Fresh Fruit and Veg Month: Chickpea Soffrito
26 Jun 2009 9 Comments
in cooking, Food, Life, Recipes Tags: chickpeas, Food, fruit and vegetable month, gourmet, Recipes, soffrito, vegetarian

June is National Fruit and Veg Month.
June is designated as National Fruit and Vegetable Month. According to the American Dietetic Association (ADA), more Americans than ever — 28 percent — are adjusting their eating habits to achieve healthier lifestyles.
This post is coming a little late (the blog event was scheduled for June 1st, ahh!) but late is better then never, right?

The motherload! Chickpea Soffrite via gourmet.com
I’ve had this bag of dried chickpeas floating around my house for yonks, so I decided it was time to do something with them! They were actually kind of intimidating. I’d heard how much tastier freshly cooked ones are compared to canned, but I’d also heard lots of horror stories about overcooking them or pots boiling over or just generay mayhem. Luckily with the support of gourmet.com and my good friend over at SweetFernHandmade, I got over it and boiled my first pot of beans!
With no more ado, the recipe, via Gourmet.
Chickpea Soffritto
Serves6 (side dish)
- Active time:30 min
- Start to finish:10 hr (Includes soaking chickpeas)
RODNEY DUNN,THE AGRARIAN KITCHEN, TASMANIA, AUSTRALIAApril 2009You’d never guess that these simple ingredients could produce such a delicious dish, not to mention one you can easily pull together from things you probably already have on hand. Keep a stash of cooked chickpeas in your fridge and you’ll be able to whip up this soffritto on demand. It’s great tossed in pasta, too.
- 3/4 lb dried chickpeas (1 1/2 cups), picked over
- 1 cup extra-virgin olive oil, divided
- 2 medium red onions, finely chopped
- 3 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
- 2 teaspoons fennel seeds
- 2 tablespoons rosemary leaves
- 1 teaspoon fine sea salt, divided
- 6 celery ribs, finely chopped (3 cups)
- 2 medium carrots, finely chopped
Accompaniment:
lemon wedges
Generously cover chickpeas with water and soak at least 8 hours; or quick-soak (see cooks’ note, below). Drain. Generously cover soaked chickpeas with water in a 4- to 5-qt pot and simmer, partially covered with lid, adding more water if necessary, until tender, 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 hours. Drain. Heat 1/2 cup oil in a 12-inch heavy skillet over medium-high heat until it shimmers. Cook onions, garlic, fennel seeds, and rosemary with 1/2 tsp sea salt, stirring occasionally, until onions are golden, about 5 minutes. Add celery and carrots and cook, stirring occasionally, until carrots are softened, 8 to 10 minutes. Add chickpeas, remaining 1/2 cup oil and 1/2 tsp sea salt, and 1/4 tsp pepper and cook, stirring, until heated through, about 2 minutes.Cooks’ note: To quick-soak chickpeas, cover with water by 2 inches in a medium pot and bring to a boil, then boil 1 minute. Remove from heat and soak, covered, 1 hour. Drain, discarding water.
Although a little time consuming, I found this dish to be very much worth it. It’s extremely flexible. I ate it over pasta (tasty), over couscous (even tastier), and tossed in soup. It would probably be great mashed and fried in cakes too. I was a little worried about the fennel because I’m not a big anise fan, but the combination of herbs was strong but well-balanced, not overwhelming at all. Also don’t be afraid of the amount of olive oil, it’s totally called for and binds the flavors on the dish together.
~MS the Yunger (and hungrier!)
PS: The New York Times has a really great feature on how to freeze foodstuffs, and their tips for cooked beans are especially useful. Also, SweetFern also has a nice, easy recipe for Chickpea Salad with Sundried Tomatoes and Artichoke Hearts and she posted recently. Go check it out!
PPS: What are your favortite ways to use chickpeas? I’ve still got a bunch in the freezer needing love. Send your suggestions/recipes my way!
White Noise Fades Away
25 Jun 2009 2 Comments
in Art, Digital art, Thoughts Tags: Television

Now those rabbit ears may have been promoted to the status of collectibles and exotic artworks, but there’s still the chance they may capture some stray television broadcasts. As reported at CBS News.com:
“The antenna is alive and well,” said Michael Godar, who runs one of the nation’s few hand-made antenna companies out of a TV repair shop in Gilbert, Arizona. And he says that, even at the dawn of the digital age, there’s plenty of life in that old antenna. “There was almost a sport adjusting your antenna on your TV,” said Sieberg. “Oh yeah, battling it, you know,especially when you had a remote control,” laughed Godar. “You’d change the channel and then get up, adjust the antenna!” Antennas are as old as television itself. Their limitations were spoofed in the very first episode of Jackie Gleason’s “The Honeymooners.” The antenna is the sole survivor of our analog past. And while it just receives over-the-air channels, digital is the reason there’s more of them. “An antenna will still work,” said Godar. “Even some of these antiques here will actually pick up a digital signal.” Of course, some things never change. You still need to be in a place where it’s possible to get good reception. In fact, unlike an analog signal with its fuzzy picture, a weak digital signal can leave you seeing . . . well, nothing at all.

