Mandi sent me this shot of an Illy espresso kiosk at the Las Vegas airport. After all the bad Starbucks double espressos I’ve had in various airports, it’s nice to see there’s at least one airport with something else.
Author: isaac
I like cats and compost.
Some snow, but will it stick?
Stuff I’ve been working on lately…
The Social Science Research Network has working papers for a variety of social sciences, including economics. I found this article about the economics of virtual worlds there a while ago.
The most scholarly thing I’ve found about involuntary parks is the Science article referenced in this Viridian note, which talks about the strip in Germany that once separated East and West. There are probably other articles around about re-wilding in landmined or otherwise abused areas.
While waiting for Exploitation, Conservation, Preservation to arrive, I found these glossaries and links for each chapter, and also some quizzes.
Organic tomatoes…. in Alaska!
Quick jerked meat
Let’s say you’re too lazy to marinate food for more than ten minutes, and you don’t have any fresh herbs or peppers around. Can you still achieve semi-authentic jerk flavor?
- chicken parts, pork ribs, skirt steak, or something similar
- dried herbs like oregano and thyme
- ground spices like allspice and cumin
- pepper sauce such as Melinda’s, Tabasco, or similar
- something acidic, such as lemon juice or vinegar
- salt and pepper
Cut some clashes in your meat in order to facilitate flavor penetration and reduce cooking time. Pork ribs can’t be slashed much, but cutting them into chunks of 2-3 ribs will provide more surface area. It’s best to mix up all your marinade stuff first, but if you’re like me you’ll just sprinkle it all on on then massage it in lieu of mixing. This also ensures you’ve got enough marinade on the meat – it should be well coated. Rub the marinade into the slashes in the meat.
Grill the meat over hot coals for maximum flavor. Skirt steak can be cooked in a hot cast iron skillet. Chicken and pork ribs can be roasted in a 400-ish degree oven.