Saturday, December 02, 2006

Waldorf Salad in the Kitchen

The good news? All the first time turkey cookers survived. Reading the e-mails, there was a lot of talk of averted mishaps (I wasn't joking about chicken stock and I'm glad everyone had some on hand). Belinda seemed the most sensible with her attitude. She wrote that when she was at her breaking point in the last two hours, she poured herself a cup of coffee, sat down at the kitchehn table and just took a break. Her sister was telling her there was no time for a break (they were in Belinda's kitchen and Belinda was in charge of the cooking). Belinda just ignored her. After her break, she went back to cooking and "I was up for it then."

If you're catering an event, there may be no way to avoid feeling like you're part of an assembly line. But when you're in your kitchen, preparing a meal for people you know, there's always time for a break. I mentioned Belinda's e-mail to my next-door neighbor and she said it took her years to get to that point. Prior, she would rush through and "the last dish was always awful. It was just tossed together with little care so I could get it on the table."

Whether you try the recipes (or some) because you're interested in cooking or because you're trying to watch your budget, hopefully, you get the point that there's no freaking out in the kitchen. Mike's "Impeachment, Iraq" includes a story of his youngest sister attempting to make fudge while my husband and I were out and creating a smoke storm in the kitchen (she was melting the chocolate in the microwave). She was freaking out and he thought to pull out the burned portion in the center (my daughter hadn't stirred as she was melting the chocolate) and just add a little extra vanilla. I had a piece of the fudge (she wasn't taking it to her friends after the incident, she was convinced it would taste awful) and he saved it. That's what the kitchen is, plans and hopes and last minute saves.

If something can't be saved, you toss it out. But if you're not adapting, you're really not cooking.

Megan e-mailed that her great aunt is coming for Christmas dinner and she'd like to make the woman's favorite dish. She wanted to get a practice turn in before Christmas day. It's a very easy dish to fix and it's one without meat and one that requires no cooking at all. So those who are vegetarian or looking to get more fruits and vegetables into their diet and those who feel, post-Thanksgiving, "I don't even want to look at my oven" (Benny) should be able to enjoy this recipe. Waldorf Salad is the name. And Megan was afraid it was complicated. It isn't.

This is a very basic recipe. You can spruce it up by squeezing a half a lemon over it and adding a tablespoon of sugar and/or serving it mixed in with a lettuce.

You need:

2 apples
4 stalks of celery
1/4 cup of mayonnaise
1/2 cup of walnuts
1/4 teaspoon salt


If you're thinking, "I don't know how many walnuts to buy for a half cup," don't worry. Go the baking section of your grocery store and they should have packaged nuts. You're going for the small hanging bag of pieces. I would also suggest you crumble them somewhat while they are in the bag. Crumble, not pulverize. By doing it before you open the bag, you'll have less clean up after.

Take the apples and and cut them half and then remove the core. (Throw away the core.) Then cut the apples into 1/2 inch pieces (or "small" if you're not good with estimating inches). Chop the celery into 1/4 slices. Put the celery and apples into a bowl and add the walnuts and salt. Now mix in the mayonnaise.

Guess what? You're done. You can dress it up (see earlier) or you can serve it right away. If you're fixing it beforehand, cover the bowl and place it in the refrigerator. You don't want to prepare this too far ahead. I wouldn't prepare it more than 24 hours ahead of time. You want to have the crispness and the longer it sets, the less crispy it will be.

If, like Megan, you're fixing it because it's someone's favorite dish, you might call to find out whether or not they enjoy it with lettuce. (Or raisins, I know some people who add raisins to it.
If adding raisins to the above, add 1/2 cup.)

I'm posting this I may come back and add more but Blogger/Blogspot is acting up.

And that's it. I've worked most of the morning trying to post and I've lost posts repeatedly. I don't know what's going on with Blogger/Blogspot, but C.I. called and the problem isn't just with me. This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" from Friday:

December 1, 2006. Chaos and violence continue in Iraq, early numbers for November indicate a dramatic rise (another dramatic rise) in the number of civilian deaths, does the puppet of the occupation feel the EARTH . . . MOVE . .. under his feet (nod to Carole King "I Feel The Earth Move"), and the James Baker Circle Jerk continues to raise eyebrows.

