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...a pocket full of rye.

Four and twenty blackbirds

Baked in a pie

When the pie was opened

The birds began to sing

Wasn’t that a dainty dish

To set before a king!

starlings, grackles, flock, Central Park, Murray Head

And then I looked up to the sky

photo by Murray Head

grackles, starlings, flocks, Central Park, Murray Head

It blackened right before my eyes

photo by Murray Head

grackles, starlings, flock, Murray Head, Central Park

Silhouettes - My own film noir

photo by Murray Head

flocks, central park, Murray Head, grackles, starlings

Fly away, fly away, fly away now

photo by Murray Head

grackles, starlings, flock,Murray Head, Central Park

Soon to be a distant memory

photo by Murray Head

I thought these photos were great – the beauty of nature and the artistry of the camera captured a “Mother Nature Moment” in Central Park.  These photographs were taken near Bethesda Fountain.

This article below is a wonderful Top Ten list so I  thought I would appropriate it for my Thursday blog and the visuals are so much better than anything I have.
Ethan Trex 

10 Buildings Shaped Like What They Sell
by Ethan Trex – November 16, 2010 – 6:20 PM

Looking for a good way to advertise your business? Why not shape your headquarters like what you sell or offer? It’s worked out pretty well for these businesses and groups.

1. The Longaberger Company, Newark, OH

Longaberger is known for its handcrafted maple baskets, so its headquarters are obviously shaped like a giant basket. Not just any old basket, though. It’s a Longaberger Medium Market Basket that’s been blown up to 160 times its normal size. The basket includes a seven-story atrium, heated handles that prevent ice formation, and two 725-pound gold leaf Longaberger tags. Want to take a look the next time you’re in Ohio? Longaberger has visiting hours!

2. Twistee Treat Ice Cream

Between 1983 and the mid-1990s, Twistee Treat opened 90 or so ice cream shops around the country, and each one is shaped like a delicious cone of soft-serve vanilla. Want your own towering cone? A completely stocked one in Zephyrhills, Florida, is on the market for a mere $475,000. Or, if you’re on a budget but good with tools, the same listing also offers “A Separate Dismantled Ice Cream Cone Building” at the bargain price of $40,000.

3. Kansas City Public Library’s Parking Garage

Parking garages are usually eyesores, but this one’s beautiful. The garage for Kansas City’s Library is cleverly concealed behind what look like the bindings of 22 giant books. What’s really terrific is that local residents got to help pick what books would get the nod for 25-foot renderings on the side of the garage. Some of the tiles that made the cut: Catch-22, Invisible Man, The Lord of the Rings, Silent Spring, and Charlotte’s Web.

4. House of Free Creativity, Ashgabat, Turkmenistan


Kansas City doesn’t have a monopoly on book-shaped buildings, though. Turkmenistan cut the ribbon on this open book in 2006 as part of an effort to create a comfortable environment for journalists. Of course, “free creativity” may be a bit of a stretch. The journalists in question all work for Turkmenistan’s state-run press, and the country had no foreign or private media and very little open Internet access when the building opened during the reign of the late dictator Saparmurat Niyazov.

5. The Hood Milk Bottle

This one’s a Boston institution. In 1933, Arthur Gagnon wanted to open an ice cream stand in nearby Taunton, and he designed his new business to look like a giant milk bottle. After several changes in ownership (and a sail from Quincy to Boston proper), the structure is now known as the Hood Milk Bottle and resides at the Children’s Museum. It’s 40 feet tall and could hold 58,000 gallons of milk.

6. United Equipment Company, Turlock, CA

United sells and rents heavy equipment like compactors and excavators, so it’s only natural that the company’s headquarters building is shaped like a two-story yellow bulldozer. The bulldozer building, which opened in 1976, is “using” its redwood treads and giant blade to move a pile of boulders. [Image courtesy of the Flickr user Nevada Tumbleweed.]

7. The Phoenix Financial Center, Phoenix, AZ

Financial services made early use of massive punch-card-driven computers, and the Phoenix Financial Center looks as if it’s offering an odd tribute to this antiquated technology. The entire building has narrow slits for windows and looks like an oversized punch card. According to Phoenix’s municipal government, though, the resemblance was purely accidental; the narrow windows are there to minimize the effects of the hot desert sun on the building’s air conditioning bills. Nevertheless, local residents still refer to it as “the Punchcard Building.” [Image courtesy of Flickr user mcbrennan.]

