Sunday, July 30, 2006
Tuesday, July 25, 2006
When I die, one of the thing I want them to say is...
"he was a good Dad to his kids". Quite a few years ago, I listened to an Anthony Robbins CD and he said "begin with the end in mind" and one exercise was to imagine what you would want people to say about you at your funeral. One of the big things for me was I wanted them to say "He was a great Dad". Well, I had a great weekend and I really felt like a great Dad. I know this may sound like I'm tooting my own horn, but I just wanted to share how great a simple little activity made me feel. It started on Sunday with Patrick havin' a not-so-good day. He'd pushed the limits quite a bit and Marie was runnin' short with patience. We were sittin' outside in front of the house watchin' the boys riding their bikes when Patrick basically had a metldown. He cracked a reflector on my father-in-law's trailer, hurt his brother and frustrated his Mom. He felt like he could do no good. It hit me... why don't I get my bike out and take him down to the lake and spend a bit of time with him... just the two of us. So we did that. We went down to the marina and looked at the boats, walked down to the water, and sat and chatted a little. It was GREAT! He really responded to the individual attention and he went on about it to his grandma yesterday. Funny how we sometimes forget that a little individual attention is what's needed... we get caught up in doing things as a group. Of course, Mark got his nose out of joint a little 'cause he wanted to go too. I promised him we would go the next day and that this time was for specifically for patrick. I ended up doing the same thing with Mark yesterday afternoon and guess what... it was GREAT too! I'm tellin' ya, such a simple thing and it payed back in buckets in the joy it gave to the kids and, for that matter, to me.
One other thing to comment on and then I gotta get back to work... it figures, just when we're about the leave for our big canoe trip, I pulled a muscle in my back. I'm hopin' it gets better before we leave otherwise it's gonna put a damper on the trip for me. It even hurts when I take a deep breath. Dammit! Well, I've got a week to get better. I gotta go.
Have a great day everyone!
g.
Posted by Suds at 8:31 AM 2 comments
Thursday, July 20, 2006
So Jim finally did an update and...
he puts the pressure on. In his latest blog entry, he states:
... My plan is for Gerry and I to have our bags packed AT LEAST 24 hours before we leave and avoid any last minute running around....
Does Jim not understand how I operate? LOL! Hey, this could be a trip of many firsts... the first time I do the canoe trip I've always wanted to do, the first trip I say I'm gonna pack light and actually do it... and now apparently, the first time I'm not packing my backpack just before walkin' out the door to get in my car to leave! Hey, I know I've made the decision to "raise my standards" in my life but wow, this seems like crazy talk! LMAO!
Kiddin' aside, I'm really doin' my best, and being successful, at raising my personal standards. I recently listened to a talk (I've kinda changed my car into a classroom by listening to audio books on various topics) that spoke about the fact that the only way we can become a better person is to continuosly raise our standards. It made me think how Marie and I had taken that approach (although I wouldn't have labelled it as such at the time) back when we started our life together, and that in recent years I had failed to continue to raise my standards. Marie and I had a conversation last night about this. We had set ourselves a 5 and 10 year plan and here we are, we've achieved what we focused on. What we hadn't done is reset the goals and re-focus on the new goals. In other words, we'd kinda just coasted along and became quite passive in our lives. For me, although I didn't realise it at the time, this had lead to a slight discomfort and more stress. I think that most people, if not all of us, need to improve ourselves as we go through life to be satisfied and fulfilled. We must add value to society and make it a better place. That is what I'm now focusing on. I'm gonna make a positive difference and teach my kids through my example that we must go the extra mile, make the extra effort and make a positive impact on the lives of the people around us... in our circle of influence (I'm not sure who coined that phrase, but I like it). That is the only way we can do it. We start with ourselves and soon the people around us will be influenced.
Whoa, that totally wasn't where I meant to go with this entry... I just wanted to rib Jim a bit. It's all good though... kinda reflects where I'm at right now and if anyone wants to talk about it more, feel free to e-mail me, call me or whatever. I don't have all the answers but I certainly have ideas and would love to learn from the people around me that are makin' positive impact.
Have a great day!
g.
Posted by Suds at 10:02 AM 1 comments
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
Another article that was thought provoking...
This one is on the effect of the baby boomers on our social programs...
