Winter Wonderland: Games of November 14

ARIZONA FALL LEAGUE

SURPRISE 9, PEORIA 3 IN SURPRISE

Surprise scored two in the first and three in the second and cruised to a win.  Nick Gordon was 3-for-5 with two runs and is batting .361.  Mitch Garver was 1-for-3 with a double and a walk, scoring once and driving in one.  Tanner English was 0-for-4.

MESA 13, GLENDALE 5 IN GLENDALE

Bradley Zimmer hit a two-run homer (his third) in a four-run third that gave Mesa a 5-1 lead.  Ian Happ was 2-for-3 with a three-run homer (his second) and two walks for Mesa.

SALT RIVER 9, SCOTTSDALE 1 IN SALT RIVER

Travis Demeritte drove in two with a sixth-inning triple and scored later in the inning to give Salt River a 6-0 lead.  Spencer Turnbull struck out four in four shutout innings for Salt River, giving up three hits and a walk.

VENEZUELAN LEAGUE

ZULIA 7, MARGARITA 1 IN MARGARITA

Zulia scored three in the first and never trailed.  Carlos Teller struck out six in six shutout innings for Zulia, giving up four hits and three walks.

DOMINICAN LEAGUE

LICEY 8, ESTE 1 IN LICEY

Licey scored three in the third and two in the sixth to go up 5-1.  Leonardo Reginatto was 0-for-3 for Este.

AGUILAS 2, ESTRELLAS 1 IN ESTRELLAS

Boog Powell's two-run double in the fourth provided all the runs Aguilas would need.  Confesor Lara pitched 1.1 scoreless innings for Estrellas, giving up a walk and striking out one.

ESCOGIDO AT GIGANTES

Postponed due to wet grounds.

PUERTO RICAN LEAGUE

No games scheduled.

MEXICAN LEAGUE

No games scheduled.

Apple Jelly … Made With Apples & Stuff

I was going to recap my Wet Hop American Session Ale with homegrown Cascade hops when I realized that cheaps was likely doing brewing post for the old fundraiser

/checks drafts, smiles knowingly/

so I decided to reach back a year to my first run of jelly making.

I've canned a lot of the typical stuff: salsa, cucumbers, pasta sauce, garlic dilly beans, peppers, strawberry rhubarb jam, etc., but I'd never tried jelly before. While at the apple orchard with the family, I noted $8 bottles of apple jelly and thought, "I wouldn't mind some apple jelly, but I ain't paying no $8 for a pint!" Instead, I bought 4# of McIntosh & Fireside apples and hauled 'em home to give her a go.

I used the apple jelly recipe from my favorite canning cook book: Put 'Em Up! A Comprehensive Home Preserving Guide for the Creative Cook  by Sherri Brooks Vinton.

Ingredients:

  • 4# Apples
  • Approx. 4 Cups Water
  • 3 Cups Sugar
  • 1/2 Cup Bottled Lemon Juice

Step 1 

Wash & stem the apples leaving the peel and core. Roughly chop and put into a large stockpot.

img_20141103_211139_556

Step 2

Add enough water to barely cover the apples, bring to a simmer and cook until tender, about 30 minutes. img_20141103_214224_427

Step 3

Pour the mixture into a dampened jelly bag or colander lined with dampened cheese cloth and let drain in the refrigerator (or, in my case, the screen porch as it was mid-30's) overnight.

note: it's tempting, but don't squeeze or press the bag; it'll make the resulting jelly cloudy

img_20141103_222348_640 img_20141103_222405_529

Step 4

Measure 1 quart of the resulting apple juice and add it to a large saucepan over high heat. Stir in the sugar and lemon juice.

img_20141104_192434_171

Bring to a full boil that cannot be stirred down. Continue to boil until the gel stage is reached. Remove from the heat.

Note: this was (is?) the trickiest part. although the jelly will taste fine no matter the viscosity, if you want it to hold like jelly instead of a sauce, you want it to set. I didn't use any additional pectin as apples are naturally high in the stuff... I digress - there's a few different ways to determine 'gel stage' including temperature, sheet/spoon method, or cold plate ... as you can see, I went with the thermometer.

img_20141104_191121_741

Apple jelly sets up quickly, so you have to be ready to transfer to your storage container in a hurry.

