Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Yummy in My Tummy: Summer Salad Spectacular!

Hi ho there! Greetings from the sweltering heat of this humid Boston summer! Now, granted, I spend most of my days indoors at work or in my air conditioned bedroom (yes, I know, I live a dangerous life -- do not try it at home!), but it is actually impossible to escape the heat. It always catches up to me somehow. Walking home, exploring the city, sitting on the porch, cooking in the non-air-conditioned kitchen, etc. And when it reaches at least 80°F every day, no one really wants to cook in a non-air-conditioned kitchen. I mean, I love cooking, and even I dread the prospect of turning on my gas stove and boiling water for even a minute. Salads, therefore, are basically the lazy, temperature-sensitive chef's best friends in the summer.

As anyone who lives with me knows, I'm a fan of grabbing whatever is in my fridge and/or pantry and making something new and different out of it. In the case of this salad, I did just that. Here's the recipe:

Almond and Pomegranate Salad



Ingredients:
Baby spinach
Arugula ("rocket" for all you Anglophiles in the audience)
Grape tomatoes
Black beans
Pomegranate seeds
Sliced almonds
Salad dressing
Parmesan cheese (optional)

Directions:
  1. Wash all vegetables and drain. Remove stems from spinach if desirable. Toss greens together in a large salad bowl.
  2. Add tomatoes, beans, pomegranate seeds, and almonds. Mix well.
  3. Drizzle salad dressing over salad. Sprinkle with parmesan, if desirable.
  4. Om nom nom.
Rachel's notes:
There are no specified amounts in this recipe. I measured nothing out when I threw this together after drinking a bottle and a half of white wine with my roommate and her friends. Everyone likes their salad proportions to be a little different, so play around with the amounts and see what works for you. Personally, I love heavier proportions of tomatoes, almonds, and pomegranate seeds because I think the flavors are so interesting and mesh together so well. One of my closest friends would probably choose to use mixed greens over arugula because she can't stand the taste of it. My roommate in France would have refused to eat the tomatoes. Salad is very much what you make of it, but I felt that this had to be one of the best salads I had ever tasted. And I'm not saying that because I was a little tipsy at the time. I replicated this recipe the very next night when I was 150% sober and still thought it was the best thing since cream cheese. This was a very last minute decision for a meal and it turned out marvelously.


Special note on salad dressing:
I don't usually make my own salad dressing. In this case, at any rate, I didn't. I used the Tuscan Italian Dressing with Balsamic Vinegar from Trader Joe's, and it worked great! I have a default salad dressing that I go to, however, when I run out and am too lazy to run to the store to buy more. I haven't tried it on this particular salad, but based on my past experience with this dressing, it would be a great match! I thoroughly encourage you, dear reader, to try it out and tell me what you think!

Walnut Salad Dressing

Ingredients:
2 Tbsp vinegar (red wine or balsamic)
4 Tbsp walnut oil
1 tsp Dijon mustard
Salt, pepper

Directions:
Mix together all ingredients, stirring aggressively as dressing is apt to separate.

This should easily make enough for 2 people to have salad dressing.

Wine of the Meal
Green Fin 2010 White Table Wine 


This is one of the really cheap wines that you can buy at Trader Joe's for about $4 (maybe even less back home in CA, since two-buck Chuck is three-buck Chuck in MA) and is surprisingly good. Normally, I steer clear of table wines because, as experience with French table wines taught me, they normally taste like someone poured some ethanol into some grape juice. However, my current roommates insisted that it was worth a try one night when they were cooking and, boy, was I surprised!

It's somewhat citrus-y, but mostly sweet and fruity (yeah, yeah, citrus usually equals fruit, but I mean something more like mango here). People who know more about these things would likely say that there are oak overtones or something like that. Maybe. Personally, I think it's the perfect wine to share after a long day at the lab as you sit out on your front porch, waiting for the temperature to go down, trading stories with your friends. It pairs pretty nicely with this salad and is a surprisingly good companion for ice cream, as I discovered this evening.


Frankly, it's a cheap wine that doesn't offend my inner scientist (why would I pay to drink ethanol and grape juice when I could make it for free at work?), helps cool one down on a hot day, and doesn't do a number on my wallet. That's a solid wine in my book.

That's it for this week! It's shorter than the last Yummy in My Tummy, and future entries will probably be somewhere between this one and the first one in terms of length and depth. To make up for the simplicity of this week's recipe, I leave you all with a question: What is your favorite summer salad? Leave recipe suggestions in the comments!

Peace, love, and pomegranates,
Rachel

Thursday, July 7, 2011

In Which Aristophanes Takes a Tumble

You may have noticed that I’ve been noticeably absent from my blog lately, and I feel dreadful about it. I promised you tons and tons of new posts (and believe me, there is plenty to write about), and yet I have not delivered on any of them. I feel as rotten as a politician.

