Humor
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Popovers (and a Pumpkin Turkey Cake Story)
Popovers are usually thought of as a type of roll to make with roast beef, using the suet as the shortening and using the popovers to sop up the beef ‘juices’. In the immortal words of Penfold of the Danger Mouse cartoons, “Oh, ick!” I’ve made vegetarian popovers for many years and they are not only extremely easy to make, but fun to eat. My recipe contains dairy products, but any vegan cook could whip some up with rice or soy milk.
Popovers are made from a simple batter which relies on very high heat and steam to make them puff. There are two baking temperatures, the first is high to create steam for the lift-off, so to speak, and the second is moderate for the cooking through to the tender insides. For the last few minutes of baking you should stick each popover with a fork to release the steam, otherwise they’ll end up soggy.
You have to eat popovers right away, with as much butter as your conscience will allow. Or use them to sop up vegetarian gravy. You can also add cinnamon or nutmeg into the batter and serve them for breakfast.
For years I made popovers in oven-proof custard dishes. They didn’t rise as high and were wider than normal, but me and my children managed to choke them down pretty well.
Then I bought myself a real popover pan. I’m a real sucker for shaped baking pans. I think I could keep Nordicware in business if I didn’t control myself.
I don’t even bake very much anymore, but I do love my castle bundt pan, or turkey cake pan that my daughter bought me (there is a story there. I’ll tell it later*.) There are worse vices. I think. The popovers in the popover pan look terrific and are very impressive, but they eat just the same way that the custard cup ones did. So, go make some popovers! What are you waiting for?
PopoversAuthor: Diane KennedyRecipe type: BreadPrep time:Cook time:Total time:Serves: 6Popovers without the suet, for lacto-ovo vegetarians and the world!Ingredients- 1 tablespoon butter or vegetable oil
- 2 eggs
- 1 cup milk
- 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- ¼ teaspoon freshly ground pepper (opt.)
- ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon or nutmeg if you are making breakfast popovers)
Instructions- Heat oven to 400 degrees F.
- Put ½ teaspoon of butter or oil in each of six 6-ounce oven-proof custard cups or in each cup of a popover pan. Coat the bottom and sides.
- Place custard cups on a cookie sheet, if using.
- In a blender, mixer, or in a bowl with a wire whisk, beat eggs, milk and oil until combined. Beat to blend; don't incorporate too much air into the batter.
- Add flour (and spice if using) and combine until smooth.
- Divide batter between prepared cups; each should be half full.
- Bake for twenty minutes in 400 degree oven, then reduce the heat to 350 and bake fifteen minutes more.
- Turn oven off.
- With the tip of a knife or a fork, prick the tops of the popovers and allow them to stay in the oven for about five minutes more. Popovers should be firm and crisp on the outside, and tender on the inside.
- Remove popovers from oven; turn out of pan or cups and serve immediately.
- Makes six.
* Okay, so here’s the turkey cake story. My daughter gave me this fabulous turkey cake mold last year. I decided to have Thanksgiving early with my son, then fly to her university to have Thanksgiving with her. I made most of the meal and packed it up in my carry-on (no liquids!). After some debate with myself, I caved in to my sillier side and baked a pumpkin cake in the turkey pan and sandwiched the sides together with buttercream frosting. It looked perfect! I wrapped that sucker up in lots of plastic wrap, stuck in on top in my carry-on, and headed for Carlsbad airport.Flying out of a small airport is the only way to go. Small lines, easy parking, and a not-so-hostile security. When my carry-on went through the X-ray machine, I wasn’t surprised when they pulled it off and called me over. I explained to the very nice female officer that the dark blob in my bag was a pumpkin cake shaped like a turkey. She said that they’d have to check it again, which they did. She and another security officer had a good laugh at the image and when she brought it back to me she said that in profile it looked exactly like a small real turkey on the screen. Then much more seriously she asked if I was going to change planes on my trip. When I told her that I was, in Los Angeles, she quickly advised, “Don’t go out of the security area there!” I don’t think the Los Angeles airport security force, on a high-risk day-before Thanksgiving holiday, would feel so friendly towards my turkey cake.
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A Scream in the Pond
I have a small lined pond in my front yard, created by my daughter and I a good five years ago or so. It is a pond gone native, for the most part, and I like it that way. The mysteries of what lives in those three feet of murky algae-laden water give me a shiver and excite my naturalist sense of curiosity (See post The Monster in the Pond of March 2nd). Sometime earlier this year as I was walking past the stretch of green that was partially covered with newly unfolding waterlily pads, I was startled from my reverie (I’m always in reverie it seems, especially now that I’m wrestling with mid-life crisis!) by what sounded like a small scream and a splash. I saw nothing. Hmm.
