Archive for January, 2010

Borough Market Ragu

Until moving to London, I made a frequent point of cooking and trying out new things. Partly, as a result of cooking for a girlfriend who is less likely to settle for pasta or rice every night of the week. Moving to London resulted in losing both cooking facilities and utensils that I had previously relied on. With a set of knives and sauce pan left from last year’s residents I have managed to get by so far.

Over winter break, I decided that I needed to step up the cooking game. Considering that I eat 90% of my meals at home, a little effort could go a long way. Also, living in a part of London with almost immediate access to the Borough Market, an abundance of fresh ingredients are at my disposal.

For my first foray back into cooking, I decided to take inspiration from what has been my staple – pasta. A good meat sauce is my favorite addition to some properly cooked pasta and parmesan cheese. Additionally, a traditional ragu sauce requires several hours of cooking, legitimizing this as a real attempt at making something.

Two recipes, found online, guided this experiment. The first provided the outline for the ingredients and steps, the second provided some guidance on using fresh tomatoes instead of canned. All of the ingredients, aside from salt, pepper, olive oil, and wine were purchased from the Borough Market in Southwark, London.

Note: I make no claim to the authenticity of this recipe and the list of ingredients is largely inspired from the first recipe (linked to above).

400g x Ground Beef
100g x Streaky Unsmoked Bacon
24 x Vine Tomatoes
1 x Large Onion
3 x Garlic Cloves
3 x Bay Leaves
1 x Rosemary Stalks
Red Wine
Olive Oil
Salt and Pepper

The vegetables and herbs were purchased from Elsey and Bent and the meat was purchased from the Ginger Pig, both within the market.

1. Chop the tomatoes into smallish cubes (I list this first because it will take a while and you don’t want to leave everything else on the burner too long)
2. Turn a stove burner on medium heat and place a large pot on it (large enough to fit all of the ingredients)
3. Pour about two tablespoons of oil into the bottom of the pot (eye this up, enough to cook your onion, garlic, and bacon in)
4. Finely chop the onion, garlic, and bacon. Place these ingredients in the pot and cook for about 10 minutes. Avoid over-cooking the garlic.
5. Add the tomatoes, about a glass and a half of wine, the bay leaves, and the rosemary.
6. Cook for about 2.5 – 3 hours, stirring every half hour. Add a bit of oil if the sauce sticks to the pot. If the sauce seems quite thick about an hour in add a dash of wine, but don’t overdo it.
7. Add basil, salt, and pepper in the last 15 minutes of cooking.

Enjoy! Serves 6-8 people.

Roger Federer Takes the 2010 Australian Open in 3 Sets

Roger Federer won the Australian Open this morning 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (13-11). The first two sets, it was clear that Fed was dominating play in this match. Murray looked frustrated initially and frequently made motions toward his knee and quadricep. The Scot turned things up for the third set, breaking Federer early, but Fed fought back to force the tiebreak. Throughout the match Federer looked fairly calm, even when the set was within reach of Murray.

Being in the UK, I was able to enjoy this evening match (Melbourne time) in the morning. The match was definitely a bit of a nail biter at the end, but I was happy to see Federer come out with his 16th grand slam victory.  Playing a tiebreak to 13-11 is tough, but both players looked strong throughout it.  I’m sure we have more to see in the future from Andy Murray.   At the end, Federer looked genuinely elated to win this match.

Disaster in Hyrule

At points, any Zelda game can be painstaking to get through. Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks can be downright embarrassing. Sitting on the plane or train blowing into the spirit flute does not usually make you look particularly cool. But I fought through the temples, bosses, and annoying puzzles.

Two temples away from the end, I accidentally erased my saved game. All of the progress…gone. Not sure if I will play again. Definitely need some time away from that game now.

2009 Q4 GDP Statistics

From the WSJ today:

The U.S. economy surged at the end of 2009, a bigger-than-expected gain driven more by slower inventory liquidation than by consumer spending.

Gross domestic product rose a seasonally adjusted 5.7% annual rate October through December, the Commerce Department said Friday in its first estimate of fourth-quarter GDP.

Don’t read too much into this though:

“Household spending is expanding at a moderate rate but remains constrained by a weak labor market, modest income growth, lower housing wealth, and tight credit,” the Federal Open Market Committee of policymakers said this week.

Not to say that this is not good news. Obviously, strong growth stats are great when compared to a year of the economy contracting. We should all be wary of over-celebrating two digits meant to estimate the aggregate activity of the world’s largest economy. Undoubtedly, this will appear in papers across the country and around the world this week. The WSJ does a good job of laying out what factors composed the growth and how those changed from last year or last quarter.

Here’s to hoping 2010 turns things around!

The iPad

Apple announced this week a new device, the iPad. I have been reading reviews over at Engadget and around the web. This comment crystalizes what I think is the most meaningful insight regarding the iPad:

it’s hard not to see it as a pretty bold statement of what Apple thinks general-purpose computing should look like in the future

I’m starting with a positive comment about what I will mostly have critical things to say.

Click to continue reading “The iPad”

The Future of Europe

Although, I make a distinction between Europe, as in the continent, and the United Kingdom, which I think is fair culturally and as far as identity, the UK is part of the EU. Perhaps if the matter went to a vote in the UK, they would no longer participate. As of now, the UK has not adopted the Euro as a currency or participated in the Schengen Agreement for immigration. When one of the world’s more politically powerful and economically stable countries refuses to fully participate in the EU, you have to wonder where the problem lies.

Click to continue reading “The Future of Europe”

Upcoming Travels

The last time I received a phone call about an impromptu trip planned to Asia was in 2007. My friend Bill called and said (more or less) ‘let’s go to Japan’. At the time I had no particular plans or ambitions to go, but I liked the idea and the adventure. We had done a bit of travelling together as a part of the debate team in high school, but nothing international. To make matters worse (or possibly better

Click to continue reading “Upcoming Travels”

Google Voice

I have been using Google Voice since this summer and have been extremely happy with it so far. Several people have commented to me that they’ve used Google Voice, but don’t get why or how it is useful.

Living abroad, it has been an indispensable tool for me to keep in touch with everyone at home. So, let me lay it out.

Click to continue reading “Google Voice”

End of a Season

Last night I fell asleep right before half time, the score tied at 14-14. At this point, 1 am GMT, I was tempted to stay awake and stick it out with the team, but I felt confident that the Vikings would pull it off.

Every season ends at some point though. Of course, the ultimate way to end it in the NFL is with a Super Bowl victory, something I am confident that the Saints will now pull off. This year is one for the NFC.

Vikings – it was a good run, Favre led us through some tough games and gave us consistency, but in the end the Saints took it. Let’s come back strong next season – I know Minnesota loved it.

Helsinki Recap

At the moment, I don’t feel particularly inspired about any current political events and not too much exciting has happened this term yet. I was able to do a lot of travelling over winter break as I alluded to in an earlier post. My final destination over winter break, which was from January 9th to 10th was Helsinki, Finland.

I took a ferry from Tallinn, Estonia to Helsinki, following the recommendation of Adam. He also gave me a warning that it would be a booze cruise full of Finns on their way back home.

Click to continue reading “Helsinki Recap”



Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes

Close
E-mail It