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George Orwell’s recipe for Christmas pudding
12.24.2010
07:18 pm
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In 1946 George Orwell was commissioned by the British Council to write about food in Britain. The timing couldn’t have been worse. Britain was in the middle of a period of severe food rationing and Orwell’s manuscript, “British Cookery,” was seen as being a celebration of culinary extravagance at a time of enforced austerity. It was never published.

In this excerpt from “British Cookery,” Orwell shares a recipe for Christmas pudding. Suet is a critical ingredient in this particular pudding and there’s really no substitute for it. Butter or lard just won’t do. Unfortunately, obtaining suet may be difficult in your neighborhood. You can find it at some butcher shops. Good luck.

In the second half of the midday meal we come upon one of the greatest glories of British cookery—its puddings. The number of these is so enormous that it would be impossible to give an exhaustive list, but, putting aside stewed fruits, British puddings can be classified under three main heads: suet puddings, pies and tarts, and milk puddings.

Suet crust, which appears in innumerable combinations, and enters into savoury dishes as well as sweet ones, is simply ordinary pastry crust with chopped beef suet substituted for the butter or lard. It can be baked, but more often is boiled in a cloth or steamed in a basin covered with a cloth. Far and away the best of all the suet puddings is plum pudding, which is an extremely rich, elaborate and expensive dish, and is eaten by everyone in Britain at Christmas time, though not often at other times of the year. In simpler kinds of pudding the suet crust is sweetened with sugar and stuck full of figs, dates, currants or raisins, or it is flavoured with ginger or orange marmalade, or it is used as a casing for stewed apples or gooseberries, or it is rolled round successive layers of jam into a cylindrical shape which is called roly-poly pudding, or it is eaten in plain slices with treacle poured over it. One of the best forms of suet pudding is the boiled apple dumpling. The core is removed from a large apple, the cavity is filled up with brown sugar, and the apple is covered all over with a thin layer of suet crust, tied tightly into a cloth, and boiled.”

Recipe after the jump…

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Posted by Marc Campbell
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12.24.2010
07:18 pm
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Dingushead: Dr. Steve Brule meets Eraserhead
12.24.2010
06:22 pm
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“Dingushead” by Dylan Mitchell-Funk.

I’ve been reading boingboing for a while now (...) I’ve just put the finishing touches onto a poster I’ll be printing out as a gift tomorrow - Steve Brule and Eraserhead… I’m really pleased with how it turned out and thought I’d share it. Merry Chrimbus!

(via Boing Boing)

Posted by Tara McGinley
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12.24.2010
06:22 pm
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The Music They Made: Ones we lost in 2010
12.24.2010
05:50 pm
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Dangerous Minds pal Wm. Ferguson’s sound-collage-and-video tribute to musicians who died in 2010.

Posted by Richard Metzger
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12.24.2010
05:50 pm
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Solar Skeletons Coming to Save the Planet
12.24.2010
04:45 pm
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Solar Skeletons consists of French duo TZII and RIPIT, who brought their musical talents together in January 2006 to create “a conceptual band with no limit of genre nor process.” Their music fused Industrial Minimalism with Blues, and a dash of psychedelia.

They sell their wares with a mix of tongue-in-cheek and sci-fi babble:

The Dead Sons of the Sun are roaming the Earth, choosing the musical weapon to convince the so-called human intelligence to fight if they can’t love each other. After conquering Mars and Pluto, they chose the East Coast of the USA to land and start their crusade. Their Head Quarters is now established in Brussels. They will blind the audience with raw rays of unseen light, and preach through distorted music clichés. The absurdity of human beings needs to be shown by pointing its most obvious form: religion, drugs, love etc… After being reprogrammed, humans will be able to save their planet.

Best stick to the tunes, guys, which are hypnotic, addictive and exceedingly tasty.
 

 
Bonus Solar Suns track after the jump…
 

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Posted by Paul Gallagher
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12.24.2010
04:45 pm
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Underground filmmaker Hollis Frampton’s ‘Lemon’ (1969)
12.24.2010
03:48 pm
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America’s abstract expressionist on celluloid, Hollis Frampton’s early still life, Lemon. What would you do with a light, a lemon and a camera? (On second thought, after seeing how you lot are doing with the band naming contest, please don’t answer that).
 

