Entries by Frau A (293)

Friday
Feb112011

Cool Timelapse Video of Antarctic Expedition

Very cool video of the 54th Russian Antarctic Expedition, shot using time lapse photography.

I want to go there so badly....it's my last continent to visit, and I'd love to see the Emperor Penguins. Need to get my dry suit certification first, though!

РАЭ-54 с борта НЭС "Академик Фёдоров" from North Pole on Vimeo.

via GeekoSystem

A short overview of the expedition can be found here (using Google translate)

Thursday
Feb102011

Why I Must Watch More TV

I find myself in a very strange situation these days. For the first time in life, I am trying to force myself to watch more television.  My goal is to get in several hours a day. It's surprisingly hard.

I’ve watched relatively little TV here, partly because my German has been too poor to understand the local TV and partly because much German TV is just American series dubbed in German. Once you've become used to an actor’s voice, it’s very distracting to watch them with a strange German voice attached!

But now I must watch more TV and movies, to improve my German.  Luckily, my cable box has an integrated DVR, so I accomplished Step One weeks ago…programming some German shows to watch. The Step Two of actually watching them has been more difficult.

So, I’m beginning with what was a 2 week nightly German event – "Ich bin ein Star – Holt mich hier aus!", Germany’s version of the British show "I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here!"…and then moving on to some other classics such as "Bauer Sucht Frau" (the dating show “Farmer seeks Woman”), and Doctor’s Diary, a prime time soap with the slogan “Men are the Best Medicine.”

And of course, there are a couple of disaster movies, with this week's premiere of the long-awaited miniseries Hindenburg.

Look forward to some posts from the couch…

Thursday
Feb102011

iPhone Apps

Ok, I am the last person who should be promoting iPhone apps, since all I currently have is a plain old mobile phone with a pre-paid SIM card…..But this is something I would issue to all first year analysts or anyone starting to work in finance or real estate.  Latham & Watkins has done a few of them - all free - for Banking and European Banking.

  

I wonder if it has the real finance jargon like “open the kimono,” “come to Jesus meetings,” “a little bit pregnant,” and many of the phrases that Goldman Sachs has banned from emails?

Wednesday
Feb092011

Mmmm....Mexican Food

Food in Munich has been a pleasant surprise - Not only is Bavarian food quite tasty, but Munich also has an incredible variety of cuisines available. There is great Thai, Afghan, Persian, Italian, French, Vegetarian, Spanish, and even some good old American burgers and ribs.  There is not, however, much good Mexican. There are some Mexican restaurants here, but they are most loved for their cocktails - the food is only a side to help absorb the sugar and alcohol.

El Gordo Loco has always been pretty good and authentic, and if you ask nicely, they'll make frozen margaritas from scratch. Luckily, we have a new Mexican restaurant in the neighborhood - Milagros, between the Viktualienmarkt and Isartor. It's great food and very authentic Mexican - and the margarita menu is impressive. Both restaurants are Mexican, not Tex-Mex. And I recommend reservations....they're small, and fill up quickly.

For the most part, however, you just have to cook Mexican or Tex Mex yourself. Finding the ingredients, however, is not easy....we have many Asian markets carrying almost everything you could want, but I've only found two Mexican stores: Mercado de Mexico near Donnersbergerbrücke and La Tortilla out in Unterschleißheim. I asked the lady at the cheese counter if she could suggest a cheese that I could use in cooking Mexican food or for quesadillas. She just looked at me, frowned, and said there are none. I highly doubt that, but I got a similar reaction from the butcher when I asked what cut of beef he would recommend for satay. He informed me that you cannot make satay with beef, only with chicken.  Much of Thailand and Indonesia would disagree, but...he's the expert, right????

Herr J gave me a great cocktail shaker at Christmas, so margaritas were a good first test.

