Welcome To The Ledge...

I thought I'd try to keep this site more on the lighter side...more upbeat and geared towards the positive things in my life instead of the negative crap as I do in my personal blog Muted Lunacy. Over there I just grouse about all the injustices and whatnot in my life but here I thought I'd share the things I like such as books, movies and the like.

Shrimp Lo Mein

Posted By Mina on May 16, 2009

lomeinAnother Chinese dish as interpreted by a nice girl of Irish/German heritage! :D And to let you know ahead of time, I don’t have any specific measurements for the ingredients so just use your judgment.

Oh yeah, it reheats great in the microwave too.

    Ingredients:
    1 pkg Spaghetti (you can use wheat pasta)
    Cooked Shrimp (peeled and deveined)
    Shredded Cabbage
    Bean Sprouts
    Chicken Broth
    Stir Fry Sauce
    Soy Sauce
    Oyster Sauce (optional)
    Oil

Cook the pasta (as much as you want) according to package directions. In a bowl mix together the Stir Fry Sauce, Soy Sauce, Chicken Broth and Oyster Sauce until you have a flavor you like. Heat a little oil in a frying pan and cook the cabbage and bean sprouts in a little of the sauce mixture until soft. Add the shrimp and heat through. When the pasta is done, drain and add to the frying pan with more of the sauce mixture and mix all ingredients together. Let simmer a little while and then serve.

Spinach Casserole

Posted By Mina on December 7, 2008

I can’t remember where I got this recipe but it is one of my favorites. There are a couple ingredients that, when eaten on their own, I hate but all mixed together is heaven. And it reheats very well in the microwave.

    Ingredients:
    2 pkgs frozen Chopped Spinach (you could probably use fresh)
    1lb. bacon
    1 pkg. Onion Soup mix
    16oz. Sour Cream
    2 sticks butter
    1 pkg. Stuffing Mix

Set the butter out to soften and preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Fry the bacon and crumble into small pieces, set aside. Cook the spinach according to package directions (I use the microwave). In a large bowl mix together the cooked spinach, 1 stick of butter, sour cream, and soup mix - mixture should be “semi-liquidy”. Add stuffing mix, a little at a time, until most of the liquid is absorbed. When ready put into a casserole dish and set aside. In a separate bowl melt the other stick of butter in the microwave. When melted add stuffing mix (again a little at a time) and mix until mix is well coated and all butter is absorbed. Spread this on top of the spinach mix in the casserole dish. Cover and bake at 350 for about 60 minutes. Remove the cover and let bake approximately another 10 minutes or until the topping is golden brown.

Kielbasa and Sauerkraut

Posted By Mina on December 7, 2008

Thanks to my German ancestors for this! This dish reheats very well in the microwave.

    Ingredients:
    1lb. Polish Kielbasa
    1 large jar of Sauerkraut
    1 stick of butter (you can use more or less according to your taste

Cut kielbasa into bite size pieces and fry with half the butter. When done, set aside in a bowl. Drain the sauerkraut and in the same skillet you cooked the kielbasa in, fry with the remaining butter. When the sauerkraut is brown add the kielbasa back in and mix both together heating thoroughly. Enjoy!

Folly

Posted By Mina on August 22, 2008

“The thing about madness was, it just took so damn much energy, and it was so thoroughly tedious in the meantime.”

Master woodworker Rae Newborn knows madness intimately, with every bone, every pore, every particle of her being. At 52, with three suicide attempts, extended hospitalizations, the death of her husband and daughter, and a vicious attack behind her, Rae has come to Folly Island, far out in the Straits of Juan de Fuca, to rebuild her life by building a house:

She would pull herself together, she would go and rebuild Desmond’s house, she would lift his walls and dwell within them quietly all the rest of her days. Everything that House was lay there waiting for her to take it up: House as shelter, House as permanence, House as a continuation and a legacy, comfort and challenge, safety and beauty, symbol and reality joined as one.

Bequeathed to Rae by Desmond Newborn, a great-uncle she never met, Folly Island is lovely indeed. But when Rae discovers Desmond’s journal in the 70-year-old ruins of his house, she learns that Desmond had his own internal horrors to confront on the island. As she labors in solitude, her prickly nature deterring all but the most determined of her would-be neighbors, it’s not just her well-being that’s at stake. Rae must prove herself sane if she is to have any contact with her beloved granddaughter Petra. So when the “skin-crawling feeling of being watched” doesn’t fade, she does her best to ignore it. But does paranoia have its roots in reality? And is Rae doomed to repeat her ancestor’s tragic end?

So effectively does King weave together past and present–the shrouded history of Desmond’s life and death on Folly, and the tense, dusty, exhilaratingly panicky account of Rae’s wrestling with old demons and new timber–that the future seems less important than the author might have wished. In other words, the eventual unmasking of Rae’s watcher pales in comparison to the gradual revelation of Rae herself within King’s haunted and haunting narrative. But with such a strong character and such moodily lovely prose, readers shouldn’t miss the denouement-driven trappings of standard suspense. –Kelly Flynn - (This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.)

Laurie R. King - Bantam - 2002

‘Night, Mother (1986)

Posted By Mina on March 30, 2008

“Dead Is Dead Quiet”

Written for the stage by Marsha Norman, ‘NIGHT, MOTHER opened on Broadway in 1983 with Anne Pitoniak and Kathy Bates in the roles of Thelma and Jessie Cates. It proved a stunning success with critics and audiences alike, running 380 performances, receiving the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, a Tony award for Best Play, and Tony nominations for Pitoniak, Bates, and director Tom Moore.

