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Paul Prudhomme Outside Of His Restaurant “K-Paul’s Louisiana Kitchen”, In New Orleans (1979)
For a period between 1989 and 1990 I was the head chef at a Cajun Creole restaurant (Fat Franks). We did our utmost to produce authentic creole food in a place not exactly known for the cuisine. During that time this man was my guru, I devoured everything on him that I could find from the other side of the globe.
The one issue we had was that at the time Sassafras was illegal in Australia, I believe it can now be imported with a licence, but fortunately a friend of the restaurants owner had smuggled a few jars of Sassafras powder into the country. We kept that stuff in the safe.
I visited New Orleans in 2001, but I had stopped chefing by then and had just graduated Uni as an archaeologist and I barely had enough money for the trip, so much so that when I stood outside his restaurant reading the menu I came to terms with knowing I wouldn't be dining in there this trip. To this day I regret not selling a kidney to do so though.
I miss cooking that food, I also miss eating it. I think I should smash out a gumbo or a jambalaya soon.
For a period between 1989 and 1990 I was the head chef at a Cajun Creole restaurant (Fat Franks). We did our utmost to produce authentic creole food in a place not exactly known for the cuisine. During that time this man was my guru, I devoured everything on him that I could find from the other side of the globe.
The one issue we had was that at the time Sassafras was illegal in Australia, I believe it can now be imported with a licence, but fortunately a friend of the restaurants owner had smuggled a few jars of Sassafras powder into the country. We kept that stuff in the safe.
I visited New Orleans in 2001, but I had stopped chefing by then and had just graduated Uni as an archaeologist and I barely had enough money for the trip, so much so that when I stood outside his restaurant reading the menu I came to terms with knowing I wouldn't be dining in there this trip. To this day I regret not selling a kidney to do so though.
I miss cooking that food, I also miss eating it. I think I should smash out a gumbo or a jambalaya soon.
ba
Same.
I have never once considered my access to filé powder as a sort of privilege... on the few occasions I couldn't buy it, with a small amount of effort, I could make it... I now know, and I won't take that for granted again.
I’m a roux man myself, but I respect the old ways.
Also, cool on you that you had that trade. Mealtime at your place must be grand.
Also, cool on you that you had that trade. Mealtime at your place must be grand.
Roux or file ... smash out something ASAP. We lived in NOLA for most of the 90s, and dined at K-Paul's many times. It was always amazing. I have 2 more comments to follow ... few people to share them with these days.
We took an Australian (from Drouin, Victoria) to K-Pauls' in the late 90s. On the menu that day was ... Something with Hot Fanny Sauce. Once the hysterical laughter subsided, we may have been the only table that night that got the Australian slang translation of that.
New Year's Day, around midnight in the French Quarter, somewhere around Dauphine and Conti, we saw a guy exit a darkened doorway to a private home. He was carrying a bottle of wine in a brown bag, and seemed to be hurrying as he went diagonally across the street in the direction of Burgundy. Difficulty walking. Very large and round. Trimmed beard. We instantly knew who it was. Or was it? We told that story a few years later to a server at K-Paul's. She was dubious, and replied "Chef don't walk." Since then, we have entertained the low probability that it might have been Dom Deluise.
@BooBounder story 1 ... I am also laughing!
story 2, hilarious 😂
story 2, hilarious 😂
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photograph showing the spires of St Patrick's Cathedral between two office buildings
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I was using google maps just now to locate an area for some fieldwork and this formation caught my eye. A salt lake near Salmon Gums, Western Australia
The most delectable part of the salmon really
A very unique formation!
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Bagpipe player in full costume
Dressed up for the weekend crowd
Dad said we were from Clan Gordon and I'm always on the lookout for Gordon tartan. This might be a variety of Robertson - it appears that within the specific Clan you can have a range of tartans - Dress, Ancient, Hunting, Weathered to name but a few.
Both sides of my family migrated from the UK to NZ and Australia, early 1800's or thereabouts and I've become interested in the back story as I've aged.
Ironically, the two sides of the family had to travel all this way to find a mate, who, in the Old Country, lived, in relative terms, just down the road.
It seems it is not an uncommon occurrence.
Both sides of my family migrated from the UK to NZ and Australia, early 1800's or thereabouts and I've become interested in the back story as I've aged.
Ironically, the two sides of the family had to travel all this way to find a mate, who, in the Old Country, lived, in relative terms, just down the road.
It seems it is not an uncommon occurrence.
@roonie It might be Galbraith tartan, as it looks like my family's one. Not that we're Galbraiths: we're Russell, and it's shared with Hunter , Mitchell and the USAF pipe band too. Gordon has more white in it: https://www.tartanregister.gov.uk/tartanDe...
Tartans are kind of bollocks but as somebody whose family used to make their living selling them they're fucking great and everyone should have one.
Tartans are kind of bollocks but as somebody whose family used to make their living selling them they're fucking great and everyone should have one.
I love this tartan!
