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The Tower of the Americas & Hemisfair Park in San Antonio, Texas

So, in continuation with the amazing week-long vacation that I took with my honey in the lovely city of San Antonio, Texas, recently, one stop that we made was at the Tower of the Americas and the adjoining Hemisfair Park. 

The Tower is a 750-foot observation tower/restaurant and offers the most breathtaking views of the city on a clear day.  We did happen to go up on a clear day, as you’ll see from the pictures below.  Also, the Hemisfair Park is a beautifully manicured set of lawns and grounds that evidently hosted the World’s Fair in 1968.  For more on the official site of these two venues, click here.  Lovely views on a lovely day.  See for youself: 

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Coconut Milk Matar Pulao (Fried Rice): A Recipe, For a Change!

So, I visited with an old friend over the weekend, and brought her some Coconut Milk Matar Pulao (Fried Rice) that I’d made the night before.  Leftovers, really, that I took her, but she’s been raving about it and has asked for a recipe, so I thought I’d put down some approximations that will, I hope, translate to a half-decent recipe. 

3 cups Basmati
1 can of Coconut Milk
1 frozen bag of Peas & Carrots
Cooking Oil – Canola is good

For the tempered seasoning:  Cumin (teaspoonful), Cardomom (4-5 small green ones), Cinnamon Sticks (a couple will do); two Bay Leaves; Salt to taste

Get a nice broad flat-bottomed pot.  Place on stove, get it somewhat hot, then pour about 3 tablespoons of oil.  In moments the oil will be hot enough (but not smoking-hot!).  Add the ingredients in the order listed to create your tempered seasoning.  Everything should be done real fast and the cumin must instantly start to sputter, and the fragrance of the other spices should fill the air around you instantly.  Next, add your three cups of dry rice to this seasoning and stir away; within moments they’ll look toasted.  Next, open your bag of frozen veggies and add it to the rice.  Stir some more; reduce your heat a bit, if necessary, because you do not want to let the rice stick to the bottom.

Now:  put your coconut milk into a measuring cup (I use a large 4-cup measure), and to this add boiling-hot water to make a full-six cups.  Add this coconut-milk liquid to the pot, and it will come to a rolling-boil almost instantly.  Stir for a few minutes until the rice begins to cook and the liquid begins to disappear.  In a few minutes, cover the pot (lid should be secure), reduce heat to a complete simmer, and forget about it for fifteen minutes.  Do not open the lid for any reason whatsover until the fifteen minutes are up! 

When you do open the lid, you ought to be able to see each individual grain of the Basmati rice separate.  Needless to say, it mustn’t be sticky in the least.  You’ve got your Coconut Milk Matar Pulao ready to serve with anything you wish, or just as is!  Yeh Hui Na Baat!

Cocopeaspulao

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The Doobie Brothers – Long Train Runnin'

One of my all-time faves; heard it on the radio coming in to work this AM. Somebody induct them into the R&R Hall of Fame already!

Doobiebros

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Why Didn't Obama Go To Congress? – The Daily Dish

David Frum muses:

In his mind, he may have been signaling: this is a humanitarian police action (like Somalia or Bosnia), not a real war (like the Gulf war, the invasion of Afghanistan or the invasion of Iraq). But he opened the door to his critics alleging: Obama is a liberal one-worlder who thinks that a Security Council vote can substitute for American democratic processes. Did he possibly fear that Congress would say No? Is he hoping that he’ll wrap this thing up faster than the debate would have required?

Is he signaling inner discomfort with his own decision, a preference for talking about almost anything else? Or is he just recklessly forgetting the old rule: if you don’t invite them to join you at the takeoff, they won’t be there for the landing?

The other obvious explanation: there was no time. But I think this blatant breaking of a core campaign promise strengthens the hand of those insisting that this be a short, limited engagement with no troops on the ground and no alliance with rebels we scarcely know anything about.

Of course, the Republican position on this is a fantastic example of opportunism.

They loved an executive branch under Bush that declared its unilateral power to declare war and peace at will, to simply reinterpret the law as something to be gotten around rather than complied with, and that summed up its ethos in one piece of cult-lingo: “the Decider.” There was only one “moment of accountability” for the last Republican president – his re-election in 2004. In matters of war, outside the law, he was a monarch.

Nonetheless, even granting this massive piece of situational politics, I’m glad the right has now remembered the things it wilfully forgot under Bush: that you have to live within your means, and that the Congress has the ultimate say on whether to go to war. I’m also relieved to see some Democrats not shifting, in reverse fashion, to back the imperial presidency, but insisting on accountability from the executive branch.

If we are ever to restrain the Washington machine from its addiction to unfunded and unbudgeted and unending war, now is as good a time to start as any.

Didn’t feel right the first time around, and doesn’t feel right this time around either.

Libya

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We Love 1994 Old Navy!

Sweetest Priscilla / You and me in Old Navy / Two pods in a pea!

Note on picture:  My sweetest cousin in Dallas, Texas wearing the Old Navy hoodie I brought her!  Pity we didn’t take a picture together, but next time for sure!

Prisci