December Radio Playlists 2013




The name of the show: Blackbeard's Delight
Your host: Prof. Kitty
The station: WVEW 107.7 Brattleboro, VT

December 5, 2013

  • Paranoimia: Art of Noise
  • Real Life: Tanlines
  • All That We Perceive: Thievery Corporation
  • The Forest: The Cure
  • An Anniversary Away: Reverie Sound Revue
  • Sun Children: DJ Nickodemus f. Real Live Show
  • Polythene Pam & She Came in through the Bathroom Window: The Beatles
  • Our Lips Are Sealed: Go-Go's
  • Happy: Pharrell Williams
  • Tarzan Boy: Baltimora
  • Wet & Rusting: Menomena
  • Rasputin: Boney M

December 12, 2013

  • Can't Get You Out of My Head: Kylie Minogue
  • La Cucaracha: Kumbia Kings
  • Never Tear Us Apart: INXS
  • The Hazards of Love 4 (The Drowned): The Decemberists
  • Life in a Northern Town: The Dream Academy
  • Sycamore: Bill Callahan
  • Corrupted Endeavour: Jessamine
  • Digging in the Dirt: Peter Gabriel
  • Lose It In the End: Mark Ronson & the Business International
  • Jique: Brazilian Girls
  • Who Loves the Sun: Velvet Underground

December 26, 2013—recap of 2013 songs! plus other things that go with them


  • Tonight's Today: Jack PeƱate
  • Out of My League: Fitz & the Tantrums
  • Keep Moving: Jessy Lanza
  • Renaissance Girls: Oh Land
  • L.E.S. Artistes: Santigold XXXchange remix
  • Afterlife: Arcade Fire
  • Mirrors: Justin Timberlake
  • Heaven: Club 8
  • Get Lucky: Daft Punk
  • Safe & Sound: Capital Cities
  • 24 Hours: Sky Ferreira
  • Ain't No Sunshine When She's Gone: Bobby "Blue" Bland

My intro to snowshoeing

My beloved and I once received a pair of snowshoes each as a Christmas gift. They were something I'd always wanted but would never buy for myself: the perfect gift. I was secretly pregnant at the time, and that winter to get healthy exercise I'd don my snowshoes in the early morning and pad around the country farm where we lived. I especially loved to find some snowbound drama of predator and prey, where perhaps one steady set of tracks would meet another leaping set of tracks, with signs of scuffle and blood, and nobody to know or witness except one puzzled woman on snowshoes. They seemed like secret stories left in plain sight for me to unravel, and accessible only because of my particular footwear.

When we moved into town I put the snowshoes away for a while, until another perfect Christmas gift, cash, allowed me to purchase a bright headlamp. I pictured myself using the headlamp to snowshoe on a local woodland trail in the gloaming, trudging along, perhaps alone or perhaps with my young daughter, and soaking up the quiet muffled tranquility of the coming dark and the deep powdery snow. This actually happened soon afterward, when I spent one magical late afternoon with my child in that very gloaming in those very woods. Then the snowshoes got put away again.

Until this year. This year when the snow came, I kind of freaked out because I couldn't run in it. I am now so addicted to running and regular exercise that the problem of SNOW threw me for a loop. How do I run in this stuff? What can I do instead? How am I going to survive until spring? After a few days of worrying and some helpful Facebook support, I realized that winter was here and I should probably roll with it. And if I want to get out and exercise in the snow, I should use my snowshoes!

This past Sunday was a perfect opportunity. We'd just had our first significant snowfall when about a foot fell overnight and then cleared up by dawn leaving a winter wonderland. At the time of my traditional Sunday long run, I geared up with snowshoes and headed into the woods.


 

One person has been here before me...

It was so fun to be active in a new way, and the woods were lovely. I even practiced some run-walking on my rather wide snowshoes. Snowshoing is hard work though. I could run about 7 miles in the time it took me to snowshoe 2.

That brings me to yesterday morning, when the group that I run with during the warm season turned out to be a group of snowshoeing beasts. Through our email forum I was invited to join their annual Ascent to the Star, which is an early morning snowshoe up a nearby mountain to the top where a Yuletide star is lit up (in bulbs) year after year.


Above: Using my trusty notebook to plan everything I would bring; At the last minute I added a thermos of hot tea.


We met at 5am and headed up the mountain in fresh snow under a full moon. 22 people and about 6 energetic dogs were there. It was an amazing experience, with great camaraderie among the trekkers, some jokes about our slow single-file ascent resembling the Hillary Step (I was thrilled to be in a crowd that makes casual Everest references), and immense and rewarding physical effort to make it to the top by snowshoe.