Don't know about the copyright stuff so I hope it's okay to post the article here. Also, here's the link to the story too.The baby boomers' tabCanadian baby boomers are going to disappear en masse and they are going to leave fewer children behind. The annual cost: $38 billion by 2020, writes Pierre Fortin
One in an occasional series (Toronto Star, Mon Jul 17, 2006)Jul. 17, 2006. 10:32 AMPIERRE FORTIN
Just after World War II, from 1945 to 1960, there were about 28 births per 1,000 people in Canada: These were the children of the baby boom. But these baby boomers did not have many children of their own, and they did not have many grandchildren, either. By 1970, the birth rate in Canada had dropped to 17 births per 1,000 people. Since 2000, it has been hovering around 11 births per 1,000 Canadians.This extraordinary flip-flop in the birth rate explains a number of key phenomena in our collective life during the last 50 years. It will now have a determining influence on the economic and social change that we will witness during the coming decades and certainly between now and 2020. As my colleague and friend, David Foot, of the University of Toronto, likes to say: "Demographics explain two-thirds of just about anything!"The Golden AgeThe notable phenomenon of the years 1960 to 1980 was the mass entry of baby boomers into the workplace. During that period, the number of workers earning a salary and paying taxes grew at a breathtaking rate. The welfare state experienced a rapid expansion. We successively implemented hospital insurance, health insurance, low-cost college and university education, social services, public pension plans, more generous old age pensions, and employment benefits, etc. It was the Golden Age of social programs. Do you admire the politicians of the era — the Pearsons, Trudeaus, Douglases, Robartses, Lesages, etc. — for developing our great social programs? You are right in doing so, for they were great people. But, from a financial perspective, they had an easy time of it. Money was no problem. The huge addition to the tax revenue from the baby boomers was great food for their imagination.The flip sideIn the years to come, we are going to experience the flip side. Baby boomers born between 1945 and 1960 are now between 45 and 60 years old. In 15 years, in 2020, they will be 60 to 75 years old. Most of them will have begun their retirement. Just as they entered the job market en masse between 1960 and 1980, they will leave it in large numbers between now and 2025. They will hardly be doing any work and they will not be paying many taxes. (The money they withdraw from their RRSPs will be taxable, but that really does not change the big picture.) The consequence is obvious: Our governments will be cash-strapped.Fewer tax revenues.This year, 51 per cent of Canada's total population is working. In 2020, when the baby boomers' departure will be well underway, only 49 per cent of the population will be working, if employment rates by age remain stable. The overall employment rate will thus have dropped two points from 51, the equivalent of a 4 per cent drop. What will the impact be on government tax revenues? We can calculate how much governments would have lost in 2006 if the number of taxpayers had suddenly dropped by 4 per cent. Since Canadians will pay $500 billion in income and other taxes this year, our governments would have collected $20 billion less (4 per cent of $500 billion). But that's not all. More health-care spendingThe passage of this large group of baby boomers into their golden years will push the percentage of senior citizens 65 years of age and older from 13 per cent of the total population in 2006 to 18 per cent in 2020. A senior citizen costs, on average, five times more in terms of health-care costs and social services compared with a younger adult. As a result, between now and 2020, there will be a 14 per cent increase in annual provincial spending in health care and social services — above and beyond the already extremely rapid increase in spending over the past several years (on average 7 per cent per year since 2000).Once again, a simple way to comprehend the financial import of this demographic shock is to calculate the impact of a 14 per cent increase in provincial health care and social services spending in the year 2006. Given that total spending in these two areas will reach $112 billion this year, the 14 per cent increase would add $16 billion to the pressure on provincial finances (14 per cent of $112 billion). More payments to seniors.Another government program that is going to suffer the effects of the aging baby boomer population is federal payments to seniors, including the venerable "old age pension" and the guaranteed income supplement for lower-income seniors. With 13 per cent of the population currently 65 years of age or older, the federal government expects to spend $31 billion in payments to seniors in 2006. If this percentage were to suddenly jump five points to 18 per cent, as is expected for the year 2020, Ottawa would have to come up with $12 billion more in 2006.Will the aging of the Canadian population allow at least some savings? Yes, in the areas of children's benefits, child-care allowances and education funding. According to the average birth-rate and immigration scenario put out by Statistics Canada, the relative weight of young people (0-19 years old) in the total population will drop by 13 per cent between 2006 and 2020. School enrolment will decline accordingly. This will permit proportional reductions in federal children's benefits and provincial education and daycare spending. In 2006, the combined value of all these expenditures on children and students is $79 billion. If these expenses dropped suddenly by 13 per cent, governments would save $10 billion.Will the demographic transition threaten the viability of our public pension plans? No. To avoid any slips due to demographic shock waves, the various