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That sounds good. Though it’ll be while before I can afford to test out such a dish (I may have to take up the other kind of wine poaching to afford this wine poached scallop).
I think Trader Joe's has some good scallops. You do not need too many of them.
However, you may also want to try searing the scallops.
I heard that Dalian is a seafood heaven.
Do you like oxtails? I am also thinking of combining an oxtail soup recipe into one with risotto.
Wouldn't risotto be kind of waste for king crab? I find dungeness crabs to be very good and cheaper. It's not as sweet as blue crabs, but much easier to eat.
I like eating shrimp (or some other white fleshed sea fish) with hot rice congee. That cooks the shrimp quickly and compliments the delicate texture of the shrimp.
I tried TJ frozen seafood once. Never again!
I may have had oxtail once, but I don't remember what it tastes like. Tails and necks are too much work.
Wouldn’t risotto be kind of waste for king crab? I find dungeness crabs to be very good and cheaper. It’s not as sweet as blue crabs, but much easier to eat.
Not really. King crab meat is quite firm so it should do fine. Dungeness crab meat is quite delicate and it can "disappear" in the rice. :)
Blue crab is sweet!
Congee is a good way to cook seafood. Adding clams is the easiest way to bring more flavor to the soup.
I tried TJ frozen seafood once. Never again!
Costco has good scallops too.
Tails and necks are too much work.
Meat should fall off of the oxtails and it is quite tender. I do not usually eat neck.
My fellow Patrick.net bloggers,
I could use your help/ideas . Patrick is now interested in doing a CafePress-style storefront to merchandise Patrick.net themed T-shirts, hats, mugs, etc., but is not too keen on on the per-unit price CafePress charges. The "base price" (CafePress's cut) on each t-shirt is $8.99.
Does anyone out there know of another merchandising/storefront site that does the same thing but takes a slightly less gargantuan cut? I'm new to this game and any constructive suggestions would be much appreciated. Thanks.
Clams are good. Though a good chunk of my family got Hep A through an unfortunate batch of raw clams once. So we always get a little paranoid around clams. We do cook with mussels a lot.
Have you ever tried really small softshell clams? They're called sea melon seeds and they're the size of pumpkin seeds. It's good beer food.
"Costco has good scallops too."
Thanks for the tip. They have good frozen dungeness crabs and mussels too.
Clams are good. Though a good chunk of my family got Hep A through an unfortunate batch of raw clams once. So we always get a little paranoid around clams. We do cook with mussels a lot.
I believe there is a vaccine for Hep A.
Have you ever tried really small softshell clams? They’re called sea melon seeds and they’re the size of pumpkin seeds. It’s good beer food.
Perhaps I have tried that in miso soup, but I am not too sure. I usually cook clams in a wine/beer/sake broth. I do not prepare raw seafood at home.
They have good frozen dungeness crabs and mussels too.
I will try. I saw them at $4/lb. It takes some work to get the meat out though. A hammer would be useful.
It was about twenty years ago in China. And I do try to keep my Hep A and Hep C vaccines current when I travel to China, just in case.
I haven't had sea melon seeds raw. They're good sauteed with a little rice wine, scallion and ginger.
I don't have much trouble with dungeness crabs. A seafood cracker might be helpful. The blue crabs are a pain though, especially the claws.
I haven’t had sea melon seeds raw.
I only had cherrystone and littleneck clams raw. They taste very good with mignonette sauce.
The blue crabs are a pain though, especially the claws.
I had blue crabs once but I was more interested in the crab roe.
There seems to be a positive correlation between cholestestrol and taste. :)
Blue crab roe is yummy. East Coast blue crabs taste a lot like Yangtze hairy crabs. The roe gets used like truffle, they use it to flavor many meat and vegetable dishes. Late September and October are very good times for crabs.
Blue crab roe is yummy.
Yes. The roe was so good that forgot the crab had claws.
how are crabs and housing alike??
At this time, they both walk sideways.
