Saturday, April 11, 2009

Gumbo! Mmm!


So, last night, Eric made gumbo. Because I don't like shrimp, he was kind enough to make it with chicken and kielbasa. It took almost three hours, but boy was it good.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Mmm! Mmm! Homemade Cupcakes!

Eric's birthday was last week, and I don't know of a bigger fan of the cupcake than Eric. Weeks ago I had bought a box of cake mix and a few jars of frosting with the idea that I would bake birthday cupcakes for him. But as his birthday neared, I figured I might rather attempt my first cupcakes from scratch. It was really very liberating to "bake outside of the box," and Eric thought they were very, very good.

It's not much to look at, but behold my very first homemade cupcake with homemade frosting:


Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Happy Birthday, Eric!

A quick post to wish my Eric a happy 33rd birthday!

Here's to many happy returns of the day.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Vote!

In case you've been living under a rock, you'll need no reminder that Tuesday, November 4th, is a very special day. It's not only my brother's 37th birthday. It's Election Day.


Please make sure you get out there and vote. You might even be so inclined as to Barack the Vote, but I'll leave it up to you to decide who the right candidate is. (Hint: His name kind of rhymes with Clock Mama.) Whoever you end up voting for (Barack Obama), please just make sure you exercise your constitutional right to vote.


Vote, and get all of your family and friends to vote.

Vote, vote, vote!

P.S. About 50% of those at Natural Log Squared officially endorse Senator Barack Obama for President.

Chef Eric

Since Eric is relatively new to cooking, he often finds recipes that he's curious to try. Two of my favorites of his were an almond-encrusted salmon he make for my birthday, and a chocolate cheesecake.

This time, he's asked whether I have the following ingredients:

Red pepper flakes
Dry white wine
Flat-leaf parsley
Fresh basil

Of course, these could be ingredients to just about any recipe. But I'm having fun wondering what he's got planned!

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Autumn 2008

For the third straight year, Eric and I made our way to Wightmans Farm in Morristown. This year, we took with us our friends Nathaniel, Pei, and their son Alexander Preston.

The weather couldn't have been more perfect. The day included a hay ride, a pumpkin sling shot, pumpkin picking, and yummy snacks, including apple cider, apple pie, and donuts. And then a few more donuts.

The neat thing about Wightman's is their pumpkin sling shot. This is how it works: You place a baby pumpkin into the sling shot. Then, you try to shoot the pumpkin into one of the buckets off in the distance on a hill. Here's a picture of me getting ready to let go:


What makes the sling shot so special is that this was the third consecutive year that I managed to get the pumpkin into the bucket! The prize is a pumpkin, which we'll hopefully carve up this week.

Here are our friends Nathaniel, Pei, and Alexander Preston:


Here's Eric and me with Nathaniel and Pei's little Pumpkin:

Watch this space in October 2009 to see if I can make the pumpkin sling shot for a fourth time...

2008's First Pumpkin

In honor of our long-neglected blog, here's our first pumpkin of the year.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Baked ziti...yum yum

I'm not much of a cook but I do like to dabble here and there. Once we get a new kitchen, then I'm sure we will graduate to more complex dishes. But for now, I'm sticking with the comfort foods. The latest creation was baked ziti (very adventurous, as you can tell).

Ultimately, most pasta dishes are a combination of bread/pasta, tomato sauce, and cheese. From that perspective, baked ziti is really not that different from lasagna. Maybe that explains why everyone kept on asking for more "lasagna."

Whatever you call it...here is the recipe:

1 pound of uncooked ziti
1 1/2 tbps olive oil
1 small onion, chopped
1 tsp of minced rosemary
4 cloves of garlic, chopped
1/2 pounds of ground beef
1 jar (26 oz.) of spaghetti sauce
6 oz. of sliced provolone cheese
3/4 cup of cottage cheese
6 oz. of shredded mozzarella cheese (I love this stuff, so I put more in)
3/4 cup of sour cream (I didn't like it with the sour cream, so I would leave it out)

I was also going to throw in sliced Italian sausage but I forgot to include it! So I guess that is an optional ingredient. I also deliberately left out the parmesan cheese (gross!)