levels of government proactively revised the structure of the Canada Pension Plan and the Régime des renters du Québec some time ago. The general contribution rate was upped to 9.9 per cent of insurable earnings in 2003. This rate will only need a slight increase to permit adequate financing for retirement income of baby boomers and their children for the foreseeable future.The tab: $38 billion.To sum up: Baby boomers born between 1945 and 1960 are going to retire en masse but they will leave few children and grandchildren behind them. Canada is thus going to undergo a major demographic transition. To highlight the financial consequences, I have presented a scenario that applied future reality to our current state of affairs. I have calculated the impact that demographic changes would have on public monies in Canada in 2006 if the age pyramid expected for 2020 suddenly applied today. The result would be a marked deterioration of public finances. As we saw, tax revenues would drop by $20 billion; provincial spending in health and social services would increase by $16 billion; federal payments to seniors would rise by $12 billion; allowances for children, education spending and child-care spending could decrease by $10 billion. In total, if it were applied today, the age structure of 2020's population would make a hole of $38 billion in government budgets for 2006; this would be split about evenly between the federal government and the provinces. In other words, there would be a new kind of "fiscal imbalance," demographic in nature. But this time it will hit Ottawa as hard as the provinces. Even worse, after 2020 the problem will not disappear; it will, in fact, grow.As of 2010, year after year, governments are going to see more and more disappointing tax revenues. The problem of health-care funding, which is already a hot issue today, will become absolutely dramatic as the baby boomers get older. Federal payments to seniors are going to see unprecedented growth. While provinces may realize some savings in education, these will only partially compensate for the drop in tax revenue and the explosion in health-care spending. As for pension plans, they will deal with the shock without too much difficulty.Financially, governments have three options: go back into debt (the Japanese approach), cut or privatize public services (the U.S. approach) or raise taxes (the Swedish approach). Each government will choose the combination that best matches its political philosophy. But in Ottawa, just as in the provinces, we cannot exclude the possibility of a new cycle of debt. A funding crisis could lead, more quickly than one might think, to a major transformation of our cherished health system. And we had better forget about major tax reductions for quite some time.Growth and solidarityGovernments can implement two main kinds of policies to deal with the demographic shock: a policy of economic growth and a policy of intergenerational solidarity. They can accelerate economic growth in the usual ways — fight unemployment and poverty, support employment of older workers, accelerate the integration of immigrant workers and foster education, entrepreneurship, savings, investment, innovation and productivity. Stronger economic growth will reduce the effects of overall economic decline and tax revenue losses due to the disappearance of the baby boomers.Also, governments can try to protect new generations from debt, program spending cuts and tax hikes by convincing current generations to proactively share the tab. This policy of solidarity between generations would be based on the repayment of public debt. A reduction of debt financed by today's taxpayers will reduce interest charges paid by the taxpayers of tomorrow, who will therefore have more money to access the same level of public services as today, without being forced to overly add to their tax burden. To me it seems self-evident that after having treated themselves to a great party, baby boomers would want to not leave all the cleanup duties to their children. Two governments in Canada have followed that path: the federal government and the government of Alberta. For several years now, each federal budget has set aside a sum to repay part of the debt. For its part, Edmonton has followed in Norway's footsteps and has actually finished reimbursing its debt through oil and gas royalties.Other governments could follow their lead. Quebec, Manitoba and British Columbia could sell their electricity at market price rather than massively subsidizing consumption. As well as being ecological, such a move would free up money to repay provincial debt. There is an obvious political obstacle to overcome: it is difficult to take the gift of cheap electricity away from taxpayers who are so used to it. But the citizens of these provinces might just be convinced to pay more for their electricity if they believed that the money earned would truly be used to an end that is dear to them: the future of their children. Those who think my analysis unduly alarmist are wrong. The passage of baby boomers to old age is not weather forecasting; it is based on fact. And the amount of the tab they are going to leave us with is both large and unavoidable. Our task is one of lucidity and solidarity. We must recognize the problem, create solutions and share the cost in an equitable manner.There is only one acceptable way to face the future: with eyes wide open.
I'm just goin' through my retirement planning stuff and I guess this just struck a chord with me. Marie and I decided to have our family first and then do our travellin' in our retirement. I also don't plan to work full time past 55 so that we're still young enough to enjoy the moments so I wanna make sure that we have enough in our retirement to do the things we want to as well as need to (like health care stuff in the later part of life). Anyway, just thought I'd post it in case it was of value to anyone else out there.
