Archive for 2008

Backyard wine update

Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

It has been just over 2 weeks since Jamie and I spent the day picking grapes.

The buckets were kept upstairs where the ambient temperature was warmer. Each day, I would open the buckets and punch down the pomace that had risen to the top of the must. At first, the whole room smelled like bread+rotten fruit (sorry ’bout that sam). As the fermentation began to slow, the aroma turned fruity+alcoholic.

Yesterday, I finally got my hands on the carboys. Racking the wine this first time took forever. Grape skins and seeds kep getting stuck in the siphon. I should have strained it first.

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Curse of motorcycle

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Ever since I got my /5, I have wanted to dress it up for Halloween. It has a rack behind the seat that would be perfect for  jack-o-lantern. Unfortunately until 2008, I have either been out of town, or teh bike has been broken.

So, this year - the bike was working fine. I hooked up a pumpkin (foam) and added a highpower LED with switch. Everything looked great…

So of course the bike gets a flat right before the 31st :(

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Time for sweet corn

Friday, October 24th, 2008

It’s the time of the year to stock up for winter. A poor season and ethanol subsidies kept the price of corn high for a long time. Finally it dropped to 5/$1.00. So, we grabbed/shucked/cooked/de-kenneled a hundred ears.

Would have prefered 10/$1 :)

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Frida Kahlo

Friday, October 24th, 2008

For http://blog.vibrantjourney.com/2008/10/23/frida-kahlo-scarecrow/#respond

Backyard wine experiment

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

There are some tremendous grape vines growing on the south side of my house. The vines were planted years ago by my landlord and each year we get buckets of concord, himrod, and canadice grapes. Usually, we make a little juice or jelly and let the rest go to the birds. This year, Jamie and I decided to take a chance on wine.

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Took most of the day to pick, de-stem and crush grapes. A press would have expedited the process, but we did fairly well with just a colander and an old pot. At the end of the day, we had 22 gallons brewing. 12 of concord, 5 of candice and 5 of a medially (mixed). This should produce at least 50 bottles of … something. Each brew was a different color. I will add the yeast tomorrow.

If it seems to be brewing well - I will come back and add the recipe.

DragonSlayer Wheat Beer

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

DragonSlayer (super easy mini mash) recipe:

Slightly modified version of Greydragon’s recipe.

Ingredients

(for approximately 12 gallons)

  • 6 lbs - Wheat Malt (grain - we used 5.5lb white +1/2lb “special-b” for flavor)
  • 6 lbs - Amber Unhopped Malt Extract (liquid)
  • 6 lbs - Light Dry Malt Extract (dry)
  • 3 oz - Boiling hops (Hallertau)
  • 1 oz - Finishing hops (Willamette)
  • 2 tbs - Gypsum powder (for clarity)
  • 2 pkg - Yeast ( Wyeast 2206:Bavarian Lager and 1214:Belgain Ale - for separate carboys)

Steps to success

Get a big pot for mash. Add cracked grain and gypsum to about 7 quarts of water @ 160 degrees. Maintain for 1 hour @ 155 degrees. Strain out grains and rinse (sparge?) with 5quarts of water @ 170 degrees. Bring to a boil. Add all the extract (liquid and dry) and the boiling hops. Boil for 30 minutes. Add finishing hops during last 2 minutes of the boil.

Fill clean carboys with cold water. You need enough so that water + condensed malt = 12 gallons. After evaporation, we had about 3 gallons of malt - so each of our 5 gallon carboys got 3 gallons of cold water. Add hot malt mixture. When temps get reasonable add the yeast.

For yeast we experimented a bit. I used a traditional ale yeast, but Jamie insisted on a bavarian lager. The 3rd carboy received a mixture of the two… What will happen?

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Some of those last pictures are from bottling a previous brew “Hop-Scotch Ale”. It was a long night.

Metrofiets

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

My talented friend Jamie has started building Bakfiets (dutch style cargo bikes). The cycles feature  a large box for hauling groceries, kids, concrete, whatever and are popular in Europe and South America, but hard to come by in the US.

The bike you see here is one of his working prototypes and was recently featured at the Oregon Manifest bike show. It has also received a fair amount of press online:

He brought the bike by on Friday and I got a chance to take it for a spin. Even with a full load, the bike is smooth and easy to pedal in city traffic - thanks to internal gears, disk brakes and other modern features. The beautiful lines and whimsical color are also a real head-turner.

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Football

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

I am usually not much of a football fan, but we got free tickets to last nights Ducks vs. Bruins homecoming game in Eugene. The seats turned out to be fantastic (box seats) and the game had the requisite amount of excitement (bad calls, major injuries, ect…)

Sam is looking over my sholder and bugging me to write more.

So here are the vital stats:

  • People we went with: Sam and I, Porch, Sue Bomber, Jessica and Brandon
  • Oh, an I had fun :)

Goodbye Springfield?

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Currently siting in the Springfield airport, flight is delayed already, but still should leave in time. Randall is on the same flight. And… Traci just showed up! Hurray!

The last few days have been really crazy. Unfortunately,  managing the recorders took a lot of time so I missed several of the sessions and most of the meals. The ones that I got to were really good and Kyle Ford’s keynote was inspiring.

The discovery center was also very cool. Just look at the smile on my face.

Oh, and I won “best of” for my track! Which was great, because I really wanted that red stapler. It was also fun to do the presentation twice more. There were some really good questions the second and third time around.

Update:

Back at home now. We made our connecting flight, but just barely.  Turns out that both Randall and Traci ended up stuck in Denver for the night…

UAD10: New Initiatives in Web Standards Education

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

Chris Mills | Developer Relations Manager,Opera Software ASA

I had a few chances to talk to Chris and just had to make it to make it to this presentation.

Before starting he warns us that he is going to be “impossibly english” for the next 45minutes.

Opera’s MAMA project

  • structural search engine
  • has returned some shocking figures.
    • 2001, 0.71%
    • 2006, 2.58%
    • 2008, 4.15%
  • Only 50% of sites with “standard compliant” badges validated.

Problems:

  • Corporate lock-in
  • Existing developers who don’t have the time to care
  • Lack of respect in computer science AND design world
  • Hobbyists

What can be done?

  • Make better education available.
  • Make changes slowly
  • Filter outdated material
  • High quality, free, in-one-place resources
  • Resources: www.opera.com/wsc

Standard complaint sites have access to a larger market.

“Developers who don’t care” == THE BEST SLIDE EVER! (go see his slides)

WaSP web curriculum framework - Competency check lists.

I just signed up on dev.opera. I wonder how they moderate the submitted articles. It sounds like if you are interesting in submitting articles send them directly for Chris at this point. The will be redesigning the site soon to make the submission process easier.

I also had to give him a friendly jab that the first article I clicked on was just a placeholder.