Archive for March, 2008

A Little Sweet, a Little Savory

March 30, 2008

Holy crap, has it really been that long since I blogged? Oops!

Despite my inability to actually get anything on this here page, in the little book Neeta gave me, I have 3 entries I’ve started and stopped:

1) Addiction to Life Change, the New Cocaine
2) Battling Your Essential Nature
3) The Hills Premiere

And sure, I think you’d be, oh, ENTHRALLED, by a) my total boredom with my own self, b) my battle with smoking (Jen: 1, smoking: 0), with keeping my apartment clean (Jen: 0, apartment (is it really the winner here, tho?): 1), and c) my belief that Heidi was only really pissed off at Spencer because the “growing” she wanted to do was THE SIZE OF HER LIPS (but really, who can not empathize with the desire to get your collagen injections done off-camera? A big enough zit and I debate going into work. Not really. Sort of.).

But, I’ve felt kind of stuck, unable to commit to a topic, just like LA (and I) can’t seem to commit to a season.

There are signs of Spring:
– It was 90 degrees here weekend before last!
– I got my Hollywood Bowl calendar in the mail
– Broke out the Orly’s Passion Fruit, which, DUDE, still has magic powers; the other day, some man on the street literally did a double take over my toes
– I booked my summer vacation — Costa Rica with Amber!

But there are still signs of Winter:
– I broke it off with the new dude I was seeing, not sure why
– This weekend was my first one completely off in a few weeks, dredging up unpleasant memories of The Christmas That Wasn’t
– I’ve spent the portions of the weekends I wasn’t working just trying NOT to be miserable

Basically I think I just haven’t committed to what my life is right now. Sometimes I’m just like, WHY, WHY do I have to be single again? WHY, WHY does my job require so much of my time? Which is totally pointless because a) I am and it does, and b) I’m going to miss out on all the fun things about being single and on the time I do have to myself if I don’t just COMMIT already. Commit a.k.a. accept reality and stop whining about it.

I think this weekend was a turning point, however. I think I might be ready to fully commit to being single, and to Spring.

i. I hung new thrift store purchase ($9, people!):

ii. Installed an orchid in my other find, a Ritz Carlton silver champagne bucket and stand ($20):

iii. Actually dragged myself away from Stacy and Clinton and went out on Friday night with Neeta in open-toed! shoes and actually gave out my number.

iv. Tried this:

Oh. My. Goodness.

Everyone needs some bacon! and chocolate! together at last.

A little sweet, a little savory.

And maybe if I’m lucky, if I commit, maybe I’ll get some more of that. There’s always a fair amount of unsavoriness involved in being single — the drama, the hopes, the fears, the disappointments (sounds like a high school graduation speech, no?). Actually, same goes for work. But usually there’s some sweetness and savoriness to balance it out.

So here’s my commitment to this being the last time I whine about it (for all our sakes), here’s my commitment to Spring. And to chocolate! and bacon! together at last.

Two Pizzettes, Two Vignettes

March 13, 2008

The Pizzettes

Can I share with you the easiest, awesomest pizzettes recipe EVER? I procured it at a super fun but appallingly titled Hip Cooks class “Cooking for One.” I highly recommend their classes if you live in LA, and that one in particular if you are one of those people, ahem, who have a hard time not eating Trader Joe’s buffalo wings every night (I have been truly afraid before that I would just wake up one morning covered in a thin layer of buffalo sauce, like I had BECOME a wing.).

Recipe at the bottom of the entry. Makes two pizzettes.

Vignette One

I know what you are thinking: DUDE, “pizzettes?” Let’s just call these what they really are, personal pizzas, you BoBo freak.

I think that, too, sometimes, but pizzette sounds so much better than “personal pizza”…. that is, unless you’re talking a Personal PAN Pizza from Pizza Hut!!

Personal Pan Pizzas from Pizza Hut will be forever linked for me to this cross-country road trip I took with Mom, Dad and Jeff in, hm, 1983? In which Jeff had to pee like EVERY TWELVE MINUTES. Which I find fascinating because his last blog entry, OVER A YEAR AGO JEFF, is about forgetting to pee.

You want to know the saddest thing? My parents that summer dubbed me “Bladder of Steel” (k-k-k-klassy!). And because since birth I have been an incredibly competitive little mofo, I strongly suspect my little 6-year-old self held it in on purpose to outdo my 3-year-old brother, like, TAKE THAT, you little bowl-cut towhead who’s cuter than me, I CAN HOLD MY PEE IN LONGER.

Anyhoo, in addition to the fun of exiting the highway every 12 minutes, on that trip I threw a fit any time our lunch-time stop was not Pizza Hut. I mean, why would anyone want to eat anything else besides your very own personal cheese pizza with crust that oozed oil down your chin? Some unknown diner where they might have fresh, local ingredients? ARE YOU CRAZY?

Certainly my parents were by the end of the trip.

Which is why I feel so bad about the ending of Vignette No. 2.

Vignette Two

My family took a lot of cross-country trips, actually. One of my favorites was the one I took with Mom and Penny, I guess, holy crap, over 10 years ago now since I was 20. Penny was thus 12.

And, G-d love her, that girl refused to eat anywhere but Taco Bell. And you know, I was all TWENTY, and had practically GRADUATED by then, I ate SUSHI and was moving to NYC and HELLO, as if!, I was NOT eating Taco Bell. I. was. EXPERIENCING. LIFE. In technicolor, at local diners, with The People. Of Montana. And probably Iowa.

Oh, though I remember it fondly, there were some speed bumps on that trip.

By the time we made it back across the country into Portland, to see my dad race, Penny and I HATED one another. Like Montague/Capulet Hate.

