March 28, 2008

cary in the scene

Filed under:, , , , , — Chris @ 9:29 am

My friend Cary Ann has a good write-up in the Scene:

Bluesy soul-country mamas with impeccable twangabilly tendencies can be a retrofitted drag, or they can be Cary Ann Hearst. Dust and Bones from 2006 recasts Americana as outsider folk and rock ’n’ roll, right down to the impressionistic precision of the backing band and Hearst’s untutored but lively guitar. The title track stomps its feet in an abandoned church and Hearst sings “Dresden Snow” like Wanda Jackson covering something winsome from John Cale’s Paris 1919. Only it’s not winsome—it’s twisted, brilliant and very alive, like most of Dust and Bones. As a pure vocalist, the Mississippi native bears comparison to Jackson or Nashville’s Kristi Rose, but there’s nothing particularly campy about Hearst’s songs or the way she delivers them. She’s a canny singer and songwriter with a knack for the telling details that color her concise narratives.

You should go see her play tonight at the End (10PM).

March 27, 2008

OpenBSD on alix2c0

Filed under:, , , , , — Chris @ 12:04 am

I recently bought a alix2c0 board and enclosure as a cheaper alternative to my preferred (but somewhat pricier) Soekris Net4501 platform for running OpenBSD for a local firewall/router. I didn’t have a modern copy of OpenBSD anymore (my current firewall is still running 3.9), so I didn’t have a convenient platform to use flashdist to dump a working install onto the CF card. Such a thing was necessary back in the day when I was dealing with 64M of space, because you had to be Really Picky (pickier than the barebones install) about what you install. Now, however, I am recycling a 1G CF card for my firewall (I just bought 2 new 4G CF cards for photography, w00t), so I have a reasonable amount of space. I figured I’d try a more standard install. Here were the steps I took:

  • Enable tfp on my firewall in inetd by uncommenting:

    tftp dgram udp wait root /usr/libexec/tftpd tftpd -s /tftpboot

  • kill -HUP inetd
  • added this to /etc/dhcpd.conf:

    filename “pxeboot”;

    See the OpenBSD FAQ section on PXE booting for more on this. (as well as the following steps)

  • kill -HUP dhcpd
  • Hook up the alix2c0 board via a serial null modem (38400, 8N1, no flow control) and turn it on. Hit ‘S’ during the memory test to enable setup. Hit ‘E’ to enable PXE/network boot and quit, saving the settings.
  • Grab pxeboot and bsd.rd for the version of OpenBSD you want to install
  • Put those two files in a directory called /tftpboot on your dhcpd/tfp server (as referenced in inetd.conf above), along with a /tftpboot/etc/boot.conf with the following:

    set tty com0
    stty com0 38400
    boot bsd.rd

  • Reboot your alix2c0, and it should request an IP via DHCP and then start requesting the aforementioned files via TFTP. If all goes well, it should switch the console to com0, grab bsd.rd and boot you into the OpenBSD kernel with a ramdisk that will dump you into the normal install process. Voila!

March 17, 2008

st patrick’s season

Filed under:, , , , — Chris @ 1:50 pm

I took this picture two years ago meaning to make a blog post about it because I thought it was funny. Obviously this was before I had any photography skills whatsoever:

A Picture Share!

Apparently the celebration of St. Patrick is no longer merely a day, but a “season”.

March 15, 2008

ack

Filed under:, , , , , , — Chris @ 1:40 pm

As usual, I’m a day late and a dollar short. I missed the news that Adam Kleinheider is out of WKRN. I think say uncle put it best:

sorry to hear it. If there’s anything I can do, let me know.

It’s offical: I have no use for WKRN.

That about sums it up. There was a time when Mike Sechrist was still there when he almost had me believing that even their local news might be worth watching again. Not so much anymore. So, I guess the local media’s experiment with “new media” is officially over. I can now continue watching cynically as local media implodes, atrophies and is replaced from the outside rather than from internal change.

Best of luck to ACK in his future endeavors, which I’m sure will be successful.

March 14, 2008

youtube friday

Filed under:, , , , , — Chris @ 1:25 am

March 12, 2008

chili cookoff

Filed under:, , , , — Chris @ 2:55 pm

Does anyone else find it a little ballsy that the URA, who has steadfastly opposed both the homeless in the Church Street Park, public food distribution to the homeless (by Food Not Bombs and others), and restaurants giving out food, is now holding in the Church Street Park, of all things … a chili cook-off?

I hope their permits are in order. That said, I make some damn good chili. I should enter it.

March 9, 2008

jesus fucking christ

Filed under:, — Chris @ 6:15 am

I wish I could think of a guy I believed in more whose name I could profane to indicate how awesome this is. Wait, I got it. Barack Hussein Obama!! Wait no. Well, maybe.

