Dr. Jill to the Rescue

I was at my skating practice last night when my medical skills were called upon… One of the other skaters had fallen and hurt her ankle, and the couple of people helping her had some first aid skills, but they were a little unsure of what to do. They were asking for a nurse, and I said “well, I’m a doctor, what do you need?”

So I examined her and came to the conclusion that I thought she had broken her ankle (specifically, her distal fibula) and she needed to go to an ER for X-rays and splinting/casting. She wasn’t feeling (or looking) that great (kind of shaky and pale… Hello, broken bone!) so we called for the paramedics to give her a temporary splint and transport her to a hospital. They said they didn’t think it was broken, and I just thought… “Well, I hope it’s not (for her sake) but I really think it is.” and off she went in the aid car.

This morning I stopped at Starbucks on my way to work and I saw another skater who had been helping out with her last night: “It’s a broken fibula.”

Ahhh, victory. (Though I am sad for her that it is actually broken.) 🙁

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Makin’ Bacon Derby Camp

I did roller derby summer camp this past couple of months, and I learned how to skate from the actual Rat City Rollergirls! It was awesome fun, and I nearly made it onto their “Fresh Meat” team (for new-to-the-league skaters). Even though I didn’t make it on the team, I did make it ALL the way through the tryouts (through all 3 cuts) so I’m pretty proud of myself! I’ll be on wheels for the next few months, and I’ll try out again early next year.

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Yakima River Float Trip

A.J., Shaquita, and I took a leisurely kayak float down the lower Yakima river yesterday (starting just outside Ellensburg at the Big Horn launch site and floating to Big Pines campground). It was sunny and beautiful with nice cool water, and the current was running fast enough so we didn’t have to paddle much if we didn’t want to. It was so much fun, and I’m hoping we can go again later this month!

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Shower Glass!

We had our glass panel for our shower wall installed yesterday and it is beautiul! I’ve been showering without any blockade there for so long that now it feels a little weird to have it in place… but I’m almost used to it, and it’s so pretty and definitely worth it!

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Ninja Salsa

We have a new Ninja Blender and it is quite the amazing kitchen tool. We put in these lovely fresh ingredients (tomato, garlic, cilantro, lime), hit the pulse blend for a couple seconds, and voilà! We had perfect fresh delicious salsa in seconds!! It was so good that we ate it all before I remembered to take a picture of the finished product!

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“Chef dishes up breast-milk cheese”

* The following is an article I ran across out in the vastness of the internet – I’m sure you can find it (and more information) by Googling “breast milk cheese” or some variant.  Interesting idea and interesting public response. 

Human cheese may sound more Hannibal Lecter than haute cuisine, but it’s an intriguing new menu item at a fancy New York City eatery.

No humans were harmed in the making of the novel new dish; rather, mommy’s milk supplies the dairy quotient for the little canapé offered up by chef Daniel Angerer at his Klee Brasserie.

Noted chef Angerer, who once bested Bobby Flay on Food Network’s “Iron Chef” reality competition, says necessity was the mother of invention for his new dish — and in this case, the mother was his wife, Lori Mason. The couple realized their freezer was overflowing with breast milk as their baby daughter Arabella turned 4 weeks old.

“We are fortunate to have plenty of pumped mommy’s milk on hand, and we even freeze a good amount of it,” Angerer wrote on his Web site. “Our small freezer ran out of space. To throw it out would be like wasting gold.”

With his wife on board with the plan to offer a bit of herself in the name of culinary art, Angerer began experimenting with making cheese out of his wife’s breast milk. Turned out it worked pretty well — two gallons of breast milk, some curdling and two weeks of aging produced a sweet cheese with a taste not far removed from the more familiar cow’s milk cheese.

When Angerer posted a recipe for “My Spouse’s Mommy’s Milk Cheese” on his blog, customers began calling his eatery begging for a taste. So he began offering an appetizer of breast-milk cheese with figs and Hungarian pepper at Klee Brasserie. While response has been generally positive, Angerer and Mason admit the dish has been a decided turnoff to some.

“I think a lot of the criticism has to do with the combination of sex and cheese,” Mason told the New York Post. “But the breast is there to make food.”

TODAY tested how much of an “eww” factor comes from mommy’s milk cheese Monday when hosts Kathie Lee Gifford and Hoda Kotb displayed a platter of the Klee’s canapés to the show’s crew. Kotb was amazed no one would take the bait. “Not one taker? You get 100 bucks for being on camera!” she said.

Finally, restaurant owner Billy Dec of Chicago eatery Sunda came onto the set and offered to be the human guinea pig, even though he had missed hearing the appetizer was made from breast milk. After tasting, he nonchalantly said, “It’s cheese,” and then was told of the special ingredient.

Dec, on set to watch his chef Rodelio Aglibot make a recipe on TODAY, looked shocked and made a beeline off camera. Still, he finished off the appetizer, which may show the power of cheese in any form.

Angerer said that it’s all in the name of kitchen science. “Being a chef, you’re curious about anything in terms of flavor,” he told New York magazine’s grubstreet.com Web site. “It wasn’t like, ‘Hey, this is such an amazing cheese!’ It’s just like, ‘Can you use human milk? Yes, you absolutely can!’ ”

Angerer’s wife Lori Mason notes that the restaurant has heard from a few prospective patrons who seem to have childhood issues. One person e-mailed asking for a sample, moaning that they were not breast-fed as a child. “I’m not here to walk people through their psychological problems,” Mason told the New York Post.

As for Angerer’s own Web site, response there has ranged from “I am LOVING this idea” to “Gross, who’s supposed to eat this?” Either way, Angerer notes that this is surely a limited-time-only menu item — the milk supply, courtesy of Mason, isn’t going to last forever.

Still, Mason is urging her husband to try out another recipe before the mother’s milk supply dries up; she’d love to see a breast-milk gelato. In homage, Gifford and Kotb dug into bowls of gelato shaped like a female breast Tuesday, daring each other to dig in. After both took a mouthful, they admitted a ruse: No mommy’s milk was used.

But the New York City Health Department seems less amused: It has told Angerer he would be well-advised to stop offering his wife’s milk to the general public, even though there is no specific law on the books prohibiting it.

“The restaurant knows that cheese made from breast milk is not for public consumption, whether it is sold or given away,” a Health Department spokeswoman told the New York Post.