Monday, March 25, 2013

Gene's Rib Sauce

Around here, when we eat barbecue (in the south, this only means one thing: pulled pork) we do it with a tangy cider vinegar based sauce.  But in the western part of the state barbecue is done with a milder, thicker, tomato based sauce.  A thicker sauce like that is much better suited to ribs.  Here's my dad's rib sauce recipe.


  • 29 oz tomato puree
  • 1/3 cup mustard
  • 2 T lemon juice
  • 2 T sugar
  • 2 T dark brown sugar
  • 2 T chili powder
  • 3 cups water
  • 1.5 cups cider vinegar
  • 1/4 cup dark corn syrup
  • 1 T dry mustard
  • 1 T paprika
  • 2 T red pepper flakes
  • 2 T onion powder
  • 1 t salt
  • 1 t pepper
  • 1/2 t garlic powder
Bring all these ingredients to a boil in a sauce pan or stock pot.  Stir and lower to a simmer, let simmer for 30 minutes.

Gene's Eastern NC Barbecue

The most important part of barbecue is the meat, of course.  But what separates eastern north carolina style pulled pork from other barbecues is its vinegary sauce.

The Sauce

My dad's BBQ sauce recipe:
  • 1 qt cider vinegar
  • 1 T crushed red pepper flake
  • 3 T Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 oz tomato juice
  • 1/2 t black pepper
  • 3/4 t salt
  • 1 T mustard
I prefer a variation that substitutes 1/2 cup texas pete for the 2 oz tomato juice.

Bring all the ingredients together in a large saucepan and simmer until the mustard dissolves and all the spices are integrated into the sauce (except the red pepper flakes).  Turn off the heat and let cool.

The Meat

For a 6 pound boston butt, you can grill over indirect low heat for approximately 8 hours, or in an oven for about 8 hours at 170.  When finished, pull apart with two forks into a large pot.  Add sauce to taste and cook on low heat for a couple hours, but make sure to keep some sauce set aside for diners to use.

Gene, God, and Mr Wolfe's BBQ

After my dad died I started trying to make barbecue the way he did.  He always used indirect heat on a small charcoal grill.  He'd just do 1 or 2 boston butts at a time, low and slow.  Not long after that, our long time family friend Lowry Wolfe died unexpectedly, much the same way as my own father.  As a gesture, I made barbecue for Mrs Wolfe and her family.  Unfortunately it didn't go quite as planned.  My dads old charcoal grill bottom had rotted out.  That grill was a piecemeal creation, an old gas grill turned charcoal grill, so I thought maybe I could use the gas function - but the gas lines were also rotted out.  We already had the boston butts out and sauce on, so I decided to do the best I could with dad's oven method, with a few changes.

I used 2 6-7 pound boston butts, and I cooked them for 1.5 hours at 250 in a large roasting pan.  Then I added about 1/2 cup of cider vinegar and tented the meat with aluminum foil, and put back in for another 1.5  hours.  Then I increased the temperature to 300 and cooked for another 2 hours.

I was afraid the result would not be impressive and that I would end up having to slice the meat instead of simply pull it with two forks - but I was pleasantly surprised at how tender and pull-ready it turned out.  So surprised, that I decided my God and my dad must have been helping, to honor Lowry Wolfe.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Update on Me

Ok, I heard it from the Larsons 18 times (or twice) that I haven't been blogging here. I have been blogging a TON on my "other" blog, where I put all my geeky shtuff.

Anyway, what have I been up to? Having as much fun as possible. Sitting pool side, cooking out, playing Ultimate, running, spending as much time as possible with Lauren, house shopping, and preparing my own house to be put on the market.

I helped Lauren's dad and brother replace her water damaged carpet (her neighbor had a leak) with new pergo laminate flooring. Since I learned how to do that I decided to replace my own as well, since my older engineered hardwood floors had some scratches and minor damage. I'm about 80% done at this point, hoping to finish tonight and move onto putting down the new quarter-round molding. Next before I put my house on the market is repainting a few rooms and replacing my patio door, which took some water damage caused by my own neglect (gutters were leaking and splashing up onto the door).

I've been looking in the Mebane area for a new house, since that is located half way between Durham (where I work) and Greensboro (where Lauren works - she just took a new job there, since she has finished her PNP at Duke). The distance from Mebane to my office is about the same or shorter than the distance from Apex to my office, so thats cool. Plus I'm closer to Charlotte.

Work is fine. Anna is great. Lauren is great. I am great.

Monday, June 08, 2009

Non-Techie Guide to Free HD TV

I have been free of my monstrous cable tv bill for many months now, and I love it!  Woooo!  A while back I posted about how I want to get revenge on Cable companies by helping as many people as I can kill their cable service in favor of free HD tv over the air and over the Internet.  You can read about that here.

There are other “free TV” guides on the Internet – but they suck because they are too generic, too technical, or not technical enough.  Hopefully this one doesn’t suck.  Let me know if you have any questions – if you tell me that you are going to cancel your cable tv service, I will answer all your questions.

