Speculoos, Food Photography

Food of the outside world. Did you know the US had one? “Currently Chef Notter is the pastry coach of the USA Culinary Olympic Team which represents the USA in international culinary competitions.” EMC: About Us, cited 5 Dec 2025.

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Photo of four cookies and one chocolate bonbon

Photo of six cookies and two chocolate bonbons

Chocolates, Elizabeth Moore Chocolates, Pelham AL USA
Cookies, Benton’s Speculoos, Aldi

Per EMC, bon-bons are made with a Speculoos cream and crushed cookie pieces. Per me, yum. Definitely prefer my speculoos in bonbon form.

Technical note. Check out the color difference in photos taken the same day, minutes apart, with the same distance from camera to subject. Taken with phone camera on auto. I know color is something that pro photographers have to address. I don’t usually see it this obviously.

Food Photography [archives]

Update. TIL about light. Photo tip from comment below, “light changes every 15 minutes” & “I’ve learned that I have to take a photo, if it is dependent on certain sunlight and shadows and angles, asap, or it will change to something else.” Thank you to MM.

Onwards!
Katherine

Telling Tales, Writing

Awareness of the outside world. Election news. Florida Politics: Eileen Higgins shatters glass ceiling with runoff victory in Miami Mayor’s race, Scheckner, December 9, 2025. Hat tip to Bolts Magazine, via Bluesky. The Downballot: Georgia Democrats flip conservative seat in yet another upset, That’s 25 pickups for Democrats nationwide this year—and zero for Republicans, Nir, Dec 09, 2025.

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Looks like Thursdays are gonna be medical for a while. What can I say. It’s a large life event. Plus, what else I gonna to write about?

So, here’s a family tale. What kind of person was my father? Let me tell you a story about his surgery. Don’t worry, it’s good vibes.

A while back, my father had heart surgery at Cleveland Clinic. I went up to sit in the waiting room & stew, along with the rest of the fam.

The night before his surgery, my father wrote notes to my stepmother. He gave them to me with instructions to deliver each one at certain points in the process.

The one after surgery said, “See. I told you I was going to be okay.”

That was my father. Equal parts kind and smart-ass.

Onwards!
Katherine

Reading The Rules, Trotting Into The Ring

Awareness of the outside world. Peeks at news. Gaa. Still awful. Have a happy instead. APNews: A symphony of woofs: This is what happens when 2,397 golden retrievers gather in an Argentina park, Debre, December 8, 2025. Hat tip to G.

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I was this many years old when I learned about the current rule for entering the ring in a hunter class.

“No course may have exhibitors trotting or cantering through the in-gate or out-gate; any exhibitor choosing to trot or canter through the in-gate or out-gate will be eliminated.” USEF, HU109.6

USEF Rulebook> Chapter HU Hunter Division > Subchapter HU-4 Courses > HU109 General. Effective 12/01/2025.

That’s not going to a problem for me at all!

For the non-horsey or the non-ASB, be aware that saddle seat horses trot into the ring.

Not only do they enter at a trot, they enter with verve and style. The judge is looking and you are making your first impression. So, for the past 13 years, I have worked on TROTTING into the ring. [Looking at Lexington, master class]

After the class, the winner also trots out at the end of the victory pass. The rest of the class walks out. Unless your trainer is giving you the high sign that you need to hustle in order to get the horse ready for a rider swap. [Presentation]

I discovered this alarming potential for elimination on page 17 of Judging Hunters and Equitation by Booker & Winkel. [Homework]

I don’t recall this rule being in force back in the dark ages. It could have been. Mostly we would be standing around the in-gate waiting to go next. Walking in was a natural result rather than a conscious decision. Any H/J people know when this rule came into effect?

Onwards!
Katherine

Slowly Moving Forward, Morning Walk Stories

Awareness of the outside world. The what? Time to start moving the wrist. Off to a good start, but my brain is empty. (Post is coherent because it was written before Doc appointment on Monday.)

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Chugging along on the morning walk with the horses. Up to three laps, or 0.6. miles. Annoyingly, each added lap exhausts me the first time we do it. [Differing Distances]

I know why. I understand why. I still hate it.

I am still walking Milton. When he tries to motor off, he comes back with a stern word.

Rodney not so much. He alternates between being rude, being offended that he has to walk slowly, or feeling good. On Saturday, Other Barn Minion took off the leadrope as we headed back to the corner, as we do. Rodney chose to run all the way to the corner, complete with leaping and hopping. The three of us – two people, one horse – watched him go.

Onwards!
Katherine

Horsekeeping, Still Not

Awareness of the outside world. Have you heard about the ICE-influenced Nativity scenes?

