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Saturday, November 12, 2011

Lime Cornmeal Glazed Cookie


Lime Cornmeal Glazed Cookies


My favorite cookie recipe, the Lime Cornmeal Glazed Cookie:

The cookie that bites back!


Incidentally, and for no particular reason, this recipe contains no leavening agents (baking soda / baking powder) and no salt.


If you don't consider the time it takes to zest those limes, this recipe is very simple and fast.  The night before I plan to bake these cookies, I take the limes, my favorite zester and a bowl into the living room, and I 'zest the night away' in front of the TV!  The only liquid in the glaze is juice from the limes.  Pucker up, buttercup!

They are definitely a wake-you-up cookie. Take one bite, and your eyes pop wide open!

Unless the limes are HUGE, I find that I need a lot more limes to get the right amount of juice and zest than the recipe calls for. I often use 12 - 14 limes.
I let the glaze that drips off onto the parchment paper dry, and I eat it like candy!

Ingredients:

1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature.
     If you use margarine, I will come to your house and beat you!

1 cup sugar
1 large egg
4 teaspoons freshly grated lime zest, plus 2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lime juice (about 6 limes total).
      If you use lime juice out of one of those plastic squeezy-thingys, I will come to your house and beat you TWICE! 

2 teaspoons freshly grated orange zest (2 medium oranges)
1/2 teaspoon pure almond extract
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup yellow cornmeal


Directions


In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy, 3 to 4 minutes. Add egg; beat until just blended. Add citrus zests, lime juice, and almond extract.


With the mixer on low speed, add flour and cornmeal. Continue beating until well blended. Transfer dough to a piece of plastic wrap. Shape the dough into a disk, wrap, and chill until firm, about 1 hour.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Using your hands or an optional 1 1/4-inch ice-cream scoop form balls from chilled dough. Place balls on prepared sheets, spaced about 3 inches apart. Spray the bottom of a medium drinking glass with non-stick cooking spray. or moisten the bottom of the glass slightly with water, and  flatten balls with the bottom of glass until dough is about 1/4 inch thick.


Bake cookies until crisp and light-golden brown around the edges, 14 to 16 minutes. Transfer baking sheets to a wire rack, and let the cookies cool completely.  From personal experience, I find this baking time a bit too long. Watch the first batch of cookies closely.  They can burn quickly!


Place a wire rack on top of a piece of parchment paper. Pour the lime glaze over the cooled cookies, allowing the excess to drip off the edges. Let glaze set. Store cookies in an airtight container for up to 1 week.
  Lime Glaze

3 1/4 cups confectioners' sugar
8 tablespoons fresh lime juice, plus 2 1/2 teaspoons freshly grated lime zest (about 6 limes total)

Directions

Sift confectioners' sugar into a medium bowl. Add lime juice; stir until smooth. Stir in lime zest. Your proportions of lime juice to 
confectioners' sugar will vary, depending on humidity, the size of the limes, and the amount of juice they yield. You might have to use more or less juice or confectioner's sugar, accordingly.

Use glaze immediately.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Me & my cell phone:


Me & my cell phone:


1) I check my voice mails.  Maybe twice a month.


2) My cell phone is *not* my hobby.  I have real hobbies, and I'm good at them.  It shouldn't be your hobby, either, but you are responsible for how wisely you use your time, and that is your own business.
  
3) I don't read text messages.  I don't sent text messages.  


   To paraphrase a well known game show, "If you can't afford to buy a vowel, and use complete sentences, proper puncuation and proper grammer, you can't afford my attention." (I also don't respond instant messages who are written in the same duck-speak.


3) If I missed your call, there are several reasons why:
  a) I will take your call if I am expecting it.
  b) I hate the damned thing (cell phones)!
  c) I didn't hear the damned thing ring.  It is not now, nor will it ever be, attached to my hip.
  d) You say you left a message?  See #1.


4) I do not take pictures with my phone.  That is what a real camera is for. I have a real camera, and I am pretty good at using it.  While I am on the subject, like the damned plague, I try to avoid looking at pictures taken with cell phones.  They hurt the only eye I have left, and I think it is in my best interest to protect that lone retina.
  