8, 9 and 10. And the Rest!

Furnitureland South’s 85-Foot Tall Highboy is more statue-attached-to-building than building itself, but the North Carolina landmark is still worth a mention. As is BMW’s Four Cylinder building in Munich, which architect Karl Schwanzer designed to stand out next to the eye-catching Olympic buildings in the area. And while Japan’s Banna Park Birdwatch isn’t an egg store, we just couldn’t leave it out. Birdwatchers on Ishigaki Island can view their avian friends from the comfort of an enormous egg. Visitors can even climb up to the top-level of the egg to get some fresh air and a view from the broken tip of the shell.
* * * * * *
These certainly aren’t the only buildings shaped like what they sell. Have you seen any examples in your travels?

Mugshot taken of Jack Ruby, taken following hi...

Image via Wikipedia

November 22, 1963 – John F. Kennedy was assassinated.  Do you believe one lone killer did this?  Really??  This is the 26th installment of the conspiracy theory, COUP D’ETAT.  The trail is leading us to a conspiracy formulated at the highest government levels.  You can read the entire conspiracy theory up to this point by clicking on the category, Conspiracy Theory Wednesday on my home page.

The Policeman’s Pimp – Jack Ruby

From his days as ” Sparky Rubenstein, errand boy for Al Capone, to his ownership of a string of Dallas nightclubs where policemen got preferential  treatment, Ruby was “one of our boys” according to mobster Johnny Roselli, with whom Ruby met twice during the month prior to the assassination.  Other gangster friends of Ruby’s included Joe Civello, Dallas Mafia chief: Barney Baker, teamster president Jimmy Hoffa‘s 370-lb bodyguard; and Dave Yaras, hitman  for Chicago mob boss Sam Giancanna.   Known as the guy who could “fix it” with e the police, Ruby counted ast least 100 Dallas cops among his pals.

Ruby’s self-professed idol was Lewis J. McWillie, a professional gambler who worked at te mob-owned  Tropicana Hotel in Havana.  In 1959, Ruby visited McWillie and the two met with crime boss Santos Trafficante Jr. then in a Cuban prison.  Shortly after Ruby’s return to Dallas, Trafficante was released.  The House Select Committee on Assassination suspected Ruby, acting as a gangland courier, had bought Trafficante’s freedom.  During the six-month period that included his Havana trip, the FBI interviewed Ruby eight times as a “potential criminal informant”.   For Ruby, this was not a first: in 1947 while still in Chicago, he “performed information functions” for the staff of then-Congressman Richard Nixon.

On June 7, 1964, Ruby told the Warren Commission his “life was in danger” – “Gentlemen,” he said, “if you want to hear further testimony, you will have to get me to Washington soon because…I want to tell the truth and I can’t tell it here”.  Before he died, he smuggled two letters out of prison which hint darkly that Lyndon Johnson was behind the conspiracy.

Someone stuffing a turkey

Image via Wikipedia

Or NOT – for the past few years I’ve opted to bake the stuffing separately and not in the bird.  When you have an empty cavity you can put onions and lemons inside, and you don’t have to get all gooey while trying to jam the stuffing in – and if you are using meat in your stuffing, I definitely would not want it inside the turkey because by the time you were sure the sausage had cooked through, your turkey could be dry and overdone.  Anyway, that’s just my opinion and this blog is really about the stuffing itself.

There are probably hundreds of stuffing variations; regional choices dictate certain ingredients, generational recipes passed down over the years, perhaps tweaked a bit here and there.  I’ve made all kinds of stuffings;  my mother-in-law’s recipe (see   previous blog http://wp.me/pNyWj-19g), basic bread stuffing, sausage and chestnut dressing, sage stuffing and god knows how many others for Thanksgivings past.

This year it’s going to be Celery-Herb Stuffing.  I’ve picked this stuffing for this year because I’m doing most of the cooking myself, and Peter has been telling me for two weeks “not to overdo it”.  So I’m hoping this stuffing won’t be too difficult and I think it will complement the Roast Turkey with Rosemary and Lemon.

