Electronics is fun

I recently took up a new hobby. Electronics. As I mentioned before in another post, I am not really good with real world physical things. That’s why I’m, luckily, a software engineer. I do, however, like the challenge of writing software that controls real world things.

Electricity astounds me in the fact that I have absolutely no knowledge of how it works. Until I bought the book Make: Electronics (Learning by Discovery), which is a wonderful guide that really assumes you know nothing about electricity and teaches the theory behind it, if you care to read it, which I do, along with examples that reinforce the theories. Today I did the first experiment which was tasting the power of a 9-volt battery (ouch!) and learning how to use a strange device called a multimeter. I can finally measure the resistance between two points. And the measurement is ohms. Wow, look at me.

Anyone scared or fascinated by electronics should really pick up a copy of this expertly crafted workbook.

Now, on  to Experiment 2. Here’s hoping I’m not sticking a fork into a toaster, and tasting the power of AC current.

Bread: Old Hobby New Again

Back a couple of years ago I was lucky to pick up a copy of the The Bread Baker’s Apprentice: Mastering the Art of Extraordinary Bread by Peter Reinhart which is an extraordinary book on not just recipes but about the multiple processes that take place when baking bread from scratch. Somewhere along the way, I had stopped baking bread but I have recently started again, with this book as a guide and I am enjoying it immensely. There is nothing more satisfying than creating artisan bread with nothing but simple ingredients and your bare hands.

Now I know I have blogged recently about my concerns over people taking pictures of their meals and displaying them as a Smörgåsbord on Facebook here for others to laud about but my picture of bread here represents art, yes, and I guess food. I’m sure many of you might see this as the same thing, which is fair.

Regardless, I urge anyone with a love for cooking, or creating, or art, to pick up this book and try a few recipes. He even has three simple recipes for creating white bread. The breads range from the simple, to the more complicated artisan breads, to even the sourdough varieties which requires diligence to keep the yeast starter alive, essentially forever, in your fridge. At one point I kept the starter alive for roughly two months. Going on vacation was not favorable for it, and the smell was not a nice welcome home (it smells almost as bad on day one).

So here, I present my picture of Potato Rosemary Bread (made with the optional garlic). It is delicious.

Stay Away from my Retina

Well, here it is. My first one. A laser pointer. Truthfully, I’ve never gotten one of these because I have kids and I wouldn’t want to make a midnight trip to the hospital because one of them blew out his retina(s). Then I’d have to throw the laser pointer away and go cross-country as a road scholar preaching against the dangers of laser pointers in the proximity of retinas. I keep this one under lock and key to prevent such a situation from ever occurring. The only two reasons I can think of why people have laser pointer is they are frequent presenters or they have cats or dogs. I have three cats. And let me tell you the fun never stops at least until after the first 10 minutes. But now I can claim I am in that higher echelon of humans that owns a laser pointer. Now how many can admit that?