1965 Rewind: Game One Hundred Twelve

MINNESOTA 7, NEW YORK 3 IN NEW YORK

Date:  Tuesday, August 10.

Batting stars:  Earl Battey was 2-for-4 with two doubles, scoring once and driving in two.  Zoilo Versalles was 2-for-5 with a double and two runs.  Tony Oliva was 1-for-3 with two walks, scoring once and driving in one.

Pitching stars:  Jim Kaat pitched 7.1 innings, giving up three runs (two earned) on seven hits and two walks with four strikeouts.  Al Worthington struck out two in 1.2 scoreless innings, giving up one hit.

Opposition stars:  Whitey Ford pitched seven innings, allowing two runs (one earned) on four hits and no walks with four strikeouts.  Hector Lopez was 2-for-3 with a triple, scoring twice.  Mickey Mantle was 1-for-4 with a home run, his sixteenth.

The game:  The Twins started the scoring early, as Rich Rollins had an RBI double and Tony Oliva a run-scoring single to take a 2-0 lead.  It stayed 2-0 until the fifth, when Lopez tripled and scored on a Clete Boyer single to make it 2-1.  The Yankees had two out and none on in the seventh, but a walk, an error, and a Ray Barker single tied it 2-2.  Things worked out for the Twins, though, because Barker pinch-hit for Ford, against whom the Twins had done little since the first.  Pete Mikkelsen came in and it looked as if it might work, as the Twins had a man on second with two out.  A walk and an error put the Twins up 3-2.  Then came an RBI single by Jimmie Hall, a two-run double by Battey, and a run-scoring single by Don Mincher to make it 7-2.  Mantle homered leading off the eighth, but New York never threatened to get back into the game.

Of note:  Rollins was 1-for-4 with a double, scoring once and driving in one.  Bob Allison was 0-for-5 with a run.

Record:  The win was the Twins' sixth straight and made their record 73-39.  Baltimore split a doubleheader with Boston, making the Twins' lead 8.5 games.

Notes:  Oliva's average stayed at .307.  Hall fell to .306.  Battey raised his average back to .300...1965 was Whitey Ford's last year as a rotation starter.  He had the worst ERA of his career at 3.24.  He also pitched the fewest innings that he had since 1960, at 244.1.

Happy Birthday–January 26

Francis Richter (1854)
Kaiser Wilhelm (1874)
Tubby Spencer (1884)
George Blaeholder (1904)
Charlie Gelbert (1906)
Bob Nieman (1927)
Ray Knoblauch (1928)
Bob Uecker (1935)
Mike Pazik (1950)

Rick Schu (1962)
Jeff Branson (1967)
Esteban German (1978)
Andres Torres (1978)
Ryan Rowland-Smith (1983)

Francis Richter was the editor of two  influential early baseball publications, the Sporting Life and the Reach Guide.

The father of Chuck Knoblauch, Ray Knoblauch pitched in the minors from 1948-1957, going 54-51.

We would also like to wish a very happy birthday to Daneeka's Ghost.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–January 26

1965 Rewind: Game One Hundred Eleven

MINNESOTA 8, BOSTON 0 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Sunday, August 8.

Batting stars:  Tony Oliva was 4-for-5 with a double, scoring twice and driving in three.  Bob Allison was 1-for-2 with a triple and three walks, scoring twice and driving in one.  Don Mincher was 2-for-4 with a triple and three RBIs.

Pitching star:  Jim Perry pitched a complete game shutout, giving up two hits and three walks with two strikeouts.

Opposition stars:  Felix Mantilla was 1-for-3 with a double and a walk.  Dave Morehead pitched five innings, giving up three runs on six hits and two walks with two strikeouts.

The game:  It was close for quite a while.  Mincher singled in a run in the first to put the Twins up 1-0.  It stayed 1-0 until the fifth, when Allison tripled in a run and scored on a balk.  Mincher delivered a two-run triple in the seventh to make it 5-0 and in the eighth, Oliva had a two-run double and Jimmie Hall an RBI single to round out the scoring.  The Red Sox did not have a hit until Mantilla's two-out double in the seventh, which was the only scoring threat they had.

Of note:  Zoilo Versalles was 1-for-5 with a run.  Hall was 2-for-5 with a run and an RBI.

Record:  The win made the Twins 72-39.  Baltimore split a doubleheader with Kansas City, meaning the Twins' lead was now eight games.

Notes:  Oliva and Hall both raised their averages to .307...Dave Morehead would lead the league in losses in 1965 with eighteen.  It is the only black ink on his baseball-reference page.

