Burgerville tops out again

You can’t beat Burgerville for fast food. Grass fed beef, humanely raised bacon, radicchio in the house salad, delectable Walla Walla onion sauce on a big burger, sweet potato fries, local fruit milkshakes. . . .

Last week, while enjoying a lower-carb burger basket—you can order one  with a salad and milk instead of fries and a soft drink—I saw a new item on the breakfast menu: Bob’s Red Mill oatmeal. This is seriously cool.

BRM, a local Oregon business, is the pinnacle of down-home value and goodness. Go find grains, spices, rice, lentils, nuts, and all sorts of other good stuff, much of it organic, in packages and in bulk at Bob’s  headquarters on International Way in Milwaukie. When he retired a few years ago, Bob Moore gave the company to its employees, who run it with gusto.

Contrast this to my former employer, The Oregonian, which is disrespecting both readers and employees by cutting back daily delivery for the former and laying off the latter wholesale. The company is in the black, and it’s continuing to fatten the bottom line without any soul attached.

I like to buy local, even the local newspaper (dang!), and I like good food. I don’t often eat fast food, but when I do, it’s always Burgerville. Yay, team!

 

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Stupid Safeway door

Stupid safeway doorThe new (well, it’s maybe a year old) Safeway at SE 27th and Hawthorne has a door that opens directly onto the curb cut where one can cross Hawthorne at 28 Avenue. It works great if one is exiting the store; however, it only opens one way.

 

So if I am going to Safeway with my walker, and I cross Hawthorne at 28th, I can’t get into Safeway through the door that is right in front of me. The door opens outward rather than sliding like most supermarket doors, and is marked “exit only.” Were I not using the walker, this would not be any big deal, but as I am walking with the walker,  it is a royal pain to have to walk several yards to go into another door. I only have so many energy units, after all.

Posted in MS, Observations, Walking | Leave a comment

Channeling Babette

This is a long post because I have a lot to say. If bored, skip to the image at the end.

I promise to post something shorter soon.

It’s the meds, stupid

What a difference a tiny pill—in this case, just half a tiny pill—can make. For nearly a week, I have been fighting the most pernicious fatigue. It has been hard even to walk around the house with my usual two canes or the walker. The weather has been hot, but even taking that into account all I have been doing is sitting on the couch or in my bed watching videos, playing solitaire, trying to read books, doing some knitting. I have spent a bit of time at the computer scanning in patterns for needlework projects, my new passion. But it was not until this morning that I realized I had not been taking the tiny little half pill of Provigil  to counteract the fatigue of multiple sclerosis.

I got distracted when I was parceling out my meds a week ago and just forgot to include it. Small error, big effect.

Tired and dispirited, I skipped church this morning. But then, in mid-morning, I took that tiny half pill for the first time in nearly a week.

The results were nearly immediate and, I  dare say, astounding.

Confident in the kitchen

About 12:30 p.m. I walked into the kitchen ready to do the dishes I was  too tired to do the day before. I was also thinking about breakfast. What follows is the saga of breakfast and coffee and a whole lot of things that just fell into place.

I felt like Babette in the movie Babette’s Feast, supremely confident, knowing what to do, moving easily from one task to another, everything meshing perfectly.

In the freezer was a box of multigrain waffles. I have never, ever made frozen waffles—they’ve always been from scratch. But since Robert is never awake early enough to have waffles for breakfast it seems too much trouble to make a whole batch, even my famous yogurt waffles from the recipe Sunset magazine paid me $100 for about 20 years ago.

I bought these whole-grain waffles in the “nutritional” frozen section at Safeway, made by a company called Vans that promises lots of good fiber. The catch is you can’t just stick them in the toaster, as I had supposed. You have to heat them for 10 minutes or so in a 400-degree oven to cook them thoroughly.

My nature abhors the idea of heating an oven to 400 degrees just to heat up two waffles. So I start thinking about other things that I can do with a 400-degree oven. Well, there were three big red beets in the crisper drawer. I could roast those. I could also make some bread.

So as I preheated the oven to 400 and started a pot of espresso coffee. I made some sponge for bread using whole wheat flour, some Bob’s Red Mill whole-grain cereal, yeast, sugar, and water. I usually proof bread in the oven using the proof cycle, but of course the oven was preheating to 400, so I set the bowl with the sponge on the stove near the oven vent, where it heated nicely and became quite spongy in about half an hour.