Alastair Macdonald (Reuters) reports that the Iraq Interior Ministry has released their statistics for November's death toll in Iraq, 1,850 -- and increase of 44% from their count of 1,289 for October. Macdonald reminds, "Although it does not appear to encompass all violent deaths in Iraq, the Interior Ministry's statistical series has reflected trends".

And for the living? Not much better as
Dahr Jamail discussed with Nora Barrows-Friedman on KPFA's Flashpoints yesterday. Dahr explained how the violence was so common, the attacks so rampant, that for fear of their safety, many Iraqis no longer sent their children off to school (approximately 30% was the number given). On the topic of the daily violence and the people effected, Isam Rasheed (Alive in Baghdad) provides a video report from a clinic in Adhamiya where Ahmed Hameed (cigarette vendor) explains how a car bombing resulted in his hand and leg being lost, "I was working and someone left a car bomb. It blew up shortly after they had left. I woke up and found myself thrown against a wall beside my friend Shukri."; Shukri Abdul (owner of the Al-Areesh restaurant) then explains being outside his restaurant speking with an ice vendor when the car bomb went off "And I can remember landing on the ground. I was blown into the air, and when I landed, everything piled on top of me, the pots & corrugated metals." Shurki Abdul also lost his arm and foot and experienced severe damage to his back. This is the daily reality and, as Dahr pointed out, the only area under US control was the Green Zone section of Baghdad but now even the Bremer walls that wall off the section do not translate as 'safe.' Dahr spoke of speaking with a US marine stationed in Ramadi where he was part of 200 US forces expected to provide order to a city of 400,000.

Dahr noted that move to pull forces out of Ramadi and the rest of the Al-Anbar Province in order to send them to Baghdad to secure the capital. Earlier this week,
Dafna Linzer and Thomas E. Ricks (Washington Post) reported on a Marine Corps intelligence report entitled "State of Insurgency in Al-Anbar" which tagged the area "a failed province," one that was beyond US control. Also earlier this week, Jonathan Karl (ABC News) reported that, in an effort to 'secure' the capital -- 'crackdown' in any version didn't, the Pentagon is weighing pulling the 30,000 US troops out of the province and redeploying them to Baghdad.

Also addressed by Dahr was the issue of the realignmment on the ground in Iraq's parliament where new alliances are being formed with Muqtada al-Sadr's group and Dahr wondered exactly how much longer the puppet, Nouri al-Maliki, would be in place?
CBS and AP report that Tariq al-Hashemi, one of Iraq's two vice-presidents, has stated "he wanted to see al-Maliki's government gone and another 'understanding' for a new coalition put in place with guarantees that ensure collective decision making" while Salam Zikam Ali al-Zubaie (handmaiden to the puppet) has said the fault lies with the presidency (a ceremonial position) and not with the prime minister he (al-Zuabaie) serves under. If the memo Stephen Hadley penned November 8th is taken at all seriously don't be surprised to discover US monies are being tossed around right now in an attempt to ensure that new coalitions will be to the US administration's liking. Tom Hayden (Huffington Post) examines the events and notes "the sudden move by al-Sadr's Shiite bloc, which pulled out of the Baghdad government over al-Maliki's meeting with Bush, provides the anti-occupation coalition with significant, perhaps decisive, power, if they choose to bring down al-Maliki's shaky coalition." [Hayden's earlier reports on the al-Maliki upset are: "U.S. Retreat from Iraq? The Secret Story" and followed that with "Documents Reveal Secret Talks Between U.S. and Iraqi Armed Resistance."]

Did someone say shaky?


