Alan Hussey

hi.

hi.

Posted 1 week ago

legos:

INCEPTION!
Submitted by valerizzle:
Happy Friday!

legos:

INCEPTION!

Submitted by valerizzle:

Happy Friday!

2 weeks ago from legos

When all of human endeavor falls under the rubric of the ‘hack’ the word ceases to mean anything. Hack your commute, take public transit! Hack your next dinner party with parlour games. Delightfully clever key hack keeps all your keys on the same ring. Hack Mexican food with a ‘burrito’ sized tortilla! Hack your brain with REM sleep. Hack the sun with a straw hat. Hack hygiene with silver oxide ‘deodorant’. Hack girls with compliments. Hack your windowsill with a pot of wheatgrass, and hack the sky with the goddamn moon.
Hacker News comment by qwzybug, via Simon Willison. (via inky)

4 weeks ago from inky

merlin:

baileygenine:

Whatever, I was just adding shadows to shit anyway. 

merlin:

baileygenine:

Whatever, I was just adding shadows to shit anyway. 

1 month ago from merlin (originally from baileygenine)

My ability to decide how I feel about Wikileaks’ activities is totally annihilated by my ongoing realization that it cannot possibly be real. It’s a plot device in a near-future thriller novel. I mean, seriously, semi-stateless man with an unusual appearance uses an army of anonymous allies to expose governments’ secrets, and posts an insurance file in public with some kind of deadman switch in case he’s taken out by his enemies? That shit does not happen in real life. Julian Assange is a Neal Stephenson character who’s escaped in to the real world.
Tomorrowman on Metafilter (via Simon Willison) (via inky)

1 month ago from inky

jonmccon:

Another design club poster series. Two color split fountain on tracing paper. We hung them up all over campus on different kinds of surfaces so that they would show through the poster itself to the viewer. Conceptually showing that “design” can be found anywhere, yet is different in its form every time.

Bring your busssss passsss.

1 month ago from jonmccon

A weird side-effect of this scaled-down screenshot I found: the gray circles made by the image-scaling change color depending on what angle you view them from. Try it!

*You may need to click-through to see the effect.

A weird side-effect of this scaled-down screenshot I found: the gray circles made by the image-scaling change color depending on what angle you view them from. Try it!

*You may need to click-through to see the effect.

Posted 2 months ago

inky:

Lego printer

What.

3 months ago from inky

New MacBook Pr—OH LOOK, AN IPAD!

marco:

…Not included: smartphones, iPad, JooJoo (LOL), Nokia’s tablet things, iPods touch, and probably most future devices based on Chrome OS, Windows Series 7 Phone Series Windows, or iPhone OS.

iPods touch is a great example of pluralizing compound nouns.

4 months ago from marco

Bickham Script Pro is one serious mothafatha.

Bickham Script Pro is one serious mothafatha.

Posted 5 months ago

This is post #600

That is all.

Posted 6 months ago

  (via pakotoo)

AAAAHHH! DO WANT!

  (via pakotoo)

AAAAHHH! DO WANT!

Posted 7 months ago

The potential for unintended humor in “compressed” English isn’t restricted to headline writing; it goes back to the days of the telegraph. One clever (though possibly apocryphal) example once appeared in the pages of Time magazine: Cary Grant received a telegram from an editor inquiring, “HOW OLD CARY GRANT?” — to which he responded: “OLD CARY GRANT FINE. HOW YOU?” The omitted verb may have saved the sender a nickel, but the snappy comeback was worth far more.
On Language - Crash Blossoms - NYTimes.com From an otherwise entertaining article comes this gem.

Posted 7 months ago

Tomato-butter sauce

I just made this for 14 people. 4 28oz cans of whole tomatoes, and 3 sticks of butter, plus some oregano. Terrific.

saltandfat:

The best recipes give you more than the food they describe; they give you the skills to make a dozen more dishes. Sometimes they do so by incorporating many different techniques, calling for ingredients you have to research, or putting the pieces together in a surprising way. Other times, they just describe a simple process which lends itself to endless variation.

Today, one of the last variety: a fake book for a tomato-butter sauce. I got it from Cathy Whims, the chef at Portland’s excellent Nostrana.

Pappardelle with tomato/sausage sauce

Why am I talking about tomato sauce in January, about as off season for tomatoes as we get here in the US? (If you’re in Australia, there’s still some good ones about, probably.) Well, I really wanted to have some tomato sauce the other night. Really. Then the lesson is: compromise and make-do are great friends to have in the kitchen.

There’s nothing like in-season tomatoes, of course - ah, the smell alone! - but did you know that the closest thing comes in a can? You can pretty much ignore those yellowish, hard, watery, tasteless red fruits in the winter; instead, reach for a can of San Marzanos or Glen Muir tomatoes; whole and peeled, please.

For this recipe, put the entire contents of 1 large, 28 oz can in a large plastic or glass bowl and crush the tomatoes with your hands. It’s fun! Get them to sub-bite-size, then put them in a nice pot or pan (I’ve used a saute pan and a sauce pan; either works.) Add some butter, cubed. How much butter? Oh, about a tablespoon per tomato. Or less if you’re watching your fat, or more if you’re not. Add a medium onion, peeled and cut in half; you’ll take it out when you’re done (you can then eat it; I do!) This way the onion will add sweetness without the crunch and bite you’d get if you chopped it into the sauce.

Start this on medium and bring to a simmer. You’ll want some infrequent bubbles at the surface and a heat that won’t scorch the bottom. Cook for 40-50 minutes, stir now and then, crushing any large pieces with your spoon or spatula. Salt as you go; start with just a little bit and add the bulk of it near the end; remember that sauces get saltier as water evaporates.

That is it - really, that’s all! Four ingredients. Now, the jazzy part is, you could start adding things. Herbs, meats, bits of Parmesan rind (don’t throw these out! In your soup or sauce they go), maybe some red pepper flakes. This sauce doesn’t need any of those, and I encourage you to try it in its sweet, jammy simplicity first. One of the reasons to cook this is that even the best jarred sauces - and there are some great ones - can never be of this bright, fruity quality; the fact that they’re mass-produced and stored on shelves guarantees that. So, start simple, but remember that you can use this recipe as a base for richer sauces.

As it is, I love it over fresh or nearly-fresh pasta; Bionaturae is my favorite in the latter category. Don’t be fooled into thinking fresh pasta is somehow superior to dried stuff by default. They’re different products, with different up- and downsides. Your typical “fresh”, refrigerated pasta from the grocery store is doughy and heavier than good dried pasta.

I also skip the Parmesan on this sauce and let the sweetness speak for itself. Jam on bread with butter, it is.

If you remember this recipe in the summer, do make it with fresh tomatoes. You can peel them by putting them in boiling water for 30 seconds, then promptly moving them to an ice bath; this will crack the skin and make peeling effortless.

I was told Smitten Kitchen posted a similar recipe recently - great minds think alike! The sauce really is that easy and that tasty.

7 months ago from saltandfat

kidcasting:

Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny, 2006

kidcasting:

Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny, 2006

8 months ago from kidcasting