Friday, April 22, 2011

Savory Sausage Stuffing with pine nuts

Savory Sausage Stuffing

 From FamilyFun Magazine
  • Rated by 21 members
Savory Sausage Stuffing

For families that have always favored a traditional white-bread stuffing, this side dish will seem both familiar and exotic. The Italian sausage provides a savory note that goes great with the fresh fennel (if you've never used it, think of it as celery with pizzazz). The optional toasted pine nuts are rich and buttery, but mild enough not to interfere with the other flavors.


Ingredients
  • Loaf of sturdy white bread (1 pound)
  • 1 pound Italian sausage links, mild or hot
  • 1/4 cup unsalted butter
  • 1 large onion, chopped
  • 1 bulb fennel, finely chopped, or 2 cups finely chopped celery (or a combination)
  • 1 large carrot, peeled and finely diced
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 1/2 cups chopped mushrooms
  • 1/2 to 3/4 cup chopped fresh herbs (use mostly parsley, plus sage, rosemary, and/or thyme)
  • 1/2 cup pine nuts, pan toasted (optional)
  • 3/4 to 1 1/4 cups chicken broth
  • Salt and ground pepper to taste
  • 2 large eggs, lightly beaten
Instructions
  1. Slice the bread into 3/4-inch cubes and allow to air-dry for several hours (or dry in a 350º oven for about 10 minutes). Transfer the bread to a very large mixing bowl and set it aside.
  2. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Poke each sausage several times with a fork and drop into the boiling water. Boil for 13 to 17 minutes, until the center of the sausage is no longer pink. Transfer to a bowl and cool. Score the casings and peel them off. Quarter the sausage lengthwise, then cut crosswise into 1/4-inch pieces. Set aside.
  3. Melt the butter in a very large sauté pan. Stir in the onion, fennel, carrot, and bay leaf and sauté over medium heat for 8 minutes, stirring often. Stir in the mushrooms and sausage. Cover and sauté 3 to 4 minutes more. Remove from the heat.
  4. Remove the bay leaf and add the sautéed mixture, fresh herbs, and toasted pine nuts (if desired) to the bread. Gently toss the mixture and add the chicken broth, 1/4 cup or less at a time, until the bread seems moist but not soggy. Taste the stuffing, adding salt and pepper. Add the eggs and mix gently. To stuff your bird, see the Herb-roasted Turkey recipe. Makes 10 servings. Test Kitchen Tip: To cook the stuffing on the side, spoon it into a large, shallow, buttered baking dish. Cover with buttered tinfoil, buttered side down, and bake in a 350º oven for 20 minutes. Remove the foil and bake for another 15 minutes, until crusted over.

The Art of Time: Twitter book club discussion article

The Art of Time: Twitter book club discussion article: "iPhone Tracks Your Every Move, and There’s a Map for That By Brian X. Chen April 20, 2011 1:30 pm Categories: Phones An une..."

