Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun

Thursday, March 31, 2016

INSIDE TRUMP'S CLOSET and CONTENTED DIVERSIONS

CONTENTMENT
close up
Grazing slopes on Turri Road, San Luis Obispo County

    Silly to ask perhaps, but at what point and for what reason does a cow decide to stand or to rest?
FAVA UPDATE
   Frequent readers may recall recent photos of this year's fava bean crop, showing great promise. The days of promise have arrived.
     As Lana noted and as memorialized in this 2013 post Romancing the Fava, the Fine Art of the Shuck, it takes a lot of work to get the fava ready for inclusion in a menu. Picking, cracking the pod to shell it and then freeing the morsel from an inner skin. But the flavor is unlike anything else and thus coveted.
     I told Cambria artist and Italian cuisine maven Bruce Marchese, who seemed overly pleased that we had harvested our first batch, I was putting barbed wire and guard dogs around our fava bed.
     
WITH RESPECT TO THE CATALYST
    My friend Bruce Taylor, who blogs as the Catalyst at Odd Ball Observations, frequently treats and teases his readers with posts of food. Often they are items that he has made or that his beloved SWMBO has created. SWMBO, also known as Judy has delighted Lana and me with delicious dishes for more decades that would be polite to mention.
    Recently Bruce posted about a crispy fried egg. This is not that, but something he may wish to try. It begins skillet life as a fried egg, but at a propitious moment is suddenly scrambled, but only briefly. The white is set and the yolk is only a few moments from still being runny. By the time Mr. Camera arrived to snap the evidence, the yolk had set up a bit more than is desired. If you try it, get to that moment of scramble, then spatula it onto your plate and begin to eat. Leave the camera out of the equation and you'll have yolk that is that special exquisite place between solid and liquid. If you like that sort of thing.
SYMETRY
&
 HOME MADE POT STICKERS & HOT AND SOUR SOUP

RUMMAGING IN TRUMP'S CLOSET



      Though I do not see eye to eye with David Brooks on some policy questions I think he is a thoughtful essayist. I find agreement with much of what he writes about ethics and philosophy. I urge you to read this piece on the sexual politics of 2016.
     It is my belief that all are welcome in the American political rumble, even those with views I deplore. However people are responsible and accountable for their behavior. That means of course that voters should be thoughtful and even studied. That is not the case too often. We acknowledge it with the identification of LOW INFORMATION VOTER. Regardless, candidates are still liable for what they say, do, advocate and for the effect they have.
      I suspect some of you are offended by the images above but as I follow Trump and his artful manipulation of the media and his use of propaganda techniques, and read again his racist, sexist, ethnocentric remarks and see a void when it comes to specific policy objectives, other than building a wall, and see his bullying and bellicose manner I am reminded of history. So I've spent time reading about Germany from the end of WWI, the rise of Nazism, Adolph Hitler's oratory, the consolidation of the workers movement, the outrageous beer hall putsch, the writing of Mein Kampf, the growth of the Nazi party and all that followed.  Of course there many differences and circumstances.  But it is the similarities that worry me.
     Here we are when conservatives and liberal are both surprised and even outraged by Donald Trump's ascent. His own party is worried sick. Pundits, commentators and analysts are surprised his quest for the Presidency is real. Donald Trump is not Adolph Hitler nor is he a Nazi. But the similarities should worry us all.


     See you down the trail.

10 comments:

  1. I don't think I've ever tried a fava bean but your love of them is compelling me to try some.

    The egg dish (AND the pot stickers) all look fantastic.

    And what can anyone say about Trump that hasn't been said. About the only hope one can have for the future is the widely held belief that Mrs. Clinton will trounce him in a general election.

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    Replies
    1. My favorite way to serve them is with orrechiette pasta, sausage, creme fraiche and parma-reggiano. The potstickers are Lana's-borrowing from a little of this and a little of that of good recipes.

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    2. BERNIE SANDERS IS SURE TO "TRUMP" TRUMP. CHECK THE COMPARISON POLLS.

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    3. Even Donald will feel the Bern!

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  2. Trump's policies are not that different than the vast majority of Republicans, he's just articulating them without the dog whistles.

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  3. Said and written with rapier wisdom.

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  4. I love the green, reminds me of my grad student days at Cal, living in Sebatapol, the bucolic nature of spring in Sonoma Co., back in the late 70's. As to the blip called Trump, it's the damnedest thing I've seen in Politics in 50 years. So much is changing, it's hard to predict. Certainly I'd like to see the 'Sanders' method succeed, but am fascinated by what might happen here in the years ahead, the years I'll never know.

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  5. As we look forward,
    --it appears many of the current student and 18-34 generation are on board with a Sanders view of America and the federal government.
    --Larry Sabato at the U of Virginia, a Presidential politics scholar, says the Electoral College Votes are almost locked for Hillary.
    --I have concern about some of the years we'll never know, as climate and stability loom as threats to my daughters and granddaughter.
    --Glad the green brought back good memories.

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  6. Replies
    1. Very tasty. Lana has been working on her recipe for them over the years and I think she's found the right combination.

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