The Twelve Days of Christmas and minutiae

Today is the first day of Christmas. The holidays are still not over (not officially) so if you don't want to take the tree down this week read why you don't have too. If you haven't done Christmas cards or forgot a gift and a visit with someone, you still have until the evening of the 5th. Just mention you are following the European tradition of Christmas this year.

My stock has run out so I must begin all over. The winter season has just started so not sure if I should put out Winter items or just begin on Spring like the stores do.
I'll let the first request be my guide.

I made too many cookies this year... Yeah I did. I still have dough in the fridge too.

Going to spend the rest of the week in hibernation reading Amy Sedaris.

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Mini Accomplishments

The best meal I ever made was on Monday night: Meatloaf (with turkey instead of beef), mashed potatoes and asparagus. I took the time to cook this all with love and wanted my husband to be impressed with my meatloaf dish. It's meatloaf!  It's for husbands and should be served with a Donna Reed flip and apron.

I did make the sugar cookies. I hate sugar cookies with icing but I have never made a good batch with icing and everything looking so perfect until today. YAY! Now that I have those out of the way everything else in my Betty Crocker Cooky Book seems very easy. I am actually excited about tackling gingerbread men tomorrow.

Christmas Time

So, tomorrow is my last day at work for the year and I am so into a deck the halls state of mind. I can't wait! Last year all I could think of was family and baking and music and Christmas specials like the PeeWee Herman Christmas Special. It was difficult trying to accomplish all those things that make the holidays special.

I am so proud of myself for setting this goal and saving up my vacation days. Falalalala! Some things I want to try to make while away from the cube is meatloaf. I've never made meatloaf but want to try using turkey instead of beef. I've always been afraid that I would over or under cook it.  I'm also going to try out gingerbread men. I would like to try out new recipes so everyone,  SEND ME YOUR BEST/FAVE CHRISTMAS casserole, baked goodie, main course, veggie dish, salad, beverage so that I can try it out while on holiday. I throw a small retro Christmas party each year and make those fun party foods from vintage cookbooks with oversaturated, colored photos.

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Yule Log

The WPIX fireplace manages to always make me feel so warm.

I once watched a PBS documentary on the tradition of the yule log. It was not the WPIX fireplace or the yummy cake often made during the holidays. What I saw was some sort of meat or fish dish that was buried. A dog urinated over the area it was buried and this supposedly added to the flavor?  I watched this as a child so I don't completely trust this memory. I have searched for some Scandinavian recipe that is like this but have yet to find yet. Maybe the memory is completely off or maybe I dreamt it. When I think of a yule log, that is always what pops up in my mind... What was that? If you can set me straight please do.

St Nicholas Eve

Christmas for some begins December 6th and goes through January 6th. Tonight is the Eve of St Nicholas so if you have stockings to put out, do so tonight. You should awaken to small toys, candy and fruit.

As children, my sibs and I were always so excited because St Nicholas Day was the official start of the Christmas season. Even though we had been pouring over the toy sections of  Sears and JC Penney catalogs since Halloween, it was receiving a chocolate morsel or small stuffed animal in our stocking that set off the excitement.

Trying to control us after St Nicholas Day was a challenge. The house became littered with construction  paper, scissors, glue and  Christmas ornaments. Then came the wrapping supplies, thrown all over the floor as we kept coming up with things to wrap. My  baby sister was big on wrapping up spools of thread and rocks. My mother had her sewing machine out and we'd be called into her room to try on our Christmas dresses or nightgowns.  Not much was sewn for my baby brother.

Christmas needs to be up by the 6th of December or it just doesn't feel right.

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Egg Nog!

I LOVE EGGNOG
DEATH BY EGGNOG
GIVE ME MORE EGGNOG!
I actually love cream, plain cream. Yes, it's gross and decadent and gross but I love cream and  anything made from it like custards, creme brulee, puddings, real butter and I LOVE EGGNOG! So this time of year I fill up my 8 oz glass with eggnog. I take it with nutmeg and sometimes I'll add  rum or whiskey. I actually prefer whiskey to rum. My favorite brand is Promiseland.

