Archive for 2007
yes, another meme
You know, I always did like filling out surveys, so it’s no surprise that I can barely contain myself when I see a good meme.
Yes, folks, here’s another–this time courtesy of Karla at Tales of a Texpatriate. As always, if you want to play, please leave a link to your meme in my comments so I can find you.
1. When you looked at yourself in the mirror today, what was your first thought?
I don’t remember looking at myself in the mirror today. Obviously if I did, it wasn’t notable.
2. Do you read while you’re in the bathroom?
Not really in there long enough to even bother to bring anything, so no.
3. What’s a word that rhymes with “fit”?
Skit.
4. Favorite planet?
I’m really fond of the Earth for obvious reasons, but I’ve always been partial to Venus as well.
5. Who is the 4th person on your missed call list?
P, and that’s because he gives me un squillo when he’s out and about so I can call him from the home phone (much cheaper). Fellow Italian residents, I know you hear me on this one.
6. What is your favorite ring on your phone?
I don’t have anything special, but I do like the tango one.
7. What shirt are you wearing?
Two actually. A long sleeve v-neck in navy blue (3 euro at the local market) and my weekend hoodie (5 euro at the market). Bonus info: the matching pants were also 5 euro. I’m a big spender.
8. What were you doing 20 minutes ago?
Washing dishes.
9. Name the brand of shoes you’re currently wearing?
Some sort of Ugg-like slippers from Australia that P’s aunt sent our way. Comfy as all get out.
10. Bright or Dark Rooms?
Bright if I’m doing something that requires light; dark if I’m doing something that requires dark. I’ll leave it at that.
11. What do you think about the person who posted this survey?
I’m enjoying getting to know her through reading her blog.
12. If you’re in a room with two beds, which one do you sleep in?
The one farthest from the door.
13. What were you doing at exactly midnight last night?
Watching the end of an episode of Lost (Season 2–the one where Locke refuses to press the button so Desmond breaks out the Safety Key).
14. What was your last text message you received on your cell?
Last night from a woman for whom I translated a power point project; I sent her an email but forgot to attach the translation. Duh.
15. How do you like your eggs?
Any which way really, including in purgatory (speaking of Lost…).
16. What’s a word/phrase that you say a lot?
Stereotypical but “Mamma mia!” And also to Luna, “Vuoi uscire?” (Do you want to go out?)
17. Who told you he/she loved you last?
P, this morning.
18. Last furry thing you touched?
Luna balloona.
19. How many drugs have you done in the last three days?
If vitamins count, 3. Otherwise, none.
20. How many rolls of film do you need to get developed?
Even though it’s all digital now, I do have about 5 really old rolls of film that I should get developed before all color is lost.
21. Favorite age you have been so far?
I always thought 24 would be cool, and then it was just OK. I guess I kinda like wherever I am at any given moment.
22. Your worst enemy?
Personally? Can’t think of any. I’m a non-confrontational Libra after all.
23. What wallpaper do you have on your desktop?
The close-up of Luna from this post in block formation (there are 4 of her).
24. What was the last thing you said to someone….
Va bene.
25. If you had to choose between a million dollars or to be able to fly?
You know I’ve never had a flying dream that I can remember? I had one where I sort of hopped from roof to roof, but that’s as close as I’ve gotten. Ahem, gimme the cash.
26. Do you like someone?
I like most people most of the time. Mostly.
27. If you could punch one person in the face, who would it be?
I don’t want to be investigated by the FBI or anything, so I’ll plead the Fifth.
28. What is the closest object to your left foot?
My bag of teaching materials.
29. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be.
I’d like to be able to eat whatever I want and not gain weight or, more importantly, health problems.
30. If one thing about you could always remain the same, what would it be.
My ability to roll with the punches; humor is often involved.
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[tags]memes[/tags]
village games
I moved here three and a half years ago, but I still haven’t discovered even half of the gorgeous, unique, and interesting nooks and crannies of the village.
How can I be so sure?
Well, every time I find something simply amazing, P nods politely and tells me exactly where it is I’m talking about.
