September 21, 2003

Mellow fruitfulness

Autumn in England is full of it, according to Keats.

He’s right. Yesterday we picked cooking apples from our neighbor’s tree and today we went “blackberrying” along the River Frome. Tonight, we had blackberry and apple pie with fresh cream.

Mac makes the best short crust pastry I’ve ever tasted, so it’s not surprising the boys and I overdid it a little with dessert this evening. I won’t be posting again today. Instead, once the boys are in bed, Mac and I plan to settle down on the sofa with a bottle of wine and watch a movie.

Before I go, I just thought I’d post one of the recipes I used today. Hey, if Eugene Volokh can post a recipe, why can’t I?

I cooked chicken tikka with a mint raita (the boys love it), cauliflower masala and pilau rice. Now, some people might think apple pie wouldn’t go with that. They’re wrong. Apple pie goes with everything.

Here’s the recipe I used for the rice.

Pilau Rice

275g/10oz basmati rice
50g/2oz of unsalted butter
1 large onion finely sliced
2-4 cloves of garlic peeled and finely chopped
8 whole cloves
8 green cardamoms, split open at the top of each pod
2 cinnamon sticks, 2 inches long broken up
8 whole peppercorns
1 tsp ground turmeric
570ml/20fl oz water
1 tsp of salt
1 heaped tsp of butter
1 oz of seedless sultanas
1 oz flaked almonds

Wash the rice and soak in cold water for 30 minutes and drain well.

Melt the butter over a medium heat and fry the onions until they are soft (approx 5 mins).

Add the garlic, cloves, cardamoms, cinnamon and peppercorns. Stir and fry until the onions are golden brown (2-3 mins).

Add the rice and turmeric, stir and fry for 1-2 minutes, reduce the heat to low, stir and fry for a further 2-3 mins.

Add the water and the salt bring to the boil, cover and simmer on a low heat for 15 minutes without lifting the lid.

Remove the pan from the heat and leave covered and undisturbed for a further 10-12 minutes.

Melt the 1 tsp of butter over a gentle heat and fry the sultanas until they change colour and swell up (approx 1 min) keep to one side.

In the same fat fry the almonds until they are lightly browned.

Mix the almonds and the sultanas in with the rice and serve.

It’s time consuming but very tasty.

Posted by George Junior at 07:20 PM | TrackBack

September 20, 2003

The Lady Eve

Our favorite movie …

Roger Ebert in the Chicago-Sun Times:

If I were asked to name the single scene in all of romantic comedy that was sexiest and funniest at the same time, I would advise beginning at six seconds past the 20-minute mark in Preston Sturges' ``The Lady Eve,'' and watching as Barbara Stanwyck toys with Henry Fonda's hair in an unbroken shot that lasts three minutes and 51 seconds.
... now available on dvd.
Posted by George Junior at 08:35 PM | TrackBack

September 01, 2003

Dinner and a movie

I was going to post more today but I haven’t been able to access Blogger or visit any Blogspot sites.

Instead, I had a lazy Saturday morning reading the latest issue of Foreign Affairs and then spent the afternoon shopping and cooking. I did chicken fajitas for the boys this evening. It’s their favorite and they’ve been bugging me for days to cook it for them again.

Here’s the recipe I use:

Chicken Fajitas (serves 2, fills four tortillas)

Ingredients
8oz boneless chicken breasts, sliced in thin strips
1 small green pepper, sliced in thin strips
1 small red pepper, sliced in thin strips
1 onion sliced in thin strips
2 tbsps of vegetable oil for cooking

Marinade
juice of one lime
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon light soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 large cloves of garlic crushed
1/2 teaspoon hot chilli powder
1 teaspoon cayenne pepper

Pour the marinade over the chicken, pepper and onion, mix well, cover and refrigerate for 2 hours

Heat the vegetable oil over a high heat in a large cast iron pan add the chicken, peppers and onions (discard the marinade) and cook for 10-15 minutes (or until the chicken is cooked through). Stir frequently to avoid sticking and burning.

Serve with flour tortillas, grated cheese, shredded lettuce and sour cream.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go sit with the family and watch “Forrest Gump” on tv.