But I have an excuse.

Well, several excuses, really, but there is one big one that totally takes the cake. Beyond the whole “I’m busy” excuse (which, ironically, seems to be the same excuse that keeps interfering in my love life) – involving moves across oceans and countries, working reunions and partying with Wellesley alums, getting a driver’s license, getting in touch with old friends, and just trying to be available for a family which really does need their daughter’s help – there is something much deeper at work here.

Aristophanes, my beloved computer, broke. Again.

FFFFFUUUUUUUUUU

This is not the first time that my dear, sweet, amazing, sexy laptop took a tumble. The last major problem led to a new motherboard and new memory. This time around, though, it seems that the love of my life was out for blood: the hard drive failed.

In all honestly, I knew this was coming. Aristophanes had been dropping warnings left and right. Files were corrupting, the bios and Windows were taking a long time to boot, and things just weren’t running as smoothly as they once had. I should have had the foresight to back up all of my files. Yeah, shoulda, woulda, coulda. The point is, in a bout of impressive laziness and astounding forgetfulness, I failed to back up my computer with my (literally) thousands of images from France. Not to mention my music, my writing (which is mostly backed up, actually), and some important documents for school and life in general.

I don’t think I’ve ever wanted to cry over a piece of technology before.

Most of my life flashed before my eyes as I thought of the gigabytes upon gigabytes that might potentially be lost forever. I managed to get a new hard drive through Dell that was covered under my warranty, and my family bought a copy of Windows 7 for me to install on my computer, so I soon had most things up and running again. However, I still hadn’t made any attempts to recover the data on the dead drive. I was terrified that I wouldn’t be able to salvage anything and that so many memories would be lost to hard drive heaven (or hell, I suppose).

In the end, though, I pulled my act together, mostly thanks to my dad, and took my hard drive to San Diego PC Help, where they told me that they could do a full recovery of all the data on my drive.

Huzzah!
sarah-michelle-gellar-as-buffy-the-vampire-slayer
In the immortal words of Buffy Summers, “We saved the world. I say we party.”
Now, while I have yet to receive all the data from my old hard drive and confirm that everything is indeed there, I am fairly confident that I am going to get my hands on all my important pictures and not lose all the lovely images of my year abroad. I suppose that we shall just have to wait and see, but I am choosing to be optimistic here.

So there you have it. No pictures = no updates. I don’t want to present you with massive amounts of text that, while possibly descriptive and accurate emotional descriptions of my experiences, just wouldn’t do justice to anything without some sort of personal visual aid. Therefore, expect more posts soon, dear reader, for I will eventually have my pictures sitting at my fingertips (backed up about six times), ready to be posted in awe-inspiring posts about Italy, England, and beyond!

Aristophanes has been my loyal companion for three years now, and though she has been a frustrating  and unruly mistress at times, I just can’t imagine giving her up for another model.

…I sound as though I am writing about a transsexual computer from Ancient Greece. Well, I suppose we all have our quirks.

Until the next entry, dear reader.

Bisous,
Rachel

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

A Nice Place to Visit

This


is my current desktop wallpaper. I captured this image on my most recent travels to the Most Beautiful Places in the World.

This


is what that exact same place looked like in April of this year. I think this place certainly warrants a Seasonal Lusciousness of the Year award. Or perhaps the Ugly Duckling that Grew Up into a Beautiful Lake award.

Ok, enough capitalization. It is making me seem pretentious. Also, the lake wasn't really that ugly in April. Just nowhere near as green.

These two pictures, as I mentioned, come from one of the most beautiful places I have ever been: Wellesley College. No, this is not an underwater institution, as might be suggested by these images. That, unfortunately, would be too badass to ever bring into existence. Also, the lead levels in the sediment of the lake make it not-so-safe for underwater undergraduate schools. The actual campus is on the other side of the camera, facing Lake Waban, and is one of the most prestigious colleges in the world, as well as the most well-respected women's college in the nation. I am more fortunate that I can even comprehend to be able to attend this school.

What is so sickeningly wonderful about this place is the actual, physical location of the school. It is in the town of Wellesley, or as I like to call it, upper middle-class suburbia where the nightlife is non-existent and the cheapest stores are CVS, Starbucks, and the Gap. Luckily for us Wellesley women, this means that we are surrounded by trees and pretty houses and scenic routes. We have a lake on the edge of campus. We have our own arboretum. Our buildings are Neo-Gothic and old, so they make those lovely creaking noises when you step on just the right plank of wood on the floor. There is a sense of sophistication everywhere you go - even when you go to the Science Center, which sticks out like a sore thumb and then some. And that is how you fall - hook, line, and sinker - for the school.