He rather enjoys bragging about how well he knows his medieval village. And know it he does–understandable as he has lived here all of his 28 years. Plus he’s a guy, so you know that most of those years were spent exploring the most obscure and likely dangerous spots.
So I’m taking him to task, calling his bluff, and pulling out every other cliché in the book (hah!) as we institute a little game I like to call “Dove cazzo è?” The clean version would be “Where the heck is it?” and it works like this:
(1) I roam the village taking random shots of things.
(2) He has to tell me where I’ve found them–all of them.
(3) Loser cooks dinner and cleans up afterwards.
Here are this round’s pictures:
This is not one of the famed door knockers as you might think. It’s actually a fancy place to hook up your donkey outside the house. This was the easiest of the photos, as it’s not too far from P’s house.
But then I turned up the heat:
A random orange in a random tree. Somewhere. Right? How could one pinpoint it?
Close-up of a door. In a tiny alley. A good distance from where we live.
So? How’d we do?
Tonight I’m making that artichoke dish from last week’s What’s Cooking Wednesday if anyone would like to join us. I’ll even let you dry the dishes. (But not put away the silverware.)
And then we’ll go out and find much more challenging pictures.
Just wanted to give him a false sense of security for the first go-around.
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[tags] calabria, donkey rings, oranges, life in calabria, wooden doors, wood[/tags]
where were you?
Saw this meme over at ViVi’s Dispatches from France this morning and figured now is as good a time as any to record these memories.
If any of you would like to play, let me know you’re doing so in my comments, please.
And if you’re American, in particular, also let me know where you were when the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded. I was watching live in my 4th grade class room, but about 30 seconds after it happened, the TV was shut off, and I don’t remember discussing any more about it until the next day. I later did a spectacular book report on the “Heroes of the Challenger” (forget author), but, to be honest, the whole thing really did sort of crush my astronaut dreams (the price of Space Camp was also involved).
Now the meme:
1) Where were you when Armstrong first walked on the Moon?
My brother, who is six years older than me, wasn’t conceived yet, so I was less than a glimmer in anyone’s eye. But I’ve seen the footage many times. And it’s real, dammit!
2) Where were you when you heard Princess Di had died?
I was moving into my dorm for my last year of college. One of the first things we had done was hook up the TV to see if the cable worked. At that point, they were only reporting that she had been in a car accident; I think they reported that she had died a few hours (if that) later, but I can’t say as though I remember that moment specifically. I never got the Princess Di thing, sorry.
3) Where were you on New Year’s Eve of 1999/2000?
I have no idea, and I’m pretty sure it’s not because I was just that drunk. If I had my old journals with me, I could probably track me down, but apparently the whole Y2K thing really didn’t make much of a difference in my life. If anyone out there spent that New Year’s Eve with me, please let me know. Goodness that sounds pathetic, but really, New Year’s Eve has never been a big deal for me–being single your whole life can do that, I suppose–so they all kinda blend.
4) Where were you on Sept. 11, 2001?
Oh, for this one, I got details.
I was at work on the 28th floor of a Philadelphia building with a great view of the airport and located a few blocks from City Hall, a little further from Independence Hall, the federal courthouse, and the Liberty Bell, but still within striking distance, so to speak.
I was doing my usual run through the Internet before settling into work when around 9 a.m., I saw on Msnbc.com that a plane had hit the WTC. I kept reloading the page for more info, thinking it was just a crazy accident, until news of the second plane came in through one of our secretaries who had been listening to the radio.
By that point, we knew it was a terrorist attack, and we all crowded around the radio for up to date news—the Internet pages were too overloaded with traffic to get more from there. I kept going back into my office to check anyway, and boy was it weird to see no planes, air traffic having been grounded.
Finally around 11.30 a.m., after we heard about the Pentagon and the crash in PA, our boss told us we could go home. I had to walk from Center City to my house (about a half hour on a normal day) because the traffic was wall to wall on the way home. I remember thinking “Just get me out of Center City” because at that point, no one knew if there were more planes heading for East Coast landmarks.
It took me about an hour to get home dodging in and out of cars. I still remember the suit I was wearing that day; even though it had been one of my favorites, I never wore it again.