During the most frigid, god-forsaken unpopular months of January and February, it seems as if every Pacific Chorus frog migrates from a forty-mile radius to mate in my small three-hundred gallon pond. Every night the males attempt to out-sing each other with such buzzes and chirps that even I’m impressed and tempted to follow their siren song, if only it weren’t so cold out there! (Wimpy San Diegan, I know!) Let their large ladies deal with them, I say. Sometimes their song is so loud that it becomes one giant noise. Often it drowns out whatever movie we might happen to be watching and we have to shine a flashlight out the window to startle them, catching them in flagranti as it were and quieting them for a short reprieve.
However, none of them scream. They sing.
When walking past the pond a few weeks later it happened again. A much louder scream and a splash. At least I knew that whatever it was hadn’t been so frightened by my passage that it committed suicide the first time. Then soon after my son came in from the front yard with a puzzled expression and said, “Something in the pond just screamed at me.”
There is a lot of algae in the pond which blooms about the time the frogs are mating, so I leave the frothy green bunches in place to protect the clear jelly sacks of spawn that cushion the frog eggs. Therefore, not much visibility at any time in my pond. Nope.
Finally I saw the screaming thing as it flung itself from the flagstones into the water. It was a large frog, much larger than the Pacific Chorus Frogs. Uh-oh.
When at breakfast I saw it sitting on the flagstone walkway around the pond through my bay window, my heart sank. It was a bullfrog. The glistening, beautiful green gigantic (for around here) frog sat there for awhile, then leaped into the undergrowth of my columbines.
American bullfrogs (Rana catesbeiana) are what you think of when and if you ever think of frogs. They can become huge. People farm them to eat their legs and back meat (oh ick!). Little American boys are supposed to spend their idle childhood summers wading through creeks (pro: criks) catching them and tickling their stomachs. I think they are a gorgeous and wonderful creature.
Except. Except that bullfrogs are not native to the Western states and they eat anything that they can shove into their mouths, including snakes, birds, rodents, other bullfrogs…. They are partially responsible, along with the red-eared slider turtles (America’s favorite pet turtle which was dumped wholesale into lakes and streams after the salmonella scare some twenty-five years ago and took over the waterways) and polluted water for endangering our native cute little Western pond turtles. So having this great screaming mouth eating down my mosquito fish, my Pacific Chorus frogs and their young, and everything else in the yard, is not good news in my book. Then my son noticed a second, smaller one. A male. Oh no!
How to catch a bullfrog? I brought out an old cat litter bucket and a fish net and left them handy. We’d see the frog’s nose clearing the water, but by the time we’d go out there he would be long gone. Being very busy I didn’t have the opportunity to sit, net in hand, for hours waiting for my screaming frog to appear. (Hey, wait, shouldn’t that be ‘handsome prince’ instead of screaming frog? I get everything wrong!).
A few days ago on a sunny afternoon I was surveying the weeds in my garden, trying to burn them into cinders with my eyes without success. I walked along the pathway by the pond that was now almost completely overrun with peppermint, lazy stalks of columbine, the all-too vigorous Mexican primrose and the definately healthy weeds. I surveyed the back half of my garden making plans about weeding that had to be carefully done since many of the nasty little beggers were coming up in my heirloom bulb beds and their stalks looked almost identical.
Wandering back I stepped through the overgrown columbine that hid the path when suddenly something big and shiny and screaming came flying up towards my knees from right under my foot. I also screamed and jumped. A second scream and leap to my left alerted me to the very large, very green bullfrog panting and staring at me with much the same expression that I must have been wearing as I stood staring and panting back. Even in my surprised state I realized that this might be my chance. Of course, the bucket was all the way over by the gate. I made a lunge for the frog but she evaded me. I managed to keep her from jumping into the pond and she disappeared under some weeds and mint by the bird bath. I squatted down and held down the grass hoping to contain her. I yelled for my son, but he was out of earshot. I started laughing, which I do so often in my life when I find myself in unusual circumstances. Come to think of it, I laugh pretty regularly. Maybe too regularly. Regaining control of the slight hysteria and my breathing, I slowly lifted up the grass… but she was gone. I knew she hadn’t jumped into the pond. She must have made her way along the sides of the flagstones. I made a plan. Quietly I stood and tip-toed around the back of the pond and around the end, making my way back toward the gate and the bucket with the fish net. Everything was still and I made no noise as I crept along. Just as I made it halfway past the pond, there were two almightly screams in close succession, two jumps and a splash. Fortunately it was the bullfrog who landed in the pond, not me. Shaking slightly with a trace of that hysterical laughter, I went inside to have a calming cuppa tea, and to give the lady frog time to settle her nerves as well. All that screaming had been a very girlie experience for both of us.
