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Thursday, August 1, 2024

Bessie May Pelfrey

Bessie May was my great grandmother, and I never once called her anything other than Granny Pelfrey.  She was the gentlest person I ever met, which blew my mind to find out later in life from Granny Joyce that Bessie May was the only woman she said she ever felt threatened by, because she felt like she thought her mother-in-law believed she wasn't good enough for her son (my Grandpa Mervin).

Bessie May had a soft laugh, the warmest hug, and the greenest thumb.  She would quietly chuckle all day long.  She found humor in every situation and her joy was contagious.  To this day, although I feel I am fairly skilled in the kitchen, my palette is so black pepper heavy that I have to ignore my own taste buds most of the time and trust my recipes for everyone else.  She had a habit of making hamburgers that were practically dredged in black pepper with almost no salt, and it would burn your eyes when she was cooking them; however, those crazy burgers were always complimented by fresh melon, grapes, or something else amazing from her garden. I know she owned more cookware, but I only recall ever seeing her use a cast iron skillet and a small paring knife to make everything.

She smelled like lavender and baby powder.  In an area known for two types of trees, arid plains, and almost no grass, she would always grow her own grapes (sometimes pressing her own wine), multiple types of tomatoes, squash, cucumbers, cantaloupe, and melons.  Honeydew was her personal favorite; although, Grandpa Mervin was a sucker for watermelon hearts.

She kept an immaculate house, and I mean absolutely spotless; however, I don't recall ever seeing her freak out about a spill, dirty child, or mishap.  She would laugh, hug, and smother you with comfort for days.  She used to tell me what a wonderful complexion I had at a time in my life when I was extremely self-conscious and was struggling with self-esteem.  She was sunshine incarnate, and she would drag you up, make you grow, without time to complain or mumble excuses.

She was a simple woman, but also fashionable (at least to my eye).  She always wore a light gray or white dress and would carry a petticoat and hat when she'd go visiting. On ancestry.com, there is a photo of her before she turned 20 and already had silver hair.  I'm not sure if it's why I started getting gray hair in my early twenties and had full silver by 35, but they say you get hair genes from your mother's father.

Her house was otherworldly, with a giant cinderblock fence around the small back yard to protect her garden.  It was the only house I knew of with a giant stone stairwell with solid stone balustrades.  I was always told her husband, Joe, not only built the house, but made that stairwell.  He was the most masculine man I have ever met, and the quietest.  The most amazing thing about him, considering the area and the men in my family and all their friends: I never once heard him cuss, or raise his voice.  He wasn't just civil in front of his wife (which was rare), but he was soft-spoken while possessing the skillset of any other five men and was a huge believer that only actions matter.  Everything else is bragging and reasons why things don't get done.  He was a man who got things done.  They were such a power couple.  He lived to 89 and she tiptoed into 101 years.

In her final days, I visited her in the hospice center where she was staying.  I had not seen her in over a decade, having gone gray, and having put on a lot of weight.  I walked into her room, and she just chuckled, held out her arms and called me by my name, and held her arms out for a hug.  I lost it and ran over.  Halfway there, she even warned me "I have to tell you, my brain says there's a giant pit right there on the floor, but I'm also smart enough to know that's ridiculous. Just in case I'm not crazy, you should walk around the edge of the room."

We hugged, we cried, we laughed, and then talked.  She was magical and if anyone in my life figured out how to stick around and watch over their family, that woman did it.  While I ache for Granny Joyce that leaves me near despair, I miss Granny Pelfrey the same way I miss the way the ocean looked on my wedding day.  I remember her and find comfort and a serenity that grants me so much strength.

Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Logo For a Friend

 Here are some color swatches at 300 DPI for 4"x4" coasters and square business cards.  If anyone else is interested, moo.com has incredible deals and material options for traditional and unique business cards.  I've been using them for years.  Plus, they know what they are doing.  There is no substitute for experience.

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5. 
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and my least favorite, but sometimes you have to deal with corporate assholes to pay the bills ->


and my favorite... letterhead for newsletters and formal shit ->



Friday, February 16, 2024

My Tamagoyaki Recipe


Basic Ingredients 

Tamagoyaki Photo1
For a plain, but delicious Japanese omelet:

  • 2 large chicken eggs
  • one teaspoon of dashi
  • one bottle cap of mirin
  • 2 tabs of butter

Basic Hardware

NOTE: A list of exact brands can be found at bottom of page.

