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V for Vendetta

Oh, delicious:

James Wolcott has posted his review of Alan Moore’s V for Vendetta. Check the official website for trailers.

“People should not be afraid of their government. Government should be afraid of the people.”

I’m paranoid enough to think saying this will put my name on a list somewhere, but, hot damn, I can’t wait.

D.

Put another candle on the birthday cake

Karen had a birthday last week, but who has time to make cake during the work week?

It seems appropriate for people our age to sing things that none of you thirty-and-under-somethings would understand. Who recognizes this number?

Put another candle on my birthday cake

We’re gonna bake, a birthday cake

Put another candle on my birthday cake

I’m another year old today!

That’s from Sheriff John, and you can hear him sing it, too. Unfortunately, Karen didn’t grow up in L.A., so she doesn’t know what the f*ck I’m talking about. Or singing about. But she understands chocolate cake, all right.

The inscription is not Not Dead Yeti, which makes no sense at all, but Not Dead Yet!, which any Python fan should recognize. The recipe is from this month’s Cook’s Illustrated (March/April ’06), and while labor intensive, produces damned fine results. I cut the recipe in half since, as it is, we’re going to have leftovers.

Note to people with kids: the frosting calls for 100% semisweet chocolate. Knowing my son, I used half semisweet chocolate and half sweet German chocolate, and he still considered the result too bitter.

By the way, in case any of you have forgotten, this is what I want on my next birthday cake:

(not work safe)

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You could make a stone ache.

Like many of you, I sometimes check my referrals. How are people finding Balls and Walnuts? Well, this morning, someone found me by searching for “testalgia”.

Hmm. I didn’t even know I had written about testalgia, but apparently so. Back in October, a big Technorati slutstravaganza month for yours truly, I concluded a lengthy blogwhoring section with the following:

Awright, awright, that’s enough whoring for the weekend. If I do any more of this, I’ll end up with testalgia. Ask Beth, she knows what it means.

I’ll bet Beth has forgotten all about this, too. Or not.

Testalgia, also known as orchialgia, also known as orchidynia (guys, bet you didn’t know your stones were also orchids!) is commonly known as blue balls or stone ache. With sexual arousal, the genitals engorge with blood. Primarily, this is a venous capacitance effect. In other words, it’s the venous system, not the arterial system, which swells with blood. If orgasm occurs, the vessels relax and everything goes back to normal. If not, then the vessels may remain distended.

According to this Discovery Health Article,

This uneven blood flow causes an increase in volume of blood trapped in the genitals and contributes to the penis becoming erect and the testicles becoming engorged with blood. During this process of vasocongestion the testicles increase in size 25-50 percent.

Wow! I wasn’t imagining it. There’s more:

The condition usually does not last long and the level of pain associated with blue balls is usually minor and can be exaggerated. Most men have been socialized to ejaculate when they get an erection during sexual activity. Failure to ejaculate and to feel orgasm often adds frustration and disappointment to the reality of the physical sensation.

Like hell it’s minor. Guys, back me up on this. Think back to your virginal days, when all you could do was kiss and grope for hours. Felt like you’d been kicked in the nads afterwards, didn’t it?

I learned from Discovery Health that women get stone ache, too. In med school, we were taught that we should be very gentle during that portion of a pelvic exam when we palpated the ovaries. My fingers are too short, so I never did get to feel an ovary. Some women, I could barely reach the cervix. So ended my budding career as a gynecologist.

I would like to conclude this public service announcement with a snip from one of my favorite Country Western songs.

You can tell my arms : Go back into the farm!

You can tell my feet to hit the floor.

You can tell my lips to tell my fingertips,

they won’t be reaching out for you no more.

But don’t tell my balls,

my achy breaky balls

D.

So I lied

I do have bupkes.

And so does Mr. Squirrel, by the look of it.

Superdickery.com has dozens of intentionally? unintentionally? suggestive comic book illustrations for your edification. Enjoy.

D.

Ever have one of those days

. . . where you ain’t got bupkes?

Don’t get me wrong. I had a great day editing and writing, but now I’m spent. My one inspiration was, “Gee, it’s been a long time since I’ve done a sex post,” but then I got discouraged because I couldn’t find a web page discussing Prairie Muffin bedroom habits, and before long I ended up at one of the online skin sites. Again.

I don’t know about you, but looking at that stuff alone depresses me. So, to perk up my spirits, I headed over to YouTube and watched Keith Olbermann pwn Bill O’Reilly. (Hey, did I use that slang right? Pwn? Am I cool or what?)

