Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Let's Scrapple

Scrapple, also known by the Pennsylvania Dutch name panhaas or "pan rabbit,"[1][2] is traditionally a mush of pork scraps and trimmings combined with cornmeal and wheat flour, often buckwheat flour, and spices. The mush is formed into a semi-solid congealed loaf, and slices of the scrapple are then pan-fried before serving. Scraps of meat left over from butchering, not used or sold elsewhere, were made into scrapple to avoid waste. Scrapple is best known as a rural American food of the Mid-Atlantic states (Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Virginia). Scrapple and panhaas are commonly considered an ethnic food of the Pennsylvania Dutch, including the Mennonites and Amish. Scrapple is found in supermarkets throughout the region in both fresh and frozen refrigerated cases.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrapple

Sounds delicious, no? Let's take all the bits and pieces and junk of the pig and mix it with cornmeal and eat it? Sure. The sad part is it's not even that much cheaper than sausage. I got a 1lb "loaf" for $2.30 on sale. I can get low tier sausage for $2.80/lb on the reg. Still, I bought some and ate it. Here are pics.


Ingredients: pork stock, pork livers, pork snout, pork heart, cornmeal, spices! Yummy!


Slice it and fry it. You really want it to get crispy as sin.


Serve with egg, toast, and liberally apply tobasco. The great thing is that you think you are eating sausage, but it's mostly cornmeal so yeah it's weird as hell when you eat it.

Overall: I'd eat it again if it was cheaper.

Sunday, October 25, 2015

I have the power!

If you're like me, you stream entertainment a ton. Whether it's Netflix, Hulu, or some third thing, no one likes it when a show stops to buffer. This is the problem I've been facing when streaming with my PS4. I believe my wifi is fine. My laptop, phone, even my PS3 all work great. I've come to believe that the PS4 just has a shitty antenna. I always try to be hard wired when possible when it comes to my home network but sometimes it's much easier to go wireless. Well, there's another option.

I've been doing a bunch of reading about powerline adapters. Essentially what they are are two adapters that plug into a normal electrical outlet and turn your home's wiring into a really long network cable. What this allows you to do is extend your hard wired network into any room in your house. So how do you set it up? It's easy. You plug one adapter into an outlet near your router. Then take a network cable and plug it into your router and into the adapter. Then you take the other adapter and plug into an outlet near whatever electronic device you want to have network. Then plug a cable from that adapter into said electronic device. Bam. You now have a hard wired connection. No more dropping of signal strength and other issues with wifi. You do get a slight drop of speeds compared to if you just a ran a typical network cable to the electronic device from your router, but length can be an issue. Also you don't want cables just lying about. I have heard of things like the washer and dryer, or microwave potentially creating slight drops in speed as well with powerline adapters. We'll see if I run into issues.

So I did a couple of speedtests on my PS4 and laptop that I typically stream from, both before and after the powerline installation. Before install, the PS4 was getting tests of 16, 4, and even 2 Mbps. Wtf. The laptop was much much better with 60, 62, and 61 Mbps. As a comparison, my main computer that is plugged straight into my router gets 92 Mbps. After install, the PS4 got 34, 32, and 35 Mbps. That's a ton better but still not great. The laptop got the tiniest of nudges up to 68, 66, and 70 Mbps. Not bad.

At $70 for the Netgear PL1200, I'll see if I end up keeping it. Knowing that I get 90+ Mbps on my main computer and my laptop getting the best at 60+, that's a 30% drop off that I'm not sure I can live with. I may have to bite the bullet and finally run a network cable under the house into the living room.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Gutter Guards

There are many mature trees in my neighborhood, which I enjoy, but one negative of this is the constant need to clean the gutters.

I cleaned the gutters last week, and here is what they look like today:



I was thinking about installing some gutter guards to see if that would help. I was at Menards today when I saw them on sale for $1.68 per section with a $1.68 mail in rebate. So for some reason they are giving these away for free. After scratching my head for a few minutes I shrugged my shoulders and bought the maximum amount of sections allowed under the rebate. Then I went home and installed my free gutter guards.


The end.



Monday, October 19, 2015

Herbs

Got a peanut butter jars worth of parsley and a good amount of oregano. 


Saturday, October 17, 2015

DIY

Started a new DIY project with my boy today.

What's this?

A bed for Corduroy!

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Garlic!

Garden Log
Today's Date: 10/15/2015
Description:  Today I planted 1 lb. of garlic bulbs.  The garlic bulbs were purchased from Keene Organics dot com.  I purchased the medium garlic variety set.  To plant, I first tilled the soil, added compost and fertilizer, then planted the bulbs six inches from eachother.  Next, I covered the garden with mulch and watered.

Day 0

And here I have listed the varietals.