Saturday, December 31, 2011

Lynnae's Orange Biscuits

This is the recipe as it was printed in the Daily Sun News of Sunnyside, WA on Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. It was printed at the end of a column about responses that reporters get, written in response to a request for the recipe. The column was not published on the website of the newspaper.



Lynnae's Orange Biscuits

1/2 cup butter or margarine
1-1/2 cup orange juice
1-1/2 cup sugar
2 teaspoons grated orange peel
4 cups flour
6 teaspoons baking powder
1 scant teaspoon salt
7 to 8 generous tablespoons shortening
1 1/2 cups milk

Combine butter, orange juice, sugar and orange peel in saucepan. Cook and stir overmedium heat until sugar is dissolved. Pour into 9x13 baking pan.

Combine flour, baking powder and salt; cut in shortening until finely incorporated. Add milk, stir until dough follows fork. Knead on lightly floured board until dough holds together, being careful not to over handle the dough, roll about 1/4 inch thick. Brush with soft butter, sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon. Roll as for jelly roll. Cut into slices, place cut side down in orange juice/sugar mixture in pan. Bake at 450 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes or until golden brown on top.



For the record, I haven't received any response to that column yet. We'll have to see if it happens. However, I did go ahead and make the recipe today for my brunch. Since Eric isn't here at the moment, I halved the recipe. It came out excellent. It feels a little like blasphemy, because mom usually made more than one batch and halving it ... wow.

Half Batch of Orange Biscuits

Orange Biscuits are best served fresh out of the oven with a side of eggs and sausage. They are best on Christmas Day, served after presents have been opened. To serve, scoop up one or more of the biscuits with a large spoon and turn them over onto a plate, so the orange sauce is on top. Use the spoon to capture more orange sauce in the bottom of the pan and dribble it over the biscuits.

In the unlikely event you have leftovers, store them covered in the fridge until somebody eats them. They can be heated for about a minute in a microwave oven to get back much of their glory.

See this post for the story on how my mother came up with the recipe. If you make these, PLEASE let me know. I want to hear what you think. For me and my family it is not only an excellent breakfast, it's a cherished tradition. But I love to hear other opinions.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Why I'm Not Posting

I keep meaning to write posts, and I keep delaying. The main reason is that I'm busy working, and once I get home I'm not really all that inclined to do more writing.

The secondary reason is that I'm still getting the hang of being an actual journalist, and I don't want to mess up and write something I really ought not to be writing about here. At the moment I don't think many people who read my work in the newspaper are aware that I also have a blog, but I'm sure that will change if I do anything stupid.

So why don't I talk about my Christmas... that's a fairly safe topic.

Christmas Day

Eric and I got up lazily when we felt like it on Christmas morning. We attended church together, and once home we made orange biscuits using my mother's recipe. And yes, it was a "we" effort. Eric made the sauce, then helped me roll up the biscuits. The orange biscuits were REALLY good, and there's a story about them I'm going to tell as soon as I'm done with the main Christmas day events.

After our late breakfast/brunch, we opened presents. We did not get presents for each other, but both sets of our parents sent a package, so we opened those. From my in-laws I got a few months supply of my dark chocolate and some other very nice gifts. From my mother (and sister, I gather) I got a flying shark. We watched the second half of Gone With the Wind, which I had never seen before. And that was about it.

Orange Biscuits

Now, a few days before Christmas I wrote a column in the editorial pages about what Christmas means to me, and mentioned (twice) the scratch-made orange biscuits that my mom used to make. The column was printed on Wednesday, and on Thursday I got a call from a person VERY interested in the recipe for the orange biscuits. So I contacted mom, asked her permission to print it, and wrote up a column on responses I'd gotten to my writing since coming to work for the newspaper. Mom promised to send me an updated version of the recipe that included changes she just automatically makes when she makes them herself, but forgot to write into the recipe.

So I got the updated recipe before Christmas and decided that before I print it, I ought to at least make it again for myself... and it was delicious. I told Mom so, and she told me how the recipe came about. I may end up using it for a future column, but I don't think so. So I guess I'll write that little tale here for everyone to enjoy.

Mom said she was working at the hospital when she turned 16, and there was an older lady who worked in the kitchen who made the pastries and such, and had her own corner of the kitchen. Mom said the woman's orange biscuits were a favorite, and when she made them she wouldn't allow anyone in her corner, jealously guarding her secret recipe. But the biscuits, oh, they went fast when they were put out. So mom did some experimenting. She started with a fairly standard cinnamon roll recipe for the biscuits, and worked on the sauce, altering it and adding to it and trying to get the balance just right. Eventually she came up with the recipe that had her children scrambling for the stuff every Christmas morning, and remembering the dish with awe and happiness.

Flying Shark

Whew. Now, on to the flying shark. I mentioned on this blog that I wanted one a few months ago, and my mom came through with flying... er... sharks. I was tickled, but not really sure what to do with the thing. I mean, a flying shark!

So yesterday after I got off work, Eric and I went down to the grocery store and got it filled with helium. The folks at the store weren't sure how much to charge, because it's a tad larger than the typical 18 inch mylar balloon. So they charged me $5, which I felt was reasonable, and I went home with the very light and amusing shark which Eric dubbed "Bruce".

Once home, I attached the various bits and bobs to the thing that make it fly properly. It was a bit of a job, and I messed up some of it. But overall I didn't do too bad. The quality of the equipment seems really flimsy, but it was made to be very light so it can fly, and I think it's not all that bad. Ask me again once it has run out of helium and I have to refill it. Once I was done I used the remote to chase Eric around the house, although he didn't really run. Bruce is fairly ineffective, bumping up against people instead of gripping and shredding with his painted-on jaws.

The shark seemed heavy enough to stay put, as it wasn't really floating above the couch. When we went upstairs to bed, the shark was downstairs, sitting on the back of the couch looking very calm and collected.

In the morning I got up and opened the door to our bedroom and screeched a little, slamming the door. Eric asked what was happening, and I opened the door again to see Bruce the shark floating at eye level right outside our upstairs bedroom. I couldn't really think of Eric pulling that particular trick on me, and besides, Bruce was floating, so it was fairly clear he'd gotten up there on his own.

When I posted about the event on Facebook, Garret posted this link to a similar story with a less happy ending.

Shark at Work

This morning I decided that I couldn't possibly take Bruce to work, and didn't. I did tell my flying shark story to my office mate, and she was a little amused and more bemused. At lunchtime I debated, but not for long. I couldn't take Bruce in my car, so I took Eric's car back to work with Bruce in the back seat.

Once at work I spotted one of the gals in the ad department in the parking lot and enlisted her help in getting the flying shark safely into the building. It really does not like being outside in the wind. It feels very much like it's going to blow away no matter how hard you hold onto it. She got me into the press room, which is the large part of the building where the printing press is set up. It was running off today's paper when we got in, and I let the shark go immediately and used the remote to make it swim around the air in the large room. It was very neat, as there was plenty of room to maneuver in there. The folks of the press room were amused at Bruce, and then we took him down the hall.

Word got ahead of me, so the ladies in the front office weren't at all surprised to see the floating shark, but we hid Bruce around a corner and waited for the other ad gal to walk down a corridor before the shark swam out at her and startled her good. No one else was really surprised until my editor came back from lunch, then my office mate and I managed to get him while his back was turned. I was afraid for the health of the shark for a bit there, but the editor returned it in one piece.

I also managed to startle one of the other reporters, and got the publisher making jokes about land sharks for some time. I overheard the ad lady I surprised telling someone on the phone that "one of the reporters is attacking people with her pet shark!" I was warned not to leave Bruce in the office overnight, as other balloons had moved around enough to trigger the alarm. Which was fine with me, I had no intention of leaving him there, but at least I had a bit of fun.

The editor suggested I take the shark to the senior center tomorrow, since I'm headed over there for a story. Hmmmm....

Anyway, that's my tales for the moment. I'll endeavor to write more regularly now, if I can just get my willpower working again.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Famous People Go See "Wicked"

A new series! Number one: Mark Evanier.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Simon's Cat for the Holidays

Sunday, December 18, 2011

A Sunday Review

My NetGalley book this week was Seraphina by Rachel Hartman. A gifted young musician attempts to hide her dark secret while trying to solve a major mystery. Rachel Hartman is best known in my circles as the writer and artist of Amy Unbounded. But with this novel she's taken the plunge into a different world, and in the process fleshed out Amy's world unexpectedly. Yes, the novel is set in Goreed, no, Amy does not appear. But a couple of other familiar characters do, and the result is something that will please Amy's fans while still appealing to a whole new audience. I can't speak to the details of the book yet, though I plan on writing a more thorough review. Let's just say this is the kind of book that you read once, set aside for a bit, then reread with a great deal of joy. I haven't found such an appealing read in awhile, and I'm actually excited that I'm going to read it again. Parts of the novel remind me of Bujold's Chalion series, in a good way. And parts are very much Hartman's old style, also in a good way. I want to read the sequel, and my only real regret about this book is that the official edition won't be out until summer. In the meantime, get ready, fans of Amy Unbounded will want to read this, fans of young adult fiction will want to read this and fans of well-designed fantasy worlds will want to read it as well. Put it on your wish lists now.



This week's comic book related review is Brody's Ghost Volume 1 by Mark Crilley. A total slacker wins a staring contest with a ghost, and suddenly is drawn into an unexpected world. I like the art, of course. Not Crilley's old style, but it's still got that strong sense of storytelling and clean lines. The main character is kind of annoying, but he grows on you. The ghost... well, she's really annoying, but that's the way she needs to be for the story to work. If you are looking for Akiko, you won't find it here. But this is something just as good in its own right.



Agatha Christie this week was Postern of Fate in 1973. Tommy and Tuppence move into a new home, only to find mystery is still around them. I enjoyed this final tale of the pair of investigators. I like how they casually talk with one another, so linked. And I figured out some of the mystery, although not all of it. I regret that I'm so close to the end of Christie's works. I wish I could do what Holly did in Red Dwarf and just erase my memory of the whole lot and start over again. They are that good. I wonder if there are any mystery writers out there that even come close?



Friday, December 16, 2011

Flu Shot

The first time I got the flu shot, I got violently ill soon after. It's hard to remember after all these years, but I was pretty sick. It had to be coincidence.

The second time I got the flu shot, I got violently ill soon after. Again, it was a long time ago, so I don't remember exact symptoms, but they matched the flu pretty closely. Despite a real possibility that it was coincidence, I resolved to never get a flu shot again.

The third time I got the flu shot, I was talked into it by my doctor. And sure enough, I got violently ill soon after. As with the other times, it was long enough ago that I don't remember it too clearly, but I recall complaining to my doctor that I'd gotten the flu from the flu shot. I again resolved to not get a flu shot again.

This year, many years after my last flu shot, I chatted with a Department of Health official as part of my new job as journalist (four months, yay!) and she was really curious about my story. She suggested it might have been the formula used, which has changed in the last few years. She asked me to consider getting a flu shot and seeing if it happened again, and reporting it all to her. I didn't have money for the shot, nor did my insurance kick in until later, so I waited and thought it over very carefully.

Yesterday I saw my doctor (insurance, yay!) and when she asked if I wanted a flu shot, I said yes, explaining my history with the thing to her. So, at 2:15 on Dec. 15, 2011, I got the latest flu shot. We will now see if I get any symptoms at all, and after a month I will report to the health official and let her know how it went.

So far, so good.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Just an Update

It's been cold here. Not as cold as I've ever felt, but certainly a bit chilly. I'm experiencing freezing fog for only the third or fourth time in my life. It's strange, like snow that doesn't fall, just sticks wherever it feels like.

In the last week I went to Rotary (guest speaker was sick), the Port meeting, a grief ceremony at a local hospice, a Christmas celebration to interview a former member of the Billy Graham crusades, a local business that's being sold soon and this morning I went to a cemetery for a wreath laying ceremony in the freezing fog. I've also had a mammogram, had blood drawn, interviewed one of our carriers about her efforts to self-publish a book of poems and listened to a telephone town hall with politicians whose ideas I mostly disagree with, then had to write a fair article about the call. Today I still have a museum open house and basketball games to go to, and tomorrow I need to attend a VFW dinner. And that's just this week.

I have LEGO advent calendars, TWO of them, but I haven't had time to sit and enjoy them. I also haven't had time to put together the Winkie Newsletter, which has given a couple of people a bit of consternation, I know. I'm working on it!

Monday morning, I'm going to have a minimum of seven stories to write up before 10:30 am, which is one reason I've started on as many as I can right now. Thank goodness for basketball coaches who get back to you quickly! All of my teams and the team I'm taking over while one of the other reporters is on vacation have two games each this weekend.

So life is busy. And I'm enjoying it, mostly, quite a bit.

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

Spam Attack!

I think the spammers believe I'm gone from here, because they are doing their best to load up my comments with unsolicited commercial links. Ha. Good thing I moderate.

Sorry I haven't written more. Been surprisingly busy.