The oven dance: food in, food out

Meanwhile I put the waffles in the oven. Then I cut the beets in half, set them cut-side down in a big cast-iron frying pan, added about half an inch of boiling water from the kettle, put on a lid, and stuck the pan in the oven. Epicurious, the website where I got the technique, says it takes an hour and a half to roast the beets, but half that time is plenty.

About this time, I picked over about a pint of red beans with the idea of quick-soaking them to make chili for dinner.

Next up was eating those waffles, which were pretty good, along with an Americano made with espresso and a bit of boiling water. The sponge for the bread was ready within half an hour, so I added some white flour, salt, sugar, and light rye flour to the Cuisinart, scraped in the sponge, and let it rip. (I usually knead bread in the machine, using about 4 cups of flour to make one large loaf or two small baguettes or maybe 18 rolls, plenty for just two of us.) Pretty soon I had a nicely kneaded piece of dough.

About my wedding…

I greased a round 1-1/2-quart casserole, a stoneware dish in a pattern called Kaira, an iconic 1970s pattern of simple blue and brown bands on a gray background that was part of a set of stoneware I picked out after my mother gave me some money to buy dishes after my marriage. She hadn’t been around for the wedding because she wasn’t speaking to me at that point in my life because I had been living with the man I married. So when Mark and I got married it was a very simple ceremony before a Universal Life minister and two witnesses above an establishment on Durant Avenue in Berkeley called Top Dog. It was called that because it sold hot dogs.

Sorry for the wedding digression, but I thought it might be interesting.

Anyway, I set the kneaded dough into the buttered casserole and put it back on the stove to rise. The beets were still roasting. I had on hand a sugar pie pumpkin and a Delicata squash that I could also roast, so I split each of them in half, scooped out the pulp and seeds, laid them on a foil-lined baking pan, and stuck them in the oven, too. The beets came out, the bread went in. I did some of the dishes, then the beets were cool enough to peel.

The end is near

I finished the dishes. There were a lot; I do not have a dishwasher and I had been eating leftovers for a day and a half. About this time, I drained the red beans, refreshed the water and boiled them until tender.

By the time I was finished with these tasks, the squash and pumpkin were tender. I scooped out the flesh to keep for later; I don’t have definite plans for it. Robert doesn’t like pumpkin pie, so I’ll have to think of something else, or make a pie and invite folks (like Lyza, who loves pumpkin pie) over to help me eat it. If I do that, I’ll have to go to Pastaworks for some real lard, ’cause the Morrell lard they sell at Safeway is so full of preservatives it can be stored at room temperature. Yech, what is in that stuff?

What I know about piecrust and you should, too

You need either lard or Crisco to make a good piecrust; just using butter will get you a rich  crust, but it won’t be flaky. And Crisco, which produces a flaky crust, has that unfortunate oily Crisco taste. I have found the best method to be a combination of lard for flakiness and butter for richness and flavor, although, frankly, I sort of like the taste of lard used all by itself, the way Mom used to make pie.

Tea time with cappuccino

Well, there really is just so much one can do even with the energy of half a tiny white pill. So I finished roasting those pumpkin and squash seeds, cut myself a slice of the bread—which is actually delicious—put some butter on it, and made myself a nice dry cappuccino. I did that by heating some milk in a pan and frothing it with one of those tiny frothers that work just as well as my expensive, heavy industrial-strength milk steamer that takes 15 minutes to heat. The heavy steamer looks great and does a great job, but the little frother can  make tiny bubbles (cue Don Ho) in just a few seconds.

So now it’s 4 p.m., tea time, and I have my dry capp and my slice of wonderful bread with butter, and my computer to write down how deliciously good I feel. Yesterday I awoke in a funk, and in the days before that it was just too hot for me to function adequately, even with my cool vest, with it’s 68-degree chemical packs.

But now all is right with the world. I have beets, bread, pumpkin, and squash for later feasts. The seeds will disappear as soon as they come out of the oven.

I think I’m going to go do some art now, maybe some knitting or needlework. I want to make something for Theresa’s new baby, and I have buttons to cover with cloth for a tote bag from a favorite new craft book. You can see the tote bag behind the jackalope on the cover:

This book has so many good projects in it that I think I will make them all.

