My in-laws are in town. They, and the rest of us at The Compound, gave your ziti with two cheeses all thumbs up. Thanks!
Tag: compound
I am, therefore, I bitch
Maybe it’s because I’m sleep deprived, but it feels like nothing has been working here. Dying phones. My desktop won’t stay connected or hesitates every couple of minutes. I’m having the same trouble with my laptop at Tim’s that he’s been having with signal strength from the wireless router. On The Compound, if it’s communication-related, it’s faltering. And Mercury isn’t even in retrograde. Yet.
After waking from a post-client session/post-writers’ conference call nap (and missing my window of opportunity to go with Tom to Rich’s to watch Lindsey and Rhonda make fools of themselves to raise money), I decided to check into this signal problem we’re having. Based on research I accomplished during the five minutes that my computer worked, some geek (I say that with the utmost respect) recommended something called a “repeater.” Since my car is in the suburbs with Tim, I walked to Office Max to check on this “repeater” thing.
(By the way, my car also has problems. I can’t make the driver’s door electric lock or window work, not a good thing when I do all my pharmacy and banking at a drive-through. And Jack in the Box. Will I have to go inside for a sourdough Jack? Is it worth it? Tom says the car problem is not a fuse. It must be something that will cost at least $300 at the dealer, because I never get away from there without spending a minimum of $300. They think I should be happy because they have Starbucks coffee and a massage therapist on site who’ll give me a 15-minute neck-and-shoulder massage. Um, I know the second-best massage therapist in Houston whose rate is $75/hour, and I can get out of Starbucks drive-through at less than five dollars a trip. Or at least I could when I could lower my car window.)
On the way to Office Max, I fended off some kind of bug attack. Too big to be a mosquito (though there were plenty of those), too small to be a palmetto bug tree roach. Very big men in very big pickup trucks playing very loud music were driving through the ‘hood. What is it with big white rednecks and hip hop? Who are they kidding? They don’t intimidate me as much as having to pass one of those fuzzy little dogs on the sidewalk. (Note to self: Consider therapy for emotional damage caused by Cujo/ Creep/ Chocolate/ whatever his name really was.)
Then I jaywalked. Ha! I’m such a lawbreaker. Bring it on, hip hop rednecks.
Office Max was closed. Sort of. The exit door was still open, so I slid in and asked the cashier if they were closed. I have become my own retail nightmare. I just know she was thinking, No, dumbass, we have those bars across the door because we’re open. When she asked what I needed, I lied and told her phone batteries, because I couldn’t remember the word “repeater.”
After she graciously directed me toward the phone batteries, I found another employee and used really technical terms like “some thing that makes your wireless signal stronger that I can’t remember the name of.” He called someone else on his Office Max radio.
Those Office Max people are like cops; has anyone else ever noticed that? They’re always radioing each other. I’ll bet when no customers are around, they make that “donging” noise from Law and Order. Plus their breakroom probably has a two-way mirror and a box of stale Krispy Kremes. They could have taken me back and roughed me up for jaywalking if they hadn’t been trying to close.
The answer that Employee Two came up with was not “repeater.” It was something else. They didn’t have it in stock.
I guiltily went to the phone battery aisle. I’d actually looked at the battery pack of my dying phone earlier, so there was a remote chance I might buy the right thing, even though I didn’t have any information with me.
Paid for the battery pack. They had to unlock the door to let me out. At which point, Employee One morphed from cop wannabe to Bill the Cat, made a hairball/ack noise, and said, “Bug! On her back!” Hitchhiking bastard. Employee Three knocked it off, and I walked home.
I noted how many houses in the ‘hood:
1. Still have their tape up from Hurricane Rita. Hurricane season is like necktie widths. Wait long enough, and you look like you’re on the cusp of a trend instead of behind the times. I learned this trick from my father and my Uncle Dwight. Unfortunately, I don’t wear neckties. And I don’t want tape on my windows all year.
2. Have grass. Grass makes me bitter. I wouldn’t give up my trees to have grass, but I used to actually live in a state where you could have trees AND grass. Crazy.
3. Have fences that are falling in. Maybe I should rubberband that Robert Frost poem that says, “Good fences make good neighbors” to their gates. Except they’d probably just think it’s the fortieth Chinese takeout menu of the week and throw it away.
4. Have dogs watching me from windows. Including the one where two red mini dachshunds jumped on the back of the sofa and used their little German barks to tell me that if they could only get to me, they’d bite my ankle. Yeah, yeah. You’re not fuzzy? I don’t fear you. I’m a jaywalker, bitches.