CELERY – HERB STUFFING

7 TBS unsalted butter, plus more for baking dish

1 loaf rustic white bread, crusts removed and cut into 1/2″ cubes

1 celery Root (1 1/2 lb) peeled and cut into 1/2″ dice

Coarse salt and pepper

2 TBS Olive oil

3 celery stalks, thinly sliced on the diagonal

2 medium onions, halved lengthwise and thinly sliced in half-moons

2 cloves of garlic, finely chopped

1/2 cup extra dry vermouth

1/2 to 1 3/4 cups homemade or low-sodium chicken stock

1/2 tsp poultry seasoning (such as Bell’s)

3 TBS coarsely chopped fresh flat leaf parsley

3 1/2 tsp finely chopped fresh sage

2 tsp finely chopped fresh thyme

2 tsp finely chopped fresh rosemary

3-4 large eggs lightly beaten

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Melt 5 TBS butter in a skillet.  Toss with bread cubes in a large bowl.  Spread in a single layer on 2 rimmed baking sheets. Toast in oven, tossing once, until golden about 29 minutes.  Let cool completely.

Place celery root in a medium saucepan; add salted cold water to cover.  Bring to boil; reduce heat, and simmer until soft, about 15 minutes.  Drain and set aside.

Heat oil and remaining 2 TBS of butter in a large skillet over MEDIUM-HIGH heat.  Add vermouth, cook, scraping up browned bits with a wooden spoon, until it bubbles.  Pour over bread-vegetable mixture.  Stir in 1/2 cup stock, the poultry seasoning, and herbs; season with salt and pepper. Stir in 3 eggs.

Stir in 1 1/4 cup stock.  Stir in an egg.  Spoon into buttered 13″ by 9″  baking dish, and dot generously with butter.  Cover with   foil, and bake at 375 degrees, 25 minutes.  Uncover, and bake until golden brown, 10-15 minutes more.

Recipe from Martha Stewart Living

 

Six Word Memoir Monday

Illustration depicting thought.

Image via Wikipedia

Thank you (you know who you are) for bailing me out after my whining last week!  Great response to my weekly request for contributions to the Six Word Project every Monday.  They are as always terrific to read and speculate what your thought process was to produce it.

Planning another royal wedding! Oh my!! – Heather

Holiday festivities get earlier and earlier – Gail

Any pictures of the new baby? Susan Celtic Lady

Really missing the sound of laughter – Weez

Economics rule-Emily decided on Florida – Heide

Talking to myself more these days – Me

And a few from the book, Not Quite What I Was Planning-Six Word Memoirs by Writers Famous & Obscure.

I asked. They answered. I wrote. – Sebastion Junger

Extremely responsible, secretly longed for spontaneity – Sabra Jennings

Joined army. Came out. Got booted. – Johan Baumeister

Almost a victim of my family – Chuck Sangster

Garden State Parkway shield

Image via Wikipedia

I’m living in a world where I am omnipresent-everywhere at all times.  If you can’t reach me on my phone a/k/a house phone now a/k/a my land-line, then you can call me on my cell phone OR you can send me an email on at least two of my three email addresses OR you can text me and I will get it on my blackberry…SO why is there a problem communicating?

That was a rather loosely-connected (sorry for the pun) prologue to what really happened today.  There was a break down in communication BUT not really because I couldn’t be reached.  However, I liked writing that blurb about the absurdity of how connected we all are.

I had to make an overnight food and turkey run to New Jersey so I could pick up my turkey that I am paying $2.65 per lb for in a town that is “kinda” on the way home to New York City while my friend is paying $2.39 per lb for the same brand turkey AND if I had bought it where she did and where I did shop today I would have not had to “race” back to try and get to the City before my daughter did.  She was driving in from Boston with a baby, a baby nurse and a 2 yr. old in tow and I HAD HER KEYS! Not good!!

