Month: June 2016

Monday, 20 June 2016

10:15 – Barbara is off to the gym and running errands. This afternoon and the rest of this week we’ll be filling and labeling bottles and making up science kit subassemblies.

One of the problematic chemicals has always been starch indicator, which is a suspension of “soluble” starch in water. We use a 10% m/v solution of thymol in IPA as a preservative. That generally works pretty well, but we sometimes get mold or fungal growth in some of the bottles. We just threw out a bunch of them the other day that had assumed a dark brownish gray cast. They’d still serve their intended purpose, detecting very small amounts of iodine, but their ugliness offended me. So yesterday we tried something different. I made up a small batch of the starch indicator, enough to fill 60 bottles. After they were filled and capped, we put them in a pot of boiling water and let them boil for ten minutes or so. That’s enough to kill any microorganisms present, although not spores.

The bottles are polyethylene, which softens but does not melt at the temperature of boiling water. I was a bit concerned that boiling would deform the bottles severely, so we ran a test recently with just one bottle in a pan of boiling water. It swelled a bit, but did not melt or deform.

Killing spores would require heating the bottles to 121C (250F) in a pressure cooker or autoclave. Unfortunately, it would also melt the bottles. So if just boiling them doesn’t keep them from growing mold/fungus, we’ll have to use a 19th century technology which is still occasionally used today for special purposes. It’s called Tyndallization, and was widely used for preserving food before pressure cookers became widely available.


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Sunday, 19 June 2016

09:58 – We made up another batch of the no-knead bread dough this morning, and will bake two more 1-pound (454 g) loaves this afternoon, after it finishes rising two hours at room temperature and then two more hours in the refrigerator. The last time we used this recipe, we didn’t use bread pans. This time, we’re going to try it with our silicone bread pans. We both think this bread is better than commercial bakery bread, let alone supermarket bread.

My desk looks out over the back deck. When I look up, I see the satellite dish installed by the former owners. We’ll never have satellite TV here, and I’ve been thinking about converting that dish and mount to a parabolic solar oven. I’ll leave it where it is for now, but if we ever need it it would be quick and easy to repurpose it, just by covering the surface of the dish with aluminum foil.

Back to work filling and labeling bottles.



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Saturday, 18 June 2016

09:59 – Barbara is cleaning house this morning, while I do laundry. We just started seasoning the new wok she bought down in Winston. I’ve seasoned cast iron cookware, but this is the first time I’ve done steel. It’s ugly, which is more obvious on the gray surface of the steel than it is on the black cast iron. Barbara has never cooked in seasoned pans before. I think once she tries it she’ll like it. Ten second cleanup and the food just seems to taste better. And I like the idea of using 3000 year old nonstick technology.

UPS showed up about 7 p.m. yesterday, just after we’d finished dinner and cleaning up, and left five large boxes on the porch. Colin never even woofed. Those boxes contained about 3,000 30mL bottles and caps, a case of funnels, and two cases of test tube racks, which we were completely out of. Later today, we’ll finish building a dozen chemistry kits, which were awaiting test tube racks, and then return to labeling and filling chemical bottles and building subassemblies.

And in more bizarre news, it seems that four years or so ago a Pennsylvania Amish couple more-or-less sold their 14-year-old daughter to a 51-year-old pervert, by whom she has borne two children. What really surprised me was that the father of the girl said he thought it was legal based on research he’d done on-line. Since when do the Amish use the Internet?

Email from Jen, whose husband has a new hobby. Two or three weeks ago, they attempted to start their generator and it wouldn’t fire up. So David hauled the generator over to a guy he knows who works on small engines. He sat and watched as the guy tore down and cleaned the carb, making notes of tools and supplies he’d need to do it himself. Jen says David has now downloaded service manuals for all their tools that use small gasoline engines, both four- and two-cycle. Last weekend, he tore down, cleaned, and rebuilt their leaf blower and chainsaw. This weekend, he’s going after their lawn tractor, which Jen fears will never be the same. But she does admit that both the leaf blower and chainsaw are running fine.


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Friday, 17 June 2016

12:47 – Barbara is down in Winston today running errands. I’m working on kit stuff. We got another quarter inch of rain overnight. Colin is terrified when it rains heavily, presumably because he knows that lightning and thunder is likely. He’ll just have to get used to it, because we have lots of rain, wind, and thunderstorms here in Sparta. Dinner will be leftover chicken tetrazzini with homemade bread. Colin will like that.

This is the time of year when cases of bottles start arriving in droves. I ordered 6,000 30 mL bottles and caps Tuesday. They should arrive sometime today. Once we get those labeled and filled, it’ll be lather, rinse, and repeat until we’re ready for the autumn rush.

Here’s a link to a PDF of a chapter in the prepping book I just finished the first draft of this morning. I haven’t even read through the chapter, so it’s probably a mess. The chapter naming starts with a three-digit number–007, 030, or 365–to indicate whether it’s in the first section (prepping for a week), the second section (a month), or the third (a year). The second number, in the form Cxxx, indicates the provisional chapter number within the book as a whole. This is an early chapter, but I have nearly all of the book in progress at this point.

If you’re interested, please read through it and tell me what you think. All comments are welcome, and many of them will no doubt influence the final form of the book, although obviously I can’t promise to incorporate every suggestion. Please send your comments to me via email, with the chapter title–030-C004-Water-for-a-Month–as the subject line. I’m sure I’ll get a ton of comments on these chapters, so I won’t acknowledge any of the comment emails unless I need clarification.