When management asked people to stay late and work weekends, the H1-B’s always obliged fearing about being sent home. So, then I have to work the extra time because the H1-B’s will seldom say no, I’m not mad at them I came here on a visa also.
You do not have to do what they do. Perhaps you need another job. One should not have to put up with abusive management. You know, expectation does not necessarily have to be fulfilled.
When management asked people to stay late and work weekends, the H1-B’s always obliged fearing about being sent home.
One can also have two cellphones and turn off the business line after work. The most overworked employees are not necessarily H-1Bs. They tend to be people who do not see a purpose in themselves. Consequently, they think work is all they have.
Go to a sushi bar and you will know there is more beyond work. :)
One of the cafeteria’s at work had oxtail soup just last week. I had never had it before, so I took some. I won’t be trying it again.
Huh? Do not judge food in a cafeteria. It should be presumed bad unless proven otherwise.
But now, I don’t care anymore, a job is just that, read the CNN/Money blog about how people got fired, sad stories but abusive management are alive and well.
If you have politically savvy bosses, you will not be laid off.
I am glad that you have realized "a job is just that".
“I’m sorry, but I forgot that you’re on the list alsoâ€
So what? This just illustrates that it is important to have enough saving to survive a temporary setback. Once that stress is gone, it is much easier to approach things.
It is just that I didn’t like the oxtail soup myself.
Perhaps. It is... different.
Record foreclosures in Sydney: doubled since 2002...
"At Annandale, a "mortgagee in possession" house, bought 18 months ago for $750,000 was up for auction. But only a handful of interested parties went looking for a bargain.
The Susan Street home passed in at auction without attracting a single bid. Before the auction, Century 21 City West principal Matthew Meynell expected the three-bedroom, two-bathroom strata home to sell for about $550,000.
Afterwards, a potential buyer offered a mere $330,000."
They tend to be people who do not see a purpose in themselves. Consequently, they think work is all they have.
Go to a sushi bar and you will know there is more beyond work.
how are crabs and housing alike??
At this time, they both walk sideways.
very wise today, peter p :P
Also from that article:
It's not the only repossessed home in the popular inner-west. "There are a couple coming up and we have another in Annandale in a few weeks," Mr Meynell said. "I think some people overcapitalised and it has been very easy for people to borrow money.
The RE agents feign surprise that the RE market could collapse, 2 years after they were telling people 'it only goes up', and developers agents would put a 'conservative' 7% annual growth for 20 years into their projections to convince investors to buy... and they blame 'interest rate hikes' as the problem - so they can blame the Fed... altho lowered interest rates can only lead to a one-off price hike, and that will inevitably be undone when they go up again...
maybe it's time to use a hieronymous bosch graphic for a thread to show capitalist boom/busts? just watched a show on it -- particularly the hell scene from the paradise tryptich...
I haven't had a chance to peruse it yet, but today's Sunday NYT has a "new" magazine section (very thick): "Keys" or something like it - all about real estate! Should make for interesting bathroom reading later today.
astrid,
On the other hand, compare AT&T’s prices and services in the 100+ years before the breakup and all the great stuff we have now for a fraction os the cost.
Big telecom happens to be my strongest industry of expertise. While that is a quite common popular conception, the reality is much more complex and much different. In fact, US telecom has fallen significantly behind Euro & Asian telecom's in those regards since dereg, while they were never deregulated and are still largely monopolies.
Also, you are confusing natural monopolies from socialized/state-run monopolies. The two are seldom one in the same.
I missed participating in the last thread's discussion of Boston as a leading indicator for the bubble so I thought I'd add my perspective now.
The pop has definitely hit the MSM here. The Boston Globe and Boston Herald both run articles on a weekly basis. The Mass Association of Realtors admits to a ~4% YOY median SFH decline, while the Warren Group (local analysts) come up ~6% decline (they include FSBO's).
On a square foot basis there is no doubt that a 10% decline has occurred for many neighborhoods, some of them very nice, such as Newton.