My roommate got home just after I did, and we sat in front of the television the entire rest of that day—stopping only to be freaked out by very low-flying jets that speeded over our house, shaking it from top to bottom.
5) Where were you when you first heard about the big 2004 Tsunami?
Here in my house in Italy. I had just gotten into the habit of watching BBC World, so like any other day, I got up in the morning and turned on the news. What I saw was and still is indescribable.
6) Where were you when you first heard that Madonna would go on tour last year?
I guess I was here in Italy since I was here all last year, but I can’t say that I even knew she was going on tour—until she did that whole Crucifix thing in Rome, of course.
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[tags]where were you meme, memes, where were you, space shuttle challenger, 9/11, tsunami, princess diana, madonna[/tags]
Love Thursday: A Grandmother’s Influence
Today would’ve been my grandmother’s 83rd birthday, and in her honor, I dedicate this post to Mam Mam.
I’ll never miss the smell of cigarette smoke. With my sincerest apologies to the late, great Dr. Seuss:
I cannot stand it in a car.
I cannot stand it in a bar.
I cannot stand it in the air.
I cannot stand it anywhere.
If there is one scent that I would associate with my late grandmother, it would be that–the stale, bitter, choking smell of cigarette smoke. Well, that and the rich, tomatoey aroma of her gravy (spaghetti sauce to many people) cooking on the stove. But that one I do miss.
Stereotypical but true, this was a Sunday tradition in our house–chairs borrowed from every other room and a table so full it asked for help from the nearby counter. Gravy, macaroni (spaghetti to many), meatballs, pork spare ribs, breaded veal cutlets, and tomatoes and onions in olive oil, all mixing with chatter and clanking silverware and plates to form my weekly sensory overload.
And then, after the sights, smells, and sounds had just about disappeared (although, let’s be honest, garlic sure does hover), my grandmother’s cigarette to celebrate.
An intoxicating aroma of food and love snuffed by one puff.
Mam Mam was a small Italian lady with a raspy voice perfected by decades of her favorite pastime: smoking. It drove me crazy. No matter what I did to show my disgust, it didn’t matter. Coughing violently. Swishing the air around with force. Hiding the cancer sticks. Nothing made a difference.
She had smoked since I could remember, and indeed, as she later told me, since she was thirteen years old, but I never did adjust.
She said her smoking was a favor to me; by stirring up my hatred for the dirty habit, she was ensuring that I’d never light up myself. A tricky card to play, it seemed, but maybe she was right, because I’ve never even been tempted to try it.
Whenever I saw my friends light up, I was transported back to a time when I couldn’t get far enough away from that smell, that burning in my eyes, that restricting of my throat. And I know I’ll never try it, because, quite simply, I *hate* it.
But my favorite little smokestack also gave me something far more essential to who I am: my love for the written word. No, my grandmother wasn’t a writer, and honestly, she wasn’t much of a reader either. I don’t know that I could have convinced her to read a novel if there were a carton of cigarettes in it for her.
Her first love was sewing, which she did for both a living and a hobby for most of her life. When she was young, her cat always had the latest gear, and when I was young, my dolls were beyond stylish; our dogs, to their relief, were spared.
So if she was neither a reader nor a writer, then how did she inspire my desire and need to write? Like many of my best and most influential childhood memories, the answer was found on Sundays.
The Sunday crossword.
If you put a crossword puzzle in front of my grandmother, you’d see the blank spaces reflected in the gleam of her eyes. I believe she was personally offended by the open squares, because she had already coffee brewed and pencils sharpened by the “good sharpener” in the basement by the time the paperboy delivered her weekly mission.
In any event, those strategically placed blocks and cleverly worded clues nourished her fascination with words and began a hunger in me that still continues. And Sunday was the best day to sate both our physical and mental appetites with its gluttonous Italian dinners and the paper’s perpetually perplexing puzzles.
Yeah, I still like me some alliteration.
Even when I was young and had no chance of knowing any answers, my grandmother let me poke around the puzzles. I read the clues and her answers, filing away that okapi fills the blank for “elk” and Edam is cheese. And of course I asked a lot of questions.
