground pepper (to taste)
2 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil
3 Tbsp thick Greek-style or drained yogurt
1 to 2 garlic cloves (to taste)
Optional: Halved cherry tomatoes, sliced roasted beets, chickpeas
Place the mâche in a salad bowl. Whisk together the lemon juice, salt and pepper, and olive oil. Toss with the mâche.
Combine the garlic cloves with a generous pinch of salt in a mortar and pestle and mash to a paste. Stir in the yogurt. Add to the salad and toss. Top with any of the optional ingredients, and serve at once.
We have become accustomed not to real food but to “convenience,” one of the filthiest of modern catchwords, and to the ill health and waste associated with it. (Some estimate that 50 percent of all food produced in the U.S. is wasted, and that doesn’t include the junk that isn’t worth producing in the first place.) Though cooking is healthier for land and bodies, marketing, habit, social pressures and the false belief that it’s expensive [...], have all but killed it. To become a healthier, more sustainable population — in every sense of both adjectives — one of the major goals of the foreseeable future must be to encourage a shift from ubiquitous fast food to the all-but-vanished craft of cooking and associated thrift.
Mark Bittman, Shared Meals, Shared Knowledge (NYT)
Dining on the 405
File this one under dinner party stunts, alongside the six-course repast enjoyed by passengers aboard a Brooklyn-bound L train this spring. While the 405 Freeway was closed for construction in July, three friends decided the most appropriate thing to do was enjoy a little pasta salad in the middle of it.
Braving brambles to get onto the highway and dodging police and construction vehicles once they were there, the trio didn't actually consume anything, but they were able to take a picture to commemorate the shenanigan.