In the best downtown neighborhoods such as Back Bay and Beacon Hill (where we rent) sales have been sporadic enough that I cannot yet perceive a decline. I think this confirms the theory that the best neighborhoods will be the last to go. When we were looking to buy in Fall 2004, prices were about $650/sq ft, and we are not yet back to those prices.
Still, when I compare the rent on our apartment ($2360/month) to the approximate sale value ($750k) I cannot help but feel a cumulative 30% real decline will occur eventually.
When I talk to coworkers they are evenly split. Half believe declines will continue, half think things will level off. I do have a couple friends who bought two years ago and have been unable to sell without bringing money to the table.
The most interesting recent news is that there will be an auction for unsold condos in a new highrise on the waterfront:
"The developer of a new luxury condominium project in Boston's financial district is resorting to a tactic last seen in the real estate bust of the 1990s: It's holding an auction for the 34 remaining, unsold condominiums...
...A minimum bid will be required for each unit. A one-bedroom currently offered for sale at $480,000 will be sold at or above its $325,000 minimum price. The most expensive unit to be auctioned, a $1.76 million, two-bedroom with a wraparound terrace on the 14th floor with a waterfront view, has a $1.025 million minimum price..."
http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/09/06/going_once/
Randy,
I'll defer to your vastly superior (since I know almost nothing about these markets aside from some rather old Economist article) knowledge in this area. Though I will note that the Chinese cellphone service charges went down dramatically after the entry of a second player in the market. While I understand that multiple competitors in a single market can present technological challenges and bad for the companies involved, I'm far less convinced that the presence of competition is bad for the final customers.
"Also, you are confusing natural monopolies from socialized/state-run monopolies. The two are seldom one in the same."
Huh? I assume natural monopolies are utilities & railroads & airline & phone service and state run monopolies are patent monopolies & radio/TV stations given out to serve a stated public interest.
Rat_Patrol,
That's some great footage of Ronnie Montrose and the boys. I'd love to be able to get my hands on the version of Ronnie backing Edgar Winter doing a timeless classic "Tobacco Road" on Don Kirshner's Rock and Roll in Concert. All 17 minutes of it!
The version of "Bad Motor Scooter" on their first album had a "slide guitar" intro that was out of this world. Unlike Tom Sholz of Boston that leaned heavily on artificial "sustain" Ronnie was just fine with the raw sound of his Les Paul straight through a Marshall stack. I'd pay money and stand in line to see him play today.
"Oops, I guess armageddon hasn't hit yet"
Are you from this planet or just visiting?
Almost made it to 9:00am on a Sunday morning without a troll parading ONE STINKING LISTING where some GF got his manhood taken away. Sheesh!
Huh? I assume natural monopolies are utilities & railroads & airline & phone service and state run monopolies are patent monopolies & radio/TV stations given out to serve a stated public interest.
MSFT is a natural monopoly (despite one's feelings about their products). Natural monopolies are also very common within local markets. Even pre-big box store competition, nearly all small rural towns only had one hardware and one discount store. The irony was that Walmart entered as a competitor, driving down prices due to breaking the local monopoly (or duopoly in bigger towns). This is an example of competition lowering prices for end users, but simultaneously reducing value to end users.
I don't want to come off defending monopolies (monopsonies, duopolies, cartels, etc.) In fact, they are usually a bad thing for both consumers and innovation.
But there's one thing to keep in mind:
Monopolies are not illegal in the US. Most people mistakenly believe antitrust laws prohibit monopolies. That is categorically false.
What is illegal is:
1) Explicit collusion
2) Price fixing
3) Direct harm to end-user consumers
Therefore, if Cisco were to become an established natural monopoly, did not collude with would be competitors or any other vertical player, did not fix prices for non-economic reasons, then it would not be guilty of violating antitrust laws. Cisco has few end consumers in non-competitive markets, so the Justice dept. doesn't care about their B2B monopoly impact.
That is a common theme. The US Justice Dept. sets an extremely high bar for the argument that any monopoly harming other businesses is relevant to protecting consumers. Almost no such cases make it out of the gate. Therefore don't expect to see SAP, Oracle, etc. ever embroiled in an antitrust suit.