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Doing what I can around the barn, but still not doing much. [Horsekeeping, Not, Things I Can’t Do Now]

Standing around the barn as a decorative element is a weird combination of being there and not being there.

When I go out of town – not often, but it does happen – the other barn minion has control of the bridge. As long as everyone is ears up when I get back, what I don’t know, I can’t complain about.

When I’m here, I can’t help but have opinions. I watch him do barn chores. That’s not how I would do it! Well, I’m not doing it.

Other people want to know when they can drive. I want to know when I can pick up a loaded pitchfork.

Onwards!
Katherine

Three Way Weaving, Paper Art

Art of the outside world. “The pattern of the kirigami was the key to dropping objects straight down … in the field of materials, kirigami is a great source of inspiration (Gosselin).” The Mainichi: Parachute inspired by traditional Japanese paper art could assist in humanitarian aid. Hat tip to Helen Hiebert Studio: The Sunday Paper #580, second entry.

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Photo of paper weaving with three colors inside a notebook

Hexagonal Weaving, part of The Paper Year by Helen Heibert.

Photo of paper weaving with three colors

Perennial Pastimes: Learning to Weave with Fabric Strips: Triaxial Tumbling Block/Madweave Pattern

Three strands. Weaving with two strands is child’s play. Literally. How many of us made those cheesy woven potholder squares? Weaving with three strands will break your brain.

Photo of paper weaving with three colors

Three strands with one fixed. The dark blue is a sheet of paper with slits. Done al lib with reminders from the Perennial Pastimes post above, and – I think – from a demo by Heibert at some point. Or I made it up. Slightly easier. Either because it was second or because the verticals were immobilized.

Note. In all three, the yellow strips go from lower right to upper left and the green strips go from lower left to upper right, Yet the second and third patterns came out differently. I either need to do a lot more of this, or to walk away and not look back.

How The Sausage Is Made, Paper Arts

Reason for the change of plan last month. This was the intended post. I changed my mind & pulled up one from the vault. [Fire Hydrants, Street Art]

Original plan was to do many paper art posts in the last part of this year, so that I could Get My Money’s Worth from my Paper Year subscription. Then I decided to keep going next year. I wasn’t doing as much as I might with it, but I had enjoyed the parts I did. Which took the presure off and I figured variety in Sunday posts would be more entertaining. For both of us.

So, you will still be getting much paper art, just spread out.

Onwards!
Katherine

Extended November Writing Challenge Part 1, Fiction Fragments

Talking about fiction in the outside world. Transfer Orbit: The idea is never the problem. Interview with John Scalzi. Amusing on its own and a second professional who says what I have said. [Sending A Message To The Future, intro]

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#20 Strength Training, 213 words

The instructor pointed to the numbers on the board and announced, “Think of it as strength training for your brain.”

I must have looked dubious since he called on me.

“Do you have a comment, trainee?”

I looked at the instructor. I looked at the board. “It’s the times tables,” I said. “It’s not rocket surgery.”

Instructor: What is two plus two?

Me: Four.

Instructor: What is six times seven?

Me: Forty … two.

Instructor: See. Right there. You paused. You had to check your math. Facts have to come to you immediately. You will be making scoring decisions in seconds. The numbers have to be reflex.

(turning to address the class at large)

This is a common misconception. Hey, it’s multiplication. I learned that in third grade. But I have to ask, did you? Did you really learn them? Or did you learn a few tricks to get you thru the weekly quiz? Things like the nines tables add up to nine?

It’s not a game anymore my friends. It’s sponsorships and advertising and multi-million dollar facilities. And you are the ones standing in front of the world making the calls. People have dedicated their lives to getting here. They are not going to be happy if you make a math mistake.

~~~

Afterword

Once again, I have no idea what comes next. I was happy to hit 200 words. Getting back into it after stalling out 11 days ago. I think it makes sense, but I did not have the text read for coherence.

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#21 Inner Critic, 208 words

Podcaster: Tell us about your blog, The Inner Critic.

TIC: I review movies with an emphasis on set design, mainly interiors.

Podcaster: That seems like a very niche topic.

TIC: It is. Think of it as the furniture version of Frock Flicks. They talk costume; I talk couches.

Podcaster: What do you say when you talk couches?

TIC: The set is another member of the cast, a silent character. Does the set have plastic walls and doors that swish open automatically? Science fiction. Low light and cobwebs? Horror. We know this without realizing we know this. We are so familiar with the tropes that the set designers can play with the themes. These days, low light and visible cobwebs are more likely to be a horror parody.

Podcaster: With your readership numbers, you must be talking about more than couches.

TIC: The bigger part of the story is that set design is a way of talking about the time the movie was made. If you watch episodes from the original Star Trek series, they no longer look futuristic. They are a time capsule of the 1960s. It’s about context. Why were these choices made? What was going on in the world that this was story was responding to?

