Recent Movies

So a whole year has passed…

Hard to believe that another year has flown by!  As I was going through my blog over the past year I have realized a few things.  I bake way too much and our eating has become rather unhealthy in the later months of the year.  One of my goals for 2010 is to change all of this.

Anyway as I was going through the past year in food I picked out some of my faves to do a short round up…hope you like!

Short Ribs cooked Low and Slow:

image

Stuffed Cabbage Rolls or Golumkis:

image

 Spanakopita:

image

Thyme and Rosemary Oven Roasted Beets

image

Tourtiere or French Canadian Pork Pie:

image

Pastel Azteca:

image

Lemon Curd and Pop Tarts

image

Grilled Tilapia Tacos with Pineapple Salsa:

image

Shrimp Burgers

image

Watermelon and Feta Salad

image

Salsa Chicken Enchiladas

image

Black Bean and Goat Cheese Quesadillas

image

Big and Bold Blueberry Muffins

image

Here’s to the New Year with wonderful food, family and friends!

signature

Autism Reality On The Last Day of the Decade:The Autism Spectrum Concept Has Been Harmful, Part I

On this last day of this decade, as we prepare for 2010, and all that the next decade will bring,  it has become apparent that a major autism development of the last decade has been the growth of the Autism Spectrum concept.

The growth of  the Autism Spectrum concept has caused considerable harm to the interests of many persons severely affected by  Autistic Disorder, especially the 75-80% of persons with Autistic Disorder who are intellectually disabled or cognitively impaired. For these severely autistic their life realities are obscured and even hidden by the Autism Spectrum and by some high functioning, high profile media attractive persons who define autism in the public mind.

The Autism Spectrum concept has created confusion  about what constitutes "autism".  Some members of the public, talk show hosts, and  comics, joke about autistic persons as spoiled children who would have been given a good spanking back when they were kids. These people obviously do not see the children with Autistic Disorder who bite themselves, chew the insides of their cheeks, bang their heads until they cause injury, starve themselves out of aversion to food tastes and textures or wander away from their homes, some to be lost forever.  They see some very high functioning persons with no readily apparent disabilities who are "on the autism spectrum".

Yes, the mainstream media publishes reports when an autistic child or severely impaired adult goes missing. When an autistic Nove Scotia boy disappeared before a snow storm, and died of hypothermia, the media and Canadians reacted with genuine compassion and feeling for the poor boy and his family. But even then there was little in depth coverage of how many autistic children, and adults, go missing or the steps that have to be taken to ensure that others do not. Even the tragic death of  the young Nova Scotia boy did not prompt the mainstream media to thoroughly explore the harsher realities of autism disorders.

By contrast the media has been obsessed with promoting images of very intelligent, high functioning persons "on the spectrum" as the expression is used today.  CBC has many times featured Michelle Dawson, a person with "autism",  who excelled in the  challenging work environment of Canada Post and is now an autism researcher. CNN on several occasions featured  Amanda Baggs, a  very intelligent person who did not have an autism diagnosis earlier in life and who attended a school for intelligent,  gifted youth.

Today Alex Plank and Ari Ne'eman are the newer faces of  the "autism spectrum", two very intelligent young University students with Aspergers Disorder who tell the world what it is like to be Autistic, who take it upon themselves to tell the world that Autistic People do not want to be cured.   Mr. Ne'eman is an obviously intelligent gentleman with very highly developed communication and organizational skills.  He functions and operates very well in the complex world of Washington politics  and communicates regularly with the most influential media institutions in the world.  To the general public, and to the mainstream media,  Dawson, Baggs, Plank and Ne'eman are what they see when they close their eyes and visualize what it is like to be  "autistic".

It is no wonder that sufficient funds are not made available to support autism research, to find causes of, and cures for,  autism disorders.  The public  does not see the harsher realities of autism. They do not see lengthy, repetitive  features about the life of individual autistic persons with Intellectual Disability or autistic adults living in institutional care. The public sees a very positive image of autism, the one at the very highest end of the "autism spectrum".  As a general rule that is all that they see.

It is not an image that would necessarily generate much funding to find cures for autism disorders.  Especially when the media savvy persons at the high functioning end of the "autism spectrum",  tell the world that WE, referring to people "on the autism spectrum", including those with Autistic Disorder and  cognitive impairment, including those autistic adults living in the care of others,  do not want to be cured.

