Sunday, June 12, 2011

The Cider-Roasted Chicken That Almost Wasn't

 Ever been going through recipes and ended up taking a walk down memory lane?

I used to be a Cooking Light junkie.  When I still worked at Waldenbooks (when there still was Waldenbooks) I looked forward to the box of magazines that would yield the new issue, through which I would eagerly page looking for new ideas.  At that time, my husband David was still away doing Army stuff (we joked that even though he was Army Reserve, whose motto was "one weekend a month and two weeks in the summer", we only got to see him one weekend a month and two weeks in the summer) so I was in charge of getting real food into myself and Emily.

The cover of the October 2004 issue featured an extremely attractive recipe for Cider-Roasted Chicken, which I immediately decided I had to try.  Soon after purchasing the magazine I went out to the market and purchased all of the ingredients, including a small roasting chicken.  When I got home, I began my preparations:  following the directions, I carefully removed the packaging on the chicken and fished out the bag of giblets.  I then thoroughly washed the chicken and set it on a measuring cup at the very back of the kitchen sink to drain. 

At the time, we had an aging English Springer Spaniel named Teegan.  Springers are quirky by nature (one source states that if you have a ghost in your house you should obtain a spaniel because they will chase the ghost away with their goofy nature) and Teegan was no exception.  She helped raise Emily (she is in virtually every photo of Emily from babyhood on); she ate watermelon with me when I was pregnant; she loved green beans.  In the span of her lifetime she never, ever curled a lip at a child--even when they pulled her ears, lips, fur and stubby tail.

Teegan was named for a character on Doctor Who--a bossy, outspoken Australian airline hostess who questioned everything the 800-odd-year-old Doctor did and who had a habit of barking responses when she didn't like what he said.   I just liked the name:  I didn't realize that the puppy who climbed over all the other puppies to get to us was an alpha dog--which meant she was bossy--would also always be after my job, literally nipping at me, challenging me (and not in a playful way), and talking back to me if I scolded her.  When David was away, she would try to promote me to Alpha Male by taking over my side of the bed and pushing me over to his.  She was also the Wolf in Our Living Room, the Mighty Hunter, a Dog's Dog.  You could play tug of war with her for hours and her teeth would never come near you, but if she got hold of something she knew she wasn't supposed to have, she became a different dog--demonically possessive.  Before you ask, yes we worked with her--with limited success.  She was determined to be the Boss.
Teegan, sitting at David's computer--you guessed it--at the dining room table

When this all occurred, Teegan had reached the venerable age of ten years:  the only evidence of her status as a senior citizen was that she had gone utterly and completely deaf (and was really enjoying it--there were times when you could just see her looking at us waving our arms and thinking "this is GREAT!").

Imagine for a moment your kitchen sink and how high it is off the ground.  Now imagine an English Springer Spaniel--a dog whose shoulder comes roughly to your knee--next to the sink.  Tack on 10 years--that's 70 in dog years--to the dog and what you've got is the equivalent of my mother attempting the high jump.

Except my mother is not Teegan.  My mother knits; Teegan is the Mighty Hunter.  My mother wants Archway Cookies; Teegan wanted that chicken.

I still don't know how she did it.  After setting the chicken to drain, I turned away for two seconds, and when I turned back there was Teegan standing on the floor holding the chicken--the raw chicken, MY raw chicken-- by the wing. 

The following thoughts flashed through my head in the microsecond of realization that occurred before I reacted to this sight:  if Teegan gets away with the chicken she will take it under the table--from whence I won't be able to get it back without getting bitten -- and eat it.  Which will make a huge, disgusting mess.  If Teegan eats the chicken she will then likely get really sick, making an even bigger, more disgusting mess.  I must get the chicken back!

 I knew I had to keep my hands clear of her teeth:  this was a prey object, which she had hunted and caught fair and square and she was prepared to defend it.  


Lightning-fast, I reached down and grabbed the chicken by the leg, instigating what remains to this day the strangest tug-of-war in which I have ever engaged.  Predictably, Teegan did not let go of the chicken.  She dug in as best she could on the kitchen floor:  this was a battle to the death!

...ever played tug-of-war with a raw chicken?

Teegan had the advantage:  her teeth had a firm grip on the chicken and all she had to do was pull.  Meanwhile, I was forced to use my hands--including my supposedly evolutionarily advanced opposable thumbs--to try to maintain a grip on my slippery chicken leg.  And I was laughing--how could I not as I tried to hang onto a raw chicken that my dog had decided was hers?