Over the Air HD

Most people (including me until not long ago) don’t realize that tv stations all over the place are broadcasting over-the-air (OTA) HD signals, and that the quality of those signals can be better than what you can get over cable or satellite (because these OTA signals don’t use all the lossy compression that cable and satellite signals do).  Buying a UHF digital antenna, available at your local hardware store or online, will allow you to pickup these signals, for free.  Of course you won’t be able to pick up cable networks like TNT, ESPN, MTV, and Comedy Central with this – instead I just get whatever signals are broadcast in my geographic location.  In my case those are FOX/HD, CBS/HD, NBC/HD, ABC/HD, PBS/HD, CW/HD, WRDC/HD, and some spanish channels.  Sweet! 

The OTA antenna gives me access to HD pictures from all the major networks:  FOX, CBS, NBC, ABC, PBS, plus the CW (whatever that is) and WRDC which is a local network.  This pretty much covers most of the tv shows that I watch, except a few that come on cable channels like Good Eats, Colbert Report, Daily Show, Psych, Monk, and a few others I’m not willing to mention.  But, don’t stress.  Most of those other shows I can catch online.  More on that later in this post.

There are three criterion to consider when purchasing a digital antenna:

  1. Range: You can get short-range, mid-range, and long-range antennas.  To decide which you should get, visit antennaweb.org, enter your address, and it will show you all the broadcasting networks in your area, and how far away they are, and what kind of range your antenna will need.
  2. Mounting:  Antennas can be tv-side, atic mounted, or roof mounted.  For best results you’ll want the roof mount, for which you’ll probably want to get a pro to mount it for you (ask at your local hardware store and they can probably handle that job for you).  I personally have my DB4 antenna mounted in my attic, and it does a fine job for me.  The tv-side antennas, like the Philips PHDTV1 Silver Sensor, sit right on top of or beside your tv and do a good job for short range signals.
  3. Directional/Multi-Directional:  If you purchase a directional antenna, you’ll have to point it in the direction in which you want it to pick up signals.  If you purchase a multi-direction antenna, no pointing is necessary, it will pick up signals from all directions.  Obviously I recommend multi-directional.

Internet TV

Many people don’t have an interest in Internet TV because they don’t want to watch tv on their laptop or on their desktop computer.  That’s completely understandable.  But most of those people don’t realize that it is extremely easy to connect your computer to your tv!  You can take this as far as you want to go – from literally just connecting the computer video output to your tv, to having a dedicated computer sit next to your tv, to adding a remote control to your computer, etc.

  1. Basic Setup

    For the basics, all you need is one of those cables that people use every day to connect their computer to their computer monitor (this is called an RBG cable).  Most televisions purchased in the last 10 years will have a connection on the back for such a cable.  Just connect the two, and use your television remote to put it into “PC Input” mode.  At first you may not see anything, but on your computer look for the function key (Fnc) and the F8 button.  Pressing Fnc and F8 simultaneously should toggle the computer through its possible output modes – including the one that outputs to television output.  F8 is commonly labeled “crt/lcd” or something similar.

     

  2. Advanced Setup

    If you want to get a little more nerdy with your setup, you’ll want a dedicated PC for your tv (aka, a DVR or PVR).  There are a lot of choices here, but since most people are comfortable with Windows, probably the easiest solution is just to buy a cheap PC with Windows Media Center pre-installed on it (ie Vista Home Premium, which comes with Windows Media Center).  This will not only give you convenient access to the Internet from your tv, but you can also connect a digital antenna to this PC and get free HD over the air.  Media Center PC’s usually come with one tv-tuner card, but you can add one or more additional tv tuner cards.  When you buy another tv tuner card, you’ll most likely get a remote control bundled with it.  I also recommend a wireless keyboard for browsing the net, something compact that you can hide away in a coffee table drawer or beside the couch.  If you just want somebody to tell you exactly what to buy, let me know and I can talk you through a shopping list.  There’s more on setting up your own DVR later in this post.

  3. Content

    There are many choices for watching fresh television content online.  Network websites, Hulu.com, Amazon UnBox, etc.

    a.  TV Network/Channel Websites: All of the major networks and channels provide on-demand viewing for many of their top shows, including NBC (The Office, etc), ABC (LOST, Grey’s Anatomy, etc), FOX, and CBS.  CBS is the worst, they only provide 1 or 2 episodes at a time, if any.

    b.  Hulu.com.  My new favorite website of all time.  Hulu.com lets you view an unlimited amount of free tv and movies.  The quality of the content here is great!  On Hulu you can watch The Office, Daily Show, Colbert Report, Family Guy, and many many more.  You can create an account, and “subscribe” to television shows, so that when a new episode airs it will be added to your queue.  Thank you Hulu!  I love you and will cherish all of your advertisements.

    c.  Amazon UnBox – ok, this one is not free.  But, you can purchase entire seasons (or single episodes) of television shows.

    d.  NetFlix – if you already have a NetFlix account, you can watch an amazing amount of content for free over the Internet through Netflix’s “Instant” play-now functionality.  This includes movies and television show seasons that have already been released on DVD.

