Thursday, July 17, 2008

the vet, etc.



This afternoon Tyler and I took our new baby kitten, and our sweet Jennie to the vet. After the appointment we were set to meet someone, and since we had quite a while to wait, we decided to have a beer at the pub next door. Since we had two animals with us, and they had outdoor tables, it seemed the perfect spot.

An older man was sitting alone at a large table, with a nice shady umbrella, and he invited us to sit with him. It was a kind and generous offer, and he didn't seem like too much of a crazy, so we thanked him, and sat down.

He was missing several teeth, and sitting in the heat so that he could smoke. He told us about his life, his family, and Philadelphia as he had experienced it; his father having been born a few blocks away on south street 105 years earlier. But the amazing thing was that he knew us so easily. When he asked Tyler what he did, he asked, 'so, are you an engineer?' Where we were from, 'Upstate New York?' what I did 'University of Penn? A secretary?' All of these were initial questions, we had never met him, or even spoken among ourselves in front of him, and all of them spot on (well, I have a fancier title, but, to a 70 year-old, yeah, secretary works). It was a little eerie. Or, maybe we are such a standard boring couple, that the assumption when you meet two people, carrying two cats, having a refreshing afternoon beer, you just have to assume, 'oh, yeah, engineer, UPenn, Central New York.'

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Saturday morning haiku

slept in until noon
the cat washes her anus
going back to bed

Sunday, June 1, 2008

People I've exposed myself to recently (or they've seen London, they've seen France)

So, I went to Princeton yesterday for my little pseudo-sister's graduation. As we were walking into the auditorium, right in front of the Newark Boy's Choir a big gust of wind came up behind us, lifting my skirt up into the air, almost over my head, exposing my very grown up, white cotton with lime green polka dots panties to a whole line up of adolescent boys.

Later, as we were walking to the car, I asked Tyler if I had at least had the dignity to avoid having a wedgie while my big potato ass was exposed to the assembled group of pre-pubescents. So, assured that he at least thought that my buttocks were mostly covered, (and that they were probably wondering what grade I was in, based on the aforementioned mature undies) I asked "why didn't you at least try to pull it down?" His reply, I swear, was - "I don't know, I was worried that some sort of crazy Animal House shit would happen. Like, I would try to grab a hem and the whole dress would come off, and then you'd be standing there naked."

Seriously. Right. Like he wasn't just enjoying getting a free peek.

ten things you will never find in my kitchen

You will never find these things in my kitchen:
  • Canned fruits or vegetables
  • Cool-whip
  • Processed cheez food of any kind (whiz, spray, individually wrapped "singles.")
  • Instant rice (Uncle Ben's, Minute Rice, etc.)
  • Creepy processed meat products (bologna, pimento loaf, spam, Jeffu's canned toes, etc.)
  • Ho-ho's, Ring-dings, Twinkies, etc.
  • Crisco, margarine, butter substitutes of any kind
  • Non-alcoholic beer
  • Instant pudding
  • Pre-chopped garlic
Things I never thought I would end up having in my house, but have, and they weren't that bad:
  • Instant mashed potatoes (the frozen bag of potato pellets from Trader Joe's may sound unappealing, but they are actually really good if you make them with milk)
  • Instant biscuit mix (I know, this is just gross, but sometimes if I want Tyler to help cook, I have to cut some corners)
  • Instant coffee (not the Sanka shit or anything, but I do have some instant espresso that I've used for making ice cream)
  • Chicken Stock (or broth) from a can (or box). Seriously, I do make my own, but somehow I always run out faster than I can make more, and frankly, I use a lot of stock for stuff, okay?
  • Peeled garlic cloves - I bought these when I was making roasted chicken with 40 garlic cloves, and frankly, they are damned convenient. They taste pretty much the same as regular garlic, too.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Sundays

Sundays, especially Sunday evenings, can be achingly sad. If you don't love your job, you hate and dread Sunday evenings intensely. Your life can seem small. Smaller than usual even. Another week over, another week to get through.

I tend to deal with this sadness by cooking a nice Sunday dinner. My favorite is a roasted chicken, with gravy (always), stuffing (occasionally), greens, and a salad. Perhaps this goes back to my childhood, when I would spend certain weekends (the custody agreement varied through out my childhood: one weekend a month, every other weekend, three weekends a month, etc.) with my father; separated from my adored mother, and stranded alone with an adult completely bereft of any culinary skills. My father's idea of a balanced meal was a fatty steak, shoved under the broiler, with no seasoning, for a minute, or a half an hour, depending on when he remembered to pull it out, a few potatoes, cut into quarters, boiled in plain water, and a packet of frozen veggies - lima beans, corn or "French cut" green beans, only - also boiled, and also cooked for an arbitrary amount of time, based on his ability to remember that he is, in fact, cooking. My father owned very few pieces of cooking equipment: a dented double-boiler, with an irremovable black crust caked on the lumpy bottom, a cast iron skillet, used exclusively for frying hot dogs, a simple, dull, knife, and a pig shaped cutting board, marked with knife marks, some darkening mildew, and bowed, as if it were arching it's flattened porcine back against the disgrace of our kitchen.

