Jan 2007
Recipe: Asian Salsa
Thu Jan 04, 2007 Filed in: Recipes
This is a fun fusion recipe that I think is really
tasty. My Dad discovered it in a Chinese cookbook and
it became a standard munchie at my folks' house.
28 oz. can top-quality petite-diced tomatoes, drained
1/2 C scallions, chopped
1/2 C fresh cilantro, chopped
2 cloves garlic, finely minced
1 T ginger, finely minced
3 T wine vinegar
2 T sesame oil
1 T safflower oil
1 1/2 t sugar
1 t chili paste
1/2 t salt
It doesn't need to me made exactly as above (safflower oil could be replaced with sunflower, peanut, or vegetable oil), but the sesame oil, garlic, ginger, and cilantro are essential. To make it hotter, add more chili paste.
28 oz. can top-quality petite-diced tomatoes, drained
1/2 C scallions, chopped
1/2 C fresh cilantro, chopped
2 cloves garlic, finely minced
1 T ginger, finely minced
3 T wine vinegar
2 T sesame oil
1 T safflower oil
1 1/2 t sugar
1 t chili paste
1/2 t salt
It doesn't need to me made exactly as above (safflower oil could be replaced with sunflower, peanut, or vegetable oil), but the sesame oil, garlic, ginger, and cilantro are essential. To make it hotter, add more chili paste.
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Review: Weiser Sunrise, Foghorn Stringband
Wed Jan 03, 2007 Filed in: Reviews
Weiser Sunrise is Foghorn's third album, and features the same personnel as the previous two albums, Rattlesnake Tidalwave and Reap What You Sow. One characteristic that distinguishes Foghorn's sound is the 3-finger style (or Scruggs style) employed by banjo player P.T. Grover Jr., which gives songs unique rhythmic color and a driving feel. Grover plays the melody in approximate unison with fiddler Stephen Lind and mandolinist Caleb Klauder. Klauder's mandolin gives a percussive jolt to phrases, playing in exact unison with the fiddle. Together the three deliver melodic lines with clarity, vigor, and stylistic perfection. This egalitarian approach to melody challenges the attitude often found in the old time scene that old time music is all about the fiddle. Bassist Brian Bagdonas and guitar player Kevin Sandri are undoubtedly one of the best rhythm sections on the old time scene. They are so solid that it's easy to take them for granted as they lay down the foundation to Foghorn's sound.
The song selection is well balanced, with standards like Mississippi Sawyer and Sally Anne and more obscure tunes such as Kicking Up The Devil On A Holiday (my favorite cut on the album). The recording itself is transparent and clean. Like their other albums, Foghorn picks both instrumental and vocal songs of varying tempos in both duple and triple meters. The singing of Lind, Klauder, and Sandri is understated and feels like it grows naturally out of the music rather than being featured specifically.
I highly recommend this spirited and unpretentious album from one of the best old time stringbands in the country.
Happy New Year!
Tue Jan 02, 2007 Filed in: Recycled
thoughts
Happy new year to my friends, students, colleagues,
and family. I hope everyone happily grows one year
older, stays in touch, and finds a healthy way to
deal with failing to fulfill their news years
resolution. My new years resolution is to finally
record a full-length album of traditional and
original songs. (That was also my resolution last
year--please help me hold to it this time...)