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Skunk in a Can
I worked for San Diego County Parks and Recreation for ten years as a Senior Park Ranger. My first assignment was at Flinn Springs County Park, near Lakeside in East County. Flinn Springs is a small oak-filled park with a stream running it’s length. My year there was interesting and quite a learning curve. I was lucky enough to meet some very wonderful people. One such person was Mel. Mel and his wife, both in their early 80’s, were seasonal volunteers at the park. The volunteer program with the County is a good one for the right people. In exchange for free utilities and a place to park a motorhome or trailer, the volunteer must perform twenty hours a week of service to the park. Some volunteers stay at a park for years. Others, like Mel and his wife, spend six months in our mild winter climate, then head to colder states where their home or family is for the summer and Fall.
Mel was tall and thin in his khaki volunteer uniform. His job was to clean the restrooms in the park every day. That entailed removing all the toilet paper, hosing down the inside (called ‘field day’), scrubbing toilets, and emptying the large aluminum trash cans that stood outside the doors.
Mel and I were talking once, not long before he and his wife would be driving North. He was telling me that at the first restroom that morning, which stood just above the streambed and foot bridge, there had been a young skunk in the trash can. Mel said that he’d looked down into the trash can to see if it needed emptying, and there was this young skunk looking up at him. It gave him a start, but he figured that he’d given the skunk a start, too. He thought that the skunk had been searching for food and had become stuck in the can. Mel addressed him kindly, then very gently tipped over the trash can. The skunk waddled out obligingly and without a backward look or spray, disappered under the footbridge where Mel thought might be the den.
Mel came up to me about a week later and, shaking his head, said that I wouldn’t believe it but every morning he’d look in that same trashcan and the skunk would look up at him. He’d say a few words of greeting to the little fellow then gently tip the can over and the skunk would waddle off. Mel said that he’d enjoyed his morning ritual with the skunk, but since during the week in the off-season there wasn’t anything in the trash can, he wondered why the skunk would get himself trapped into the can like that, morning after morning.
That weekend was the last for Mel and his wife, who were driving up to Minnisota for six months to be with their children. In fact, Mel didn’t even own a house anymore, but the two of them lived in the mobile home and had their furniture in storage. Up in Minnisota they volunteered at another park for the other six months, and this life suited them both just fine. I really liked the pair, who were very lively for octigenarians.
With no volunteers in their space, and being the newest Ranger at the park, I took over Mel’s routine. The morning after they’d left I headed down the hill to the restroom. Not thinking about much, I glanced into the trash can to see if it needed emtying and, lo-and-behold, there was a half-grown skunk at the bottom, pointy nose raised and beady eyes looking at me. I froze and looked at him, and he froze and looked at me. Then I remembered what Mel had told me and I greeted the little fellow. Examining me with his beady black eyes, he appeared to become agitated. Gently I tipped over the trash can and the skunk waddled out and down the embankment to under the footbridge and at a quick rate.
The next morning I smiled to myself as I went down to the restroom to clean, thinking about seeing the skunk again. I looked into the trashcan and… no skunk. I never saw that skunk again.
I guess the game wasn’t any fun without Mel.
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When Chickens Fly
My seven chickens are quite the young women now. They really should be out in a pen, not still in a Rubbermaid container in the side room, but tractor work will be started this week and I don’t want to horrify them with large machinery. The big girls have begun to squat on the floor like broody hens. Most of their feathers are in and they look very sleek and lovely. The Americaunas, who are almost two week older than the others, are much larger and also much shyer. They are usually at the bottom of the pile when I go in to change their water. Why is it that I’ve held them, fed, watered and cleaned them, crooned to them, and every time I put my hand in there they start screaming and flying around as if I’m going to murder them? I’ve explained my vegetarianism to them, after all!
Then there are the two smaller girls, the Barred Rocks. These girls have attitude. They were in a large cardboard box for awhile, but the larger of the two kept jumping up and out. Last week I found that they were in the same container as the larger girls! Apparently they both got out of their own box, had a time pooing on the floor, then went exploring into the big girl’s domain. The Barred Rocks (BRs) were in one corner, and all five of the big girls were dogpiled in the far corner. They were all frightened of each other! (Yes, the term chicken comes to mind here.) I left them for the night thinking that maybe they’d settle in together (no pecking), but heard intermittant squawks. Apparently the Silver Wyandotte would be brave enough to verture over and scare the BRs, then the larger of the BRs would venture over and scare the others. Geez. So I pulled out an old birdcage and put the BRs in it. They like it just fine, and are enjoying the wooden perches. Of course, teaching chickens to perch in trees is not a good idea, but I have experience with this phenomena.
About fifteen years ago, me and my young children were living in a house in Vista along a busy steep road. Across that road was a fenced property with avocado trees and a couple of loud Rottweilers. On the corner of my yard was a tall pine tree that stretched past the convergence of telephone wires.
