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Dear foodies on my friends list:

I made a batch of cheese out of some week-old raw milk, and now I have about 4 cups of whey.

What should I do with it?? The internets tell me that you can use whey to make ricotta, but not if it's been separated with an acid (like lemon juice or vinegar, which is what I used). Other camps talk of using it as a liquid in recipes, but I Have The Fear about ruining recipes. Can I put it in smoothies as a protein/mineral boost? Use it to ferment things? What?
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Having good friends that love you and whom you love and can trust is one sign of a life being lived fully. But having no enemies may be a sign you are doing something wrong.

Discuss.

ETA: See comments for some clarification of the above.
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Hey folks,

So, encouraged by [livejournal.com profile] fanw, I went to see an excellent voice teacher at Brandeis yesterday. She showed me wonderful things and put me on the road to fixing all kinds of bad habits I'd been harboring, and also complimented my voice greatly and said I should start a caberet group.

Now, one of my favorite fantasies has always been to be a jazz singer in a slinky gown at a smoky nightclub. The smoky part is out of the question in this town, but at least there could be sexy martini drinks.

Question is: anybody interested in playing?

[livejournal.com profile] annacallahan, you might know some resources for this. It's not like I want to become a professional musician or anything, but getting a little combo together and doing an open mike night here and there or getting some small-time bookings would be a total dream come true for me.

Translation: dilletantes more than welcome.
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So, sometimes I have these ideas, and no real idea (or really, personal inclination) for how to implement them. Yet I know they are good ideas!

For example:

I was sitting at dinner last night with [livejournal.com profile] imlad and [livejournal.com profile] preraphaelite when the latter began to spin her water glass. "Waterspinning," someone remarked, and I immediately thought, "Water-poi!" Hey, if you can do it with one element, why not another? (Though Air Poi and Earth Poi both sound like distinctly bad ideas...I'm thinking practice poi with rocks in them - ouch.)

So I thought it would be neat to have something that 1) would be a lot safer for those who aren't all *that* good at spinning yet, and 2) would look cooler than beanbags in socks.

So: at the end of two chains or lines or whatever, you have some kind of malleable, yet strong, sealed plastic globes. Preferably, the globes would not be entirely solid, but rather would shapeshift a bit when you swing them through the air, rather like water balloons. They would also not be entirely full of water, so that the water could move within the shape.

Where the balloon-things attached to the lines, an LED or other light would be attached.

In the best possible world, the light passing through the shifting water would make cool swimming-pool-like ripply patterns on the body of the person manipulating the poi.

Certainly not as spectacular or death-defying as fire, but preeeeetty.

Anyone want to try and make some? Just remember, it was my idea.

(Unless someone else already thought of it.)
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Since I'm a posting fiend today, I thought I'd mention: It seems [livejournal.com profile] imlad and I are going to Burning Man this year.

We're a bit nervous. Neither of us are terrific outdoor types, there's a lot of equipment to worry about, there's art to make and transportation to arrange and so forth.

What I'm looking for is some people's thoughts, a kind of here's-the-most-important-things-to-know primer, and, frankly, some advice on camps. We figure that, rather than camping independently or creating our own camp, that we'd like to join someone's camp, where we have friends and could be helpful. I plan on making some costumes, as I usually do, but I'm not planning any giant art installations or anything. At least for my first time out, my chief concern is helping others and finding a way to belong.

So! Tell me! What's your experience been about? What camps should I look into maybe joining? Do you want us in your camp? How can I help? I can build and use tools, a little. I can sew, a little. We're both young, willing, able-bodied folks who just don't want to feel quite so lost during this experience.

Counting down the months...
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"Barnaby Evans’ WaterFire® is an artwork involving movement, participation and surprise. When visitors encounter WaterFire, they cannot absorb the sculpture from just their sense of sight or even from a single vantage point -- they must walk through the installation and they must use all five of their senses. WaterFire is full of motion -- throughout the night the firetenders stoke the fires, the boats move past the flames, the rivers flow quietly beneath the braziers, and the flickering flames reflect off the dark surface of the water animating the architectural fabric of the city."


A few weeks ago, I went to Providence at last to experience WaterFire. Neat, I thought: bonfires on canals. Should be cool. So [livejournal.com profile] imlad and I piled into the car and endured the annoyingly trafficy drive to Providence and met up with my old friend C. and her friend, K.