Finally I realized that this had to end before I slipped and Teegan got away with her prize.  In a last, desperate measure, I stuck my whole arm into the chicken's empty body cavity and pulled up with all my might.

And my 40-pound Springer Spaniel came right with it, gripping that wing with barracuda-like determination.  After a moment suspended by the chicken, she realized that I wasn't giving in:  grudgingly, she let go and dropped to the floor.

Calmly, I washed the chicken very thoroughly again, patted it dry, and set it to marinade in the cider-brine described in the recipe.  It was very tender when cooked:  whether it  was the marinade, or the extra tugging, we will never know.  But here's the recipe:

http://www.myrecipes.com/recipe/cider-roasted-chicken-10000000701063/

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

I Have Seen the Enemy, and It is Green and Shiny--Sometimes

I love camping.   I spend nearly the entire summer outdoors in a beautiful, rustic setting with my tent, my fire ring, and Mother Nature for company.  This makes me happy.

Sadly, into each life some rain must fall.   I don't mind rain of the watery kind (that would be silly).  I'm talking about my metaphorical rain, my nemesis...
The Evil Weed
from Wikipedia

Poison ivy.


Poison ivy is my enemy.  It is the Soviet Union to my United States, the rain on my parade, the PC to my Mac.  It is the only adversary in my life with which there is no negotiation, no compromise, for which the "last resort" is the ONLY resort. There is no detente, no shelter, no agreement to disagree.  Poison ivy laughs in the face of diplomacy; it creeps over the boundaries I try to establish with it.  I tell it that I only want a little free space and it laughs and sends out insidious little hairy tendrils to torment me. 


 My husband says that I can get poison ivy just by walking past someone who is thinking about the horrible case of poison ivy they had two years ago last July.  He is not exaggerating:  if anything he is sometimes guilty of understatement.  When I get poison ivy, I don't just get it on my hands:  I get it on my feet, even though I am wearing jeans, hiking boots and thick socks; I get it on my stomach (my STOMACH!) even though I am wearing two layers of clothing; I get it all the way up my arms even though I am wearing a long-sleeved shirt and gloves; I get it on my thighs...on my THIGHS???

My medicine cabinet has a whole department of poison ivy remedies.  Most of them were a waste of money.  The homeopathics are largely a better bet than the pharmaceuticals, but at least once a year I find myself giving in and calling the doctor to howl for steroids.  It's usually this time of year, and usually I get the incredulous nurse asking:  "Are you sure it's poison ivy??"

Yes, dammit.  I was in a ditch in an area where poison ivy grows in the summer.  The roots are there.  Dead leaves are there.  They wait for me.

I really think that all I need do is glance at those ominously shiny leaves and the itching starts.   When I've mentioned this to someone, I've had responses like, "Oh, I don't get poison ivy!"


I hate them.   

Each year, as I set up my campsite, I entertain the irrational hope that maybe this year I will finally have gotten enough poison ivy that I have become immune to it.  Every year, I am sadly disappointed:  even though I armor myself against the Evil Weed, I end up like I am now--red and itchy.  

Inevitably there is a certain amount of astonishment on the part of my friends when, in mid-March, I contract my first case of the year.  I can't tell you how many times I have explained that poison ivy doesn't just go away in the winter time, and that the leaves aren't the only part of the plant exuding  urushiol, the liquid which causes the rash.  In fact, the leaves are only the tip of the itchy iceberg.


KNOW THY ENEMY
I would like to have included more photographs but I didn't want to post things without permission.  Next time I go out to the campsite maybe I can get some identifying shots to add to this blog.

For me, camping is like the movie "Zombieland":  like the main character, I have developed a few simple rules that help keep me from getting walloped with more than one really catastrophic case of poison ivy a year.


RULE 1:  AVOID THE THREE SHINY GREEN LEAVES UNLESS YOU ARE SPRAYING THEM WITH POISON IVY KILLER.  This most obvious rule is best  remembered with the adages, "Leaves of three, let it be", and "One, two, three? Don't touch me."  


COROLLARY TO RULE 1:  THE LEAVES AREN'T ALWAYS SHINY, AND THEY AREN'T ALWAYS GREEN.  Leaves in the spring can be red:   "Red leaflets in the spring, it's a dangerous thing" (I had never heard this one, but I'm posting it in the hope that someone can benefit).  Once fully leafed the leaves are shiny green.  Then summer comes, with drought and dust, and the pretty shiny green leaves become dull, blending into the rest of the forest foliage.  This is just one of the ways that my leafy nemesis lies in wait for me.  