1. Cook the ziti and set it aside. I just boil it without any salt or oil.

2. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet and cook the onion. Then, throw in the rosemary and garlic, and mix well. Set aside in a small bowl.

3. Cook the ground beef (and sausage) in the skillet until cooked throughout. Then, stir in the onion mixture and spaghetti sauce. Reduce heat to low and let it simmer for 10 minutes.

4. Preheat the oven to 350F.

5. I line a baking dish with non-stock aluminum foil, so that the dish doesn't get caked with sauce and pasta. I spread a thin layer of sauce along the bottom of the dish. Then, I spread about half the pasta in the dish. Layer the provolone cheese, cottage cheese, and sour cream (if you so choose) on top of the pasta, and then top it with about half of the sauce. Then, layer the rest of the pasta, the remainder of the sauce, and the mozzarella cheese.

6. Bake everything uncovered for about 30 minutes. Since everything is already cooked in this recipe, you don't need to worry about exact cooking times.

As I mentioned, this is very simple. But is also pretty satisfying and makes great leftovers! I'm getting hungry just writing this...

Friday, June 13, 2008

Sunday In The Park With George

Earlier this week, we went to see the Roundabout Theatre Company's revival of the Broadway musical Sunday In The Park With George by Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine. For anyone who is not familiar with this show, it focuses on the artist Georges Suerat and his famous painting "A Sunday Afternoon On The Island Of La Grande Jatte". You may not be familiar with the artist or the title but you surely have seen the painting itself. The painting is currently on permanent display at the Art Institute of Chicago.

The show is a fictional imagination of the creation of the painting by Seurat himself (played by Daniel Evans) and some of the people that inspired some of the figures in the painting, including Seurat's fictional love interest, the cleverly-named 'Dot', played by Jenna Russell.
Both actors are quite accomplished in London but "Sunday" represents their breakthrough in the US.

I had the opportunity to meet both Daniel Evans and Jenna Russell at a special event for the show. They were both extremely friendly and seemed genuinely interested in speaking with some of the fans of the show. They performed three songs from the show:

"Sunday In The Park With George" is the first number in the show and Dot is posing for George. In the painting, Dot is the woman on the right in the foreground. As Dot poses, she expresses frustration at George and his creative process.

In "Finishing The Hat", Seurat is alone with his unfinished painting. Dot has reached out to George but he has dismissed her in favor of his work. But he sings of missing Dot and how his work has enveloped his whole life.

"Move On" is from Act II of the show. This act takes place 100 years later and George's great-grandson (also named George) is also an artist but is working with technology. While visiting the Island of La Grande Jatte, the setting of famous painting, younger George has a vision of Dot who tells him to stop worrying about what people think of his art or the commercial prospects for his work, and focus on creating art for himself -- just as his great-grandfather did 100 years ago. In this number, it helps to know that the real Seurat never sold a painting and died at the age of 31.

Also included is a clip from Good Morning America where Stephen Sondheim himself and James Lapine discussed the show with Diane Sawyer.

As you can clearly see from the clips, Daniel Evans and Jenna Russell are remarkable talents and seem to share genuine chemistry together, which gives added depth to the strained relationship between George and Dot, as well as gives richness to the painting itself.

And the special effects used in the show are as good as I have ever seen on Broadway. The show creates the "canvas" of the painting with lighting effects and video that illustrate the evolution of the painting. As George erases from his sketchpad, the "canvas" on stage gets erased as well. At one point, there are four "Georges" on the stage at once and the "real" George pours champagne into the simulated glass of one of the simulated Georges. Truly incredible work.

Even though the show is fiction, seeing some of the (possible) inspirations of some of figures in the painting creates an added dimension to the work. Now the painting almost seems to be a 3D world where the figures interact with each other and with the viewer. As a non-artist, "Sunday" gave me a look into the kind of single-minded focus and dedication that is required to create such an iconic work.

