Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Only one more sleep until 2025

One of the reasons we could be gone for a whole week is that I was able to take my turn covering the clinic remotely. With the exception of split pea soup for lunch and a walk to the creek while the weather was nice, it meant a full day on my laptop and phone, handling patient matters. After I finished video visits, Dear Husband and I kept each other company at the kitchen table while he put together the Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol Lego set I bought, along with the pieces necessary to transform it into A Muppet Christmas Carol.



In the evening we worked on another puzzle and finished watching Oppenheimer. We marked New Year’s Eve with the hilarious British short, a German/Continental tradition since the 1970s, “Dinner for One.” Then we played Trivial Pursuit with dessert and champagne. It was the Genus IV edition (c) 1998s, so the questions were newer than the original edition I grew up playing but older than the Millennial edition. No one won by getting all the colors and answering a question in the center or answering an entire card. Hockey, Wagner, and Presidential quotations were overrepresented in the questions, which had an awkward syntax that made them hard to parse. The categories also had the "wrong" colors.

Recipe: Here’s the eggnog pie that has featured on these pages before. Mix 1.5 cups eggnog + a 3.4-oz instant vanilla pudding packet + either 1 cup of heavy whipping cream, whipped OR ~2 cups or 2/3 of a container of whipped cream. Pour into a 9” graham cracker pie crust, sprinkle with nutmeg, and chill until serving. East peasy, lemon squeezy!



2024 went out with a bang: Dear Husband and I stayed up late enough to hear the fireworks at midnight, and then we rolled over and went to sleep. Happy New Year! After a quiet morning and an early lunch, we packed everything up and drove back to Pittsburgh, taking the scenic route along the Lincoln Highway (Route 30) and stopping for ice cream at the Lincoln Highway Creamery, which was open on the holiday and happy to let me taste the teaberry (tastes like Pepto Bismol!). DH opted for the black cherry, and I finished off the tub of queen of hearts (their version of death by chocolate, with raspberry to boot). The drive over the Laurel Highlands was a little dicey, with the beginnings of a winter storm, but we made it home to Rosamunda, who was happy to see us. She's such a snugglepuss that we don't get the cold shoulder; instead, she wants ALL the attention, pets, and affection she missed while we were gone, with interest. She's purring on his lap right now, but if he tries to go to bed without tonight, there will be meows. So he will sleep with her in the guest room tonight!

Sunday, December 29, 2024

Open Hearts, Open House


On the “low” Sunday after Christmas, we decided to attend worship at Lovely Lane, the “mother church” of Methodism in this country. I had visited 30 years ago on a field trip with my confirmation class, when the building was in disrepair. They have since restored the beautiful starry ceiling, wooden auditorium seats, and stained-glass windows in the round sanctuary. The scripture passage was about Jesus’ parents finding him at the Temple in Jerusalem, and the sermon was about how we’re preparing ourselves to find God in the new year.

Then it was home to finish getting ready for an open house with many old friends from church and growing-up.


Recipe:  The hands-down star of the show was my SIL’s cranberry salsa, which you spread over cream cheese and eat with Wheat Thins or other crackers.

Ingredients:

If you're serving a crowd, use 16 ounces cream cheese = 2 standard blocks at room temperature.
Otherwise it's a more even ratio to use only 8 ounces = 1 block.
12 ounce bag fresh cranberries, washed
2 jalapenos minced (adjust according to taste)
½ cup sliced green onions, roughly chopped
¼ cup chopped cilantro, roughly chopped
½ tablespoon lime juice
¼ teaspoon kosher salt
½ cup sugar, plus more to taste
Wheat Thins or some other sturdy cracker

Instructions:

  • Set out the cream cheese to soften.
  • Finely chop cranberries, jalapeƱos, green onions, cilantro, lime juice, salt, and sugar, in a food processor.
  • Add salt and sugar to taste.
  • Chill in fridge for about 2 hours or more. 
  • To serve, spread room temperature cream cheese evenly in a pie plate or other shallow serving dish, like an 8×8 pan. Spread salsa on top and serve with crackers.

