New Mexico — Curt Teich Kansas Soldiers

Curt Teich Kansas Soldiers

Written by . Posted at 10:50 pm on February 3rd, 2012

Check out these Online Home Search images:

Curt Teich 1582 – Kansas Soldiers Orphan Home (circa 1907)
Online Home Search

Image by Thiophene_Guy
The Curt Teich archive offers a guide to dating Curt Teich postcards. Bibliomania’s online guide to dating postcards indicates this undivided back card was probably produced between 1901 and 1907.

1582 Kansas Soldiers Orphan Home, Atchison, Kas. (text red)
Manufactured by Curt Teich & Co., Chicago, Ill (text light blue)
Read reverse.

Notable landmarks:
Orphan’s home
List of landmarks found at the Atchison History project.

Other postcards in this series

The Joy of Cooking – Irma Rombauer (1931) … Meet the middle-aged, middle-class woman who traps, butchers and eats squirrels in her Seattle backyard — Her reason: Squirrel is the ultimate local meat (27th January 2012) …
Online Home Search

Image by marsmet491
Eating wild squirrel and other game has long been a part of the diet in rural America. But Ms Vorass is taking the age-old practice out of the backwoods and bringing it to the big city.

Read more: www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2092809/Melany-Vorass-ur…

……..***** All images arre copyrighted by their respective authors ……..
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…..item 1)…. Mail Online … www.dailymail.co.uk … Meet the middle-aged, middle-class woman who traps, butchers and eats squirrels in her Seattle backyard

By MICHAEL ZENNIE
Last updated at 9:13 PM on 27th January 2012

www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2092809/Melany-Vorass-ur…

Melany Vorass is a 49-year-old college-educated woman living in a middle-class neighborhood of Seattle, Washington.

And in the backyard of her quiet neighborhood home, she traps, drowns and butchers squirrels for her dinner table — one of her family’s principle sources of meat.

Ms Vorass is part of a growing crowd of city-dwellers who are ‘foragers’ — living off of greens picked from public parks, fish caught from local streams and mushrooms plucked from nearby forests
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img code photo … Associated Press

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/01/27/article-2092809-117D9C…

Food for though: Grey squirrels (left) are trapped, slaughtered and butchered (right) by Melany Vorass and served for dinner

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img code photo …

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/01/27/article-2092809-117D9C…

Food for though: Grey squirrels (left) are trapped, slaughtered and butchered (right) by Melany Vorass and served for dinner

Associated Press
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img code photo …. Melany Vorass

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/01/27/article-2092809-117D9B…

Urban forager: Melany Vorass middle class woman who has begun finding her own food in the city of Seattle, including by eating squirrel

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Eating wild squirrel and other game has long been a part of the diet in rural America. But Ms Vorass is taking the age-old practice out of the backwoods and bringing it to the big city.

Her reason: Squirrel is the ultimate local meat.

More…

….. Think marriage is expensive? Singletons spend more than £3 billion a year looking for love

…… Man ‘planned to extort a wealthy former attorney then electrocute him in the bath – and frame the cat as the culprit’

‘I admit I enjoy a juicy cut of prime rib over squirrel, but I find I can no longer eat it without experiencing some feelings of guilt,’ she wrote on her blog.

Ms Vorass believes commercial meat is unethical. Cows are raised on inhumane feedlots, butchered in inhumane ways and fed rations of unhealthy and environmentally-damaging antibiotics and feed, she says on her blog Essential Bread.
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img code photo … Ms Vorass cuts the squirrel into pieces like a chicken

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/01/27/article-2092809-117D9D…

Ready for the fryer: Ms Vorass cuts the squirrel into pieces like a chicken before cooking it

Associated Press
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‘I know how out there it sounds. But the alternative is to close your eyes and eat what comes on a Styrofoam tray,’ she told the Seattle Times.

——-SQUIRREL: IT TASTES NOTHING LIKE CHICKEN

Squirrel can be tough and somewhat greasy and gamey so it’s best to braise, boil or stew it. Soaking it in a simple salt brine will also help tenderize the meat. But otherwise, it’s not difficult to prepare.

Food safety dictates that it’s best to cook to 165 degrees to kill a possible bacterial contamination. And steer clear of the brains — scientists believe they could carry Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease, the human form of mad cow disease.

**** Cooking suggestions:

….. Brunswick stew

….. Mulligan stew

….. Braise meat and remove from bones for ‘squirrel-ritos’ — burrito filling

Her urban foraging isn’t just limited to squirrels. In her backyard, she plants a garden every year and raises chickens and goats.