This is yet another link in our expanding connection with the movie "Ferris Bueller's Day Off". We have met both stars of the movie, Matthew Broderick and Alan Ruck, and now we have seen the painting in that hysterical scene in the movie. Maybe we'll meet the members of Yello next...

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Deal Or No Deal...The Ultimate Game?

Back in March, Mary Beth Holtzheimer (sorry if I misspelled your name) ran a nearly perfect game on Deal Or No Deal. Check out the video to see what happened.

First of all, that is the great poker player Annie Duke who is advising Mary Beth. And Annie is exactly right in her assessment of the game. With $25, $500K, and $1M cases still in play, and an offer of $404K on the table, there are three possibilities if she chooses to play on.

  1. She opens up the $25 case. Then, with the $500K and $1M cases remaining, you would expect the Banker's offer to be somewhere around $750,000.
  2. She opens up the $500K case. Then, with the $25 and $1M cases remaining, you would expect the Banker's offer to be somewhere around $500,000.
  3. She opens up the $1M case. Then, with the $25 and $500K cases remaining, you would expect the Banker's offer to be somewhere around $250,000.
Based on this assessment, two out of the three outcomes would result in an offer higher than the current offer of $404,000. The only outcome where the offer would decrease would result in an offer of $250,000. So, this analysis suggests that the minimum possible outcomes is $250,000. At this point, my recommendation would have been to reject the offer and continue in the game.

As you can see from the video, Mary Beth did continue and she eliminated the $500K case. But the offer came in at only $341,000. What gives? The answer lies is basic financial theory.

Generally, most people tend to prefer a sure thing over taking a chance. In the case (haha) of DoND, most players prefer taking a guaranteed and immediate sum (i.e., the offer) over taking a risk to win an unknown and future amount. This concept is known as the "time value of money" and is one of the cornerstones of modern financial theory.

The amount by which one person prefers the sure thing over the gamble is known as the "discount rate". Obviously, the amount of the discount rate varies according to many factors, one of which is the individual's risk tolerance. People who are more cautious are more likely to place a higher value on an immediate and guaranteed amount, thus they have a higher discount rate.

To illustrate this point, consider Mary Beth's situation where there are only two cases remaining ($25 and $1 million). Now consider someone who had no preference between taking the guaranteed sum and taking a risk (i.e., their discount rate is zero). For such a person, their expected value of the two cases would be slightly less than $500,000. Assuming that someone's discount rate cannot be negative, then this hypothetical person would refuse any offer that was below that amount.

An analysis of past games shows that the offers that are accepted by the players tend to be 91% of the average of the remaining cases. That suggests that most people place a higher value on the guaranteed offer over the unknown risk (a discount rate of 9%).

Presumably, as the stakes get higher, people's risk tolerance tends to change. Between a choice of $25 and $100, most people probably wouldn't care much (i.e., the discount rate tends to be lower). But between a choice of $25 and $1 million, most people would probably become very cautious out of fear of losing the top prize (i.e., the discount rate tends to be higher).

The offer of $341,000 implies a discount rate of almost 32%, which suggests that the Banker believes there is a strong preference toward the guaranteed sum. Clearly, the Banker was correct as Mary Beth (wisely) took the offer.

If Mary Beth's discount rate was lower than 32%, then she would not have accepted the offer. Another way of saying this is that if Mary Beth would choose the guaranteed sum over the unknown sum less than 2 out of 3 times, then she would not take the offer. Obviously, nobody knows what their exact discount rate is but most people do have a gut feeling about their preference between a sure thing and taking a chance.

Of course, it turned out that she was one of only two players to have ever chose the Million Dollar Case. There is only a 3.8% chance of that occurring, so Mary Beth clearly beat the odds.

This was an incredibly exciting game. The "ideal" game in terms of having the most drama would probably be a situation where a contestant had the $1 million case and the $0.01 case remaining. This came pretty close!