Hyakumangoku Festival 2009
23 Jun 2009 3 Comments
in Japan, Japanese Culture, Travel Tags: festival, festivals, Hyakumangoku Festival, Japan, Kanazawa, parade
Hyakumangoku Festival is the biggest festival of the year in the Kanzawa area. It’s basically a re-enactment of the entrance of Lord Maeda Toshiie into Kanazawa Castle back in 1583. I wrote about it back in 2007, the first time I was able to march in the parade as a handmaiden to the Lady Maeda. Although I participated again last year, this year I decided to take a break and let some of the other new JETs in the area give it a try. My friends had a ball hanging out with the other parade participants!

Our menfolk terrify and amuse small children dressed in traditional clothing.

East meets West? The boys are accosted by some picture-seeking business men.

The local lady-folk in their guises as handmaidens to the Lady Maeda.

One of my favorite costume groups - these little girls had amazing wigs!

Traditional dancing in the streets - over 1000 participants!
~MS the Younger
Let’s go more LEGO
19 Jun 2009 1 Comment
in Art, Creativity, Culture, Life, News, Thoughts
From DesignBoom.com:
The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation together with LEGO® have released the Frank Lloyd Wright collection of LEGO architecture building sets, coinciding with the Wright exhibition ‘From Within Outward‘ at the Guggenheim Museum. The line currently consists of six buildings, including two of Wright’s most famous and recognizable buildings, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and ‘Fallingwater‘.

Image via designboom.com
Artist Jan Vormann uses LEGO bricks to repair damaged walls in Italy.

Image via designboom.com
What would a LEGO post be without the MadSilence favorite LEGO artist, Nathan Sawaya?

Image via designboom.com
Legoland California celebrated the park’s 10th anniversary with a 10-foot plastic birthday cake made of…LEGO.
Finally, there’s Mariann Asanuma, a former LEGO Master Model Designer and now a Freelance LEGO Artist and Author. Visit Asanuma’s WordPress blog, Modelbuildingsecrets’ Blog, for some amazing images.
Related MadSilence posts:
HoW to pLaY WeLL: Learn to LEGO®
~MadSilence
Engrish: School Club Posters
16 Jun 2009 5 Comments
in Art, Culture, Engrish, Humor, Japan, Japanese Culture Tags: Clubs, Engrish, Japan

The Basketball Team recruiting poster... mmm manure! Why don't they ever check with the English teachers before posting this kind of thing??
June by Dux
13 Jun 2009 1 Comment
in Art, Art History, Life Tags: Federal Art Project, Works Progress Administration, WPA
Image Credit: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, WPA Poster Collection, reproduction number LC-USZC4-7679.
June “is bustin’ out all over” in this illustration taken from a calendar created by the New York City Poster Division in 1938 to show government officials the skilled artistic work the Federal Art Project was doing for the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Reminiscent of Coney Island, the artist is obviously a New Yorker.
Care to learn more about posters created for the WPA’s Federal Art Project? Visit By the People, For the People: Posters from the WPA. 1936-1943.
The By the People, For the People: Posters from the WPA, 1936-1943 collection consists of 908 boldly colored and graphically diverse original posters produced from 1936 to 1943 as part of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal. Of the 2,000 WPA posters known to exist, the Library of Congress’s collection of more than 900 is the largest. These striking silkscreen, lithograph, and woodcut posters were designed to publicize health and safety programs; cultural programs including art exhibitions, theatrical, and musical performances; travel and tourism; educational programs; and community activities in seventeen states and the District of Columbia.
The WPA’s Federal Art Project was one of the first federally funded programs to support the arts in the US.
~MadSilence
Asanogawa Lantern Festival
11 Jun 2009 2 Comments
in Culture, Holidays, Japan, Japanese Culture, Travel Tags: Asanogawa Lantern Festival, Japan, Japanese Culture, Japanese festivals, Kaga-yuzen, Kanazawa
The first event of the Hyakumangoku Festival in Kanazawa is the Lantern Festival (Kaga-yuzen Toro-nagashi). The Asanogawa is one of the beautiful rivers that flows through Kanazawa. Lanterns made of Kaga-yuzen silk and also those made by local school children of rice-paper and bamboo are lit up with candles and flated down the river. This year was the first time I got to go, and it was an impressive sight! My friends and I had a nice little picnic while holding our spot in the river bank (of course having a few close calls with the hawks swooping around – one sandwich was sacrificed to the little buggers!) and watched as twilight descended and the lanterns started floating. Here are a few of my favorite views from that night:

Sunset falls over the river...

Lanterns are lit and guests prepare to float their lanterns...