I chose to can the jelly (1+ year shelf life) rather than refrigerate it (up to 3 weeks). Unfortunately, I was moving so quickly with hot, sweet, sticky jelly that I didn't get any pictures of the process beyond this:

img_20141104_191217_016Step 5

Boiling Water Canning Method:

  • Ladle the jelly into clean, hot half-pint or pint canning jars, leaving 1/4 inch of headspace.
  • Release trapped air (wooden spoon handle or small rubber spatula) and wipe the rims clean.
  • Center lids on the jars and screw on jar bands.
  • Process (boil) for 10 minutes.
  • Turn off heat, remove canner lid, and let the jars rest in the water for approximately 5 minutes.
  • Remove the jars and set aside for 24 hours.
  • Check seals (lid should have sucked in - press up on the lid edge slightly with your thumb. It should not pop off easily).
  • Store in your cupboard for as long as it lasts* or give as gifts (being sure to ask for the jar back).

*I don't recall how long it lasted - ended up with 6-8 jars of jelly...but it was "my" jelly, so all the effort was not wasted.

Who Wants To Be An Astronaut?

Did anyone here used to want to be an astronaut when they grew up?  I don’t remember ever wanting to be an astronaut as a kid.  I think it seemed like a job that regular people don’t ever have, so I’m not sure I ever even thought of it as a real possibility.

NASA announced a new call for astronaut applicants at the end of 2015, and I didn’t seriously consider applying.  I have the degrees and work experience that I would certainly meet the minimum qualifications.  Not saying I would be highly ranked among those who have the required background, and I don’t hold any illusions that I would have been one of the few selected, but I don’t think I’d be the first one removed from the list, either.  Since I teach astronomy, my students often ask me if I would ever try to become an astronaut.  If I had to option to go to space tomorrow, I would sign up immediately.  But, the actual day-to-day work of an astronaut, the years of training, that is not a job I actually want to do.  I love teaching, and don’t really want to become an engineer.

My outlook on the possibility of being an astronaut has changed a great deal since I was a kid.  It is of course still a difficult job to get, but it’s now so much more attainable to me than it seemed as a kid.  I know a few people who have applied in previous years and who also applied this time, some from the civilian side and some as active duty military.  My wife considered applying to this most recent call for applications, and even started working on it, but never actually submitted it.  (Turns out it probably wouldn’t have mattered either way; 18,300 people applied for 14 or fewer positions, so being selected is certainly a long shot.)

For my wife, being an astronaut was something doable, something that could really happen.  She grew up with an astronaut in her family, and lived in the same neighborhood as a bunch of other astronaut families.  Current Administrator of NASA Charlie Bolden’s kids used to babysit her.  For her growing up, being an astronaut was a job real people have, not just something she saw on TV or read about in books.

My youngest son is almost 3, and he’s started saying he wants to go to the moon.  He has spent the last four months saying he wants to be a construction worker when he grows up, but now he’s shifted to saying he wants to be an astronaut construction worker who builds things on the moon.  For my kids, being an astronaut when they grow up seems like more of a possibility than it ever was for me.  For them, it can be “I want to be an astronaut like ______ was.”

I hope that big, long-shot jobs like becoming an astronaut remain a possibility in their minds.  I’m of course not the first parent to hope their kids will see the whole world as a possibility, I just hope I can help them keep feeling like they can do anything.

1987 Rewind: Game Forty-three

DETROIT 7, MINNESOTA 2 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Sunday, May 24.

Batting stars:  Kent Hrbek was 2-for-3 with a home run (his eighth) and a walk, scoring twice.  Mark Salas was 3-for-4 with two doubles.

Pitching star:  Les Straker pitched 6.1 innings, giving up an unearned run on six hits and two walks with five strikeouts.

Opposition stars:  Kirk Gibson was 3-for-5 with two runs and an RBI.  Alan Trammell was 2-for-4 with a walk and a stolen base (his fifth), scoring twice.  Jeff Robinson pitched eight innings, giving up two runs (one earned) on five hits and three walks while striking out nine.

The game:  A walk, an error, and a sacrifice fly put the Twins up 1-0 in the second.  The lead held up through six, but the Tigers scored five in the seventh to take control of the game.  Straker was pitching well, but was removed in the seventh following a one-out error.  Keith Atherton came in and walked both men he faced, loading the bases.  Juan Berenguer came in and gave up a run-scoring single to Gibson, wild pitched home another, a third run scored on a ground out, and two more came in on a single by Johnny Grubb.  The game was gone after that.

Of note:   Kirby Puckett was 1-for-4 and is batting .328...Straker's ERA fell to 2.62...Berenguer's ERA rose to 2.61.

