Friday, December 23, 2011

Mom's Chinese Food

Just so I can remember all the yummy foods my mom makes and try to copy her:

  • Bean curd skin in soysauce/water/sugar simmered
  • "Ji cai" + bean steamed and chopped really small
  • Salmon + mayo
  • Glass noodle + napa + shrimp
  • Flat bean + shrimp + bamboo + carrots + meat
  • "Mei gan cai" + pork
  • Phoenix claw (aka chicken feet)
  • Egg + ground pork steamed
  • Cauliflower and chicken
  • Cabbage + some soysauce

Thursday, December 22, 2011

It's the Little Things: The Free Stuff

Among the hustle and bustle to buy the best gift for this season, this article lists some good reasons to be happy without having to go broke:  It's the Little Things

Seattle

Ah...I miss Seattle!  Believe it or not, it's blue skies and emerald trees in December.  Recently occurred to me I should document the awesomeness of Seattle.

I like this person's top Seattle foods:
1. Salmon (love! love! love!  Especially covered with mayo and cooked at 200 degrees for 1hr)
2. Dungeness Crab (And to think we used to go crabbing and get cooler-fulls...)
3. Oysters and Mussels (screwdriver + hammer on the beach does the job)
4. Pike Place Market
5. Local Artisinal producers (bread, cheese, salumi)
6. Microbreweries
7. Coffee - artisinal, not S-bucks (Alas, I'm no coffee drinker)
8. Washington Wine
9. Local Chefs (Tom Douglas, etc.)
10. Berries, Mushrooms in season
Also Top Pot Doughnuts was featured on the food network! - blanchard&5
Personally, I'd also replace coffee or breweries with Ivar's clam chowder.  


Top places to visit in the city:

  • Pike place market
  • Seattle center, Experience Music Project, Space Needle
  • Sculpture Park (free) + Art Museum (free 1st Thur/mo)
  • Underground Tour
  • Safeco Field
  • Further out in the area: Museum of Flight, Boeing tour
  • ...
Top Nature Lovers places:
  • Mt Rainier: it's on all the license places!
  • Olympic Mountains
  • Cascades
  • Mt. Saint Helens: one of these days I'll climb it...
  • Mt. Baker
  • ...
Cultural
  • Tillicum Village (salmon slow cooked over open fire...mmmm)
  • Leavenworth (German town, Enchantment peaks hiking)
  • ...
Holiday Season (most free): 
  • Seattle:
    • Seattle center: Ice skating $7, control model train, caroling 
    • Shereton gingerbread village - union &6
    • Fairmount teddy bear suite - university&4
    • Macy/nordstrom santaland - pine&3
    • Pacific pl -pine&6
    • Holiday carousel westlake - pine&4
    • Lighted waterfront park, pier57-59, end of pike
    • Seattle Civic Christmas Ship Celebration - select dates & locations (Meydenbauer beach park)
  • Everet flying heritage collection $12
  • Bellevue:
    • Garden D'Lights
    • Bravern Holiday Lighting: Santa rides in, caroling, beverages, pony rides, santa mailbox, cookie decoration - Nov-?, $?
    • Live entertainment Dec till 23rd
    • Gingerbread display @Hilton 300 112 ave SE, Dec until 21?
    • Hilltop Craft show - late Nov till early Dec
    • Jingle Bell-vue Blvd at  Bellevue Arts Museum - select dec dates
    • Heritage Center Winter Open House - Dec?
    • Square mall ice skating -$10
    • www.magicseason.com
  • Woodinville Molbaks displays

    Tuesday, December 20, 2011

    National Geographic Photo Contest 2011

    AMAZING photos:

    1) No idea Yellowstone could be like this!
    9) According to my brother..."UFO!"
    10) Beautiful, but so creepy!
    14) A different kind of lollipop!
    19) I had no idea these things existed...haha
    21) If I had this kind of alarm, I'd wake up in the morning
    22) People are so strange
    29) AK-49 shell casings = bracelet? really?
    51) Very cool perspective

    20 Pictures That Will Make You Feel Happy and S*** Girls Say

    These definitely made me feel much happier: 20 Pictures That Will Make You Feel Happy (AS).  I think my favorites are the pandas, the doggy stacking, flexible bear...shoot, I like all of them.