N. stayed for dinner so we could keep talking, and afterward we played Baltimore in a Box, the Monopoly knock-off. There’s a one-hour version that involves handing out properties at the start and limiting the time of play. At one point, three of us were in a traffic jam together! Daddy Money-Bags won.



Saturday, December 28, 2024

Visiting the American Visionary Arts Museum


When I still lived in Baltimore as a teenager with conservative tastes in everything but politics, I didn't think that I would vibe with the American Visionary Arts Museum, but when my family visited over the holidays, it was a pretty conventional museum-going experience. Only the gift shop, Sideshow, with its yard-sale bazaar atmosphere of plastic goo-gahs next to irreligious icons next to crystals next to a bucket of buttons (marijuana leaves, Harry Potter, zodiac symbols, etc.), seems to retain the off-beat character I expected.

Foreground: Andrew Logan, "Black Icarus"
Background: Ingo Swann, "Millenium [sic] Triptych"

A whole gallery is currently given over to the multi-media sculptures of Judith Scott (1943-2005). She lived with her family in Cincinnati, until she was institutionalized at the age of 7 because she was deemed "ineducable" due to Down Syndrome and the fact that no one realized she had lost her hearing from scarlet fever as a baby. In 1986, her twin sister Joyce removed her from the institution and brought her to California. She was put in supportive housing and began attending art classes. Judith developed a unique and thought-provoking style of fiber arts collages with found objects. Imagine the life she could have led without that 36-year exile.

Gallery title: "The Secret Within: The Art of Judith Scott"




Videography stills of Scott at work at the Creative Growth Art Center in Oakland, CA

You may say I'm a dreamer,
But I'm not the only one.
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will live as one.
~John Lennon

"Esther and the Dream of One Loving Human Family" is a long-term exhibit of art by and about people who have suffered violence, such as apartheid in South Africa and the genocide in Rwanda. It was inspired by the 36 large crewel-work pieces of Esther Nisenthal Krinitz (1927-2001) who survived the Holocaust in Poland with one sister, hiding in the countryside while the rest of their village perished in the Majdenek concentration camp. Both married other survivors, and Esther moved to New York and later Maryland, while the sister went to Israel.

Childhood dream that the sky was falling on their barn; she is running away with her mother.

Krinitz included the gas chambers, crematoria, piles of discarded shoes, and fields of cabbages grown in soil mixed with the ashes of murdered Jews.

This is a happier image from life in Brooklyn, when Krinitz climbed a tree to pick cherries for her two daughters waiting in the yard.

Life-sized doll in traditional Polish costume

Apache elder Judy Tallwing (1945-) depicts the desert and the mountains.

Mr. Imagination aka Gregory Warmack (1948-2012),
"Always Remember You Are A Child of the King"

Finally, we scoped out "Good Sports: The Wisdom & Fun of Fair Play," a gallery on sports-inspired art, including Morgan Monceaux's (1945-2017) large portraits of Black pioneers, such as Toni Stone, the first woman to play in the Negro Leagues. In the 1940s and1950s she was on the rosters of the San Francisco Sea Lions, the New Orleans Creoles, the Indianapolis Clowns (a baseball-version of the Harlem Globetrotters), and the Kansas City Monarchs.


Minor-league umpire George Sosnak (1924-1992) was extremely talented with ink. Unfortunately, the photo I took of one of his decorated baseballs was blurry. Here's a letter he wrote and illustrated for Miss Lois Sullivan, who lived on Virginia Avenue on Mt. Washington in Pittsburgh. We looked at a house on Virginia Avenue before buying in Munhall.


David R. Klein, Pez dispensers

We were hungry, so we didn't even visit the museum's second building. Instead, we hopped on over to the Cross Street Market, loud and lively and looking good. Founded as open-air stalls in 1845, a two-story brick Italian Revival hall with shops on the bottom and a meeting space above replaced it in 1871. It burned to the ground in a 12-alarm fire in 1951. The next year, the current one-story brick building opened; it was renovated in 2018 and houses more than 20 vendors. The five of us had poke bowls, Korean fried chicken, a cheeseburger with fries, and/or ice cream from Taharka Brothers.


