Thursday, August 28, 2008

An entertaining, mostly non-academic lunch with Acosta-Alzuru, Fink, Hollander and Hume (delayed by committee meeting, which is darn close to "delayed by death"). 

Lots of talk of apples. Preferred apples, heirloom apples, saving apples for later, the best age for apple trees and the heartbreak that an apple tree will put you through. (Fink, mostly, on that last one.)

Things we learned:
  • Fink believes apple trees do best along treelines
  • If a tree splits and the branches spike into the ground, they can root and continue to grow
  • Apples are not grown in Venezuela, and all those imported are "red"
  • Johnson prefers Empire apples, occasionally available at Publix now (which the author knew, being Johnson himself)
  • Hollander ate some sort of small, sour green apples as a child (no comments, please)
Lemon bar update: I failed to comment on last week's lemon bar which was, perhaps, the finest lemon bar I have ever consumed at the faculty center. It had a nice, sponge-cake like consistency with wafting overtones of lemonicity. Far superior to the gelatinous creations we consumed last semester.

This weeks again had a decent consistency, though perhaps slightly more dense than last weeks, but had hidden pockets of lemon situated quite far from the edges. Some discussion on how they managed to center the lemonicity in a bar cut from a pan. 

1 comment:

Hollander said...

I dunno how they manage the lemon bar trick, but it probably has something to do with heirloom apples.

And yes, I ate sour green apples as a child. Nuff said.