I came home from Mercado de Mexico overjoyed at finding queso blanco, tomatillo sauce, canned and dried chiles, and homemade (frozen) white corn tortillas. Using some rotisserie chicken, white cheddar, and tomatillo sauce, i threw together some tasty enchiladas verde, topped with queso blanco. Yum, and so easy! Using some extra chicken and cheeses (we had some yellow cheddar left from cheeseburgers last week and some chips from turkey taco salad), I threw together some chicken nachos as a snack. A tasty treat, and very cute served in cazuelas.

We started with the classic margarita recipe of 3 parts lime juice, 2 parts tequila, and 1 part Cointreau. Perfect! Using up the last of the lime juice, the second ones were a little too limey and tequila-y, so we added a splash of Licor 43 (the secret ingredient to our traditional Dallas Easter Sangria). A very tasty twist on the classic margarita! And it will sweeten it and cut the tequila taste.

Another Tex-Mex fave of mine is Brisket Tacos. I have to order them every time I go to Taco Diner or Manny's in Dallas - no point in even looking at the menu.... 

So, a couple days later, I decided to use some more of the tortillas and give brisket tacos a try. Homesick Texan recently published a great recipe on her site, and it looked pretty good. Surprisingly, it worked perfectly! I still hadn't found fresh chiles to roast, so we just went with the meat, gravy, and queso blanco. They were soooo good! I'm definitely going to make them again. No changes needed to this recipe - for those of you in Germany, the tafelspitz cut of beef is the closest match to brisket. I used a hunk of tafelspitz and a hunk of rinderbrust. Both cooked perfectly, but the rinderbrust has too much fat running through it.

The cooked meat will also freeze well, to pull out for a very easy impressive dinner.

After the empandas, tacos, and enchiladas, I'm inspired to try some other new dishes. Borracho beans (in the crockpot) are high on the list, and I'd like to experiment with some other taco fillings and make some homemade tortillas.  There is a defintely a Cinco de Mayo party on the horizon this year!

Tuesday
Feb082011

Fun with Science at Home

Since the typical German refrigerator is the size of an American college student's dorm fridge, there isn't much room for storing drinks. I've been keeping my drinks "refrigerated" by just leaving them on the balcony, where the temperature has been consistently below freezing for the past week.

Though the beer holds up well, we find an interesting reaction when I open a new bottle of Diet Coke ("Cola Light over here").... as soon as I open it and pour, it immediately turns into a Coke Slushie.  See it here:

Herr J immediately recognized this as "supercooling" the liquid.  The concept is this:  a liquid's freezing point is the temperature at which the free molecules "want" to stop being free and "prefer" to get themselves into a tighter, crystalline formation (because we've taken energy -- measured as temperature -- away from them).  As soon as just one set of cooling moelcules forms a crystal, the others will start forming more crystals right next to the first one.  BUT, if you have a relatively pure liquid and don't disturb it during the freezing process, the free molecules just might hang out in their freer liquid state well below the temperature at which they would normally crystallize.

This is definitely something anyone can do at home... get the kids to like science by making a Slushie!  Wonder if Cool-Aid would work, or if that has too many particles in the water...

In fact, there are a number of neat examples on YouTube where people supercooled water.  In this one, the guy cooled water down to -21 Celsius!  Notice how gingerly he holds & pours the water out -- so as not to disturb it too much.  The disturbance ends up being the water coming into contact with the bowl itself, where it immediately freezes with a cool effect (sorry about the pun).


Then we have this shirtless (Dutch?) guy who is pretty excited about his discovery.  He also "pours" gingerly so the disturbance is the water hitting the ice cube.  "This is not an optical illusion, this is for real!" says the surfer-scientist.

  

Finally, in this example, we see the entire process of doing this at home.  The water is only cooled to a little below freezing point, so it doesn't crystallize as quickly as in the other videos.  However, you can see that all it takes is a tap on the bottle to get the whole chain reaction going.  And notice that some of the bottles did freeze outside rather than become supercooled (probably because they had extra minerals/particulates in them to get the freezing started)  Warning:  the creator felt compelled to use "Ice Ice Baby" as the audio track.  Mute is advised.

