Croissant making is no joke. It takes two days to make the most delicious, buttery, flakey, beautiful croissants that just melt in your mouth. The whole house smells of them, and its amazing. Made some with dark chocolate centers (pain au chocolat) and it only adds to the unbelievable sensation of blissful flavors. As I was making these I thought for sure I had completely fouled up the complicated recipe, but oh no. These are phenomenal.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Aunnie, Posie, Aunnie, Posie
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Love Is All You Need
Here is a brief summary of Aaron and Namgyals wedding day. I have more pictures and will figure out how to post them on a picture site.
We started off the day with a Tibetan ceremony, Namgyals mom made all the food, a lot of which was brought over from Tibet and not available anywhere else in the world. The food was given as offerings and symbolize various great things for the new couple.
Next we went to the Oakland courthouse where they were married in a little chapel room.
We went for dinner at Skates on the Bay at the Berkeley marina, Aaron had lobster for the first time, then home for wedding cake! Congrats A and N, you guys are the best!
Tibetan wedding ceremony, abbreviated. There are offerings to Buddha and the Dalai Lama, and the wedding party eats symbolic food that promotes longevity, prosperity and many other things regarding the new couple.
Monday, July 28, 2008
They Do
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Monday, July 21, 2008
Growing To Love You
Monday, July 14, 2008
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
Monday, July 7, 2008
Friday, July 4, 2008
You Make Our Nation Great
Wrapped up jury duty yesterday with a tough verdict. Guilty on count one: the manufacturing of methamphetmine, a controlled substance; & guilty on count three: possession of methamphetamine.
One more bad guy off the street! Nothing more interesting then having an expert chemist from the state crime lab teach you how to make meth in excruciating detail.
We really had nothing to link this guy directly to the meth lab located in the back of an SUV, but we had enough circumstantial evidence to pin it on him and feel confident about it. We were told when trial was over he had been convicted of meth manufacturing 2 times previous! They didn't tell us during the trial because they thought to might effect our verdict. So, its ten years in the slammer for this guy. Luckily, the judge is big on getting drug offenders into rehab and all that so I guess there's a bright side for him.
Its amazing the way your heart feels as if its going to explode when you are about to decide someone's life. We all needed a few margaritas after it was over.
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Tout effort est voue a l'echec
Yours & Mine
Arguing is exhausting.
To be caught in the middle of an argument is a horrible place to be, one which we all avoid.
To be a juror is to be in this place.
Don't get me wrong, the process is fascinating, methodical, scientific, manipulating, and above all else, fair.
So all day we sit and listen to the arguments so we can decide who wins. Yesterday was especially exciting with expert scientists(chemists!) and more diagrams, both of which I'm a sucker for.
We'll see if it continues...
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