My mother used to blend a raw egg, almond or vanilla Adams extract and milk with a tablespoon of sugar in the blender on high until it was frothy and called it milk punch. She would  give it to us as a morning snack and we loved it! Would not touch it now.

By the way Martha Stewart's eggnog:

12 eggs, separated

1 1/2 cups superfine sugar

1 quart whole milk

1 1/2 quarts heavy cream

3 cups bourbon

1/2 cup dark rum

2 cups cognac

Freshly grated nutmeg

1. In a very large bowl, beat egg yolks until thick and pale yellow. Gradually add sugar to yolks. With a wire whisk, beat in milk and 1 quart cream. Add bourbon, rum, and cognac, stirring constantly.

2. Just before serving, beat egg whites until stiff. Fold into mixture. Whip remaining 1/2 quart heavy cream until stiff, and fold in. Sprinkle with nutmeg.

Note: Raw eggs should not be used in food prepared for pregnant women, babies, young children, the elderly, or anyone whose health is compromised.

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This is how I'd spend $150K

Available on Ebay today is a 12" LP acetate of a Velvet Underground recording! I just found out I know someone who has a roomate who knows the person selling this. I must re-post the Ebay post:























AT AUCTION: ARGUABLY THE RAREST MOST IMPORTANT ROCK 'N' ROLL AND POP-ART ARTIFACT IN THE WORLD

This auction is for a unique 12" LP acetate whose unearthing has been storied in several underground/label international news features, periodicals and a documentary over the last several years including Rolling Stone Magazine (December 30, 2004), Mojo Magazine (May 2005), U.K. Record Collector Magazine (May 2005), Goldmine Magazine (December 8, 2006), The Globe Mail (May 28, 2005 and January 14, 2006), and the 2006 Documentary "Velvet Underground Under Review (An Independent Critical Analysis)".
Globe & Mail
Mojo Magazine presentation U.K. Record Collector
Rolling Stone Magazine
Goldmine Magazine presentation
Link To "Velvet Underground Under Review" DVD

Following is excerpted and adapted (with the author's approval) from the article written by Eric Isaacson of Mississippi Records in Portland Oregon which is featured in the December 8, 2006 issue of Goldmine Magazine currently on newsstands through mid December:

THE MYSTERY OF THE VELVET UNDERGROUND'S "REAL FIRST RECORD" (AND HOW THE ONLY EXISTING COPY WAS BOUGHT FOR 75 CENTS)

In September of 2002 Warren Hill of Montreal Canada was perusing a box of records at a Chelsea, New York street sale when he happened upon a nice Leadbelly 10" on Folkways, a water damaged copy of the first Modern Lovers LP on Beserkely, and a brittle 12" piece of acetone-covered aluminum with the words "Velvet Underground. 4-25-66. Att N. Dolph" written on the label. He purchased the three records for 75 cents each.

As I have a small knowledge of records and am an old friend of Warren's, I got a call from him the next day in which he described the acetate. Because of the date and the unique type of pressing, we both agreed that it was probably an in-studio acetate made during the recording of the first Velvet Underground LP back in 1966 (I had heard that they occasionally would havea vinyl cutting lathe in the studio to cut records of the day's recordings for the artists and/or producers to take home for review). Warren didn't want to play the mysterious platter due to the fragile nature of acetates, and the cheap nature of his record needle, so we agreed that the next time he was visiting me in Portland we would check it out together. If it turned out to be what we thought it was, maybe we could sell it at Mississippi Records, the small neighborhood record store in Portland that I work at. Sight unseen and sound unheard, I assumed that it was likely an acetate pressing of the recording which would be eventually be released asthe group's first album, "The Velvet Underground Nico".