Here's my reward, a photo of the star from beneath. It's at least 20 feet tall.


When we got there we toasted to health, wealth, and happiness and made remarks about which of the 3 was most important. I had a welcome slug of Bailey's Irish Cream. Coming back down the mountain was a blast, since we were all motivated to get home and warmed up as quickly as possible. We took a lot of shortcuts and slid down very steep slopes on snowshoes and backsides, which I learned has the elegant name of glissading. At the bottom, my new friends even helped push my car out of the snowbank where I'd managed to lodge it when I first arrived.

The experience was one of those incredible group activities that is so satisfying, even though so simple. I felt proud and accomplished afterward just for getting up really early and putting one foot in front of other for 2 miles up and back a mountain. What an amazingly achievable pleasure, to set a physical goal and then reach it and feel proud! What's next!?

Dinner Salad with Chicken, Gorgonzola & Pomegranate

Recently (possibly after perusing food pictures on Pinterest), I had a vision of a delicious salad that could be a whole dinner. I made a sketch to demonstrate.



Basically, lovely greens with all manner of delicious toppings. I forgot to draw pomegranate seeds, but they were also a critical part of my plan. Here's my recipe!

Ingredients:
  • Orange juice, such as 1 orange's worth squeezed
  • Grape seed oil or favorite salad dressing oil
  • White balsamic vinegar
  • Salt & pepper
  • Arugula, washed and torn
  • Salad greens mix, such as Olivia's mix with baby spinach
  • 2-3 chicken breasts
  • Ghee or butter or oil, your choice
  • 1 pomegranate, firm skin
  • 1 ripe avocado, cut into chunks
  • Gorgonzola or blue cheese, ready to crumble
  • Cucumber, cut into chunks
  • Radishes, cut into chunks
  • Pumpkin seeds

Assembly:

  1. To prepare dressing, heat orange juice over the stove in small pot until reduced by at least half. Let cool, then combine with grape seed oil, white balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper. Set aside.
  2. Heat ghee/butter/oil in a cast iron skillet or nonstick pan. Add chicken breasts and turn to medium-low heat. Cook until finished throughout (you can slice it open to check) and a slight golden crust has started to form. Cool and then cut into chunks.
  3. Meanwhile, heat smaller cast iron skillet or pan and toast pumpkin seeds at medium heat. It takes about 3 minutes for them to start to crackle and seize up and brown, which is perfect.
  4. Meanwhile meanwhile, remove arils from the pomegranate. I read that one way to do this is to cut the pomegranate in half, turn it over a bowl and whack the skin side with a wooden spoon until all of the arils fall out into the bowl. I'm not sure if this is the most efficient method, but it is very satisfying.
  5. You are ready to assemble the salad! I set out all of the ingredients separately, including washed arugula and salad mix, and then had each person pick and arrange as desired.


Above, deosil from bottom left: radishes, pomegranate arils, cucumber, salad dressing, avocado, random cornichons



Above: chicken chunks, toasted pumpkin seeds, salad mix, arugula, gorgonzola is camouflaged in the upper left-hand corner



Above: young girl's plate: chicken, pomegranate, radish, greens



My plate: EVERYTHING. Particularly the crumbled gorgonzola, yum. With the green lettuce and the red pomegranate, it looks kind of festive, no?

Do you make dinner salads? What makes them "dinner" ? I used to think it was crumbled bacon and pieces of hard-boiled egg.

Living room update, December 2013

We've been working on our living room since April, and I'm pleased to report that we're done with the current phase of renovations and upgrades. Let's review!

I'm going to concentrate on our front closet, which was our most obvious upgrade.



This is the "before" picture. Wall paper peeling off to the right, nasty unused closet by the front door on the left.



We ripped everything out. Here it is partway done--the closet doorway still exists.



Closet doorway has been removed and pinkboard/insulation put in place.



Sheetrock installed. Because we wanted a bench in the former closet area, the dudes were able to switch around the existing floorboards to fill in where the closet door had been. All gaps would be covered over by the bench. Note we have a new front door now.



Primed!



Painted, trim put up, and bench with coatrack has been built in.



Here's our beautiful boot-bench. We don't have space for a mudroom, but this will be a tidy way to stow boots and extra shoes.



Custom coatrack that goes above the bench--before finishing paint.



The former closet area, still some weeks from completion. We still need to do 1. floor refinishing 2. bench refinishing 3. wall touchups.