~~~

Afterword

I had more to material for this one, for example interiors vs exteriors. Stopped when I crossed 200 words. The rest still would not have constituted a story, more like another 200 words of pontificating.

Does what I’ve written have any bearing on reality? No idea. Making it up as I went along.

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#22 Community Service, 265 words

Did you know that there are three types of community service?

Direct. Feed people. Clean oil off ducks. Pick up litter on the roadside. Do the thing.

Indirect. Hold a food drive. Paint a building. Do the thing that benefits someone, without having to interact with the someone.

Advocacy. Hand out flyers. Call your Congress critter. Raise awareness.

These are all legitimate types of community service.

So why am I stuck doing data entry at a health clinic? I could be selling cookies and giving them the money. I could do that. Without eating too many of the cookies. Or I could yap at people about the need for better local health services. I’m real good at yapping.

Then I wouldn’t have to deal with the hostility. I don’t want to be here. They don’t want me here. Would you let someone who has been convicted of computer fraud near your IT system? Of course not. But they are state funded, so they have to help with criminal rehabilitation. That would be me.

So I am doing trivial tasks nowhere near their system. At least, they didn’t think they have let me near their system. Volunteers have to sign in. Sign in is by computer. That’s all I need.

Oh don’t worry. I’m being good. Once my community service is up, I’ll give them a white hat hacker report. Tell them all the ways they need to update their system. Because they really need to update their system. If they had anything worth stealing, it would be gone by now. By someone else! Not me!

~~~

Afterword

So tempted to stop today. Energy low. Don’t feel the project is leading anywhere. I’m getting blog posts out – even did an extra one today (for next Wednesday) – and prodding my work assignment along. After that, much staring into the middle distance.

As you see, got it done. Guess that’s the point. Set the bar so that it’s achievable even when you don’t feel it. Is the project going anywhere? We’ll find out in 8 days.

✍️ ⌨️✍️

#23 Seasonal Shift, 208 words

Now that winter is almost here, it’s time for the seasonal shift. Out with the autumn seasonings. In with the winter seasonings. Yes, I do mean season as in time of year and season as in spices. Puns pay the bills.

As an executive chef for a restaurant that markets itself as trendy, I have to keep the menu New and Exciting. We do that with our Seasonal Section. Want fun food? Try this. We also want to keep offering the same entrees to grow our base of return customers. Want comfort food on a Thursday after a long day at work? Check out the regular menu.

Of course, trying to predict new fun foods are a crap shoot. Sometimes you hit big. Sometimes the new menu becomes a meme for bad food puns. Sometimes it’s both. Pumpkin spice sausages? Everybody laughed, and kept ordering. We bring them back as a recurring seasonal special every year.

So, winter. Ice and cold and blue. We served spiced blueberry sherbet as an entree one year. Wasn’t as bad as you might think, although not a repeater. There has to be something with pine. Not everyone celebrates Christmas, but If I leave pine off the menu, boy do we get complaints.

~~~

Chugging through this. Also, back on hi-test pain meds today, so no idea if this makes sense.

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#24 Heavy Coat, words

Andres asked if I wanted to use such a heavy coat. He thought there was already too much color on the trees this year and was convinced the humans would notice. He worries too much.

I was sure it wouldn’t be a problem. Humanity takes so much of the world in stride. Sunrises and sunsets are a festival of color every day. Sometimes they comment on the beauty. Sometimes they comment that it’s too early, too late, or too much sun directly in their eyes.

And then there is the animal world. I mean, have you seen the blue poison dart frog? That is an unreal level of color, and blue no less. Not much in nature is blue. If they can accept that, then a little more red on the maple trees will slide right by.

At least, they won’t notice consciously. Unconsciously, the difference will register. A little redder. A little prettier. Someone is bound to say, “The trees look nice this year.” And then get on with their lives.

Which is why I do it. It has been a rough year for everyone. A little more joy in the autumn trees will be a nice grace note.

~~~

Afterword

Feel like I’m cranking these out to get ‘er done. Having said that, I don’t hate this on reread.

Oddly, this one ended at 192. Had to find 8 words to pad it out. Usually if I get anywhere near 200, I have no problem crossing the finish line. Do I write these with an eye on the word count? You better believe it.

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Resuming project that was delayed on account of splatifying myself and the subsequent surgery. [Horsekeeping, Not]

See Jane Write: 30 Writing Prompts for November
[November Writing Challenge Week 1, Fiction Fragments]
[November Writing Challenge Week 2, Fiction Fragments]
[November Writing Challenge Week 3, Fiction Fragments]

Onwards!
Katherine