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A person pilots an unusual delivery vehicle through the dark. The vehicle is an iridescent green and looks like a space helmet mounted on four legs. Each leg has an orange cowboy boot on it. The windshield of the vehicle is purple, and the driver is silhouetted behind it. On the side of the vehicle is a small round hatch, perhaps a fuel port, and a logo of a gift with a curved arrow under it. The vehicle has two antennae with glowing white lights on them, and a single round headlight that casts an intense white-green beam. The painting is signed "Chris Silverman".
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Illustration of a man in traditional attire with a turban and mustache. Yellow and red tones. Folk Art design.
great link! there's something about that old matchbox art, the colors and textures, that's so satisfying!
Woah. Such great images.
Published o 3 May. You're on the ball.
Published o 3 May. You're on the ball.
@joost it's called "following Jason Scott's feed", not any trendsetting on my part
@scruss still a cool find.
very good
Fashion goals
Lots of amazing images. My favourites are the cyclists.
Tropical Island Woman. okay
Wheat Collection Machine. what?
Hand Chained To Rum Bottle and Burning Cigarette (Looks like a forest fire warning). good. PSAs
But the two I've seen with a person standing in a shower? I'm confused.
Tropical Island Woman. okay
Wheat Collection Machine. what?
Hand Chained To Rum Bottle and Burning Cigarette (Looks like a forest fire warning). good. PSAs
But the two I've seen with a person standing in a shower? I'm confused.
@roonie there are some very odd ones
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A bagel cut in half with ramp cream cheese spread on both halves. The bagel is on a white plate sitting on a wood table.
Friends gave us a bunch of ramps from their yard so made some ramp cream cheese and well of course needed something to put it on so made some bagels.
enjoy some sweet jumps
You’ve never ramped.
time to ramp up my game.
@scruss - came here to jump that
@redfox just planted some farmers' market ramps in our garden, we'll see if they take.
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source: https://sakurajima.moe/@Kingu...
The Latin alphabet! Also should "W" be wider?
@poorusher Yeah, doesn't seem like a font-nerd joke when the premise is the font is monospace except for some letters.
And where is the kerning?
Hehehehe
ooh, someone's been reading Flatland
Font nerd jokes are 100% reliant on font nerd comment sections
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"girl"
This appeals to me.
I’ve been holding them wrong all this time!
With a kitten, without a cranium.
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phone pic: a rainbow forms over the university of illinois’ gies college of business building. behind it a dark rain cloud is unleashing curtains of rain on another part of the town.
snapped this while working (read: staring at a half-finished notebook until the clock ran out) yesterday afternoon. forgot to upload until just now.
truest spring midwest vibe, watching it absolutely pour half a mile away while the sun shines on you (or vice versa)
truest spring midwest vibe, watching it absolutely pour half a mile away while the sun shines on you (or vice versa)
There's a Leprechaun guarding a pot of gold at the Assembly Hall (or whatever it's called these days) right now!
Is that IU?
@BooBounder university of illinois (urbana-champaign)!
@ba that little dude is tired of all these frat boys appropriating his gold!
@ba that little dude is tired of all these frat boys appropriating his gold!
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Five CD cases arranged in a grid, cover-side-up. Albums from Leon Bridges, Deftones, Czarface, Gorillaz, and Nathaniel Rateliff.
Stopped buying physical media in 2014 and what felt right then feels less so today. I’m not sure if I’ll ever get back to a full collection of albums, but I am happy with a short stack of good music in my life again.
The liner notes for the new Gorillaz are great.
The liner notes for the new Gorillaz are great.
@patd I hear ya
I'm waiting for a new CD player to be delivered. I haven't played a CD for more than a decade now and I'm looking forward to diving into my collection (which has been ruthlessly thinned) as much as I am looking forward to buying new music while avoiding apps, itunes and sundry downloading bullshit.
hops down from soapbox
I'm waiting for a new CD player to be delivered. I haven't played a CD for more than a decade now and I'm looking forward to diving into my collection (which has been ruthlessly thinned) as much as I am looking forward to buying new music while avoiding apps, itunes and sundry downloading bullshit.
hops down from soapbox
@roonie Its nice. The constraint of "oh I have loaded this album into a player" is enough for me to commit to listening to something as a whole and not just keep hitting the skip button constantly.
I sold all my CDs at a garage sale around 2014. Figured physical media was dead and why am I hauling this shit around. Within 6 months, I ended up in a record store and realized I missed records.
A decade later we’re thinking of moving/downsizing and am torn on what to do with all these records, CDs and cassettes I now have again.
But glad I have them.
A decade later we’re thinking of moving/downsizing and am torn on what to do with all these records, CDs and cassettes I now have again.
But glad I have them.
Our CDs are in storage (many digitized, still actively working on that), tapes were digitized and thrown out back in the oughts, records are in storage (but a few came out over the last 10 years after a gift of an all-in-one). I still enjoy looking at them all, but I don't go out of my way. It's about the music for me. Still I don't think I I'd want to sell them or throw them out.
FWIW: "River" from that Leon Bridges CD came up on my phone's MP3 playlist this week!