Recipe: That night for dinner I made a vegetarian feast of stuffed acorn squash, green salad, and rosemary bread. We fed 7 people with a variation of a recipe I found on Facebook.


Ingredients:
1/2 acorn squash per person
2 large sweet potatoes, cubed
2 cups Brussels sprouts, halved
as much dried cranberries and crumbled goat cheese as you want
olive oil, garlic powder, maple syrup, salt and pepper to taste
Instructions:
• Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C). Wash and chop the vegetables.
• Paint the edges of the acorn squash with olive oil and sprinkle with salt. Roast (skin up) for 40-45 minutes.
• Toss the Brussels sprouts and sweet potato with olive oil, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Roast on a baking sheet for 20-25 minutes, stirring halfway through until golden and crispy.
• Fill each acorn squash half with the roasted veggies. Sprinkle dried cranberries and crumbled goat cheese on top. Drizzle with maple syrup if you like a touch of sweetness.

Friday, December 27, 2024

Miracle on 34th Street, Hon!

One day we all gathered at my brother’s house for brunch, games, and presents. It was really nice to have the kids’ (almost) undivided attention for a Nerf battle, Chinese checkers, and Don't Bee Last (which I wasn't very good at). We also saw the beginning of Red One, the new Santa action movie (yes, you read that right).

In the evening, we went out to Everyman Theater, which shrewdly seemed to be the only company in town putting on entertainment between the holidays. We saw an excellent production of Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None, a sort of “locked-room” whodunit based loosely on a fairly racist children’s rhyme. While movies today come with lots of slick special effects, it's always exciting to see stage magic happen in person.

On the way home, Dad, Dear Husband, and I stopped by the 700 block of 34th Street in Hamden to take in the 77th year of spectacular holiday lights! The lights are on from 6pm-10pm Sunday through Thursday and until midnight on Friday and Saturday from November 30-January 1. To manage the crowds, they block off vehicular traffic and invite vendors, Santa, and caroling groups. We might have stayed longer, but it was starting to rain.


Happy Holidays Hon!
Flock Party


Merry Grinchmas

Happy New Year

It's hard to see, but this is a train garden under the front porch.




Hannukah lights!

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Christmas 2024



Dear Husband and I were lucky enough to spend from Christmas Day to New Year’s Day visiting my family and our old friends in Baltimore. After opening gifts from his parents at our house, we packed up the car and headed east. The drive was cloudy but dry.


When we arrived it was time for dinner and more presents, including a large number of jigsaw puzzles. Here are the ones that we did together over the next week:

We started with this “Deck the Shelves” puzzle from my Aunt Beth, with its bright primary colors and many discrete elements to assemble.

This 1000-piece Melissa & Doug puzzle of striking front doors of unknown provenance has bold colors and different textures in the image, but the pieces are cut with a limited number of shapes, so many fit where they didn’t belong. Usually you just had to turn in upside-down.

The most unique puzzle was undoubtedly this 500-piece wooden jigsaw puzzle of an elephant. Some of the pieces are identifiable shapes, like a cat, a dragonfly, or a leaping dolphin. Black shading and extremely unique piece shapes that broke up the patterns upped the difficulty level, but it helped that if a piece didn’t fit, you knew it was wrong.

Lastly we started a 1,000-piece masterpiece of the "Alchemist's Library" by Vasilisa Romanenko, who paints vibrant scenes that could double as eye-spy games.

When not puzzling or eating, I alternated between completing a book review and working on my cross-stitch. I am pleased that I was able to read the book, write the review (my 7th article or book review of the year), and submit it on time to get it off my to-do list. I have since finished the animals and words in the “Peaceable Kingdom”; all that remains is a LOT of outlining. I think I’m going to add some grass at the bottom, since there is so much extra green floss left over from the olive twig.


Other “fun” while on vacation included taking DH’s car to the shop to replace the left rear tire, which was as flat as flat could be, and having to hide all the carbohydrates from the mouse that has taken up residence in my parents’ house, chewing through packaging to get at the sweets and avoiding my father’s traps: