Assignment L.09.1: Exotic Drinks Tales

Terry wrote in email:

“Since there seems to be some interest in this article, perhaps a Lichtenbergian assignment might evolve from it. We could describe making or imbibing our most exotic drink and the circumstances surrounding it. And of course this would have to be written with a certain panache.”

He was referring of course to this article from the New York Times about the Old-Fashioned.

I have a model for our assignment, taken from Jigger, Beaker, & Glass: drinking around the world, by Charles H. Baker, Jr., originally published in 1931 as The Gentleman’s Companion: the exotic drinking book.  This is from the foreword, in which he pooh-poohs the pale delights of Prohibition:

We also doubt if any lemonade social ever afforded a thrill like the moonlit night in Ceylon when we went to a Hollander friend’s beach bungalow out beyond Galle Face, where we swam in the blood-warm Indian Ocean and drank enough of his Flying Fish cocktails to do, and lay on the cool sand and listened to Tauber sing Dein Ist Mein Ganzes Herz on the gramophone.  Then when we swam again we slipped out of our suits to make the water feel better, and finally, when it was very late indeed, we dressed and said goodnight and vowed eternal friendship to our host; then for precisely no reason at all dismissed our waiting carriage with a flourish of gross overpayment and walked all the way back in our evening clothes through a new quiet rain to the jetties and the motor launch, just in time to prevent one of our best American cruising friends from consummating bribery of the Quartermaster on the good ship RESOLUTE into letting him hoist a purchased baby elephant—whom he said was Edith, and over whom he politely held a Burmese parasol of scarlet oiled silk—from a hired barge onto the forward cargo hatch in a sling!

Marvelous stuff, and that’s just the forward.  There follows a COMPANY OF 267 ASSORTED POTATIONS.  Here he is talking about an actual drink:

THE RANGOON STAR RUBY, a Wonderful & Stimulating Cocktail from Lower-Burmah

In 1926 we disembarked in Burmah from a round-the-world ship, and spent several days there before hopping off to Calcutta in a little “Bibby” boat carrying a mess of Mohammedan pilgrims headed for Mecca as deck passengers, and who did all their own cooking right down there in plain sight.  In Rangoon we joined up with several folk in the Strand bar of evenings to chin about the romantic Mandalay country far up the Irrawaddy River, and to talk over gems with Hamid and his brother from Colombo and Bombay, and to acquire a really fine zircon for someone else and a set of star sapphire dress studs for ourself.  One American headed out on leave from certain ruby mining operations up-country told us he had invented himself a drink that everyone up at headquarters liked so well he was going to shout it to the world so that no man might be denied its virtues.  He popped behind the bar before we could say “knife” and whipped up the following mixture which, due to its color, he had christened the Star Ruby.

Take 1 jigger of good cognac, 1/2 pony of cherry brandy, 1/2 pony of French vermouth, 2 dashes each of orange bitters and lemon phosphate, then for added flavour 1 tsp of kirsch, or 1/2 tsp of maraschino.  Shake with finely cracked ice, pour into a wine glass leaving a little ice floating, and let fall 6 drops of grenadine in the center of this chilly expanse for the ruby color touch.

So now you have the flavour of it, hop to it!

QED

I have essentialized the terms for our most recent field of discussion.  Should we resume it, this should help tremendously.  I’ll spare you the pages of laborious proofs and transformations–silly technical stuff, really–and simply render the result:

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WordPress upgrade

The new WordPress has completely revamped the interface behind the scenes, so don’t be shocked when you go to write a new post.  Everything’s in a different place, but it’s all there.

UPDATE: Well, almost all there.  I can’t find the control panel for the Quote Rotator, which allows us to randomize the quotes and control how long they’re on screen.  Arrggh!

Assignments: recap

All of this is over at the page, but it would be nice to pull together some comments about our various blunderings this year.

(An explanation of my hyperlinking here: the link from the descriptive phrase takes you to the original Assignment.  A link from an Assignment number takes you to a category search, pulling up all the posts about that Assignment and the results.)

Several Assignments never went anywhere.  The very first one (L.08.1), the one about the toxic waste site, got a lot of discussion but no real results.

Likewise, there were two unnumbered , both by Mike, I think, that never produced anything.

Marc’s bogus email chain (L.08.7) never got any takers, either, along with my “time travel” suggestion (L.08.11).

Two assignments that got no responses are actually still percolating, I think: Turff’s film festival (L.08.10) and my labyrinth lighting fixture (L.08.9).  I know that one of my goals today is to put together my new drill press, finally, and one reason I even bought the thing was to create lighting fixtures.  So maybe by the end of the year…

We did have many Assignments that produced results, starting with the George Lichtenberg film project (L.08.2).  We did work on that a bit, and the general feeling at the Annual Meeting was that we wanted to continue, perhaps as the subject of the still-unproposed Podcast Project.  That’s over at BaseCamp.

The self-exposé Assignment (L.08.3) was very entertaining, as was the critical response/review one (L.08.5).  I think they showed us off our best sides: as poseurs.

The album cover Assignment (L.08.6) produced a lot of fun work.  A quick, easy one, the best kind for this group, as was the self-portrait Assignment (L.08.8).

There was the Frog Song effort (L.08.4), which was very successful, although I think now we would shunt that over to Lacuna Group for actual performance.

And of course, still ongoing and I think the most successful, the non-Assignment of Symmetrical Hand Arrangment.

Remember, it’s never too late to finish what you’ve procrastinated all year!