Tag Archives: Seneca

Podcast Lost In Space Episode 11!

It’s a strange and technical issues ridden? episode of Podcast Lost in Space as we’re down to two regular hosts and our guest speaker (aka B-team Member) Kelvin Campbell. We get into some real good discussion of Black Friday, Thanksgiving and dealing with Family while my internet craps out. It’s Podcast Lost in Space Episode 11!

Follow Us: @PLISOfficial on Twitter or on Facebook at Podcast Lost In Space and on Youtube atTPLIS Official

Many thanks to Peter Scott for his awesome Intro/Outro Music! Everyone go check him out! https://soundcloud.com/peterscott-3

And many more thanks to Matthew Jager for his amazing graphics and banners! Check him out at mjagerdesign.com and on Twitter at @TheSeattleOne

Podcast Lost In Space Episode 10!

Join us for Podcast Lost in Space Episode 10! It’s the Thanksgiving episode of PLIS! Join us for a heartfelt episode where we talk about Ryan’s stupid ants again, depression and what we’re thankful for!

Follow Us: @PLISOfficial on Twitter or on Facebook at Podcast Lost In Space and on Youtube atTPLIS Official

Many thanks to Peter Scott for his awesome Intro/Outro Music! Everyone go check him out! https://soundcloud.com/peterscott-3

And many more thanks to Matthew Jager for his amazing graphics and banners! Check him out at mjagerdesign.com and on Twitter at @TheSeattleOne

Podcast Lost in Space Episode 9!

PLIS Episode 9! Join us for a silly, then dark, then serious then silly episode of Podcast Lost in Space! Seriously, we talk real serious about the terror attacks on Paris, Beruit and Baghdad  and then shift over to a fairly serious talk about the Friendzone too.

In a new shift, technical issues held this one up for a few days sorry!

Follow Us: @PLISOfficial on Twitter or on Facebook at Podcast Lost In Space and on Youtube atTPLIS Official

Many thanks to Peter Scott for his awesome Intro/Outro Music! Everyone go check him out! https://soundcloud.com/peterscott-3

And many more thanks to Matthew Jager for his amazing graphics and banners! Check him out at mjagerdesign.com and on Twitter at @TheSeattleOne

Extra Life Recipe: Loaded Potato Soup

All By Seneca

Today’s recipe was made during the Extra-Life event this past weekend. The original recipe was given to me by one of the families I tutored for during my sophomore year at undergraduate school. Over the years I’ve modified it little by little into what I now use as a simple at home recipe for when the weather is a bit too cold for my liking. The family called it potato goulash, but I think of it more as loaded potato soup.

tsp = teaspoon

Tbsp = Tablespoon

lbs = Pounds

Mince = chop into very small pieces

Diced = You chop the thing into roughly square like shapes

Cubed = Actually what it says, cut the ingredients into rough cubes, much bigger than diced

Sliced = Cut into thin broad strips (usually circles)

Chopped = to cut into small pieces with repeated blows

Al Dente = Pasta and/or Vegetables, Rice or Beans that are cooked to be firm to the bite. – Another way to put it is that it’s cooked but not fully cooked

Saute = cook with oil

Fold = Mix the ingredients by scooping the bottom of the mix onto the top of the mix.

Reserve = Hold on/Don’t discard. Usually a liquid that is normally considered waste.

Ingredients

  • 5 lbs of red potatoes
  • 3 pieces of garlic – fresh
  • 10-11 ounces of cream of chicken
  • 10-11 ounces of cream of celery
  • 1-2 pounds of bacon (depends on preference)
  • 2 cups of shredded cheddar cheese
  • 2 tbsp of butter
  • Salt – for taste
  • Half a quart of whole milk (even 1% works, it just won’t be as thick)
  • 2 bunches of chives (maybe only 1 if you’re not a chive addict like me)

Necessary Equipment

  • 1 large pot (at least 2 quarts)
  • 1 cutting board
  • 1 sharp knife
  • 1 wood spoon
  • 1 serving soup spoon
  • 1 pan
  • 1 mug