I am an Admissions Student Assistant during the school year, and I know for a fact that many, many high schools girls are romanced not by the academics, not by the social life, but by the red bricks of the centenarian buildings and the sweet, wafting scent of the blooming magnolias in the spring. Of course, they have already come to the school with some idea of our excellent academic reputation our unique situation in which students are very, very much in charge of their own social lives. These are the reasons for which I originally applied to Wellesley College, in fact. And these reasons are nothing to be scoffed at. However, when it comes to romancing a student, to setting her imagination ablaze with desirable images of studying on the bench near the Paramecium Pond under the shade on a nice, autumn day, of strolling around the lake just as the sun as started to set over the trees and turn the sky into dazzling shades of pinks and oranges, and of finding oneself in an impromptu snowball fight after class in a winter wonderland... yes, when it comes to all of that, Wellesley's campus cannot be beat. Simply put, my school is gorgeous.

And yet. And yet...

I think there must be some sort of agreement between the weather gods and the big wigs at Swells in that the true face of New England weather may only rear its ugly head once students have actually enrolled in the school. And I think this because the two things they never tell you about the weather are 1) the rain, and 2) the humidity.

Let's start with the rain. I've seen rain before. I've danced in the rain before. I've walked home without an umbrella in the rain before. But I had never, ever seen rain like this:


Buckets (literally, buckets) of rain falling from the sky, drenching people within seconds of stepping outside. Torrential downpours that would put monsoons to shame. Flooding that threatened to not only destroy the 2012 class tree freshly planted by the lake, but that also threatened to turn Wellesley from a beautiful forest dotted with buildings to a swamp that required swamp boats like the one in The Waterboy to get around. I honestly thought rain like that was only used in movies for epic battle sequences (reference: Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers) or make-out scenes (references: The Notebook and Match Point).

Ok, so I exaggerate a little, but when you have to walk across that campus to get to class at 8:30 am, and it's pouring down rain, you'll know exactly how I feel.

You will also come to understand the exact need for rain boots.

When I was a naive, foolish thing, I was under the distinct impression that rain boots were for fashionable, young mothers who wanted their children to be extra prepared and super cute in the event that it ever even drizzled outside. To me, galoshes were just part of the rain wardrobe, along with the bright yellow rain coat/poncho and the bright yellow sailor's hat. Everything matched, and everything was made with extra special care to make that your child never, ever had to get wet. Even though she or he was probably dying to rip the darn things off and go streaking through the rain-soaked streets. Oh-ho-ho, how wrong I was.

Along with more winter clothes that I believed anyone ever needed, galoshes were my first major clothing purchase after moving to the east coast.

Now, let's move on to our second topic: humidity. To someone from Southern California, like myself, humidity is a vague concept that usually means that the marine layer has not burned away yet, or that it might rain at some point later in the day if we're really lucky. It is also something that only comes onstage during the last act of the year when the temperature actually dips below 65 degrees and everyone complains about the cold and the clouds (this is called winter in SoCal).

Meanwhile, in Wellesley, and apparently in the rest of Massachusetts as well, humidity is something that never goes away, and is most noticeable when you most wish it would evaporate (no pun intended), notably in the summer. Here, in Boston and its surrounding suburbs, the humidity is as much likely to get your shirt completely wet as the rain is. 85 degree Fahrenheit weather, sun, and humidity mean more sweat than you ever thought possible for one person to secrete in a 30-minute period.

My boss is from the southern tip of Sweden, so we are both originally from climates that experience dry heat. The idea that you can step outside and feel like you are breathing in water when you haven't jumped into a pool yet is at once bewildering and frightening to the two of us. Try asking us about the weather sometime after we have just walked to work. You shall get more than earful.

Seriously, I would not have changed my mind about coming to study at Wellesley if I had known about the rain and the humidity, but I would have liked to know that I was moving into a giant greenhouse before I showed up here. I especially would have liked to know that, in the summer, the humidity seems to double in evilness. I would have stocked up on t-shirts to sweat through if I had known it would be so humid. I also would have bought a snorkeling mask because it honestly feels like I am swimming some days when the humidity reaches levels known and "unbearable" and "ludicrous."

But maybe I am just prone to complaining. My mother certainly used to think so when I was younger.

In summary, I love Wellesley. I believe it is the only place where I could be half as successful and well-rounded as I have become. There is no other institution in the world where I could meet such wonderful people, receive such an excellent education, and experience such breathtaking views as the picture at the beginning of this post. But I could never live here. I could never take up permanent residence here. I need somewhere that looks like this when you look one way:


and like this when you look the other way:


And this is what it looks like in the middle of January.

Call me spoiled, but San Diego, home of In-N-Out and authentic Mexican food, will always be my one true home.