Hedge Fund

Anyone have an extra they aren’t losing using?  Because we need a good one… to finish the hedges around the foundation.  We got a good start today…. and admittedly we’re a little overly ambitious with the new plantings and might need to go rob a bank  get a second job to finish what we started.

Granite steps installed at the front door
Today was a glorious day weatherwise… I hope you were able to get out there and enjoy it too.

Painting The Town Red

 Oh, I know it’s trivial compared to the world’s troubles…compared to some of OURS for that matter.  But… we came to a crossroads today at This Old House.  Followers of my old blog might remember the war  discussion Mike and I had over his desire for something to be painted crime-scene-dried-blood-red   heritage red  somewhere in the house. Somewhere big. It’s apparently THAT kind of need.  And I love the color, I do!    As accents, not the entire horizon.

  So.. I walked into the kitchen as the men stood round staring at the mantle with the various shades of RED..and I was to choose which RED I liked.  Here’s how it goes.

Me:  Red again?  The whole fireplace?
Him:  And the trim. 
Me:  The trim where?
Him: Around the whole room…and the cabinets.
Me:  The Cabinets????….
Him:  So where do you want me to stop (pointing DOWN THE HALL AND INTO THE MUDROOM)….
Me:  DOWN THE HALL AND INTO THE MUDROOM?  RED???????
Him:  Yes… I can’t just stop HERE (pointing to the end of the kitchen)
Me:  Oh yes you can.  You’ll stop here.  (pointing to trimwork at end of kitchen)   And the cabinets? Red? REALLY?
Him:  I SUPPOSE YOU HAVE A BETTER IDEA?  Trust me, I know what I’m doing.

I’m gonna have to give in and let him have his way with  heritage red  somewhere… but please..
not here..
in my kitchen.
Trust me….

Mike graded the backyard and made an area for a brick patio…

Steve making progress with the second story of the familyroom/loft fireplace….

 This is the trim color I prefer…. Not that there’s anything wrong with red…

Jeff working on the cabinetry…which did not come fully compliant with the old beams of the old house.

Barn/garage moves forward….
A really cool blue paint puddle I found out in the yard….

See how the Garden Grows

  I’ve come to know a lovely lady who is also a transplant from New York. We are both passionate about a town property of historical significance that will become a hub for historical, agricultural, recreational and educational activity and Michelle has put many many hours into the project in various ways.  It’s an exciting time to be involved in the development of such a place.  She  is  knowledgeable in all things horticultural and  has graciously put together a selection of vintage fragrant peonies for my new gardens at This Old House. They include the Mrs. Jules Elie, Mrs. Euclid Snow, Mrs. FDR and Nancy Nicholls variety.  

Thank you, Michelle – 

Everything you didn’t want to know about Hot Dogs

My two guys spent yesterday at the new Yankee Stadium on Steriods and consumed a total of ten hotdogs between the two of them.  Now I’ll be the first to tell you I love a good hotdog, smothered in saurkraut and mustard on a soft roll.  My grandmother, who was an excellent cook, also enjoyed a good hotdog now and then.  (Liver too, we don’t share that passion. gack.)   But the consumption in one game of so many hotdogs got me to thinking….and googling.   I shoulda stopped there. 

It’s the subject of many urban legends, the object of many grade-schoolers’ double dares: do hot dogs contain pig snouts and chicken feathers, or are they really made from high-quality meat?

The debate certainly hasn’t put a damper on Americans’ enthusiasm for the food. The U.S. population consumes about 20 billion hot dogs a year, according to the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council. That works out to about 70 hot dogs per person, per year. And, an estimated 95 percent of U.S. homes serve hot dogs at one meal or another.

Wondering how many hotdogs are sold each year? In 2005, retail stores sold 764 million packages of hot dogs (not including Wal-Mart), which adds up to more than $1.5 billion in retail sales.

In 2006, Americans ate enough hot dogs at major league ballparks to stretch from RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C. to AT&T Park in San Francisco. New Yorkers eat more hot dogs than any other city population (even Chicago, also known for its hot dogs). Travelers at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport eat six times more hot dogs than travelers at Los Angeles International Airport and LaGuardia Airport combined.

Hot dog season — during which Americans eat 7 billion hot dogs — stretches from Memorial Day to Labor Day.  Americans eat 150 million hot dogs on the fourth of July, alone.

On to the million-dollar question: what are hot dogs made of? According to the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council:

“All hot dogs are cured and cooked sausages that consist of mainly pork, beef, chicken and turkey or a combination of meat and poultry. Meats used in hot dogs come from the muscle of the animal and looks much like what you buy in the grocer’s case. Other ingredients include water, curing agents and spices, such as garlic, salt, sugar, ground mustard, nutmeg, coriander and white pepper.”

However, there are a couple of caveats. “Variety meats,” which include things like liver, kidneys and hearts, may be used in processed meats like hot dogs, but the U.S. Department of Agriculture requires that they be disclosed on the ingredient label as “with variety meats” or “with meat by-products.”

Further, watch out for statements like “made with mechanically separated meats (MSM).” Mechanically separated meat is “a paste-like and batter-like meat product produced by forcing bones, with attached edible meat, under high pressure through a sieve or similar device to separate the bone from the edible meat tissue,” according to the U.S. Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).

Although the FSIS maintains that MSM are safe to eat, mechanically separated beef is no longer allowed in hot dogs or other processed meats (as of 2004) because of fears of mad cow disease. Hot dogs can contain no more than 20 percent mechanically separated pork, and any amount of mechanically separated chicken or turkey.

