hannah: (Pruning shears - fooish_icons)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2025-11-05 09:35 pm

Kitchen work.

Having now made soufflés, I can't see what the big deal and the fuss is all about with them. They're difficult the way risotto and yeast-based breads are difficult: it's all in the technical details. Once you've mastered those, you're fine. I was fine even whipping the egg whites with only one whisk on the electric mixer because I couldn't find the other one, even when I had to leave them for a few minutes while I got the simmering water ready, even when the oven somehow turned off and I had to leave them sitting in the water bath an extra half-hour while it heated back up. They didn't puff up as much the picture promised, and they were astonishingly fragrant. Cakes on top and custards in the middle as they're supposed to be.

It's not something I'll make all that often - I made them today as recipe testing for one of my clients - and it's something I'm not going to be scared of, if I'm ever called on to do so.
cimorene: an abstract arrangement of primary-colored rectangles and black lines on beige (bauhaus)
Cimorene ([personal profile] cimorene) wrote2025-11-05 04:38 pm
Entry tags:

Are you fucking kidding me, health center?

When I called the health center in late October and said "My last refill of ADHD medication came with a note that said 'book appointment with doctor for checkup'", they told me that there were no appointments available until December, and to call back at the beginning of November when the December appointment slots open up.

I called after lunch today, and the receptionist told me that all the slots had been filled already (even though the slots only opened for booking this morning - I checked their hours - at 8 am) so I would have to call back on November 17th when the next batch of appointment slots (for later in December I guess) opens up, "and preferably as early as possible in the morning!"

This isn't a functional system.

It might be the best way they can manage the resources they have, but it's clearly a health center that doesn't have enough doctors.

This is not an acceptable way to access a doctor's care in a public health system!!!!

(It's because conservative governments have had control in Finland and have been shoving through 'healthcare reforms' and insane cutbacks to all the social services over the last few years.)

An appointment with a private GP at the chain of private health centers with a branch in town has a base price of 100€, but it's 140€ for specialists and I suspect might be more for psychiatrists. (I haven't seriously considered going there, so I didn't check the specifics. Checking how the psychiatric medications are going for me is theoretically a more long-term monitoring anyway, not a one-time visit.)
hannah: (Martini - fooish_icons)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2025-11-04 09:42 pm

Good time.

Genuine cheering and plate-banging outside my apartment right now is proper celebration on the mayoral race. I'm still a little disappointed I couldn't work the polls today, because it'd have been wonderful to be in the room, but this will do for now.

Other good things of the day really pale in comparison to someone who wants there to be poor people in New York City, because a healthy metropolis is one where people of all stripes thrive. Bring it.
cimorene: painting of two women in Regency gowns drinking tea (austen)
Cimorene ([personal profile] cimorene) wrote2025-11-04 10:44 pm
Entry tags:

I've had it in lattes before but couldn't taste the difference bc lattes are delicious

When I saw her a few weeks ago my vegan-and-gluten-free-bc-allergies friend said that she loves oat milk and it tastes much better than soy or almond milk, especially in coffee, so I got some to try.

And it's so good! I'm only making cocoa with it right now, but it impressed me right away. I use lactose-free dairy products usually, but I suspect that they disagree with me too, just mildly, especially cocoa made with milk. I've always been too lazy to test that systematically. Eliminating all dairy for an extended period (which I have a few times) isn't rigorous enough because other things can upset my stomach too, including just... anxiety.

I really love lattes - mostly chai and matcha, but I like coffee lattes too - and I've been wanting to make them for years and years. I was originally planning to get a milk steamer as a reward when and if I ever pass the driving test, but currently I'm trying a caffeine-free diet to see if it helps my anxiety. I'm not sure if I will decide to consume it again when the trial is over (I'm doing two and a half months minimum on physician's advice), and there's no point buying one if not.

There's popcorn flavored oat milk at the store. Bewildered and concerned. Don't like that.
impala_chick: (MCU || KateYelena)
impala_chick ([personal profile] impala_chick) wrote2025-11-03 06:59 pm

Fandom Gift Basket + Trick or Treat Ex

I got three wonderful gifts at [community profile] fandomgiftbasket over here, including the icon I used for this post!!

[personal profile] spikedluv wrote a super cute Kate/Yelena (MCU) fic called Pretzels and Pizza where Clint and Bucky figure out Kate & Yelena are dating and are so cool about it.