On a lighter note... 15 days 2 hours and 24 minutes!
I'm gonna visit a local butcher to get some more meat to try the jerky again. It was tasty, just more crunchy than chewy. The butcher's wife was there when Marie had her seizure and helped out in a huge way. She held Marie while it was all happening so that she didn't get hurt. I'm greatful for her being there and figure that I should support her and her family if I can. Jim tried with the watermelon again and it turned out great (or so he says... funny how I never get to try this "nature's candy" eh? I hope there's some left for our trip! lol!) Jim came through as usual and has created several lists for us. It's great havin' such an organized friend... I just hope that some of that rubs off on me!
Back to work for a few more hours... thanks for readin'!
g.
Posted by Suds at 1:31 PM 0 comments
Monday, July 17, 2006
A neat article I read in Saturday paper...
about an environmentally friendly home that was built 10 years ago. Some interesting features and given that Canadian Tire stocks clean energy products now, perhaps this is more doable nowadays. It's still expensive though, I think I'd be lookin' at $35,000 CDN to add solar to my house. I'm not sure if that would cover all my energy needs or whether I'd still have to buy energy... I suppose it also depends on how much I modify the way we live - it's a constant battle to get the kids to turn off the lights when they leave a room, not put the lights on when they can just open the curtains and not walk away from the TV leavin' it on. When I was a kid in school, there was a HUGE campaign at school about energy conservation and that seems to have all but disappeared. I know that we're responsible to teach our kids but it helps when they reinforce the message at school.
Anyway, that's all for now... if I have more time later I'll add more but it's lookin' like a very busy afternoon. Oh, and by the way.... 17 days 1 hour and 49 minutes !!!!!
g.
Posted by Suds at 1:55 PM 0 comments
Friday, July 14, 2006
Oops! I got a little ahead of myself yesterday...
I'm down 32lbs not 37lbs. I'll be down 37 by next week though!
I ran 8km today and it took a little more out of me that I thought it would. I had an apple before I left (about 20 mins before) but I still felt the low blood sugar levels after I got ready for work. I had one of my protein bars after I was dressed for work and it seemed to help a little and I started to feel better in the car. Now I'm at work I'm feelin' a little better too. Jim warned me about being on lower carbs and workin' out but I guess so far I haven't had the effects that I had this morning... I mean it's nothing to0 bad but I want to make sure I keep things balanced. Also, last time I went running I had an applesauce beforehand and maybe that's broken down more and easily processed by the body as opposed to the apple I had this morning. Anyway, feelin' better as each hour goes by.
My parents were over yesterday and started helping me set up the new pool I bought from Wally World. They're comin' back today 'cause I didn't have an air pump that would fit the valve for the air ring (it's one of those soft sided pools. They used to be called "funny pools") I also decided to bite the bullet and pay for water to be delivered so we don't miss the heat wave that coming while the pool fills and then warms up. Wish I could be there to watch it get filled from the big truck... I'm just a kid at heart and still love watchin' trucks!
Well, another busy day today and I'm meeting my sister for a quick lunch today and I don't want to be here until 18:00 so I'll be off for today!
Have a GREAT weekend everyone and by the way, thanks for reading!
g.
Posted by Suds at 9:49 AM 0 comments
Thursday, July 13, 2006
Building integrity with yourself...
is VERY rewarding. I've stuck to my healthy eating for 5 and a half weeks and I'm down 37lbs! I even managed to camp with the kids and stick to it. I'm flyin' high these days! (No, it's not light-headedness from lack of food ya bunch o' jokers! lol!) My goal was to be down to this weight by the time Jim and I left for our trip. I may be down another 10lbs by then, which would be even better. I have such focus with this that it's even amazing me. I have my moments of craving but nothing that isn't manageable. I'm now finding that the integrity that I've built with myself is spreading to other areas of my life. I feel like I'm on top of the world!
Busy day at work today so that's all for now, just wanted to share the positive vibes with everyone!
g.
Posted by Suds at 12:37 PM 1 comments
Tuesday, July 11, 2006
Well... errr... we *were* cookin'...
Well, the jerky turned out good and not so good. It smelled great and once you got past the fact that it was crunchy instead of chewy, it tasted good too. We inadvertently left it in a little too long and ended up demonstrating the new cookin' trend for those adrenaline junkies: Extreme Dehydrating! LOL!
Jim's recipe was amazing with great flavour. I really think we've got a keeper with his recipe. With mine, it was a little too sharp and I could reduce the cayenne pepper and perhaps add a little more salt to balance out the flavour. Perhaps a pinch of sugar too. I'm gonna experiment some more with it.