FWIW: "River" from that Leon Bridges CD came up on my phone's MP3 playlist this week!
nice haul right there. i really gotta pick up that deftones album when i get the chance. i'm a couple behind on their discography.
i never fully gave up on my luddite madness - still have about 500 CDs and 250 LPs - but sadly the CDs did go into storage for long stretches of time. on top of that, i only had a macbook to play them, which mostly fed the behavior of ripping to MP3, loading onto my phone, and putting it back into storage limbo.
getting them back out again after i'd reacquired a proper CD changer was a delight. the thing i missed the most was looking at the booklets while i listened, reading the liner notes and lyrics. it definitely encouraged me to listen in a more active way, rather than fiddling on my phone once i'd cued up the song.
i never fully gave up on my luddite madness - still have about 500 CDs and 250 LPs - but sadly the CDs did go into storage for long stretches of time. on top of that, i only had a macbook to play them, which mostly fed the behavior of ripping to MP3, loading onto my phone, and putting it back into storage limbo.
getting them back out again after i'd reacquired a proper CD changer was a delight. the thing i missed the most was looking at the booklets while i listened, reading the liner notes and lyrics. it definitely encouraged me to listen in a more active way, rather than fiddling on my phone once i'd cued up the song.
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A reddish meadow under a fiery orange-yellow sky. Standing in the middle of the meadow is a doorway that appears to be a portal. Through the doorway is an entirely different world; one with a blue sky and white clouds. The doorway casts a yellow glow across the red grass, and is made of orange brick. Attached to the top of it is a round white sign with a black letter T: the logo for the Boston subway system. The painting is signed "Chris Silverman".
Way down in Hadestown, way down under the ground
https://youtu.be/bUFG_x9d...
https://youtu.be/bUFG_x9d...
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A comparison image. The top shows a frayed and broken white smartphone charging cable with the text "They need to make these." The bottom shows a sturdy, green coiled telephone cord with the text "As strong as these."
The Verge's offshoot Version History had a piece on the Western Electric 500 and at one point came to the conclusion that since At&t was a monopoly at the time, it made good economic sense to build the phones as solid as possible!
Not "as strong as", but "as flexible as". 99% of those fucking USB/Firewire cable failures could be avoided with (a) a proper strain relief gusset and (b) not being a 3mm cable with a 10cm minimum coil radius.
@idogcow @ardgedee +++ to both of you! I wanted my Grandma Amanda’s Bakelite table phone when I heard that Southwestern Bell was coming to collect it. Alas, she was too German to allow for such hi-jinx….
Feel like I should add that the worst USB cable tangle you've ever seen is not as bad as what a run of the mill handset cable could manage in a single day's use.
And there's a huge difference in construction and quality between a modern office phone's handset cable and an early '70s Bell Telephone handset cable.
And there's a huge difference in construction and quality between a modern office phone's handset cable and an early '70s Bell Telephone handset cable.
@idogcow > "...since At&t was a monopoly at the time, it made good economic sense to build the phones as solid as possible! "
Only because they leased the phones. The more easily damaged the phones were, the more Bell had to spend on service calls and replacements. Once people owned their own phones quality went to shit, and that would've happened with or without dissolving the monopoly.
Only because they leased the phones. The more easily damaged the phones were, the more Bell had to spend on service calls and replacements. Once people owned their own phones quality went to shit, and that would've happened with or without dissolving the monopoly.
@idogcow weirdly, the one thing that was very fragile on WE phones was the socket from the wall cable. I dunno how many phones I've seen at surplus/thrift places that have this socket smashed
@scruss I thought the technicians did that to decommission the phones and prevent customers from reusing them.
@ardgedee ooh, I never thought of that. The socket does seem to have almost an engineered break line in it, just right for a screwdriver to go in ad fuck things up. Had to repair my very late model WE Princess that way
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3 stacked images with text. The first image says, "my brush" with an image of chopsticks. The second says, "my paint" with an image of what looks like pho or ramen. The final image says, "my canvas" next to a clean, white t-shirt.
I just painted that same image.
My kid could paint that
Phoooooook
imagine the sound
If you get to San Diego, you should have this experience with the best pho in town at either Pho Cow Cali location. Maybe better can be had elsewhere but this is the best I know here.
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Mexican-ish chihuahua art
Did some art for the first time in a long time, for my beloved’s birthday.
This is fantastic!
WOW!
Alebrije!
@gormat Absolutely!
@idogcow @ufez Thank you!
@idogcow @ufez Thank you!
Love!!
Lovely!
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Rabbit and duck at opencasket funeral for optical illusion.
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A cartoon of an adult and child standing near an unmade bed. The adult is saying to the child, "If you think you shouldn't make your bed because 'it will get messy again,' I have terrible news about literally every aspect of your life."
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An animated image zoomed in on the pale concrete of a sidewalk, a smattering of small dark dots grows more plentiful as additional unseen drops join their brethren on the pavement.
Was walking the dog in a brief light rain, and loved that it felt like the dark spots appeared on the sidewalk spontaneously rather than being the result of the raindrops. ❤️💧☁️
@wombatman70 I'm with ya, Drugs are fun!
I've seen this before. Oh!... https://mltshp.com/p/1RP0R
@roonie hahaha I had just woken up from a “coma” nap so very much felt like it!
@heyitsal 😂
I can smell this gif