It took awhile for Warren to visit, but when he did he brought along the acetate. We cued it up and were stunned -- the first song was not "Sunday Morning" as on the "Velvet Underground & Nico" Verve LP, but rather it was "European Son"- the song that is last on that LP, and it was a version neither of us had ever heard before! It was less bombastic and more bluesythan the released version, and it clocked in at a full two minutes longer. I immediately took the needle off the record, and realized that we had something special. Between the two of us we had heard many Velvets outtakes on both official and less than official releases, but the present material had never been heard by either of us.

The next few days found us scrambling for clues and information about what to make of this find; calling every record collector/historian we knew and reading everything we could find concerning the early recordings of the VU. We pieced together that this was probably a surviving copy of the legendary Scepter studios recordings which had been regarded as lost (hence the epic moniker "the lost scepter studios recordings" applied to these unheard sessions over the years). The recording is comprised of the primitive first "finished" version of the LP that Andy Warhol had shopped to Columbia as a ready-to-release debut album by his protege collective "The Velvet Underground".
This acetate, which is possibly the only surviving copy, represents the first Velvet Underground album as Andy Warhol intended it to be released.

Though the same compositions and even a few of the same "takes" (albeit in different mixes) were used on the subsequent commercial release, that which was eventually issued as their debut album on Verve, "The Velvet Underground & Nico", was a significantly different creation. I had heard of these nascent recordings before... it was said by some that the mastertapes had burned in a fire, by others that all of those recordings ended up being on the released album, and still by others that the only existing copy of that material was on an acetate owned by David Bowie, and that he was known to tout it as his most prized possession.

The truth about what we held was fuzzy until Warren managed to track down the N. Dolph referred to on the label for an interview.
Norman Dolph was a perennial in the New York art & music scene of the 1960's. He worked as a sales representative at Columbia Records through 1967, and was deeply involved with different facets of the independent music world on the side. Andy Warhol, who was managing the Velvets at the time, contacted Dolph & offered him a painting in exchange for services as"ghost" (uncredited) producer for the Velvet's first recording session. Warhol wanted to record a Velvets album before they had a record company behind them as this would tend to minimize meddling label executives' mobility in compromising the musical arrangement's distraught primal force, not to mention the unprecedented taboo lyrics which openly address sex, drugs, and depravity. Warhol's plan was to have Dolph record it and then shop it around to labels (first & foremost Columbia) as a finished recording.

...and so Dolph rented out Scepter studios, and with an engineer named John Licata by his side, they recorded the Velvets for four days. At the time Scepter studios was between reconstruction and demolition with walls falling over and holes in the floor. Velvets' bass & viola player John Cale would later recall the environment as "Post-Apocalyptic".

Dolph took the master tapes made during this session to the Columbia building, which still had an in-house pressing plant, and cut the acetate "after hours" with people he knew on the inside. Dolph then sent the acetate to Columbia to see if they were interested in releasing it. It was returned promptly with a note that said something akin to "do you think we're out of our f**king minds?" Dolph then gave the acetate to Andy Warhol or John Cale, he cannot remember which.

Six of the songs recorded during the Scepter session made it on to the "Velvet Underground & Nico" LP, albeit with radically different mixes. The other four songs were re-recorded in LA by Tom Wilson. As far as we know, the only listenable copy of the original versions of Heroin, Venus In Furs, I'm Waiting For The Man, and European Son exist on the acetate that Warrenfound. (A Japanese bootleg of the same material did appear, but in poor, arguably ‘unlistenable' sound quality. It is possible that the source tape for the Japanese bootleg was made from this very acetate decades ago when it was in different hands. Who knows?) We have since realized that we are in possession of a likely one of a kind artifact - the first recordings by one of the most influential rock bands of all time!

