There are Other Vegetables

I’ve earned a most unfortunate reputation.  According to many of my friends and family, I don’t eat vegetables.   Especially if they are green – any green vegetable.  Some how I am reported to subsist mainly on beef, bread and Pepsi with the occasionally bowl of chips.
I wish to report that this is totally false and claim that I do eat a wide variety vegetables.  It is true that my tastes do tend more to the food provided by hunters rather than gatherers.  I’ve thought about this at some length to try and understand why I have this reputation, even after eating a spinach salad in front of witnesses.
After due consideration I’ve come to the conclusion that the culprit is, broccoli.
Have you noticed that in a restaurant the menu item, “Fresh Vegetable” is usually broccoli, sometimes with carrots and often it’s frozen not fresh.  Try to order a nice side of say peas and carrots and you’ll get odd looks from the waiter and suggestions from the manager that you eat somewhere else.
This is where I make the big announcement:  I hate broccoli.  I hate the taste, texture, color, smell and even the very thought that it is on the same planet as me.  It is vile loathsome stuff and I don’t wish to eat it, or even have it touch food that might enter my mouth.

For those of you who now think it’s the right time to sing the virtues of broccoli or try to convince me that if I just had it cooked right…  Just stop.  Please.  I am a million years old and have attempted to like the stuff – covering it with cheese, butter, gravy or wine doesn’t help.  If you like the evil stuff, good for you.  Would you like my portion?

There, I feel better.  Don’t you?  It is said that confession is good for the soul.  So while we’re at it, let me add that cauliflower and brussels sprouts are also on my list of hated veggies.  Okay, I’ll admit that I also dislike watercress, chard and kale.  Cilantro tastes like soap and I will avoid radishes and prefer kidney to garbanzo beans but on the whole, I eat a wide range of foods that grow on plants.

I will admit never having eaten black-eyed peas or seeking them out as a gastric delight.  Serve them to me once and I’ll give them a try.  But don’t bury broccoli in beef with a fancy sauce and expect me to react as if it’s some new tasty culinary adventure.

As I age, I’ve tried to tone down my militant attitude towards broccoli and it’s related vile, evil cousins. Now when someone attempts to serve broccoli, I try to politely point out, “There are other vegetables other than broccoli.”  I smile when I say it.  Soon, I hope to relax enough that I don’t say it through girted teeth.

Rather than focus on the veggie that shall now remain nameless, I’d like to share a list of vegetables I will and do eat.  Before we start that list, I’d like to point out that I’ll eat all fruits, but prefer apples to oranges and I haven’t found a grain I don’t like – well couscous is a bit weird but edible.

Have I mentioned that I eat a salad for lunch most days of the week? Like five out of seven.  Just wanted that on the record.

So to the list of veggies I like:

  • All beans, even bean sprouts but do find the notion of garbanzo beans to be a bit odd.
  • Carrots, raw, baked, boiled, glazed – well with butter and brown sugar, what’s not to like?
  • Lettuce of all kinds, except wilted
  • Cabbage
  • Celery
  • Cucumber, even a nice cucumber sandwich I will happily eat
  • Bell peppers – green, yellow, red
  • All onions, yellow, white, green, red, garlic, leeks and I have come to terms with shallots
  • Eggplant – can you say eggplant parmesan?
  • Peas
  • Asparagus
  • Fennel
  • Artichokes but I am not fond of the hearts
  • Green beans (note the use of the word ‘green’)
  • Corn – on my list even though certain ‘nutritionists’ are claiming it’s a grain
  • Mushrooms – okay maybe not technically a vegetable but it’s in the produce section of the store
  • Rhurbarb when baked into a pie with strawberries
  • Ginger
  • Potatoes – russet, red, yellow, sweet, yams and in Hawaii I’ve eaten taro and liked it
  • Spinach – most Sunday nights I have a spinach pizza and love spinach in salads
  • Squash, yellow, butternut, pumpkin

I haven’t mentioned tomatoes yet.  As the saying goes, being intelligent is knowing that a tomato is really a fruit but wisdom is knowing not to put them in fruit salad.  I would be justified in not talking about tomatoes, but will press on even though I don’t have to. I have an odd relationship with tomatoes.  I love them cut up and cooked into a nice sauce, stew, soup or chilli, but raw in a salad I just won’t do.  I have managed to expand my tomato horizon and allow them to be placed in my sandwich or burger where I will eat them, but still I can’t come to terms with fried tomatoes.