    On a side note...this also made me kinda happy - at the very least, made me laugh. Kinda. S*** Girls Say

    Monday, December 19, 2011

    Reindeer Race

    Hahaha, this was hilarious: Reindeer Race

    Imagine all of this with an English accent:
    * "And away they go!...sort of"
    * "Right to the back of the field is Prancer...who's not really prancing"
    * "What's Dasher doing?!!"
    * "Oh! they're all having a nibbling of grass! Ohhhh this is disgraceful!"
    * "The winning line's over there, everyone!"
    * "Oh father Christmas is running after them."
    * "They're all obviously taking a bit of break, but Cupid is still in front."
    Thanks KP!
    After staying up till 4am looking up fun places to go in Minneapolis, I came up with this itinerary (google map plan): Mall of America, NWA Historic Museum, Sculpture Park, Institute of Art, Mill City Museum, Bell Natural History Museum, Waterfall at Minnehaha Park, Fort Snelling, back to Airport.  This is what I actually ended up doing:

    • Walked around Mall of America with random girl, went on the Sponge Bob rollercoaster, walked around mall, window shopped – 2 hrs! How in the world did I spend 2 hrs in a mall, granted it’s one of the largest in the country.
    • Went to Sculpture Park and took pictures with the cherry on the spoon. 
    • Went to Institute of Arts – yes, I got sucked into the museum.  I get sucked into all museums.  Even though it was modern art, it was fascinating!  There was a gallery dedicated to children’s dark dreams (yes, creepy), graphic art, informatics, clay movie, Andy Warhol (awesome!)…
    What I found even more interesting were the people I came across:

    • Freshman from Vietnam, studying advertisement, also had a good 3 hrs of layover before going to Seattle, so she was my guide at Mall of America.  Unfortunately, I couldn’t convince her to ride the rollercoaster with me, so I rode it with a cute 9yo boy who said he rode it 30+ times already. - only person I got a name out of.
    • Elderly man, smoking cigar, from Rochester, MN who I enlisted to help me take pictures at the Sculpture Park.  He invited me to walk around the park with him, but I think I ended up walking too fast and being in too much of a hurry.  Haha.
    • A really nice man on a bike who guided me to the metro station.  I probably ruined his last day of good biking in MN.  He biked 1.5hr/day! How awesome is that?
    • Lady who teaches kids with disabilities, wants to live in France, just bought “French for Dummies”, lived in Minneapolis for 30+ yrs, and told me the secret of mini jukeboxes and videos at the metro stations. 
    • Recent high school graduate who’s taking a year to just play hockey, hoping to do college hockey next year.
    • ICU nurse from Ohio hospital, discussed the awesomeness of electronic records w/ONE program

    Tuesday, December 6, 2011

    Not PC: Autocorrect Fail, S*** Girls Say, Hey Girl

    Sure, some are not PC, but some really made me lol: Autocorrect Fails

    On the subject of not PC:  S*** Girls Say (Hilarious, and I definitely hear this around me. Fine, I'm guilty for a few).  Can't forget this as a med student: S*** Med Students Say

    And still on the subject of not PC: Bonjour, Girl (From the childhood fav - Beauty and the Beast)

    Monday, December 5, 2011

    45 Most Powerful Images of 2011

    These are truly amazing shots that made me teary and shiver: http://www.buzzfeed.com/mjs538/the-most-powerful-photos-of-2011?sort=posted&z=2NNLJ6
    Notables:
    1) This article made me teary: http://motleynews.net/2011/09/12/photo-of-heartbroken-father-robert-peraza-at-the-911-memorial/
    8) When Joplin residents were asked what was one thing they wish to have restored, most said the trees.
    12) If everyone with strong beliefs did beautiful acts like this, the world would be wonderful.
    14) Irony that the standing person has a "Stitch" in her back pocket.
    30) This baby is so thin he looks out of this world

    33) What can one possibly do?

    34) Hilarious
    44) What incredible luck to be caught during an attempted suicide - or is it?
    45) This is what makes kids incredible.

    Sunday, December 4, 2011

    Whirlwind of Chicago

    Finally! With a switch weekend break of 2.5 days, a few friends and I headed out to be tourists of Chicago, armored with our various forms of cameras: hand held, ipod, and super fancy + big lens kind.  No coincidence only the Asians had cameras.  The trip started at -2 days when I found out my long lost roommate from undergrad was also going to be there for the weekend - yay MNZ!

    Day 1: Finished ob/gyn shelf, went to eat some free appetizers (complement of social chairs), packed in 15 minutes, and drove 5 hrs, to get there around 7:30p.  We ate dinner at Lao Szechuan in Chinatown, which was a nice break from the same frozen pasta that I've eaten for the past two weeks.  Oh man, do I miss Chinese food! With our powers combined, we ordered in in Chinese, and it was delicious.