September 15, 2013 5:49 PM

September 15, 2013 9:17 PM

I took a break after writing the above, then started in on the chili: onions, garlic, green pepper, a fresh tomato, the kernels from a leftover ear of cooked corn, sun-dried tomatoes, a can of tomato sauce, a smidgen of cumin (Robert doesn’t much like cumin), and a chopped chile in adobo sauce. Plus the red beans, of course.

Thick, rich, and flavorful, the chili was good with shredded cheese and a spoonful of Greek yogurt (which I don’t recommend and won’t buy again because it has as much fat in a cup as ice cream and isn’t quite the treat for the same amount of calories and fat).

Of course, one never uses all of a can of chipotles in adobo sauce, so I apportioned the chiles into small snack bags, enclosed them in a bigger freezer bag and froze them for future use. I do the same with tomato paste, freezing it in 1-tablespoon portions, ready to plop into a sauce or gravy.

And finally, more dirty dishes. My day is done, the kitchen is clean, and I have lots of ingredients cooked and ready for soups and salads.

9:24 PM

Posted in Food, MS, Observations | 1 Comment

Newspaper strikes and how I got hired

My son-in-law, Jeff Holden, recently pointed me to a story about the big NYC newspaper strikes of the 1960s, which triggered a mass of memories:

There were a number of big newspaper strikes in the 50s through the 70s, often having to do with the switch from hot type (Linotype) to cold type (lithography), which put a lot of compositors out of work. I was actually less aware of the big one in New York, as I was in college at the time.

In her autobiography, Personal History, which won a Pulitzer, Katharine Graham of the Washington Post recalled a nasty typographers strike in 1975 in which the compositors did a lot of sabotage.

The Oregonian and the Oregon Journal, both published by Newhouse, weathered a long and rancorous strike in 1959-1960. Someone shot up the home of Don Newhouse, and his injury shortened his life. The NLRB ruled the strike was illegal, and the union was busted. When I started at the paper in 1976, it was still considered a scab publication, and it was a long time before it was able to hire first-class reporters and even longer before it was allowed to win a third Pulitzer, in 1999 (the first was for editorial writing in the 1930s, and the second was won by reporters William Lambert and Wallace Turner in 1957 for uncovering corruption involving local government and big unions. Turner  honored the picket line and never returned to the paper. Starting in 1999, The O won several subsequent prizes, including the one for public service, which is the most prestigious.)

The Oregonian and Journal merged in 1982, which was when my career started taking off. All of a sudden the paper was way bigger, as nobody was laid off. The Newhouses even had a pledge that no one would be laid off for economic reasons, which was important because other papers cut back when newsprint prices rose, which they did cyclically.

How times have changed! One woman who was laid off recently was the daughter of longtime publisher Fred Stickel. My friend Mary says that on her last day, Friday, she went to HR to sign the last papers and the idiot new hire who helped her (all the great HR people have left) actually told her, “Easy peasy, lemon squeezy.” One cringes.

The change from hot type to cold did impact my career. I actually started at a six-edition-a-week paper in Tulare, Calif., as the Saturday proofreader when I was in high school and junior college. There were still the two Linotypes, so I learned all about how a hot-type operation worked. There was also one optical typesetter; as the operator typed on a regular keyboard, a paper tape was created that was fed to the typesetter, which had a spinning glass disk through which light shot through the letters onto photographic paper. The brand was Mergenthaler, made by the same company that had developed the Linotype. (A Linotype produces a line of type set in lead, as opposed to the single letters produce by a Monotype, higher quality for use in publishing books.)

The Daily Cal newspaper at Berkeley was usually typeset at a non-union shop, and the folks there sometimes let me type on the new machine, so I was later able to work for print shops before I got a newspaper job. I learned how to read the perforations on the paper, like Morse code, sets of six holes in various forms. I’m not able to immediately fine a guide to that code on the Internet, but I’ll bet it’s there somewhere.

When I came to try out on The Oregonian’s copy desk in ’76, the company had just gone to cold type a few months earlier. Everyone was scrambling to learn the new technology. I had an enormous leg up from having set type. The editors were so impressed that I knew how to CODE headlines (you had to tell the machine what font and size to use) that they didn’t really care if I knew how to WRITE headlines. They hired me anyway.

The first thing that impressed my about reading other peoples’ copy was that they didn’t write well or grammatically. I really was shocked; I though everyone wrote pretty clean copy, that, for instance, people who wrote books just wrote them. I had no idea then how important editors really were.

So that’s how I came to work at a scab paper that later got its prestige back.

