Month: May 2006

  • Z Tejas, Semi-Review

    Z Tejas

    Went to Z Tejas for Mother’s day. I’ve always assumed it was a pretentious, fru-fru place, and it turns out I was right!

    One thing about pretentious restaurants, no matter how good something sounds, they always manage to find something to ruin it, some incongruous ingredient that indelibly stamps the chef’s unique perspective on the whole affair.

    I settled on the Stuffed Pork Tenderloin
    Medallions which is described as

    pork tenderloin medallions stuffed with chorizo sausage, cheese, onion and poblanos in a roasted garlic cream sauce. Served with mashed potatoes and sautéed green beans and carrots.

    It turns out that it was extremely good.

    Pity there wasn’t enough there to feed an anorexic ant! The three medallions were about 2.5-3″ across and only had a .25″ thick ring of pork medallion left after the center had been hollowed out. Nonetheless, the pork was good, the stuffing inside was very good, the sauce complimented it nicely.

    Good thing there was an ice cream shop nearby so I could fill up after dinner.


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  • The Floppy Inn

    05-04-06_1052

    My dad always tells me about a place in Florida called the Bottlecap Inn. It was covered floor to ceiling in bottlecaps done up in intricate designs.

    It sounds like a bit of Americana that’s bound to be long gone, but, perhaps a modern day version, like this desk with every surface covered with floppies might catch on…


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  • Volcanoes Are Just Cool

    National Geographic => Volcano Spews Lava in Indonesia:

    I wouldn’t want to live under this volcano, but it sure makes a cool photograph.

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  • Ruins From Space

    Space Imaging => Ancient Observatories

    Google Earth can be a lot of fun. I’ve tried tracking down Easter Island, the Great Pyramids, Machu Picchu and others just to see what they look like from space, but, Google Earth doesn’t always have high resolution pictures of the interesting places (mostly because they’re in the middle of nowhere – Easter Island barely looks like a land mass.)

    Spaceimaging.com has posted this series of photos of some of the more interesting ruins around the world.

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  • Crashing The Great (Fire)Wall of China

    TheStar.com => Hoodwinking the censors

    China has the most sophisticated and effective Internet censorship regime in the world, employing North American technology from Cisco Systems Inc. and Canada’s Nortel Networks Corp., among others, to filter out banned material.

    “Banned Material” being subversive stuff like letting their people discover Taiwan isn’t part of China.

    Hopefully, this merry band of freedom fighters can make a difference…

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  • I Never See The Fun Stuff

    Don't  Beat Me

    How come everytime I go to Taiwan, I never see the fun stuff like this?

  • Stonehenge, ancient ticketgate?

    BBC NEWS => Proposals to Recreate Stonehenge

    I’m sure this proposal to recreate Stonehenge as it existed in its heyday is all about the science and not about the not inconsiderable tourism dollars it could generate.

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  • The Big 300!

    The lonelocust.com blog just hit its 300th post. Pity it was about McDonald’s, but that’s the breaks.

    This is the 301st post.

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  • So How Does That McLook?

    BusinessWeek=> McDonald’s wants a digital-age makeover

    Staring last year, all the McDonalds’ in Phoenix started getting a major makeover. As far as I can tell, most of them are done. They’ve changed the color schemes, the seats, added wi-fi and televisions displaying news… but none of them seem to have gone as far as this article suggests. (Pity the wi-fi isn’t free, but then, I’d never take my iBook close to a table with hamburgers with special sauce on them!)

    I wonder if the Phoenix franchisee is one of those who did the small makeover and is now being asked to do it again?

    I can’t imagine the McDonalds’ in Taiwan making these changes – the kids already spend hours there. They buy one cup of tea and sit there studying and socializing all day.

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  • Doctor Who – Rise of the Cybermen – Review

    The Doctor’s old foes, the Cybermen, are back.

    Rise of the Cybermen by Tom MacRae is the first of a two-part adventure that concludes next week. It details the origins of the Cybermen. The origins of the Cybermen has already been fouled up enough in the past, with the whole what planet do they come from? Telos or Mondas?

    The episode appears to answer the question firmly with: neither. They come into existence on good old planet Earth. (Although there’s still next week to try to tie it all up neatly. They’ve never actually called it Earth, it is set in London.) Despite this apparent gross continuity gaff, they’ve taken an extra precaution: This episode takes place in a parallel universe that the TARDIS has been stranded in.

    In this universe, an insane genius wants to “upgrade” humanity to the next level: emotionless brains encased in metal bodies.

    Meanwhile, Rose, who apparently a lot dumber than previously thought, just has to go see her father, who is still alive and very wealthy in this universe, and her mother, a bitchy rich woman with a dog named Rose instead of a daughter. The character of Rose has been really annoying this season (except for last week’s episode) and she’s staying true to form in this one.

    Meanwhile Mickey has begun to develop a personality. Honestly, that’s bad for him. A tried and true crutch that writers use (some would say, “abuse”) is to take a secondary character and try to flesh him out a bit – just before you kill him off. I wouldn’t be surprised if Mickey’s days are numbered. Not only do we get to meet his dead (in our universe) grandmother, but we get two for the price of one. He exists in this universe, too, only he’s named Ricky. (Could it be the Doctor knew about this in advance somehow?) Ricky is the country’s #1 most wanted criminal, a rebel fighting against the evil genius.

    Not a lot happens in this episode, but that’s a good thing. The 45 minute format really stinks for Doctor Who, with the villains usually being relegated to an afterthought and a momentary slight of hand for the Doctor to dispose of when time runs out. The two episode formats gives them enough time to set the stage and build some menace, allowing the second episode to run full tilt towards the windmills.

    The new Cybermen costumes are pretty impressive. They’ve been given a brushed metal Art Deco look and they’ve built enough costumes to convincingly portray a small army. Earlier Doctor Who episodes suffered from three-costume-itis, where you could see obviously only 3 on screen at any given time.

    Old series Doctor Who director Graeme Harper directs this two-parter along with a couple more episodes later this season.

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