So if you’re looking for the purest franks, pick those that are labeled “all beef,” “all pork,” or “all chicken, turkey, etc.” Franks labeled in this way must be made with meat from a single species and do not include byproducts (but check the label anyway, just to be sure. Turkey and chicken franks, for instance, can include turkey or chicken meat and turkey or chicken skin and fat in proportion to a turkey or chicken carcass).

Are Hot Dogs Unhealthy?
Eating lots of processed meats like hot dogs has been linked to an increased risk of cancer. Part of that risk is probably due to the additives used in the meats, namely sodium nitrite and MSG.Sodium nitrite (or sodium nitrate) is used as a preservative, coloring and flavoring in hot dogs (and other processed meats), and studies have found it can lead to the formation of cancer-causing chemicals called nitrosamines.  MSG, a flavor enhancer used in hot dogs and many other processed foods, has been labeled as an “excitotoxin,” which, according to Dr. Russell Blaylock, an author and neurosurgeon, are “a group of excitatory amino acids that can cause sensitive neurons to die.”
If you love hot dogs and are looking for a healthier alternative, opt for nitrate-free, organic varieties (available in health food stores and increasingly in regular supermarkets) that contain all meat, no byproducts and no artificial flavors, colors or preservatives.

 What a pain in the a**.  And how gross!  But I love them.  So now and then I’ll probably still grab an all beef- meat/by/product sodium nitrite- MSG-nitrosamine enriched dog  with saurkraut and mustard .

 How do you like your hot dog?  

Information courtesy of Sixwise.com 

What’s Cooking?

 Nothing yet… BUT.. the kitchen has arrived! The main cabinets are a distressed vintage white and the island is a distressed black. Granite, lighting and appliances arriving soon. Mike and Jeff discuss the logistics…

I mapped out a garden plan for the backyard…. lace top hydrangeas around the porch, pink knockout roses in front of those, common boxwood around the foundation with perennials scattered throughout, spirea here and there too… it’s a start…
Framing began on the barn/garage yesterday…
And this is the front hall light fixture… don’t make fun of my birds.

For Lynn

 Ben turned  One Year Old  yesterday!  Because I  stupidly, rashly,  deleted my original blog,  you don’t have the old archives and Ben’s year-long ginormous growth history.  So I’ll recap here…  and let me tell you, Great Danes are an awesome family dog, love love love this guy.  Easiest dog I ever had to housetrain.   You just have to wrap your mind around the idea of having a small horse in the house.  Mike’s mind is not completely  warped wrapped yet.  He hasn’t made peace with the idea of the folding chairs as toss-around dog toys either.   We’re working on it, right Ben?

We’re getting there….

 Lately every time I pull up to the house I find myself smiling.  After many years of admiring the place, five years of trying to acquire it, and then finally the past year and a half of work to bring it around to it’s glory days,  we will live there in just a few months.  There is a serenity in those fields,  I’ve always felt it…even as a passerby many years ago. Little did I know that I would one day call it “home”.

This old window came out of the old house, and will be used in the potting shed out by the garden.

 Raised panels going up in the office…

Giant flat rocks serve as stepping stones in the courtyard out to the main brick patio. I’m trying to come up with a perennial plant layout  along and inbetween these stones that will have something blooming at all times….any suggestions?  The courtyard will have shade much of the morning but sun for the rest of the day.

Pete put alot of time into cleaning up the backyard today. The excavator is parked on the area we plan to make a raised bed vegetable garden.  Great location, lots of sun, and not too far from the kitchen.

With my husband in Rhode Island tonight on business, my daughter away at school and my son on a school trip to Washington D.C.,… guess what I’m having for dinner?……..
I’m doing a happy dance 🙂

You think you know someone.

 When you hear the name “Paula Deen”, what comes to mind?  I’m thinking Bobby’s smashed potato cakes,  Bobby’s Caramel Cake or Bubba’s shrimp gumbo.   Isn’t that what she does for a living?   I had no idea she made furniture too!  Well, she endorses it anyway. 

We recently browsed a furniture “galaxy” as this one was called, and I have never seen more ornate and tacky furniture  housed under one roof, including the ornatest of the Newport Mansions.   Why, even Donald Trump makes furniture there… or rather.. he endorses it.  What does that mean, exactly?  It’s  the kind he would have in HIS home?  I’ll tell you this, what he endorsed is the most gawd-awful tackyness I’ve seen in a while.   Paula on the other hand, has good taste in what she endorses. I like the simple lines, the cottage or down south feel. 

 SOOOO…. when I came across her line of  home furnishings on the web, I fell in love with a bedroom.  After much discussion, a decent price and a review of the bedroom set we currently occupy  (it’s a King with the middle support thing underneath bent and no longer holding the middle up properly)  we placed an online order for a Paula Deen bedroom set…… assembly required.  *ahem*  

This Joint Is Jumping!

 At this stage of the resurrection there’s a lot of activitiy and we’re rounding the bend towards moving in! Light fixtures and lamp posts have been installed, as well as  railing on the mudroom porch.  Can a great dane jump over said railing?  That remains to be seen, and  I sure hope not.

Steve is working on the loft portion of the family room/mancave fireplace, Cooper inspecting his work.
The other Steve is building the raised panels in the two home offices on either side of the front hall and stairway.
….while Dennis secures the old mantles to their original faces…
  Jeff did an awesome job with the front stairway… those of you who read my original blog might remember it was torn out many years ago and turned into a bathroom. Basically you had to be three feet tall to sit in it without risk of knocking yourself out on the sink opposite the toilet.  Not a good plan! So the stairs were restored.
Poor picture of the mancave fireplace with old beam mantle installed
Mike installed stone steps outside the back porch leading into what will be the courtyard garden… and in this picture you can also see the completed mahogany stairs into the same courtyard from the kitchen sliders.
The lilacs are in full bloom, still fragrant after all these years….