Sunday, April 19, 2009
Beef Tomato
Chinese people like to stir fry things. It's probably because a lot of raw veggies in China are irrigated with raw sewage. Even though I'm just speculating, when was the last time you walked into a Chinese restaurant and saw raw veggies other than the Chinese chicken salad?
I think Beef Tomato is an adapted Hawaii Chinese dish. It's a lot sweeter than the typical Chinese stir fry dish. I like it because it has a lot of different vegetables in it, which includes onions, celery, bell peppers and tomatoes.
One place that Beef Tomato is a fixture at is the neighborhood Chop Suey, which is a dying breed. Back in old Hawaii, there were always these Chop Suey restaurants located in the middle of a mixed residential business area. And the name of the restaurant was always preceeded by it's locale - Manoa Chop Suey, Palolo Chop Suey, McCully Shop Suey, etc. Nowadays it's all that generic mainland style choose-your-own Panda Express stuff sprouting up all over the place. Screw that! I want to order a lunch plate at a place where you don't get a choice - you get sweet sour spareribs, kau yuk, noodles, a fried won ton, and fried rice (for $1 extra). You get what the Chinese cook tells you is good, you don't get to choose!!
Anyway, Beef Tomato is something that you mostly get at a good, Hawaii Chop Suey. For mine, I start by marinating sliced flank steak in a mixture of shoyu, sugar, chicken stock, sherry and oyster sauce, then I stir fry it in hot oil (being careful not to ignite a fire and destroy your microwave). I take out the beef and then stir fry the vegetables, starting with the onions, then the celery, garlic and bell peppers. I put the beef back in and then stir in the tomatoes, and the marinade stock and some extra oyster sauce. I finish it off with some cornstarch. Yum! Gotta have plenty rice with this one!
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Monday, April 6, 2009
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Apart after only 2 hours
I bought a new old stock Music Man 5 string bass last week, and after owning it just two hours, I disassembled the entire thing. Actually the reason for that is I'm sending the body off to get painted a really bright and flashy sparkle red. Here's the bass prior to disassembly (pickguard removed):
And here's the neck taped up, getting a fret polishing.
Finally, here's how much lemonoil the fretboard absorbed (notice the rosewood on the last few frets that are unoiled):
"After" pics to come in about a week!!
And here's the neck taped up, getting a fret polishing.
Finally, here's how much lemonoil the fretboard absorbed (notice the rosewood on the last few frets that are unoiled):
"After" pics to come in about a week!!
50 mpg
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
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