Vox Hortus

Suburbia! Where we cut down the trees and name the streets after them

Froot! It’s better than fruit. June 13, 2008

Filed under: Food, Skepticism, Use Your Head — Dharma @ 3:50 pm

First, let us ponder prune buying on Amazon. Hmmmm.

Next, the bag claims that these morsels of pruney golightly are better than fresh fruit. This claim is elaborated in the product listing on the aforementioned site:

Better than fresh fruit. Ounce for ounce, bite for bite, better than fresh fruit ! Better than bananas. That’s right, just one ounce of Sunsweet Prunes delivers more potassium than one ounce of bananas. So more over fresh fruit, it’s time the once humble prune takes its rightful place as nature’s ultimate convenient and nutrient-packed snack. Potassium per ounce: prunes = 208 mg, bananas =101 mg. [Source: USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference Release 17 (2004).] So when you need energy, antioxidants, potassium, fiber, or just an irresistibly delicious snack you can take anywhere, reach for Sunsweet prunes. Grower certified: We reserve the highest quality prunes in the world for Sunsweet Gold Label packages. Diabetic exchange: 1 1//2 fruits. Dried fruits have fiber along with carbohydrate and can be a good choice in your diabetic meal plan.

Ingredients:

Pitted California Prunes (Dried Plums), Potassium Sorbate (As A Preservative).

At least they have cited their source information. Snap.
They have included exchange information for diabetics. Snap.
The ingredients list is short. Snap.

Dried prunes being wholly better than fresh fruit is our main assertion here with the following as support:

  • Kprunes > Kbananas

Let’s even go so far as to say that:

  • 2Kbananas = Kprunes

It’s actually even:

  • 2Kbananas + 6 = Kprunes

where weights of the fruits are identical and K = potassium.

This is a real losing position for bananas whose claim to fame is based on just two things: high potassium content and slippery skins who work as part time comedians. Okay, there’s some celebrity from the tarantula-in-the-banana-shipment folklore, but that’s it for bananas. The whole of their import is based on their potassium content. They are BIG in potassium circles.

Listen here, these prunes have more potassium. That’s how we know they are better than fresh fruit. I mean, they have more potassium than bananas for God’s sake!

The claim is appealing because prunes appear to provide a concentrated source of a nutrient that we all know cures hangovers. Moreover, the claim attempts to distract us from the real reason people buy and consume prunes. It’s not the potassium, K?

You could do a lot worse than these minimally processed 2-ingredient humble prunes. They’re not bad as far as packaged food goes, but they aren’t better than fresh fruit.

 

I’m trying to be Zen about it June 13, 2008

Filed under: Knitting — Dharma @ 2:49 pm

Jaywalker is not working out. Last night, I tried to slip it over my dainty heel -> not happening. And the intended recipient is also in possession of a heel but, to boot, she sports a modest cankle from an old injury. This sock is over. Note that snazzy heel I told you about though, and how this pattern makes use of this otherwise wretched Opal colorway. Off to find a pattern that is stretchy and shows nasty stripes to their best advantage. When I’ve found it, I’ll have the strength to rip back this sock and start again.
 

Field Kit + Knitting June 12, 2008

Filed under: Entomology, Knitting, Research — Dharma @ 9:04 pm
Initially I pictured field work framed by this bucolic and pastoral haze, and certainly there is some of that feeling. When the morning fog burns off and my research subjects start flying in earnest, that quickly ends and the day takes on a hot, sticky, smack-the-back-of-your-neck feeling…it’s just not what I envisioned.Nevermind, some excursions allow for plenty of knitting time.
This is the Pinwheel Blanket in progress for M’s bun in the oven (but because she won’t see it for a few more weeks, this post will not appear until after I’ve mailed her package). I was able to do a fair amount of work on it, and it’s finished now, just waiting for a warm enough day to dry after washing and blocking.
Yarn = Manos del Uruguay Silk Blend, 5 skeins
I can’t say enough nice things about this yarn, which makes me swoon.
 

Knock knock. Who’s there? Skepticism. June 12, 2008

Filed under: Food, Life, Skepticism — Dharma @ 5:03 pm

A few months ago, I planned another blog to address a pet project of mine…but I can’t exactly be trusted to update this blog regularly, so what are the chances that I’ll manage two successfully? For that reason, the Vox Hortus blog is about to get pretty eclectic – chaotic even.

I already talk a lot about horticulture, agriculture, science and landscape aesthetics here. Then awhile back I added entomology and general biology, and after much deliberation added knitting – these are all things I spend a fair amount of time on. Another thing I do frequently is rail against the diabolical shadiness in advertising, most frequently the form that takes in the selling of food. Michael Pollan and Barbara Kingsolver made an impression on me.

So at one time, I intended to create a blog for sustained railing in this same vein, but alas, I think I’m just going to go random and chaotic here at Vox Hortus, and God help you, on any given day, you won’t know what to expect. Don’t be mad.

On second thought, do be mad. Be mad that collectively, consumers are so passive, we can be told anything, and not only will we not reel in incredulity, not shake our fists or demand the truth, we’ll believe what is said and pays our money and takes our chances.

 

Footsy June 12, 2008

Filed under: Knitting — Dharma @ 12:35 am
Tags:

Another pair of socks finished, and I’ve already decided that I’m not going to knit that pattern again. It’s time to move on and try new things…

Like Grumperina’s Jaywalker which I call ‘Frantic and Indecisive’ after the infamous Onion headline:

This pattern has already taught me something interesting: that a Sl1, K1 heel flap is a far thicker and likely more durable than a Sl1, K-across heel flap. One of the things I really enjoy about knitting is the knowledge that the learning curve is going to be a lifetime ride.

I had hoped to enter some things in the county fair this summer, but I’ll be away on a research trip and anyway, would you entrust your handknits to a publicly accessible display over a weekend of tractor pulling and Budweiser? Perhaps not.

Yarn (top) = Lorna’s Laces Shepherd Sock Multi, ‘Mountain-something’ colorway, 2 skeins
Yarn (bottom) = Opal Hundertwasser, 1433 colorway, 1 skein

 

Swarmy June 3, 2008

Filed under: Entomology — Dharma @ 3:35 pm

I had this idea that swarms would be a seething mass of chaos and angry bees, but it’s not like that at all.