030-C004-Water-for-a-Month


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Thursday, 16 June 2016

10:21 – We got 1.00″ of rain late yesterday, if we’re to believe the electronic rain gauge, whose sensor is on the back deck. Barbara put out an old fashioned tube rain gauge out front just before the rain started. It said we got about 1.2″. I trust the manual one, which means the 18.98″ of rain year to date indicated on the electronic one is actually probably more like 22″ plus.

Some of the stuff we planted in the test garden has started to sprout. The summer squash made its appearance a few days ago, and is now thriving. Literally overnight, the Blue Lake bush beans went from almost invisible tiny little green dots in the soil yesterday afternoon to distinct plants about 1.5″ tall, with leaves the size of a thumb as of this morning. There are also tiny little green things in the soil that should soon reveal themselves as Siberian tomatoes, Waltham broccoli, Chantenay Red Cored carrots, and Ruby Red onions. We also have ten pots going on the back deck, with a bunch of different herbs as well as California Wonder bell peppers. Assuming the deer and bugs don’t eat everything, it looks like we’ll get a reasonable crop, particularly since we planted only 0.007 acres.




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Wednesday, 15 June 2016

10:10 – Barbara is off to the gym and supermarket. Usually, she goes to the gym MWF and does a supermarket stop on Friday, but this Friday she’s headed down to Winston to run errands.

I decided to re-read the Home series by Chris Weatherman, AKA Angery American. I read them piecemeal as they came out, but I decided that binge-reading them from start to finish was worthwhile. They’re not great literature by any means, but they’re a lot better than most of the PA series out there. It’s interesting how many PA novelists live around here. William R. Forstchen (One Second After) lives an hour or so down the road in Black Mountain, NC. Chris and his wife and daughters live in the Blue Ridge Mountains, an hour or so SW of here, on the edge of the Pisgah National Forest, not far from Forstchen. Franklin Horton, another good PA novel series author, lives an hour or so WNW of here, in far SW Virginia. If I had the time, I’d write a series myself.




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Tuesday, 14 June 2016

10:02 – Federal and state estimated taxes are in the mail. Grrrrrr.

I’m afraid that the Florida outrage is just the latest in what’s likely to be a string of similar outrages between now and the general election. The goal of terrorists, after all, is to spread terror among ordinary people. In that sense, the choice of a gay bar was less effective than it might have been had the murderer chosen a target that average people could identify with. Only a tiny percentage of the population has ever been in a gay bar. Nearly everyone has attended sporting events, theme parks, and similar soft targets that attract mass numbers of people. There are hundreds of thousands of such soft targets, most of them made even softer by declaring themselves gun-free zones. Which is actually a pretty good metric: if it’s a gun-free zone, you really don’t want to be there under any circumstances. And in that category I include not just sports stadia and theme parks, but entire cities and states. All they’re really doing is advertising, “Lots of helpless victims available here.” Someone called that a wolf amongst the sheep, but I think a weasel among the chickens sums it up better. If you value your life and your family’s lives, don’t go anywhere you can’t go armed. And if you ever find yourself in such a situation, don’t count on someone else to save you. Whether or not you’re armed, your best response is ALWAYS flat-out attack.

More work on science kit stuff today.



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Monday, 13 June 2016

09:54 – We made dinner from long-term storage last night. Chicken Tetrazzini from Jan Jackson’s 100-day Pantry: 100 Quick and Easy Gourmet Meals. The recipe claims to serve eight. As a side dish, perhaps. Not as a main/only course.

So we doubled the recipe. There was enough for the two of us and enough left over for two more meals for the two of us, so I’d say the original recipe realistically serves three. The only ingredient we used that doesn’t realistically qualify as LTS was grated Parmesan cheese, and even it has a reasonable shelf life in the original container.

With the exception of the canned chicken, which had a best-by date in November of this year, everything we used was well past the best-by date. The condensed milk was labeled best-by September of 2014. I had Barbara sniff it, and she remarked that it just smelled like condensed milk. If it had been even slightly rancid, her nose would have detected it. My guess (based on past experience) is that it would have been just as good five or ten years past the best-by date.

I wondered about the Cheez-Whiz, but it was also fine, although it was well past the best-by date. Not that that matters. We could easily substitute cheese sauce reconstituted from Augason Farms Cheese Blend Power, which we keep in our LTS pantry.


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Sunday, 12 June 2016

09:24 – House cleaning, laundry, and other routine chores today. This afternoon, we’re filling bottles and doing other kit stuff.




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Saturday, 11 June 2016

09:40 – Barbara is in Winston today, running errands, having lunch with a friend, and then making a small Costco run on her way back up here.

The final season of Downton Abbey is now available on Amazon streaming. I was surprised the other night when Barbara suggested that instead of just watching series 6, we go back and rewatch it from the beginning. I have no problem doing that, of course. Downton Abbey is decent television. Not as good as the original Upstairs, Downstairs, but good enough to watch again. We’re interleaving it with another series we’re rewatching, HBO’s Rome. That series is annoyingly ahistorical, but at least it’s watchable and has much better dresses than Downton Abbey. We also have a lot of decent stuff queued up on Netflix streaming, including the latest seasons of Hell on Wheels and Peaky Blinders. We won’t run short of stuff to watch in the evenings, although Barbara is usually doing crosswords and I’m usually browsing the web or reading an ebook at the same time.

Speaking of which, I just downgraded my Fire HD7 from Fire OS 5.x to 4.x. Fire OS 5.x is better in most respects, but I simply can’t tolerate the fact that they’ve moved the navigation bar in landscape mode from the right of the screen to the bottom. The Home icon is in the center, and I’m constantly pressing it accidentally, taking me out of whatever website I was looking at and returning me to the home screen. All I really use this thing for is checking my own web site and checking webmail, so the new features in Fire OS 5.x are pretty much a who cares for me.


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