Record:  The Twins were 21-22, tied for third place with California, 4.5 games behind Kansas City.

Notes:  Gene Larkin was the DH rather than Roy Smalley...Salas was the catcher rather than Tim Laudner.

Player profile:  Jeff Robinson basically turned one good year into a six-year career.  He was chosen in the third round in 1983 by the Tigers.  He was not very good at all in the minors, never posting an ERA below four at any level, but still found himself in the Tigers starting rotation at the beginning of the 1987 season.  He had the occasional good game, including a complete game shutout of the Yankees in August, but at season's end he was 9-6, 5.37, 1.46 WHIP, numbers that would have been completely expected given his minor league career.  In 1988, however, he out of nowhere had an excellent season--13-6, 2.98, 1.12 WHIP.  He led the league in fewest hits per nine innings at 6.3.  Unfortunately, it was the only good season he had.  He was injured in August, and when he came back he was back to being the pitcher he had been before.  In 1989 whatever he found was gone, and he went 4-5, 4.73 in sixteen starts, again having the occasional good game to give people hope.  He posted ERAs above five in each of the next three seasons, one with Detroit, one with Baltimore, and one with Texas and Pittsburgh, and then was done.  He worked at a baseball instructional school in Olathe, Kansas after his playing career ended.  Jeff Robinson passed away on October 26, 2014, after "a seven-week battle with undisclosed health issues", according to wikipedia.

Happy Birthday–November 15

Tom Loftus (1856)
Pat Ragan (1883)
Mickey Livingston (1914)
Gus Bell (1928)
Big Brother A (1951)
Randy Niemann (1955)
Pedro Borbon (1967)

Tom Loftus managed Cincinnati, Chicago, and Washington around the turn of the (twentieth) century.

Big Brother A is one of the two people--Dad A being the other--from whom I got a love of baseball and a love of the Twins.  I don't know how it's possible that I have a brother who's sixty-five years old when I'm still so young, but happy birthday, Big Brother.

We also wish a happy birthday to spookymilk’s brother.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–November 15

DIR EN GREY – The Pledge

Huh, I'm surprised I haven't heard of these guys before.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TmgZyxC5jKQ

Hmm... what's visual kei? That's potential rabbit hole material right there.

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γνῶθι σεαυτόν – Know thyself

Looking back on 2016, I had some high points (Simsbury TryAthlon, TrapRock 17K Trail Race, Ragnar Trails in MA, Longest Swim Evah in Carnac-Brittany, Narragansett Wheelmen Century Ride), but I also had numerous nadirs.

A glance at my training spreadsheet over the summer yields several gems: "more limping", "muscle spasms", Select Therapy sessions, "sore ankle", "sore knees", "epsom salt/vinegar bath."

Thanks to Baby Jeebus that it's not age-related.  And, this boyo ran my first mile in a month two days ago,  and the knee is behaving.  I'm trying to run responsibly while on the heal, but I want to go out there and run 10 miles.

What are you Citizens doing?

The Nation Has Problems: Vol. 11

Hi Everybody!

After being gone for a while, I'm back here with a quick edition of The Nation Has Problems for pledge week. I didn't have a lot of time to put things together, but I came up with something that should be pretty fun! Probability questions are always good for people that are interested in sports, so I've got three questions of varying difficulties to attempt!

Easy

Suppose you roll three dice. What is the probability that you roll at least one 5 or 6?

Medium

Two players play a game involving flipping coins. Each player has a particular sequence of Heads and Tails that they'd like to see. Once one of the two sequences occur, then that player wins and the game is over. For instance, suppose Player 1 has HHH and Player 2 has TTT, then the following sequence:

HHTHTTHHTTHTHTTHHH

In this case, Player 1 is the winner.

Here are three different pairs of sequences for the players. In each case, what is each player's chance of winning?


a) Player 1: HHH, Player 2: TTT
b) Player 1: HHH, Player 2: TT
c) Player 1: HTT, Player 2: TTH

Hard

A banquet is thrown for 100 current and ex-Twins players. Each player is assigned his own seat. Unfortunately, A.J. Pierzynski is the first player to enter and he completely ignores the assigned seating and just sits in the seat closest to him. Each other player that comes in after him then sits in his own seat if it is available and otherwise picks a seat at random. Joe Mauer is the last player to enter. What is the probability that Joe sits in his assigned seat?

Good luck and have fun! --GH