Without the "autism spectrum" concept, widely used today, a person with mild Aspergers would not be able, with a straight face,  to claim to speak on behalf of the severely disabled autistic persons whose harsher impairments, he or she,  does not share, and whose lives bear little resemblance to their own. The "autism spectrum" concept may have some useful diagnostic purposes, but it has also caused harm. It has helped keep the realities of the severely autistic, the 75-80% of persons with Autistic Disorder who are also intellectually disabled, the autistic children who hurt themselves, the adults living in institutional care, out of sight and mind.

There is a natural media, and human, tendency to want to see things in a positive light.  The media loves the high functioning end of the "autism spectrum" and ignores the harsher realities at the low functioning end of that same spectrum.  The autism spectrum concept itself allows them to do so with a clear journalistic conscience.



Bookmark and Share

Chili Verde for the Crockpot

It was cold yesterday.  At least by Southwest Florida standards.  I think we reached a high of about 60F for the whole day.  I’m not complaining.  I live for the cooler weather but I knew that I needed something to warm us up for dinner.  Knowing that we would be at The BMX Track after the sun went down was pretty motivating too!

I pulled out my trusty Crockpot and went to work. 

Chili Verde

Chili Verde

6-8 Servings

Ingredients:

  • 2 pounds of pork (this time I used pork steaks and cut them down to bite sized pieces.  Could use Pork Butt or Shoulder Roast)
  • 3 Tbsp All-Purpose Flour (seasoned with a small bit of salt and pepper)
  • 1/2 Cup water
  • 1/2 Cup Tomatillo Salsa
  • 2 Tbsp ground cumin
  • 1 tsp chili powder
  • 1/2 tsp dried oregano
  • 1/2 tsp garlic powder
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 medium onions, thinly sliced
  • 1 (7 ounce) can of chopped green chiles, rinsed and drained.
  • 1 small jar of pimientos (or 3/4 cup roasted red pepper strips)
  • 1 (15 ounce) can of black beans, rinsed and drained

Directions:

  • In a large bowl toss the pork with the seasoned flour until evenly coated.  Stir in the water , salsa, cumin, chili powder, oregano, garlic powder, salt, onions and 1/2 of the green chiles.  Mix well.
  • Cover and cook on low heat for about 6 hours (or on high for about 3 or 4), or until pork is tender.  Stir twice if possible.
  • Stir in the remaining green chiles, the red pepper strips and the black beans.  Cover again and cook on high 20-30 min. longer until heated through and bubbling again.

Will I make this again?  Definitely.  This will be a go to winter meal for us.  I wanted to try not browning the pork in this recipe and I am really pleased with how it turned out.  Truth be told I ran out of time and needed to get this on.  Worked to my advantage.  The meat was spoon cutting tender.  Everyone in the house loved it. 

signature

Autism Events of 2009 - The Good, the Sad and the Ugly

As we turn towards 2010 these are AutismRealityNB's autism events of the year:

The Good 

Public authorities begin to acknowledge the extent of the autism crisis and the role of environmental factors.

1) In an historical development  IACC director Dr. Tom Insel acknowledged that environmental factors are a component of autism. 


2) The 
CDC estimated that between about 1 in 80 and 1 in 240, with an average of 1 in 110, children in the United States have an Autism Spectrum Disorder.


3) The CDC estimated that   29.3 to 51.2% of children with Autism Spectrum Disorders  also had an Intellectual Disability.  (That estimate itself misleads by including Aspergers with Autistic Disorder in estimating ID prevalence "on the spectrum"). The percentage of persons wih Autistic Disorder and  Intellectual Disability is approximately 75-80%. 





The Sad


4) Autistic Children continue to wander from their homes, some to perish as did young James Delorey of Nova Scotia. The autistic Nova Scotia boy left his home  prior to the onset of a bad winter storm.  Although he survived the storm initially, he suffered extreme hypothermia and died shortly there after. 


The Ugly 


5)  US President Barack Obama nominated to a national disability council a young University student with Aspergers Disorder who has held conflicting and ambiguous views on whether autism disorders are disabilities, has opposed curing autism and has organized protests of  events held to raise funds to benefit autistic children including funds for autism research. 