Now at least I’m not depressed, but I’m still nearly empty-handed.

Um, if you have a filthy, and I mean filthy mind, that last line came out all wrong.

One thing to report: croissants make a decent bread pudding substrate, but I think white bread is superior. White bread-based bread puddings puff higher. Caveat: these were not the greatest croissants.

Show of hands: who made bread pudding tonight?

D.

Bread pudding to die for

Does it seem like I’m posting lots of recipes lately? Don’t hear no one complainin’.

This is the Dubai Deal of bread pudding recipes: it feels all wrong, but it tastes so good. Do you suppose that’s why the Bush Administration wants to sell our ports to the United Arab Emirates company — because those UAE guys taste so good? Is that how these closed room deals are made? It makes as much sense as any other explanation I’ve heard.

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A star-studded golden shower

Isn’t it ironic that I’m stunned, blinded-in-the-headlights by a woman who makes her living deriding the famous and wealthy, who has written at length on the soul-raping effects of fame?

Well, maybe not ironic. I’m enamored of Cintra Wilson because of her writing, not her fame, since after all she’s not particularly famous. Hell, Maureen Dowd probably has much greater name recognition, but I’d take dinner with Wilson over Dowd any day of the week. Sorry, Maureen.

In the February 8-21 issue of The Wave Magazine, in her column The Dregulator, Cintra writes:

Paris Hilton has apparently been leaving her territorial mark anywhere she feels like it — just because she feels like it — and she can do anything she wants — so there. The New York Post reported in October that Paris had an “accident” in the corridor of a Las Vegas hotel. And a couple of weeks ago, Mike Walker of The Enquirer wrote, Maui cab driver Harden Jamison picked up Miss Piss late one night with Greek man-o-kopeta Stavros Niarchos. While he drove, Jamison claims, the heiress hiked up her blue satin dress and relieved herself on his back seat. Jamison had the good fortune to serendipitously run into Paris the next night, and he confronted her. She whined outraged denials. Jamison reportedly screamed, “I kept the towel . . . I’VE GOT THE DNA!” One of her entourage allegedly tried to buy him off for $200.

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Be careful with that sponge, Eugene

First came The Shining, reimagined as the feel-good movie of the year. (Good thing Peter Gabriel isn’t dead; otherwise, he’d be forced to turn in his grave.)

Then came Brokeback to the Future.

Since I’m too tired at the moment to do anything but dick around at YouTube, here’s Tom Cruise on Oprah as It Should’ve Been.

I don’t think I’ll ever tire of these.

And, now playing at YesButNoButYes, Spongeback Mountain.

D.

It’s that time again

Thursday Thirteen

Thirteen Gastronomic Orgasms

The challenge here is to come up with thirteen omigod food experiences which I haven't blogged about. Let's see how far I can get before I have to fall back on some old favorites.

1. Funky red bean paste dessert. Let me describe this Chinese confection to you, since I don't know the proper name. It uses a sheet-like wrapper derived from tofu to enclose sweetened red bean paste. The packet, sort of like a flat burrito, is deep fried and sprinkled with powdered sugar. It's amazing -- hot, sweet, a bit salty.

2. Shrimp scampi at La Pergola's, North Beach, San Francisco, early 1980s. Yup, you'll need a time machine for this one. Karen and I went back there in the mid-80s, ordered the scampi, and it just wasn't the same.

The key features of die-and-go-to-heaven scampi: fresh prawns cooked to perfection, and a buttery sauce, no skimping on the garlic. This has to be one of the most commonly messed-up recipes, since I am inevitably disappointed.

3. Eggplant parmigiano, Il Giardino Restaurant, Ashland, OR. I make a mean eggplant parmigiano, but mine does not compare to Il Giardino's. Theirs is unparalled for melt-in-your-mouth goodness. I suspect they use Chinese or Japanese eggplant, since your typical fatso aubergine won't turn behave like this, no matter how you coddle it. And, yes, I've tried salting it, rinsing it, and squeezing out all the excess water. No go.

4. Soft tacos, El Grullense, Redwood City, CA. As hard as I try, my soft tacos can't hold a jalapeno to the ones they make at El Grullense. We first ate there in the mid-80s, when they were a hole-in-the-wall place serving food to go, lines spilling out on the sidewalk. Now they're a chain, and as busy as ever. My guess as to the secret ingredient: pork lard, and lots of it.

The perfect soft taco: pork carnitas (or lengua -- beef tongue) on a homemade corn tortilla, garnished with chopped yellow onion, cilantro, salsa, and a squeeze of lime juice.

