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Fri, 30 Sep 2005

So apparently, part of Los Angeles is on fire. It smells like I am
sitting by a giant camp fire, and the smoke is blowing my way. Its even making our highrise in Westwood smokey INDOORS. I thought the building was on fire when i first started smelling it...must be seeping through the ventilation system

I drove around Burbanks the other day and boy was the hill red with flames...I could see the smoke towering up into the sky during work today.

[/travel] permanent link

Mon, 26 Sep 2005

LAX this week

I am in LAX this week. You can cut the smog with a knife...

[/travel] permanent link

Tue, 20 Sep 2005

Two Weeks of Meals - Some Assembly Required

How many times have you wanted dinner, but just didn't have anything in the fridge to eat? This happens a lot at my house. While I can follow directions, I simply cannot plan meals. Here is an example of my past meal plan:

Monday: Fettuccini Alfredo, Salad
Tuesday: Spaghetti, Salad
Wednesday: Parmesan chicken from Metropolitan Market, Salad
Thursday: Snack on random stuff, too lazy to cook or go to store
Friday: Too lazy to cook, hungry, go over to parents to see what they are having

So there you have it. I needed help.

Lately, there has been buzz about food preparation services. You visit a special kitchen every two weeks, mix ingredents together, use their kitchen to prepare your meals, bag them up, and freeze them. When it comes time to cook, pop it into the oven, wait for it to cook, and eat.

The cost of a two week meal allocation? Depending on the business, it is the same or less than what I typically spend at the store each month on food. To put this into perspective, when I go to the store, i typically pay about $200 every two weeks for food for our family of 2 1/2. Sometimes, as much as $300 or $400. 12 complete dinners at MonthOfMeals.com was $135 after applying a 20% promotional discount. Delivery is also available, and at MonthOfMeals, the chef staff assemble things for you, another plus! You pick out what you want on the website, and it shows up to your door at the scheduled time and day. You can also pick up orders from the facility if you choose.

Quality also comes into question. How good can frozen food really be? Are they like microwave meals, or the next best thing to your own personal chef? Thats what I set to find out.

The New Meal Plan

  • Bourbon Chicken (*Red Beans & Rice) 2
  • Grilled Tandoori Chicken (Broccoli w/Orange Ginger Dressing) 2
  • Kicked-up Sweet and Sour Pork Tenderloin (Jasmine Rice Blend) 2 Lisa's Baked Halibut (Broccoli w/Orange Ginger Dressing) 2
  • Wasabi Ginger Yellow Fin Tuna (Broccoli w/Orange Ginger Dressing) 2
  • Beef in Demi-Glaze (*Corn Pudding) 2
  • Grilled Pork Loin Chop w/Peach Compote (Italian Green Beans) 2
  • Grilled Teriyaki Chicken (Jasmine Rice Blend) 2
  • Layered Italian Meatloaf (Spinach and Mozzarella Squares) 2
  • Smoked Salmon & Red Potato Cakes (Italian Green Beans) 2
  • Sun Dried Tomato Ravioli w/Pesto Cream Sauce (Italian Green Beans) 2
  • Tri-Colored Tortellini w/Red Sauce (Garlic Bread Sticks) 2

    I selected 2 servings per meal because that feeds my wife and I, with a little plate for the baby to eat. I suspect that an older child would also eat another portion. Doubling up on portions for two meals may be difficult due to the way food is presented. Make sure you make such arrangements with the vendor.

    For Monday night, I selected "Kicked-up Sweet and Sour Pork Tenderloin (Jasmine Rice Blend)". It tasted awesome...home cooked taste, without the grease one would expect from take out or dining out. Preparation was a bit of a surprise too.

    You are not just getting a cooked meal to "warm up" in the microwave. You get a container of a particular item, cooking instructions, etc. You *actually* cook this food...they are mostly raw ingredents packaged with everything you need to prepare.

    The pork dish required a pan to cook up the meat/fuit/veggie mix. A sauce was also provided. Follow the cooking instructions and moments later you have a meal. The rice just needed to be warmed up in the microwave.

    There are microwave instructions on a lot of these packages, but frankly, i would not recommend it. It would be like baking a pie in the microwave. :)

    The first night has saved me time and money. So I give MoM's and the entire concept an A+ for now. I am eating at home way better than before.

    For you seasoned cooks? Perhaps...its just like having a cook book with all the raw materials you need put together already.

    Update

    I wrote this article last week, and since then, tried quite a few of the dishes. We are close to restocking time. So far, all dishes have been very impressive -- resturant / cater quality. Right now i am baking the halibut (which came raw, along with a veggie/sauce mixture). Tomorrow night is Salmon.

    The biggest issue is trying to remember to prep your food the night before the day of the meal. This very slow thaw keeps frozen food as fresh tasting as possible, as quickly thawing food can not only be dangerous (bateria wise) but also lead to poor taste/flavor.

    [/food] permanent link

    Floride in your water is good for you!

    Today, everybody drinks bottled water...nonfluorinated bottled water that is! This has since caused a rapid increase in tooth decay, dentists report.

    So that gives me two choices: Continue to drink bottled water as my teeth rot out of my mouth, or drink water that tastes like it came out of a public pool. Hmmm...

    [/funny] permanent link

    Wed, 14 Sep 2005

    Cat Bio-Diesel?

    Some German inventor claims to have made bio diesel from old tires, weeds, and dead cats. One cat makes 2.5L of fuel (?!)

    I don't know whats more disturbing about this link - The fact he's using cats to power his car, or the illfully targeted Google ads at the bottom.

    Apparently, making bio-diesel out of cats is not uncommon Germany. The practice is already outlawed.

    For those of you who want the details this link describes the process...and yes..it also involves a catalytic converter.

    [/funny] permanent link

    Tue, 13 Sep 2005

    DHTML Fun

    I was looking around for some good DHTML how-to sites, and I ran across this freaky demo:

    http://www.bindows.net

    It works in both IE and Firefox (although, IE seems to handle it better).

    It has a full OO API that looks exactly like a windows app -- except its DHTML and Javascript....and it talks to an XML backend. The GUI API is also XML based.

    [/code] permanent link

    For past blog entries, check out the archive on the side or click here.


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