Raning Cats n Dogs *heh*

Life. Quite a lotta rain the last coupla days. Mostly shut up inside. Not quite cabin fever, but the animals feel it, too.

Been keeping Buttons mostly inside since Tuesday the 17th, when he looked two ticks shy of doggie heaven. Oh, he seems perfectly fine, now. Wants to go for runs, not walks, etc., but the vet seems to think it’ll be another week or more before we can be sure it really was just a localized infection interfering with/placing pressure on his spine.

So, medium-sized “outside” dog learning about living indoors. Been mostly mannerly, well-behaved.

*Flip*

Our (once-was) boy cat loves to play fetch with some lil superballs. They bounce off things like crazy and he just loves chasing them and bringing ’em back to me to throw again. He even drops them right in my hand most times. Was playing fetch with Jaxson a while ago and… Buttons decided he wanted to play the game, too.

Surprised lil (once-was) boy cat.

*heh*

Now Jaxson’s just “throwing” the ball for himself.

Jicama Stix

Short n sweet.

Jicama, a legume, is grown for the large tuberous roots which can be eaten raw or cooked and are used as a source of starch. The jicama plant is a vine which grows to a length of 20 feet or more. The roots are light brown in color, and may weigh up to 50 pounds. Most of those on the market will weigh between three to five pounds._*_

OK, so I can find ’em around here at about 2-3 pounds. Go figure. Get the idea out of your head that they are anything like potatoes. They’re not. Jicama is good raw, cut into french-fry sized/shaped sticks or even as ~3″X1/8″ chips (with dips or just plain). But the Jicama Stix I make are fried.

Simple: peel a jicama root. Cut it into french fry sized and shaped sticks. Heat a cast iron skillet to medium hot (on my range, about 3/4 up the dial). About the temp you’d cook pancakes. Use a relatively high-temp oil. I use a mix of olive oil (relatively low-temp cooking) and peanut oil (very high-temp cooking). Seems to work, and the two oils have flavors that suit the jicama nicely. DO NOT use a lot of oil. If you use an amount you’d normally use for semi-deep frying french fries or hush puppies or the like, too much will be absorbed by the jicama, which is much more open pored than potatoes and the like. Use maybe 1/8-1/4 inch at most.

Fry the jicama, turning with a spatula or with tongs as each side browns. Drain well on paper towells.

The Jicama Stix will be sweet and of the consistency of limp french fries. Serve as a side dish with soups, sandwiches or whatever with ketchup, horseradish sauce, mustard or your fav creamy dip.

You can also spray raw jicama sticks with olive oil and back them at about 400 degrees F, turning them as they brown. Not quite as good, IMO, but still tasty and lower in fat.

Maybe there’s hope for one or two congresscritters

We’ll see. I found this email in my inbox from Jim Talent, Senator for Missouri:

Sen. Talent Opposes Senate Amnesty Proposal

The Senate is debating immigration reform. Many Missourians have contacted me to express their views on this issue and I wanted to share mine with you. This is a nation of immigrants, but it’s also a nation of laws. I oppose the amnesty measure being considered in the Senate. Congress should not give the benefits of citizenship to those who have entered the country unlawfully; and it’s especially unfair to put them at the front of the line ahead of those who have waited patiently for years to enter the country lawfully.

I share the concerns of many Missourians that the United States requires a border control system that protects us from terrorist attacks, illegal immigration, illegal drugs and other contraband. A lot of people view border security as an immigration issue. It’s not. It’s a national security issue. That is why I introduced the Border Security and Modernization Act, which authorizes $5 billion over five years for security fencing and surveillance along the border, increases penalties for human smuggling, and increases the number of jail beds available to detain those who cross illegally. I will continue to support strong and effective measures to secure the border.

We’ll see if he can stick to his guns. Somebody need to have the stones to tell the reconquistadores to pack their bags an go home. Either that, or this country needs to see what a Texas Tea Party looks like…

Hmmm, seems to me that someone has already written a book about a modern Texas secession

A State of Disobedience

Since we all know California (one of the other hardest-hit states) isn’t going to do anything about the reconquistadores, maybe it’d be for the best if Texas did secede… and annex Mexico.