Thanksgiving dinner, Thanksgiving turkey,

I'd Walk a Mile for this turkey

Here’s the break down in communication – I told my daughter that I needed to use her refrigerator on Sunday when I brought the turkey home and her freezer.  Here’s what I said, ” Will you be home on Sunday or will the key be with the doorman“?  At which point she turns around and gives me the key.  Did I think it was her only key? NO!  Today as we are trading semi-hysterical phone calls while each of us is speeding to Manhattan, she says, “You said the afternoon” – did anything I say sound like afternoon.  Someone doesn’t always listen to whole sentences.   The baby will have to be nursed, Finley will have to be fed and they will be locked out.  Ever the fixer and over-giver I come up with a plan; first I call my friend who has a key to my apartment and ask her to leave it with the  doorman – that will work.  I call Chiara back and suggest she send the car to Queens with her baby nurse so she doesn’t have to park it or park it in her garage and take a cab to my apartment with the kids.  I don’t think she appreciated my suggestion at all because she said she would just have to go to a restaurant and wait for me. Needless to say I asked at least 3 times if she thought the doorman would have a key to the apartment since it was a corporate rental.  “NO” says she and “we’ve been through this before, he doesn’t have a key”!!!

The next glitch came when we left the Orchard and because time was really of the essence, I suggested that we drive north on Rte 18 or Rte 9 and my driver thinks we should stay on Rte 34 till we hit the Garden State Parkway or the NY Thruway. Welllllll as we headed home on Rte 34 we saw a sign for the GSP and so we turned right…right into some beautiful countryside, looked like horse country BUT no Parkway.  About 20 minutes later we finally saw the entrance to the Parkway and I just knew we would never get into the City before she did. Damn it anyway!!!

I said I would call her once I was thru the tunnel and I did and guess what?? She was in her apartment – seems the doorman had a key after all (which I said I thought he would since IT WAS a corporate apartment).  But what do I know?

The other break down occurred when I tried to dash into a beauty supply store to pick up a few things and my card was declined – WHAT??!!!  I’m not even going to go into that issue – I run out of the store and to the car to get another card.  Did I mention there had been a line of people behind me in the store, oh they were thrilled. Back in the store, thrust my American Express at the girl who says, “oh we don’t take American Express”. Well, that’s that – I leave the stuff and as I run out the door, I hear the cashier calling out that she has a void!!!

 

Whole green beans in a carton

Image via Wikipedia

Every year I’ve made “the” green bean-mushroom soup-onion ring casserole; known in my house as “the white-trash casserole”.  My children are so descriptive… NOT this year!! What I’m making is a  sophisticated adult version à la Martha. I think it’s going to be great and it’s heart-healthy too.

Green Beans with Creamy Mushrooms and Shallots

1 3/4 lb green beans trimmed

1 TBS plus 1 1/2 tsp olive oil

2 large shallots, thinly-sliced (1/2 cup)

3/4 cup low sodium chicken broth

2 tsp cornstarch

8 oz cremini mushrooms, trimmed, sliced to 1/8″ thick

1/3 cup 2 percent Greek yogurt

Coarse salt and ground pepper

Bring large pot of water to boil.  Blanch beans until tender, about 6 minutes.  Drain.

Meanwhile, heat 1 1/2 tsp oil in a large non-stick skillet over MEDIUM heat.  Cook shallots, stirring occasionally, until tender and just starting to brown, 3 – 4 minutes.  Transfer shallots to a small bowl, and wipe skillet clean with  paper towel.

Whisk together stock and cornstarch.  Heat remaining tablespoon of oil in skillet over HIGH heat.  Cook mushrooms, stirring occasionally until golden brown, about 6 minutes.  Reduce heat to low, add shallots.  Whisk in stock mixture. Cook until thick, about 3 minutes more.  Remove from heat.  Stir in yogurt and 1/2 tsp salt; season with pepper.  Toss in beans.  Serve warm.


 

My beautiful daughter with her two daughters;  Finley Ray as Snow White this Halloween, Francesca artfully disguised as a Pumpkin although most people thought she was a Carrot!  Chiara in a Halloween Hoodie courtesy of Tia – I got one too!

halloween, Finley Ray Clark, Chiara Berti Clark, Francesca, Frankie, Snow White, halloween hoodie

Let the fun begin...

photo by Lori

We’re pretty used to seeing celebrities walking, talking and shopping in New York City; so many live here.  But they also work here and hardly a week goes by when you don’t see a film being shot on location here.   A few weeks ago look who was in town.  I just LOVE Ed Harris.

