alex chiang: web 6.0

July 29, 2005

spicy thai sesame noodles

Filed under: food — alex @ 11:04 am

I’m going to try something new and start writing about food. The motivation behind this is that in my circle of friends, we’ve been getting together somewhat frequently (although irregularly) to hang out and make dinner. In a college town like Fort Collins, the tendency to become an alcoholic due to el cheapo $2 microbrews is strong, and so casual dinner get-togethers are an alternative way to have a social life without ruining your liver. Of course, the nice thing is, there are no rules that say you can’t drink, and so if you want to get wasted, you can, but just keep in mind that it’s an activity where drinking is an ancillary point, not primary, and that there aren’t really any societal pressures to imbibe.

That said, I’m not totally sure what I want to write about yet. I’m thinking about a mix of casual dinner “best-practices”, recipes, and wine (yes, I realize I just spent the above paragraph talking about not drinking. shut up.). If any readers out there in internet-land have any suggestions, please let me know.

In any case, last night, we had a sort of welcome home party for Jenny after her extended vacation in Hawaii. I’d heard JTag was making spring rolls with peanut sauce, so I thought that spicy peanut sesame Thai noodles would complement that well.

I used this recipe:

Ingredients:

  • 1 lb. vermicelli or thin spaghetti
  • 3 Tbsp. dark sesame oil
  • 4 green onions, cut in 1/2 inch pieces
  • 1 (1 inch) piece ginger root, pared and quartered (uh, just cut the ginger into small pieces)
  • 1/3 c. peanut butter (plain or chunky) (definitely chunky)
  • 1/4 c. soy sauce
  • 1/4 c. tap water or chicken broth (I just used water)
  • 1 Tbsp. rice or white vinegar (I used rice vinegar)
  • 1 Tbsp. salad oil
  • 1/2 tsp. crushed red pepper (I doubled up this and used 1 tsp)
  • 2 Tbsp. sugar (I used brown sugar)
  • 1 tsp minced garlic
  • sesame seeds

Directions:

  • Cook spaghetti as directed; drain and rinse with cold water.
  • Toss with 2 tablespoons sesame oil.
  • Do not rinse with cold water if you want a hot dish, just drain.
  • In food processor, finely chop garlic, green onions and ginger.
  • Add remaining sesame oil and all ingredients.
  • Process until thoroughly mixed.
  • Top each serving of vermicelli or spaghetti with amount of desired sauce.
  • sprinkle on sesame seeds to taste
  • Can be spicy.

Original recipe found at: http://recipes.epicurean.com/recipedetail.jsp?recipe_no=13492

The italics are my modifications/clarifications to the recipe.

To this, I added some chicken, maybe about 1/2 lb. The preparation of the chicken was simple:

  • cut chicken into 1/2 inch pieces (ie, stir fry size)
  • fry chicken in pan with sesame oil to taste until it turns white
  • add soy paste (not sauce!) to taste and fry for an additional 2-3 minutes for flavor

Then just toss the chicken into the noodles, add the sauce, and you’re done.

The bang for the buck on this recipe is incredible. Maybe a total of half an hour prep time, with very simple ingredients, and it tastes marvelous. You may be tempted to leave the ginger out, as I was. Don’t — it’s the key to the sauce.

Out of a sample size of 5 people, 100% exclaimed that it was “really good” (the ultimate cooking compliment). I’m reminded of that old commercial where the wife is in the kitchen reading Cosmo or somesuch, and when the egg timer dings, she throws some flour and water into her face, and walks out into the dining room with the food and a big sigh, while her family is just like, “YES! This food rocks!”

Hm, I suppose I should invent a ratings scale. Being a relatively simple guy, I’ll just stick with the following enumeration:

  • don’t bother
  • solid
  • really good
  • And an honorable mention category — “interesting” but not necessarily “good”

Why do you need a rating scale that goes up to 10? That just means more room for mediocrity. I give this recipe a “really good”.