5. Any sausage at Top Dog, Berkeley, CA. Certain moments in my life have crystallized as images of paradise. One such is the time I ate three sausages in a row at the Top Dog on Durant Ave. It was summer, the sky was that shade of China blue I've only ever seen in the Bay Area, the temperature was around 70, and those sausages (a Polish and a couple of brats, if I know me) slid down the gullet like raw oysters. The counter guy joked I'd need a new stomach. Wrong!

6. Thai seafood hot pot, Berkeley, CA. I don't remember the name of the restaurant, but they've long since closed. This hot pot featured unbearably fresh scallops, prawns, and calamari, all simmered to perfection, along with an exquisite balance of pepper, garlic, fish sauce, and cilantro -- yet another Wonder of the World I have not been able to reproduce in my kitchen.

7. Hazelnut gelato, Vivoli's, Berkeley, CA. Gggrrrhlllhgggrrllhgglarrrrhll. 'Nuff said.

Oh, and the alternate lifestyle wimmen who own and run Vivoli's -- total fantasy material, hairy armpits and all.

8. White sandwich bread, Virginia Bakery, Berkeley, CA. Are you beginning to understand why I miss Berkeley so much? If I won the lottery, first thing I'd do, I'd buy a house in Berkeley, north of the campus.

I went into Virginia Bakery one day and asked the counter gal, "My God, what smells so good?" She had just pulled a tray of white bread loaves from the oven. I couldn't believe white bread could smell so good, so I bought a loaf. "I'm taking this home right now," I said, and she encourage me to try a slice. What, no butter, no jam? Yes, just a dry slice of white bread, and yet it tasted like heaven. Nothing compares.

9. Soft shell crab, New Orleans. I wish I could remember the name of that place -- a converted church, if that rings anyone's bells. Karen and I ordered one helping of the appetizer. The waiter said, "What? Only one?" Um . . . yeah. "But there's only one crab per order," he said. This shocked us, given the price of the appetizer, but aw hell we're on vacation let's splurge and get two.

Two of the BIGGEST mofo soft shell crabs we had ever seen in our lives, each one swimming in its own sea of clarified butter. Needless to say, we had no room left for dinner, let alone dessert.

10. Bread pudding with whiskey cream sauce, Palace Cafe, Santa Barbara, CA. At last, something we have been able to reproduce at home. Karen uses Wonder Bread, believe it or not. If I had a loaf of white bread from Virginia Bakery for Karen's recipe, we would all die with smiles on our faces.

11. Fried clams from the East Coast. Will one of you east-coasters tell me if there are still fast food joints that serve nothing but fried clams and French fries? I remember this from childhood, our occasional voyages of the damned vacations to visit relatives in Boston. Seven Seas, Seven Es, something like that. If you west-coasters and middle-staters have never tested Eastern Seaboard fried clams, you cannot imagine what I'm talking about. Forget about those chewy boogers you get in the frozen food section; these taste like the Platonic ideal of Clamness.

12. Blood pudding in France. I mentioned this on someone's blog recently, but never here. When Karen and I honeymooned in Europe, we tended to order without knowing what it would be. I'm not sure I would have ordered blood pudding knowingly. I remember something savory, spicy, so good I was sopping up the remnants with my bread and wishing for more.

13. Mussels in Paris, in a place across from the Louvre -- also during our honeymoon. I don't think I had ever tasted mussels before, so I didn't know quite what to expect. I've had good mussels since then, but nothing quite as good. There's nothing worse than a bad mussel, and nothing better than a perfect one.

Yippee! I did it. Not a single repetition from previous food posts (I don't think; although, it's hard to imagine I've never raved about Top Dog before on these pages.)

Okay, your turn: what gives you a resounding gastronomic orgasm?

D.

The Thirteen Crowd:

1. Kate Rothwell holds forth on writing;
2. Sleeping Mommy tells us about her health;

3. Joan imagines a bunch of stuff

Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!

The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!

Dormies

Maybe it’s the grappa.

Fanatic Cook’s recent post on HDL (“good” cholesterol) led me to vow to drink more alcohol, so the other day, Karen and I dropped some dough at our local liquor store. We bought grappa, gin, and port. Tonight, we cracked open the grappa.

It’s, um, stronger than I thought it would be. Drank it three hours ago and I’m still buzzing. Mazzetti liquor de l’Oro, if you’re curious, but I’m not recommending it just yet. It’s sweeter and stronger than my usual Brandy Peak grappa, which gives me a happy buzz. This Oro stuff is making me feel all sappy and sentimental, and when I get sappy and sentimental, I scan old photos.

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