Author: Mike

  • Rescuing a pup – am I preaching to the choir?

    Rescuing a pup – am I preaching to the choir?

    With GardenFork’s audience, I’m sure that I’m preaching to the choir on this, but I still felt compelled to say what I want to say and share the video.

    In the video is Waverly, a 9 month old Weimaraner pup. With two Weimaraners already in our home, our cup runneth over long before she showed up. We do love the breed and we love our dogs. Friends of ours know this and when others have Weims, we tend to hear about them.

    This particular pup was bought by an elderly couple who thought Weims were beautiful and friendly, which they are. However, they didn’t know how much energy they have and what dangers the breed bring along with them. 

    Weims are super friendly and VERY attached to their family. However, Weims don’t understand that running up to their 110 pound owner, or 40 pound child to give them a “full body greeting” is, at best, traumatic for the receiver.

    Also, these dogs are smart. To a fault. If you don’t exercise them, challenge them, and give them something to do, they’ll find stuff to do on their own — Like dismantling a couch, one thread at a time. 

     If you decide to cruelly lock them up in order to keep them “good”, you’ll find that a locking up a Weimaraner is like winding the spring on a toy; when you let them go, all of that energy is going to be released at once. And the longer they’re in there, the tighter that spring gets!

    Really, this isn’t meant to be a lesson in Weimaraners. It’s meant to be a lesson in preparing for getting a dog properly. Also, if you know about dogs, making sure your friends who are thinking of getting a dog know everything they need to know.

    Before we got our first Weimaraner, we read every guide on the breed we could find. They are all over the internet and in book stores. We spoke to others with the breed and we visited as many Weimaraners as we could find.

    I knew very well that if I fell asleep on the couch, I would wake up with two 70 pound dogs sleeping on or under me.

    I also knew the costs. A spay, shots, licenses, food, toys, crates, and everything else. We made sure we could afford the dog(s).

    It’s easy to sympathize when someone can’t keep a dog because of an illness, injury, or worse. It’s infuriating when I feel compelled to take on a third dog because someone didn’t do some simple homework. We were told that  “It’s either you take her, or she ends up in a shelter or just released in a field. PLEASE… Take her.” How do we NOT take her?

    Sure the people were heartbroken and ashamed, but is that enough? I don’t have the answer to that question, but I do hope this is the last dog we need to rescue. She’s only here temporarily, but in my house, fostering a Weimaraner “temporarily” is like “temporarily” touching one finger to the other when there is super glue on them.

    My son has been wanting a third dog, I’ve been saying “No”, but I may be powerless against the cosmic powers behind the prayers and wishes of a 14 year old boy who loves his dogs. 

    Watching her sleep peacfully with the other two dogs, it’s easy to imagine that some angel brought her to us…

    … actually, watching the video again, it may be repayment for something bad I’ve done. I’m not sure yet.

  • Kinpira Gobo Burger, Cooking with Sesame Oil

    Kinpira Gobo Burger, Cooking with Sesame Oil

    On an episode of Gardenfork Radio, Eric and I asked for a recipe using sesame oil. Listener Jasmine came through and sent Eric a recipe for an interesting veggie “burger”.

    The “bun” is cooked sticky rice that is then formed into a patty and then fried. The filling is a carrot / burdock stir fry which Jasmine described:

    “Kinpira gobo is a traditional vegetable side, however in this case I like to use it as my “burger” filling. If you can’t find burdock root this works just as well with just the carrots or really any root vegetable.”

    I was looking forward to seeing Eric make it.

    Ever see that scene where they ask a line of soldiers for a volunteer and everyone steps backward, leaving one guy standing there? Eric responded, “hey thanks for that and the recipe. mike will make this and report back!”

    I have said that Eric does all the work and I get to have the fun, so I guess I need to pull my weight here and actually make something.

    I was buying the ingredients, but I couldn’t find burdock. I bought parsnip instead. (My camera operator said I should have gone with celery root and I think she’s right) I loaded up on sesame oil, soy sauce, rice, and the other ingredients and then one ingredient stumped me. I sent a text to Eric from the store:

    Here was my guide from Jasmine, but there was only one choice, Aji-Mirin.

    “I suggest either hon mirin or mirin-fu chomiryo. Hon mirin is true mirin and contains alcohol while mirin-fu contains less than 1% alcohol. Either way I would steer clear of shio mirin as it is the same as hon mirin except with salt added.”

    Rice Burger Patties
    1 1/2 cups (per sandwich) Japanese-style medium grain rice or similar
    1/2 Tbs. olive oil for frying/grilling
    Cook an appropriate amount of rice for the number of servings desired. Take the rice and press it into ½ inch thick circles. I use plastic wrap to do this as the rice will otherwise stick to the skin. (It is important to use a medium grain rice as instant or long grain rices will not stick well on their own. You can still use these but it will require other ingredients to get them to stick.) Once your patties are shaped simply fry them in the oil or grill them on a well oiled surface.
    I suggest using wax paper or kitchen parchment when you eat them so it doesn’t stick to your hands.

    I used an ice cream scooper to dish out an appropriate amount of rice, and then I smashed it between layers of wax paper. It made reasonable circles.