RULE 2:  TREAT EVERY PART--AND I MEAN EVERY PART--OF THE PLANT LIKE IT'S RADIOACTIVE.  You're pulling up shoots?  Great.  Just don't let those roots touch your skin or you will end up with the screaming itchies.  


COROLLARY TO RULE 2:  KNOW WHAT EVERY PART OF THE PLANT LOOKS LIKE--AT ANY TIME OF YEAR.  Poison ivy is universally evil.  You cannot stand before the plant and sigh, "I know there's good in there somewhere".  There isn't.  Since we have already discussed leaves, let's talk about the other parts of the Evil Weed:


from Wikipedia
1.  VINES.  Ever seen hairy vines growing up the side of a tree?  Yep,  that's poison ivy, and if you think that the leaves will give you the Hideous Rash, they've got nothing on the vines.  So if your mind is racing ahead to "ACK!  I've got to hack it off that tree in my campsite!" be aware that this is not just a stick, it's a living thing, a conduit, transporting poison ivy juice to leaves so high in the tree that you can't see them.  If you don't have a machete or long handled axe and a Tyvek suit, chopping it would be the dermatological kiss of death.  


The vines don't change appearance appreciably during the season.  They may have a few shoots at their bases, but generally they sit in place, passive/aggressively reminding you that they are RIGHT THERE.


2.  SHOOTS.  One year I set up my campsite in a new location.  A month later, I returned to find a zillion little grey shoots coming up around my camp kitchen.  In March the shoots are about 6" tall and have small red buds; if you pull them up, you will see that the roots run underground from shoot to shoot.  They're connected in a well-established network that is designed to thwart your efforts to eradicate the plant from your campsite.  It's March, and already you're fighting an uphill battle.


3.  BERRIES.  Recently my husband asked me if there was anything good about poison ivy, and the truth is that birds do in fact eat the berries.  WE, on the other hand, should NOT eat the berries. 


4.  THE "AT ANY TIME OF YEAR" PART:  here's where it gets dicey.  By now, I hope you're educated enough  to realize that this stuff won't just go away after the first frost.  So if you think you are safe leaning on those roots in January you are wrong.  And soon you will be itchy.


Likewise, the leaves don't lose their efficacy with the change of seasons.  Use extra caution when clearing your campsite of deadfall in the spring.  Oh, and watch out for your firewood:  if it had evil leaves resting on it, and you burn it, you will (as we found out last spring) experience the joy of what happens when you burn poison ivy (in my case, a trip to the emergency room because my left eye was swollen shut).  


That's all I have to say on the subject.  I hope that you take what I have said to heart, that you will take it with you when next you venture into the woods; that you pay better attention to the vegetation around you...


And then, after all that, laugh at yourself when you get poison ivy anyway.



























Saturday, February 5, 2011

Masks: The Adventure Continues

Because I have ADHD and a zillion ideas at once, I not only have Set in progress, but the Anubis and Thoth masks as well.

The Anubis mask is very similar to Set.  There was less of a gallon-jug armature and more foam board and screen.  I used the plaster-treated gauze to build up the primary shape.  Notice that the Anubis snout is more canid in shape and slant.

Meanwhile, Set has had his second coat of Celluclay, and I have trimmed the edges of the mask.  The edges of the mask have been finished with the plaster coated gauze.

Thoth has the head of an ibis, which has posed a very interesting conundrum in puppet/mask making.  Modeling articulation from a toy dragon my daughter got at the Renaissance Faire, I procured 1/4"heavy gauge wire and 3/8" clear plastic tubing.  The wire moves freely through the tubing and can be twisted to make the head turn. I

stuck one end of the wire into a styrofoam ball to help stabilize it once it's in the "head".


Using a quart plastic container, I fashioned a head.  The beak is made from jointed foam board, which has been stuck into the spout.  The styrofoam ball assemblage has been affixed inside.    While the first coat of papier mache was drying, I packed on the modeling for Anubis, building up the nose and cheeks.  At the very bottom of the nose is a piece of screen, intended to help with breathing.

I began coating Set with reddish brown ultra suede, which looked great except for the inevitable seams between pieces of fabric.  Because I have ADHD I could not stand to cover the whole thing and then figure out what to do about the seams:  I had to work that out first.  I ended up using acrylic gel medium to affix pieces of paper towel over the seams (like decoupage).  I Then started painting over them.  The result of this was most satisfactory.

The next projects will be making more modeling on Thoth's head and finishing Set's covering.  I expect it will talke Anubis at least two days to dry!

