Jake’s Chili recipe

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With October here, and three chili cook-offs just around the corner, I figured I’d release to the public my chili recipe.

grin

3 whole chicken breasts

fry up chicken in olive oil
add seasoned salt, little pepper
shred chicken and add to chili pot

Can of red kidney beans (add juice too)
small can of tomatoe paste
Can of dices tomatoes (non-drained)
roughly 2 cups water (add as you go, so it’s not too thick)
1/2 cup uncooked white rice
1 packet of chili seasoning
1 diced onion
1 diced green pepper

Optional
———————
diced mushrooms
diced green onions

good dash of ‘tex-mex’ garlic flavoring
1 teaspoon ground coffee (regular)
tablespoon honey
dash of ground cloves
sprinkle of garlic powder
2 good dashes of ‘herb de province’
1.5 teaspoons dried, crushed basil

Spices to try on this chili
————————-
Dry red wine
Handful of peanuts
Ground red pepper (or other hot sauce)

Bring to a boil.  Reduce heat and simmer for an 1.25 hours

Serve with biscuits

Posted by Jake Covert on 10/15/2005, terribly early in the morning
Family • (3) CommentsPermalink

Cooking For Engineers

Good cooking site.  I’m looking forward to making the pumpkin pie.

http://www.cookingforengineers.com/

Posted by Jake Covert on 10/15/2005, terribly early in the morning
Family • No Comments yet • Permalink

RC car fun….

my good friend Les, over at stupidevilbastard found this link.

This video is really neat.  I want one….

Posted by Jake Covert on 6/25/2005, terribly early in the morning
ElectronicsFamily • No Comments yet • Permalink

My Brother Is a Girlie Man!

He drinks mudslides and wears a bra!  LMAO!

Posted by EBC3 on 5/13/2005, terribly early in the morning
FamilyHumor • (9) CommentsPermalink

Walking down memory lane…

What a kick.  The internet archive website http://www.archive.org/ keeps snapshots of websites going back quite a ways.

It’s kinda neat to go back and see how my website’s design has changed through the years.

http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.jakecovert.com

Posted by Jake Covert on 4/24/2005, early afternoon
Family • (2) CommentsPermalink

Feb Pictures

image

Pictures from last January, February, and now March are up in the picture gallery.

A few shots of the new Mazda car are in there too.

Enjoy.

Posted by Jake Covert on 3/5/2005, lunch time
Family • No Comments yet • Permalink

Mazda 3s

Tammy and I got our first new car; a Mazda 3s.  Winning blue, 4-door sedan.

Boy is it nice.

I’ll post some pictures later on.

Here’s a link to the mazda website for now.

http://www.mazdausa.com/

Posted by Jake Covert on 2/26/2005, terribly early in the morning
Family • (3) CommentsPermalink

What You’ll Wish You’d Known

shek, of slashdot writes:

“Eminent computer scientist, author, painter, and dot-com millionaire, Paul Graham has written down the things he wishes somebody had told him when he was in high school in What You’ll Wish You’d Known, suggesting, among other things, that students treat school like a day job, working on interesting projects to avoid what he has found to be the most common regret among adults of their high school days: wasting time.”

This text below is by Paul Graham.  Original link here:

http://paulgraham.com/hs.html

January 2005

(I wrote this talk for a high school. I never actually gave it, because the school authorities vetoed the plan to invite me.)

When I said I was speaking at a high school, my friends were curious. What will you say to high school students? So I asked them, what do you wish someone had told you in high school? Their answers were remarkably similar. So I’m going to tell you what we all wish someone had told us.

I’ll start by telling you something you don’t have to know in high school: what you want to do with your life. People are always asking you this, so you think you’re supposed to have an answer. But adults ask this mainly as a conversation starter. They want to know what sort of person you are, and this question is just to get you talking. They ask it the way you might poke a hermit crab in a tide pool, to see what it does.

If I were back in high school and someone asked about my plans, I’d say that my first priority was to learn what the options were. You don’t need to be in a rush to choose your life’s work. What you need to do is discover what you like. You have to work on stuff you like if you want to be good at what you do.

It might seem that nothing would be easier than deciding what you like, but it turns out to be hard, partly because it’s hard to get an accurate picture of most jobs. Being a doctor is not the way it’s portrayed on TV. Fortunately you can also watch real doctors, by volunteering in hospitals. [1]

But there are other jobs you can’t learn about, because no one is doing them yet. Most of the work I’ve done in the last ten years didn’t exist when I was in high school. The world changes fast, and the rate at which it changes is itself speeding up. In such a world it’s not a good idea to have fixed plans.

And yet every May, speakers all over the country fire up the Standard Graduation Speech, the theme of which is: don’t give up on your dreams. I know what they mean, but this is a bad way to put it, because it implies you’re supposed to be bound by some plan you made early on. The computer world has a name for this: premature optimization. And it is synonymous with disaster. These speakers would do better to say simply, don’t give up.

Posted by Jake Covert on 1/21/2005, evening
FamilyHumorMisc • No Comments yet • Permalink