Skip to main content

On $100 parking tickets


When it's winter, or even just a Friday night after a long week, sometimes you just want to drive. Sometimes you forget that your destination is a hip 'up and coming' neighborhood that went, in 6 months, from relatively easy to park to a pain-in-the-butt.

So, we found ourselves returning home last night 17 minutes too late to our car, to find a $100 parking ticket. $100. It'll be beans-and-rice for the next couple of weeks until our egos and wallets recover from that mistake. I managed to escape parking tickets in every other city I've lived in, but somehow they've found reasons to ticket us at least five times here. Out of those, I'd say only one or two were legit, but fighting tickets is even harder here than in San Francisco. You actually have to pay an extra $10 to fight your ticket, which they supposedly refund IF you win. Sneaky, DC. Very sneaky.

Today's post is an exercise in whining. I know it's a new year, and we are definitely working on our resolutions and staying positive. 50 pushups (give or take 15) a day each. Paying more attention to detail (perhaps I should start with parking rules). And cooking more (success with homemade paneer! Next up: rotis). I think another resolution should somehow involve being smarter with our money - more blue plate specials, less Restaurant-Week splurges. And from that: perhaps more exciting vacations will result...

Oh, and keeping with my recipes theme, here's how I made the paneer - it was so much easier than I expected!

1/2 gallon Vitamin D milk
1/4 cup lemon juice

Heat the milk for a while (til it hits 185 degrees, or gets to very near boiling). If you have it directly over heat, stir it continuously. At 185 F, add the lemon juice and let it curdle. Simmer for about 5 minutes, and stir a bit to make sure you have curds. Then, scoop out the curds using a ladle, into a cheesecloth-lined colander. I kept the colander over a bowl so I could save the whey - which added a nice flavor to my mattar paneer.

Once the water drains out, tie up the cheesecloth, let it hang for 30 minutes, and then compress it (I used a mortar & pestle made from marble = heavy) to flatten the cheese to about 1/2". After another hour or so, chop up the cheese, and get a frying pan ready.

Heat up some canola oil, cumin seed, and salt and add the paneer. I think I also added mustard seed to the oil, and red chili powder. Heat it to almost-browned and then remove from the pan. Ta-da! Homemade paneer, so much better than the store-bought stuff.

Comments

  1. ahhh i got about five parking tickets last month all in places I really thought I was okay to park. Unfortunately here in Montreal, we have so much snow that they don't tell you when they're going to need to clear the streets, and if you don't happen to be home when the little bugger of a truck drives by wailing his siren, then we get towed to the other side of the street and charged 92$ for it!
    What a rip right?

    Whine all you want that's no fun!
    But your cooking resolution sounds wonderful! keep posting those recipes!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Oh no, I feel your frustration. The ticket fees here are insane and they are even worse in D.C. then in Arlington VA. Sorry to hear about that. I just got one in Georgetown so I'm feeling the wallet crunch too, lol.

    http://inbugsdrawers.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Saturday Morning Comparisons: by haiku

2 haikus 9 am Sunday morning in downtown Austin: Cyclists in spandex spin by Amidst the stench of vomit and homelessness Empty streets save for a motorcycle parade. 9 am Sunday morning, Alstadt, Mainz: The sun is shining A giant farmer's market fills the plaza Pedestrians, bikers, families smiling together.

Repatriation, Month 2

We're in the second month of returning stateside. What an evolution it's been. We relied heavily on family to get us through the first few weeks, spending nearly every weekend with cousins. It was nice, but they have their own routine, and we needed to establish our own. Finally, with the house painted, new floors installed, furniture delivered (hallelujah!), assembled, and boxes (mostly) cleared out, it looks like a house we can live in. Camping had become exhausting and wore the kids out. On the other hand, suddenly having a full house somewhat overwhelmed them - they would start massive fights over a single toy, ignoring the fact that there were now quite a lot of options to choose from. Given our long-term exhaustion over the past several months, this has been an annoying challenge. We have started to establish more of a routine though, and I already feel my mood lifted because of it. I hope it's the same for the kids. The early morning school routine hurts (whyyyyy...

6 Months In (almost)

We're coming up to our 6th month here. It feels especially poignant because our kindergartener finished his first semester in an American school. And boy was that first day full of tears. That day, that week, I think the whole month - every dropoff for every kid, every whatsapp text from a friend back home - anything set me off with this horrible guilty feeling that we had made a terrible mistake. (Full disclosure: I still feel like this nearly every day, but at least I'm not in daily tears about it...?) I'll never forget that first day of kindergarten. Staying at a dumpy (yet somehow $120/night) hotel with a free breakfast (truly, free breakfast at American hotels is the saddest breakfast), our son asked us to pack him a lunch. How? I asked him to please buy, it would be warm, he could eat well, and ... I didn't have a kitchen. He said, how about an egg sandwich? I put together the saddest egg sandwich I'd ever seen: 2 dry pieces of toast (no matter how much I ad...