Category Archives: Reviews

Japanese-style Hamburger Steak

I’ve been using this recipe for a while now and I just want to copy it here for reference. I think the next step is to sub the panko (it tastes great but I think normal American-style bread crumbs might be better both in cost and in terms of filling and texture) and maybe try it with nutmeg. I haven’t had it with the nutmeg yet, although I don’t think it’ll make all that much of a difference.

Source: http://www.lovelylanvin.com/2011/01/25/japanese-hamburger-steak/

[Copypasta begins]

Ingredients:  (Makes 2 large or 4 small patties)

1 pound ground beef
1/2 onion, finely chopped
1 tablespoon Butter
1/2 cup Panko (Japanese bread crumbs)
3 tablespoons milk
1 egg
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1 tablespoon canola/vegetable for frying

Hamburger Steak Sauce:

1 cup good red wine
1/4 cup ketchup
3 Tablespoons Soy Sauce
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons butter

[Comment: I’ve not actually followed through with the sauce/gravy. Ketchup works surprisingly well as a substitute and it’s cheaper and easier to …squeeze out of a bottle.]

To make Hamburger Steaks, in a small bowl combine panko and milk, mix to soften, set aside until needed. In a frying pan, heat the butter over medium heat until melted. Add the onion and cook, stirring often, until lightly browned, 5-7 minutes. Remove from the heat and let cool completely.

In a large bowl, combine the beef, panko mixture, cooled onion, egg, salt, pepper and nutmeg. Using your hands, mix to distribute all ingredients evenly. Divide the meat mixture into two large or four small equal portions. Form each portion into a patty about 1 1/2 inches thick.

In a frying pan large enough to accommodate the patties without crowding, heat the oil over medium high heat. When the oil is hot, carefully add the patties and cook until a nice brown crust forms on the bottom, 4-5 minutes. Turn the patties over and cook until a brown crust forms on the second side, 4-5 minutes longer. Remove patties and keep warm in oven while you make the sauce.

To make the Sauce, in the same frying pan over medium high heat, (drain frying pan of excess oil if needed) add red wine and deglaze the pan scraping up the brown bits at the bottom. Cook until the wine is reduced and thickens slightly. Add ketchup, soy sauce, butter, salt and pepper and stir well until combined. Drizzle sauce over Hamburger Steak and serve.

[end copypasta]

I did try the ketchup/soy mix, it gets most of the tastes but it’s important to have that red wine I think, as I didn’t have any. Going to try some seasoning wine (mirin substitute) next. Probably not going to taste too good.

The Bi-Annual Cell Phone Race

I got my Nexus One back in April 2010. It was my first smartphone and it changed the way I work and play. It also gave me this habit of staring at it while nothing is going on. It’s probably a bad habit.

With my 1.5 yr mark coming up (well it’s up technically but the 6-month-to contract renewal time is in November) it’s time to shop for a phone. I’m definitely interested in Verizon’s Nexus Prime and Droid RAZR. I also have some partialness to a GSM style device that AT&T provides. Sprint is a dark horse with good 4G plans and prices. All three, as of now, have good devices.

Current problem with my phone and service. Ranked:

  1. It only supports  HSPA, which is really terrible especially as an AT&T customer in this area–it  is simply unusable on large strides of the northeast corridor. And on the train is where I use my phone the most.
  2. It could be a little faster, although I can run most anything I want to at this point. Even more if I hack it and run a 3rd party ROM
  3. It’s finally dropping out of the googly heaven, but it’s still a well-oiled and well-hacked machine.

Long story short, these are the devices low-down:

  • I like those Galaxy S II’s, even if we’re 6 months into its life cycle already. AT&T’s LTE version launches next week and it is probably the one I would buy if I am sticking to that device. It’s also available starting 11/6.
    • Pluses: Nice screen, Available next week. Probably best supported non-Nexus phone you can get.
    • Minuses: LTE won’t roll out in this area until probably late next year, so feeling a bit wasted with just HSPA+. Kind of big. 6months in the cycle. Feels tinny.
  • I like a Nexus Prime because I’m coming from a Nexus One, and I like my googly updates. I tinker with my phone enough even if I’m running stock vanilla right now. No release date yet though.
    • Pluses: Google Heaven experience. Good phone all-around.
    • Minuses: Probably has one of those fatal flaws that mars all Nexus phones. A gambit on a Samsung CDMA-LTE phone. GS2 has better screen. No MicroSD slot
  • I think the Droid RAZR is a top notch device coming from the hardware perspective. Google’s “partnership” with Moto bodes well for Moto owners. It would be more desirable than the Nexus Prime if it had the added devices like a gyro and a compass. out 11/10.
    • Pluses: Good hardware, doesn’t feel like a POS, better than Nexus Prime basically in terms of hardware quality.
    • Minuses: Lack of a gyro and a compass, no NFC.

