Friday, October 28, 2011

Emergency Food

Food is necessary for lots of reasons, but when the wife says "Feed Me" then you know you have to come up with the goods!

2 spoons chopped garlic11/2 onion, chopped
2 lbs ground beef1 lb mild sausage-meat
1 large can diced tomatoes
1 pack cooked sausages, chopped1 tsp fennel
1 tsp savory1 tsk bay, broken into small pieces

  • Fry the onions and garlic gently in some vegetable oil until they're just beginning to get translucent. 
  • Add all the herbs
  • Add the sausage-meat. Use a spoon to chop the sausage up into ever smaller pieces as it browns
  • Add the ground beef and brown it, breaking it apart as for the sausage
  • Add some salt and pepper - use your nose to smell the dish now for flavour
  • Once the meat is browned, add the sausage pieces and the tomatoes
  • Bring up to a boil and then simmer for maybe 20-30 minutes to let all the flavours infuse together
I served this with Rotini, and escaped with my life!

TTFN

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Dennis Ritchie R.I.P.

Last Thursday the news broke that a retiree from Bell Labs in New Jersey, one Dennis Ritchie, had died at the age of 70. I had the great good fortune to meet him once, at a conference in the mid-1980s. I have to say that I was totally in awe of the man, while he made me feel quite normal as we chatted, discussed the lectures we had taken in, and our opinions of the subjects and presenters. As said of so many great men, he seems to have had the facility of putting others at ease with him, despite their initial apprehensions.

At the same time there was an outflowing of commentary on the fact that Steve Jobs had died.

If you feel that Steve Jobs was an important person in the realm of computing, I won't disagree with you. However, please follow this link and read the article about Dennis Ritchie.

You'll see that Apple's computing success (which enabled the company to survive long enough to introduce products such as the iPod and iPhone) is founded on two things - the Objective-C language for people to use to write programs for an Apple and UNIX (adapted into Apple's current line of operating systems). You'll also see that Dennis Ritchie created both of these !

Of course, there are many other companies that depend on these developments and inventions. Unless you use an operating system descended from IBM's OS-360 you are almost certainly using something which is directly or indirectly descended from UNIX. MS DOS, for example, from version 2.0 onwards, incorporated chunks of UNIX code in order to comply with DOD requirements. The computers in your car probably run Q-OS, also based on UNIX. The list covers almost every processor running code in the world today!

These things are what makes Dennis Ritchie one of those giants upon whose shoulders we stand (see Newton, 1676).

TTFN

Found Food

I have published quite a few recipes here on my blog over the last few years, and I hope that all my readers have tried at least some of the...