The grapefruit wasn't so good. I think I would prefer apples and pineapple to citrus fruits. The watermelon, so I'm told, was amazing. It seems that there wasn't quite enough to make it over to my house. (Just ribbin' ya Jim!) Jim said his kids loved it too so I'm gonna have a go at it and see if I can hook my kids on a natural candy and replace some of the other things they want when their sweet tooth makes itself known. Jim didn't mention the banana chips but I've had them enough in my life to know that I'd like them too.
Well, back to the exciting world of work...
g.
Posted by Suds at 1:28 PM 0 comments
The kids LOVED camping...
They had a great time! It wasn't as hard as I thought it would be with our youngest. I thought he might not last and want to go home and see Mommy but it turns out that he had an awesome time. Two nights was enough for him so it turned out to be the perfect amount of time. Patrick got to do some fishin', and all three boys spent some time at the beach palyin' in the water, diggin' in the sand and collecting neat little rocks in their buckets. I really enjoyed spendin' time with my boys and I can't seem to get enough family time lately. I know kids can drive us crazy at times but I'm really enjoying my kids lately and I really need to find a way to spend more time with them. Gotta think on that one for a bit and come up with a plan...
Hey, I went for a run on Friday morning and set a personal best distance - 10km! I couldn't believe it. Hey I wasn't lightnin' fast but my goal was to complete the circuit with no specific lapse time in mind. I wanted to go for a run this morning and two routes mapped out - 5km and 7.7km - but I just couldn't sleep last night and was awake until 3:30am. That kinda put a wrench in the plans for the day. I may go tonight for the short run but I'll hafta see how I'm feelin'. It's been a long time since I had trouble sleepin' like that but I've got a bunch of things on my mind and I just couldn't "turn it off" last night.
Well, I just got a pop-up reminder from my calendar here at work that I have a one-on-one with my director so I'd better prep for that.
Have a good day everyone!
g.
Posted by Suds at 10:12 AM 0 comments
Thursday, July 06, 2006
Takin' the kids "camping" this weekend...
They're so excited about it which is really cool. We're headin' up to Sibbald Point Provincial Park tomorrow at about midday. I'm gonna take their bikes so we can go for a ride around the campground and see more.
Patrick wants to try fishing so we'll prolly take the rods too. I'm not really into fishin'... I think I get that from my dad and that's why I feel like I need to start showing more interest in it so that Patrick keeps his interest up. As long as he's interested, I want him to explore the hobby.
I hafta do some shoppin' on the way home from work and get some essentials... like marshmellows! The boys have fun roastin' marshmellows but the two younger ones tend not to eat them after. I love roastin' 'em but alas, I won't be partaking this weekend... still tryin' to loose the fat. I'm down 25lbs in total now which makes me a featherweight 237lbs. 37 more to go until target. The only break I'm gonna have is when Jim and I go away for our trip but even then, I'll be burning a helluva lot of calories paddlin' and portaging. We're takin' some brownie mix that Jim mentioned in his blog and a cinnamon coffee cafe mix that looks decadent. I can't wait to experience gourmet cookin' in the back country of Algonquin. This trip is the trip I've always wanted to do but ended up doing the "car camping" thing except with a canoe instead of a car.
When we get back from our 'Gonquin trip we'll dedicate some time to building our new website (www.capsizedcanoe.ca), especially with the picture galleries. The scenery up there is absolutely stunning and the sunsets are amazing.
Marie's brother gave us one of those soft-sided pools as he was "upgrading" to a bigger, different model. I spent the holiday weeked with a wheelbarrel attached to my hands as I moved about 5 yards (something like 35 wheelbarrels full) of sand and then I have to level it and flatten it with a lawn roller I rented. I start to put the pool up when I realize that he's not given us the cap to the drain plug. Now, you know when you get a sense that something is not right... it was like my "Spidey" senses were tingling and I did what I don't normally do - I ignored it. Damn. I got in the car and drove with the heavy end-of-a-long-weekend traffic to get it from his house and when I got home, I put the hose in to start the fillin' process. I also attached the filter hoses which I noticed were chewed by a dog he refused to train properly and got rid of it because it was "untrainable"... um... yeah, okay. That was the second "Spidey" sense episode and I repeated the mistake of ignoring it. The next day I got a call from Marie...
"Do you want the good news, or the bad news?"
Being who I am, I figure, take the bad news head-on and recover with the good news.
