Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Monday, August 1, 2011
Sunday, March 20, 2011
The Argument is Finally Put to Rest
TAKE NOTE: it led to "unfriending" someone I know in real life from Facebook, after personally debating whether or not to do so for a long time, because his posts annoy me, and just to not have to see his anti-Obama slogans anymore; also, i had actually READ the Unabomber's confused manifesto out of curiosity way back when that whole thing happened, so symbolic sympathizers of him are not the least bit mystical to me; and i am simply sick of blatant misrepresentation of my president...
[words in brackets are my added notes]...
Dear Don [who posted the pic of the Unabomber with Barack Obama's grinning face under the hoodie and behind the sunglasses] heh
• Adam Lee Cutsinger: You are odd. You stop at nothing. And plugging a pic that likens Mr. Obama to a failed and misguided right-wing fundamentalist serial killer? It's just right-wing bs. Barack doesn't smile and lie like a Republican. I am unfriending you if you don't justify yourself or apologize for your confusing carelessness.
•
Adam Lee Cutsinger: okay, Clinton smiled and lied like that, but Barack ain't him
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Dear Don: Come on, it was clever. un-a-bama, I mean, that's funny.. He's also bombing Libya right now.. Get a sense of humor..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: get a sense of a job
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Dear Don: I have a job...
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Dear Don: and a sense of humor
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: then you are neglecting both
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Dear Don: Look at the rest of his photos, he's hardly a right winger man, it was just funny
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: sorry
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Adam Lee Cutsinger out of context
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Dear Don: and the unibomber wasn't exactly a right winger, he was a college professor.. [APPARENTLY THIS FAR-RIGHT-WINGER ADMITS THAT THERE IS A FUNDAMENTAL (if you will) DISPARITY BETWEEN RIGHT-WINGERS AND COLLEGE PROFESSORS] http://tech.mit.edu/V115/N45/gmani.45o.html
•
Dear Don: no worries..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: tamales off the street riddle me with patriotic angst, plus obama is underappreciated
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: delicious angst
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Dear Don: Meh, I don't like any of them...
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: WHERE IS THE ART PART? (this guy has wanted to start something called Art for the Masses since 2001, but what he has done is all political soapboxing instead; no artist's work has ever been sponsored)
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Dear Don: Who's art?
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Dear Don: Art for the masses isn't a project really
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: libertarian politics for the masses
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Dear Don: Free Flagstaff Media is my project
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: fair enuff
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: i once asked you not to write a manifesto,
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: i read the unabomber's
Dear Don: I have no interest in revolution, it just brings you back to where you started
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: 1-inch thick, nonsensical, prejudiced, incomplete
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: right-right-wing
Dear Don: I though he railed against corporations
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: do you own weapons?
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: how many, what type?
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: full disclosure
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Dear Don: a few swords and some knives, why?
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: funny, what type of swords? no guns?
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Dear Don: Chinese, no, no guns..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: knives don't count, even scary ones, they're handy
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Dear Don: Well, that's full disclosure, disappointed?
Adam Lee Cutsinger: i respect your views, my dad even aspired to libertarianism after a lifetime of philosophical, well, time
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: it's easy to point out your adversaries' weakness
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: it's harder to develop a plan
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: Mr. Obama is the real deal
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: he's not even ambitious
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: standing behind him is the least anyone can do, even people from other nations are
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: LEAST
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Dear Don: I'm not a fan of Obama, or any central authority figure. I'm not standing behind his war or his corporate bailouts and welfare. I'm not standing behind his violations of individual rights.
So, that's a no..
•
Adam Lee Cutsinger: btw, i have an ncaa bracket too [the cartoon made fun of 'Una-bama' for picking out a March Madness college basketball bracket and bombing Libya in the same week]
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: i am 32 outta 46. 3rd in my stupid group
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: he isn't violating anything
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Adam Lee Cutsinger; if you have been violated it wasn't by the black guy
Dear Don: Patriot Act..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: that was Bush
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Dear Don: and Obama, he had to renew it
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Dear Don: He could have vetoed it
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: he had to?
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Dear Don: he didn't
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: well, choose your battles
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: who DO you like?