Here comes the first wave of lanterns from upriver! Two little girls excitedly peer under the bridge...

Helpers watch the bobbing lanterns float downstream.
~MS the Younger
The Return of the Umeshu (plum wine)
08 Jun 2009 5 Comments
in Culture, Food, Japan, Japanese Culture, Recipes Tags: cooking, Japan, plum wine, plums, ume, umeshuu
Do you guys remember this post about how to make the delicious plum-flavored flavored liquor called umeshu?

Umeshuu - before (1 year ago)
Well, it’s one year later and about time to drink now that warm weather has come to stay! Here’s the finished product:

Umeshuu - After!
This batch came out surprisingly well! It’s potent but sweet enough to enjoy. Serve on the rocks while having a picnic under the beautiful summer sky! Also goes great with salty bar foods like edamame or squid. Come to think of it, this is a pretty natskashii (nostalgic) moment. This umeshuu was created in my old apartment, but drunk in my new one. If you’re interested in cooking more with ume, Obachan over at “Still Clumsy With Chopsticks” has some interesting ideas here and here. She’s made ume jam, miso, cupcakes… she’s a great cook and tries interesting recipes with native Japanese ingredients. Definitely worth a read!
~MS the Younger
50 Best Food Blogs
06 Jun 2009 8 Comments
in Blogging, Blogroll, Food, Life, News Tags: Food blog, foodies
Addiction is a hard thing to deal with. The inability to sleep, the sore wrists, the bleary eyes – all caused by a personal favorites list that contains over a hundred blogs! And the Times Online UK certainly hasn’t helped. I’m loving their list of the Best 50 Food Blogs. A bunch I already follow are featured (I posted about them way back in September 2007) but there’s plenty of new ones to feast on.
Here are two particularly delectable food blogs:
Tea & Cookies is a food blog, a collection of essays, photos, recipes, and other adventures written by Tea, a writer, home cook, and avid traveler; it’s the intersection between food and life.
Delicious Days has a cool name and a huge following, currently Technorati’s highest ranking food blog. Well-conceived, with an international flavor but healthy dose of German influence, its easy to navigate sections include a food news feed. DD features the author’s own recipes, as well as adaptations from other cookbooks. An invaluable article offers FoodbloggingDo’s and Don’ts.
Also wonderful is a strange Twitter account called @cookbook or @Maureen. This lady Tweets recipes! Full recipes, in 140 characters or less. They look a little something like this:
Mango Yakisoba: saute 2T oil/thyme&garlic/c leek&shroom 9m; +c mango/.5t redcurrypaste/4T lemon/T tamari&mint. Toss +4oz/100g al dente soba.
Lemon Lentil Soup: mince onion&celery&carrot&garlic; cvr@low7m+3T oil. Simmer40m+4c broth /c puylentil/thyme&bay&lemonzest. Puree+lemonjuice.
The New York Times has a cute little article about them here. I’ve also found that the homepage of the Dining and Wine Section provides good browsing material.
For a further healthy serving of food blogs, try [the] foodblogblog.com.
As we say in Polish, Smaczniego! Very tasty!
~MadSilences
Crochet crazier
03 Jun 2009 3 Comments
in Art, Artist Spotlight, Craft, Creativity, Japan, Japanese Culture, News, Sculpture Tags: crochet, Patricia Waller, tawashi, textile art
In a previous post entitled Crochet crazy, we highlighted the art of artist Robyn Love, good crocheter gone mad.
Now, thanks to InventorSpot.com, we’ve learned of Patricia Waller, a crochet artist with a slightly different perspective.

Accident 3: Shark

Chicken: Yarn, cotton wool, synthetic material, crochet; length15 in.; 1999
Images courtesy of the artist.
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MS the Younger adds: Talented Tawashi
For something a little more within your skill scope (and cute and useful and eco-friendly as well!) try this project on for size: the たわし (tawashi)!
Tawashi just means “little bundle” but it describes a traditional scrub brush. The most common version is the “kamenoko tawashi” which is made of hemp. It looks a bit like a “kame noko” – baby turtle! These days hand-made crocheted tawashi have become very popular. They’ve been featured on one of my favorite eco-home sites, Re-Nest. They’re great for dishes or cleaning the house and you can toss them right in the wash if you want to. Changing materials can also lead to tawashi for dusting or scrubbing yourself in the bath!
CraftStylish has a wonderful step-by-step crochet tutorial with pictures for a nice basic round tawashi, or you can head over to Shh, I’m Counting… for a huge list of tawashi patterns in an array of styles. My favorite is the fishy tawashi.

Fishy Tawashi
Also, TED talks on the beautiful math of crochet coral by Margaret Wertheim.
By masterminding a project to model a coral reef armed only with crochet hooks, Margaret Wertheim hopes to bring some of the most complicated mathematical models embodied in our universe into the minds (and hands) of the masses.
Another intersection of art & science!
~MadSilences






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