[personal profile] scintilla10 wrote a really evocative Rosa/Isobel (Roswell New Mexico) drabble called constellations, and the prose is so pretty!

I wrote two gifts: a short fic for the LOVE ME HARD music video and a short domestic fic called pillowtalk ft. Irulan/Chani/Paul from Dune.

---


I didn't sign up for [community profile] trickortreatex this year, but I'm having fun reading the collection anyway. Some recs:

water-bearer, Arthurian Mythology, Galehaut/Lancelot du Lac.
I just love how this seems to fit the canon, plus the pining is so gentle but no less intense.

These External Manners of Laments, 9-1-1 Lone Star, Owen/Billy.
Great Billy angst with a very supportive Owen.

cross my heart and hope to die, Music RPF, Towa Bird/Reneé Rapp.
This filled in so many lore gaps for me!! Plus I loved how the author wrote the same events in both points of view.

Spooky Tales: Super cute art of Abigail from Stardew Valley telling a story.

It Takes Two...: Beautiful art of Morticia and Gomez Addams dancing.

It Happened That Night, MCU/DCEU Crossover, Natasha/Diana.
A super fun idea. I love the trope that anyone might show up at a Stark party :D
hannah: (Zach and Claire - pickle_icons)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2025-11-03 08:54 pm

Take a test.

I'm only a little disappointed I'm not working the polls tomorrow. Only a little, because as much as I'd wanted to get out and participate, I know calling off was the right thing to do. I'm coming off a nasty cold - four negative rapid tests since last Wednesday night, including one this afternoon, seem reasonably trustworthy - and while I'm mostly recovered, working the polls for the full duration tomorrow wouldn't do me any good. It's hard enough when I'm completely healthy.

What I'm finding amusing about this is one of my clients reached out and because I'm not working the polls and the physical demands will be significantly less with far fewer hours, I'll be working with her tomorrow afternoon, which means I've basically gone from the public to the private sector.
flamingsword: We now return you to your regularly scheduled crisis. :) (Default)
flamingsword ([personal profile] flamingsword) wrote2025-11-03 06:28 pm
Entry tags:

Tears and conversation

When was the last time you cried in front of another person?

For me it was on the phone with my friend [personal profile] nyyki when Ghost decided to go basically no-contact with me in the beginning of September. (In my estimation, phone conversations absolutely count as crying in front of someone.)

I’m over the emotional immediacy of the feelings of bewilderment, abandonment, and betrayal. I still miss him and I really desperately miss the kitties sometimes, but I can deal with having been lied to about whether we would stay friends. I can deal with having given someone six months of space and had them instead of telling me that that wasn’t enough space just decide to cut contact completely. I can deal with not understanding why Ghost decided to stop growing or changing as a person. It’s not ideal, and I don’t deal well with not knowing important things that affect my life, it makes me neurotic and overthinky but it’s … well, it’s not fine, but it’s more disappointing and aggravating at this point and less the emotional equivalent of a freshly-broken toe. (Broken toes also make me cry. I can bear bad fibro flares like an adult, but broken toes make me tear up like an overstimulated toddler when something feels unfair.)

Thanks for sticking with me so far.

Relevant YouTube link behind the cut for folks whose screen readers may still be borked: Read more... )

So really: when was the last time you cried in front of someone? Feel free to comment here or to DM me or to ping me on other contact platforms. Anywhere you like, if you want to have a meaningful discussion about who you are, or what we have in common, etc..
cimorene: A small bronze table lamp with triple-layered orange glass shades (stylish)
Cimorene ([personal profile] cimorene) wrote2025-11-03 05:07 pm
Entry tags:

Unfortunately the correct method is still not exactly FAST and also is still stinky...

I finally managed to find good information about getting rust off of a cast iron woodstove by using Marginalia Search Engine, a specialty search engine that is intended to resurface the "old web" of private websites and bulletin boards and stuff instead of SEO and corporate slop.

A few years ago in the winter when we were using the cast iron woodstove sometimes, someone (me) uhmmmmm absent-mindedly left some candle holders sitting on top of it with candles in them and those included ones carved out of solid blocks of pink rock salt (hideous, they belonged to my MIL, who was addicted to candles. Why didn't we just get rid of them? We hated them. Natural aversion to throwing things away. We have since thrown them out). So it turns out that ummm the candles completely liquefy if you do that and then light a fire in the stove, and they like cause the salt to run and melt onto the surface of the wood stove and salt is bad for cast iron. So. Big rust spots.