For years I’ve wanted for someone like rufus wainwright that I could lust after without my inconvenient aversion to homosexual intercourse getting in the way. Finally I’ve found it. He has a sister.

March 5, 2008

on matters of steak

Filed under:, , , , , , — Chris @ 12:43 pm

So, I’ve been eating a lot of steak lately. One of the benefits of my bachelordom is that I can have bourbon and steak for dinner and not get yelled at. So, people love to grill steak, and for good reason. It’s tasty. Charcoal flavor is nice. But being the fancy-lad downtown-living metrosexual that I am, I don’t exactly have the requisite equipment to grill a steak — namely, a patio. Or a grill. So, I pan-fry. The very idea used to disgust me, but I’ve come ’round to the pan-fried steak. And I’ve mastered the art of it, if I do say so myself. The picture at right demonstrates my early on in my attempts to pan-fry. I just slapped it in the pan and hoped for the best. The fresh, pretty red color on black makes for a nice picture, but not a very good meal. More on that below.

This is not a complicated process, but it works for me, and it’s fairly tailored to my preferences. I like steak very rare, but I’ve never been a big fan of cold meat. I like my steak as rare as possible while still warm in the middle, basically. (This depends on the quality of the meat, though — I’m not as picky about this with filet mignon, for example.) So, to accomplish this, I do a few things. First, regarding meat selection. My preference is for a thick cut, an inch to an inch and a half. I usually target 16oz. steaks, as this is more than enough for me when I’m starving, and a decent size for two people. Preferrably strip or ribeye. This process works for either. Typically, I let the meat come down to room temperature on the counter, while I busy myself with other important things, such as tweezing my eyebrows.

Once the meat reaches room temp (or when I get too hungry to wait any longer), I cut the meat in half, salt/pepper it liberally and put it in a nonstick baking pan with sides. Preheat the oven to around 275 degrees and stick it in. I have no specific time that I keep the meat in the oven, and it largely depends on the thickness and size of the steak. The idea is basically to bring the meat up to serving temperature throughout, and cook the outside a bit. I basically eye-ball it and rely on smell — with a ribeye, my kitchen will start to smell like prime rib when it’s more or less there. This takes some experience to get right. Too long and you run the risk of overcooking it, or at least drying it out. So, it may take some experimentation. It’s probably the hardest part — as much as eating steak every night while you learn can be described as “hard”.

At this point, I get out my one, my only, my constant — my true love. My skillet. It’s time to sear the meat. Bring the skillet to a fairly high temperature as high as it will go. It will be scary. You’ll be afraid that your smoke alarm will go off, or that you’ll actually burn down your house. If you’re not afraid of this, it’s not hot enough. Dump butter in, and wait for the water content to boil off and the pan to start smoking. The only thing we’re doing here is searing the meat. It’s already cooked to our satisfaction. The goal here is two-fold: general browning, and the all-important Maillard Reaction. This is a complex reaction that involves chemicals and … stuff — specifically amino acids and sugar. The result is that elusive Umami — aka “the taste that everyone forgets about”. This reaction doesn’t happen at all without sugar, though, so that’s why the butter (lactose) is important. It also requires high temperature and low moisture levels, so make sure to pat the meat dry before searing. So anyways, sear the meat on all sides — I like to use tongs to allow for better management of the meat, and so I can sear the meat on the sides, as well. Once seared to your satisfaction, remove it from the heat, set aside and let it cool. Meat will continue to cook after heat is removed, of course, so make sure you let it stand for a while and also take this into account while you’re searing. While it’s cooling, you can prepare your other sides, or whatever. I’ve read some articles in Cook’s Illustrated that recommend finishing it in the oven, but I haven’t found that to be necessary.

It’s tough to get good results by just slapping cold meat in a pan (as I had previously) — if the skillet is too hot, you get seared meat but ice-cold inside. Conversely, if it’s too cold, it takes approximately forever to cook, and the meat gets dried out (and probably burned rather than browned, on the outside.). It’s a lose-lose situation. The result with this technique (when done right) is a nicely seared outside, with that savory bit of buttery brown crust we all love so much, and nicely warmed, moist, rare meat on the inside.

Enjoy!

March 4, 2008

music city center

Filed under:, , — Chris @ 8:30 am

Those of you that know me know that I’ve never been keen on a new convention center as a priority in Nashville. But despite that, it seems that it is one. I’m happy to report that a group of concerned citizens have released a design study with some recommendations, and they’ve really outdone themselves:

The design of the Music City Center will be key, and for this reason we have crafted a conceptual design study.

We advocate that the main hall be sunk into the site’s slope, and that its roof become a series of thriving public plazas, wrapped by mixed-use buildings with active streetfronts and accessed by a maintained street grid as 6th and 7th Avenues are converted into pedestrian thoroughfares rather than obliterated or entombed by the sort of “typical” convention center we do not want or need.

More details and pictures at http://www.themccproject.com/.