Acquiring stuff
My camera’s been missing for a couple of weeks now. I don’t know if I hid it somehow while moving furniture, if Maggie put it somewhere safe while clearing up, or if some handyman walked off with it. In any case, I haven’t been able to take pictures for a while, which was especially hard this weekend. With a hurricane off the coast, the surf in Florida was amazing. Maggie brought her camera but it’s not as nice as mine.
Not as nice as mine was, anyway. I’ve been thinking for a while about upgrading to a low-end digital SLR so that I can actually manage aperture and focal depth. Since my old camera is missing in action, I decided to take the plunge and buy a Nikon D40.
This morning, I spent some time catching up on work that I missed while on vacation this past weekend, including finding the forms for my quarterly taxes. In the process, I reminded of how much stuff I have. There are still some things that I need in there, but most of it has been boxed up for over a month without a problem. In addition to things from my parents’ house that I still need to sort through, I have a lot of papers, a lot of books, and a lot of electronics.
Ignoring my (lost, lamented) camera, I have another camera with case, a wireless Internet card, a couple of keyboards, an extra monitor, a desktop computer, and 3 laptops in various states of disrepair. I also have an old XBox along with a dancepad and a bunch of games. Do I really need to add a fancy camera to the family?
And that’s just the stuff I don’t use anymore! I have even more stuff that I use regularly. The sad part is that I think I have twice as much stuff I don’t use as stuff that I do use.
On the other hand, that’s good news in that I can reduce my clutter by more than half without impacting my life one whit. Some things will have to be recycled or donated to Goodwill, but some of it I can probably sell. I’ve done pretty well selling hardcovers through Amazon and Craigslist is good for older electronics. Maybe I’ll even follow along in Greeen Sheeep’s footsteps and clear my clutter out one box at a time.
Of course, then I’ll have to get a camera to take pictures of everything…
By the time this article posts, Will and I should be lounging on a beach in Florida with my grandfather and my aunt. Well, more accurately, we should be stumbling out of the car after a long day on the American interstate system. This trip won’t rank high on our sustain-o-meter but we’re ready to get away for awhile and are hoping to spot some
I had a lot of trouble coming up with a topic for today’s post. I’ve got some things I’d like to talk about that aren’t quite ready to share (I should wear my bike helmet at least once before I mention it). Maggie’s been doing a lot of cool stuff recently too, but I’ve mostly just been working and arranging my work space. Not much fodder for posts there.
I think Will and I got into soda-making last year when we read “The Tightwad Gazette” and started thinking about the myriad ways we could save money if we just put some energy into it. Or perhaps it was when we started paying attention to the amount of corn syrup contained in the food we eat and looking for an alternative. Well, mostly I think it just sounded fun. We started with a
I decided this weekend I was ready to try again and invited my cousin Lia to come and help out. (Little did she know it was an invitation to do all the work. Mwa ha ha ha.) We decided to make a gallon of ginger beer and a half gallon of root beer. To make any sort of soda, the basic idea is to make a sweet herbal tea or juice mixture and then add a little yeast and let it ferment for a few days to create the carbonation. Technically, the carbonation means that it’s very mildly alcoholic but I think we’re talking something like 0.01%. Once it’s fizzy enough, you put the soda in the fridge to stop the fermentation. Actually, the soda will keep fermenting in the fridge but at a much slower rate. You do have to drink it within a couple of weeks or it’s liable to fizz all over the place.
Our first step for the ginger beer was to cut up a bunch of ginger. (I let Lia do the dirty work). Our recipe said to combine 1.25 oz grated ginger, 1/2 gallon water, 1.75 C sugar, and the juice from half a lemon and to simmer for 25 minutes. The next step was letting it cool so we got started with the root beer. I decided to try using
For the ginger beer, the next step was to mix our ginger “tea” with half a gallon of cooler water to get the final mix around 75 degrees F to make the yeast happy. We mixed 1/8 teaspoon of yeast with 1/4C of water and let it proof for a few minutes before mixing it all in. The recipe book
My abstract thinking about
This evening I went over to my friend Bobbi’s house to help her dehydrate some peaches. I am still a novice food preserver but I am really excited to learn more about drying food and Bobbi has been doing it for awhile. Her persimmon leather is particularly tasty but she works seasonally and the fruit-of-the-month is peaches. She buys seconds (the ugly, small, or slightly blemished fruit) from Olde Lane Orchard and dries, freezes, cans, or jams them although her preference is drying.
We started by washing the peaches in a sink full of water. (Kind of makes you want to bob for peaches, doesn’t it?) Eliza, Bobbi’s daughter, had requested that we do a batch without skins so our next step was to drop each peach into boiling water for a few minutes to loosen the skin. This is the same technique used to get the skins of tomatoes for people who like their tomato sauce smooth. Bobbi and I are both of the opinion that it’s easiest and most nutritious to leave the skins on most everything but we were curious to see how it went.
The peeling part wasn’t too bad once we let the peaches cool a little. The clingstone peaches seemed to peel a lot more easily than the freestone peaches, which may explain why they’re still a popular variety even though they’re a pain to cut up. However, skinned peaches are incredibly slippery and I think it was sheer luck that none of them landed on the floor. They also seemed juicier than normal when cut, perhaps because they were partially cooked by the boiling water.
We sliced them into roughly even chunks and put them on the dehydrator trays to dry. In an ideal world, all the pieces should be exactly the same size so they dry at the same rate but in reality some of them get a little drier and some not quite as much and life goes on. Drying at low temperatures preserves a lot more vitamins and nutrients than canning or freezing and if the moisture content is low enough, it can be stored for many months.
Bobbi’s dehydrator is much nicer than mine with adjustable heat and a timer so you can turn it on and set it to magically turn itself off in X number of hours, which is helpful since drying times for fruit tend to be pretty long - say 20 hours. I left just a couple hours after we got the dehydrator loaded so I won’t be able to report back on the results for a few days but I’m sure they will be tasty and probably look like this batch that Bobbi did last week. I’m looking forward to trying out a few recipes from “