There you have it  – a long list of vegetables that I will consume and not one of the is “that-which-will-not-be-named.”  So the next time the “B” word crosses your mind, remember there are other vegetables.

Till next week,
Andrew

 

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Wednesday Woodworking – cross progress

Just some pictures this week.  I’ve been working on the cross and doing a little shop clean up so I don’t have much to talk about.  I did find the magazine I got the pattern from.  The cross was designed by Sue Mey and was published in “Scrollsaw Woodworking & Crafts,” Issue 45, Holiday 2011, page 72, tiled, “Intricate Filigree Cross.”  I get a lot of my patterns from this magazine and Sue Mey is one of my favorite designers as she does a lot of fretwork pieces.  She has a website where she sells her patterns, www.scrollsawartist.com.

The new blades - much better than what I had.

The new blades – much better than what I had.

Got some of it done

Got some of it done

Here's what it looks like from the back.

Here’s what it looks like from the back.

 

That’s it for this week.  I hope to get more done this weekend.

If you need me – I’ll be in the shop.

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Difficult

My mind is so traumatized that I am having trouble writing what I really wanted, needed  to write about today – grief and dealing with loss.

Nope, can’t write the next sentence.  Can’t figure it out.  Part of me wants to be this ‘together person’ who in the midst of grieving for a friend, can write philosophically about the nature of grief, and dealing with sudden loss.

I have no great words or theories.  No great comfort or words of solace come to my mind.

All I know, is that I am tired, and hopes I had have been derailed.

It was two weeks ago when the email came to tell me that my friend, Paul was in the hospital and not likely to survive.  It was a shock.  He was a healthy man – full of energy and joy.  He had only been serving our local church for a little over a year but in that time he had started to get long stalled projects moving again.  I started working with him on a number of projects and for the first time in years, felt that I had someone on my side, someone who was able and willing to work with me.

Now those projects are difficult for me to move forward, on my own.

Difficult to move on, when there is a hole in my heart where my friend was.  Difficult when one I could lean on for support is gone.  Difficult when the words that inspired others to action, came from him and not me.

But still the world turns and even in grief we have two clear choices; descend into the depths of despair, or move forward as best we can.

In my emails and conversations with church members I’ve been telling them to do three things: pray, thank the people around us for their support, and continue on as best we can.

I don’t know if that is the right thing to tell people, but it seems right.  Today’s writing isn’t what I’d had hoped I could do, but it’s something.

So it is time to pray, say thank you and continue the work.

Till next week,
Andrew

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Wednesday Woodworking – starting the cross

I wrote about starting this project in my post, “Of Birthdays and Crosses.”  Well, it’s underway.

The cross is two pieces of silver maple from the tree the church had to cut down last summer.  The pieces are about 1/2 inch thick and the cross is 18 inches high and 12 inches across.

The plan is to cut a couple of hours a week on this and have it done in time for Easter.  The cutting is proving difficult and this last week I ordered some Flying Dutchman blades from Mike’s Workshop. I’ve never used these blades before but have hopes they’ll make my cutting easier.  Let me give a shout-out to Mike for great customer service.  I placed the order last Tuesday, got a call from him the same day to deal with a problem on the order and on Friday my blades were delivered.  If you need scroll saw blades, call my buddy Mike – he’ll take care of you.

And now the pictures:

Fretwork cross

The two boards that will make up the cross.

Fretwork cross

Pieces clamped together with the pattern behind

Fretwork cross

Just finished cutting the half lap joints

Fretwork cross

Glued up and in clamps

Fretwork cross

Taped up and ready to apply the pattern

Fretwork cross

Paper pattern on and ready to cut.

Next Wednesday I’ll have some pictures of progress on cutting the fret work.  Also I’ll post the credit for the pattern.  I got the pattern out of a Scroll Saw magazine but for the life me I can’t it find to give proper credit today but I’ll have that sorted out by next time.

If you need me – I’ll be in the shop.

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