Man on a ledge

Ed Harris - Man on a Ledge

photo by Murray Head

And let’s not forget Sam Worthington (Avatar) who was also turning quite a few heads (the younger crowd).

Avatar, Man on a ledge, New york city, movie making,

Sam Worthington

photo by Murray Head

After seeing this photo, you might want to think twice about going to a Sleep Lab to get a cure for sleep apnea! My friend, Jim submitted himself to this tortuous event and as he said, “I failed the test”.

Jim Taylor,

"and you expect me to sleep like this?"

photo by Susan

Last week I had a special visit from our friend and adopted daughter, Luana.  She arrived with her husband (newly weds) Gustavo and spent a week in NYC.  Timing was perfect because she got to meet Finley too and lucky for Luana – Finny decided to spare one of her band-aids for Luana’s boo-boo!

Luana Teves, Finny, Finley ray, New York city, boo-boo,

Luana has a boo-boo but Finley took care of it

photo by Gustavo


Cucurbita pepo (butternut squash). Location: M...

Image via Wikipedia

Things are beginning to look like Thanksgiving around my house.  Today Peter is setting up the large table top we attach to our small apartment-sized table and as of now, ingredients are beginning to populate the counters.  Had to check on how much granulated sugar I had and where or where is that damn Sherry Vinegar?  I’ve made the soup and froze it so at least one dish is done.

BUTTERNUT BISQUE

3 TBS butter ( I use unsalted)

1 medium onion coarsely chopped

2 garlic cloves sliced ( I used 3)

1/2 tsp dried thyme

1/4 tsp cinnamon

1/8 to 1/4 tsp cayenne pepper

coarse salt

1 large butternut squash (4lbs) peeled, seeded and cubed

1 can reduced sodium chicken broth

1 cup half & half

1 TBs lemon juice

sour cream for serving

In large saucepan, heat butter over MEDIUM,  add onion, garlic , thyme, cinnamon and cayenne, stirring occasionally till onion softens 5-7 min.

Add squash, broth, half & half and 3 cups of water. Bring to boil; reduce to simmer, and cook till squash is tender – about 20 min.

Working in batches, puree in blender till smooth (I used immersion blender right in pot all at once).  Stir in lemon juice, season with salt.  Serve bisque with sour cream and dash of cayenne (if desired).

Recipe from Martha Stewart’s Every Day Food




Official seal of Young Americans for Freedom.

Image via Wikipedia

HAROLDSON LAFAYETTE HUNT in 1963, Dallas was a Mecca for the ultra-right, and H.L. Hunt was their Godfather.  An oil billionaire, Hunt supported right-wing causes such as the John Birch Society, William F.  Buckley’s Young Americans for Freedom (YAF), the political campaigns of Senator Joseph McCarthy, and the tax-exempt “news” organizations Facts Forum and Lifeline.  On Nov. 4, 1063, Hunt’s security chief, an ex-FBI agent, wrote Hunt a memo on “reports of possible violence” during Kennedy’s  upcoming trip.  Hours after the assassination, the FBI told Hunt to go into hiding, and for several weeks provided him with security.  Years later, Hunt’s personal aide alleged Hunt knew of the plot, having unwittingly influenced his right-wing followers to conspire to kill Kennedy.  He added that Hunt had sent him to check on Oswald’s security in police custody.  Though Hunt and Jack Ruby claimed not to know each other, a reliable witness alleged he and Ruby had won a considerable amount of money from Hunt, an inveterate gambler, wagering on football games.  Among Ruby’s effects was the phone number of H. L.’s son, Lamar Hunt, whose offices Ruby visited on November 21, 1963.Another son, Nelson Bunker Hunt, sat on the board of the anti-communist International Committee for the Defense of Christian Culture (led by a former Nazi Abwehr agent) and was a major backer of YAF.  Bunker helped buy an ad (placed by YAF’s future executive secretary) in the Dallas Morning News the day of Kennedy’s visit, portraying the President as a Kremlin dupe.  Texas Senator John Tower, a YAF board member, personally interceded in 1962 with the Immigration and Naturalization Service in the case of – Marina Oswald.