Larry and Susan are enjoying winter and they love this recipe for beef stew:
Ingredients
2 pounds cubed beef stew meat
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
4 cubes beef bouillon, crumbled
4 cups of water
1 teaspoon dried rosemary
1 teaspoon dried parsley
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
3 large potatoes, peeled and cubed
4 carrots, cut into 1-inch pieces
4 stalks celery, cut into 1-inch pieces
1 large onion, chopped
2 teaspoons cornstarch
2 teaspoons cold water
Directions
- Add the oil to a Dutch Oven, or a large, heavy-bottom pot.
- Cook the beef in batches over medium heat until brown. Ensure to cook on all sides and move to a plate while cooking the rest. Be careful not to overcrowd the pot.
- When the beef is all browned, dissolve the beef bouillon in hot water and then add to the pot.
- Carefully place the beef back into the pot, with the liquid and seasonings.
- Bring everything to a boil before reducing the heat to a low simmer and covering with the lid.
- Leave the beef to simmer for an hour, checking occasionally and stirring to prevent anything from sticking.
- While the beef cooks, wash, peel, and cut your vegetables. Be careful not to cut them too small, so that they keep their form after cooking.
- In a small bowl, make a slurry using the cornstarch and 2 teaspoons of water. Mix it thoroughly until totally smooth.
- After an hour, add in the vegetables and slurry, stirring everything through.
- Cover the pot and let simmer for another hour, stirring occasionally.
- Serve in a big bowl with crusty French bread.
It is a good season for warm food.
I got off at two this morning and was going to write. I looked at the e-mails and saw Larry and Susan's about beef stew. But I just was too tired to write.
Things happen for a reason. C.I. just called and told me about this from Will Lehman's campaign:
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The UAW is just crooked. We need to get the word out. That's the only way anything changes. They did everything they could to rig the election and keep people from voting for Will.
Strikes are about employees standing up for themselves. And a lot more people are standing up. WSWS reports:
Ten thousand New York City nurses across five hospitals are set to strike on Monday after the expiration of their contracts last week. Nurses are fighting for better pay and higher, safer staffing ratios amid a “tripledemic” and historic inflation.
The New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA) is breaking the unity of nurses by announcing tentative agreements (TA) throughout this week at three other hospitals, New York-Presbyterian, Maimonides Medical Center and Richmond University Medical Center. These contracts contain raises well below inflation, equating to cuts in real wages and only vague language surrounding understaffing. Workers at these hospitals are currently voting on whether to accept or reject the agreement, with the vote at New York-Presbyterian concluding on Saturday.
NYSNA is in last-minute negotiations with management with the remaining five hospitals—Mount Sinai, Mount Sinai Morningside and West, Montefiore, BronxCare and Flushing Hospital Medical Center—while doing everything it can to continue to divide up workers and shut down what would undoubtably be a powerful, unified struggle. At a private press briefing on Friday, NYSNA President Nancy Hagans said “we are hoping” to avert any strike actions and arrive at deals at the five remaining hospitals before Monday.
On Friday, a team of reporters for the World Socialist Web Site spoke with healthcare workers outside New York-Presbyterian Hospital on 168th Street on the struggle by nurses and their demands, the current TA nurses are voting on and the potential strike.
Doug, whose name has been changed due to a request for anonymity, is a nurse who's been working at New York-Presbyterian since 2020.
'One thing I wanted to see in the contract is safe staffing, first and foremost. You can't have a hospital without safe patient care. And then our pay. I think at the beginning of the pandemic, we were glorified as heroes, but when it came down to the bargaining table we were demonized for wanting more. And we're not wanting much more besides a standard raise on top of what's been inflated. Nursing is how we take care of our family, so it was a priority on my list. Also tuition reimbursement, for somebody like myself who's trying to advance their career beyond just being at the bedside.
Doug said he voted “no” on the New York-Presbyterian TA. “This hospital I feel like sets the standards for a lot of nurses. I wouldn't feel right voting yes. I wouldn't want to leave anyone hanging. I'm prepared for the worst. Since I started working at New York-Presbyterian, we were always prepared to potentially go on strike.”