In terms of network, pros and cons:

AT&T:

  • I am an existing AT&T customer, so upgrading to anther AT&T phone saves me the ETF. The ETF for me is actually very low due to the fact that my 2-yr is not with an advance device. (I got $50 out of this supposed contract). But another $80 or whatever it is now (150 – 4*number of months, or 150-4*16=86).
  • I am grandfathered into their unlimited data plan. This is a huge deal potentially.
  • I can stay with the family plan (it’s better value for everyone on the plan, but not necessary the cheapest option for individuals).

VZW:

  • Full LTE coverage in my area, way better coverage on commute. Even in the tunnel!
  • See above, ETF.
  • About the same cost as AT&T on the individual basis.
  • 2gb data limit most likely.

Sprint:

  • Cheapest on the individual basis, unlimited data.
  • See above, ETF.
  • Worst coverage for my area. I don’t even think I get 4G at my folk’s place.
  • But unlimited all that jazz.

The picture is more complicated if I also splurge for a LTE mobile device like a laptop/portable hotspot or a tablet as a holdover. But that is like another $50/mo on the device. That solves the immediate service issue needs (I would get a VZW mifi type thing with LTE) but if I upgrade my smartphone to a LTE device then it kind of is just redundant. Or I can buy a VZW iPad2 and do pay-as-you-go, and resell the iPad when I renew. Something like that.

Damn, those Galaxy Tab 10.1 LTEs are pretty tempting! Only if I have $700 to throw around.

Bitcoin and nefariousness applications thereof

Nothing to knock bitcoin, but without government regulation, this kind of currency will run against, well, problems. For those of you unfamiliar, Bitcoin is set out to be a digital currency in which you can use it in lieu of USD, JPY, EUR, or whatever you use. Merchants can get an API to hook into their shopping system. Online bank-type things (think more Paypal than an actual bank) can trade in it just like anything else. There are exchanges (as in, stock market buy-sell orders) for it in which you can put buy and sell bids at various price points.

You get Bitcoin from the thin air at first from donating CPU cycles to the organizers of Bitcoin (BTC herein), and there’s some algorithm that determines how many coins gets dolled out over time. Unlike a total hoax, you can already trade BTC for actual dollars. People have paid in to speculate BTC as well as made some real money from it.

So what’s wrong?

For starters, it is difficult if not extremely so to counterfeit it. It’s not going to be a real issue at this point.

But I think it’s going to be a prime form of money laundering. Right now it isn’t, simply because the volume is so low. If you want to swish out $100,000, you would have to take your time since the volume is at just thousands of dollars a day. If you slap down $10000 at a time, you are going to disrupt the market. But in the future, if BTC is still around, that could be a serious mean of money laundering.

It already is just yet another digital currency that could be stolen via traditional methods: someone hacking your PC can get your BTC “banking” information. To leave out the nitpicky details, let’s just say that some key BTC info is stored in the main BTC client locally, which controls BTC authentication, account storage and send/receive functionality.

The system also have some major bugs, could be horrific if you run into them.

In practice, BTC is more like a “pay-for” cloud computing solution. You trade CPU cycles for speculative money. The CPU cycles goes to encode BTC transaction encryption, which help to run the system and make it more secure. The disclaimer here is that I do this with my home PC, I leave it running when I’m out to crunch cycles at a “mining pool.” It feels all too much like, say, EVE Online, where the potential to profit is alluring, but there are many risks. But if all you’re wagering is a couple KW/h, it’s not much of a gamble.

Remixing Comics, Two Post Two Days

From the depths of PA forums, we find a cross-mix.

I find this particular one very striking and generally worth your time. Remixed webcomics are common, but few are this funny even to casuals. Unfortunately it bears marks similar to others in requiring understanding the context behind this and that.