Re: [FairfieldLife] And so this is Christmas
Dang Curtis, so nice of you to provide such lovely links and a recipe for holiday coffee. We have something in common - pre-ground coffee is a non-starter in my kitchen as well. Tee Hee. From: curtisdeltablues To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, December 9, 2012 8:37 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] And so this is Christmas So you take your fresh ground coffee (preferably dark roast Sumatran) and you brew it however you do, (I use one of those Bailetti Italian numbers you see on the stove in every Sofia Loren movie) and then the magic begins. Having tasted versions of "Christmas" blends through the years, I always thought I could do better, but until this morning never took the trouble. I resisted the temptation to drop in a soft peppermint (tomorrow I'm gunna) and went right for the high grade dark coco powder, a sprinkle of cinnamon, sugar, and some ginger and milk. Christmas blend perfection. I'm sure any version that includes cloves would be great too. But it is the overly strong cloves that I object to in the commercial mixes, aside from the fact that any pre-ground coffee is a non starter in my kitchen. (Coffee oils are where God lives, and God evaporates really quickly.) Speaking of God in his various human imagined personas, I am sipping my yuletide brew while gazing on a nativity baby as pump as the churro stuffed Honduran neighbor's kids who stomp up and down the stairs in their princess dresses, but sound more like the prince's horse. (Type 2 diabetes coming right up.) It is the nativity set from my youth rescued from my Dad's house's attic as we emptied it out. It has a tiny wind-up music box that tinkles out Silent Night, but slowed down by decades of mouse droppings no doubt. It plays the song absentmindedly now in stops and starts, like an old man slumped over the piano in the Alzheimers unit who can only manage a few notes of the melody at a time before his mental ship sails away for a few moments. The song is doubly sentimental for me because as a ploy to get some Maharishi darshon when he visited MIU my first Winter in '75, I put together a group to sing him the song in German. (It is surprisingly not at all Nazi sounding and is beautiful in that language, check it out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUb8ySdERKs ) It actually worked to flush out the old guru, and it was the longest time I had spent standing next to him at that time. He kept us waiting for hours till the early morning, but he was really gracious about it all, despite the fact that he despised Christianity and looked so tired I thought he was going to fall over. After we were done he asked for Age of Enlightenment songs. Emily Levin banged out one of her saccharine ditties. Before he went back upstairs where he was saving the world and all (banging groupies) he took a moment to look me in the eye. It was a nice steady benevolent look, not exactly kind, a bit curious, non committal but prolonged. For a guy as besotted as I was for the dhotied one at the time, (or my imagination of him) it was my Christmas miracle. I thanked him, and he floated off in a shower of Jai Guru Devs. Back to my nativity. The figures are some kind of plaster and my Dad repainted them in garish Homer Simpson style, no doubt accompanied by more than a bit of Dewar's Scotch, so that the wise men look like members of George Clinton's Parliament- Funkadelic. There are oxen and sheep and an adoring Mary, looking herself a bit sheepish, as Joseph beside her pretends to believe her whopper of a tale of her divine pregnancy in a desperate bid to keep his first century Courtney Stodden age-inappropriate hot wife with him. "This better be the ONLY divinely conceived baby in this house Miss Missy!" My eyes drift up to my walls with pictures of Santas from 1930's magazines gaily puffing on cigarettes (damn I wish I was English and could say he was sucking on a fag) while the copy makes claims of the throat soothing virtues of Chesterfields. Throat soothing! I've got versions of them all over thanks to Ebay, as if Santa had a walk-on part on Mad Men. I've got some hand carved camels made of olive wood led by a man on a donkey who I can only assume is spending another Christmas in Guantanamo and someone else is now leading these camels laden with the concentrated sap of the poppy which I guess is the wink, wink, nudge, nudge, translation for "frankincense and myrrh" I loves me some Christmas. It is an atheist version, but I don't let the bastard child of a rapist ghost interfere with my nostalgia wallowing. If you really listen to Christmas songs they are freak'n maudlin aren't they? That hits my blues center just fine. I'm not even a hater of the materialistic/commercial side of Christmas. I like being co
[FairfieldLife] And so this is Christmas
