Local Breads: Sourdough and Whole-Grain Recipes from Europe’s Best Artisan Bakers

Local Breads: Sourdough and Whole-Grain Recipes from Europe's Best Artisan Bakers

author: Daniel Leader
name: Elaine
average rating: 4.21
book published: 2007
rating: 3
read at: 2010/03/28
date added: 2010/03/29
shelves: cookbook, read-again, wishlist
review:
Recommended by Mathias, after the First Friday bread "contest" in March — he brought pretzels. (I brought the only other bread: 3 different slow-knead loaves.) Made the pretzels yesterday. OMG good. Don’t know if I’ll make any other recipes while I have it out from the library; most seem to need quite a bit of attention and a baking stone, neither of which do I have right now. But I want to come back to it one of these days.

Local Breads: Sourdough and Whole-Grain Recipes from Europe’s Best Artisan Bakers

Local Breads: Sourdough and Whole-Grain Recipes from Europe's Best Artisan Bakers

author: Daniel Leader
name: Elaine
average rating: 4.19
book published: 2007
rating: 3
read at: 2010/03/28
date added: 2010/03/29
shelves: cookbook, wishlist, read-again
review:
Recommended by Mathias, after the First Friday bread "contest" in March — he brought pretzels. (I brought the only other bread: 3 different slow-knead loaves.) Made the pretzels yesterday. OMG good. Don’t know if I’ll make any other recipes while I have it out from the library; most seem to need quite a bit of attention and a baking stone, neither of which do I have right now. But I want to come back to it one of these days.

Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan

Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan

author: Jake Adelstein
name: Elaine
average rating: 3.75
book published: 2009
rating: 4
read at: 2010/03/27
date added: 2010/03/29
shelves: autobiography, crime, non-fiction
review:
Fascinating narrative, weird & gritty, even "hard-boiled" — I stayed up past midnight to finish it, after a couple of days of reading little chunks at lunchtime.

Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan

Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan

author: Jake Adelstein
name: Elaine
average rating: 3.78
book published: 2009
rating: 4
read at: 2010/03/27
date added: 2010/03/29
shelves: autobiography, crime, non-fiction
review:
Fascinating narrative, weird & gritty, even "hard-boiled" — I stayed up past midnight to finish it, after a couple of days of reading little chunks at lunchtime.

Why Americans Hate Welfare: Race, Media, and the Politics of Antipoverty Policy (Studies in Communication, Media, and Public Opinion)

Why Americans Hate Welfare: Race, Media, and the Politics of Antipoverty Policy (Studies in Communication, Media, and Public Opinion)

author: Martin Gilens
name: Elaine
average rating: 3.35
book published: 1999
rating: 2
read at: 2010/03/10
date added: 2010/03/24
shelves: economics, history, non-fiction, politics, psychology
review:
Couldn’t get into this one enough to finish it. Very good and important information, but dry. HIDEOUS charts, too. There’s a great popular book hiding in all the data, but this isn’t it.

These three things, every day.

Take a shower
I really don’t feel awake or human until I’ve had my shower. I also like my shower for thinking time, something about being alone with nothing to distract? In college, I sometimes took showers in the middle of the afternoon, in between classes, just to get the thinking time.

My adolescence coincided with the then-worst-ever drought in southern California. (I gather it’s been surpassed since then.) So water stinginess was the order of the day. One of the things that blew me away when I got to Washington was the water: the rain, the rivers, everything. I used to joke that I moved here to be able to take a really long shower.

Which was one of the reasons we got a tankless water heater, by the way. Our old water heater was awful. Couldn’t even muster enough hot water to fill the bathtub. The tankless just keeps going and going and going. Delightful.

Weigh myself
It’s a big part of how I lost 60 pounds: weighing myself every morning and tracking it on a graph. I don’t do the graphing anymore, but the daily weigh-in keeps me honest. (I’ve gained some back, honestly, but at least I’m 100% aware of it, and can track upticks and downticks based on hormones, biking, and eating habits.) The morning routine in generally is really important to me. If I follow my usual pattern, I feel like I’ve got enough of my bearings to get the day rolling properly.

Write in a journal
I’ve kept a journal since I was nine years old, but this specific daily habit came from an assignment from a therapist. She had me write every day “what worked” that day right before bed. That way my last thought was always of a success or a pleasurable experience, rather than whatever horrid thing I’d been thinking about before that. It worked wonders; still does.