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Dear Don: That is my battle, individual rights is my battle
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Dear Don: Health Insurance Bill was Obama, forces me to buy a service I don't want
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: individual rights are safe as hell
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: you would say everyone else pay, not me, till i am old and jobless and need it
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Dear Don: Right... You do know what the Patriot Act give Government Agents the power to do right?
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: r u kidding? i did a huge presentation about it, it was amazing
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Dear Don: I'll take care of myself thank you, I don't want it
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: tell your doctor you will take care of yourself
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: you know what we need, people willing to opt out of health insurance
Adam Lee Cutsinger: you keep care of yourself, we'll use the $ elsewhere
Adam Lee Cutsinger: sign here
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Dear Don: I don't have a doctor, don't really want one either, but if I did, I would work something out for myself. I want Free Market Healthcare, pure and unadulterated..
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: You are not going to get me to change my mind Adam..
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Don M. Peavey: You shouldn't have to opt out, you freedom to choose your own healthcare is Dear Donyour natural born right
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: i wish you were as wise as you are angry
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Dear Don: Pshh..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: anywaze, if i have to watch obama paraded around as an infidel like bush was i will unfriend you; no offense, but my life is too short
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: i've suffered enuff
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Dear Don: Do whatever, I don't want you or anyone else telling me what's for my own good, it's not anger it's self ownership.. I'm not going to placate your sensibilities Adam.. I wish you well either way.
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: i know, but you equate Barack Obama witgh George W Bush. You don't really see the difference?
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Dear Don: Not in any substantial way, no..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: keep your argument intelligent, or at least funny.
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Dear Don: Talk is cheap..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: edit more
Adam Lee Cutsinger: i can't talk
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: i am a hypocrite
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: but still
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Dear Don: That's it, what do you want to hear? I do not see any substantial shifts in policy between W and Obama.. Still at War, Still engaging in Corporate Welfare, Still Violating Individual Rights.. Nope, same shit, different skin tone and character, same result.
• [he really doesn't see the difference between Barack and George W!, as though it should be some sort of paradigm shift overnight]
Adam Lee Cutsinger: i need more from you on corporate welfare and the violations of the rights of the individual
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Dear Don: Corporate Welfare - Bailouts, Fed Manipulation, selling the single payer plan he talked about to the Insurance companies (mandated insurance)
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Dear Don: Individual rights I've already told you, and while I'm at it I'll add the TSA.
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: I would like to know how you think it woulda gone under your ideal candidate
Don M. Peavey: Hrmm..
Well, I'd say ending foreign entanglements as much as possible militarily, scaling back on the world presence. That alone would do a lot to fixing the budget, add to that a serious pull back on the drug war and the prison complex (special interests). Pull back corporate power influence in politics by reassigning the means to hold the Corporations responsible for any misgivings..
Open up education and medical services to a higher level of competition and a lower level of government intervention in credentialing service providers.Allow drug imports from countries like Mexico and India, open up trade in the Middle East and begin repairing the damage done.
Return more power to the community and state level for social services, and decrease overall taxation and spending in the Public sphere of maybe 20 years or so.. Gradual as possible, but always heading back towards empowerment of individuals over groups.
Dear Don: that is, over 20 years or so..
•
Dear Don: A shrinkage..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger:
we both get a little FB-happy, and it's only because I know you and respect you and like you and love you that I haven't silenced your voice in my FB experience forever. Our views OUGHT to be different, I just want to minimize the tea-party-style belittling of MY president. He earned the vote. It's entirely possible he's more eligible than your guy/gal. He's relatively forthcoming. He's gracious. He's magnanimous. He's got character. It was hard to sit through Bush for not 4 but 8 years of my youth.
•
Adam Lee Cutsinger: You sound like an Obama supporter to me. I think he would agree.
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Dear Don: He's done the opposite Adam.. Get your head out of the clouds.
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: the ol' image of the politician fucking you over while smiling, not applicable in this case
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Dear Don: Drug War, he has to, but he has a lot of pressure not too, recently raided some shops in Cali again, for something that was within state law.
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Dear Don: Dude, It's not worth arguing about..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: not relevant
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Dear Don: I do not support Obama, and I'm not going to start..
So there we are.
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Dear Don: But I do appreciate your input, but on this, we simply disagree.