In 1986 Marsha Norman herself adapted the play to film. The roles of Thelma and Jessie went to Anne Bancroft and Sissy Spacek, and in the process of writing–and possibly under pressure from producers–Norman expanded the original play to include characters mentioned but never seen. The result was something slightly less than ideal. Spacek is perfectly cast as the suicidal Jessie, but although she gives an excellent performance Bancroft is intrinsically miscast in the role of Jessie’s “plain country woman” mother. The expansion of the original story also has the effect of diluting the claustrophobic intensity of the original. As for director Tom Moore, although his work for the play was memorable, his work with the film was unremarkable.

But unexpectedly, such is the power of the story’s basic premise that these flaws hardly matter. Watered down, fiddled with, and somewhat miscast, ‘NIGHT, MOTHER is still a knock-you-flat story that raises the sort of questions that keep you awake on a sleepless night. Thelma is an ordinary, uneducated woman who takes life as it comes; Jessie, however, is an uneasy mixture of introspection and uncertainty, a woman whose marriage failed when she developed epilepsy, whose son has become a bit of gutter trash, who has over the years become a recluse in her mother’s home. She’s tired of the whole thing, and on this particular evening she informs her mother that in a few hours she’s going to shoot herself and put an end to it.

Like the play, the film is essentially an emotional explosion between the two women, Jessie spelling out her reasons for her suicide, Thelma working to turn Jessie from it. Although the suspense of the film arises from a “Will she do it or not?” situation, the real interest here is in Jessie’s motivations, the how and why of her decision, and the tactics that Thelma uses in an effort to bring Jessie’s plans to a grinding halt, and the way they battle each other over the course of the film. The interest is in the characters, plain and simple.

As noted, Bancroft is not ideally cast here. It is extremely difficult to accept her in the role of Thelma Cates. Even so, Bancroft gives it all she has–and the end result is quite powerful as acting pure and simple, a remarkable feat. But the real powerhouse here is Spacek: we believe her, never question her in the role, and buy into it from start to finish. Even with Bancroft’s miscasting, the dilution of the play, and the uninspired direction, Spacek’s performance is more than enough to render the film powerful, memorable.

This is not a film that I casually recommend. It rather depends on the viewer’s life experiences, and I would hardly send it off to a person in a depressed state of mind or one who had a suicide in the family. But it is worth the trouble it takes to seek out, particularly if it leads you on to reading the play itself–or better yet, seeing a stage production of the same.

(Synopsis by Gary F. Taylor for Amazon.com)

Pepper Steak

Posted By Mina on March 7, 2008

This particular recipe was handed down through our family. I like it. :D

    Ingredients:
    2 small to medium green bell peppers
    1 small onion
    3/4 lb of stew meat - cubed (sometimes I use a steak- cubed) with some fat on it
    1 pkg egg noodles
    2 cubes beef boullion
    2 sticks butter

Dice the onion and put in a dutch oven along with a stick of butter and some salt heating over medium heat until butter is melted. Slice the peppers into 1 inch slices and put into the pot, cover and heat until peppers are soft then remove and set aside. Add the cubed meat and 1/2 stick of butter and brown the meat. When the meat is brown, add the last 1/2 stick of butter and cook the meat through. While the meat is cooking prepare the boullion cubes as directed and set aside. When the meat is thoroughly cooked, remove it all and set aside with the peppers. Take the dutch oven off the heat and using flour, the boullion and hot water mix into gravy. Turn the heat back on low, add the peppers and meat back in and simmer as long as you want stirring occasionally to prevent sticking. Cook the noodles (as much as needed) according to package directions. When the noodles are done, drain and put in a bowl together with the Pepper Steak. Serve with a buttered biscuit and enjoy!

1984

Posted By Mina on March 5, 2008

“Outside, even through the shut window pane, the world looked cold. Down in the street little eddies of wind were whirling dust and torn paper into spirals, and though the sun was shining and the sky a harsh blue, there seemed to be no color in anything except the posters that were plastered everywhere.”

The year is 1984; the scene is London, largest population center of Airstrip One.

Airstrip One is part of the vast political entity Oceania, which is eternally at war with one of two other vast entities, Eurasia and Eastasia. At any moment, depending upon current alignments, all existing records show either that Oceania has always been at war with Eurasia and allied with Eastasia, or that it has always been at war with Eastasia and allied with Eurasia. Winston Smith knows this, because his work at the Ministry of Truth involves the constant “correction” of such records. “‘Who controls the past,’ ran the Party slogan, ‘controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.’”

In a grim city and a terrifying country, where Big Brother is always Watching You and the Thought Police can practically read your mind, Winston is a man in grave danger for the simple reason that his memory still functions. He knows the Party’s official image of the world is a fluid fiction. He knows the Party controls the people by feeding them lies and narrowing their imaginations through a process of bewilderment and brutalization that alienates each individual from his fellows and deprives him of every liberating human pursuit from reasoned inquiry to sexual passion. Drawn into a forbidden love affair, Winston finds the courage to join a secret revolutionary organization called The Brotherhood, dedicated to the destruction of the Party. Together with his beloved Julia, he hazards his life in a deadly match against the powers that be.

Newspeak, doublethink, thoughtcrime–in 1984, George Orwell created a whole vocabulary of words concerning totalitarian control that have since passed into our common vocabulary. More importantly, he has portrayed a chillingly credible dystopia. In our deeply anxious world, the seeds of unthinking conformity are everywhere in evidence; and Big Brother is always looking for his chance. –Daniel Hintzsche –(This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title)

George Orwell - London: Secker & Warburg - 1949