Got home. Restarted my computer three times to try to make it work. All the lights on the cable modem showed it should be working, but I still couldn’t connect. I finally unhooked everything from the modem and restarted it. That worked. Once. I wrote this LJ entry. When I got ready to publish it? Not connected anymore. It’s Saturday night, 9 p.m. Let’s see when this thing actually makes it to my Live Journal.* There will be a correlation between the time lapse and the number of new gray hairs on my head that Tim will have to color when he returns from keeping dogs alive in the suburbs.
By the way, the phone battery pack? THE RIGHT SIZE! I suppose my luck could change…
*11:49 p.m. Two reboots and one firewall adjustment later…
Around The Compound
I don’t know what time I went to bed last night. I was really tired. I know Rex was all WTF?!? when I put him in his crate, as it was definitely many hours before Tim’s usual bedtime.
I then got my pillow and a quilt from downstairs and stretched out on Tim’s bed. (Not under your covers, not using your pillows, so it’ll be like I was never there. You know I hate making Tom do more laundry. Heh.)
I fell asleep quickly, but I woke up about every two hours and tortured myself trying to figure out what time it was. Finally, just before six, I got up and released Rex, who once again had that WTF?!? expression on his face. It was mirrored on Margot’s face when Rex and I took a walk around the yard. I spotted her staring out the Home Office window at me. In her case, the WTF?!? look was her sense of betrayal that I’d spent the night out with another dog. Somewhere inside, I’m sure Guinness was just thinking, “Is it time for breakfast yet?”
During the course of the night, my dreams let me know everything I’m stressed about. For example, I dreamed that I was filling my car with gas. Even though the gas was $1.67 a gallon (cue Rex’s WTF?!?! face here), it cost the guy in front of me over $300 to fill his truck.
I also dreamed that I needed to turn off the air conditioner. I don’t know why, because I damn sure wasn’t cold at Tim’s. Here at The Compound, we’re keeping the thermostats between 85 and 90, and I’m still thinking we’ll need to pimp out Tim to pay the utility bills in July, August, September, and October. Any takers? (Right now, in the suburbs, Tim’s face just got the WTF?!? look.)
I also dreamed about the TJB5 manuscript in progress. Which was kind of good, because I’ll probably get a chapter out of what I dreamed. Although I’m sort of 0 for 4 on pleasing my writing partners with what I’ve written so far.
WTF?!?
Confidential to redleatherbound
The secret’s in the skillet. Seasoned. Cast iron.
Real buttermilk. And whether you use a mix or make your own, no sugar. NO SUGAR.
Don’t overmix your batter. Coat your skillet with bacon grease and GET SKILLET HOT (either on a burner or in your oven) before you pour the batter in. A hot skillet is key. Use a drop of water or a pinch of cornmeal and listen for the sizzle. Did I mention there’s no sugar in the mix?
Place in a 400-degree oven and keep an eye on it. Most mixes (cake or cornbread) shouldn’t bake as long as the directions call for. Knowing that will always prevent dryness. By the way: cake mix? Sugar. Cornbread mix? No sugar.
Golden on the top.
Brown on the bottom.
Light. Not dry. And NOT SWEET. Because there’s no sugar.
To those Southern cooks who might scoff at me for using a mix, I say, “People have wept over my cornbread.” And to those who use sugar, I weep over your cornbread. (Sorry, Shawn!)
I gotta get out of this place
Timothy has taken my car and run off to the suburbs for a few days, leaving the Most Rexcellent Dog here. This is the result:
And he isn’t even wearing his flashdance legwarmer, which might at least help him feel a little jaunty.
No good deed goes unpunished
There’s a bug in this room, and I didn’t kill it because I was having some kind of zen moment. It wasn’t a roach (Lindsey), just some innocuous bug. But you just know the little bastard will eventually crawl over my foot, scare me, and start a chain of events that will end in tears or curses.
Ah, that chicory…
What the hell is chicory, anyway? This link tells you, if you’re interested.
Anyway, as Tim explained in his LJ, today we got a gift from seahorsemystic. OH MY. To treat Tim, AND Tom, AND me, to cover all our birthdays for the year, to just be the giver she is, we have chicory coffee (regular and decaf) from New Orleans’s Cafe’ Du Monde, along with a coffee mug, a coffee cup, a souvenir coffee cup that’s so cute it immediately went into my “special” curio cabinet, and an apron with an illustration of the famous coffee stand.
Now why would one need an apron? Because when one makes beignets from the mix that also came in the gift basket, one will need to fend off all that powdered sugar.
Lindsey, it’s on! Beignet fry-fest when everyone’s done with their traveling. Shannon, we will lift a coffee cup to you. You’re so kind. Thank you.
How we spent Memorial Day
I wrote, then we went to a delicious cookout at Neighbor Mike’s (Yes, even Tim; it’s starting to scare you, isn’t it, that he’s leaving The Compound so often?), where:
see photos