Spotthecat1
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Name: Spot The
Country: Turkey
Gender: Female


Interests: IM: MSN (spot_the_cat1@hotmail.com) AIM (spotthecat1)
Expertise: Observing, feeling, thinking, communicating
Occupation: Education/training


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Member Since: 9/26/2001

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Thursday, November 25, 2004

 
Happy Thanksgiving to all Americans!
 
Just in case you are wondering about the bird most likely to be the star feature of your feast today, I've posted an essay on the subject.  I was unable to find the original source, but this copy reached me by email not long ago.
 
Have a safe and happy holiday!
(p.s. think of me when you're eating your pumkin pie!)
 
~Spot~


Talking Turkey: The Story of How the Unofficial Bird of the United
States Got Named After a Country
 
(by Giancarlo Casale)
 
 
How did the turkey get its name?
 
This seemingly harmless question popped into my head one morning as I realized that the holidays were once again upon us. After all, I thought, there's nothing more American than a turkey. Their meat saved the pilgrims from starvation during their first winter in New England. Out of gratitude, if you can call it that, we eat them for Thanksgiving dinner, and again at Christmas, and gobble them up in sandwiches all year long.
 
Every fourth grader can tell you that Benjamin Franklin was particularly fond of the wild turkey, and even campaigned to make it, and not the bald eagle, the national symbol. So how did such a creature end up taking its name from a medium sized country in the Middle East?
 
Was it just a coincidence? I wondered.
 
The next day I mentioned my musings to my landlord, whose wife is from Brazil. "That's funny," he said, "In Portuguese the word for turkey is 'peru.' Same bird, different country." Hmm.
 
With my curiosity piqued, I decided to go straight to the source. That very afternoon I found myself a Turk and asked him how to say turkey in Turkish. "Turkey?" he said. "Well, we call turkeys 'hindi,' which means, you know, from India." India? This was getting weird.
 
I spent the next few days finding out the word for turkey in as many languages as I could think of, and the more I found out, the weirder things got. In Arabic, for instance, the word for turkey is "Ethiopian bird," while in Greek it is "gallapoula" or "French girl."
 
The Persians, meanwhile, call them buchalamun" which means, appropriately enough, "chameleon."
 
In Italian, on the other hand, the word for turkey is "tacchino" which, my Italian relatives assured me, means nothing but the bird. "But," they added, "it reminds us of something else.

In Italy we call corn, which as everybody knows comes from America, 'grano turco,' or 'Turkish grain.'" So here we were back to Turkey again! And as if things weren't already confusing enough, a further consultation with my Turkish informant revealed that the Turks call corn "misir" which is also their word for Egypt!
 
By this point, things were clearly getting out of hand.

But I persevered nonetheless, and just as I was about to give up hope, a pattern finally seemed to emerge from this bewildering labyrinth. In French, it turns out, the word for turkey is "dinde," meaning "from India," just like in Turkish. The words in both German and Russian had similar meanings, so I was clearly on to something. The key, I reasoned, was to find out what turkeys are called in India, so I called up my high school friend's wife, who is from an old Bengali family, and popped her the question. 
 
"Oh," she said, "We don't have turkeys in India. They come from America. Everybody knows that." 
"Yes," I insisted, "but what do you call them?"
"Well, we don't have them!" she said. 
She wasn't being very helpful. Still, I persisted: "Look, you must have a word for them. Say you were watching an American movie translated from English and the actors were all talking about turkeys. What would they say?" 
"Well...I suppose in that case they would just say the American word, 'turkey.' Like I said, we don't have them."
So there I was, at a dead end. I began to realize only too late that I had unwittingly stumbled upon a problem whose solution lay far beyond the capacity of my own limited resources.
 
Obviously I needed serious professional assistance. So the next morning I scheduled an appointment with Prof. Sinasi Tekin of Harvard University, a world-renowned philologist and expert on Turkic languages. If anyone could help me, I figured it would be professor Tekin.
 
 As I walked into his office on the following Tuesday, I knew I would not be disappointed. Prof. Tekin had a wizened, grandfatherly face, a white, bushy, knowledgeable beard, and was surrounded by stack upon stack of just the sort of hefty, authoritative books which were sure to contain a solution to my vexing Turkish mystery.

 I introduced myself, sat down, and eagerly awaited a dose of Prof. Tekin's erudition.
 
"You see," he said, "In the Turkish countryside there is a kind of bird, which is called a "chulluk". It looks like a turkey but it is much smaller, and its meat is very delicious. Long before the discovery of America, English merchants had already discovered the delicious chulluk, and began exporting it back to England, where it became very popular, and was known as a 'Turkey bird' or simply a 'turkey.' Then, when the English came to America, they mistook the birds here for chulluks, and so they began calling them 'turkey" also. But other peoples weren't so easily fooled. They knew that these new birds came from America, and so they called them things like 'India birds,' 'Peruvian birds,' or 'Ethiopian birds.' You see, 'India,' 'Peru' and 'Ethiopia' were all common names for the New World in the early centuries, both because people had a hazier understanding of geography, and because it took a while for the name "America" to catch on.
 
 "Anyway, since that time Americans have begun exporting their birds everywhere, and even in Turkey people have started eating them, and have forgotten all about their delicious chulluk. This is a shame, because chulluk meat is really much, much tastier." 
 
Prof. Tekin seemed genuinely sad as he explained all this to me. I did my best to comfort him, and tried to express my regret at hearing of the unfairly cruel fate of the delicious chulluk.

Deep down, however, I was ecstatic. I finally had a solution to this holiday problem, and knew I would be able once again to enjoy the main course of my traditional Thanksgiving dinner without reservation.
 
