Shawn L. Bird

Original poetry, commentary, and fiction. All copyrights reserved.

meatballs forever! March 21, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:07 am
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I love the convenience of meatballs.  I make up a huge batch and then freeze them in baggies.  Whenever I need a quick meal, I can dump in a few meatballs.  Macaroni and cheese, soup, frozen mixed veggies, tomato sauce- all are improved with a quick shake of tasty balls.  Here is my recipe, for your convenience.

Oh- I have a meatball scoop- a small round 2 tsp scoop that has a sliding mechanism like an old fashioned ice cream scoop.  This makes it a very fast proposition to make several dozen meatballs.

Ingredients: 1 kg/2 lbs of ground meat, one medium onion, 2 or 3 cloves of garlic, bread crumbs, 2 eggs, milk and assorted spices

Finely chop  the onion and brown it in a frying pan. This is the secret ingredient of my friend Julia’s amazing meatloaf.  Cooking the onion makes them sweet and gentle.  It packs in the flavour.

Into a bowl combine lean ground meat, the cooked onions, crushed garlic cloves, 2 eggs, and 1/2 – 2/3 cup of milk.  Add spices- generally lots of seasoning salt, pepper, occasionally marjoram, parsley, cinnamon, cardamon, curry, chives, basil, oregano- it depends on the meat you choose, and what else you like to eat with meatballs.  If you are thinking Italian- go with ground beef, oregano and basil, extra garlic and pepper. If you’re thinking Middle Eastern, go with lamb, cardamon and cinnamon.  You get the picture.

Add bread crumbs (about a cup or so) and mix.  The consistency should be quite moist, but not goopy.

Pre-heat your oven to 400 F.  Get out your largest cookie sheet. Using you handy dandy mini scoop, fill the cookie sheet.  No need to grease it. Each meatball can be up against the next- they shrink when they cook.  I end up with something like a hundred balls on a 12X18 pan.

Put the balls into the hot oven, and bake (convection if you have it) for 20 mins or so.  They come out evenly browned!   Put into large freezer bags, but set them in fridge to cool before you put them in the freezer.  After they’ve been in the freezer an hour or so, give the baggies a shake so they don’t stick together.

PS. I once talked with a beef farmer who thought that any ‘filler’ ingredients declared that the cook was too cheap to buy enough meat for the meal!  Not so– the milk, eggs and bread crumbs bind flavour and moisture into the meatballs.  These are much tastier than meat pellets that results from ‘meat only balls.’

 

work from here March 20, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 5:51 pm
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Prompt 69: If you could work from anywhere, where would you want to live?Why?

I would love to be writing in a cozy cabin with a huge window in front of my desk and to gaze through that window at a panoramic view of a mountain lake.  I would love to watch deer wander across my lawn and birds crowding on my feeder while a fire crackles in my wood stove. 

I would like to hear the rhythmic crunch as the axe chops the firewood.  The ax would be wielded by my brawny husband, of course.  He would bring crisp mountain air in with him on his flannel jacket as he brought in the logs to stoke the fire.

The basement would be lined with full canning jars, a year’s worth of provisions twinkling their bounty.  Since this is my perfect world, the canning was a simple day or two event, accomplished with laughing friends alongside.  The garden grew and was harvested without my help after the initial enthusiastic spring planting.  The deer were not interested in any part of my garden, of course.

I would love to hear CBC in the background, offering the news and ideas of the day, while I am warm and rested in my idyllic world.  When my work day is over, warm companionship fills the evening and night.

PS.  Yes, I know there are no students in this idyllic world.  It’s Spring Break at the moment.  We are all relishing a little time apart from one another! lol

 

world family March 19, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:21 am
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One of the purposes of youth exchange is to bond people around the world so that when you hear of a war or a disaster in a place, you immediately are concerned about ‘your family’ who lives abroad.  Your foreign exchange student children may live far from you, but the heart strings stretch.

Our first exchange student daughter came to live with us when our kids were 6 and 4.  Sayaka from Tokyo lived with us for a year.  She wanted to be a chef and loved to bake.  What a treat!  She would create amazing towers of dishes which we still call “Sayaka Stacks” at our house.  It doesn’t matter that it’s been almost 20 years.  We’re still in touch with her and we were thrilled when she came to visit several years ago.

When the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear reactor issues began in Japan this week, we immediately waited to hear from our daughter in Japan.  Waited.  Waited.

Today we heard.  She and her new husband are fine, as is her family, but like many people crowding the airports, they want to evacuate.  We would want to as well!

So it looks like we’ll have our daughter home with us for awhile.  How great is that?  Our world is wound round and around with the bonds of youth exchange.

 

story: iloveross17 (Chapter four) March 18, 2011

Filed under: Commentary,narrative — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:02 am
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log in: Lena

password: iloveross

CHAT ALERT

Lena- hi

Ross- hi

Lena- sorry about Suzanne

Ross- ya

Lena- gang is going 2 movie Fri.  Wanna come?