July 28, 2005

optimizing for itanium

Filed under: geek — alex @ 1:37 pm

Here’s a really interesting paper from USENIX 2005: Itanium — A System Implementor’s Tale.

It’s got a good overview of the Itanium architecture in general, and has details for the geeks out there. The money paragraph:

…we were able to eliminate all but one of the 15 data-load stalls, resulting in only 3 bubbles and a final execution time of 36 cycles, or 24ns on a 1.5GHz Itanium 2. This is extremely fast, in fact unrivalled on any other architecture. In terms of cycle times this is about a factor of two faster than the fastest RISC architecture (Alpha 21264) to which the [Linux] kernel has been ported so far, and in terms of absolute time it is well beyond anything we have seen so far. This is a clear indication of the excellent performance potential of the Itanium architecture.

July 27, 2005

enig-zilla

Filed under: dreck — alex @ 12:30 am

Here’s a conversation I had with my brother earlier. I’m not explaining it at all because I think it’s quite hilarious out of context.

That is all.

July 26, 2005

bye bye barney

Filed under: dreck — alex @ 2:09 pm

Last Friday, I filled up on B100, which is 100% biodiesel. The local fueling station in Ft. Collins is Poudre Valley Co-Op, and they sell Rocky Mountain Biodiesel. It’s more expensive than petrod ($3/gallon vs $2.44), and the mileage and power are worse, but to me the other factors like less pollution and less dependence on the cesspool known as the Middle East are worth it.

So at this point, I am no longer directly using fossil fuels in my daily living, as 100% of my house’s energy needs are supplied by wind. Of course, this does not mean I can go get the Ed Begley Jr. car that runs on my own sense of self-importance, as I still need petrod for road trips, and pretty much everything else I consume is thanks to dead dinos (ie, food delivery, plastic, etc.).

Still, how else to improve our lives other than one step at a time?

July 19, 2005

awash in a sea of pink

Filed under: dreck — alex @ 3:12 pm

On July 16, ZDNet reported that HP was to slash 15,000 jobs. The rumors circulated in the article stated:

Analysts, however, have been expecting HP’s Technology and Solutions Group to be the likely recipient of most of the pink slips, as well as services and HP’s research and development spending.

Compare that with the official press release sent out today, July 19:

The majority of staff reductions will come in support functions, such as information technology, human resources and finance. The remainder will be made inside business units, in areas where work can be reduced by improving processes and re-prioritizing existing tasks.

[...]

HP will dissolve the Customer Solutions Group (CSG) - a standalone business group responsible for sales to enterprise, small and medium-size businesses and public-sector customers. It will merge the sales function and related accountability directly into three individual business units - Technology Solutions Group (TSG), Imaging and Printing Group (IPG) and Personal Systems Group (PSG).

No comment, really, other than to point out the obvious fact that the “news” sites aren’t about news so much as they are about getting readership (and selling ad space). If that means peddling rumors that contain a kernel of truth and a lot of speculation, so be it.

In other news, I wonder why people on the inside leak stuff to people on the outside. What possible benefit can they gain?

July 14, 2005

doctor, it hurts when i hit my head with this hammer

Filed under: dreck — alex @ 1:28 pm

A Yahoo news story today entitled Some Weary Floridians Leaving for Good because they are tired of the hurricanes.

I am truly confused by this story, more specifically as to its point. Is it a human interest story that’s supposed to make us feel bad for them? Is it just reporting on some demographic trends?

It fails horribly in the first regard (hey, let’s build our homes in a natural disaster area and then complain when the uh… natural disasters happen) and it’s pointless in the second regard (news flash from the department of “boring stuff that happens on a local level but is reported at the national level”: Asian Ft. Collins residents between the ages of 25 and 27 enjoy getting drunk on a regular basis, followup interview at 11).