She picks also dandelion greens and other ‘weeds’ for salads and occasionally she and her husband catch trout in a local lake.

Ms Vorass began trapping squirrels as a way to get the pesty critters out of her backyard and away from her garden — which they were terrorizing.

Her husband set up a metal ‘Have-A-Heart’ live trap and started releasing them in a nearby park.

But then an irate neighbor complained that the was just dumping their problems somewhere else.

About that time, Ms Vorass discovered a recipe for squirrel and instructions on how to skin the rodents in an old Joy of Cooking cookbook.

The classic American cooking was first published in the height of the Great Depression and for many years contained recipes for all manner of wild animals — from rabbits to opossums.
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img code photo …. Melany Vorass is a 49-year-old college-educated woman

i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/01/27/article-2092809-117D9D…

Not backwoods cuisine: Melany Vorass often makes squirrel risotto – risotto di rodentia

Associated Press

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As for the actual killing, Ms Vorass says she thought long and hard about quickest the most humane way to off her captured prey.

—— HOW TO COOK SQUIRREL RISOTTO – RISOTTO DI RODENTIA

Making Ms Vorass’ risotto di rodentia is little more difficult than adding chicken to a simple risotto. Just cook it a little longer.

1) Cut hind legs and loins off squirrel.
2) Saute onions, then add squirrel pieces and brown on both sides.
3) Then add white wine, arborio rice and salt, pepper and any spices.
4) When alcohol has cooked off, cover and bake in 350-degree oven for two hours or until meat is tender.

After a squirrel is caught in a live trap baited with peanut butter and crackers, she drowns it and then cuts its throat so it bleeds out to ensure its dead before she butchers it.

She says it’s a quicker, cleaner death than befalls many squirrels when they are run over by cars or torn apart by predators.

Drowning is the fastest way Ms Vorass has found to off the squirrels yet, since firing a gun in Seattle is strictly forbidden.

However, she’s experimenting with a ‘Rat Zapper’ that electrocutes the squirrel almost instantly.

With the squirrel dead – now comes the hard part — skinning it.

Squirrel hides are tough. The best way to skin a squirrel is to cut part of it free and step on the tail to tear it from the body. If the tail breaks, Ms Vorass as a simple solution: Pliers.

On her blog, she offers detailed, graphic instructions on how to do this properly.

Once the squirrel is skinned and gutted, she gives it a truly middle class treatment: braised in white wine with mushrooms and risotto.

Squirrel is tougher and darker than rabbit and somewhat greasy.

It does not taste like chicken.

Squirrel is actually richer than beef in some ways — higher in fat and cholesterol. However, it’s dramatically lower in saturated fats and higher in polyunsaturated, so-called ‘good’ fats.

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…..item 2)…. JOY OF COOKING … A listing of the American editions

www.cookbkjj.com/college/joy.htm

1931
[November 30]
First Edition

Author: Irma Rombauer
Supporting Cast: Mazie Whyte, Marion Rombauer

Illustrator: Marion Rombauer
Pages: 396
Copies published: 3,000
Copies sold: Eventually all 3,000 copies were sold.

Overview: Irma Rombauer first published THE JOY OF COOKING in 1936, for an initial investment of ,000; with A.C. Clayton (a company which had never published a book before but printed labels for fancy St. Louis shoe companies and for Listerine).

She included casual culinary chat with recipes (narrated paragraphs including ingredients and instructions intermingled) in a book designed and illustrated by her daughter, Marion Rombauer. The mix of these elements stirred the beginnings of a loyal readership and represented a split from the domestic science/home economist cooking tradition. Irma Rombauer’s emphasis was on fun and flavor for the average cook.

Note: A Facsimile reprint of this edition, with a new foreword by Edgar Rombauer was done in 1998. Click here for specific information.
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…..item 3)… The online home of the Joy of Cooking … JOY HISTORY … 1931 EDITION

www.thejoykitchen.com/history.lasso?tag=1931

The self published book that started it all.

THE JOY OF COOKING
A COMPILATION OF RELIABLE RECIPES WITH A CASUAL CULINARY CHAT

Author: Irma Rombauer
Illustrated by: Marion Rombauer
Published by: Irma Rombauer
Printed by: A.C. Clayton (St. Louis, MO)

Irma Rombauer first published 3,000 copies of The Joy of Cooking in 1931, for an initial investment of ,000. Her casual and familiar prose put the reader at ease, earning the love and loyalty from Depression-era women who were having to take the place of professional cooks they could no longer afford. The tone and approach to cooking was joyful and quite a departure from the home keeping and cookery books of the day, most of which were written by home economists.

