Now that the Surround Sound is properly working, I took some time setting the speakers to really give me enveloping sound.
By default on pretty much everything I've watched/played, the speakers were FAR too "forward" for me, with the sound coming from the screen. The music often over powered the voice, and surround sound was pretty anemic.
Eventually I maxed out the subwoofer (Jenn like Big Boom), maxed out the rear speakers, set the center speaker, which carries most of the dialogue to default, and the left and right to negative 5 volume.
That gave me a nice surround sound finally, with the V'Ger "Wok" scenes REALLY feeling like I'm in the wok with them, with proper echoing and good rumbles instead of the sound coming almost completely from the front. The sound is still a little tinny from the regular speakers, but it's probably cause the speakers are kind of cheap.
Now if you'll excuse me, I need to go beat up on Ganon in Breath of the Wild in Surround Sound. :D
I just finished ripping my DVD copy of Fail Safe to disk. This movie, man. This movie. This is one of the most engaging and stressful movies I've ever seen. As the movie goes on, every scene ends up just being a scene of deeper and deeper trauma of everyone involved and a terrible and unnecessary Catch-22.
This Week's Meals (1/4): Spicy Chinese Pork
All of this week's meals are recipes I've screwed up. But for the life of me, I can't remember what I screwed up. Still, it was good last time, should be better this time!
# Spicy Chinese Pork
Help! My Apartment has a Kitchen
2.0 servings
6.0 whole shiitake mushrooms
0.5 pound pork
2.0 tbsp soy sauce
1.0 tbsp water
4.0 tsp flour
0.5 tsp ground ginger
4.0 cloves garlic
1.0 medium onion
1.0 whole red bell pepper
2.0 whole scallions
2.0 tbsp vegetable oil
0.25 tsp red pepper flakes
2.0 tbsp vinegar
1.0 tsp sugar
4.0 ounces bamboo shoots
1 - Wash the fresh mushrooms and cut away and discard the bottom 1/4 inch of the stems.
2 - Slice the mushrooms thin and set aside.
3 - Cut the pork into thin slivers. Combine the soysauce, water, flour and ginger in a medium-size bowl and stir.
4 - Add the pork, stir and let marinate for 10 minutes.
5 - Peel and finely chop the garlic.
6 - Peel and thinly slice the onion.
7 - Wash the red bell pepper and cut it in half.
8 - Remove and discard the stem and seeds.
9 - Then slice the pepper into strips 1/4 inch wide and 2 inches long and set aside.
10 - Wash the scallions. Cut off the root tips and top 2 inches of the green ends and discard them.
11 - Cut the remaining white and green parts into 1/2 inch pieces. Set aside in a seperate dish.
12 - Heat half of the oil in a large wok or frying pan over high heat.
13 - Add the mushrooms, garlic, onion, red bell pepper and red pepper flakes and fry for about 2 minutes, stirring continuously.
14 - When the vegetables just begin to soften, transfer them to a plate.
15 - Heat the remaining half of the oil in the wok.
16 - Lift the pork from the marinade, add it to the wok and stir-fry for 3 minutes over high heat.
17 - Add the marinade from the bowl and bring to a boil. The mixture will thicken and have a slightly glossy sheen.
18 - Add the vinegar, sugar, bamboo shoots and scallions and cook, stirring for 1 minute.
19 - Return the rest of the vegetables to the mixture, heat through and serve.
This Week's Meals (1/4): Spicy Chinese Pork
All of this week's meals are recipes I've screwed up. But for the life of me, I can't remember what I screwed up. Still, it was good last time, should be better this time!
# Spicy Chinese Pork
Help! My Apartment has a Kitchen
2.0 servings
6.0 whole shiitake mushrooms
0.5 pound pork
2.0 tbsp soy sauce
1.0 tbsp water
4.0 tsp flour
0.5 tsp ground ginger
4.0 cloves garlic
1.0 medium onion
1.0 whole red bell pepper
2.0 whole scallions
2.0 tbsp vegetable oil
0.25 tsp red pepper flakes
2.0 tbsp vinegar
1.0 tsp sugar
4.0 ounces bamboo shoots
1 - Wash the fresh mushrooms and cut away and discard the bottom 1/4 inch of the stems.