After establishing the authenticity of Warren's find we photographed the item and made a high quality digital back-up copy of the material. A media frenzy ensued, with articles appearing in Rolling Stone, Mojo, Record Collector, The Globe & Mail, and many other news sources. Calls started flooding in from people interested in buying the acetate, as well as record companies interested in releasing the songs on it. After much consideration, we decided that it would be best to release it to the highest bidder through an auction facilitated by our good friends at Saturn Records in Oakland, California (a store that has a well-established presence in the international vinyl collecting community, and an excellent reputation on the internet).
As to the most interesting mystery brought up by the appearance of this item - how did such an important artifact disappear for 37 years & end up at a Chelsea New York yard sale priced at 75 cents? ...We have no answer.

The track differences between the acetate versions and the commercial recordings on "The Velvet Underground &Nico" are detailed as follows:

1.European Son- completely different version,. Guitar solo is much bluesier. Less noisy and experimental. Longer by 2 minutes or so.

2.Black Angel's Death Song-Same take as released version. Different mix.

3.All Tomorrow's Parties- Same take as released version. Different mix.

4.I'll Be Your Mirror-Same take as released version. Radically different mix. No echo on Nico's vocals. Background vocals on end of song are more subdued.

5.Heroin-Completely different take than released version. Guitar line is different. Vocal inflections different, and a few different lyrics. Drumming is more primitive & off kilter. There is a tambourine dragging throughout the song.

6.Femme Fatale- Same take as released version. Radically different mix. Percussion more prominent.

Alternate take on background vocals. Much more "poppy".

7.Venus In Furs- Different take than released version. Vocal inflections completely different. Instrumentation more based around Cales' violin than the guitar as in the released version.

8.I'm Waiting For The Man- Different take than released version. Guitar line is completely different. Vocal inflections different, and a few different lyrics. No drums, just tambourine. Bluesy guitar solo.

9.Run Run Run- Same take as released version. Different mix.

Are they peeking?

Ever get the feeling you are being watched? Maybe I have my  finger on the pulse of things?
Whatever is going on is sort of spooky. So a magazine published all the websites I have listed on one of my blogs having to do with retro stoves and such. They are now trying to sell the rest of America on this:
"Produced between 1900 - 1920, the antique kitchen stoves from this era are styled with crisp, clean castings and sleek nickeled highlights. These stoves are sophisticated and discrete and offer a caliber of quality and construction unrivaled by today's modern stoves and reproductions."

I'm glad the word is getting out there. I did read in a trade journal that large corporations do pay for the search keywords used on such sites as Ebay. This info helps them decide what to sell you. Target is one of those companies. I don't mind repros. Mid Century Classics Re-Issued the next article. Hmmmm yep, they must be following all you retro and vintage lovers out there!

Are capes in because I kept searching for a decent wool, plaid Pendleton cape last year on Ebay? I am starting to wonder how many of our searches for the specific and seemingly obscure end up on lists with merchandisers and buyers. For Spring I am searching for the gaudiest, flowered, terry cloth robe with zipper and hood. Thought it would be cool to wear around after a dip in the pool, in the Spring in Texas. Wonder if this search will make it into the pages of Lucky. Be fun if it did...you heard it hear first, gaudy, big flowered, colorful, hooded terry robes w/zippers!

Repro Wish List:
1. Waffle iron without non-stick coating
2. Avocado green, brocade, pleated curtains
3. Two tiered,solid wood, sleek end tables (not so Modernist more late 40's, early50's)
4. Statue Lamps, you know the dancing Sanish lady, the ballerinas and exotics (not PC)
5. Said it once, say it again, re-issue Jackie O dress patterns en masse and /or put out an Audrey/Givenchy series based on what she wore in her films, EXACTLY what she wore in her films.
6. Dresses based on waitress and stewardess uniforms
7. Jacque Brel will be in the next Target commercial (heard it here first)Okay lets cover ourselves by predicting Scott Walker too, just in case. All bets on the table.

Actually, a dream job would be a one woman think tank where I just spout off the newest, hippest trends to come for ya. It could all be scientifically done or if you prefer the more esoteric, I can go by gut feelings and dreams or something.

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