Monday
Feb072011

Cool Guy DIY

If anyone knows of a good really high paying job, let me know.  (or any good real estate job in Munich that will take someone not fluent...)

Herr J hopes I'll find something that pays obscenely so he can stay home and eat bon-bons and do man stuff like build things in the back yard.

I'd be OK with this plan, as he's a really great cook. And of course I'd have all kinds of cool things in the back yard.

Wood Fired Pizza Oven

Photo by David Sheridanvia Serious Eats 

(You can find some instructions online at FornoBravo)

 

DIY Cotton Candy Machine

Herr J swears it's really easy...

Kitty Crack

I admit I'm a little intrigued to see the results of distilling catnip extract, though given that it involves steam distillation and a toluene bath, it seems a little wrong to be making meth for your pets. But hey, as long as they like it....(don't worry, catnip extract is safe for the cats).

Amusing step by step instructions are at Instructables

 

 

  Though I'm afraid this all would involve multiple trips to the ER and end in projects like this:

Homemade Backyard Rollercoaster

DIY Rocket Sled

Homemade Batman Tumbler

 

It's both good and bad to have an engineer in the house....

Sunday
Feb062011

More Fun with Maps

Along the same lines as the international stereotype maps and US States by TV and movies, there are several fun US maps floating around out there right now.  Sure we can argue with a lot of the data and how they're drawn, but these are just for fun. Yes, I'm a bit of a geography geek and love fun maps.

These maps would lead us to some unusual (and completely unsubstantiated) stereotypes... 

Utah is full of very healthy people, who watch a lot of porn and basketball instead of Jeopardy and have the Highest Reported Wellbeing. Must be the green Jell-O they eat...

Illinois wins the prize for being the most average, which they are...pizza lovers of average health level and of average Jeopardy watching, but with the 5th largest GDP, the most robbery and a great interest in Lotto (hmmm...is there a connection?).

Poor Mississippi...growing up 20 years ago in Georgia, which was often ranked 49th in most positive stats and 2nd or 3rd in the bad ones, we often said "Thank goodness for Mississippi!" In its defense, I quite enjoyed the little time I spent in Oxford...great food, art, and bookstores. But the great Mississippi literary tradition is forgotten here, and instead we see the state portrayed as large, pie-eating, churchgoing, football watching, Jeopardy freaks living in a state with the GDP of Bangladesh.

Texas, as usual, is a bit of a contradiction...though it seems to be full of high school dropouts, it has the 2nd largest state economy (on par with Russia's), the most wind power production, and apparently is very well-fed by steak. We could have a whole blog on Texas, of course, and it is a pretty interesting example economically of doing things right. On the educational side, well...TX is kind of a mess right now...but they are doing something right in terms of innovation, business, and jobs. I'm afraid to ask if the autocomplete "Texas Rangers" is for the baseball team, for law enforcement, or for Chuck Norris.

First we have The United States of Shame, showing stats at which each state ranks 50th (or 1st, where it's a negative statistic).

via Neatorama, original and source data at Pleated Jeans

 

But Ilya Gerna has made a United States of Awesome map to balance out the shame, showing where each state ranks first in something positive.

via Neatorama

  

And a bit less scientific, the map displaying what Google suggests first to autocomplete when the state name is typed into the search function:    

via Strange Maps

 

One that has been in the news often is the Obesity Map

via CalorieLab

And one that might help explain the Obesity Map, the map of foods representing each state

via EdibleCrafts

 

The original, interactive version is on The Economist website, and also has one by population. Most shocking to me is that Italy has a bigger economy than Russia. I guess it shouldn't be that suprising, but my guess would have been that all the oil and gas and minerals would have put Russia higher.

via Neatorama

 

And finally, the map of Jeopardy fans...

via Strange Maps