Asked whether he would support a strike by nurses at other New York hospitals, Doug replied, “Yes, I would support it. If you don't stand for anything, you'll fall for anything. So I think this is a time where we have to look for more.”
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Friday:
+ A week after Bush launched the War on Terror Bob Woodward asked Cheney how long it would last. Cheney replied: “It may never end. At least, not in our lifetime.” The wet-dream of weapons contractors had materialized. The Pentagon Budget in 2001 was $287B. Now it’s $857B & rising.
+ Contracts with Raytheon and Lockheed to blow s**t up followed by contracts with BlackRock to “rebuild.” What are the Minsk Accords compared to this kind of deal?
+ According to an analysis by the intrepid Stephen Semler military contractors are set to pocket around $20 billion out of the $47 billion in the last Ukraine aid package.
In the room the arms lobbyists come and go
talking of how they just added another zero…
+ Apparently the Russian military is blaming cell-phone usage by its troops on the frontlines for the recent spate of Ukrainian missile attacks on Russian outposts, attacks which may have killed more than 1000 Russian soldiers. If so, those soldiers in rural Donetsk Oblast get better cell service than I do here in the sprawl of Greater Portland, where I barely get a single bar here in the house. If Russia really wanted to protect their troops they’d force them all onto an AT&T plan…
+ According to an analysis by Max Berger, more than 75% of the $40 million crypto-conman Samuel Bankman-Fried contributed to Democrats in 2022 went to groups that dumped nearly all their money on competitive primaries, largely to neoliberals facing off against more progressive candidates. Not that it would have mattered much in the end, since nearly all of the progressives end up voting with the neoliberals when the chips are down…and even when they aren’t.
+ Life expectancy in the US continues to plummet. The response of Congress and the Biden administration in the omnibus spending bill is to end emergency Covid funding and raise the age of mandatory retirement account withdrawals by three years. Someone’s making out, but it sure ain’t us…
+ Biden campaigned to expand Medicaid. Now he’s signed a bill to sharply curtail it, ending coverage for millions of people in the middle of a pandemic he pretends is over…
+ The Social Security administration continues to deny thousands of disability claims a year, in part because it continues to rely on a 45-year-old list of outdated job titles. We live in a System that is eager to help the people who least need it and quick to ignore, chastise and punish the weakest, sickest and poorest among us.
+ 54% of Mississippi’s hospitals are running out of operating funds and at risk of closing. This “looming disaster” is largely a consequence of Gov. Tate Reeve’s stubborn refusal to accept expanded Medicare funding offered to state under ObamaCare.
+ Our book, An Orgy of Thieves: Neoliberalism & Its Discontents, which the great historian Peter Linebaugh says is written “in acid prose cutting through the machine’s wicked fabrications,” is now available on Kindle…
Today, Friday, the Gulf Arab Cup kicks off its 25th session (Gulf 25) which will be hosted by Iraq in Basra until January 19 with 8 teams from the Gulf, and the eight teams have been divided into two groups where in the first includes Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Oman, Yemen, and the second – the teams of Kuwait, Emirates, Qatar and Bahrain. The opening ceremony of the tournament will be held, after which the opening match between Iraq (the host) and Oman will take place, after which the match of our team with the Yemeni counterpart took place.
Competition in the group is expected to be fierce. In order to qualify for the semi-finals first and then the title, in light of host Iraq’s ambition to win the missing title for 34 years while Al-Akhdar hopes for a fourth title while Oman wanted to win a third title, and finally, Yemen is looking for its first title in the tournament.
In a series of tweets, Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Masrour Barzani expressed his happiness for the opening of the Gulf Club 25 tournament in Basra, Iraq.
He congratulated the people of Basra and all Iraqis for hosting this significant event, especially since it’s been over 40 years since Iraq has hosted these games.
“I’m overwhelmed with great happiness and a wonderful feeling on the occasion of the launch of the Gulf Cup Football Championship,” he wrote in one of his tweets.
He welcomed all the attendees to the event and the “guests” from Arab countries.
In other news, cult leader Moqtada al-Sadr emerged from his public retreat long enough to entertain the fellas.
And check out this Tweet.