Have you ever smelled a forgotten pot of frozen corn, burning and smoldering over a gas flame? Let me tell you, it is not a smell you can ever forget. This was the smell of dinners at my father's house. It wasn't always corn, but every time, something - a pot of boiled potatoes, all water evaporated, potato starch blackened into a thick crud on the bottom of the pan, smoke (smoke, not steam, smoke!) billowing out from under the lid - had to be held out the back door by one of us, while the other raced up stairs, with a dining room chair, climbed up on it, and fanned the screaming smoke detector, until it finally stopped. Then it was time to eat.

We ate at an old pine table, seated opposite each other, silent and cautious. We both drank milk from tall, plain glasses and ate off of blue plastic plates, with years of knife marks and fork scrapes recorded in their surface. The unsalvageable bits burnt onto the edges of the food would be carefully cut off (by me, at least) and I would try to fake my way through the meal. It was typical kid stuff - pushing the food around the plate, stacking items here, spreading them around there, forcing gag-inducing mouthfuls down with a big gulp of milk. Screaming, fists pounding on the table top, tears - pretty standard. Once it was finally over, and I had eaten at least three bites of this, and two of that, I would drag the little wooden stool to the sink and wash the dishes. Or, try to. To this day, two decades later, my father still uses that double boiler, with all of its nasty, blackened crevasses.

I don't remember how it started, but somehow, getting back to my Mami's house Sunday evening, after a weekend with Papi, felt like a celebration. From Friday afternoon when he picked me up to Sunday afternoon when she did felt like an eternity. I was completely cut off from the person by whom I measured myself, and during those days away, I felt completely lost. I feel almost embarrassed to admit this now, but when I was little, my mother was my best friend, and over those weekends when she wasn't with me, I called her three, four, five times a day, and cried myself to sleep when she wasn't there to tuck me in and stroke my hair and sing to me as I fell asleep.

But, back to dinner... When Mami and I would get home from my weekend at Papi's, we would have a proper Sunday dinner. Sometimes it would have to wait until Monday, if we go home late, but we always had a special dinner together, with multiple courses, fancy dishes, a house filled with lovely smells, and the two of us, both so happy to be able to get back to being ourselves together. We ate off of fancy dishes, drank plain tap water out of wine glasses or even champagne flutes, all at a dining table spread with linens and illuminated by candle-light. As a kid I never noticed that those accoutrement's were second-hand, or shabby, or that my Mami had picked them up at thrift stores and yard-sales. To me, they were the epitome of elegance, and they made me feel like I was finally home.

So, now, as an adult, I feel sad on Sunday evenings. I don't want to go back to work tomorrow. I don't want to be alone at my office, with my husband at his. I want it to be the weekend all the time, with friends, and people, and nice, fun things, always. So every Sunday, I make too much food, drink a little too much wine, and stay up too late; trying to keep the next day from coming.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

chunky monkey

Why is it that no matter how terrible I feel about my weight, or how much time I spend obsessing about how chubby I am, I can never seem to stop eating long enough to lose a single pound? I mean, I spend a fleeting moment of every minute fretting over my dimply thighs and rounded tummy, but in the end it just leads me to the thought - "Oooh, you know, brownies would be so perfect right now." As much as I wanted to slim down for my wedding day, I didn't. And I can't stand to look at the pictures. Or, at least the ones I am in. I was a cow. And, maybe I am just using this as an excuse, but I don't think that my dress was very flattering. It made my already giant boobs look even huger, and frankly, it did nothing to camoflauge my waddle-y arms.

Damn. I wish I had some brownies.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

So I married an ax murderer

OMG - this movie is awesome. And it's not just because my dad's Scottish. Although it does prove my point that Scottish dad's are asses. Or arses. Or whatever.

Watching it this evening really made me nostalgic for the '90s. I think it would have been really fun. You know, like if I had been a bit older. Yeah, I had the bright red, henna-ed, My So Called Life hair, and wore the baby-doll dresses with chunky shoes and actually pretended that thermal waffle knits were appropriate outer wear. But still, I didn't get a chance to partake of the youth culture of an era when screwball cultural references were hip and funny, not declasse office banter. And before everyone was so incredibly plastic-surgerized and teeth whitened that they all look like Barbies. I could do well in a society where even the moderately ugly and/or chunky and still get laid on a regular basis. Plus, the great thing about the nineties, is that all of that music that we now recognize as awesome, would just be coming out. So, like, you could be that asshole on the cutting edge, who like "discovered" the Magnetic Fields and such. Oh, and of course, if it was still the '90s, at least the good part, we would have economic expansion, a reasonable hope of conflict resolution in the Middle East, and a President who could pronounce the word 'nuclear' correctly.

Yeah, living in the '90s would be great.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

April Fools Idea

Bad April Fools jokes:
  • Telling your husband that you want a divorce
  • Setting your neighbors house on fire
  • Telling your children that you never loved them
  • Spreading filthy rumors about your boss
  • Telling a friend she has cancer