Just a thought, since I don’t think a few seantors and other congresscritters swimming upstream will stem the tide (another mixed metaphor. I’ll hit my stride this week, yet!).

Mending Walls

First, the poem by Robert Frost, then some comments in the extended portion of the post. Hang on, folks, cos this one takes a few twists and turns, ‘K?

Mending Wall

Something there is that doesn’t love a wall,
That sends the frozen-ground-swell under it,
And spills the upper boulders in the sun,
And makes gaps even two can pass abreast.
The work of hunters is another thing:
I have come after them and made repair
Where they have left not one stone on a stone,
But they would have the rabbit out of hiding,
To please the yelping dogs. The gaps I mean,
No one has seen them made or heard them made,
But at spring mending-time we find them there.
I let my neighbor know beyond the hill;
And on a day we meet to walk the line
And set the wall between us once again.

He only says, ‘Good fences make good neighbors’.
Spring is the mischief in me, and I wonder
If I could put a notion in his head:
‘Why do they make good neighbors? Isn’t it
Where there are cows?
But here there are no cows.
Before I built a wall I’d ask to know
What I was walling in or walling out,
And to whom I was like to give offence.
Something there is that doesn’t love a wall,
That wants it down.’ I could say ‘Elves’ to him,
But it’s not elves exactly, and I’d rather
He said it for himself. I see him there
Bringing a stone grasped firmly by the top
In each hand, like an old-stone savage armed.
He moves in darkness as it seems to me~
Not of woods only and the shade of trees.
He will not go behind his father’s saying,
And he likes having thought of it so well
He says again, “Good fences make good neighbors.”

Continue reading “Mending Walls”

Mini Edu-rant/Weekend OTA

This is an Open Trackback Alliance post for Friday, Saturday and Sunday–open all weekend long. Link to this post and track back. See more info below the mini-rant.


In a WSJ/OpinionJournal piece, “Educating From the Bench” we find these lil mals mots *heh* The lede:

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark.–Spending on public schools nationwide has skyrocketed to $536 billion as of the 2004 school year, or more than $10,000 per pupil. That’s more than double per pupil what we spent three decades ago, adjusted for inflation–and more than we currently spend on national defense ($494 billion as of 2005).

Imagine that. “Adjusted for inflation”–more than double the expenditure per pupil than thirty years ago.

Is anyone prepared to argue that the results are students who are twice as well-educated? Anyone, I mean, apart from a complete idiot. And is there anyone who can reasonably argue that, since more than doubling the expenditure per pupil–remember, adjusted for inflation–has resulted in LESS literate, LESS capable students, that we should spend our way out of the education mess we are in by throwing more good money after bad money?

Well, the idiots in the courts are saying exactly that:

In 2001 the [Arkansas] state Supreme Court declared the amount of money spent at that time–more than $7,000 per pupil–in violation of the state constitutional requirement to provide a “general, suitable and efficient” system of public education.

And just who did the court there (as courts elsewhere have done) hire as “outside consultants” to determine what should be spent?

A firm led by two education professors, Lawrence Picus and Allan Odden, was paid $350,000 to put a price tag on what would be considered adequate.

Talk about setting the foxes to guard the henhouse! If “education professors” were competent to “fix” the problems they have largely been responsible for creating, then they’d not be education professors but professors of something useful, like physics or chemistry or math or (non-post-postmodern deconstructionist/non-feminist, etc.) professors of history or English literature (who had actually read, you know, real English literature or real history, such as Shakespeare or Johnson or Macaulay or Herodotus or…you get the drift) instead of pseudo-babble for the lowest common denominator.

A pox on all their houses: judges, education professors, administrators all.

And a special curse for parents who let themselves be scammed out of an education for their children because they are too stupid, lazy or uncaring to demand better: may your children grow up to an awareness of just how horribly you have let them be cheated.


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