Instructions

  1. Fill up the large pot 2 thirds of the way full with water, and put it on the stove top to boil. Don’t forget to salt the water! Heat the water on high.
  2. While the water is heating up, wash and then chop up the potatoes into slightly larger than bite size pieces. I personally like to leave the skin on. While chopping the potatoes remove any off looking bits (brown, root, etc).
  3. Put all the chopped potatoes into the water once it starts to simmer and let the potatoes boil for 20-30 minutes. This can depend on the heat of your stove, a good way to tell if you’re ready to move onto the next step is if the potato skins are starting to pull away from the rest of the potato chunk. Make sure the stove’s temperature is so that the water is simmering, not boiling.
  4. Once you’re potatoes are ready, place the mug at the bottom of the sink and pour our all of the water except 2-3 inches of it. Pour the water over the mug so that you have more if you accidently pour out too much.
  5. Once the water is drained, set the pot back on the stove top. Put the cream of chicken and celery in the pot and half a quart of milk. Stir well, if the soup still looks too thick add more of the original stock to the mix. Stir before you add more. The soup should be simmering, not boiling or you will get soup all over your counter tops and stove top. The soup will take at least an hour to cook down fully, what you’re looking for is the potato chunks to dissolve and the soup to become less chunky.
  6. Peel and chop three pieces of garlic, then cut the bacon into small bite sized pieces.
  7. Heat up the pan and melt the butter in it, once the butter has melted sauté the garlic in the butter until it turns golden and the smell of garlic is wafting up at you. Then move the garlic from the pan to the pot, stir the soup well.
  8. Use the pan to now cook the bacon, watch the bacon carefully to ensure that it does not become crispy. Once the bacon has been cooked (feel free to do this in stages if you only have a small pan), move the bacon and the bacon fat that has pooled at the bottom of the pan to the pot. Stir well every time you add more bacon or bacon fat. If you want extra bacon on top, feel free to reserve some for later. The bacon you reserve can be cooked longer for a more crispy bacon topping.
  9. Now you should have some time to sit back and relax a bit while the soup continues to cook. If you bought un-shredded cheese now would be a perfect time to shred it. Check up on the soup ever 15-30 minutes until the consistency is right. Make sure to scrape your spoon into the sides and corners of your pot so that the potato soup doesn’t stick to the pot there.
  10. Once the potatoes have dissolved into the soup, turn the heat down to low. Chop the chives if you haven’t yet. Once the bacon, cheese and chives are prepped and the soup is done serve yourself a wonderful bowl. For a nice presentation like the one above put the chives, bacon, and cheese on top of your soup.
  11. Enjoy your soup! Maybe share with a friend.

Podcast Lost In Space Episode 8!

Join the Podcast Lost In Space for a mildly technical issue ridden episode of Podcast Lost in Space! We talk a bit about crisis’s a bit about people’s lives and Relationships. Lots of relationship talk. We also hit Episode 8! That’s two whole months!

Check out Our Extra Life page and Donate! It’s for the Kids!
Follow Us: @PLISOfficial on Twitter or on Facebook at Podcast Lost In Space and on Youtube atTPLIS Official

Many thanks to Peter Scott for his awesome Intro/Outro Music! Everyone go check him out! https://soundcloud.com/peterscott-3

And many more thanks to Matthew Jager for his amazing graphics and banners! Check him out at mjagerdesign.com and on Twitter at @TheSeattleOne

All Hallow’s Eve: The differences Between Celebrating as a Kid and as a Young Adult

As a kid All Hallow’s Eve, better known as Halloween, my nights of costume-infused mayhem used to involve a party at a friend’s house in the suburbs with pizza for dinner and trick or treating for our dessert. The candy bars were always enormous and I had friends to trade candy with before I went home. When I was a freshman in high school, my father ended the trick or treating tradition and I was pulled into the job of handing out candy while hanging out with friends or watching Halloween-themed movies. This abrupt change may have occurred because of my dad worrying about what kids my age would get up to with little supervision, but who knows.

As a young adult at college I didn’t have the constraint of a parental figure keeping me in at night. So all of a sudden, my version of Halloween changed significantly. I was invited to parties that were an excuse to drink, costume get-togethers with friends who lived off campus, and events on campus that were made to entertain the thousands of young adults that call this town home.  Of course, staying home with a movie and passing out candy was still an option if I so chose to do so.