And I don’t know exactly how it happened, but on the way to the race track, Penny was kicking my seat and I told her, through clenched teeth, to stop. She did not.

So what did I do? (Keep in mind, I am TWENTY at this point, not THIRTEEN, 20, and supposedly too darn evolved to eat Taco Bell) I reached behind me, dug my nails as hard as I could into her tiny little calves until she bled while she sheared the skin clear off my shoulder kicking me, trying to get me to stop.

Five minutes later we show up at the track, all cowed by our own violence and bleeding and bruised and looking extremely sheepish, with my mom near hysteria explaining what her TWO DAUGHTERS WHO YOU WOULD THINK WERE RAISED IN A BARN JUST DID, and all my Dad’s racing buddies trying to look concerned but I think truly taking obscene pleasure in that a two-week build-up of car-caged estrogen would explode into such a bloody brawl.

Luckily, in addition to amusing the menfolk, this story now amuses me and even Penny. In fact, when I told her tonight I was posting about it, she was all, “Oh yeah, that’s so funny…

I WAS JUST SHOWING SOMEONE MY SCARS.”

p.s. Finally painted my living room!

p.p.s. Quarterway through my bedroom! Still don’t have a bed! I am awesome!

The Recipe

I stretched this out over two nights but you can do it in one.

Night One:
1. Walk to Trader Joe’s.

2. Skip the bufflo wings. OK, maybe buy some just in case this doesn’t work out.

3. Buy the following:
a. Cheap-ass bottle of balsamic.
b. Pizza dough
c. Prosciutto
d. Chevre.
e. Red onions.
(Things you have to have on hand are olive oil, butter, brown sugar, cognac or brandy or red wine for the onions).

3. Walk home, throw maybe a half-cup of the balsamic into a sauce pan, bring it to a mild simmer then bring it back down and leave it at very low heat.

4. Pour glass of wine, watch Stacey & Clinton boost someone’s self-esteem through the power of fashion, occasionally stirring the balsamic until it is reduced by half. Once it cools it will get even more solid, so don’t let it turn into complete goo. Pour it in Tupperware. Or a squeeze bottle if you super ambitious (I was not). Done.

Night Two:
1. Preheat oven to whatever pizza dough directions say to preheat it for.

2. Cut the red onions, like three maybe, into 1/4- or 1/2-inch rounds, whatever your poison. Put some olive oil and 2 tablespoons butter in a skillet until butter is melted, throw the onions in there. Cook them for maybe 20 minutes or more on medium-high/medium heat until you’ve sweated out a lot of the liquid.

3. Take Trader Joe’s pizza dough out of fridge, let sit for 20 minutes. Or forget to until step 6 and let it sit for 5, whatever.

4. Then throw in something to sweeten and really caramelize the onions — I used a generous handful of brown sugar, then a little more later, and some French brandy I had around. I cooked them for maybe 20 minutes more after I put the sugar and booze, until they were good and freaking gooey. I added salt just toward the end. Done.

5. Take the dough out of the plastic bag, plop it on a cutting board coated generously with flour, cut it in half. Work each blob into a round with your hands, just like they do on TV.

6. Put your pizzettes on a cookie sheet and brush with olive oil.

7. Put in oven for half time it says on pizza dough wrapper.

8. Take it out. Burn yourself. Oh, wait, that’s just me.

9. Pile on the caramelized onions, the prosciutto (just rip it into pieces, very satisfying), some globs of chevre (also very satisfying to squeeze out).

10. Put it back in for the rest of the time, or until cheese is slightly browned. (If you, like me, are super paranoid, you can scatter corn meal on the cookie sheet to make sure the bottoms don’t burn). Remove from oven.

11. Drizzle that balsamic-y goodness over the pizza.

12. ENJOY. Dude, I am salivating just thinking about that pizza.

Oh, and day 3? LEFTOVERS!!

Onions Make Me Cry; Dating is Awesome

March 4, 2008

So, first a disclaimer: none of this is new, something someone else hasn’t written about before in a more eloquent and, surely, succinct manner.

Perhaps David & Goliath said it best in just 7 words.

Still, I’ve been thinking.

Dating someone new is hard, especially if you, like me, are adverse to change. Why can’t everyone just kiss the same?

I seek out discernible similarities to people I’ve known before — an old lover, a coworker, my brother. It makes the incomprehensibility of all there is to know in a new person less scary. But then I run the risk of not letting them be, not just peeling the onion back slowly and let come what may. I assume based on past prototype — usually to my own disadvantage.

I also run the risk of writing someone off too early — if he does this, which He did, doesn’t it stand to reason he does That, too? A logician will tell you there is no if –> then relationship between fondness for The Colbert Report and leaving you broken-hearted, but try telling that to a still-grieving heart.

There are lots of other things you can try to no avail to tell a still -grieving heart. Like to trust again, to not believe all boys deserve to be stoned, maybe this time I can peel the onion without ending up sobbing into a handtowel.

I catch myself getting excited every now and then, by something sweet that is said, some interest that is taken in my person. And then I remember, this is New.

It Gets Old. It Ages. It Dies.

So I don’t know. I find myself in an odd place.

Hating the New because it’s not familiar and warm. But not ready to trust and let something grow Old because probably that will be the Death of it. But at the same time willing the Old to COME ON ALREADY so I can know if it’s going to DIE ALREADY AND STOP WASTING MY TIME with some slow Death that I’m just going to have to repeat a year from now ad nauseum until I am 65.

The problem of course is that if you wish to hasten something’s demise, it, well, hastens.

Which is why I’m hanging in there, slowly peeling the onion. Even though I’ve never been able to do so before without crying in the end.