Friday, August 29, 2014

Marinated Rosemary Steak

This is my adaptation of a recipe that I saw in the Cleveland Plain Dealer in perhaps the mid 1990s. Where they got the recipe, I do not know, as I only have the notes for this, and as I already mentioned, this is MY adaptation, not the exact recipe from the newspaper.

I use about 2 lbs sirloin steak
1 medium onion, chopped
2 to 3 cloves of garlic, minced
2 to 3 tablespoons of fresh rosemary, chopped
1/2 cup Heinz 57 Sauce
1 tablespoon canola or vegetable oil
 1 teaspoon salt

Mix the 57 Sauce, onion, garlic, rosemary, salt and oil together on a large platter or in a baking dish. Coat the steak on both sides with the mixture, then cover the platter or dish and refrigerate for several hours, preferably overnight. Remove the steak from the refrigerator a little while before cooking to let it warm a bit. Preheated oven to 375 degrees (F), bake steak for about 30 minutes, then reduce heat to 300, continue baking another half hour, or until desired doneness. You will need to check the steak after about every 10 to 15 minutes, as the sauce can burn, so if it begins to burn, reduce the heat immediately to 300, but still check the steak, and reduce the heat further, if necessary, and just lengthen the baking time.

Served with roasted potatoes, sprinkled with Puerto Rican adobo*

* "Adobo" is a common term in regions with Spanish as the main language, but it means different things in different areas. In Puerto Rican cooking, adobo is a dry seasoning, homemade or commercially produced, usually consisting of salt, granulated garlic, onion powder, dried oregano, and pepper, although recipes vary.

WORD HISTORY:
Herb-This word goes back to Indo European "gher/ghre," which had the notion of "to become green;" thus, "to grow (as a plant or grass)." This gave its Italic/Latin offspring "herba," which meant "plant, grass," plus by extension, "herb." This gave Old French, a Latin-based language, "erbe/herbe." English borrowed the word as "erbe" in the early 1300s. By the 1400s, under the influence of the Latin spelling with an initial "h"(many scholars and religious people used Latin), English too began to spell the word as "herb," bringing two pronunciations: "herb," where the "h" is pronounced, and which "tends" to be fairly common in Britain and "often" among some cooks or chefs in North America, and the "h-less" pronunciation, which has "generally" been more common in North America.

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Monday, August 18, 2014

The Growing Danger Of American Reactionary Fascism

This was first published in August of 2014.

Elements of fascism have been around for a long, long time, before there was a general term for them. Generally speaking, it was Benito Mussolini, a former socialist, and some other Italians, who combined some of these elements into a true political movement after World War One. Mussolini took power in Italy quite quickly, as he became Prime Minister (also known by some as "Premier") of Italy in October of 1922. Mussolini's rise to power and the overall postwar situation in various parts of the world, especially in Germany, Austria and Hungary,* brought copycat fascist political movements elsewhere, although with national variations from the Italian brand.

The defeat of major fascist led countries Germany (which then included Austria) and Italy in World War Two undoubtedly led many to believe fascism was no longer a big threat to the world, although fascist governments remained in power, notably in Spain and Portugal, and another notable fascist-like leader would take over in Argentina, Juan PerĂ³n. In the United States, the Great Depression had seen the increased popularity of radio broadcasts by a Michigan Roman Catholic priest named Father Charles Coughlin, who gradually incorporated many fascist ideas, including anti-Jewish rants and hatred, into his speeches and talks, as he became a major critic of President Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal.** The beginning of World War Two in Europe in 1939 seemingly shook Americans back to their senses, and Coughlin's overall popularity declined. The 1950s saw the rise of one George Lincoln Rockwell, a former American military officer, who latched onto Hitlerian hatreds of Jews and non-white people. He eventually founded the American Nazi Party, complete with all of the hatred and nonsense espoused by Nazism's former nutcase-in-chief, Hitler.

Back in the 1960s my father was an auditor for an auto parts company (supplier). This brought him some extra work, as parts' dealers would occasionally hire him to take inventories for them, and a couple of times, he took me with him to help. I don't recall the exact year this happened, but I'll guess like 1967 or 1968. While we were on one of these inventory jobs, someone had placed Nazi pamphlets on the windshields of the cars in the area where my father's car was parked. It's been so long ago I can't recall everything, but I believe the pamphlet was all in black and white (no racial reference intended), with several crude cartoon like drawings depicting Jews and Black Americans in derogatory caricatures. While I don't remember the exact content, there was Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" quote, followed by a picture of George Lincoln Rockwell and words something like, "But he has [or had] a dream too." *** The whole thing was quite appalling and after all of these years, I still remember that night.