And the rust spots have got worse with time, because when it first happened and we tried to get them off, we tried with normal google and duckduckgo searches and got no better advice than sandpaper and steel wool. We only managed to get a tiny bit of the rust off and determined that getting it all off would have taken about 5000 hours of hand-sanding. Since that was not a worthwhile proposition, we left it that way for another year.

So anyway, I tried Marginalia a month ago or something, and it only took a few minutes to unearth a thread about restoring cast iron woodstoves on an old-fashioned bulletin board on "finishing.com, the home of the finishing industry". It's straight out of the internet 20 years ago. And the information was MUCH better!

  • WD-40 softens rust

  • wire brushes, not sandpaper or sandblasting (although industrial, like, having the stove ripped out and taking it to someone who will sandblast it is the nuclear option if it's completely covered in rust everywhere)

  • wire brush attachments for power drills


That was all the info we needed! WD-40 never seemed stinky to me when I was using it on door hinges and stuff, but when you spray it over the visible rust on a wood stove it is noticeable, though not TERRIBLE; it smells kinda like you're in an auto shop, but not in the middle of the car part. Like by the entrance.

You can get visible change on small rust spots with a handheld wire brush. A few hours on two days with the drill attachment has seemed to do the majority of it. It's very hard to work in eye protection goggles and a high filtration mask though. I have to stop, lift the glasses to look, then lower them and start again every minute or so. We are not planning to repaint the spots that have been taken back to the silvery iron, according again to the advice on this bulletin board. Apparently lighting a fire after the WD-40 is already going to be stinky enough and the paint would be worse. You can get protective stove polishes of some kind apparently.

This stove is a Jøtul 3 Classic cast iron woodstove, in a traditional 19th century style. It's completely inappropriate for this 1950 modern-style house. The expected stove in the livingroom is (and no doubt was) a masonry stove, which is much better at heating an area because the ceramic conserves heat and releases it gradually. The form of masonry stoves, which are of course built on-site, was typically streamlined in the years after this house was built. Nowadays you can't build them yourself anymore and that makes them more expensive, so somebody probably replaced the original one when it failed with this cast iron stove perhaps in the 1980s, which was the last time this model was made. But crucially, although a woodstove is completely inappropriate to the house and less functional, there were and are woodstoves that are more minimal and modern in form and they could've just got one of those. But nope.

Anyway, we can't afford a masonry stove like, ever, but our ambition is to replace this woodstove with a Porin Matti, a cheaper alternative to a masonry stove that is still slightly better at retaining heat than a cast iron stove, and which also (a) was in popular use in 1950 and (b) looks similar to the style of masonry stoves typically found in our type of house. These only cost about 2500€ (not counting labor), in contrast to masonry stoves which are typically over 8000€ not counting labor (and requiring much more labor because the mason has to build it on site out of blocks and tiles). We would've been able to buy one this year probably if we hadn't had this broken sewage pipe issue, which ended up costing around 10k. (We had previously earmarked that money, an inheritance from my great-uncle who died recently, for restoring the outer front door and maybe a stove; but the last of it got used on the plumbing instead.)
pensnest: Photo of me with face painted squirls (My squirly face)
pensnest ([personal profile] pensnest) wrote2025-11-03 09:55 am
Entry tags:

don't need another mountain

Back from Convention!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iNusMa-FQo0&list=PLh34tOVCkOjNbBaM8AqvKbIECeg81TU7F&index=13

Despite a slow start—with the first of three trains on Friday being cancelled ten minutes after it was supposed to have set out—it was a good weekend. My chorus did not win any trophies, but we upped our score by 2.4 percentage points, which is *hard* to do when you're already at over 70%. We were the second most improved chorus, and also got certificates for third-most in improvements in all three judging categories. And came third in our Division.

I had about 50% participation in Convention Stuff—there is only so much barbershop I can deal with at once—and that was enough for me. Sadly, it wasn't possible to go around Harrogate's lovely shops or visit the RHS garden, but I did have a lovely mid-afternoon lunch/dinner with my gorgeous niece, who is living and working in Harrogate for this year, before she resumes her degree and goes off to Japan for next year!