 
More Hollis Frampton on UbuWeb

Posted by Richard Metzger
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12.24.2010
03:48 pm
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Georges Bataille on French television, 1958
12.24.2010
02:11 pm
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“Naturally, love’s the most distant possibility”—Georges Bataille

Georges Bataille—the French academic and author of Story of the Eye, the pervy, transgressive erotic novel beloved by Susan Sontag, Michel Foucault and Jacques Derrida—was only interviewed on television one time, in 1958. It’s fairly easy to see why after viewing this clip! Seen here, Georges Bataille discusses his book Literature And Evil with interviewer Pierre Dumayet.
 

 
Via Kembra Pfahler

 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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12.24.2010
02:11 pm
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Limited edition Kembra Pfahler poster
12.24.2010
01:35 pm
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Still looking for that “difficult to buy for” friend’s Xmas gift? What about this badass poster from artist Kembra Pfahler? It comes in an edition of just 50 from The Hole. The poster is 24” by 36” with each one being numbered. Buy here.

These are both part of a Levis-sponsored traveling art exhibit at The Hole. The show is an homage to POSTERMAT, one of the shops that made 8th Street in NYC so great in the 80s, also featuring notables like Bruce LaBruce, Yamataka Eye, Gavin McInnes, Jack Pierson, Maripol, Clayton Patterson, ARE Weapons,  Robert Lazzarini, Shepard Fairey, Cheryl Dunn, and Yoko Ono. Kembra also appears in Bijoux Altimirano’s poster. All posters limited to editions of 50 and numbered.

I thought Robert Lazzarini’s clever homage to the famous Farrah Fawcett poster (I had one on my childhood wall right next to one of Cherie Currie, I can assure you) was especially good, but a lot of them are awesome.
 
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Posted by Richard Metzger
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12.24.2010
01:35 pm
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The Divine David’s Christmas Carol
12.24.2010
08:40 am
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The Divine David wishes us all the best for the Holidays. Let’s sing along.
 
Previously on Dangerous Minds

It’s Christmas, The World is Burning, Let’s Masturbate: The Divine David Hoyle


 

Posted by Paul Gallagher
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12.24.2010
08:40 am
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The Complete Beatles Christmas Records
12.24.2010
08:28 am
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As you sit around rolling the traditional Christmas joint (presents, surely? - Ed.) or preparing the Molotov cocktails (Egg Nog, surely? - Ed.) for the glorious day, (Holidays? - Ed), we thought you might like to hear the complete Beatles Christmas records , which some groovy people have posted on this site here.

Alternatively you can listen to all of these jolly festive discs below.

Have a glorious May Day. (You’re fired! - Ed.)
 

 
Complete Beatles Christmas Records 1963-1969, after the jump…
 
With thanks to Steve Duffy
 

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Posted by Paul Gallagher
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12.24.2010
08:28 am
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The Star Wars George Lucas doesn’t want you to see: The 1978 ‘Star Wars Holiday Special’
12.24.2010
04:26 am
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I’m probably among a handful of people who prefer the universally reviled Star Wars Holiday Special to any of the actual Star Wars movies. Broadcast once in 1978 on CBS and then quickly banished to TV purgatory, this holiday fiasco is one of the strangest things ever to be piped into the living rooms of an unsuspecting America. At 8 p.m. on November 17, 1978, Star War fans were plunged into stunned disbelief as their sacred mythology was reduced to something more akin to an earthbound shitfest than a spectacle in a galaxy far far away. The only thing missing from the special that would have transmutated its alchemy into the realm of the genuinely mindaltering would have been an appearance by Divine, Edie the Egg Lady and the ghost of Alfred Jarry.

In a highly amusing article that appeared in the December 2008 issue of Vanity Fair, writer Frank DiGiacomo describes George Lucas’s cathode ray bomb as…

[...] a campy 70s variety show that makes suspension of disbelief impossible. In between minutes-long stretches of guttural, untranslated Wookie dialog that could almost pass for avant-garde cinema, Maude’s Bea Arthur sings and dances with the aliens from the movie’s cantina scene; The Honeymooners’ Art Carney consoles Chewbacca’s family with such comedy chestnuts as “Why all the long, hairy faces?”; Harvey Korman mugs shamelessly as a multi-limbed intergalactic Julia Child cooking “Bantha Surprise”; the Jefferson Starship pops up to play a number about U.F.O.’s; and original Star Wars cast members Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, and Mark Hamill walk around looking cosmically miserable.”

I highly recommend you read the entire article by clicking here. It’s a lot of fun.

With a happy holiday heart, I present for your viewing pleasure the gloriously bizarre Star Wars Holiday Special, which has never been re-aired on TV or officially released on video. And as a bonus, this video includes all the original commercials for Star Wars merchandise.
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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12.24.2010
04:26 am
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