Posted in Whimsy, Work | 1 Comment

Names

I recently found a list I wrote several years ago about names. I’m sure many, many other names could be added, but here is what was there:

Plumbers

Smitty

Squeaky

Lefty

Pipes

Duke

Luigi

Ginger

Righty

G. Gordon

Carpenters

Pete

Mike

Steve

Jesus

Michelangelo

Carl

Jim

Samantha

Snug

 Romantic boys’ names

Edward

Pennyroyal

Carter

Elliott

Talbot

Trent

Brent

Christopher

Jack

Rhett

Blackie

Marlon

Alexander

Miles

Thorne

Oliver

Heathcliff

Anthony

Tray (for somebody who’s the third of that name)

Zoltan

Straightforward boys’ names

James

Philip

Mark

George

Mike

John

Thomas

Edward

Robert

Peter

Richard

Donald

Paul

Daniel

Wise guys and gals

Sid

Sol

Sam

Billy

Sally

Bubbles

Liza

Tom

Alec

George

Milton

Lew

Squirrels

Chip

Butternut

Zippy

Speedy

Squeaky

Simon

Curly

Snips

Dale

Chuck

Theodore

Alvin

Dave

Old dog names

Spot

Fido

Checkers

Rags

Rover

Ruff

New dog names

Chequers

Maggie

Goldie

Fifo

Lifo

Girls with lots of hair

Debbi

Cindy

Raquel

Stephanie

Sigourney

Madeleine

Brittany

Tiffany

Brigit

Victoria

Girls with lots of brains (some of whom may also have big hair)

Patricia

Elizabeth

Sam

Sally

Catherine

Eleanor

Elspeth

Forgotten names

Hortense

Hepzibah

Edwina

Dorothea

Bertha

Hildegarde

Dorcas

Chester

Milton

Maud

Forgotten no more (old names newly popular)

Ruby

Chloe

Ivy

Sophie

Isabella

Olivia

Abigail

Leah

Might as well be a boy

Taylor

McKenzie

Sydney

Leslie

Kennedy

London

Madison

Hippie names

Flower

Sun

Arrow

Lorca

Rain

Apple

Karma

Yellow

Goldfish names

Blurb

Bubbles

Carmel

Gifford

Jaws

 Clown names

Bobo

Rebo

Bebe

Bebo

Bozo

Doobie

Flop

Whiskers

Clapper

 

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An example of daily writing

Just because I haven’t been doing exers every day doesn’t mean I’m not writing. I’ve been having work critiqued by the St. David of Wales writing group (with this summer’s writer in residence, Lynn Otto) and for a two-day workshop at the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology near Otis, Ore., which is near Lincoln City. Also, since the workshop, I’ve been trying (and mostly failing) to write a few hours a day.

Here is a writing exercise from mid-August 2013, when I was staying on the Oregon Coast for the Sitka workshop. As background, I’ve been working on a story about Canyoudiggit, a South Pacific Island populated in the 19th century by missionaries who declined to go home. It was known as Bettencourt Island until a recent despot (as the person in charge of administration is called) thought of a catchier name. There’s a lot more backstory, but that’s for later. … Sarga tiles are an entry to children’s stories. A child picks a tile from the box and the story proceeds from there. The stories that proceed from the sarga tile prompt are amazing and varied.

Like all my exercises, this was timed to last 20 minutes, with a time stamp before and after.

10:01 AM

Here we go. Just a minute in after 10. I like starting on the dot. Intention today is to find a name for the satellite island to Canyoudiggit. Where the McCoys hang out. To be named later. Also, move from cinderblock to stone construction for the houses on Canyoudiggit. Can’t import cinder blocks. Of course, part of the charm of the story is that it’s all impossible. Nothing to do but watch goats, work in the garden, blow glass, drink beer, play cello, contemplate clouds, and have sex.