Free DVR

If you’re into setting up something more advanced, you’ll want to setup your own DVR.  I built a dvr out of some spare parts from an old PC and a few purchases from Tiger Direct.  I got a second one buy just buying a cheapo Vista Home Premium (which comes with Windows Media Center), also from Tiger Direct. 

What you want in a DVR:

  1. A nice graphics card, but you don’t need anything special.  Contrary to popular belief, whatever comes pre-installed on the PC is probably enough! 
  2. SATA hard drive.  You’ll want a SATA drive.  I recommend two.  One for your OS and software, and one dedicated to tv tuner recordings. 
  3. Lots of ram.  Its cheap, so you may as well stock up for best performance.
  4. Vista home premium pre-installed.  Vista Home Premium, which comes with Windows Media Center, works great and requires almost zero setup time to get started!  If you are afraid of Vista, you can go the XP route as well.  Also, I hear great things about the Windows 7, the successor to Windows Vista.

Other Options

  1. Internet service provider:  AT&T offers high speed DSL service.  Currently high speed DSL is not available in my area, so for now I will stick with Road Runner for my Internet connection.  Verizon also has high speed service in some areas.
  2. DVD only.  Many people are killing their tv watching completely except for purchasing full season DVD’s of television shows they want to watch.  If you go this route, I recommend a Netflix plan.

 

Monday, March 30, 2009

Life: Quality vs Quantity

Would you rather live a long life in which you're in medium discomfort for many years, or a short life in which you die about the time you start to get old?

Friday, December 19, 2008

My New Media Center PC

I got a new Acer at Tiger Direct. It was just a cheapo, but it is more than adequate for my Media Center. It is running Windows Vista, and I added on 2 digital tuners and a 750 GB secondary SATA drive for tv recording and media storage.

19" LCD (this came with the PC, but it is upstairs in my office now)
Embedded high-definition audio with 7.1-channel audio support
Two external speakers
VGA, DVI-D, headphones, microphone and six audio ports
Interface Ports
RJ-45 LAN
VGA
Headphones
Microphone
DVI-D
FireWire® (IEEE 1394)
Two PS/2®
Six audio
Eight USB 2.0 (four front, four back)
Communications
Gigabit LAN
V.92 modem
Bunch of Included Software
NTI Media Maker™
Six 3.5" drive bays (two external, four internal)
Two 5.25" drive bays
One PCI Express® 2.0 x1
One PCI Express® 2.0 x16
Two PCI v2.3
USB mouse and multimedia English keyboard
250 watt power supply

The secondary drive is so that all the recording/deleting of tv and other media takes place on a drive other than the one where the operating system resides. This will help keep the PC quick and responsive. Also in the "keep the PC quick and responsive" department - the PC will be locked down for program installation: no apps will be installed to the PC besides what is already there, with a few minor exceptions.

The two tv tuners allow me to record two shows at once.

Conversational Mockery

(03:36) lancer: ok
(03:37) jamesn: Did you mean: OK...
(03:37) lancer: yep
(03:38) jamesn: The ellipses are crucial
(03:38) jamesn: See more in Chapter 7 of James' Guide to Conversational Mockery

Thursday, November 06, 2008

My plan for revenge against the cable company – part 1

Intro

My cable bill is $125 a month.  Ridiculous.  That includes road runner and hd cable.  It also includes that lovely $8/month fee for the dvr.  Over the lifetime of that dvr I’m pretty sure I have paid for it about 5 times.  My plan is to set myself up with an alternative to cable, perfect it, and get as many other people as I can to do the same thing.  My first goal is to keep Time Warner Cable from making $1250 a year from me.  After that, I will start preaching and hopefully converting other people as well.

My plan:

  1. Get an over-the-air digital antenna, to receive local channels (including all the major networks, and HDTV) for free.
  2. Build my own DVR,  possibly with Windows Media Center.
  3. Watch “cable channels” such as Comedy Central and Food Network over the Internet.
  4. Cancel my cable, except the road runner part so that I can still do #3.
  5. Research other options for Internet.

Part 1

Most people (including me until not long ago) don’t realize that tv stations all over the place are broadcasting over-the-air (OTA) HD signals, and that the quality of those signals can be better than what you can get over cable or satellite (because these OTA signals don’t use all the lossy compression that cable and satellite signals do).  Buying a UHF digital antenna will allow you to pickup these signals, for free.

So, I bought a UHF digital antenna.  Specifically I got the Philips PHDTV1 Silver Sensor indoor antenna from Amazon.com, I connected it to my tv and it works great!  Now of course I’m not receiving MTV and Comedy Central with this – instead I just get whatever signals are broadcast in my geographic location.  In my case those are FOX/HD, CBS/HD, NBC/HD, ABC/HD, PBS/HD, CW/HD, WRDC/HD, and some spanish channels.  Sweet!

Part 1 accomplished.

Friday, September 19, 2008

BrewzKey

Every once in a while its good for all of us, after a hard work day, enjoy a tasty cold beverage.  And you should never be caught without the means to open said tasty beverage.  Enter the BrewzKey.  Your key to bottled goodness.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Wakeboarding

I am the proud owner of a new wakeboard.

board: msrp 399.99

bindings: msrp $329.99

I paid $150 total for both. Nice!