Christmas dinner wrapup

Man am I full.

Here is a picture of the Mock Porchetta:

Mock Porchetta

It was great, although the vegetables came out undercooked because I tried to jam too many in there. I didn’t get a picture of the Xmas Pasta, but it was also a hit. Here is a tip, though: baking the pasta in individual serving dishes looks smashing, but the individual serving dishes emerge from the oven at 500°F and people have to spoon the pasta onto their plates.

Iris was a wee bit overwhelmed by Christmas. After she opened a couple of presents, she seemed to say, “Okay, what’s the catch here?” She did like the book I got her, The Great Chile Book. She picked it up and said, “Find some cascabels!”

For dessert, in addition to the pear-cranberry tart, we had a modification of Martha Stewart’s chocolate malt sandwich cookies, using the chocolate malt filling but with vanilla cookies, for a reverse Oreo effect.

Laurie noted that when you make Christmas dinner, you can’t sit around all day and play with toys. That’s true, but now that we have a family member whose job it is to sit around all day and play with toys, we had it covered.

Coffeebucks

I’m currently at Starbucks working on a restaurant review, and the baristas are in an extra-jolly mood because they’re getting off early today. (Presumably they are less jolly over at the larger Starbucks down the street, which is open all day today and tomorrow.) I ordered a peppermint mocha (why not?) and was told that whipped cream is required on all drinks today.

“Does Santa want you to leave him low-carb cookies? I think not,” said the barista. I took not only the whipped cream, but the peppermint sprinkles.

In Bangkok there’s a coffee chain called Coffeebucks, or at least there was a few years ago; they may have been quashed by The Man since then. I liked the name enough that I’ve been calling Starbucks “Coffeebucks” ever since. I’m sure corporate is thrilled. Iris recognizes the logo and says, “Iris going to Coffeebucks, drinking some almond.”

“Almond” is steamed milk with almond, Iris’s daily beverage. Usually we make it home, but it’s available at every espresso bar, so we often get it out, too. Once Iris was going for a walk with my dad, and I told him to stop at Starbucks for some almond. Later I asked Iris, “Did you and Pops get some almond at Coffeebucks?” and she replied, “No, just Starbucks.”

Starbucks is a good place for almond because they only charge $1 for it, although sometimes they charge extra for the almond syrup (this is completely random). Recently, Iris and I were down at Pike Place Market doing some Christmas shopping and we stopped at the Seattle’s Best on Pine, across from Sur La Table. We saw someone getting peppermint sprinkles on their mocha, and of course Iris requested sprinkles on her almond. I poured the drink into her sippy cup, making sure that she saw the sprinkles before I closed it up, and she took a big slurp and said, “Iris tasting the sprinklies.”

In case I sound like a corporate tool, I did write an article recently about why Starbucks is good for local coffeeshops. It’s because they don’t serve beer.

Put that in your focaccia and smoke it

From Roger Ebert’s review of Casanova:

> She is the more skilled swordsperson, and Casanova, keen student of swordsmanship, transfers his lust to her, only to learn that she is engaged to Papprizzio (Oliver Platt), who is, according to my notes, “the lard king of Genoa.”

> It must be a wondrous thing to be the lard king of Genoa and I would have wished Casanova time to quiz Papprizzio about his lofty estate…

Stuck in head

I have two more cookbook reviews to post in the next couple of days, but tonight, a quick story–set to music.

Iris’s current favorite bedtime book is Owl at Home by Arnold Lobel, which was one of my favorites when I was a kid, too. One of the stories (which Iris calls “the crying story”) is called “Tearwater Tea,” and in it Owl makes a pot of tea from his own tears, generated by thinking of sad things like uneaten mashed potatoes.

Every time Laurie and I begin reading the story, however, we burst out laughing. The first two lines of “Tearwater Tea” are:

> Owl took the kettle out of the cupboard.

Hilarious, right? Well, I’m getting there. Either by coincidence or due to memories echoing from my youth, I once wrote a song called “The Chicken Bandit,” which was performed by Freebasing Meat Midgets, a band consisting of me and college chum Ryan Thomson. The first line of the song is:

> Mama took the chicken out of the oven

Somewhere in our apartment is the CD containing this song, and I’ll post an MP3 as soon as I find it, but in the meantime, because the lyrics embody the holiday spirit of love and larceny, here they are in full. Sing this song drunkenly to the tune of your favorite song, or several favorite songs at once.

> Mama took the chicken out of the oven
> And then we all said grace
> But when we opened our eyes again
> A note was in the chicken’s place
> It said:
> “No poultry is safe when I’m in town.”
> (Bandito de Pollo)
> “Your Thanksgiving turkey is going down.”
> (Bandito de Pollo)
> Bandito! De Pollo!
> Enrico! De Pollo!
> Bandito! De Pollo! Oh ho!

The Meat Midgets no longer exist, except in the hearts of children everywhere, but I will always remember them fondly as my second [most serious band](http://www.mamster.net/ratcm/).

**Update (16 April 2006):** [I found the CD](https://www.rootsandgrubs.com/2006/04/16/mama-took-the-chicken/)!

Mmm (bibim) bop

Yesterday we took Iris to the [bun bakery](http://www.belleepicurean.com/) and the central library. As we entered the children’s section of the library, I spied a book that appeared to be a children’s book about *bibimbap*. On closer inspection, it turned out to be a children’s book about bibimbap.

Bibimbap, for the uninitiated, is a Korean dish consisting of a bowl of rice topped with assorted flavorful meats and vegetables and a fried egg. My favorite variation is dolsot bibimbap, where the rice is placed in a dangerously hot stone bowl and the egg is cracked over the top, raw. The bottom of the rice gets brown and crunchy, a condition I like to call “crunchy rice bottom” and which is also highly valued in certain Persian dishes.

I get dolsot bibimbap sometimes at my local Korean restaurant, and I had to develop an elaborate pantomime over the course of several visits to convince them that I actually wanted the raw egg. In retrospect, I should have just looked up the Korean for “I’d like a raw egg.” Bibimbap is not complete without a large dose of *kochujang*, Korean hot sauce.

The kid’s book is great, and Iris demanded it at bedtime, even though she has never tried bibimbap. As I read it, I had a sense of deja vu, and I remembered that the very first time we went to the central library, I spied what appeared to be a children’s book about *natto*. It turned out to be a children’s book about natto.

Natto, for the uninitiated, is a Japanese torture device consisting of soybeans fermented with an evil bacterium that turns them into a stringy and foul-smelling mass. There’s an Iron Chef episode devoted to natto, and it is ten times scarier than Shark Week.

A Japanese-speaking friend explained that the story is about a kid who asks his grandfather how natto is made, and his grandfather shows him. Probably the kid was looking for a ten-second answer, or perhaps his grandfather is hard of hearing, and what the kid actually asked was, “Why do I have to eat this?”

Perhaps you don’t believe me. Well, I have pictures.

* Front cover
* Confronting the demon
* Initiated into the cult

I told my friend Rob, who has lived in Japan, about the natto book. “Have you ever had natto?” I asked him.

“Sure, I have it for breakfast every day,” he replied. And he was serious. I guess that is one way to kick ass. If you wake up with natto, the rest of the day is going to be cake.

Okay, I realize natto is probably no more an acquired taste than Thai shrimp paste, which I like, but it’s not like you run into natto that often in Seattle, so it’s easier to just make fun of it.