For myself personally, I didn’t really care how my evenings changed for that one night of the year because I was more interested in hanging out with friends than causing mayhem. Especially since I live in the Pacific Northwest. Halloween here is usually a pretty cold night of the year, which means that most costumes involve jackets over them if they are store bought. Even if they aren’t store bought it was all too frequent that I’d want to find a way to involve a jacket that I could put on or take off depending where my evening took me.

Honestly the largest change for myself over the years has been the costumes I’ve been able to get. I was raised by a single father so most of my costumes were store bought. When I became a young adult and started to go out again I had the money to create my own costumes that weren’t just Pacific Northwest appropriate but also were versatile enough to work in cold or warm situations. This not only made the holiday more enjoyable for me, but it also meant that I got to enjoy the holiday for longer than just one night. Instead, I got to enjoy the holiday for almost the whole month while I looked for random pieces of that nights outfit in local thrift shops, talked to friends about how I was going to pull said costume together, and of course the conversations weeks prior of how my friends and I were going to spend the night together. Even if it meant finishing a 25 page paper before I actually needed to, just so I would be able to enjoy my evening without worrying about what I had to do the day afterward.

Podcast Lost In Space Episode 7!

Come join the intrepid crew of PLIS as we yell at Alexander about his money issues and welcome our surprise guest Danielle!
Check out Danielle’s Stuff at: https://www.facebook.com/Fantasy.In.Reality?fref=ts
Check out Our Extra Life page and Donate! It’s for the Kids!
http://www.extra-life.org/team/PLIS
Mental Illness Awareness Month – https://www.nami.org/

Follow Us: @PLISOfficial on Twitter or on Facebook at Podcast Lost In Space and on Youtube at TPLIS Official

Many thanks to Peter Scott for his awesome Intro/Outro Music! Everyone go check him out! https://soundcloud.com/peterscott-3

And many more thanks to Matthew Jager for his amazing graphics and banners! Check him out at mjagerdesign.com and on Twitter at @TheSeattleOne

Costumes: How They Can Make or Break Your Halloween

With All Hallows’ Eve fast approaching many people are likely deciding that the classic store bought costume may not fulfill your costume dreams. This could be due to the fact that you’re liable to see the same costume on other people that evening, the price point is daunting for the flimsy so called fabric, or just the fact that it is an all too real fear that you might actually catch hypothermia in said outfit if you spend more than 30 minutes outside (thanks for that fear parental people).

Well, despite the fact that we are still figuring out our own lives, we have some people on the team who know a thing or two about how to make your own costume! Although their costumes are more often worn at conventions than saved specifically for a night of mischief, ghouls, trick-or-treating, or pumpkin spice parties their tips may be able to help you figure out an outfit that will scream Halloween without busting the bank or causing you to worry if your mom was right about the risk of hypothermia in such an outfit.

First we have Doc Von Derwin giving his rundown of Halloween costume creations.

Halloween. A time where people throw caution to the wind and ingest pounds of sugar filled sadness bars and I am filled with misery and guilt for succumbing to the power of the Reese’s peanut butter cup. This strange time of year is not just treating ourselves to the forbidden desire of chocolate covered guilt nuggets but also a time to acknowledge our fears and further our ability to conquer them so we can be stronger the other 364 days of the years or frighten kids, I am not sure which is more important. So before you can have your shame glazed cocoa balls, we need one thing; a costume. The metaphorical badge of honor that says “Hey, give me candy”. However, you shouldn’t wear just any costume, but the right costume that suits you for your evening.

