Category: Uncategorized

  • Average Jane and the Nearly Forgotten Candy

    stein candy recipe edith walker

    Yesterday as I was searching my recipe file for something else, I ran across my late great-aunt's recipe for something called Stein candy. When I was a kid, she would make batches of this candy every year, cut it into squares, box it up, and mail it to all of us from South Dakota where she lived.

    I don't know what "Stein" represents in the name, but the internet doesn't seem to have any record of such a candy, so maybe it's from someone she knew with that last name.

    Because I was a kid and candy is made of sugar, I ate my share every year, despite the general acknowledgement by everyone in the family that it wasn't particularly good. The problem was that it was way too chewy, so you'd spend forever trying to gnaw away at a piece to finish it.

    However, finding the recipe makes me curious as to whether it would be possible to make it come out better. The ingredients certainly sound good: brown sugar, tons of butter, corn syrup, chocolate, peanuts and vanilla. The amounts aren't stated for the nuts and vanilla, but you can hazard a decent guess. There's also no telling whether we're talking squares of unsweetened chocolate or an actual candy bar, but there's enough sugar that you'd probably be safe with the former.

    One hint as to the problem is the instruction to cook 3 minutes or so past the soft-ball stage. That's a LONG time considering that firm-ball sounds like the goal for a caramel-type candy and they're only 5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit apart. I think a candy thermometer and a goal of no more than 250°F might very well result in candy most people have a fighting chance at consuming. (See update below: once I was making it I decided to follow the cooking instructions as written and it worked out exactly the way I wanted it.)

    So, what do you think? Should I give it a try this year? 

    UPDATE 12/5/2021: I made it! I'm revising the recipe below to reflect what I actually did because it came out perfectly.

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    Stein Candy

    2 cups brown sugar
    1 1/2 cups corn syrup
    2 sticks butter
    2 oz. unsweetened chocolate
    2 tsp. vanilla extract
    6 oz. salted peanuts, coarsely chopped

    Combine brown sugar, corn syrup, butter and chocolate in a saucepan and cook, stirring constantly, to soft-ball stage (235-245°F) and continue boiling for another 3 minutes or so. Remove from heat, then thoroughly stir in vanilla extract and chopped peanuts. Pour into a square baking pan that's greased and lined with parchment and allow to cool. Cut into 1-inch squares (a pizza cutter worked well for me) and wrap each in waxed paper.

    Note: If you use unsalted peanuts, add 1/2 tsp. of salt with them.

  • Average Jane’s December Photo Challenge – Day 6

    December 6th – Shopping

    IMG_7799

    Here's what arrived this week. If you think I'm getting my Christmas shopping done, you can think again. These packages contain dog food, a pet screen so Sooty can come upstairs and be slowly introduced to the other cats, and a new ornament for my tree (whenever I finally put it up).

    I've ordered a few gifts, too, but not as many as I should have by now.

  • Average Jane vs. Tropical Storm Irene

    I had a wonderful time at BlogPaws this weekend in the Washington, DC area. Unfortunately, all of that frolicking in the path of a storm has come back to bite me.

    I’ve had two different flights for today canceled and now I’m booked for one tomorrow afternoon instead.

    I didn’t bring my computer so the BlogPaws recap and photos will have to wait.

    For now I’ll be cooling my heels in DC for an extra day and hoping the storm subsides enough to let me leave tomorrow.

    Just FYI, the weather where is am is just your garden-variety rain and wind. Nothing scary.

    I’ll see if I can find a way to turn this into an adventure.

    More when I get home!

  • Business Blogging Resources

    Here are some resources and links discussed at the Enterprise Center of Johnson County Blogging for Your Business Workshop on April 21, 2011.

    Blogging Platforms

    WordPress (initially free)
    Typepad (paid, various levels)
    Blogger (free)

    Spam Filter

    Akismet

    Community Guidelines

    Here’s are the Barnes & Noble Community Guidelines on Facebook. It’s a good example that can easily be modified to apply to blog commenting instead.

    Blog Readership Stats

    BlogHer/Ketchum Social Media Matters Study 2011 (PDF file)

    Pew Internet & American Life Project Generations 2010 (PDF file)

    Some Posts About Business Blogging

    10 Reasons Your Small Business Should Have A Blog

    6.5 Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Blog

    Top 5 Business Blogging Mistakes and How To Avoid Them

    15 Excellent Corporate Blogs to Learn From

    Notice that the last two posts are both from Mashable. They’re a great resource for news, advice and information about social media.