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: and this is the last discourse we will ever have I guess
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: feel free to put him down
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Dear Don: That's on you..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: make fun of him
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: twist his intentions
Adam Lee Cutsinger: i won't know
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: enjoy your 'reality' for the masses
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: you had allies but never knew
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: why don't you talk shit about shitty people? who are your leaders? let me find their imperfections on the crucial issues.
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Dear Don: I'm my own leader..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: nice. also useless. running for office? regret being under the power of elected officials? wish mommy and daddy would just let you be your own anarchist? suck it.
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Dear Don: hehe
•
Dear Don: I once shot an elephant in my pajamas,
how he fit in my pajamas I'll never know..
•
Adam Lee Cutsinger: but the smell, that sticks with you
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: alien invader says: take me to your leader
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: guy says: I'm my own leader
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: alien shoots him in the face
Adam Lee Cutsinger: but achieves nothing
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Dear Don: Isn't that a good thing? Imagine if they got Obama instead..
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Adam Lee Cutsinger: cuz the guy was leader of nothing
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Dear Don: Not sure what you hope to achieve trolling this thread..
•[APPARENTLY NOTHING, REMAIN CALM, CARRY ON RUINING THE DREAM]
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Lunch Plans Switcharoo: a traditional Italian-style sit-down for a quirky Asian & Greek happy hour with style



A funny thing stood between me and attendance at the 125th anniversary promotional lunch at Fior d'Italia, purportedly the oldest Italian restaurant in SF's North Beach, during which they honored their original menu (20 cents for eggplant parmigiana!): a long, slow-moving line, consistently consisting of somewhere around 300 people, wrapped around the block and down the street, roughly 100 feet long and with clusters often 10 feet wide - just about as far from being single-file as you can get and still have something resembling a queue of humans.
And the semi-linear crowd only partially represented the number people with designs on getting inside, since most of the would-be diners came in groups, leaving one or two persons designated as place holders while the rest escaped to enjoy espresso, wine, sandwiches and window shopping, only to join the line again near the door. Anatre fortunate!
Gauging the distance I had meandered during the first hour in line, I became quite skeptical about my prospects of actually getting inside before they closed the door at 4PM to wrap up service and begin their private in-house celebration. Anatre fortunate anche!
I felt no small amount of pity for the multitudes gradually joining the confused conflux behind me, who certainly had no clue at all that they stood no chance whatsoever of even smelling the eggplant.
Eventually the chef made the announcement, "We will be closing the door at four! If you don't get in by then you are shit out of luck!"
A few people left, but most of us wanted to see what would happen at the bitter end; we'd waited too long not to.
Many of the wannabe-ravioli-eaters were tricked into coming down by the ABC news, who featured a story about the restaurant's anniversary special, but which broadcast turned out to be a terribly misleading disservice, because anyone who had decided to attend due to that featured bit was fated to wait in line only to be turned away.
Myself included.
"I'm gonna do something..." said the house ospite, "...that much I..." but his voice trailed off in thoughtful uncertainty, since he and we all knew that he ought not make promises he would not be able to keep. A few of the hungry nonpatrons clapped anyway.
A quarter past four the rabble became antsy in the pantsy, for, though they had long ago given up hope of getting a plate, they saw that the host was handing out vouchers. But the excitement burped and faded away when we learned they were for 15% off, which would just cover the tip, maybe. He may as well have been passing out twenty dollar bills, with Mickey Mouse' face printed on them.
I don't really think the staff at Fior d'Italia won over many new customers that day, except for claiming the title of oldest ristorante in Little Italy. The people who did eat may very well opt out of returning soon, only to pay full price next time, especially with so many dining options in the City. And the people who had waited so long and then were turned away didn't leave with the impression that their feelings mattered much to the proprietors, who simply lacked the warmth and when-you're-here vibe that would have drawn them back.
When you are confined or deserted with strangers for any length of time, before long those strangers often become your friends, and such was the case here.
Meet: the Gan family: Matt, who wanted to take the family out to the special lunch in the first place, and who, when he learned the vacant value of the vouchers, said, "I gotta hurry up and throw this away," as though he needed to think about anything other than Italian special offers, just to come back from the staggering disappointment. Matt Gan's parents, Grant and Liz, couldn't have been sweeter, as with their friend Lily, and Susie, Liz' mom, with her aquamarine sweater, pink cap and hint of senility, could not have been any cuter.