Belay that. Arr. A pirate story, here on the beach, the coast, where the weather is cold and foggy. Always mid-60s. Brought me jacket and a good thing. Arrr. Forgot me pirate kerchief. Kerchief, mischief, chief chef, chowder, chowderhead, salmon ass, salmon eggs, globes, red globes, red globs, lava lamp, morph, slow burn, Tillamook burn, the Castros Fidel and Mimsy, borogroves, raths, wrath, wraith, wreath, weave, rove, riven, run, stocking, shocking, bird’s egg blue, all thee pictures, a story for each one. A vast vista through an open window. The sarga tile opens a vista like that. A sunny beach with tables and umbrellas on a seawall with the ocean crashing beyond. White sand, glorious sun, warm and too too bright. I’m chilled. It’s also dark in here. Not getting going much. Damn. Off to Starbuck’s soon. Bucks, elk, bison, binyon, bindu, Hindu, woodoo, voodoo, you do, scooby do, doodly do, and you too, screw you, through you, by you and with you. Yow. Not much is going on. Pick up that sarga tile, the one with the brown edges. Oops, what happens if you drop and break one? You get stuck in the fantasy until someone is brave enough to come and rescue you. What if you don’t want to be rescued?

She dropped the brown tile and it shattered, and as it shattered, she shrank to about 3 inches high. The cracks in the floorboards become chasms and she falls through one of them. There is a whole world down there, with spongy flowers on sticky green stems. Everything in pastels, like a little girl’s game. Not too much pink, but pale greens and blues and a lot of white. All the flowers—a forest of them—are cartoonish and flawless, if anything as ugly as they really are can be flawless. After much wandering in this forest of perfect and perfectly boring flowers, she finally finds a real flower. It is getting a bit brown along the edges of the petals, but it has the papery texture of a real flower—and it has scent. Faint magenta lines in creamy petals. The cartoon flowers smell like candy; this one smells like a flower. It’s big enough for her to curl up in, which she does. It’s slightly sticky with honey, and she licks that off, then falls asleep.

During the night, a mouse comes along, looking for a place to sleep, and is annoyed to find a girl curled up in one of the few, rare fresh flowers in this place. He taps her rudely to awaken her, and after she gets over her fright befriends her against his inclination. She is small enough to ride on his back, her hands around his little pink ears. They set out to look for more real flowers, also some crumbs. There are breadfruit trees amid the fakery, also. Fresh currants, tiny to big people, are glorious red globes to be eaten like apples. She gets juice all over herself.

Two minutes [left; it’s 10:19]. I’m bored with this, cold and edgy and hankering to take back the DVDs I borrowed. What a waste of time. What a waste. Remembering “The Good Wife” plot. Damn. Running out the clock. Soon to Starbucks. I have a new message. Not everything can be golden. Amen

10:21 AM

Posted in Journaleze, Writing | 1 Comment

The rest of the session

Here’s the rest of the “heat white chocolate wafers” exercise, the top of which is part of the “Writing every day” post.

The idea may have some potential, but I probably won’t develop it. I have lots of other stories.

What would a child do with white chocolate wafers? Eat enough to get sick, which isn’t many. Try to melt some for popcorn balls but there is a mishap. Could it boil over? Shingles for a gingerbread house. Licorice siding. Parsley trees. Cinnamon roses. The dolls sneak out in the dead of night and nibble on the house. The kids think it’s mice. Staying up late they train a flashlight and catch the doll in action. Now the doll, compromised, has to share secrets. The children want to go on a quest and grudgingly, the doll agrees. She tries to put them off with easy tasks, but these kids want challenge and they challenge her to provide that.

The Night Revels. They dance by the light of the moon and run away from the sword-wielding mice. Or badgers. Or foxes. How to tell who is a friend? The answer: trust no one.

Then they get stuck. They can’t get back home. They are in doll world and the portal is shut. They must find a new one. One of the kids is content to stay in doll world, but the others talk her into trying. Do they do this for themselves, or are they worried the parents would fret? How responsible are children when faced with a Land of the Lotus Eaters existence? It would be so easy to stay: plenty of sweet food, friendly critters, chances to swim and run. But there are no books, no TV, no music except what they can create. Nothing to consume except fruits and berries. No ice cream. These kids come from consumer culture and no matter how pleasant Paradise, they can’t wait to get back to their cluttered lives.