    Optimal Posting Times

    When’s the Best Time to Publish Blog Posts? from Problogger

    Image Resources and Attribution

    Per the question about removing tracking data from photographs, here’s an article discussing how to do that.

    Creative Commons

    Flickr – Photo sharing site with with a lot of Creative Commons-licensed content.
    Search for a word or phrase. Once you get initial results, click the “Advanced search” link and narrow the search down to “Only search within Creative Commons-licensed content” and “Find content to use commercially.” Be sure to credit the photographer (by name or Flickr handle) and link back to the original photo post on Flickr within the post.

    SEO

    Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Basics

    A Few Business Blog Examples

    Nuts About Southwest – Southwest Airlines
    A great example of a blog that has a large number of contributors yet maintains a casual tone and does a good job of varying subject matter.

    Marriott on the Move – Marriott Hotels
    One of the earliest CEO blogs – still a great example.

    Off the Shelf – Barkley
    Industry-focused blog with content very specific to consumer packaged goods manufacturers and marketers.

    stuff – Blog! – A local small business blog that features a combination of personal musings from the store owners along with new product and sale mentions. 

    Top Corporate Blogs – Listing of the most recent posts from a large number of corporate blogs via aggregator Alltop

    Social Media Clubs

    If you’d like the opportunity to meet other professionals working in social media and learn from them in a variety of settings, check out our area social media clubs.

    Social Media Club of Kansas City (I’m currently VP of this club)

    Social Media Club of Johnson County

    Social Media Club of Lawrence, KS

     

    Any questions? Feel free to contact me.

  • Average Jane Plans A March

    If you spend as much time on blogs and Twitter as I do, I'm sure you heard about the terrible tragedy that befell Maddie Spohr last week. After the Spohr family lost their daughter, friends and strangers alike rallied to donate more than $25,000 (to date) to the March of Dimes in her memory.

    I'll be doing the March for Babies Walk in Kansas City, Missouri in a few weeks and I'd like to ask you to click the graphic at the top of this post and donate a dollar or two to help me reach my fundraising goal. Or perhaps you'd like to join a team and walk.

    You don't have to be a parent to appreciate how vital it is to work to ensure that the March of Dimes' goal comes to fruition as soon as possible.

    Thanks in advance.

    * * * * * * * *

    Update: Thanks so much to Laurie and Cagey for their generous donations. I'm almost halfway to my goal!

  • Average Jane’s Underrated Movie Favorites

    Cwitajd
    Annie at Think Lynsen did a post today called 10 underrated movies that I love. As I was commenting, I decided it would be fun to steal her post idea come up with a list of some of the weird DVDs in my collection that I enjoy watching and showing to people who have never seen them. I'll admit that a bunch of mine veer into cult classic territory, but they're all underrated just the same.

    Without further ado, here are my picks (in no particular order, really):

    10. Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death
    First of all, it stars Shannon Tweed and Bill Maher, which really should be just about all you need to know. It's cheesy and ridiculous, but most of the humor is actually intentional.

    9. Cabin Boy
    Funny, surreal and very vague about the era in which it is set. I'm a big Chris Elliott fan and I also appreciate the little cameo by David Letterman.

    8. Dirty Love
    I've written an entire blog post about why I love this movie despite the fact that it was universally panned.

    7. UHF
    Call me geeky, but I love "Weird Al" Yankovic and I always have. This is a vital part of the canon.

    6. Galaxy Quest
    Great cast, tons of nerdy Star Trek references and a fun adventure plot.

    5. Charlie's Angels
    I'm stealing this one from Annie's list. This was a great, non-stop action movie with fun characters and a soundtrack that I still enjoy. It's too bad the sequel was so awful.

    4. The Rocker
    I'll admit that I'm a sucker for movies about bands, so this one had an advantage with me from the get-go. I feel kind of bad that I only went for a free preview screening and never paid to see it. My husband and I agree that we need to own the DVD.

    3. Idiocracy
    Is it as good as Office Space? Not really, but they're so different that it's really not fair to compare them. With repeated viewings, Idiocracy gets funnier and funnier as the little details you missed earlier start to come to your attention.