And then there was Christabella Savalas, who informed us that, yes, Kojak, er, Telly Savalas was indeed her first cousin. Christabella is a bubbly and vibrant person who wears her heart on her sleeve and shares everything. She plays (and teaches) piano, speaks (and teaches) several languages, and has worked in many aspects of film and television production and performance.
Making a unanimous snap decision, we all loaded up in two cars and drove to our Plan B destination: McCormick & Kuleto's in the Ghirardelli Square, where they have spectacular happy hour specials. We ate 1/2 pound cheeseburgers and chicken sliders, each for under $3, and we didn't miss the red sauce one bit.
And I proposed a toast: to the 125th anniversary of Fior d'Italia (of which I am certain none of us are likely to ever see the inside), and the great new friends that came in lieu of pretentious pasta.
Buon appeti..., er, no no...
Who love's ya, baby?!
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Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Grill a Whole Fish in Ten Tiny Steps

Grilling season doesn’t have to be about burgers, ribs and steaks. Almost anything can be cooked outdoors, so jump on the opportunity to cook outside again, especially since the weather ought to be getting better and better as summer progresses. Cooking outdoors is fun, and is extremely easy when you are prepared.
And one of the very easiest foods to grill is, believe it or not, whole fish. Whether the fish comes from the fishmonger or the end of your fishing pole, follow a couple of simple preparatory suggestions and you’ll be grilling whole fish anytime the sun comes out. So get ready to put a fresh fish twist on the old 4th of July cookout.
If you’re not too comfortable with a boning knife, have no fear. Grilling whole fish requires minimal carving.
My favorite fish to grill include trout, snapper, bass, sea bream, just about any medium-sized whitefish will do, as well as some smaller fish like mullet, bluefish, mackerel, and butterfish.
Salmon is also a great choice.Avoid flounder, sole, fluke, cod and similar fishes because they can be too delicate.
When selecting your dinner, select a fish with clear eyes, shiny scales and a non-fishy smell. Once you’ve got your hands on a fresh whole fish, here are the 10 easy steps to grill it:
1. Clean the fish: de-scale it by scraping the dull side of a knife against the grain of the scales until it’s smooth. Cut off the fins with a pair of kitchen shears and discard. Then cut along the entire bottom of the fish, remove the guts and discard. Rinse the fish clean. 
2. Score the fish with 1/2 inch-deep cuts on both sides, about 1-2 inches apart. This helps the flavors of the marinade (and smoke if applicable) to better penetrate the meat of the fish.
3. Marinate the fish for 1-3 hours in your choice of marinade. If you are using a marinade that is acidic (i.e. with lemon juice, vinegar, etc.) only marinade for 1 hour to avoid “cooking” the fish (as in ceviche).
4. Preheat the grill, or let charcoal ember to flame-less white briquettes.
5. Brush the clean grill and fish with a thin layer of canola oil, peanut oil or any other neutral-flavored oil with a high smoke point, to prevent the fish from sticking.
6. Remove the fish from the marinade and wipe it clean to prevent the fish from sticking (save the marinade). Salt and pepper both sides. Optionally, you can stuff the inner cavity of the fish with herbs and pieces of lemon).
7. Grill the fish for 7-12 minutes (depending on the size) in the hottest part of the grill (unless serving salmon rare – 4-5 minutes). Optionally, you can also dip some rosemary or dill sprigs in oil and use them as a bed to grill the fish on if sticking is a concern.
8. Turn the fish over gently with one or two large spatulas. Optionally, you can turn it over onto a large piece of aluminum foil and then slide it onto the grill.
9. Baste the fish with the leftover marinade, and let it grill about as long as the first side.
10. Carefully remove the fish from the grill and place it onto a serving platter. Serve with grilled lemon and enjoy!
Once the fish is cooked it will flake easily away from the spine (again, rare salmon is a special case), and it should be simple enough to avoid any of the smaller bones. You can run a knife along either side of the spine, and then you should be able to slide the knife under the cooked fillets with no problem.
If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to contact one of us on the cooking hotline!
Have fun grilling!
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What's a three letter word for "electric motorized unicycle"?