Bombings?
Thomas Wagner and Sinan Salaheddin (AP) report a double car bombing claimed one life and left six family members wounded in the Sadiyah section of Baghdad; while mortar rounds "near Muqdadiya" killed three and left 14 wounded; and, in Kirkuk, a car bomb took two lives and left three wounded. CBS and AP note a car bomb in Baghdad ("near a fruit and vegetable market") that killed two and left 16 more wounded. AFP notes, "A bomb exploded in the centre of Baghdad on the east side of the Tigris river, killing three people and wouding 16, while another car bomb killed three people on the outskirts of the capital."

Shootings?

Alastair Macdonald and Ahmed Rasheed (Reuters) report: "Machinegun fire rained from U.S. helicopters in central Baghdad . . . the Interior Ministry said one soldier had been killed and nine people wounded, including five soldiers." Reuters reports three people were killed by gunfire (two police officers, one civilian) in Samawa.

Corpses?

Reuters reports that 20 corpses were discovered in Baghdad and fourteen in Mosul while noting the fourteen had been kidnapped on Thursday.

Kidnappings?
Thomas Wagner and Sinan Salaheddin (AP) report that, Thursday, "Hadib Majhoul, chairman of the popular Talaba soccer club" was kidnapped.

In addition, the
US military announced: "A Multi-National Division - Baghdad Soldier was killed during combatoperations here Nov. 30." The death brings to 2,888 the total number of US troops killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war according to ICCC's count and CNN's as well. Twelve away from the 2900 mark.

This as
Antonella Cinelli (Reuters) reports that "Italy pulled its last remaining troops out of Iraq on Friday, lowering the tricolour flag at its base in the south of a country where 32 of its soldiers have died since the contingent arrived in June 2003."

Meanwhile, although the
Iraq Study Group has released its findings, people continue to ponder the James Baker Circle Jerk. As noted by Amy Goodman (Democracy Now!) today, the James Baker Circle Jerk is rumored to call for a 2008 'withdrawal' that is not, in fact, a withdrawal. It's a continuation of the air war that Norman Solomon has been describing for months now. It's also the James Baker Circle Jerk stroking themselves on the public dollar. The onanistic nonsense not only revolves around the air war, it also pushes embedding US forces with Iraqi police squads and forces.

For those who've forgotten how Patrick McCaffrey died and the battle his mother Nadia McCaffrey has had to fight to force the US government to get honest could see the 'suggestion' as worthy of suggesting. (Patrick McCaffrey and Andre Tyson, with the US National Guard, were killed in Iraq. The US government told the families that the two men were killed by 'insurgents.' In reality, they were killed, June 22, 2004, by Iraqi security forces they were training.)

Addressing the James Baker Circle Jerk on this week's CounterSpin,
Gary Younge (Guardian of London; The Nation) observed to Steve Rendall,, "The fact that this study group was necessary itself highlights a flaw in American politics. Democracy should have been able to deal with this, not an appointed study group." As Younge explained the responsibility the group was tasked with was Congress' own responsibility . . . until they outsourced it.

In peace news,
Aaron Glantz (IPS) reports that the revelations of the US government spying on peace activists is not slowly plans for the march in Washington, DC January 27th. Among the groups spied on were CODEPINK, United For Peace and Justice, Veterans for Peace, Iraq Veterans Against the War, Military Families Speak Out, the War Resisters League and the American Friends Service Committee.

The
War Resisters League will be presenting Sir! No Sir! tomorrow (Saturday, December 2nd) at both seven pm and nine-thirty pm. This kicks off the War Resisters League and the Brecht Forum's Screenpeace: An Antiwar Film Festival that will hold screenings of other films on Fridays during January.


In other activism news,
Progressive Democrats of America (PDA) are asking for a National "Mandate for Peace" Call-in Day, Monday, December 4th. To sign the petition click here. To phone your rep and senators, you can dial 202-224-3121. PDA notes: "On Election Day, voters said enough is enough -- we want a new direction. Let's make sure Congress hears it again by jamming the switchboards on Dec. 4 with our pleas to bring our troops home immediately."





the washington postdafna linzerthomas e. ricks