6) The Mainstream Media fawned over the anti-autism cure University student with Aspergers, and promoted his agenda, while failing to note that the protests he organized drew only a handful of protestors and that some other persons with Autism Spectrum Disorders disagreed with his anti-cure positions. The same mainstream media failed to note that families  trying to cure their own autistic children, many of whom are much more severely affect by Autistic Disorder and Intellectual Disability than  the anti-cure University student with Aspergers, are trying to help their children live the fullest, most rewarding lives possible.




Bookmark and Share

CHOCOLATE CHESTNUT CHARLOTTE

NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS


It’s the same thing, year in and year out. December comes to a lively end, flowing by faster than we could ever have imagined. This cold, cold month comes to a rousing, bubbly conclusion and as the end draws nigh something odd and inexplicable takes over us. All power of sensible thinking comes screeching to a halt and irrational thoughts flood through our poor over-holidayed brain. Maybe it was all that food, the turkey and stuffing, the glazed ham and cranberry relish, all the cakes and puddings and pies that softened our brains. Maybe it was the days and days of stirring cookie dough, pushing heaping spoonful after heaping spoonful of the stuff off onto innumerable cookie sheets and putting a tray in, pulling a tray out and replacing it with yet another tray of even more little mounds of cookie dough. Maybe it was all that sentimental, gooey “Good will towards men” stuff, all the presents that softened our hearts, all those Christmas specials, cartoons and old black and white films that did the job. Spending time with beaming grandparents or too many giddy little kids, thoughts of jolly Old Saint Nick sliding down yet another chimney or all the dazzling, glittery candles and fairy lights that blinded us, made us go all wobbly and weak-kneed and completely lose all reason. Hours of sitting too close to a blazing fire may have softened the old noggin. But every year it happens again and no matter what we’ve told ourselves, no matter how many times we’ve seen that it only ends in disaster, something – what, oh dear, what? – makes us do it again.

New Year’s Resolutions.


Yes, my friends, the time is once more upon us when we sit down and, pen and paper in hand, draw up that impossible list of resolutions, that endless list of promises to ourselves, promises rarely kept. All of those heavy meals and sweets must have made us delirious, intoxicated by one too many candy cane or marshmallow Santa. Glancing over past lists, we shake our head in disbelief and wonder how we can, year after year, set the bar so high: stop smoking, lose 10 pounds, visit grandma every Sunday, never raise our voice to children or spouse, quit our job and live the dream, plan that round-the-world tour we’ve been dreaming of. Pledging ourselves to such is on par with blowing out birthday candles wishing for world peace when what we really hope for is to win the lottery or for the guy that sits two rows over from us in class to fall in love with us. New Year’s Resolutions are as ephemeral as that genie in the bottle, as fleeting as time itself. Yet here we go again.


Yes, the New Year is swiftly approaching, but before we pop the cork on that bottle of bubbly we still have the time to savor the last few days of this year, playing with the toys we have received from loved ones, the standing mixers and cameras, the digital scales and the cookbooks. We watch as the leftovers disappear from the fridge, never fast enough although we know that all those plastic containers of turkey and relish, stuffing, salads and pumpkin pie will save us from having to cook yet another meal. We sit in our favorite comfy chair and sigh contentedly, smiling at those who gather round us as we tiptoe towards a new decade. So just take a breath and, before we commit ourselves to those big, impossible resolutions, let’s have a little more cake and think it all through.


Starting a new year is both exciting and scary, a time of reflection, thanks and wishes. We hope for great things yet are unsure of what it will bring. This year, I have decided to try and put together a list of reasonable resolutions for I know that I am lazy and that, no matter the good intentions, I would much rather be baking.

RESOLUTION 1: Clean up my desk and my work area. And keep it that way.

RESOLUTION 2: Create a workable space for my food photography and learn how to use my camera (see Meeta and Ilva).

RESOLUTION 3: Find the courage to create more elaborate desserts, working more on presentation (see Mowie and Deeba).

RESOLUTION 4: Organize my weeks better so I can spend more time visiting other blogs on a regular basis as I used to do and which I have so neglected these past few months.

RESOLUTION 5: Organize my days better so I can return to my old ways and spend more time on FB with my old Mudpuppy sisters, my hearts and souls, Minna, Vera, Claire, Sabine, Bobbi as well as my darlings Debbie, Lisa and Lee and my high school friends.