(The standard in Europe is much more liberal, and allows companies to be challenged for merely "having a commanding market position". Ironic, given that Europe is the poster child for illegally subsidizing inefficient, inferior, defacto monopoly industries with state funding, but I digress.)
Bap33,
Big oil in the US has been found guilty of all three on various occasions in the past. At this point, it is pretty unlikely that they engage in collusion or price fixing, at least within the US. They employ a different tactic, common of lots of big industrial, mature concerns. They send all their managers to the same MBA schools, where they all take the same economics classes and learn the same game-theory pricing strategies. Then, they are able to engage in something that looks a lot like price fixing, but is in fact completely legal and justifiable in our legal system.
It's like this: say there are 25 of us in a condo development who intend on selling in the next year. For simplicity, assume we are the only condo development in the area, and no other substitutes exist. Let's also pretend that we are not allowed to talk to each other to fix our sales prices, and we in fact can't talk to each other about anything else that would result in our cooperation on pricing.
Normally, we're screwed, because someone will figure out, hey if I price a little less than everyone else, I'll get the best price because everyone else will have to follow suit on the way down. In the end, we all lose because we didn't cooperate.
Now, we all spend 2 years in school somewhere on the East Coast, where we learn how to play theoretical pricing games. This time, when we run the scenario, no one defects because everyone knows that we'll all get much higher prices by not defecting.
As for international oil, or other cartels, there's little the US can do about it. Diamonds, Oil, bananas, sugar, about everything you can think of is controlled by some type of int'l cartel outside the US, often impacting our prices here, and often even in the vehicle of US multinationals.
And oil companies are a good example of a natural monopoly (oligopoly, in this case). That's because there are enormous natural barriers to entry:
-massive capital investment requirements
-substantial know how and technique implications
-regulatory hurdles
-resource barriers (tie up reserves in long-term contracts)
-capacity barriers (dissuade entrants by increasing existing capacity)
Behold, a lower unit flat selling after 2 weeks on the market for full asking. Oops, I guess armageddon hasn’t hit yet.
Wow when the trolls gleefully post that condos in PRIME areas are going for asking, you know the excrement has hit the cooling device.
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Some notorious quotes --like events-- represent pivotal moments that should never be forgotten. They should be preserved for posterity and passed along to future generations to serve as a warning. Some of the crap the REIC (Real Estate Industrial Complex) has been spewing for the last 5 years meets this lowly standard of putrescence.
Whenever these shills try to reverse course, change their tunes or revise history in the face of (now undeniable) evidence that their empire is crumbling, these quotes should be trotted out and rubbed in their lying, ugly faces at every opportunity.
Here are some of my infamous favorites:
Source: L.A. Times (August 28, 2005)
“Equity Is Altering Spending Habits and View of Debtâ€
Source: Federal Reserve Board (February 23, 2004)
Remarks by Chairman Alan Greenspan: Understanding household debt obligations
(just as Greenspan was preparing to start RAISING rates from 1%)
Source: N.Y. Times (March 25, 2005)
Trading Places: Real Estate Instead of Dot-Coms
Source: CNN Money/Fortune (February 13, 2006)
A tale of two markets
Source: N.Y. Times (October 16, 2005)
Chasing Ground
Bob Toll (President of Toll Brothers):
Source: N.Y. Times (March 25, 2005)
Trading Places: Real Estate Instead of Dot-Coms:
Source: Planet Jackson Hole (September 6, 2006)
Un-Real Estate
Source: Contra Costa Times (September 13, 2006)
Housing bubble may spare East Bay
Source: WILX.com (January 10, 2007)
Housing Market Recovery?
Source: newspress.com (January 24, 2007)
Low bids take glow off property auction
Source: Monterey County Herald (June 29, 2006)
Reaching The Dream Without Moving In California
Source: brisbanetimes.com (September 3, 2008)
Sky's no limit for property prices
Please post some of your own favorite "pearls of wisdom" you feel are especially worthy of remembrance.
HARM
#housing