It’s one and a half hour later and things are pretty much the same, except that Katy and I feel like the worst parents on earth.
Category: uncategorized
And things had been going so well up to now.
I had a feeling that things had gone a bit too smoothly up to now for our return to the UK. Ben has been wailing for the last hour and we have no idea why. He’s not running a fever, doesn’t want anything to eat or drink, has had calprofen for the large molar he’s cutting and still, he’s wide awake when HR should gave been asleep for 3 hours now.
I hate not knowing what to do. The only thing left now is to let him cry it out but that’s one of the hardest things to do.
It’s so out of character for him and it happens so seldom that it always sends me into full dithering mode.
Le fret.
Random troubleshooting
Mmmokay, I came online only to find that my blog isn’t working and that wp-spamfree was the culprit. I needed to increase the WP_MEMORY_LIMIT to 96 because the script was running out of memory. Why this started to be a problem now – after months of stable running – I have no idea.
Still, nice way to be welcomed back home :)
Quote of the day
Did Shakespeare ever make plays from Dickens?
… Pam
The drops of god
Japanese wine cartoon makes Bordeaux grower famous
SAINT-CIBARD, France – Chateau owner Jean-Pierre Amoreau is a celebrity in Japan — a privilege he owes to a wine-obsessed cartoon he had never heard of until diehard fans started calling him at home.
Amoreau, owner of the Puy Chateau near the village of Saint-Cibard in southwestern France, said he did not know what to think last year when he started getting calls from Japanese buyers who wanted to buy his 2003 growth bottles at any cost. His agent explained the reason for the calls: a television show broadcast in Japan. Named “The Drops of God,” it is a cartoon about wine that has won a passionate following in Japan and has the peculiar trait of referring mainly to real bottles.
It tells the story of a famous oenologist who, upon his death, bequeaths a vast wine cellar to one of his two sons on the condition he can solve 12 riddles about 12 bottles. After completing the challenge, the heir has to track down a 13th bottle — the ultimate, perfect bottle of wine — known as the “Drops of God.”
“For the last episode … millions of Japanese people were in front of their TVs about to find out the name of the chateau which Tadashi Agi thought produced the best wine of thousands he had tasted the world over,” Amoreau said. The cartoon gave birth to a comic book that boosted the success of his wine with Japanese consumers. “Today we are the best-known wine-makers in Japan,” he added.
The owner of the 17th century estate is the 14th generation of wine-makers in his family, as well as being a firm believer in chemical-free agriculture in the tradition of his ancestors who banned chemicals in the 1930s.
Despite the frenzy surrounding the 2003 bottle named in “The Drops of God,” Amoreau kept the 18 euro ($24) price tag even when bottles were selling in Japan for 1,000 euros. “We stopped selling the 2003 until the excitement had died down to avoid penalizing our regular customers,” he said.
Thanks to the cartoon, Chateau Le Puy gained access to lucrative Asian markets in China as well as Taiwan and South Korea. About 80 percent of the 120,000 bottles produced at Saint-Cibard are destined for export. Among the other Bordeaux vineyards to have benefited from a cameo appearance in the cartoon are Chateau Calon-Segur, Saint Estephe, Chateau Palmer, Margaux and Chateau Poupille. Philippe Carille, owner of the Poupille vineyard, is still enjoying the windfall, three years after his wine was mentioned in the fourth volume of the series.
The cuteness, it burns!
Katy had 3 night shifts in a row and hurt her back last weekend. On Monday, she was feeling less than stellar. Happily for her though, Ben was at hand to put her to bed on the couch and take care of her:
I just like this one, because he has on his “serious face”. Cause, you know, grapes is serious buziness, yo.
More pics here: http://www.flubu.com/various_pics/saffron_walden_aug_2010/
Leaving your mark, indeed
This isn’t some fancy Photoshop trick, these are real human footprints ingrained in a hardwood floor.

70 year-old Buddhist monk Hua Chi has been praying in the same spot at his temple in Tongren, China for over 20 years. His footprints, which are up to 1.2 inches deep in some areas, are the result of performing his prayers up to 3000 times a day. Now that he is 70, he says that he has greatly reduced his quantity of prayers to 1,000 times each day.

The footprints have become a source of inspiration to younger monks at the temple. “Every day I come here and every day I look at the piece of wood, and it has inspired me to continue to make the footprints myself,” Genden Darji, a 29 year-old monk in the monastery, notes.