Marion Rombauer, Irma’s daughter, designed and illustrated the book in addition to testing recipes. Her recollection of printing the first edition, the "Little Joy" as they called it in later years, are as follows:

"How naïve and straightforward was our approach to publishing! We simply called in a printer. I remember the Saturday morning she arrived, laden with washable cover fabrics, type and paper samples. In a few hours all decisions were made, and shortly afterwards we signed a contract for 3,000 copies complete with mailing cartons and individualized stickers. Then came the new experience of galleys, proofreading and preparing an index." Modern woman is faced with tasks almost as diversified as St. Martha’s, and cooking is not the least of the problems she must meet with intelligence and understanding.

In this book every effort has been made to add variety and interest to everyday fare, as well as to provide dishes for special occasions. The hundreds of tested recipes given are both old and new. The old ones have withstood the test of timethe new ones have been added through careful selection. Experienced cooks in search of novel recipes and ideas will find many to interest them. Inexperienced cooks cannot fail to make successful soufflés, pies, cakes, soups, gravies, etc., if they follow the clear instructions given on these subjects. The Zeitgeist is reflected in the Chapter on Leftovers and in many other practical suggestions.

The cover of the book may be cleaned with a moist cloth. .00
Luckily for JOY collectors, a facsimile of the 1931 edition was printed in 1997.

——TESTIMONIALS AND CRITICAL ACCLAIM:

…..Mrs. Rombauer successfully imparts the feeling that cooking never is nor should be a dull task. A thoroughly practical cookbook, well indexed and including old and honored recipes as well as the newest fads and fancies. —Marguerite Martyn, St. Louis Post-Dispatch

…..Inexperienced cooks find it a splendid teacher. —Mrs. W. H. Dempsey, Alton, Illinois

…..I have yet to find any as practical from every standpoint as The Joy of Cooking. It is reliable, contains unusual and original dishes and menus, and best of all, its outstanding virtue is economy. —Rita Ross,
Household Club Program, KSD Broadcasting Station

…..I take the book to bed with me because it is such fun to plan for the next day and be entertained at the same time. —Jean Wagoner, Indianapolis, Indiana

…..Women in business with little time to give to the all-important kitchen will find this complete cookbook most satisfactory. —Laura Stith Corbitt, St. Louis, Missouri

…..The fact that it was written with one eye on the pocket-book and one on the bathroom scales will appeal to all young and old housekeepers. —Louis K. Adam, Chicago, Illinois

COLLECTOR’S VALUES: 0-,000
Please read about cookbook collecting in the Kitchen Table Forums to learn more.

A FACSIMILE OF THE FIRST EDITION
THE JOY OF COOKING

1998

With a Foreword by Edgar R. Rombauer
Printed by: Simon and Schuster/Scribner

Luckily for JOY fans and collectors, a facsimile of the 1931 edition was printed in 1998. This is a perfect copy of the first edition and reveals why the Joy of Cooking has become a legacy of learning and pleasure for generations of users.

The Foreword by Irma s son, Edgar Rombauer, is full of information about the writing of the little book (as it was often referred to by the family), and Irma’s quest to find a publisher.

COLLECTOR’S VALUES: Available new. Not a collector’s item.
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My iPhone 4 home screen
Online Home Search

Image by Robert Scoble
I have dozens of apps all arranged into groups. I’ve added even more apps after taking this photo. You can find my latest here: myap.ps/X3

Here’s my groupings:

1. Social
– Buzz (Web). Google Buzz, I love that social network.
– Twitter. The official Twitter app. I find I use this more than others. Originally Tweetie.
– Facebook. The official Facebook app.
– LinkedIn. The official LinkedIn app.
– Scobleizer. Did you know I have an app? Mobile Roadie created this for me and it’s great.
– Gist. Great for tracking your favorite contacts.
– HootSuiteLite. Aimed at corporate Twitterers. Still trying to fit this one into my usage.
– Summizer. A Twitter search app. I don’t use it much since those features are built into other apps.
– Twitterrific. I mostly got this for the iPad since most of the Twitter apps haven’t been ported to the iPad yet.
– Buzzie. An app for reading Google Buzz. I find I just usually use the Web page above, though.
– Seesmic. Lets you post to a bunch of different social networks. That’s why I keep using it.
– TweetDeck. I used to use this more before Tweetie, er, Twitter came out with an official app.
2. Utilities
– Settings (Apple)
– Compass (Apple)
– Calculator (Apple)
– Clock (Apple)
– Google Voice (Web, but very well done)
– LogMeIn, lets me log into my home computers and control them, I mostly use this on my iPad.
– textPlus, I don’t use this much, gotta play with it.
– Weather (Apple)
– Flashlight, turns your iPhone 4′s flash into a flashlight.
– appsfire, syncs my apps and lets my friends compare which ones I have with which ones they have.
3. News
– NPR News
– CNN
– SkyGrid, great aggregator of news. Use it a lot to read mainstream news.
– NYTimes
– Huff Post
– BBC News
– TUAW
– Memeorandum (Web)
– Google News (Web)
– Digg
– Techmeme (Web)
– Hacker News (Web)
4. Travel
– TripIt, my most-used travel app, tracks my flights, hotels, rental cars, and more. Very useful.
– WorldMate, playing with this to see how it compares to TripIt.
– Layar, augmented reality app for finding stuff in strange places.
– TripAdvisor, we love their community and found where to stay on vacation with this.
– Kayak Pro, my favorite way to buy flights.
– TripTik (AAA). Playing with this, but Google Maps seems to be how we got around on our road trip.
– TripTracker, another competitor to TripIt.
– Expedia, buy travel stuff, airlines, hotels, etc.
– TripDeck
– GateGuru
– Roadside (AAA)
– FlightTrack
5. Maps
– Maps (Apple)
– waze, I use this to show other drivers what’s going on on the road. Cops, accidents, etc.
– Trapster, see where the cops are hanging out.
– Goby, find stuff to do near you.
– AroundMe, find stuff near you, like restaurants, hospitals, gas stations, etc.
– Google Earth
– UpNext, cool 3D maps of some cities.
– Find iPhone (Apple, find your iPhone if you use MobileMe, useful if you lose your iPhone or it gets stolen)
– ifFoundPlus (message to people who find your iPhone)
– junaio (Augmented reality app, cool, but still trying to figure out how it fits in my life)
6. Food
– Foodspotting (see pictures of food near you, great way to find new restaurants).
– fiddme (I love sharing great food on this with other foodies)
– Yelp (the standard way we find businesses near us)
– OpenTable (make a reservation at a better restaurant near you).
– Epicurious (recipes for making your own food)
– In-N-Out (in California, find an In-N-Out near you).
– Urbanspoon (shake your phone, get an idea for a restaurant).
7. Location
– foursquare (serendipity around location, find friends near you, and find better experiences via tips near you).
– Gowalla, share your favorite things about your favorite places.
– Whrrl, make a story about where you are.
– Glympse, running late to meet someone? Send them a Glympse so they can see where you are.
– Loopt, offers from brands near you.
– DeHood, I’m still trying to figure this out out.
– MyTown, a location-based game. I’m not into it, but millions are.
– Latitude (Web). Google Latitude lets you share your location with your friends.
– ArcGIS, get tons of info about the location you’re at.
8. Shopping
– Amazon.com
– eBay
– Best Buy
– Square, take credit cards from your friends so you can sell them stuff.
– RedLaser, aim your camera at a bar code and this will show you stuff about that product, like where to buy it cheaper.
– Groupon, a deal a day.
– Gift Card Exchange, make those gift cards you get more useful.
– StupHub, find concert tickets.
– CardStar, I use this for those loyalty programs. Like Toys-R-Us has.
– PayPal, pay for stuff online.
– Shopping.com (price comparison).
– Apple store (find stuff about apple stores near you).
9. Photo/Video
– Best Camera, nice app for processing photos a bit before you upload them. Done by pro photog Chase Jarvis.
– Photos (Apple’s standard app)
– Camera (Apple’s standard app)
– Justin.tv, lets me watch live streams from Justin.tv.
– iMovie, lets me edit my videos. From Apple.
– Viewer (Ustream), lets me watch live streams from Ustream.tv.
– YouTube (Apple standard app)
– Pano, lets me stitch together photos to make panaoramic photos.
– PhotoCard, lets me create cards from my photos.
– Light Table 2, I haven’t used this much, mostly for my iPad for letting me drag around photos
– YouTube (Web, better than Apple’s app)
– Autostitch, better than Pano for doing panoramic photos.

18 comments.

  1. in the thumbnail I thought this was a screen shot of some sort of Rubic’s cube solving sequence :)


  2. I’ve got pretty much the same grouping/categorizing except some apps like Dropbox, Twitter, Foursquare, Flickr and 2-3 others which are in the first screen. I used to have 7 home screens but now I have just 2, like you. Works well.