Beast texted me the horrible news about the knife attack on a train yesterday, and even offered to drive up to Harrogate to bring me home, which I declined. Our train journey home was very calm and straightforward to Peterborough, but Beast was able to drive there and collect the three of us travelling together, thus sparing us the undoubtedly less calm and straightforward bus replacement service, and delivering my travelmates direct to their doorsteps. We then went on to Bun's place to feed her cats and put eyedrops into one of them, then home for a curry and a bit of vegging.
hannah: (Interns at Meredith's - gosh_darn_icons)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2025-11-01 09:15 pm

November the First.

I called the library beforehand to ask when they took donations for the book sale, and how much I could provide. I followed directions on time, but not so much on volume - they got what they got, which was mostly what I'd bought from them over the past couple years. Nearly all of it was DVDs, CDs, and Blurays where I kept telling myself I didn't want the object, I wanted what was stored on the object. It was lovely to get this movie or that album, and now that I had what I wanted on my computer, I didn't need the object anymore. It was nice to grab all four seasons of Black Sails and the whole series of Fringe, and I don't have the space around my apartment to keep those with what I've already got on the shelves. Especially when I haven't yet gotten around to watching the shows. Soon, in due time. But keeping the objects of the box sets around won't help.

All that, and it's nice to get a few square feet of floor space back. Enough to notice, which is enough to make me want to keep going. Do another book cull, drag those clothes to the donation bin. Say "goodbye and thank you" to the stuff that isn't giving me anything but nostalgia. And maybe see about which extant box sets on my shelves are objects I want for the particular value they have as objects. Is it "the value of the object qualia object"? I'm sure there's a term for it.
cimorene: Illustration from The Cat in the Hat Comes Back showing a pink-frosted layer cake on a plate being cut into with a fork (dessert)
Cimorene ([personal profile] cimorene) wrote2025-11-01 11:36 pm
Entry tags:

Pastry and donut (do donuts count as pastry?) market

There is a wide distribution of flaky pastries that are very good in Finnish grocery stores, even little ones. The danishes and chocolate croissants and the pecan ones are some of my favorites. I like these more than donuts in general, so it doesn't bother me much usually, but:

The state of Finnish donuts is lamentable.

The most popular kind here is a berry jelly-filled donut rolled in granulated sugar or topped with pink icing. Ring donuts with pink or chocolate icing are not uncommon. But glazed (my 3rd favorite) and Bavarian cream (my 2nd favorite) are unknown, although the plain pastry cream is very occasionally, and I've never seen an eclair (my favorite), not even a frozen one. It's almost annoying enough to get me to try making them (but not quite).

Because I prefer the texture of flaky pastry, I usually like these more than I miss eclairs and Bavarian cream, but. Sometimes I just remember for some reason - usually something I read or watched - and get very sad.
infrequencies: (Default)
wren ([personal profile] infrequencies) wrote2025-11-01 01:29 am
Entry tags:

fanwork alphabet

Rules: How many letters of the alphabet have you used for starting a fanwork title? One fanwork per line, ‘A’ and 'The’ do not count for 'a’ and ’t’. Post your score out of 26 at the end.
Saw [personal profile] hwarium and [personal profile] poppyseedheart do this and wanted to get in on it!

21/26

A - anxiety in real time
B - break you down
C - can't always have what you please
D - dear gravity
E - earth girls are easy
F - forward / reply
G - got my veins all tangled close
H - hot like a fever (make you a believer)
I - in bloom
J -
K -

L - love where you are
M - magpie
N - now i'm coming undone
O - overcompensate
P - pray on my knees to a protector
Q -
R - recessional
S - sucker
T - tandem lover
U - under your skin
V - variations under domestication
W - with eyes shut (it's you i'm thinking of)
X -
Y - you know the two of us are just young gods
Z -

This is not surprising. Unfortunately, I suffer from terminal cannot shut the fuck up disease, 


And going with Hwa on titles for unrepresented letters:

J - juxtaposition 
K - king for a day 
Q - qualifying questions 
X - xenolithic
Z - zero sum game 


I do think I could use at least two of these for WIPs....

givemeyourhonor: (pic#16553350)
Joy ([personal profile] givemeyourhonor) wrote2025-10-31 09:17 pm

All Plans Come Unraveled-A Twisted Wonderland Fic, Chapter 16

Title: All Plans Come Unraveled, chapter 16
Characters/Pairing: Floyd/Deuce
Warnings: None really
Notes: None
Summary: Ace and Floyd talk
Link: https://archiveofourown.org/works/53967079/chapters/136607800