  • a frying pan (preferably cast iron, Japanese version of pan is square)
  • a non-metal spatula (the wider the better)
  • a fork
  • a small bowl

Instructions

These should be performed in order, without delay between steps.
  1. Clean your pan surface.  The whole process only works if your pan surface is smooth. Easy mode on copper tamagoyaki pans or use stainless steel chain and soapy water on cast iron versions. I have never seen a stainless-steel tamagoyaki pan, but if you do find one or substitute a small pain of stainless, preheat the pan to medium heat, give it about 3mm of white vinegar and a firm spatula should clear anything abrasive out.  You HAVE to have a buttery smooth surface.
  2. Read all the following instructions before proceeding.
  3. Set your pan's burner to MEDIUM LOW. That's 3 of 10 for most electric stovetops.
  4. While your pan comes to temperature (usually takes around 5 minutes to stabilize) combine the eggs, dashi, and mirin in a small bowl.  
  5. Chop the egg mixture against the side of your bowl with a fork to mix.  Thank you, Jacques Pepin. (Dunna stir. Chop, my friends!)
  6. After pan has achieved temperature, add 1 tab of butter and lift pan off the burner.  Roll pan to coat. Street vendors reuse a dedicated thin towel for reapplying butter on multiple pans at a time with tongs.
  7. If the butter turns brown, your stupid burner is too hot.  Turn it down just a little and think about buying a real stove.
  8. Pour half the egg mixture into the pan and roll the pan to coat consistently. Return to burner.
  9. Watch the egg until there is almost no eggy liquid on top.  It will cook to yellow very quickly.  Do not wait for the entire egg to solidify.  Making tamagoyaki has wiggle room as long as you observe some minor egg liquid.  If the entire thing looks cooked throughout, you have overcooked it.  Try again tomorrow.
  10. Use the wide spatula to release the edges of the omelet and softly fold in thirds.
  11. Now, scoot the small egg rectangle stack to the back of the pan.
  12. Add the second tab of butter to the open surface, raise pan, and roll to coat.  Professional omelet chefs use a tongue with a buttered paper towel or cloth for this step but keep egg stack against edge.
  13. Add the second half of the egg mixture to the pan, from one edge to the other side, flowing into the base of the existing tamagoyaki stack.
  14. Watch the egg begin to solidify.  Similar to Step 9, when there is just a little liquid left on the top, fold starting with the existing egg stack in thirds again, snowballing the rectangle into an inch-thick pillow of eggy heaven. 
  15. If your pan has a square edge, park the egg against it for 2 seconds, allowing the liquid that slid out during final fold to encounter the pan and cook prior to serving.
  16. Use your spatula and move final tamagoyaki to plate.  Let it sit for 30 seconds while the omelet's interior solidifies from the heat of all the interior layers.  This is what causes the entire thing to produce: a non-trivial omelet of uniform height, cooked throughout, but without being dry.
  17. Turn off the burner and allow the pan to cool (not on the burner).
  18. Salt and pepper to taste. Give thanks for the blessing you are about to consume. Itadakimasu!
Tamagoyaki Photo2

Fancy Ingredient Options

Always add these after the first phase of egg folding prior to second pour to keep them from destroying the beautiful yellow pillow you worked so hard for.  For easier folding, place them in a line between a boundary of thirds in a very thin layer.
  • Green onions (whites during cooking, and fresh green over the finished product).
  • Shallots (this requires you to get the shallots glassy prior to starting the tamagoyaki).
  • Cheese (cheddar works just fine and produces a nice gooey visual akin to thick hollandaise, but ricotta, and even cottage cheese would be great as a healthier option).
  • Bonito flakes (if you're going there, you may as well go all in).
  • Ham of any kind: thin canadian bacon, country ham, 
  • Hot sauce (for those who don't like heat, Cholula Chili Lime is fantastic on these).
  • Cacique® Crema Mexicana (only 3mg of sodium, adds a richness without making it taste like a giant breakfast burrito).
  • Cilantro (duh)
  • Diced tomatoes.  I create a layer from thinly sliced Campari tomatoes akin to a tart.
  • Nori.  This one is delicious BUT be sure to add it while the egg is still liquid, otherwise the nori will not have enough moisture to fold.  Also, don't use too much.  Enough to cover two thirds of a single egg phase will more than suffice.
  • Sambal Oelek (oh heck yeah, bring on the heat)

Non-obvious Ingredients to be Used in the Future

Tamagoyaki Photo3
These are listed alphabetically to avoid bias (and probably should not be combined, except the plantains and mole... that would probably be fantastic):
  • chilaquilles
  • hashbrowns
  • fried plantains
  • fried rice
  • linquica
  • lox
  • mole
  • sumac
  • tapenade
  • tobiko

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