    Classic Kinpira Gobo
    2 burdock roots, well scrubbed
    2 small or 1 medium carrot, peeled
    1 Tbs. sesame oil
    1 tsp. dry red chili pepper flakes, or 2 small fresh red chili peppers finely chopped
    1 Tbs. sugar
    1 Tbs. mirin
    2 to 3 Tbs. soy sauce

    I wanted to buy Japanese rice, but unless I wanted 25 pounds of it, I had to settle for this brand. It worked fine.

    Cut the burdock root into matchstick size pieces and soak in a bowl of water. Strain the burdock and refill the bowl with clean water to soak a few more minutes. Drain again then pat the burdock root dry. Cut the carrots into matchstick size as well. As long as you rinsed the outside of the carrots there is no need to soak them.

    Heat up a wok with the sesame oil. Add the burdock root, carrot pieces, and any other vegetable you might like to add. Sauté briefly, tossing to coat the pieces with oil. Add the chili pepper flakes and toss. Add the sugar, mirin, and soy sauce and about 1/2 cup of water. Lower the heat to medium, and continue cooking and stirring until the moisture has disappeared from the pan. Taste a piece of burdock root: it should be crisp and tender. If it’s too crunchy for you, add a bit more water and cook some more.

    As it cooks down. I know, I wasn’t patient enough to make match sticks. These are more like, uhm, giant match sticks.

    Finished Product

    Here is the finished product. I picked up some Japanese beer to go with the “burger”. It was a little messy, but it was fun to eat and it tasted very nice. Sweet, salty, spicy, with interesting textures. The sesame gave it a little smoke flavor too. It was worth the work and I can see this as somethign easy to whip up if you already have the ingredients around. Thanks Jasmine!

  • Replaced Doorbell

    Replaced Doorbell

    Doorbell repair by Mike

    My doorbell stopped working. While it was nice that I didn’t hear sales people ringing my doorbell, occasionally friends or family would feel ignored.

    A doorbell is a pretty simple circuit. There is a transformer that steps the electricity down from 120 volts to somehwere between 13 – 18 volts. There is a wire going to a momentary switch (doorbell button) and to the doorbell itself. When someone presses the button, the circuit is closed and the bell rings. If it’s not working it can only be one of a few problems. Broken wire, broken button, broken doorbell, broken transformeer, or no power at all!

    Warning!  Even though we should only be seeing low voltages here, locate the breaker or fuse for this circuit and shut it off whenever you will be touching the bare wires. Clearly, if you are testing voltages the circuit should be on, but if you are replacing any of the bits (transformer, doorbell, doorbell button, doorbell wiring) the circuit should be turned off. Even a 12 volt short can cause a fire and you never know, something may have been wrongly connected to a 120 volt line.

    01-Transformer

    Above is a picture of what the transformer looks like. 

    02-Multimeter18v

    A quick test with an inexpensive multi-meter shows here that there is 18 volts coming off the transformer. So there is power, and the transformer is OK.

     03-DoorbellButton

     This particular doorbell switch has visible leaf springs that make contact. Inspect the springs to make certain they are not broken. You can see here that the wire was showing a little bit of copper. There is no charring so I don’t think it caused a short, but this should be fixed.

    04-18vatbutton

    Do a quick voltage test here to make sure you’re getting electricity through the circuit. This way you know the wire isn’t broken somewhere in the circuit.

    05-Tape

    I’ve wrapped some fancy blue electrical tape around the wire to cover the small bare spot. There’s no significance to the color of tape, I just happened to have blue handy.

     06-OldBell

    Here is the old doorbell on the wall. Notice where the last person missed with paint. Wasn’t me!

     07-Plunger

    I removed the cover (the cover just snapped off) and unless you make it a habit to dust the inside of your doorbell, this is what you’ll see. Ick. You can see that something isn’t right just by looking at it. The doorbell has a solonoid in it, which is basically an electromagnet. 

    When electricity flows through the magnet, it makes a steel plunger pop out of it. When the electricity is stopped, the spring returns the steel plunger into the solonoid. You can see that something is wrong with the plunger. I checked it closer and it was frozen in place, this is clearly broken and for $18 I can buy a new one.

    08-Flippy

    All you need is a screwdriver. This is the flippy screwdriver thing Eric and I discussed in the “Pinball is 50v” episode of GardenFork Radio.

    09-6in1

    It’s six tools in one! I can almost dismantle my whole pinball machine with this tool.

    10-open

    Just to be certain that this did not break because of a short. I test the voltage at the coil. If it was showing any voltage, I would know that there is a short in the line and that would have caused my problem. Here there is no voltage so I know the doorbell probably just broke after 15 years of use.

    11-pressed

    I sent my daughter outside to press the button while I was checking the voltage. You can see that it is now registering 13.4 volts, so the circuit is good and I’m certain that this doorbell isn’t working properly. I read the manual on my camera after this blurry picture to figure out what I did wrong. I need to have the little picture of the flower on the LCD when I’m up close like this.

    12-DoorbellINPlace

    Here the new doorbell is in place. I just reused the same screws. One slotted and one phillips. It’s good I had the flippy screwdriver thing. Normally I’m more meticulous about things like this, but I didn’t have a phillips electical box screw handy and I have no slotted drywall screws. Someone will be complaining about me in 15 years.

     13-Done!

    Done! (I have a video of it working but I haven’t figured out how to post that yet!)