Here's the same spot today. We love it! I painted the bench to match the other trim and gave it a coat of matte sealant. That thing is full of boots and sneakers and a diaper bag, but it looks tidy!



In an insomniac moment recently I started plotting out the rest of the living room using Polyvore. It's livable, but we could still make it prettier. From this "Living Room Look," we already have the fluffy rug, black couch, and pinao. I would love to get my hands on a large-ish ottoman, a credenza, and a metallic Moroccan pouf. A little gallery wall area would also be cool.


 

Here is my Polyvore mood-board for the imaginary built-in I envision on our "entertainment wall." Dare to dream!

Radio Playlists for November 2013




The name of the show: Blackbeard's Delight
Your host: Prof. Kitty
The station: WVEW 107.7 Brattleboro, VT

November 7, 2013

  • Be Near Me: ABC
  • Keep Moving: Jessy Lanza
  • Warm Heart of Africa: The Very Best f. Ezra Koenig
  • Da Funk: Daft Punk
  • Actor Out of Work: St. Vincent
  • Love Is a Stranger: Eurythmics
  • The Stuff that Dreams Are Made Of: Carly Simon
  • Future: Cut Copy
  • Far Away: Cut Copy
  • Free Your Mind: Cut Copy
  • Afterlife: Arcade Fire

November 14, 2013

  • Ooh La La: Goldfrapp
  • The Hardest Button to Button: The White Stripes
  • The Warning: Hot Chip
  • Royals: Lorde
  • (Nothing But) Flowers: Talking Heads
  • Rattlesnakes: Lloyd Cole
  • Kids: MGMT
  • Beautiful World: Devo
  • Wraith Pinned to the Mist & Other Games: Of Montreal
  • The Future: Prince (from Batman)
  • Alone Again Or: Love
  • Saint Behind the Glass: Los Lobos

November 21, 2013

  • My Guru: Kalyanji & Anandji 
  • Good Times: Chic
  • Something is Not Right with Me: Coldwar Kids
  • Unstoppable: Santigold
  • Egg Man: Beastie Boys
  • One Nation Under a Groove: Funkadelic
  • Old School Joint: Missy Elliot
  • Love Train: The O'Jays
  • Funky Kingston: Toots & the Maytals
  • Jimmi Diggin Cats: Digable Planets
  • Wicked Funk: Kwanzaa Posse

Pile on the Miles Challenge 2013

This month has been kind of crazy so far. I have been overwhelmed with work and not taking care of myself the way I'd like to. I rely too much on wine, coffee, and Boggle (the iPad app version) to calm me down or lift me up when I need it.

Also my nutrition has not been great. I eat healthy foods until about 5:30 pm, and then I start inhaling pretzels or crackers or goldfish or anything crunchy and carby that I can get my hands on. I am so busy during the day that sometimes I actually eat a toddler pouch for lunch because it seems like the fastest, healthiest thing I'm going to get!


Lunch is served! SUPER CHIA!

One positive thing I've been doing this month is the annual Pile on the Miles challenge, organized by Run Eat Repeat (you rock Monica!). I did it last year, and this time I've signed up for twice the mileage--90 miles!

Why double my miles? 2013 has been the Year of the Long Run. I had never run more than about 6 miles before 2013, but now I am consistently putting down 9 or 10 miles a weekend and it feels normal. To boost my monthly total to 90 miles this month, I've also added an extra running day. The average week looks like this:

  • Monday evening, homemade boot camp with kettle bell, weights, etc.
  • Tuesday morning, group track workout, 6 miles total
  • Wednesday morning, Spin for cross training
  • Thursday morning, 3 miles flat and easy (extra day for this month)
  • Friday morning, 4+ miles with hills
  • Saturday morning, sleep in
  • Sunday late morning, 9 miles or more long run
In the past week I've also made a real effort to take better care of myself. Compare my post-long-run meals two Sundays ago (crackers, other crackers, pretzels, beer), with last Sunday (black beans, brown rice, salsa, goat yogurt). Woohoo!

I hope your November has been good so far!