    After meeting some more friends, we went to a comedy show at The Second City.  Unfortunately, the main show was sold out, so we just went to watch the backup comedians/trainees.  Although not the real deal, it was still pretty entertaining (OCD bartender, black/white twins, vegan song, radio station couple, Goldfigure and Jonathan Bond, wedding songs, Dr.'s creation).

    Day 2: After insistence from the coffee drinkers of the group (KL, LL), we went to Intelligentsia where all I enjoyed was the aroma.  True to our tourist roles, we went to Millennium Park to observe the city through a gigantic bean-shaped mirror.  And to train my stomach for going abroad, I licked the bean.  Yup, I licked it.  I'm hoping because it just rained, that it didn't have too much dirty hand microbes on it.  I also got a deal out of it from a friend, so it wasn't too bad.

    We continued across BP bridge (no sliding down the slide for me...), admired the Crown Fountain (aka faces fountain), skimmed the Art Institute, and took a bus to The Magnificent Mile on Michigan Ave.  You'd think traveling with 2 guys and a girl wouldn't involve a huge amount of shopping, but I was wrong.  We must've spent an hour in Banana Republic.  There was another really interesting shop, that I forgot the name of.  It was dark, the ceiling was dotted with sewing machines, and it had tons of leather.  Man, if I had more money, I'd buy clothing from that shop.

    After getting cute gifts from Anthropology, we ate lunch at Portillo's Hot Dog's - some classic Chicago hot dogs.  Not supposed to have ketchup, but I put some on anyways (how can you not have ketchup?!!).  They were good (probably because I was starving without bf), but I still don't understand why they're so special.

    The Navy Pier was a lot of fun!  The sea (okay, lake) was refreshingly beautiful, and the skyline was perfectly outlined by a sunset.  We had some fun observing the slowly moving Ferris Wheel and making fun of their usefulness in trapping potential dates, and then continued to the end of the pier where I took a picture with the anchor that looked like a pelvis (don't they all look like pelvises?).  The cherry on top was that along the way back indoors, we ran into a Winter Festival with beautiful lights/rides/events, and the Smith Museum of Stained Glass that's supposed to be one of the best in the U.S. (free!).

    We then made our way to Kai's place, got a tiny view form the 58th floor, and ordered some Gino's deep dish pizza.  While it was very filling, I have to say I prefer my cheese on top of the sauce.

    Day's still young: We then went to the Zoo Lights - how can anyone not like shiny, glittery lights that synchronize to the music?  And while the group (now expanded) wandered from light to light, I preferred to check out all possible paths, which often led to me being separated from the group and trying to catch up to them.  I sometimes wonder if I were completely gone, if anyone would notice.  Anyhow, my efforts were awarded with seeing sleeping lions and gorillas with a foot of me.

    We spent a little time celebrating our wonderful host's bd party (LM), and then I split to join MNZ and YYL at a holiday party.  There I realized what a small world it was, how everyone knew everyone, and our class president was as notorious in highschool as now.

    Day 3:  After sleeping 4 hrs, we sent MNZ off on her plane.  Intending to take a short nap, we slept too long, ran into Bear's Game traffic, and didn't get to the Field Museum until 11:30.  Sighs...were supposed to leave at noon for SL.  It was supposed to be free for residents today, so I had a friend bring her residency info, but I was disappointed that they stamped your hand, not give you a ticket.  I lingered a bit, hoping the security guards would look away, and I could make a quick dash for it, but the opportunity presented, and I was too chicken.  So instead, I wandered around the building's outskirts.  While I was on the phone, I followed some people into the North entrance.  Before I realized what happened, I was already in the museum.  Fortunate for me, my friends decided to leave at 12:30, giving me some chance to explore the exhibits: Gems, Evolution of the Earth, New Guinea, Environment, Egyptian Tombs, etc.

    Fun times!

    Sierra Leone Healthcare Updates $15million

    Interesting update from Haja Bangura (Minister of Health) on new fund from Kuwait Fund to improve Ola During Children's Hospital in Sierra Leone: Hot From Press.  Key updates (?=number accuracy uncertain):

    • Fund used for post-grad training, oxygen/fluid factory, abroad training.
    • Goal: 49 health facilities by next year, 350 nurses, 300 RN's, ?300 doctors trained; 8 doctors in each district.
      • Current: 21 hospitals (18 are free).  
      • Only 1 gynecologist available.
    • Major problem: distribution of free drugs.  Now still have 140 contains of drugs worth $11 million in storage.
      • Initial drug distribution losses: 6% (hope new measures decrease this stat).