2 - Slice the mushrooms thin and set aside.
3 - Cut the pork into thin slivers. Combine the soysauce, water, flour and ginger in a medium-size bowl and stir.
4 - Add the pork, stir and let marinate for 10 minutes.
5 - Peel and finely chop the garlic.
6 - Peel and thinly slice the onion.
7 - Wash the red bell pepper and cut it in half.
8 - Remove and discard the stem and seeds.
9 - Then slice the pepper into strips 1/4 inch wide and 2 inches long and set aside.
10 - Wash the scallions. Cut off the root tips and top 2 inches of the green ends and discard them.
11 - Cut the remaining white and green parts into 1/2 inch pieces. Set aside in a seperate dish.
12 - Heat half of the oil in a large wok or frying pan over high heat.
13 - Add the mushrooms, garlic, onion, red bell pepper and red pepper flakes and fry for about 2 minutes, stirring continuously.
14 - When the vegetables just begin to soften, transfer them to a plate.
15 - Heat the remaining half of the oil in the wok.
16 - Lift the pork from the marinade, add it to the wok and stir-fry for 3 minutes over high heat.
17 - Add the marinade from the bowl and bring to a boil. The mixture will thicken and have a slightly glossy sheen.
18 - Add the vinegar, sugar, bamboo shoots and scallions and cook, stirring for 1 minute.
19 - Return the rest of the vegetables to the mixture, heat through and serve.
It's funny how my handwriting has changed post transition. I didn't change it on purpose, but it's morphed over the years. I really slice the downstroke on the t, and something you don't see here is I really hook the crook on the letter "f."
It's kinda cartoony, but kinda cute, too.
Silly Jenn Fact: In high school, Steph decided my handwriting was so unfeminine, she made me practice writing like a girl. It didn't take at the time. Maybe it did decades later?
This Week's Meals (4/4): Chinese Sweet-and-Sour Pork
Yeah. This...I've had better. It's not BAD, but it's far more spicy than sweet, and certainly not sour. I have better recipes for this that I'll use moving forward....
Title: Chinese Sweet-And-Sour Pork
Yield: 7 servings
Category: Entree
Cuisine: Chinese
Rating: 3/5 stars
Source: The Ultimate Chinese & Asian Cookbook
---
Ingredients
---
12 ounces pork
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 tsp ground Szechuan peppercorns
1 tbsp dry sherry
4 oz bamboo shoots
2 tbsp flour
1 whole egg (beaten)
vegetable oil (deep frying)
1 tbsp vegetable oil (sauce)
1 clove garlic (finely chopped)
1 whole scallion (cut into short sections)
1 whole green bell pepper (seeded)(diced)
1 whole fresh red chili (cut into fine strips)
1 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp brown sugar
3 tbsp rice vinegar
1 tbsp tomato paste
1/2 cup water
---
Instructions
---
1 - Cut the pork into bite-sized cubes. Place the cubes in a shallow
dish.
2 - Add the salt, peppercorns and sherry to the dish. Marinate for 15
minutes.
3 - Dust the pork with flour, dip into beaten egg, then coat with more
flour.
4 - Heat the oil in a large preheated pan and deep fry the pork in
moderately hot oil for 3 to 4 minutes, stirring to keep the pieces
seperated.
5 - Remove the pork and drain.
6 - Reheat the oil and return the pork to the pan now with the bamboo
shoots.
7 - Fry for 1 minute or until golden brown. Remove and drain well.
8 - To make the sauce, heat the oil for the sauce in a clean frying
pan and add the garlic, scallions, green bell pepper and red chili.
9 - Stir-fry for 30-40 seconds, then add the soy sauce, brown sugar,
rice vinegar, tomato paste, and the water.
10 - Bring to a boil and then add the pork and bamboo shoots.
11 - Heat through and stir to mix.
Artist for Closetspace and A Wish for Wings
Creative Text Writer for MTG: Universes Beyond
Writer for Sea of Legends
One enchilada short of a Mexican Platter