So you take your fresh ground coffee (preferably dark roast Sumatran) and you brew it however you do, (I use one of those Bailetti Italian numbers you see on the stove in every Sofia Loren movie) and then the magic begins. Having tasted versions of "Christmas" blends through the years, I always thought I could do better, but until this morning never took the trouble. I resisted the temptation to drop in a soft peppermint (tomorrow I'm gunna) and went right for the high grade dark coco powder, a sprinkle of cinnamon, sugar, and some ginger and milk. Christmas blend perfection. I'm sure any version that includes cloves would be great too. But it is the overly strong cloves that I object to in the commercial mixes, aside from the fact that any pre-ground coffee is a non starter in my kitchen. (Coffee oils are where God lives, and God evaporates really quickly.) Speaking of God in his various human imagined personas, I am sipping my yuletide brew while gazing on a nativity baby as pump as the churro stuffed Honduran neighbor's kids who stomp up and down the stairs in their princess dresses, but sound more like the prince's horse. (Type 2 diabetes coming right up.) It is the nativity set from my youth rescued from my Dad's house's attic as we emptied it out. It has a tiny wind-up music box that tinkles out Silent Night, but slowed down by decades of mouse droppings no doubt. It plays the song absentmindedly now in stops and starts, like an old man slumped over the piano in the Alzheimers unit who can only manage a few notes of the melody at a time before his mental ship sails away for a few moments. The song is doubly sentimental for me because as a ploy to get some Maharishi darshon when he visited MIU my first Winter in '75, I put together a group to sing him the song in German. (It is surprisingly not at all Nazi sounding and is beautiful in that language, check it out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUb8ySdERKs ) It actually worked to flush out the old guru, and it was the longest time I had spent standing next to him at that time. He kept us waiting for hours till the early morning, but he was really gracious about it all, despite the fact that he despised Christianity and looked so tired I thought he was going to fall over. After we were done he asked for Age of Enlightenment songs. Emily Levin banged out one of her saccharine ditties. Before he went back upstairs where he was saving the world and all (banging groupies) he took a moment to look me in the eye. It was a nice steady benevolent look, not exactly kind, a bit curious, non committal but prolonged. For a guy as besotted as I was for the dhotied one at the time, (or my imagination of him) it was my Christmas miracle. I thanked him, and he floated off in a shower of Jai Guru Devs. Back to my nativity. The figures are some kind of plaster and my Dad repainted them in garish Homer Simpson style, no doubt accompanied by more than a bit of Dewar's Scotch, so that the wise men look like members of George Clinton's Parliament- Funkadelic. There are oxen and sheep and an adoring Mary, looking herself a bit sheepish, as Joseph beside her pretends to believe her whopper of a tale of her divine pregnancy in a desperate bid to keep his first century Courtney Stodden age-inappropriate hot wife with him. "This better be the ONLY divinely conceived baby in this house Miss Missy!" My eyes drift up to my walls with pictures of Santas from 1930's magazines gaily puffing on cigarettes (damn I wish I was English and could say he was sucking on a fag) while the copy makes claims of the throat soothing virtues of Chesterfields. Throat soothing! I've got versions of them all over thanks to Ebay, as if Santa had a walk-on part on Mad Men. I've got some hand carved camels made of olive wood led by a man on a donkey who I can only assume is spending another Christmas in Guantanamo and someone else is now leading these camels laden with the concentrated sap of the poppy which I guess is the wink, wink, nudge, nudge, translation for "frankincense and myrrh" I loves me some Christmas. It is an atheist version, but I don't let the bastard child of a rapist ghost interfere with my nostalgia wallowing. If you really listen to Christmas songs they are freak'n maudlin aren't they? That hits my blues center just fine. I'm not even a hater of the materialistic/commercial side of Christmas. I like being coerced into buying presents with money I don't have, because otherwise I wouldn't do it, and gift giving is a blast. (If you prime the pump with specific requests, the receiving isn't so bad either.) The invention of the modern Christmas and many of its most iconic symbols and traditions was pretty recently laid herky jerky on top of those wonderful pagan contributions. (Let's get plastered and bring a tree into the hut!) If some people want to believe that the arrival of one fat