Ross- maybe

           G2G

Lena- C U!

log off

——————————————

 Lena?  wtf?

 

Saints and sinners March 17, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:36 am
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 Last year on St. Patrick’s Day I was walking upon Palantine Hill in Rome.  We met these anonymous Americans as we were trekking toward a church past the 12 stations of the cross.

Of course, we took their photo so they had a remembrance of the day as well.  I couldn’t help thinking that they obvious had much larger suitcases than we did if they were willing to put so much precious real estate into a hat that was only going to be worn one day!  We follow the Rick Steves principle that each item must provide be used at least 3 times or it doesn’t come.  (You will be relieved to know that we also have a Rick Steves laundry line and carry soap wafers to do laundry two or three times as well!)

I was surprised in Rome at the Tivoli Fountain to be surrounded by a dozen or more enthusiastic and slightly inebriated youth wearing green t-shirts that announced they were participating in a St. Patrick’s Day Pub Crawl.  Occasionally the group would stagger by us as we were wandering the streets and more than once we came across a confused looking singleton and pointed him off in the direction of the last migration.  None of the participants appeared to be Roman, but there were a lot of Brits and Irish in the crowd.

I’m afraid for me  St. Patrick’s is more about wearing some green and whispering some blarney,  not about beer.  Let’s just work together to keep those snakes out of Ireland, shall we?

 

10,000 thank yous! March 16, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:16 am
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Around 5:15 p.m. PSTMonday March 14, the ten thousandth visitor visited my blog.

This blows me away.

Since I began this writing adventure the middle of last May, I have been privileged to share the experience with visitors from around the world.  Thank you for coming!  Thank you for allowing me to be a part of a your day! 

May today be a beautiful day for you!

 

invocation after earthquake March 15, 2011

Filed under: Pondering,Rotary invocations — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:33 am
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The recent massive earthquake in Sendai Japan reminds us once again how fragile our society is.  Our strength does not lie in the cities we’ve built or our impressive transportation infrastructure.  One belch from a volcano or a shift the  Earth’s plates show us that everything we think is so impressive is quite tenuous.  Our strength lies in our bindings to one another, our willingness to serve, and our gratitude for the blessings of life itself.

(c) Shawn Bird 2011  Free use with Rotary.  Please credit Shawn when you share this in your club; as well, please leave a comment to let us know your club  and when you intend to use it.  With thanks.

 

Chocolate or vanilla? March 14, 2011

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 2:03 pm
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Prompt #70: Chocolate or vanilla?

Chocolate OR vanilla?

No
Chocolate AND vanilla
Ebony and ivory
Male and female
Bitter and sweet
Life and death
Ying and Yang
Chocolate and vanilla

 

 

 

music for my iPod March 13, 2011

Filed under: anecdotes,Grace Awakening,Writing — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:12 am
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One of my former students, who was a beta reader for Grace Awakening, wrote me the other day to tell me how she was thinking about downloading some music for her iPod.  She thought, “I should download that song Ben wrote for Grace” and then realised with some chagrin, oh wait.  That doesn’t really exist.

The note has made me smile all week.  I love that my characters are so alive!  I love that Ben is so real that people want to find the music described in the book for their iPod. 

Of course, there was music that inspired all the music Ben writes for Grace.  I don’t think I could have written it without remembering the feeling of listening to a composition created just for me by a musician I adored.  (See the blog entitled “Starry Night of Music” for a general sense of it!)  When I find the missing cassette tape,  I promise to post my Graduation tune (providing the composer gives permission, that is).  Until then, perhaps you can find something inspiring among the demo reels at Bhatia Music?

 

Well met March 12, 2011

Filed under: Grace Awakening,Literature,Writing — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:42 am
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Prompt 67 If you could bring one fictional character to life for a day, who would it be?

Wow. What a great question. Since I just finished Inkheart, where fictional characters pop to life all around, my first thought was Meggie, but I quickly shelved that idea recognizing it was only because of her current status as ‘most recent’ that brought her to mind.

The next character to pop into my mind was Jacob from the Twilight series. That idea just made me giggle. I love his sense of humour and strong sense of right, plus his devotion and loyalty. His take is less obsessive than Edward’s: more honest and less obnoxious. My favourite students are these kind of laid back, witty clowns.  Since I see these guys all the time in my class room, I guess I will leave Jacob and his abs in the book.

The next thought was Harry Potter. Such nobility of character!  He had greatness thrust upon him and met the expectations to serve the greater good. I love him as a character, but what would he say to us in the muggle world? He’d better stay in his books.

Grace. Oh yes. I would love to meet my Grace Severin! Like a child, I may have birthed her, but she has taken on her own life. She has her own friends, speaks to other people, and she definitely did what she wanted, despite what I wanted on many occasions. She’s a responsible person though. Hopefully a bit of a mix of all the best things from other characters I’d like to meet. Yes. I’d love to sit down for a heart to heart with Grace. I know a nice Greek restaurant we can go to, and this weekend, they’ve even got a harpist.  I’ll wear Bright’s boots.