Now I have a lovely moleskine datebook: in the morning I record my weight (see above), and at night I record my bike miles/time if any, as well as “what worked.” Occasionally I add some details about the weather, since there’s a cute spot to do that at the bottom of each page.

(I’m such a cheapskate that I didn’t buy 2010’s book until March. :\ Until then I was writing in another micro notebook!)

I enthusiastically recommend the journaling habit, by the way, especially if one is prone to see the glass as half-empty!

Old School knows pizza pie

It’s the perfect Olympia place: delicious food in a funky/surly atmosphere. I can’t imagine any Olympians who have NOT been there, so for the out-of-towners:

A brick storefront between a vintage store & a beat-up parking lot; on the parking lot side, a mural of superheros (mostly). Inside, the walls are covered with posters & other random flat things from the late 70s and 80s, many with specific northwest significance; but it doesn’t have that “crazy crap on the walls” feel of a TGIFriday’s, because it’s genuinely shabby & time-worn, as are the vinyl booths & stools, the vintage video games, etc. Curiously, there’s an enormous aquarium in the front window. The queuing space is cramped and awkward, and sometimes splits off towards both of the two doors. Staff tends towards the usual Oly-style punks, so some tattoos, some oddball hair, a little short/surly but not excessively so.

The pizza itself is mostly of the thin enormous slice variety. (They added a “Sicilian style” pizza a while ago, but I don’t ever get it.) Great crust, a bit of a crunch but not too crispy. The basic varieties are rock solid, but I have a fondness for some of the oddball versions, particularly anything without sauce: the Greek (iirc), which includes spinach & feta — we usually add sausage if getting a whole pie, and the Al Green, just cheeses and broccoli. No, seriously, the broccoli is really good. Eating there, a single slice is enough to fill me up most of the time. When we get a pizza to go, I have to be careful not to scarf down WAY too much.

I just wish they delivered. (I did once bring home a pizza on the Xtracycle. In the rain. It was AWESOME.)

Rex Libris Volume One: I, Librarian (Rex Libris)

Rex Libris Volume One: I, Librarian (Rex Libris)

author: James Turner
name: Elaine
average rating: 3.48
book published: 2007
rating: 0
read at: 2010/03/01
date added: 2010/03/10
shelves: fantasy, fiction, graphic-novel, read-again
review:
I can’t give this any stars one way or the other — it looked fascinating, but the font was too freaking small to read. Will need to see if I can find a larger copy.

Rex Libris Volume One: I, Librarian (Rex Libris)

Rex Libris Volume One: I, Librarian (Rex Libris)

author: James Turner
name: Elaine
average rating: 3.48
book published: 2007
rating: 0
read at: 2010/03/01
date added: 2010/03/10
shelves: graphic-novel, fiction, fantasy, read-again
review:
I can’t give this any stars one way or the other — it looked fascinating, but the font was too freaking small to read. Will need to see if I can find a larger copy.

The Imperial Cruise: A True Story of Empire and War

The Imperial Cruise: A True Story of Empire and War

author: James Bradley
name: Elaine
average rating: 3.45
book published: 2009
rating: 4
read at: 2010/03/03
date added: 2010/03/10
shelves: history, non-fiction, politics
review:
Excellent book — uses the far east trip of (at the time Secretary of War) Taft and Teddy Roosevelt’s daughter Alice as a structure to talk about American involvements in Asia in the late 19th & early 20th century. It’s not pretty. Amazing use of primary sources to show the specific elements of racism and imperialism at work.

The author got interested in the subject after writing a book about his father’s experiences in WWII, and so a large portion is devoted to the Americans’ encouragement (development?) of imperial ambitions in Japan, and when push came to shove and the Japanese fought the Russians, how the Americans were quick to go back on whatever they’d said to the Japanese. He also makes the explicit connection — as the Japanese did — between the Monroe Doctrine in the Americas and the Japanese’s view of their dominance in Asia.

A similarly large section covers the Americans’ colonization of the Philippines (and Hawaii as well) — the same combination of confidence & naiveté that you see again in Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq. You’d think we could learn from the disasters of the past, but apparently not.

Highly recommended.