    2. The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension
    The main character is a neurosurgeon, a rocket scientist and a rock star. Yes, it's kind of cheesy, but how could it not be?

    1. So I Married An Axe Murderer
    Best movie Mike Myers ever did, hands down. He steals the movie from himself whenever he plays his main character's dad. Anthony LaPaglia is adorable. My sister and I can have an entire conversation using only lines from this movie.

    Okay, it's your turn. What are your favorites?

  • Average Jane Sings Some Songs

    Last night my band had a gig. I worked all day beforehand because although I have a generous amount of vacation time per year, I don't have enough to take a half day before each Friday night engagement.

    When I got home, I was already rather tired. It would help a lot if I'd eat better and get some exercise, but I couldn't turn my entire life around in two hours so I just ate a light-ish dinner and hoped that would give me enough energy to get by.

    From the get-go, I had a couple of problems. My mic stand fell over in the parking lot as I was unloading gear and of course it broke. I got through the night with it duct taped, but it's going to have to go in the trash. A new one like it will cost me most of what I earned last night. Grrr.

    My second issue was wardrobe-related. The jeans I had on were too loose around the waist and I kept having to hike them up all night. I'm sure it was very noticeable, but there was nothing I could do about it. I actually considered looking to see if I had an instrument cable in my bag that would be short enough to tie around my waist in lieu of a belt, but decided against it.

    On the plus side, I was delighted that seven of my Twitter buddies came out to hear us play: @jeffisageek, @kayhaswings, @wrytir, @digitaltiger, @SysAdmKC, @banky and @thundabolt. That made the evening a lot of fun. You can see some of @wrytir's photos here.

    Eqj

    It was (theoretically) our last night with my husband on drums and I thought we sounded pretty decent. The only problem was that we were all equally tired and I could feel our energy level dipping from the third set on. It didn't help that a lot of the crowd left toward the end of that set. Once the bar gets kind of empty and you're tired, too, it's hard to maintain much in the way of a show.

    Still, we soldiered on and made it through until 1:00 a.m. As always, we packed up our gear quickly and went straight home. I think I was asleep within 15 minutes of walking through the door.

    Our next gig (so far) is April 17th, which also happens to be my husband's birthday. He's taken the evening off from his other band so he can come and hang out at our gig. If all goes well with our new drummer, at least he won't have to play.

    It's become very obvious to me that I need to get in better shape if I'm going to continue belting out rock songs and hopping around on stage. An extra 25+ pounds of body weight and poor aerobic conditioning make the whole thing much more difficult than it needs to be. Here's hoping I can 30-Day Shred myself into better rock form before summer. Maybe then I'll need a belt for my skinny jeans!

  • Average Jane Reads

    I really had no intention of leaving my last post up so long without writing something else that wasn't a bold declaration of my support for profanity. Just to bump it down one, here's a quick little list.

    This meme was developed by one of my many librarian buddies and has been making the rounds on my friends' Facebook pages.

    1. Which book has been on your shelves the longest?
    Probably "Ozma of Oz"

    2. What is your current read, your last read and the book you’ll read next?
    Current Read: "Dry Store Room No. 1: The Secret Life of the Natural History Museum"
    Last Read: "The Light of Evening"
    Next Book: Don't know yet – I have a big stack.

    3. What book did everyone like and you hated?
    I was not at all fond of "Bonfire of the Vanities." It took me a long time to realize that it was supposed to be funny.

    4. Which book do you keep telling yourself you’ll read, but you probably won’t?
    Anything really long, like "War and Peace"

    5. Which book are you saving for “retirement?”
    None

    6. Last page: read it first or wait till the end?
    I never skip ahead.

    7. Acknowledgments: waste of ink and paper or interesting aside?
    They're really for the author's loved ones and supporters, so I don't mind them.

    8. Which book character would you switch places with?
    Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz

    9. Do you have a book that reminds you of something specific in your life (a person, a place, a time)?
    I remember reading many of the original "Tarzan" books in Lake Andes, South Dakota after having checked them out of the local library while I was vacationing at my great-aunt's house.

    10. Name a book you acquired in some interesting way.
    I once grabbed a box of books off the curb where my neighbors had put them out for trash pickup. One of them was "Vampires, Burial, and Death: Folklore and Reality," which was cool enough that I ended up passing it along to a bunch of people.

    11. Have you ever given away a book for a special reason to a special person?
    No, but I've set a bunch of them free via Bookcrossing.

