A public service announcement regarding computer security

Friday, October 11th, 2002

Yesterday I spent a lot of time researching Bugbear, and trying to get in touch with an old mentor of mine whose computer was infected and sent me two infected emails containing personal email originally sent to him, all without his knowledge. I’ve also spent some time lately helping various family members better secure their home computers.

Computer security is no longer optional for anyone who owns a computer connected to the internet. Even if your computer has absolutely nothing of interest stored on it, hackers will try to get to it so they can use it to attack other computers to cover their trails. Computer viruses and worms attack without forethought, automatically spreading and squirming around into places they’re least expected, much like their biological counterparts. Yes, I know this is a long entry. Read it anyway! I promise to use mostly understandable English!
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Tease

Tuesday, October 8th, 2002

(I wrote a poem.)

Tease
by Adele Shakal

The crisp in the air teases us,
Wakens a yearning for action,
For preparing, and storing,
Weaving our webs of family,
Cocooning with our thoughts and dreams,
Nestling tidbits into our burrows,
Securing our homes and ourselves
For the coming winter.

Yet just when we feel about to begin,
Autumn snatches back its whispered caress,
And we are pushed, unwilling,
Back into summer’s warm embrace,
A lingering farewell of too much heat.

Indian-Style Potluck

Monday, October 7th, 2002

Well, it turned out to be too hot to bake this weekend. Instead, I remembered the following recipe, which is stove-top and fairly simple, healthy, and tasty. My friend Jean taught me variants on this recipe a while back. Thanks, Jean!

Make rice. I usually dump 1 cup of white rice and two cups of water. Bring to a boil, then cover and turn off heat. Leave sit for 30 minutes.

Cube some potatoes, chop up some carrots, half an onion and whatever other vegetables you have. I usually use zucchini and yellow mini-squash. Sometimes I also use frozen mixed veggies, or corn or lima beans… and you’ll need one tub of plain yogurt and one smallish can of tomato sauce. I also sometimes use a can of diced tomatoes.

For seasoning, you can use some minced garlic and whatever spices you like that you have on hand. I usually use some garam masala and some paprika, but you can use tandoori seasoning instead.

You want to use a big frying pan or saucepan, and put in your potatoes, carrots, and any other vegetables that will take longer to cook than the rest. Add water to half-cover them, and bring to a boil.

Let it boil until the potato cubes and carrots are near to being cooked through. Reduce heat slightly, and add the other veggies. Reserve any tender veggies that cook really fast, like zucchini, to add just before serving. Add the tomato sauce, diced tomatoes, and yogurt, and stir gently. Reduce to simmer. If it seems like the sauce is thin, leave it uncovered. If the sauce seems thick, you can add a bit more water and cover it. In any case, simmer until the veggies are nearly done. Add any tender veggies that you’d reserved to add in last, and stir. Cover and simmer for a few more minutes, then remove from heat.

Serve over rice, with salt and pepper to taste.

The first pumpkins of the season

Friday, October 4th, 2002

The first pumpkins of the season have arrived at my local grocery store. Little albino mini-pumpkins, mounds of decorative oddball gourds of every shade and degree of warty bumpiness, oodles of different shapes and colors of squash. And one little bushel basket of sweet pie-sized pumpkins.

Oh, yes, fall is here!

Oh, and just to get further into the mood, here’s a link to a childhood book that I absolutely adored, The Witches’ Catalog. Now, if only I had bat fat and flea tears to rub my order form with, and a hollow tree to hide it in… *grin* I always wanted to order two pet dragons: one small enough to fit into my cupped hands, who would live indoors with me, and one about the size of a horse, big enough to ride, who would live in the backyard. I never could settle on what colors I wanted, though!

It’s time to think about making pumpkin bread and apple pie, to mull cider and wine, to reminisce about Halloween preparations from my childhood, to make ghost-shaped sugar cookies with Mom’s recipe, and to decide how I’ll celebrate both modern Halloween and my personal Samhain, the new year holiday celebrated by many of the earth faiths.

The veil between past and present is thinner this time of year. Like the mysteries popping up through the grass in springtime and the joy of planting, there’s magic sparkling in the deepening shadows, in the chill in the air, in the harvest and in the preparations individuals, families and communities make for the coming winter.

Janis’ Baked Apples

Thursday, October 3rd, 2002

One of my best friends taught me this recipe a few years back, and now autumn just isn’t autumn without baked apples. I’m still experimenting with what I add to the mixture.

Preheat the oven. Depending on how baked you want them, either change the oven temp or the baking time. I usually do these at 250 degrees.

Slice off the tops of the apples so the result is caps and cups.

Scoop out the apples caps and cups with a mellon baller, making sure to leave enough of the fruit so that the skin of the apple retains its shape. Be careful not to poke holes through the bottom of the apple when you scoop out the core bits. Save the fruit bits you’ve scooped out, and discard the seeds and core bits.

