It's Milton Friedman Day

- A new PBS Biography will air tonight (9pm on Channel 11 in Chicago).
- Free to Choose is being streamed online, 24/7, at no charge to the viewer. See it on ideachannel.tv
- A Memorial Service at the University of Chicago - 2pm.
Some comments and babble on the world around us... or at least the little part we get to see.


Labels: Language
The first cookbook on my shelf is The American Woman's Cook Book (1948). It seemed a good place to start my cookbook project. This was one of the few cookbooks my mother had around the house when I was young. I remember looking for Christmas cookie and candy recipes here.
This definitely vintage cookery here. If you want to what the post-depression, post-WWII American housewife was cooking, it's in this book. Mainly meat and potatoes recipes here with lots of cream sauces -- good for stretching the meat ration. The full color pictures are kind of nauseating, whether it's their strange pastel shades of green and pink or that the subject matter. The picture of ring of noodle aspic with chicken ala king in the middle is a true food nightmare. Thank god Mom only subjected us the the decidedly non-Chinese Chop Suey detailed on pg 334.Labels: 1940's, cookbook project

Labels: cookbook project, cooking, use what I have
Today's internet is all about sharing. The younger generation (boy, it pains me to use that phrase) believes in sharing it all on the web. I'm not too into the whole MySpace thing, but I do have this blog --- so I guess I'm part of the movement.
Labels: Mistakes, Motivation
Resolutions, here in late January, the season has almost passed. After a flurry of news stories, little is said for year. It seems people either dig in and try to make changes or they hate the whole idea of resolutions.
Labels: resolutions