Twitter book club discussion article

iPhone Tracks Your Every Move, and There’s a Map for That

An unencrypted file stored in iPhones and iPads constantly records a user's location data. An open source application was used to plot the location data from an iPhone belonging to a Wired.com reporter.
Update 4 p.m. PT, Thursday: Wired.com has obtained a letter from Apple explaining how and why iOS devices store geo data and transmit it to Apple.
Your iPhone or 3G-equipped iPad has been secretly recording your location for the past 10 months.
Wired.com can confirm that fact: The screengrab above shows a map containing drop pins of everywhere yours truly has been in the past year.
Software hackers Peter Warden and Alasdair Allen discovered an unencrypted file inside Apple’s iOS 4 software, storing a long list of locations accompanied with time stamps. The file is labeled “consolidated.db.”
“Ever since iOS 4 arrived, your device has been storing a long list of locations and time stamps,” Warden and Allen wrote. “We’re not sure why Apple is gathering this data, but it’s clearly intentional, as the database is being restored across backups, and even device migrations.”
Warden is providing an open source program “iPhone Tracker” for iPhone and 3G iPad customers to output their location file into an interactive map, like the one above, so they can see for themselves. All you have to do is plug in your iDevice through USB and run Warden’s application. The software requires OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard).
The iPhoneTracker application features a sliding bar for users to see where they were in specific times of the year.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for a comment. Apple has not previously disclosed that iPhones and iPads are constantly tracking and storing user location.
The discovery is the latest in a series of alarming incidents that serve as cautionary tales about privacy in the always-connected mobile era.
Recently, German politician and privacy advocate Malte Spitz sued his phone carrier Deutsche Telekom to get every piece of information it had about him. The carrier delivered to him a gigantic file containing 35,000 data points of his location for six months. Later, a German publication plotted Spitz’s data onto an interactive map.
This iPhone and iPad privacy leak is eerily similar, and creepier, considering that Apple has sold over 100 million iPhones and 15 million iPads.
The location data stored inside “consolidated.db” cannot be accessed by Safari or any apps, said Charlie Miller, a security researcher known for discovering vulnerabilities in the iPhone. However, the data file is sensitive because a thief who gains physical access to an iPhone or iPad could look at the file and see everywhere a customer has been, or a hacker could remotely break in and read the file, Miller said.
It’s not simple for a hacker to remotely access an iPhone to get to that file. But in the past, Miller found an exploit that would allow a hacker to hijack an iPhone just by sending a text message to it containing malicious code. Apple later patched that exploit, but security researchers say there are plenty of vulnerabilities in the wild left unaddressed.
Sharon Nissim, consumer privacy counsel of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said it is possible Apple is violating the Wireless Communications and Public Safety Act, which allows telecom carriers to provide call information only in emergency situations.
“By asking for permission to collect location data, Apple may be trying to get around its legal obligations, by asking people to give up privacy rights they don’t even know they have,” Nissim said.
She added that a potential privacy concern is that law enforcement would be able to subpoena these types of records from people’s iPhones or iPads.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The Art of Time: The art of list making

The Art of Time: The art of list making: "Like baking the one-bowl chocolate cake, list-making is effective and produces great results when you have: § Appetite: I WANT to do t..."

The art of list making

Like baking the one-bowl chocolate cake, list-making is effective and produces great results when you have:
§  Appetite: I WANT to do this
§  Desire: I’m GOING to do this
§  Ingredients: all the items on the list
§  Tools: something to record with and on

This process is a way of getting control back in our lives; of identifying and managing our commitments to ourselves and others so that we start WORKING TOWARDS THE FINISH LINE!

Before we start, there is one ground rule: We are not creating more work for ourselves with impossible lists attached to disproportionate timetables.  This is the beginning of a transformation into stress-free achievement and efficiency. 

Time is one of the most valuable things we have! And guess what…..EVERYONE’S time is valuable!  If you are the CEO of a corporation or COO of your home, no one can be productive when feeling overwhelmed and disorganized. 

The journey, therefore, begins at home…..keep your pen and notes handy at all times…..initially you will need some uninterrupted time in whatever environment stimulates thinking…we are beginning small....

LET’S GET STARTED!

1. Record EVERYTHING you need to do this week (or think you need to do)
§  regardless of what day it is, end your week on Sunday
§  don’t worry about order or priority for now….just get it all down
§  this isn’t a wish list….write down what you actually have to do

Example:
Based on full-time working (outside of home) mom, two teenage boys (high school), full-time working spouse who shares in household responsibilities, no outside house cleaning, hobbies
            1. Feed family
            2. Grocery shopping
            3. Laundry
            4. Clean house
            5. Job interview for son
            6. Purchase cleats for boys’ tryouts
            7. Haircuts
            8. Birthday cards for extended family March birthdays
            9. Twitter, facebook, gmail, blog
            10. Personal hobby time: finish painting for auction
            11. Exercise
            12. Pay bills
            13. Shovel sidewalks
            14. Garbage
            15. Recycling


2. Record EVERYTHING you can think of that needs to get done this month

Example:
            1. Pay bills
            2. Dinner party
            3. Birthday gift for niece
            4. Fix caulking in main bathroom
            5. Organize winter/spring clothes – donation of excess?
            6. Take in vehicle for windshield repair
            7. Orthodontist
            8. Eye appointment
            9. Review household budgets
            10. Start thinking about themes for the art show
            11. Volunteering at art gallery
            12. Lose 5 lbs (ha ha)
            13. Exercise plan for family?
            14. Call sisters
            15. Call parents

3. Record EVERYTHING you can think of that needs to get done this year

4. Record EVERYTHING you can think of that falls on your wish list


Think of list making as a way of having a personal assistant…..of getting control.

Next we will explore how to manage the lists you have created and I'm doing it as well!