Eventually, when Mam Mam would hand me the mostly filled-in grid, I could offer a tidbit here and there–sports, pop culture, music, typical teenage topics were my specialties. And then as I learned more history and literature in school, I started to feel like I actually contributed.
Finally one magical Sunday, we finished a puzzle together, each of us filling in a few letters before handing it back. But that one Sunday soon blurred with many others because this happened frequently thereafter. We grew bored without a challenge.
And so, to up the ante (another crossword word!), Mam Mam asked me if I could find puzzle books–the hard kind, New York Times–in the bookstore in Philadelphia where I lived. So whenever I went home, I toted tomes of Times teasers, and they’d keep her busy for a few weeks.
Unfortunately, though, I was never home long enough to really play the old back-and-forth game. As a result, Mam Mam compiled an impressive collection of partially-completed crosswords before she died in 2001. I inherited those mindbenders, but they’ve lost something without my partner, the one to whom I could hand back the real stumpers.
Beyond that, I’ve noticed another interesting phenomenon–I am hesitant to change what may be her miscues (and to think in my youthful arrogance I had been proud to point them out!).
Now I have learned that when you’re left with a finite number of tangible memories of someone, it’s hard to erase them. Quite literally.
I know my Mam Mam, however, and I know that she would privilege the right answers over my odd sentimentality about the flag of her “E” that never touched the vertical line, the peculiar arch of her A, or even her O that had just the tiniest curl of hair hanging inside it. So I take eraser to paper gently now, and only when I am sure of what I am changing.
I do these crosswords with the reluctant but utter awareness that there is no one to double check my answers.
But I hold the intangible memories–yes, even the now-nostalgic smell of cigarette smoke–in my heart, where they have been written indelibly.
Happy Love Thursday everyone!
What’s Cooking Wednesday: Rigatoni with Tuna
Welcome to What’s Cooking Wednesday!
It’s pasta again, folks, but I swear one of these weeks, we’ll go carb-free. I’ve been dying to slip a dessert in here, so perhaps next week. But there will probably still be flour. Oh well.
If you have been searching for recipes for tuna, search no more…rigatoni with tuna is a super-easy, super-fast recipe so it’s perfect when you get home late but still want something homemade.
I’ve been trying to convince P to let me make this for about a year and a half now as this was a staple of mine when I was single and cooking just for me.
Well, apparently it was also his go-to dish, because he kept refusing the offer. He finally agreed to the tuna last week, and we’ve now had it two more times since then.
Three notes before we get to the recipe:
(1) I serve rigatoni with this because I like the way the grooves catch the sauce and the holes catch the tuna and tomato chunks. Most recipes I’ve seen, though, do this with regular old spaghetti; obviously that works too.
(2) Many recipes for pasta with tuna don’t use onions. I don’t know why because I love tuna and onions together (especially on pizza!), and I think they work well together here as well. That said, if you don’t happen to have an onion, feel free to do this recipe without it and double the garlic. Because many of you will have garlic and not onion, I’m sure.
(3) This is a great recipe to switch up and add other ingredients you like–basil, black olives, and capers come to mind, but the possibilities are endless.
Rigatoni al tonno
(Rigatoni with tuna)
1/2 red onion, finely chopped
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
2 small cans tuna (if yours is packed in olive oil, use that for part of the oil above)
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1 can peeled tomatoes, run through grinder or coarsely chopped
salt and peperoncino to taste
First, put on the water for the pasta. By the time it’s boiling, your sauce should be about 10 minutes away from ready–perfect for rigatoni cooking time.
Put olive oil in skillet and sauté onions on medium heat until translucent. Add garlic and peperoncino and cook for a few minutes, being careful not to burn the garlic.
Add tuna and let cook a few minutes, mixing them well with the onions, garlic, and oil.
Add tomatoes, parsley, and salt (at least a hefty pinch will be necessary), lower heat, and let simmer for about 20 minutes or until the tomatoes are cooked to your satisfaction.
When your pasta is cooked and drained, mix well with the sauce.
Serve hot and with grated Parmesan cheese if you like (even though purists would say no cheese with tuna).
Buon appetito!

