Radio Playlists for October 2013




The name of the show: Blackbeard's Delight
Your host: Prof. Kitty
The station: WVEW 107.7 Brattleboro, VT


October 3, 2013

  • Signed, Sealed, Delivered: Stevie Wonder
  • My Bag: Lloyd Cole
  • Wah-Wah: George Harrison
  • Every Man Has a Woman Who Loves Him: John Lennon & Yoko Ono
  • Four Winds: Bright Eyes
  • You're Insane: Rod Stewart
  • Electric Feel: MGMT
  • If You Love Somebody, Set Them Free: Sting
  • Katrina: Childsplay
  • Catch the Wind: Donovan
  • Vo Kerch: Kiran Ahlu Wahlia
  • Golden Years: David Bowie
  • Dying is Fine: Ra Ra Riot
  • This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody): Talking Heads


October 10, 2013

  • Johnny Too Bad: UB40
  • The Ghost Who Walks: Karen Elson
  • Great 5 Lakes: Buffalo Daughter
  • Smiley Faces: Gnarls Barkley
  • Phantom Limb: The Shins
  • What Is Life: George Harrison
  • Tell Me: Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings
  • Mixed Bizness: Beck
  • Hearts Like Ours: The Naked & Famous
  • Keep Your Eyes Ahead: The Helio Sequence
  • Back to the Old House: The Smiths
  • Round & Round: Ariel Pink
  • Your New Cuckoo: The Cardigans


October 17, 2013—tapping the jazz archives, I'll put the year where I know it. The day after this show I found out Howard Brofsky had just died. His immense spirit was in the air.

  • Passion Flower: Johnny Hodges (alto sax) & his orchestra, 1940
  • Love Is Here to Stay: Lester Young (tenor sax), 1956
  • I'm an Old Cowhand: Jimmy Smith, 1962
  • Moon Ray: Teddy Wilson & His Orchestra, 1939
  • Rosetta: Benny Goodman & His Orchestra, 1937
  • So Sweet My Little Girl: Johnny Coles
  • Polka Dots & Moonbeams: Howard Brofsky (trumpet), 1999
  • Time on My Hands: Ben Webster (tenor sax) Quintet, 1957
  • Alone Together: Hal McKusick (alto sax), 1957
  • Angel Call: Coleman Hawkins (tenor sax), 1947
  • I'm Alone with You: Jimmy Lunceford Orchestra
  • Careless Love: Sidney Bechet


October 24, 2013

  • Adir Adirim: Balkan Beat Box
  • Pump Up the Jam: Technotronic
  • How We Exit: Gentleman Reg
  • Hong Kong Garden: Siouxsie & the Banshees
  • Radio: Black Cherry
  • Bring on the Night: The Police
  • Disco Infiltrator: LCD Soundsystem
  • Animal: Miike Snow
  • Wild About You: Worryin' Kind
  • High Times: Elliott Smith
  • Back of the Van: Ladyhawke
  • White Winter Hymnal: Fleet Foxes
  • Star Sign: Teenage Fanclub
  • From Africa to Malaga: jj


October 31, 2013—Halloween edition!!

  • Cemetry Gates: The Smiths
  • Superstition: Stevie Wonder
  • Frankenstein: Nosotrash
  • Cemetery Lawn: The Rosebuds
  • Ghostbusters: Ray Parker, Jr.
  • Terror: The Stockholm Monsters
  • The Boy Who Drew Cats—story narration
  • I was Stabbed to Death in this Very Doorway: Steward
  • Loupgarou: Crispy Ambulance
  • Eve of the War: Jeff Wayne's Musical War of the Worlds
  • Don't Fear the Reaper: Blue Oyster Cult
  • I Want Candy: Bow Wow Wow

Easy No-Boil Lasagna

 

Here's a make-ahead or make-right-now lasagna recipe. You can have this on the dinner table in about 90 minutes, or make it ahead and reheat in about an hour. The trick is to use oven-ready lasagna noodles.

Ingredients:
  • 6 oven-ready lasagna noodles, I used half a package of Ronzoni
  • 1 jar of prepared pasta sauce, such as Muir Glen (25.5 ounces)
  • 3 sweet Italian turkey sausage (or any sausage you like; we use Shady Brook)
  • 8 ounces of cottage cheese
  • 1 egg
  • Handful of chopped fresh herbs, such as parsley, rosemary, oregano, basil (dried is also fine)
  • Salt and pepper
  • 2 cups or more of grated mozzarella cheese
  • 1/2 cup or more of grated Parmesan cheese
Assembly:

First, if you're going to bake on the same day as assembly, preheat oven to 350F.
  1. Squeeze sausage out of casings and fry, chopping and moving with a spatula to break it up well and cook evenly.
  2. Beat egg in a bowl and combine with cottage cheese, salt & pepper, and chopped herbs.
  3. Start layering in a 9x9 inch glass baking pan as follows: put a bit of pasta sauce on the bottom, then 2 noodles. Spread on half the cottage cheese mixture, half the cooked sausage, and pour on more sauce. Then sprinkle on half the grated mozzarella.
  4. For the next layer, place 2 more noodles, the other half of the cottage cheese mixture, the other half of the sausage, more sauce, a third of the mozzarella, and half the Parmesan.
  5. Finish up with 2 more noodles, a good final layer of sauce, the rest of the mozzarella and the rest of the Parmesan.
  6. Cover with foil. At this point you can either refrigerate and bake later, or proceed with baking as follows.
  7. Place in the oven for 30 minutes. At that point, remove the foil and bake for 10 more minutes.
  8. Secret tip: crank the heat to 450F and bake it uncovered for 10 more minutes. Then remove from the oven (it should be nice and browned and bubbly) and let lasagna rest for at least 5 minutes.
  9. Serve! Ideally with a healthy salad, but don't feel bad if this is so delicious it just gets inhaled solo. It is good!
PS I got a ridiculous new app for the iPad that makes photos look like 70s developing mistakes, see above. I think I like it! It's hard to get those strange lens flares and hairs these days. It is cheesy-good, just like lasagna.

Honk if You Love Cheeses of Vermont



At the beginning of summer this year we had an international guest, and I picked up a few Vermont cheeses at the Brattleboro Food Coop to show off our local color. Little did I know I was facing a summer of being addicted to Vermont cheese. The cheeses I picked were SO GOOD, we ended up buying others in the same weekend, and I have been trying to make a study since then of super Vermont cheeses... when I can afford it.

I would like to share a few notes about some that I've tried so far.




Lazy Lady Farm: Sweet Emotions (cow and goat milk)



Small round brie-type cheese. Lovely texture and perfectly "brie" taste. Creamy, minimal "stinkiness." (I actually wrote "minimal pong," but I'm not sure that's a cheese term.)



Blue Ledge Farm: Plain ChĆØvre (goat milk)


 

Lovely on a cracker, this was more of a "slicer" chĆØvre than the "spready" type that I'm used to. Moist, small-grained texture, light goaty taste.



Scholten Family Farm: Roger's Robusto (cow milk)



I wanted to like this cheese, but it wasn't pungent enough for me. It has the texture of chĆØvre but not the taste. Coating it with herbs didn't really help. It would be nice for people who like very mild options though!




Jasper Hill Farm: Harbison (cow milk)




This cheese is amazing. Look, it's wrapped in bark, for one thing. It has incredible texture, heavenly taste. Nice bite, herby/grassy notes, really premium and complex. Shown here with some French MorbiĆØre, which I also fell in love with this summer. Harbison was even mentioned in Bon Appetit magazine recently.



Woodcock Farm: Summer Snow (sheep milk)




Summer Snow was the last cheese on my tasting list for the summer because I had to save up for it. It's not crazy expensive, but at about $10 for what you see here (bottom left), it's a stretch. It is deliciously piquant, soft grading to crumbly that's a lovely contrast reminiscent of boucheron. Shown here with another piece of MorbiĆØre (bottom right), as well as a hunk of "Lake's Edge" from Blue Ledge Farm (top right), which is another yummy Vermont goat's cheese I'll try to review another time.

This all has expanded my love and knowledge of Vermont cheeses 100%, and I'm very grateful and inspired. I feel like I've been missing out for years not really knowing much about these places and tastes... and this is probably just the tip of the iceberg. Exciting!


Vermont baking: First, make your own butter

When fall comes, I feel like baking. For one thing, I wanted to make a plum cake that called for buttermilk. So I put buttermilk on my shopping list. I also kind of wanted to make a chocolate cake that called for a stick of butter. 

At the farmer's market, a vendor we like a lot told us he had fresh cream to sell. We almost passed it up until he mentioned it could be made into butter. When I quizzed him, he said the easiest way was to pour the pint of cream into a quart jar and just shake. He said he used to do it when he visited schools to show kids how butter is made. My mind started to work. Butter.... means buttermilk! We bought the cream.




The cream and the quart jar.  I shook that stuff for about 20 minutes. Shake shake shake! I was just starting to give up when a miracle happened.



Butter!! I made it myself, all Vermont style!



Strained out, the butter part was exactly a quarter of a pound. That's what I needed for the chocolate cake recipe.



"Grandma Effie's chocolate cake"--super-easy recipe from my mother in law. Dump everything into a food processor, blend, pour, bake in a bundt pan, delicious.

