Spinach Mushroom Barley Soup

I’m working on my kitchen skills or as normal people would say – I’m learning to cook. It’s a way to keep my sodium intake down to keep my blood pressure lower (not low as it will never be low again unless I work hard at it). I’m cooking the eponymous soup of the title from a recipe from The Big Book of Soups & Stews by Maryan Vollstedt.

I like barley and wanted to cook something with it. If you think of a barley soup, you usually think of Beef Barley Soup. Yet, I’m looking for something vegetarian, so that’s why I’m leaving out the meat.

Last week, I made the vegetable stock. It’s just a simple stewing of your normal stock vegetables: celery, leeks, onions, peppers, turnip. Plus some herbs in bay leaf and thyme. Black pepper but no salt also added. This stock has been frozen in the freezer for a week now and it will be the basis for the soup.

Now, I’m not gonna rehash the recipe here. I will put my cooking notes down so as to help me become better around the kitchen.

First of all learning kitchen skills one of the hardest things is measurement. The recipe called for a half cup of chopped red peppers. I had a big pepper and chopped it, but what is half a cup from this. It’s the same with the mushrooms: one pound. What does this look like? I went by sight, but since I am a novice, I have no idea what these measurements looks like. They seem like I have too much.

Second, it takes longer than you think to prep the ingredients when you’re a novice. I chopped the vegetables, but forgot about defrosting the spinach and the stock. I was left standing around with the vegetables simmering in the pot while it took a while for the stock to be melted.

Third, knife skills. I can’t for the life of me dice or chop vegetables. They end up irregular sizes. Are the carrots too big? Are the mushrooms? In due time I’ll know, but right now with my skills, the vegetables are too big.

So this is my adventure this morning. I’ll let you know how it tastes.

UPDATE: Fourth, grains soak up water. I had put in half a cup of barley. The recipe originally called for a third of a cup. This looked meek. So I upped the measurement. After half an hour of simmering, the barley has soaked up tons of the stock. Rather than a soup, it looks like a stew.

The Ides of March

I’m kind of sick of politics right this moment, so I guess that catching the morning showing of The Ides of March somewhat trying. It also doesn’t help when you can’t figure out the central conflict of the movie. Plus, going in they sold it as a political thriller; yes there was some of that, but it was mostly a character drama — what will Ryan Gosling learn? Speaking of who, this guys in every movie right now, hunh?

Anytime Evan Rachel Wood is in a movie watch out. She plays dangerous very well because she looks so innocent. You know it would come down to her getting into trouble with a capital T. Just pick up the phone.

The overall theme of the movie is that politics is dirty and will make even those with high minded ideas change their tune. I know. That’s why I’ve been sick of politics lately.

3 of 5 stars

Slack

I’ve been kind of slack since NewsRadio Quote Month ended. Even then, I let September slip by without many posts there at the end, but really stopped for October. I don’t like to do that as this is my Social Network, and I like to blog — mainly about nothing. Or about everything.

So, let me try to jump start my writing posts again. Maybe write about cooking. I’m trying out several different things with soup. I’ve already made some vegetable stock. I’m trying to stay vegetarian as much as possible, so my soup stock will feature vegetables. Now I’ll have to use it for soup. Coming up some barley spinach mushroom soup. Later on perhaps just mushroom. I’m looking at the Japanese dashi but trying to figure out how to make it less salty.

That’s another thing I have to worry about this time. My blood pressure. I’ve felt terrible the last two months. I’m hopeful I’ll feel better from here on out.

So trust me. I’ll start writing again.

R.I.P. Steve Jobs

That’s what you see on Apple’s home page this evening. Steve Jobs has died and has left us to a future of our own, one where we must decide what technology will be like on our own. That is daunting, but one which we will live in.

As for Steve, he’s the man. You can’t imagine. Or you could because he brought us the future. It’s in your hands. It’s on your desktop. And on your lap. It was his vision and we were glad for it.

He’s made our present the future and our lives less complicated. Thank you once again.

Rest in peace, Steve, rest in peace.

Hot Spot of Bothers

Hawaii 2010/To Hilo and Back/Clouds on Mauna Kea

Iceland

One’s Hawaii. The other’s Iceland. There’s lots of black lava on the two islands. If you’ve ever been, you’ll notice the similarities. Especially, if you go to the Big Island. Little fluffy clouds.

We Eat Always On Vacation

Iceland: Pulsa

Spent some time today scanning some photos of the Baltic Cruise of 2001. Working my way backwards. Here’s some hot dogs from Iceland: a red pulsa with remoulade, fried onions, and bacon. It’s making me hungry.

I’ve already posted my vacation log. If you want to read about the day, then click here. Good times. Good times. Before I die, I would like to go back.

“Why don’t you call a specialist?” “I am a specialist.” “At what?” “At everything.”

Moneyball! makes even old people care about baseball. At the showing, the old people liked the game. They seemed to cheer for a game that was played years ago. And that’s the magic of Moneyball!, it made baseball slightly relevant again.

Of course, I was going to watch Moneyball! because I’m a baseball jones. As the Orioles wind down another losing season, we can only hope that the new O’s GM can find some magic and breathe life into a moribund organization. I said it once I have to say it again, “There’s rock bottom, then fifty feet of crap, and then there’s [the A’s].” They’re being held up by the Orioles.

Hopefully, this movie will make our ownership decide to try and find a system to get out of this losing. Or inspire baseball players to go all OBP on us. The Orioles need the players to stop giving up outs. Earl Weaver, we need your guidance!

Anyhow, Jonah Hill plays it straight. Brad Pitt does a Brad Pitt move. It’s great that the A’s have won something. Now when will the O’s.

3 of 5 stars