Take the apple fruit bits that you’ve scooped out and chop them into small pieces. Combine with homemade (or storebought, but it won’t taste as good) granola. You can use anywhere from 1 part apple with 2 parts granola, to 2 parts apple with 1 part granola according to taste. Toss in some brown sugar according to your own sweet tooth level. If you’d like to add cinnamon and/or nutmeg, go for it. Consider adding fresh or frozen blueberries, cranberries, or currants.

Take that mixture and stuff it back into your apple cups. Put the caps back on, and place each apple upright onto the center of a square of aluminum foil. Wrap the foil up around the apple, completely covering it.

Place the foil-wrapped apples upright on a cookie sheet or into a baking pan. Bake until you get the softness you desire. I usually try for 20 to 25 minutes, then pull the pan out and gently squeeze one of the apples with an oven-mitted hand to see if they’re getting done.

Oh, and you may end up with extra of the apple/granola mixture when you’re done stuffing the apples. That’s fine, just bundle it up in a foil package and bake it with the apples. It will probably be done slightly before them.

Note that this recipe will make your kitchen, and probably your whole home, smell wonderful. Mmmmm.

Thanks, Janis.

Mom’s Oatmeal in Disguise (homemade granola)

Wednesday, October 2nd, 2002

Adapted by Virginia and Adele Shakal from a recipe found in a 1970’s version of The Mother’s Almanac by Margarite Kelly and Elia Parsons.

Depending on whether you like chewy or crispy granola, preheat your oven to 250 or 300 degrees.

Heat 1/2 cup canola or olive oil, 1/2 cup honey, and 1 teaspoon vanilla.

I usually use a Pyrex 1 cup measuring cup and 15 seconds in the microwave. You can use any kind of honey… clover’s good but others will add nuances to the flavor. Use natural rather than synthetic vanilla flavoring.

In a 13×9″ pan, gently mix 4 cups rolled oats, 1 cup wheat germ, 4 ounces of nuts, and 3 tablespoons of flour. You can also add some oat bran or pine nuts at this point.

I use a metal pan but whatever you’ve got handy works.

Mom usually chooses either pecans, almonds, or walnuts, or a mixture of those three. Nuts usually are available in 4 our 6 ounce bags, and tossing in an extra 2 ounces is OK, too. You can chop them with a nut grinder or leave them whole. I usually use whole wheat flour, but white flour is OK too.

Add the honey mixture to the dry ingredients in the pan. Stir gently with a big wooden spoon.

Bake for 10 minutes, then pull out the pan and stir gently with the big wooden spoon.

Bake for another 10 minutes, then pull out the pan and stir it again.

Bake for another 10 minutes, then pull the pan out of the oven and let the granola cool.

If you want to add any dried fruits, you can add them at either the first or second stirring, depending on your taste. I’ve experimented with dried cranberries, blueberries, apricots, raisins, golden raisins, and dates.

Spoon some of the warm granola into a bowl for a real treat. Store your granola in an airtight container. Serve it with milk as morning cereal, or over vanilla ice cream for dessert. Or use it to stuff baked apples, the recipe I’ll be sharing tomorrow.

If some members of your family like chewy granola and others want crunchy, preheat your oven to 250, and after the 30 minutes of baking are done, spoon half of the warm granola into your container to cool there with the container open. Bake the remaining granola, stirred and spread out so it makes a thinner layer in the now-emptier pan, for 10 minutes. Store this crunchier granola in a second air-tight container after it is completely cooled in the pan.

Note that with careful supervision, children as young as two or three years old can help with this granola recipe, either measuring the dry ingredients or grinding the nuts, or doing the first stirring before the pan is put into the oven the first time. Kindergardeners can do all the stirring if they’re outfitted with a sturdy apron and an oven mitt for the hand which steadies the hot pan, and if your wooden spoon has a good handle. Some elementary schoolers and most middle schoolers can make it themselves if you’re nearby to keep an eye on them.

And college students love getting a big double-bagged Ziplock of homemade granola in the mail (yes, it ships well, especially in the cooler weather of fall and winter).

Thanks, Mom.

Autumn’s Chill

Tuesday, October 1st, 2002

Every autumn, I feel reborn.

That wonderful feeling sometimes happens in the middle of winter for me, and sometimes in spring… and almost never in summer. Makes me wonder why I’m living in LA!

Summers here wear me out with the heat and the dryness, and I turn lobster-red rather than tanning in the sun, so the beach holds no great allure for me. Beaches are nice and all, especially if you can wander just looking for bits of shells… but I like forests, prairies and mountains better.

A few days ago, a cool front moved through. The skies opened up and beautiful clear water fell in quantity for the first time in what feels like years rather than months. The previously sweltering dry air now has a chill, and a certain crisp moisture to it reminiscent of the smell of impending snow in the midwest. It was misting as I drove to work this morning.

Fall foods are wonderful. Baked apples stuffed with homemade granola, caramel and candy corn, pumpkin bread and hearty soups. Mmmm. Homemade apple pies and hot spiced cider, or mulled wine.

I wish I had a fireplace.