RESOLUTION 6: Work more on my writing, completing the stories of blog posts past, trying to write non-blog post articles and stories. Write. Write. Write.

RESOLUTION 7: Isn’t 6 enough?


2009 has brought me an armful of fabulous friendships, a bevy of sisters and a few brothers who have helped me through thick and thin, seen me through the hard times and the fun times, who have encouraged me, taught me, supported me and made me laugh. Where would I be without them? Deeba, Hilda, Meeta, Mowie, Minna, Bobbi, Claire, Vera, Sabine, Debbie, Lee and now Lisa (yay!), Nanette, Ilva, Simone, Kerrin. Ellen, Mike and Frank. And of course Sue, Carolyn and Andrew. There are many more that I am thankful that I have met and become friends with, but these special people are truly special indeed, more than one person could ever expect to know in one lifetime and I am truly thankful. And hope they each know how much they mean to me.

And wonderful Greg of Sippity Sup! has generously nominated Life's a Feast for a Homie 2009 and I would absolutely be thrilled if you would go here and vote for my blog (look for lifesafeast.blogspot.com and click on the little house next to it)! Thanks so much!


And now for something very special, an amazing, very elegant, festive dessert, perfect for your New Year’s Celebration, luscious and fancy, perfect with champagne. A gorgeous treat, rich in flavor yet light enough to round off a celebratory meal without pushing you over the edge. Barely sweet, feather light chestnut mousse filling, its nuttiness perfectly matched to the sweet chocolate buttercream cradled in tender, moist vanilla sponge.


CHOCOLATE CHESTNUT CHARLOTTE

SPONGE CAKE:
¾ cup (95 g) flour
1 tsp baking powder
4 eggs at room temperature
1/3 cup (70 g) + ½ cup (100 g) sugar, divided
1 tsp vanilla
¼ cup (50 g) powdered sugar


CHOCOLATE BUTTERCREAM FILLING:
1cup (120 g) powdered sugar
1 stick (115 g) unsalted butter, softened to room temperature
2 Tbs unsweetened cocoa powder
2 Tbs hot or boiling water

CHESTNUT MOUSSE:
21 oz (600 g) cooked chestnuts
2 cups (500 ml) milk
1/3 cup (70 g) + 3 Tbs sugar, divided
2 envelopes (12 g) unflavored gelatin
½ tsp salt
3 egg whites at room temperature
1 cup (200 – 250 ml) heavy whipping cream


Prepare the Sponge Cake:

Prepare the sponge cake filled with chocolate buttercream a day before (or at the very least early in the day) serving the Charlotte.

Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C). Line a 15 ½ x 10 ½- inch (40 x 27-cm) jelly roll pan with parchment paper, leaving a bit overhanging the sides.

Blend and whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt and set aside.

Separate the eggs. In a plastic or metal bowl, whip the egg whites, beating first at low speed for 30 seconds then increasing to high speed, until the whites hold soft peaks. Continue beating the whites on high speed gradually adding the 1/3 cup (70 g) of sugar until you have stiff, glossy peaks.

In a large mixing bowl beating at high speed, beat the egg yolks until thick and pale. Gradually beat in the ½ cup (100 g) sugar until very thick. Beat in the vanilla.


Gently fold both the flour and the meringue (egg whites) into the egg yolk/sugar batter using a rubber or silicone spatula until well blended and smooth with no more chunks of whites remaining.


Spread the batter gently and evenly in the prepared jelly roll pan, making sure the batter is spread into the corners (you can “glue” the paper to the bottom of the pan by dabbing a bit of the batter between the paper and the pan and pressing down. This will keep the parchment from moving around as you spread).


Bake the sponge in the preheated oven for 15 minutes until the top springs back when gently pressed. If the cake looks like it is browning too quickly simply lay a piece of aluminum foil on the top of the cake.

Have a very clean kitchen towel ready before removing the cake from the oven.


Remove the cake from the oven onto a cooling rack. Sprinkle the top of the cake with the powdered sugar making sure it is sprinkled evenly all over the surface. Lay a clean kitchen towel over the top of the cake and invert the whole thing. Lift off the baking pan. Very very gently (the cake is delicate) peel off the parchment paper from the cake. Now, working from a long side of the cake, roll the cake and the towel up together into a tight roll. Let the cake cool completely rolled in the towel set on the cooling rack.