July 11, 2005

weekend quickies

Filed under: dreck — alex @ 12:58 pm
  • Ye gods it’s hot in Fort Collins. I’ve been sleeping in the basement the past few nights.
  • Dusted off the road bike and went for a ride up to the mailboxes of Rist Canyon. On the way back, I saw the most useless car ever made — a stretch Saturn limo. Who on god’s good earth would rent such a thing?
  • Climbed at Lumpy with a friend of a friend from Illinois. Good times, but damn it sucks coming from the flatlands and trying to do physical stuff at 8000 feet.
  • Filled up with B20 (20% biod) on Saturday. It seems like I’ve already lost a bit of power/torque, but cutting down on consumption of petrod is worth it.
  • New promise to be healthier. First steps: only drinking diet sodas (when I drink soda) and no more fried potato products. Good bye fries. So long, tots. I’ll miss you hash browns. Sniff.

July 8, 2005

moab 4th

Filed under: dreck — alex @ 4:18 pm

I’ve been coveting a new car for a while now, maybe several years. The current steed is a ‘94 Plymouth Voyager (yes, Virginia, a minivan) with 172k miles and still running strong. (aside: I’ve never owned a car with http://flickr.com/photos/chizang/tags/moab/

July 7, 2005

too bad, atkins

Filed under: dreck — alex @ 9:39 am

Today’s business lesson comes from a Coloradoan article titled Low-carb store closes as trend fades. Although the title is pretty descriptive in and of itself, there are a few choice quotes in the article:

The first warning signal:

Competition from larger grocery stores that also carry low-carb products makes it difficult to bring people into the store, especially because it’s tucked away into a shopping center at the southeast corner of Prospect Road and Lemay Avenue.

Clearly, the owner Barb O’Malley-Wikstrom, ignored the first rule of business that depends on foot traffic, which is: location, location, location.

Second warning bell:

In an attempt to broaden her customer base, O’Malley-Wikstrom, who invested about $100,000 into the business when it first opened, recently spent about $5,000 on a coffee and espresso bar.

Then the Larimer County Health and Environment Department told her that the coffee bar couldn’t be located in the same place as a kitchen that she sometimes uses for cooking demonstrations and classes. Department officials were unavailable for comment Wednesday.

“They were going to completely make me retrofit my whole kitchen,” she said. “It was the final straw.”

Personally, I would have checked with the county to make sure any potential improvements were up to code BEFORE spending the money. But hey, that’s just me.

The *real* final straw (for me, in terms of not having much sympathy):

“When I first opened, it was doing well because it was the only game in town,” said O’Malley-Wikstrom. “But I couldn’t compete with Wal-Mart.”

Please don’t blame the Wal-Mart boogeyman for your lack of business sense. Also, here’s a free tip from me — don’t base your business plan ON A FAD.

And I don’t even have an MBA.

July 1, 2005

xavier, part deux

Filed under: dreck — alex @ 3:44 pm

I caught the Xavier Rudd show last night in Boulder. Overall, I’d say it was more mellow than the show I saw 9 months ago, which is actually what I was in the mood for. A few vignetted memories from last night…

  • some random guy trying to give away t-shirts before the show butted into our conversation and tried to impress us with his knowledge of San Francisco and how great the sushi is there, and then asking us, “Who’s playing tonight? Ha-vier Rood?” (phonetic spelling here) Thanks guy. You rule.
  • Xavier upgraded his acoustic stomp box from last year to an electronic bass pedal stompy thingy
  • being surrounded by obnoxious teeny-boppers tripping their balls off on ecstasy, announcing in LOUD voices, “oh god, I’m ROLLING!” My favorite part was when two dudes took off their (sweaty) shirts and the girl they were with started giving them sweaty backrubs. Yum. They may as well have been wearing bright neon signs over their heads with arrows pointing down, blinking and flashing, “WE ARE HIGH ON ILLICIT DRUGS! PLEASE COME ARREST US!”
  • my realization that Xavier’s music is kinda…. simple. I mean it’s full of energy and good beats, but the melodies get pretty repetitious, and his lyrics are more or less like, “I love the earth! Let’s all have peace! So much energy! La la la la la!”

Don’t get me wrong. It was a good show, but I’m realizing that my tolerance for dirty hippies has decreased dramatically.