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Writing every day

Since the early 90s, I’ve been doing early morning writing sessions on and off, sometimes every day for months. Julia Cameron famously enshrined the practice as “morning pages” in her 12-step approach to creativity, The Artist’s Way, but I got the idea from Writing Fiction: A Guide to Narrative Craft, by Janet Burroway. Here’s how she describes it:

In Becoming a Writer, a book that only half-facetiously claims to do what teachers of writing claim cannot be done—to teach genius—Dorothea Brande suggests that the way to begin is not with an idea or a form at all, but with an unlocking of your thoughts at the typewriter. She advises that you rise each day and go directly to your desk (if you have to have coffee, put it in a thermos the night before) and to begin writing whatever comes to mind, before you are quite awake, before you have read anything or talked to anyone, before reason has begun to take over from the dream-functioning of your brain. Write for 20 or 30 minutes, then put away what you have written without reading it over. After a week or two of this, pick an additional time during the day that you can salvage a half hour or so to write, and when that time arrives, write, even if you “must climb out over the heads of your friends” to do it. It doesn’t matter what you write: what does matter is that you develop the habit of beginning to write the moment you sit down to do so. When this habit is developed, Brande says, then read your pages over and pick a passages that seems to suggest a simple story. Muse on that idea for a few days, find its shape, fill that shape with people, settings, details from your own experience, observation, and imagination. Take several long walks turning the story over in your mind. Sleep on it—more than once. Finally take a definite time when you’re going to write the story, and when that time comes, go to the desk and write a complete first draft as rapidly as possible. Then put it away, at least overnight. When you take it out again you will have something to work with….

I write 20 minutes a day at the keyboard (Cameron suggests writing longhand for three pages, but I won’t do that because I have tendinitis and I want to keep track of what I write). It did not take me long to learn how to spin an entire story, with a beginning, middle and end, in that 20 minutes.

Sometimes I have an idea when I sit down to write, but often I begin with word association, going from image to image until something catches fire. Rarely, I’ll use a prompt, and that is generally a phrase picked at random from a book at hand. Recently, a book called Christmas Gifts from the Kitchen was near the computer, and the prompt-phrase I found there was

heat white chocolate wafers

Here, unedited except to fix typos, is the beginning of the piece I wrote in that 20 minutes:

What if Communion wafers were chocolate? Couldn’t the body of Christ be sweet? I mean, maybe he took the dessert and said “Eat this, all of you.” Does it matter?

Anything we eat comes from the essence of the Universe, created by energy that transfers to our own. Eating is a sacrament. Exactly what that means for Diet Coke, I’m not sure. Unnatural foods are the foods of the devil. What about white chocolate? That seems semi-unnatural…

Food is sacrament, eating is prayer. It is so important that what we eat is worthy of prayer. Food has energy, and the more elemental it is, the more energy. Corn chips are dead food, likewise other processed and over-processed junk. Microwaved food is likewise dead….

White chocolate wafers like pennies on the eyes of the dead. They won’t melt; the body is no longer warm. It keeps the crows away; they very sensibly don’t like white chocolate.

Other uses for white chocolate wafers: skipping stones. Checkers, although they may be hard to stack. Stepping stone for a doll’s patio….

I’ve trained myself to slip right into alpha brain mode, a trick worth cultivating. Zen teacher Gail Sher writes in her amazing little book One Continuous Mistake that you don’t know what you are writing until it’s written. I am continually amazed at the stories that appear.

From time to time I may post some of them.

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Complicated breakfast

Some days I just don’t know when to quit. Most often, I have a Vitamix green drink, with ingredients like

  • Whole apple or pear
  • Other fruit (berries, kiwi, dates)
  • Kale
  • Other vegetables (spinach, parsley, celery)
  • Orange, prune, or unsweetened cranberry juice
  • Flax meal
  • Lemon
  • Ginger
  • Water and ice

If I add an egg, the resulting texture is appealing and fluffy, like an Orange Julius.

Today breakfast was a throwback to pre-Vitamix days. I  ate the fruit whole with some protein.

  • Kiwi
  • Apricot (why are they all so big? I liked the tiny apricots of my youth.)
  • Tiny avocado (25 cents each at Kruger’s, just the right size for one) mashed with ume vinegar and hot sauce, spread on a crisp corn tortilla
  • Hard-boiled egg
  • Queso fresco
  • and Coffee. Did you know that Americans get more of their antioxidants from coffee than any other source?

I forgot to take a picture.

Now, what’s for lunch?

 

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Self love

Here, without edits, is my Google search list from a few days ago. I forgot to post it on the day, July 20.

Obert Skye
How much are my golf clubs worth
Used golf clubs Portland
How to iron rayon
Audible
Olson Rug Co
Netflix
Popular Science January 1962
After earth
Downside of nectresse
Goats movie
Paper piecing quilting
Word games for iPad
Sodastream refills Portland Oregon
Kitchen Kaboodle
Sodastream refill
How to write a successful blog
Noro designer mini knits
Noro designer mini knits Amazon
Instagram

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