I'd only been in Providence a few times, and, being there mainly to see shows, I wasn't so much gazing at the architecture. This time I saw everything by daylight, and had the opportunity to walk around downtown. The preservation and neatness of the old buildings here puts Boston's counterpart to shame. And besides, there are all of these canals running through the city, along the edges of parks, with bridges over them, with statues and stone libraries and brick and cobblestone everywhere...this is a place where you really feel New England.

After having dinner we strolled down and saw where they were still lighting the fires. In the middle of the canals, at regular intervals, stood braziers filled with wood. Long black boats with names like Prometheus passed them with torches, setting them instantly ablaze. This was a fairly impressive sight. The lighters wore all black as well, giving the boats the solemnity of funeral vessels. And we strolled along the banks as it grew darker, and watched the fire flicker on the surface of the water. At the end of the line, we looked down the canal to see them all lit in a line, like an endless string of holiday lights.

Pretty.

And for a while, that was it. Okay: pretty. Fire and water. Yay! There was music floating from speakers installed beneath the bridges, creating maximum resonance in this outdoor setting. Haunting things, sounding like Eastern European composers (I later found out that what sounded like Arvo Part probably was), arias from Italian operas, snippets from especially moving film scores. We kept on walking. At some point I became aware of the woodsmoke smell, and the scent of the fuel they were using to light the braziers so efficiently. My head became heavy and light at the same time, and with muffled senses I strolled along, entranced by the flames. At a beautiful stone railing we stopped again and stared out. Some unspeakably gorgeous piece of music was echoing through the space: a mournful alto singing in some unknown language, over some intense instrumentation I cannot recall. I only know I felt I wanted to close my eyes and listen, but I have a voice in my head that tells me how I am supposed to experience art, and a conflicting desire made me want to keep them open and watch the flames. But at last I felt a moment of calm assurance that a few moments of isolated listening was what I wanted, and so, I gave in and my eyelids dropped soundlessly. The voice washed over me, the smell of the wood still reaching me, the fires still flickering behind my eyelids, the sound of their crackling a counterpoint to the music, and I entered a mystical realm of experience: the feeling of being nowhere and in no time, being within a bubble of sound, that sound at once the only thing existing, and the irony striking only afterwards that music, entirely dependent on the passage of time for human perception, is one of the few things that can transfix me in utter timelessness.

We continued to walk, and I was quiet, observing. Fires. Smells. More haunting music. Passing beneath the stone bridges, where there were hanging chandeliers and sconces alive with candles, creating the feeling of a medieval castle. What had seemed like a simple arrangement of elements had become spellbinding.

A bit later, we moved away from the water and checked out some of the exhibits nearby: a collection of large sculptures, one of which threatened to eat us (but which we frightened out of it by banging with our feet simultaneously on its metal hull); a mile of sidewalk chalk drawings in different levels of skill; a combination magician/mime, who actually did neither but wore a top hat over his adorable red head and created small origami creatures as we watched, then soundlessly handed them to children (including our C.); and the gargoyles.

The gargoyles might be getting a short story of their own. They were two men, dressed in horned workboots, tight jeans and pieced-together padded armor painted the same shade of stone grey. Their facial masks were in pieces to allow them expression, and their fingers were extended into spindly points. Left alone, they sat at the base of a huge statue, unmoving. Given a little money, they would animate and interact: scritching your head with a quizzical look, kissing your hand, even grabbing you a bit. One engaged in a staring contest with a child who eventually shrugged and walked away, leaving the gargoyle to put his head in his hands, distraught. One woman stood with him for a while, exploring touch and engaging in a kind of slow contact improv. Interactive spontaneous street performance. I yearned to explore their inner lives.

At last we walked up the hill to beautiful Benefit St., where C. had parked her car, which was full of Camus and apples. We ate luscious Cortlands and parted ways.

WaterFire does a full lighting for the last time this year on October 9. If you can make it, do. But remember to spend a few hours and be patient. This is an experience that washes over you.
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Fill your cup to the brim and it will overflow.
Keep sharpening your knife and it will blunt.
Chase after money and success and your heart will never unclench.
Seek the approval of others and you will be their prisoner.
Do your work and then step back.
This is the only path to serenity.

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