"Gimme the bad news first"
"There are like, six holes in the pool and they're leakin' water"
Slience.
Small Spidey sense tingle.
"Are they big?"
"Well, we'll loose the water over time and they may even expand when the boys get jumpin' around in the pool."
"Frig. Okay then, what's the good news?"
"The pool hasn't burst and flood the neighbours yards... yet"
Pause.
"And?"
"Well... nothing. I just couldn't think of anything else to say that would be positive"
Hmmm.
I ended up stoppin' at Wally's World on the way home where they had a pool on for $199.00. I picked it up and had my final "Spidey" moment of this farce... why the hell didn't I spend the $200 and save time, money and hassles? I guess this is where I remember the sayin' about lookin' a gift horse in the mouth and perhaps this time I needed to look in to see what I was really gettin... I would've realized that it wasn't the mouth I was lookin' at, it was more like a horse's ass.
Posted by Suds at 2:24 PM 0 comments
Ah, the wisdom of Cliff Clavin...
I always loved the nuggets of gold that came from good ol' Cliffy...
"Well ya see, Norm, it's like this... A herd of buffalo can only move as fast as the slowest buffalo. And when the herd is hunted, it is the slowest and weakest ones at the back that are killed first This natural selection is good for the herd as a whole, because the general speed and health of the whole group keeps improving by the regular killing of the weakest members. In much the same way, the human brain can only operate as fast as the slowest brain cells. Excessive intake of alcohol, as we know, kills brain cells. But naturally, it attacks the slowest and weakest brain cells first. In this way, regular consumption of beer eliminates the weaker brain cells, making the brain a faster and more efficient machine. That's why you always feel smarter after a few beers."
Posted by Suds at 9:23 AM 1 comments
Wednesday, July 05, 2006
Now we're cookin'!
Okay, so it's only 29 days 6 hours and 45 minutes until we leave for Algonquin on our big trip and we're only just startin' to do some trials with the dehydrator. I had messed around with it earlier in the year and dried out some fruit but neither Jim nor I have ever made jerky which is something we really both enjoy and want to bring. It turns out that Jim had hit google lookin' for some tasty sounding recipes as did I and we came up with two different styles; a wet marinade and a dry rub marinade. I don't have a link to Jim's recipe but it has light soya sauce, brown sugar and some spices. I found this little tasty soundin' recipe and settled on it only to have a little side adventure gathering the ingredients.
The recipe calls for chilli powder and neither of us had any left so, like I do for many of my unanswered questions, I hit google and searched on "how to make chili powder" and tried the first link that came up. I'm glad I did this 'cause Jim and I assumed that chili powder was made from ground up chili peppers when in fact it's made up of a blend of spices, all of which we had on hand.
Here's the recipe that I used to make chili powder:
It smelled GREAT! Now, Jim and I have never really cooked together where we're blending ingedients so I think I may freaked him out a little when every couple minutes I kept sayin' to him, "Hey Buddy, you've gotta smell this!" LOL!Mild Chili Powder
Ingredients:
3 Tbsp. paprika
1 Tbsp. ground cumin
2 Tbsp. dried oregano
1 tsp. red or cayenne pepper
1/2 tsp. garlic powderMix well. Place in an airtight container. This makes 2/3 cup.
Anyway, here's the recipe that I linked to above for the dry rub jerky:
Dry Cure Southwest Jerky
1 ts Salt
Combine ingredients and thoroughly mix together. This is a dry marinade so there is no liquid. Sprinkle the spice mixture on the meat slices and work into the grain with your fingers. Cover and marinate overnight. Place trays in the oven and dry at 145'F. for first 4 hrs. then set oven 130'F. until dry.(4 to 8 hrs.) Jerky should be hard but not brittle. Blot up any fat that appears with paper towels. *For a chewy texture, slice the meat with the grain, or across the grain for more tender jerky.
1 ts Pepper
1/2 ts Cayenne pepper
3 tb Chili powder
2 ts Cumin
2 Cloves garlic minced
2 lb Steak sliced thinly
Now does that not sound mouth watering? The two batched of jerky are marinatin' in Jim's fridge and the dehydrator has bannanas, grapefruit and watermelon in it and that stuff should be ready by tonight. Jim read that the watermelon tastes like cotton candy when it's done... wouldn't that be a treat in the trail!
I'm findin' myseld a little short on time this morning so I'll stop here and if I get chance I'll come back and finish off.
Have a great day everyone!
g.
Posted by Suds at 9:17 AM 6 comments