Isn't that "Facebook Button" that is located on some 'smart' phones quite the invention?  At the moment, I can think of no other gimmick that encourages fast, ill-thought out photography that is quickly posted by people who are too lazy to crop or to other wise properly prepare a photograph before it is made viewable by the general public.  At an alarming rate, the internet is splattered by random acts of "BLAH!"


5) I won't even talk on a cell phone while driving my vehicle.  Never. Not even for you.  In fact, I usually turn it off before I get in the car, and I don't turn it back on until I exit the vehicle. (And that is if I remember, or I care to turn it back on!)


6) I will not talk on a cell phone while walking through a store, and especially while waiting in the check out lane - or any other public place, as far as that is concerned.  That is rude.  If I would be waiting on an important call, I will quickly excuse myself and get to a more private area before continuing the concersation.  If people taking loudly on cell phones in stores / check out lanes annoy the Hell out of me, why wouldn't I think that the same behavior would annoy the hell out of someone else?  It does!


I do answer messages sent to me on Facebook or e-mails faster than any other mode of communication.  The reason is that I am probably already on the internet or on my computer, and thus I can kill 2 birds with the same stone.  My precious resource - time! - is saved.

For additional reading:
http://mrtoadslivingoutloud.blogspot.com/2011/03/buying-live-digital-chicken-in.html

- Michael

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Michael, The Animal Whisperer

I don't know how I developed this particular skill, but I do know that when I go to Grant's Farm here in STL, there can be over 100 people standing by a fence looking at the Clydesdales in the distance. All their whistling, whoopin' and hollerin' won't bring the horses over to the fence to see the spectators. I gently make my way through the crowd, and give a particular whistle. A stampede ensues! Those Clydesdale colts, who are still HUGE compared to other adult horses, come galloping across that huge pasture, high-spiritedly over to the fence, and in particular, over to me! I don't know why! What gives? Mark and several of his relatives were with me on this visit.

When I go to the St. Louis Zoo, if I am the only person in the 1904 Flight Cage, there is a particular Egret that is fond of me. All birds in this cage are free-roaming, contained only by the large wire frame of the flight cage. I do have this particular event on video. This Egert will fly down to within just a few feet of me. I squat down to his level, and he will jump up and perch on my fore arm, and gently explore my upper quarters with his bill. He was sitting on my arm for probably 15 minutes, before I had to gently persuade him to go on about his way, so I could continue through the Zoo.

If I go into the Bird House, the Toucan will slide down the wires of his enclosure, just to visit me. He ignores everybody else in the bird house.

A similar event happened when I was at the Chimpanzee enclosure. There were several Chimps down near the large observation windows in front of their outside enclosure. This was a nice, busy fall day at the Zoo, and any time a chimp is near the glass, he draws a large crowd instantly. I was standing 2 - 3 people deep from the windows in this crowd when I caught the chimp's eye. He approached the glass, and motioned with his hand for the small children in front to move out of his line of sight. The kids didn't understand him at first, so he again motioned with his hand for them to step to the side. I walked through the part in the crowd that the chimp made for me, and he looked into my eyes for what seemed to be the longest time. Then, he pointed at the plugs in my ears, the choker made of nuts 'n' bolts that I always wear around my neck (visible in my profile pic), and he pointed down at my bright, glittery raspberry shoes. It might be my imagination, but he did seem to smile! Then, he put his knuckles gently against the glass. I put my knuckles, in the same fashion, against my side of the glass, against his knuckles. We paused for a moment as he once again looked deep into my eyes. I know I saw another smile cross his face, and then he scampered off into the distance!

I know I had tears in my eyes, as I turned to the crowd that was standing behind me. Many of them had their hands over their mouths, and their eyes were WIDE with astonishment. I heard a few gasps. I intentionally raised my eyebrows at them, in a "So, there! Take THAT!" sort-of fashion, as I made my way through the crowd. Like Moses and the Red Sea, they automatically parted as I walked on!

Animal Whisperer? I dunno. You tell me. :)

- Michael