As for the buttermilk, I got about 1 cup after straining out the butter. I used it to make a plum cake with my mother's recipe, perhaps we should call it "Grandmaman's Buttermilk Plum Cake." I love this recipe because it's great with different fruits, like raspberries or peaches or maybe even pears.




Have you ever made your own butter? When I talked to the cream farmer the next week, he mentioned he'd forgotten to tell me that the cream should be around 55 degrees to turn into butter. Don't chill too much, but also cooler than room temperature. Good to know!

Butternut maple apple coconut soup

Inspired by a coworker's description of a soup with cumin and maple syrup, I've worked out yet another way to eat butternut squash. Try this as a warming, sweet-savory lunch for fall!

(See also Butternut Pasta with Sage & Bacon, Butternut Ravioli 2 ways, & Butternut Cranberry Bake)


My version is pretty thick and chunky, this could be purƩed and thinned if desired.

Ingredients:
  • Olive oil and/or butter
  • Onion, chopped
  • Garlic clove, crushed
  • 1 T Maple syrup 
  • 1/2 t ground cardamom
  • 1/4 t ground cumin
  • 1 butternut squash, peeled & cubed
  • 1 apple, cored and cut up
  • 3-4 baby carrots or 1-2 regular carrots, cut up
  • 2 cups chicken broth
  • 4-6 fresh whole sage leaves
  • Salt and pepper
  • Coconut manna to garnish

Assembly:
  1. In large pot, such as a Dutch oven, heat the olive oil and/or butter. Add onions and sautĆ©. 
  2. When glassy and just beginning to brown, add the maple syrup, garlic, cumin, and cardamom. Heat until you can just start to smell the spices & garlic.
  3. Next, add the squash, apple, carrot, and broth. Add some extra water if needed to just cover.
  4. Give whole sage leaves a bit of a squeeze to loosen up the oils, then add to pot.
  5. Boil on low until the squash is falling apart, perhaps for an hour. Salt and pepper to taste. (For a less chunky version, try mashing or pureeing at this point, then thin by adding coconut milk or just water.)
  6. To serve, fill a bowl with hot soup and add about a tablespoon of coconut manna. Stir until the coconut is melted and incorporated. Enjoy!


I found a new variety of sage this year that has amazing, wide leaves. I love this plant. It seems so happy and profuse!

Lobsterland: Maine photo essay



My last trip to the Maine seaside was in the late 90s. I only live two states away, so a few weekends ago we decided it was high time to re-visit Vacationland. Our idea was to have a multi-generational trip that would give kids lots of chaperones, parents some date-night time, and grandparents some colorful traveling companions. I think that's basically how it worked out... Here are some photos!

I had a craving for lobster rolls weeks ago, but held out until I could get a real one in Maine. I'm not so sure about those Vermont lobster rolls. This one was PERFECT.


We got our lobster rolls at Scarborough Lobster, a wonderful "shack" in Scarborough, Maine.

The kind guy there also gave our daughter a lobster tour, getting different sized lobsters out of their tanks and showing her their long antennae, their rubber-banded claws, and how to stroke a giant lobster to sleep. He was awesome.


This store just down the street in Scarborough specializes in local and natural foods. Nice logo.

View down the beach from our hotel, you can see the Old Orchard Beach Pier.


Typical tourist counter. I did kind of want some poutine!


Oh the neon! Most of these shops were closed since we got there after Labor Day.


Of course we had to visit the GFB Scottish Pub. It's a huge place that probably gets pretty wild when a band is playing. Here's the bar-island, check out the row of taps over there in the middle right. Those are the other taps.


Their haggis had raisins in it, so instead we split an order of Scotch Eggs. GOOD!


Flags at the GFB Scottish Pub. I have some issues with their website's spelling of "whisky," but I love the idea of this place and wish them good success. They just opened a few months ago!


Dinner at Joseph's by the Sea was a highlight of the trip--love my restaurants! This is my starter, a lobster potato pancake.


For my main I had Seared Scallops with "spicy rouille." Delicious.


Fabulous and fancy dinner ended with a Chocolate Espresso Torte... and a decaf.


For one of our date-night evenings we visited the Palace Playland arcade (open through Columbus Day) and did ridiculous things like dancing on computerized squares, shooting balls at clowns, driving virtual racecars on mountain roads, trying to roll quarters into tiny dump-trucks, and posing in a photobooth.

For the record, we stayed at the Edgewater Motor Inn which seemed like the nicest place on the strip.  Don't go to OOB for the museums, but do go if you like to relax and be a little lowbrow and touristy!