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Set Mask Update: The Plaster is Applied

Forging ahead:

Having had dinner and taken my life into my hands while walking the dogs ('icy" does NOT begin to describe walking conditions out there!) I repaired to the basement with a bowl of water and some prepared papier mache gauze.

First I had to trim up the screen.  One of the real advantages of using this plastic screen is that you are not risking life and limb when  you work with it:  the last time I made a mask I used metal screen and bled profusely over the mask--which is, according to my costuming friends, necessary in order to ensure costume success.

I also ran an extra piece of foam board across the top of the mask to keep the ears from doing anything stupid like tilting inwards, and cut out part of the handle that had remained up to this point.

Cutting the gauze into strips, I started covering the mask.  At some point I noticed that the ears were too short, so I added length to the ears and covered over them.  I've left openings for the eyes that are large:  these will not only allow wide vision but also ventilation.

If there is an issue with vision after the plaster has dried, I will be able to cut through the plaster and screen to make the mask work.   But that will have to wait till tomorrow, when the plaster has completely dried.

You might wonder about the flat top of the mask:  no worries!  All Egyptian gods wore headdresses, and Set here will be no exception.  I might glue half a styrofoam ball to the front to help shape the "forehead" but otherwise this should be fine.  I gave some thought to opening up the top but I'm not sure how that would work.

Tomorrow:  check fit and eyes, and then another coat of plaster.

Onward!

Shaping Set: A Mask Project Part 1

Gods for Modern Times:  Sutekh
by Sophia Kelly Shultz
Popular literature--and some modern cults--portray the ancient Egyptian god Set (also known as Set, Sutekh or Typhon) as "evil."  After all, he murdered and dismembered his brother Osiris:  how much more dastardly can you get?  Why, he probably has tea with Osama bin Laden on a regular basis!

A little research reveals this to be a very simplistic description of an enormously complex deity who represented not evil, but something that the ancient Egyptians found to be far more terrifying:  chaos.  Set represented the chaos of storms, of the untamed desert, and of change.  Chaos was BAD.  It was one step away from the thing that they found most terrifying:  oblivion.

The ancient Egyptians did not, for the most part, love Set, but they accepted him as part of their cosmology because he provided the thing which the Egyptians valued above everything--balance.  The Egyptians were a very practical people:  you can't have good without evil; you can't have order without chaos.

I am in charge of Body Tribal, which will be held the second weekend of August at Four Quarters Farm  www.4qf.org  , and the theme this year is the Egyptian netherworld.   I'm sure there is a way to stage the dramas I have in mind without masks, but I can't envision acting out a judgement scene or the Osirian drama without animal-headed gods.

This is the first part of a blog about making a mask of the god Set.

It was supposed to be a blog about making a mask of the god Anubis, but that plan went south when I realized that with the exception of the ears the mask looked more like Set than Anubis.  Finally, I caved in and changed the ears.  So, this is in fact the first part of a blog about making a mask of the god Set.

I had found a website that suggested using a gallon jug as an armature for a mask.  I liked this idea, so I started with this shape.  I cut away much of the bottle, leaving the top and handle intact.


I tried gluing the foam board ears to this shape but was unsuccessful, so instead I punched holes into the center of the handle and around the perimeter of the remaining jug shape, then cut sections of nylon screen and laced wire through them and into the holes in the jug handle.

 I then punched holes matching those in the jug into the ears and threaded wire through them and into the jug.  It was at this point that I realized that the ears were too high, so I had to unthread the wire, move the holes, and re-thread the wire.  Very exciting.

Archaeologists have no clue what sort of animal Set was.  He had square-tipped ears and a tail that forked at the end:  suggestions have included everything from aardvarks to giraffes.  It is simpler to refer to him as "the Set animal" or "Typhonian beast".  On the left you can see one square-tipped ear mounted on the jug-armature.


Of course, the jug handle is not nearly long enough for a mask that covers an adult human's face.  I cast about the basement for something tubular, and when nothing was readily apparent, I took a scrap of foam board (I'm an artist; I have lots) and scored it on one side (right).  Now the normally rigid foam board will curl around nicely to form a snout.
Looks like a gas mask!

I next sliced the screen right at the handle level and lifted it up so that I could wire the snout to it.  I glued the snout together and am now waiting for the glue to set (nice pun, huh?) so that I can continue on.  I may have to shorten the snout, but that will be easy enough once the glue has set.

As you see, this is not your "Halloween mask for beginners" mask.  Tomorrow it may even begin to look like something!