Originally posted at The Examiner on June 15, 2009A couple of years ago a young man from just outside of Toronto, Canada went on a trip to China, and what he saw there inspired the coolest, greenest motorcycle yet to be invented. Ben J. Poss Gulak observed congested urban streets, where thousands of small vehicles filled the air with smog.
“The entire time I was there, I didn’t see the sun once; the skies were perpetually covered in smog,” he recalls. “Looking back,” he adds, “I guess I’ve always had an interest in eco-minded transportation technology.”
Gulak’s Uno was designed on the idea that one wheel would be easier to maneuver through crowded streets than two, but what he eventually went with is more comparable to a Segway than a unicycle: two tandem wheels provide more stability, creating a dicycle, which allows riders to intuitively navigate left and right as each of the two wheels adjust to compensate for the shift in weight.
The Uno has two microgyros (the Segway only utilizes one), one for front and back stability, the other for side to side. The only instrument on the machine is the on/off switch; everything else is controlled by the rider’s movement, which makes for an interesting first ride, to say the least (Gulak’s first spin ended in a serious crash). Not to worry, though: the Uno has since been made safer and easier to control.
The technique is simple enough – lean forward to accelerate, lean back to slow down. By sitting upright a rider can easily balance in one spot. But, as utilitarian as it is, it has the look of a crotch rocket, and, if the prototype wasn’t orange, it could easily be something driven by the Green Goblin.
Gulak has already demonstrated the Uno on Tonight Show with Jay Leno, who is also a cycle enthusiast. He also won the “most marketable award” at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, and made the number one spot in Popular Science Magazine’s “Top Ten Inventions,” which included a cover photo. In an ironic twist, Gulak invented the Uno while being waitlisted for MIT. He has since enrolled, however, and is expected to graduate in 2012.
The young entrepreneur was heavily influenced by his grandfather, “Opa” Werner Poss, an inventor himself with a complete machine shop in his house. When Poss died, he left his entire workshop to Gulak, which has facilitated the younger inventor’s work and ambition.
The Uno runs on wheelchair motors, and is entirely electric. Gulak had some trouble with the electrical aspects, resulting in a few fires, and elicited help from Veltronics, Ltd., an electrical engineering company in Brampton, Ontario, on the circuitry. He also received some assistance from Trevor Blackwell, inventor of the Eunicycle, which incorporates a gyro control system to stay upright.
One of the key values of the Uno is its virtue of extreme accomodation. Weighing a mere 120 lbs, it can be carried indoors, and even into elevators. It can even be charged from a regular plug-in outlet.
As urban areas like San Francisco, where scooters are already a hugely popular substitute for cars and public transportation, become more and more densely populated, it’s safe to say alternative vehicles like the Uno will become more and more common in the metropolitan landscape.
So, where can you get one? Nowhere just yet, sadly. Gulak is focusing on his school work at MIT, and who can blame him? The fundamental tech is figured out." he says. "It just needs the right people to tweak it." It's clear that the young talent prefers to focus on increasing his knowledge of the mechanics, and let someone else worry about sales and distribution. Good for him.
Still, I want my Uno ASAP, and will follow up as soon as the Uno has been made accesible to the public.
For more info: Watch this YouTube video
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Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Get Out with Take-Out: to Land's End and China Beach

Even when you are watching your wallet there are a lot of places you can go to get away for a day, and if you live in San Francisco, the top of the short list has got to be China Beach.
Located on the northwest end of the City, China beach is a pretty ribbon of tope sand tucked away amongst the cliffs and protected from the persistent Pacific wind. This is where many Chinese fishermen used to camp in the 19th century.
Beyond the beach are the gorgeous green cliffs of Land’s End, with tall trees and the easy-to-walk Coastal Trail. Along the trails are numerous curiosities to see, including Eagle’s Point, Painted Rock, a medicine wheel, Point Lobos, the Sutro Baths, the Legion of Honor museum, and a camera obscura at the Cliff House.
The views from the trail are unmatched, whether you are gawking at the sea, the bay, the bridge, or the handsome houses of the Sea Cliff community (the one directly across form the beach is rumored to be Robin Williams’ house).
Plan a Chinese take-out picnic at the most overlooked and underrated beach in San Francisco. [Insert a good place for Chinese take out] Or maybe some sashimi and sake. Peaceful, beautiful, easy to get to, China Beach is an ideal low-cost day-trip destination.| Reactions: |