  3. Actually, I fit everything into one home screen. I love it that way.


  4. wow. that’s a huge collection of apps.


  5. Thanks for posting the complete list! All my apps now fit on 2 screens. So much easier. Can’t believe it took Apple this long to integrate folders.


  6. The rest of the descriptions:

    10. Search
    – Aardvark, ask questions and it finds you the answers.
    – Bing, Microsoft’s alternative to Google.
    – Google, the original and best.
    – Siri, great app that lets you talk to your iPhone and get services.
    – Wolfram, for science, chemistry, and other geeks.
    – Stocks (Apple’s app)
    11. Schedule
    – Plancast, find an event and share it with your friends.
    – Calendar (Apple’s standard app)
    – Tungle, I use this to help me schedule my calendar with other people.
    12. Music
    – iPod (Apple’s standard app)
    – NPR Music
    – iTunes (Apple’s standard app)
    – Shazam, lets you record music you hear in a store or on the radio and find out details about it.
    – Pandora, I listen to this a lot for different styles of music.
    – Remote, controls your iTunes music library from your phone.
    – SoundHound, better than Shazam for finding music.
    13. Media
    – Kindle
    – iBooks
    – Skype
    – Zinio, magazines online.
    – IMDb, get movie info.
    – WordPress, control your wordpress blog.
    – Instapaper, read longer items offline.
    – Pana.ma, like a walkie talking with your friends.
    – Cinch, post audio recordings online (this is what I use to do audio interviews)
    – GoodReader, an RSS reader (I don’t do RSS much anymore thanks to Twitter)
    – Pulse News, another RSS reader, nice, but I don’t use RSS much anymore.
    14. Collaboration
    – Dropbox, share files and back them up.
    – Scan Biz Cards Lite, scan business cards and get them into contacts with the camera.
    – iDisk, Apple’s app, I don’t use it much.
    – Notes (Apple’s standard app)
    – Voice Memos (Apple’s standard app)
    – Contacts (Apple’s standard app)
    – RTM, remember the milk, good task list, although I don’t use it much
    – Messages (Apple’s standard app)
    – Evernote, great app for remembering things.
    15. Entertainment
    – Hulu Plus
    – Tap Tap
    – iDygest
    – GWars:Touch, Geometry Wars. My favorite game, I mostly play on iPad.
    – Faces iMake, make faces out of vegetables.
    – Mad Math, educational game for kids.
    – CatInTheHat, book for kids.
    – HistoricPlace, info about historical places in US. Good for road trips.
    – Democrats, government app so I can interact with the Democratic party.
    – DoodleJump. Game.
    – Fandango. Get movie tickets.
    – Gun Range. One of only games that uses the gyroscope in iPhone 4.
    – Spawn Glow. Game.
    – N.O.V.A. Game.
    16. Disneyland
    – Wait Times
    – Disney Plan
    – Mouse AddictLite
    – Secrets
    – MouseWait


  7. I have a similar setup, I love that I just have one screen now. Although Maps, Contacts, and Safari still get their own space. I’m sure that will eventually change.


  8. I just added a bunch of new apps. My latest are at myap.ps/X3


  9. very neat :)


  10. Thanks for taking the time to post what apps you are using. Much appreciated.


  11. Thanks for sharing, I added a few new ones from your list and took a second look at some of the older ones. I’m always torn between certain apps that do similar things:

    When I see a cop do I want to add it to Trapster or Waze? I love Waze and am glad to see them continuing to grow!

    When I arrive at a location, do I check in with FourSquare (through Waze?) or Gowalla?


  12. Dan: I check in with both. :-)

    And, yes, I do tell everyone when I see a cop on Trapster (usually) and Waze (sometimes).


  13. Yeah, you got me… I do check in with both whenever I have the time :-) I use Waze when driving around (and I know where I’m going) since their directions are not yet up to speed in my area… but munching bumps on the road and picking up soccer balls does make it more entertaining.

    As for FourSquare and Gowalla… both need to start using the power of the crowd to do their location updating. On FourSquare there are the nearly mythical "superusers" who can merge venues and correct mistakes, but instead they just send everyone to the GetSatisfaction forums and the changes never (or very slowly) get made. How hard would it be for them to let people propose changes… show the update on the venue and let people vote it up or down until it is accepted as valid. They’ll catch on one of these days!


  14. I’m slightly surprised you don’t have Bump. Or did I miss it in the crowd?


  15. Agree on that.


  16. StarToe: I have Bump now.


  17. thx for sharing! great briefing!


  18. GlenWheeler

    Camera+ for Photos: campl.us #Ahem!


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