Giancarlo Casale


Wednesday, November 03, 2004

All Natural Hamburger HelperĀ®

(makes 2-3 fairly generous servings, may be doubled)

Ingredients:

  • 2 slices bacon (optional), cut into 1" pieces OR 1 T. oil (preferably olive oil)
  • 1/2 onion, chopped
  • 1/2 green pepper, chopped
  • 1/2 lb. ground beef (or more if you like)
  • 1 t. salt
  • dash pepper
  • 1/4 t. oregano
  • 2 c. pureed, stewed or grated fresh tomatoes
  • 3/4 c. water
  • 1 1/2 c. egg noodles

Fry bacon pieces until crisp and set aside bacon.  Saute the chopped onions, green pepper and ground beef in the bacon fat until the beef is no longer pink.  Drain any excess fat and add all the remaining ingredients EXCEPT for the noodles.  Cover and simmer for 10 minutes.  Bring the mixture back up to a boil and add the noodles, a few at a time.  Reduce heat, cover and simmer for 10 more minutes, stirring occasionally.  Top with reserved bacon and serve.

Taken from More With Less Cookbook

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TRUE CONFESSIONS:

100.  I'm not really afraid of flying...it's the possibility of crashing while I'm on the toilet with my undies around my ankles that scares me to pieces.  I'd hate to be remembered (and laughed about) by the rescue team as the chubby lady without any undies on...

99.  I'm a card-o-holic.  Anytime, anywhere, I'm game...I know lots of card games: Spades (my current favorite), Oh Hell!, Hearts, Canasta, Pinnochle, Cribbage, Gin Rummy, Nines, King, Rich Man/Poor Man, Mille Bourne...plus many more.  Now I'm trying to learn Bridge (you can get a free program off the internet...www.bridgebase.com)

98.  I love crafts but have a hard time finishing anything.  I have a quilt-in-a-bag...IN PIECES...it's been there for 15 years or so.  One day maybe I'll finish it!  I've got an almost finished (knitted) vest for my daughter...maybe I'll finish it for her daughter...p.s. my daughter is 10 1/2 right now!  I painted a serving tray for my sister-in-law's apartment by the sea and haven't varnished it...it's been sitting on the counter for about 6 months!

97.  I both love and hate cooking at the same time.  I have a huge collection of recipe books and can't resist buying cooking magazines and books, but when it comes time to figure out what to make for dinner I'm stumped!  Hubby doesn't like potatoes and is particular about vegetables, daughter doesn't like meat or rice anymore, son doesn't like fish or vegetables but I like everything...every dinner I have happy faces and sad faces at the table.  Guess Abe was right...can't please all of the people all of the time!

96.  I really dislike all forms of shopping except grocery shopping.  Going out to a mall is like torture to me.  Usually I know where to go and I'm in and out in a matter of minutes.  Forget comparison shopping or window shopping...ugh!

Have a great Tuesday (even if your candidate didn't win)!

Spot

 

Currently Reading
More-With-Less Cookbook
By Doris Janzen Longacre
see related


Thursday, October 21, 2004

Cream Cheese Raspberry Coffee Cake

(12 very generous servings)

  • 1 8 oz. pkg. cream cheese (200g)
  • 1 c. sugar (200 g)
  • 1/2 c. butter, softened (115 g.)
  • 1 3/4 c. flour (245 g)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/4 c. milk (4 fl.oz)
  • 1/2 t. vanilla
  • 1 t. baking powder
  • 1/2 t. baking soda
  • 1/4 t. salt
  • 1/2 c. seedless raspberry jam
  • sifted powdered sugar

Preparation:

Grease and flour a 13"x9"x2" baking pan.  Preheat oven to 350 F (about 180 C).

Mix cream cheese, sugar and butter with mixer on medium speed until fluffy.  Add the eggs, milk, vanilla, baking powder, baking soda, salt and 1/2 the flour.  Beat for 2 min. or until well mixed.  Beat in remaining flour on low speed until well mixed.  (The batter will be thick)  Spread the batter evenly into baking pan.

Spoon jam in 8-10 portions on top of batter.  With a knife, swirl preserves into batter to marble.

Bake for about 30-35 minutes or until toothpick comes out clean.  Cool slightly.  Sift powdered sugar on top. Cut into squares and serve warm.  Garnish with fresh mint and/or whole berries.

Enjoy with a steaming cup of tea or coffee!

Have a great Thursday!

Spot

p.s. find me playing spades at www.pogo.com (my nick is Spotthecat1)


Monday, September 13, 2004

What a relief!

The little boy turned 9 on 9-11 and there were no disasters....as far as I know, that is.  About 10 kids (the birthday boy's friends and his older sister's ones too) enjoyed the afternoon playing computer shoot-em-up games at the local arcade, then we came back for cake and way-too-sugary drinks at our house.  The afternoon went smoothly; I didn't need a locksmith, no one ended up in the hospital for stitches,  there were no electricity cuts, no one slipped and cut his eyebrow, no one nearly hit a child with their car...quite a welcome relief after DD's birthday party!

Hope you have a great Monday, I sure am (kids started school today )!

Spot


Thursday, September 09, 2004

Pick one

Knowing how many Xangans ramble on and on about why they haven't been around, I've decided to make my update blog available only to those who are really interested.  Choose one of the following according to your interest! (The links will open in another window)

a) If you aren't interested in another of those boring 'update' blogs, go here.

b) If you care, but don't have the time to read details and just want the highlights, go here.

c) If you are new around here and wish to skip the update blog, go here.

d) If the above conditions don't apply to you, go here.

Have a great Thursday!

p.s. if you want to leave a comment you'll have to go to one of the links above!

Spot

Currently Reading
The Proper Care and Feeding of Husbands
By Laura Schlessinger
see related



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