Prepare the Chocolate Buttercream Filling:

Place the powdered sugar, the soft butter, the cocoa powder and the hot water in a medium-sized mixing bowl and beat until very well blended, smooth and creamy. Taste. Feel free to add a bit more sugar or cocoa to taste.

When the sponge cake has cooled completely, remove it from the cooling rack and place lengthwise in front of you on the work surface. Carefully unroll the cake. If the cake seems to have shrunk a bit, don’t worry about it. Spread the chocolate buttercream evenly all over the surface of the cake. Now, gently but firmly reroll the cake, rolling it as tightly as possible. Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and refrigerate until ready to prepare the Charlotte.


Prepare the Chestnut Mousse Filling:

Grind the cooked chestnuts very finely using a food mill or grinder with fine cutting disc (using a food processor may turn the chestnuts to paste) until they are like sand. Get a teen or a young man to help you out as this is hard on the elbow grease. Place the ground chestnuts in a large mixing bowl.


In a small saucepan, heat 1 cup (250 ml) of the milk with 1/3 cup (70 g) sugar and the gelatin. Cook over medium-low heat, whisking occasionally, until the milk is hot and the sugar and the gelatin are completely dissolved (you will see flecks of pale yellow/goldish on the surface – this is the gelatin. When the gelatin is dissolved these flecks will vanish.)

Pour the hot milk/sugar/gelatin over the chestnuts along with the remaining cup of milk and the salt. Stir until well blended. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate for about an hour and a half until the mixture mounds when dropped from a spoon onto a plate.

This goes in the fridge...

... and comes out like this

Assemble the Charlotte:

When the Chestnut Mousse mounds after refrigeration, be ready to prepare the Charlotte: Line a 4-quart (4-liter) glass bowl, preferably round bottomed, very well with plastic wrap. Remove the sponge cake/chocolate buttercream roll from the fridge and remove the plastic wrap. Carefully and evenly slice off the uneven ends then slice the cake into ¼-inch (1/2 cm) slices. Starting at the bottom, line the bowl with the slices of cake, working your way up and around, pressing the pieces gently together to try and eliminate any gaps between the cake slices.


Complete the Chestnut Mousse Filling: In a small plastic or metal bowl, beat the egg whites on high speed until soft peaks form. Continue beating, gradually beating in the 3 tablespoons of sugar until peaks are firm and the sugar is dissolved. In a separate bowl, preferably chilled, beat the whipping cream until peaks hold their shape.


Using a rubber or silicone spatula, fold the beaten egg whites and the whipped cream into the chestnut mousse until well blended and smooth. Mound the mixture into the cake-lined bowl, filling up the bowl to the top.


Carefully trim any cake slices that come above the edge of the bowl and fold them over. Cover the surface (which will be the bottom of the Charlotte once it is flipped over and unmolded) with more cake roll slices. Cover with plastic wrap and put back into the refrigerator until set, at least 4 hours or longer if possible.

To serve:

Remove the Charlotte from the refrigerator. Remove the plastic wrap from the surface and invert a serving platter onto the Charlotte. Invert the platter and the Charlotte. Lift off the glass bowl (yay! It’s clean!) and the plastic wrap. The Charlotte is ready to serve.


I lift up my glass and my fork and I toast you, my dear friends and those of you who come and pay me a visit here at Life’s a Feast every now and then. You keep me alive and keep me going. And I am thankful for each and every one of you.


(ok, she’s had too much to eat and drink, she’s gone all soppy and sentimental now. Grab her arm there, come on, help me pull her off and get her to bed…. Quick, push her out o’ here before she starts on again with all that love and friendship and soppiness and stuff…geez she just doesn’t stop does she? Oops, come on, pick her up again… take that chocolate Santa away from her, oh wow, she’s stuffed it in her mouth already….yipes, oh gee whiz she’s going for the old films now, oh no! not Christmas in Connecticut again! Wowee how many times can one woman watch that stuff… take that bowl of candy away from her I said… almost there…easy now… ok! Whew! She’s stopped now…..


Labels

أحدث المواضيع

 
Support : Creating Website | Johny Template | Mas Template
Copyright © 2013. Entries General - All Rights Reserved
Template Created by Creating Website Published by Mas Template
Proudly powered by Blogger