1. Preparation: If you are reading this on October 22nd, or even later, you are a little late to the game for designing something elaborate. Thankfully that is not an issue. Retail stores provide plenty of clever options that will allow to become a discount version of anything you actually wanted to be. So wave goodbye to Freddy Krueger, and say hello to Bad Dream Melty Face who will disrupt your REM cycles as he attacks you with his spoon hands. If you find yourself complaining about only having Swan Ronson and General Canada to choose from, then you should have planned ahead. Self-created costumes routinely take roughly 2-3 weeks to get ready when accounting for material gathering and construction within your daily routine and that is if you have decided on a costume ahead of time.Doc Von Derwin

2. Setting: The setting will dictate the proper costume choice for you in a big way. Are you at a party? Is it inside or outside? If you will be in a warmer setting then you want something light weight and has minimal layers. The large amount of people confined into a small space will crank up the heat making your Judge Dredd or Black widow costumes the sweatiest and most uncomfortable leather you have ever worn. Anything makeup or paint based will also become an issue as your sweat begins turn your sexy vampire into an emo high school who can’t apply makeup. Masks will make things way too difficult by limiting your visibility turning you into a bumbling buffoon, but also making sure no drink touches your lips, leaving you sober enough to remember every awkward conversation you have. Cold temperature locations will clearly encourage almost opposite scenarios. Heavy clothing becomes a strong ally, allowing you to point and laugh at the person freezing their butt off in a yellow bikini that they are wearing to be a sexy Pikachu. Masks and make up will also become saviors as they conceal your identity on your inevitable fleeing from law enforcement. That’s the typical Halloween experience, right?

3.Costume Choice: Once you have nailed down your setting, you can choose a costume that not only fits the setting but also to who you are. The options can literally be anything. This isn’t a convention where people expect pop culture references with great accuracy and the undying passion of a thousand suns. You can be classic movie monsters, pop culture characters, elaborate avantgarde jokes, or even a giant fruit. Your costume is in some way a reflection of yourself in that it shows others what you think is cool and what you are interested in. Highlight your wackiness by being a giant Banana, or express your interest in sex appeal by being a shirtless lumberjack. Pick a costume that is for you, not your audience.Booker and Eliz (1)

4. Materials: When your costume idea isn’t sold at your local Halloween store, you will need to think outside the box and craft your own. Any discount clothing store can be your best friend. The hidden treasures of your local Good Will or thrift store can provide more than you would expect to create a great costume. Even if you don’t have a specific idea in mind, you can take the most bizarre items of clothing possible and generate your own crazy character. This allows to not only dress for the setting directly, but it also makes it unique to you and your needs.

5. Crafting: Crafting a costume can be dangerous yet rewarding. Anything that takes serious crafting will make you the bell of the ball but you run the risk of having it back fire. Costume pieces that are crafted run the risk of falling apart in the middle of your evening leaving with the option to either ditch the piece or continue without the costume being whole or bail on the evening because the costume is more important than being with friends with inferior costumes than yours.

6. Have a good time: As you may have guessed, I have had my fair share of blunders when it came to Halloween costume choices. These mistakes can lead to very annoying evenings that distract from the good time you can have with your friends. Halloween is such an interesting time of year where people express themselves in a very unique and special way (or they don’t. Everyone is a snowflake). I had to piece all this together through trial and error, so this is my call to action for you: keep it simple, make it special, and enjoy the new temporary you for the evening.

Our second costumer, Sheena, had some computer malfunctions prior to this article. However she still managed to write up a few of her suggestions and the ticks she has found effective for herself.

Sometimes all you need to do to make a costume is to look in your own closet or that of a friends. Borrowing where you can will save you a small fortune when it comes to costume making. For example, let’s say you would like to be a witch for Halloween. Maybe you have a black dress that can be added onto. Personally when I do this and don’t want to destroy my clothing by sewing, I use safety pins on the inside of the clothing to secure the additions. They aren’t very noticeable and can be easily covered. If you can’t find everything you need in the closets of your friends and family, secondhand shops sell very cheap clothing and those pieces you buy can easily be modified without the worry of being destroyed because they were bought for that reason.

With simple costumes, it’s easier to borrow or buy secondhand, but sometimes you don’t want to wear a simple or generic costume. When it comes to these you might need to make certain pieces specifically for your costume. If you can modify existing clothes by doing some slash and hack work (aka cutting them up) that is an easy way. However when that doesn’t work, starting from scratch is your only option. And let me say…..bedsheets are your friend! They come in many colors, can be found in secondhand stores for fairly cheap, and have large amounts of fabric (in case you mess up).