I had the opportunity to aquire some mature hens from my boss who couldn’t keep them any longer. One in particular was a Barred Rock with an attitude. We were novices at chickens, just claiming cats, dogs, fish and tortoises at the moment. The first night the chickens spent in the garage. Chickens after dark are like moaning footballs. Like bees, they don’t fly after the sun falls, and those who would scream and behave as if they were about to be axe-murdered upon your approach in the light, would in the evening suffer you to pick them up and tote them around like inanimate objects. Inanimate except for the low crooning moans of great distress and sadness that chickens use as lullabys.
I built a very large, and in my opinion, handsome cage for them on wheels (a chicken tractor and I didn’t even know it!), and there they lived. We allowed them to roam during the day when we were home. Then we found that one of the Barred Rocks, and I’ll give her name to you now as DC although that sobriquet was bestowed later, enjoyed flying up to the lowest limbs of the great pine tree. I’d never heard of chickens flying. There are, thankfully, no chicken migrations darkening the sky across the Southwest. If you haven’t seen a chicken for awhile, take a gander at one (oops, wrong fowl) and notice how round and large they are. They are not sleek, flying birds. The BRs, mostly black with white dabblings all over them, look especially rotund and solid, like cast iron. My children and I thought that DC aiming for the heights was, at first, funny.
Then came the day that I went outside to find that DC had set and acquired goals for herself, and had fluttered branch by branch up the pine tree until she was very high up indeed. We tried to lure her down with food and endearments. My son attempted to climb up after her. DC, the most ornery of birds, instead of retreating into the waiting arms of my son, decided to fly. Her first flight was a brief one, more of a fluttering really, to the telephone wires that lined the busy street. There she sat, proudly swaying back and forth on the slender line. If you haven’t seen a chicken on a telephone wire, you really can’t imagine what it looks like. It isn’t like seeing a hawk or another large bird, because they are shaped the way they should be. A chicken, as I’ve said, is like a dark super-sized soccer ball balanced on a wire as if ready to drop any moment. They shouldn’t be that high. I think only seeing an ostrich on a telephone wire would look as strange. The vehicles that came speeding down that hill slowed and made careful detour around the area where she might land if indeed she did drop and shatter their windshields. DC appeared to be about to break her neck, and at this point I was saddened at the thought that it would be her own machinations and not my two hands that would do the act.
My thought now was to get her to fly, or rather drop, back into the fenced area of my property. I don’t remember what time of day it was, but I was dressed in my Park Ranger uniform and badge. There I was, on the far side of the two-laned road in uniform, dodging and directing and apologizing to drivers, an armful of pine cones at the ready, chucking them as high as I could at DC. I am a poor pitcher and none of them came close. However the shouting, the chucking, the passing vehicles and the breeze all made DC come to the decision that she was, indeed, a flying chicken. With grace she launched herself. Chickens don’t fly, but they will, if the wind is willing, glide. She passed unsteadily over the road, causing the driver of a pickup truck to swerve as he caught sight of the immense black object bearing down on his windshield. She just hit managed the top rail of the neighbor’s chainlink fence before teetering over and falling into their yard of avocados.
Dropping my armful of pinecones, saying unpleasant things under my breath, I went to knock at the door of the house who now had a new kind of bird in their yard. No one was home. I’d never met these people, and had only come away with a feeling of slight hostility from them. I went around to the gate in their chainlink fence and the lock was on it but unlatched. Closing the gate behind me I ducked under and around the variety of fruit trees, calling for my lost pet, hoping that the inhabitants of the house were not just lunching on the back porch with their rifles handy. I caught sight of DC, who looked no worse for wear but a little flustered by her adventures and in no mood to suddenly become docile and walk over to me. At the same time that I caught sight of her, I stepped in a pile of poo. A very large pile of poo. That’s when I remembered the Rottweilers.
I froze, listening. I hadn’t heard any barking, not even when I knocked at the front door. That could mean that the huge unfriendly dogs were on the back porch with their huge, unfriendly owners, and all of them had rifles. And as DC headed around the back corner of the house, I thought I’d pause and see what happened before I lost my direct pathway to the side gate.
After no explosions of ammunition or feathers occurred, I went after her. Bent over to avoid branches, hissing so as not to draw attention to myself, chasing her around in circles because chickens are the most uncooperative of animals, I finally cornered her. I threw a stick so that it landed behind her, and scared her enough to run towards me. I grabbed. She screamed and fussed as I ran with her tucked under my arm, not unlike a football, back across the street to the safety of my own yard.
It was afterat we began to clip her wing feathers,, and it was then that she earned the name of DC, which stands for…. Damned Chicken.