Posted by George Junior at 09:13 PM | TrackBack

Diplomatic criticism

In Stumbling Into War in the current issue of Foreign Affairs James P. Rubin argues that “Washington's failure to muster international support to depose a despised dictator was a stunning diplomatic defeat”:

What went wrong? Why, when the leader of the free world went to war with a brutal and hated dictator, did so many countries refuse to take America's side?
For Rubin the fault lies squarely with Washington.

He argues that Washington’s shifting justifications for war, the failure to synchronize the military and diplomatic tracks and the Bush administration's rhetoric and style resulted in the loss of international support for action on Iraq. In Rubin's view, the Europeans would have eventually come on board if Washington had been willing to compromise on Iraqi compliance and allow more time for inspections.

These are familiar criticisms but many of them are threadbare and, despite the space allowed him, Rubin does little to refurbish them. A number of his criticisms, such as the Bush administration’s refusal to accept partial compliance with the requirements of Resolution 1441, and its refusal to compromise on this issue, don’t look like failures of diplomacy to me. They are the result of a policy decision to draw a line in the sand and to use the military build-up to put Iraq under pressure. The policies themselves are open to criticism and it’s true that the administration’s posture presented a number of diplomatic challenges, but to describe this as a failing of diplomacy seems to me to put the cart before the horse.

Take Rubin’s view on American attempts to gain a second resolution.

Having decided to seek a second resolution, why couldn't the United States even muster a majority of votes? This failure will be long remembered. The convenient response was to blame Chirac, on the grounds that his veto threat made it impossible for the undecided council members to support a losing cause. But the real story is more complex.

Yes, more complex but still not Washington’s fault, as Rubin himself seems to accept when he notes two pages later that “France's opposition made passage of a second resolution impossible”.

And it wasn’t just French opposition:

Berlin, Moscow, and Paris joined forces, insisting that the Iraqi threat did not justify an American-led invasion and claiming that the inspections were serving their purpose: Iraq was no longer in a position to develop a militarily significant arsenal of biological or chemical weapons. With the emergence of this new alignment, London's hopes for passage of a second resolution were crushed.

What I find amazing is Rubin’s view that opposition to the war in Iraq by Russia and our erstwhile allies in Europe was due almost entirely to American diplomatic failings, rather than the result of the divergent interests of the nation states involved. For Rubin:

The real surprise was that the world's democracies did not see the importance of upholding UN disarmament demands or ending the misery of the Iraqi people. One explanation is that Bush's emphasis on personal diplomacy between leaders was not enough to win him support in democratic countries, where governments cannot simply act in complete defiance of public opinion.

This seems to me to display a certain credulity, as does this:

Even French President Jacques Chirac acknowledged that the deployment of U.S. forces had pressured Saddam into agreeing to these measures. Chirac's mistake, however, was to think that he could limit the United States' role to supporting his own favored policy for Iraq: containment through aggressive inspections.

Chirac’s policy involved much more than “containment”; it involved the maintenance of Saddam’s regime, trade links with Iraq and French influence in the Middle East. But Rubin, while questioning the Bush administration, seems to take pretty much everything else at face value:

All of the key players in Europe now say that they would have been prepared to support or at least sanction force against Iraq if it had not fully disarmed by then. And waiting that long would have demonstrated to all that Washington was prepared to go the extra mile to secure international backing. But the Bush administration showed no such willingness.

I had expected a partisan assessment of Washington’s failings from Rubin but his uncritical acceptance of the post-war meanderings of European politicians suggests a naïve ignorance as to how European statesmen play what used to be called the Great Game.

There were real diplomatic failings in the run up to war: the failure to get Russia on side at an early stage accelerated the development of the Franco-Russian axis of opposition to the war, the failure to gain the support of Turkey, at one time a key Nato ally, hampered the timely deployment of our forces; and the administration’s difficult relationship with Hans Blix made it unlikely that we would get the report we needed at the UN.

Rubin touches on each of these, and makes some interesting points, but the essay as a whole seems to miss the wider and more important question: What national strategic interests were France, Russia and Germany pursuing in opposing American action on Iraq?

In my opinion, the answer to that question would serve as a better guide to future American diplomatic efforts than any number of post-mortems on the administration’s so called diplomatic failings.

Posted by George Junior at 05:38 PM | TrackBack