At least I can drive when it’s raining…
I had another driving lesson this morning – this time going for my module 1 exam. The day didn’t start out well. We were doing some low-speed stuff on the back lot and I dropped the bike I was on doing a u-turn. This is highly annoying because so far the only thing that’s been reliably good has been my mod1 stuff and this morning, the mojo left me. I really didn’t like the bike I was on at first – the throttle was really stiff. After a bit of faffing to siphon some gas into another bike that handled better, we were off.
Then we got pissed on.
Quite a bit.
Really, really quite a bit.
So far, the last two lessons I’ve had have been in the drink, but this one today took the case. What I get for learning to drive in the fall, I guess.
The bad news is that I failed my mod1 for a silly reason. I don’t know how I manage to do it, but somehow I keep catching my foot rest when I pull away and it flips up so that I can’t use it properly. This happened just as I was pulling out for my slalom run. I had to put my foot down to put it back in the correct position. Foot down. Automatic failure. Bummer.
Still, I wouldn’t have passed. I wasn’t quick enough for the speed manoeuvres so I need to work on that and I put my foot down during my u-turn. That one really bugs me because I had those down pat last lesson. Blergh. Oh well, I have another mod1 scheduled for when I get back from Canada.
The DSA guy said that I have the control, I just need to clean a few things up.
In a perfect world, I’d be a stilton
Anthony Bourdain: From rebel chef to doting dad
The bad boy chef is now an ex-cook who tells stories.
Anthony Bourdain reluctantly embraces the label at first, saying “you can call me anything you want, I’m just glad that anybody cares.” But then he wavers. That’s why he named his new book Medium Raw: A Bloody Valentine to the World of Food and the People Who Cook.
“It’s a deliberate non sequitur — you can’t be both medium and raw,” Bourdain says Tuesday in Toronto. “I’m not a chef. I’m not a writer. I’m not the angry, snarky — what is it? — bad boy of cuisine. I’m somewhere else now. The book is about second-guessing myself, and conflicting emotions and elements that don’t exactly fit together for me.”
It has been a decade since Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly — which he calls “that obnoxious but wildly successful memoir” — changed the trajectory of Bourdain’s life.
It got him A Cook’s Tour (the book and Food Network show), followed by Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations on the Travel Channel and now Medium Raw (his 10th book). It got him out of the kitchen after 28 years of hard labour. It hastened the breakup of his first marriage, which paved the way for his second marriage and fatherhood.
That’s right. At 54 Bourdain is the blissed-out father to 3-1/2-year-old Ariane, who just started pre-kindergarten.
“I had a top-of-the-line Bugaboo (stroller) — pink,” admits an animated Bourdain during an interview at Mercury Espresso Bar in Leslieville. “I pushed it with pride. And I will tell you, with pride, that I was the star pupil in my Lamaze class. I’ve totally gone over to the warm, fuzzy side.”
Maybe he dabbles in the fuzzy side, but the lanky New Yorker still dresses in black (jeans, T-shirt and blazer) and still exclaims “nice choice” when the coffee shop blasts a song by the Stooges.
In Medium Raw, the former heroin addict admits to owning a couple of suits. He wears one of them on the cover, though it’s offset by the pockmarked brick wall behind him, the knife in his hand and the wedding band on his finger.
“I certainly didn’t want to wear a chef’s coat,” says Bourdain. “(The suit is) the uniform of my traditional enemy, who I’ve become. I just thought it was the opposite of a working hero, which I am not.”
Okay, so he lives on the Upper East Side, feeds his daughter organic food, and calls himself a “jaded, overprivileged foodie.”
He slings that at himself before anyone else has a chance.
“I think it would be hideously dishonest to not remind people of that constantly.”
Still, when given the chance to act like a world-weary foodie with an exacting coffee order, he’s downright casual, requesting only “some jumbo-sized latte with sugar.”
But speaking of jaded, Bourdain — who’s giving a public talk Wednesday night at Massey Hall — admits Monday’s sold-out show in Houston didn’t go so well because the audience simply knew too much.
“Three minutes into it, I realized they’d heard it all, between interviews, articles, blogs and the books. It was an awful moment for me. This audience was very wired in and this is the world we live in now. If you write about food too long, you run out of adjectives and, more importantly, you lose the sense of wonder. It’s a terrible thing.”
China, Bourdain figures, is the next food frontier. Even if he devotes the rest of his eating life to figuring it out, he expects to “still die knowing relatively nothing.”
Bourdain’s sense of wonder makes multiple appearances during the interview.
He worries about being that idiot who tires of foie gras and truffles, and then slides into a spirited discussion about how he and his chef friends love yakitori – Japanese, charcoal-grilled chicken parts.
Then there’s the care and feeding of his daughter. She gets hot dogs (organic), grilled cheese and pasta with butter, but she’s also well-travelled (already) and exposed to everything.
“She likes pecorino (cheese), anchovies, sardines, tuna, olives and risotto,” says Bourdain, who never forces her to eat what’s put in front of her. “And she loves raw oysters.”
Bourdain hasn’t cooked professionally for over a decade, and admits to eating out with chef friends and ordering in a lot like most New Yorkers. When he cooks at home, it’s “in one pot” and it’s probably stew, beef bourguignon, steak, calf’s liver, pasta or risotto.
Still, in Medium Raw, Bourdain advocates cooking at home whenever possible and calls basic cooking skills a virtue that should be taught as soon a child can be trusted with a knife.
It has been eight years since Bourdain visited Toronto. Back then, we got 90 minutes together for Vietnamese iced coffee, Salvadoran pupusas and Chilean corn pie in Chinatown and Kensington Market, but came up empty on his search for raw milk Canadian cheese.
This time I bring four Canadian cheeses, including two raw ones, for our 45-minute coffee interview.
Guidi predicts he’ll go for the Bleu D’Elizabeth from Quebec, “because big personalities like big blues.” She’s right.
“If I were to be a cheese it would be a really funky, slightly overripe blue cheese,” says Bourdain, breaking apart a baguette by hand and diving into the cheese. “In a perfect world, I’d be a Stilton.”
Source: TheStar.com
Quote of the day
I’m sick of hearing about Eat Pray Love. If I wrote a book called Booze Game Shag (where I feel unfulfilled and therefore abandon my family to go to Germany to drink beer, Tokyo to play video games, and anywhere to get laid), I doubt that everyone would see it as such an uplifting thing, and generally just consider me a git.