    12. Which book has been with you to the most places?
    All of my childhood books (Oz books, Nancy Drew books, etc.) have traveled with me everywhere I've lived.

    13. Any “required reading” you hated in high school that wasn’t so bad ten years later?
    No, I always loved reading in school.

    14. What is the strangest item you’ve ever found in a book?
    I once found a greeting card with a lock of hair taped into it.

    15. Used or brand new?
    Just getting ready to get a new library card.

    16. Stephen King: Literary genius or opiate of the masses?
    He's rather inconsistent, but I've enjoyed much of his writing.

    17. Have you ever seen a movie you liked better than the book?
    No, but sometimes movies are nice for providing more vivid visuals than you might have developed on your own.

    18. Conversely, which book should NEVER have been introduced to celluloid?
    Hmm, "Dune," maybe?

    19. Who is the person whose book advice you’ll always take?
    Not sure. Even among my book club buddies, there have been hits and misses.

  • Average Jane Wants Her Rock Music Uncensored

    As you might know, we're in the process of looking for a new drummer for our rock cover band. (Actually, we might have found one, but that's a story for later.)

    The other day I overheard my husband's speaker phone call with one of the guys who answered our Craigslist ad. When he got to the standard question about whether the drummer liked the material we're doing, the guy said, "Actually, I'm uncomfortable with the language in some of your songs like 'Highway to Hell' and 'Hair of the Dog,'" (which contains the line, "Now you're messin' with a son-of-a-bitch").

    I walked out of my office, made eye contact with my husband and shook my head to indicate that he didn't need to bother to book an audition with that one. Imagine how the delicate flower would have reacted when we got to one of the songs with the word "fuck" in it. And he wasn't even going to be the one singing the lyrics!

    Rock music is about rebellion and rule-breaking. I may be a 40-something with a desk job, but when I'm singing with my band, I'm still the 17-year-old who used to piss off her mom by cranking up her Rush records all evening long. We're playing this stuff in bars, not kindergartens.

    Which brings me to another of my pet peeves: the bleeping of songs on the radio. Even classic rock songs that escaped unexpurgated for 30 or more years (like "Who Are You" by The Who, for example), have now been neutered for broadcast. Yesterday I heard "Life in the Fast Lane" by the Eagles on the radio and the entire line "haven't seen a goddamned thing" was just crudely removed from the song, making it skip at that spot. Who are we protecting here? Does the classic rock station really have that many elementary school listeners in its demographic?

    Back in the heyday of the PMRC, I wore a t-shirt with their silly warning label printed on it when my band played. Then and now, I thought that music censorship was stupid and wrong. But even back then they didn't try to completely sanitize the airwaves.

    Am I going to play a Buckcherry song in front of children? No. And parents can easily wait to listen to the hard rock station in the car until they've dropped off their kids. But I'm against infantilizing the entire populace because a few people get the vapors over the occasional "bad word" in popular entertainment.

    My iTunes collection is liberally bedecked with red "Explicit" labels because I automatically buy the songs in the version the artists originally intended. Because music is art and art – like it or not – is about unfettered expression. So let's all just grow up and keep that in mind.

  • Average Jane Goes Out

    It's easy for me to get into a rut where all I do is work, go to meetings, grab dinner at a restaurant and then spend the rest of the evening sitting at home watching TV or reading. Thus, I've been trying to expand my horizons a bit.

    This Saturday I spent the afternoon on a pub crawl with other Twitterers and bloggers in the town where I've lived since 1995. Here's a better recap than I could do (although, for the record, it was Megadeth, not Metallica). I paced myself pretty well and didn't even need to take a nap when I finally got home.

    One of the best things to come out of the experience was our stop at the local sausage shop, Werner's Specialty Foods, which I'd never visited before. Because I'm rather gristle-averse, I had a grilled knackwurst and it was wonderful. I'll definitely be back.

    Last night my husband and I went to see The Breakfast Club – Live. It's exactly what it sounds like: the '80s movie staged as a play. Originally we were supposed to go with a big group, but people dropped off one by one until it was just the two of us. However, we ran into another couple we know, so that made it even more fun.

    After the play, they invited the audience onstage to graffitti the desks and hang out with the cast, but we decided we wanted to get home and watch "Heroes" before bedtime. Baby steps…