Happy Birthday–January 25

Danny Richardson (1863)
Les Nunamaker (1889)
Kenichi Zenimura (1900)
Ernie Harwell (1918)
Bill Lucas (1936)
Jake O’Donnell (1939)
Wally Bunker (1945)
Vern Ruhle (1951)
Kerry Taylor (1971)
Dan Serafini (1974)

Better known as an NBA referee, Jake O’Donnell was an American League umpire from 1969-1972.  He is the only person to have officiated both an NBA all-star game and a major league baseball all-star game.

Kenichi Zenimura was a long-time player and manager in Japan as well as an ambassador of the game of baseball.  He helped organize Babe Ruth's tour of Japan in 1934 and is known as the Father of Japanese Baseball.

Ernie Harwell was a major league baseball broadcaster from 1948-1991 and 1993-2002, mostly for the Detroit Tigers.

Bill Lucas was the first African-American general manager, holding the position for the Atlanta Braves from 1976-1979.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–January 25

Taking It To The Limit Cassoulet

In the interest of expanding my waistline and hardening my arteries, I decided I would take a swing at making cassoulet, inspired by a recent NYT recipe. (as it happens, this is a topic that the NYT returns to again and again and again and again and again; apparently, they really want their readers to make cassoulet).

anyway, I had already purchased the ham hocks with a vague plan to make either split pea soup or navy bean soup, so I was part way there. I picked up a package of chicken legs (to make confit), a turnip, rutabaga, small can of tomato paste, a bucket o' lard, and a bag of Great Northern beans. The rest, I had on hand.

Chicken confit in process.

Step one was the confit.

I rubbed the chicken legs with a spice mixture vaguely in line with the recipe (ground cardamom, ground coriander, ground clove, ground nutmeg, paprika, cayenne, salt; I forgot the white pepper and the ground ginger) and settled them into my cast iron dutch oven (in which I'd melted about 2 lbs of lard) along with an unpeeled, whole head of garlic, a sprig of rosemary from the garden, and a few bay leaves. I had to top off with about a cup of olive oil because I had so many chicken legs (about 4 lbs worth).
This is a great technique, well worth trying. The chicken came out succulent and delicious, and I now have a quart of nicely flavored lard for frying potatoes and such. Also, the confit-ed garlic is the bomb.

Beans for cassoulet

Step two was to par-cook the beans.

I soaked them for an hour or so in 5 cups of water (brought to boil, then shut off) along with the ham hocks, which I didn't have room to confit the day before. I then added about three more cups of water, brought the pot back to a boil and lowered to a simmer. After skimming several times, I added a pinch of red pepper flakes, a half-tsp of white pepper (trying to make up for forgetting it with the confit), a half-tsp of dried thyme, a tsp of kosher salt, a couple of bay leaves, and 4-5 smushed cloves of garlic. I let this cook for about 45 minutes, until the beans were mostly done. I then removed the hocks and poured off almost all of the liquid and reserved it separately from the beans.

Sweated veggies for cassoulet

Step three was to render the bacon, brown the sausages, and sweat the veggies.

I rough-chopped about three strips of thick bacon and browned it in the cast iron pot, then browned the sausages (truth be told, I forgot this step and had to pause half-way through the sweat to do it). I then added, in large-ish dice, an onion, a couple ribs of celery, about 2/3 cup carrot, a medium turnip, a small rutabaga, a sprig of rosemary and about five cloves garlic (rough chopped). After these were fairly soft, I added a couple tbs of tomato paste, the beans, the garlic confit, and stirred in about 3 cups of the reserved bean water.

Meats (ham hock, bacon, garlic sausages, chicken confit) for cassoulet.

Lastly, I added a bit of the reserved gelatin from the confit-ed chicken and layered on the meats. A lot of meats.

This is not a low-calorie dish.

Into the oven at 350 for 45 minutes covered, then 20 minutes uncovered and, lastly, I cranked the heat to 425, turned on the convection fan, and let it go another 20 minutes.
The finished product.

It smells great, but looks a little wet. This recipe mocked the use of bread crumbs for the topping, so I left them out.

Post-prandial assessment: It was really good. A bit wetter than I wanted, but excellent flavor and richness. The mouthfeel was not fatty, so the Mrs. did not get grossed out. The beans were creamy, the broth flavorful (could have used even more garlic!), and the meats were meaty. It was a really, really, really good, fancy bean soup/stew. Maybe a lot of work for the result, but fun to try.