The Great Depression had brought about a major political realignment in the United States, with Democrats "generally" becoming the governing majority for several decades, although Republicans did break the Democratic dominance on occasion, especially at the presidential level. Gradually voters seen as progressives shifted more and more into the Democratic Party, while voters seen as conservatives shifted into the Republican Party, until we arrived at where we are today. Increasingly conservative elements began to gain control of the GOP, where they were often seen, even by other Republicans, as "extremists." Arch conservative Republican and libertarian Barry Goldwater, the GOP presidential nominee in 1964, addressed the extremist tag by saying, "...extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice." Senator Thomas Kuchel, a moderate Republican from California, expressed concern and outright dismay in the mid 1960s about the extremist conservative infiltration of the GOP, and he called these elements "a neo fascist political cult ... driven by ... corrosive hatred and sickening fear ..." **** Again, this was in the mid 1960s, well before the major influx of former conservative Democrats, which gradually accelerated during the 1980s up until about a decade or so ago, which only concentrated and intensified the right wing fascist ideas of the GOP. The election of Barack Obama brought fascist racial, ethnic and religious hatred to something of a fever pitch, as former moderate and traditional conservative Republican officeholders shifted rightward, fearing their defeat in primaries by right wing candidates, who would have been laughed off the political stage less than a couple of decades ago.

Moderate and progressive Americans need to sit up and take notice of what's been going on, as right wing extremism has spread from the far right into the periphery of the mainstream, sold to the American public by the likes of Rush Limbaugh and others, including an organization hiding behind the cover of being a "news" organization, but which was founded with the direct purpose of supporting a political point of view, an organization headed by former Republican operative Roger Ailes; that organization being Fox News. I see comments posted online by those seemingly complacent individuals predicting the "demise of the Republican Party" (see book title in note **** below), this is nonsense, and it is very dangerous folks! In my lifetime I've heard such predictions about the demise of both parties. Remember, underestimating your enemy can be devastating, and these are not just political opponents, they are enemies, as they see anyone who does not toe their line as "the enemy," as can be seen by their attempts to force Republicans further to the political right, although some Republicans have begun fighting back. In the 1920s and early 1930s many Germans, including German Jews, thought it would never be possible for the ranting, far out, sort of crazy and almost comical looking Hitler and his Nazis to gain power; that educated Germans would never let it happen, but it did. After the Nazis took power, the anti-Nazis deluded themselves into thinking the Nazis could be held in check and that the nightmare would soon pass, but it didn't, and it got much, much worse, including war, mass murder and genocide. I see our own modern American reactionary nutcases for what they are .... FASCISTS!

* Germany, Austria and Hungary were all defeated in World War One, thus bringing attempts to place blame for their defeat elsewhere, like on leftist and communist elements of their respective nations. Adolf Hitler came to add an especially virulent racist element to his form of fascism, with an illogical obsession with Jews being its foremost principle. The Bolshevik takeover in Russia in late 1917 had added a particular sense of fear to wealthy (and definitely to the nobility) and middle class people in many European countries, and in the United States, especially during the Great Depression. This fear drove some, perhaps many, toward the various fascist movements in Europe, as fascist paramilitary forces and thugs, like Mussolini's Blackshirt units and Hitler's Stormtroopers, were likely seen as protectors against communist thugs (they had thugs too).

** Remember, there was no television in those times, so radio was a fast, direct and major way to reach large numbers of people. Coughlin also published a weekly newspaper/magazine to disseminate and promote his ideas.

*** If my memory serves me right, Rockwell's picture showed him with a corncob pipe, something he had adopted from General Douglas MacArthur, who was famous for such, and whom Rockwell deeply admired. I am not sure of the exact line used following Dr. King's quote, because Rockwell was assassinated in 1967 by a former American Nazi Party member, so whether it was in the present or past tense ("has" or "had"), I don't remember.

**** See: "Rule and Ruin (the Downfall of Moderation and the Destruction of the Republican Party, from Eisenhower to the Tea Party)," by Geoffrey M. Kabaservice, Oxford University Press, New York 2012, page 220.

WORD HISTORY:
Danger-The history of this fairly common word is a bit involved. It goes back to Indo European "domo/doma," which meant "house." This gave its Latin (Italic) offspring "domus," meaning "home," and then the derived "dominium," which meant "property," and then the derived "dominus,"  which meant "lord of the estate." This then produced "dominarium," which meant "the authority or power of the lord." This gave French, a Latin-based language, first "dongier, and then "dangier," meaning "power, authority." This was carried to England by the Normans, where it was altered to "daunger," with the same meaning, and it was borrowed into English in the 1200s. The idea of  "power or authority over others," also had come to mean "power to punish, do harm to," and this gradually became "the risk or fear of harm," the meaning it still carries today.  


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