Easily__Amused: U.S. Military Scrutinizes Leaks for Risks to Afghans http://htxt.it/lMa1
1 day ago from htxt
Easily__Amused: Old story: Walmart makes itself look like Scrooge of employee health benefits http://htxt.it/6d3Y
1 day ago from htxt
Easily__Amused: Wikileaks at it again! http://htxt.it/SmXu... http://htxt.it/l/XAmPaX
4 days ago from htxt
Stay Amused- You Wish Your Town Had This Park
- To Kill a Mockingbird Turns 50
- Now That’s My Type of Humor!
- Ninjavideo Died! Back to Real Life!
- Chinese Propaganda vs US Propaganda
- Economy Still Jittery, Lack of Job Growth
- Shake, Shake It Like a Disco Stick
- Now’s Not the Time to Stop Spending!
- Google Adsense, So Cool!
- Chinese Government Blocked Me, France Too
Recent Musings
- OMGareader? on Chinese Propaganda vs US Propaganda
- Scott Dobbins on Have Grad Students Made a Terrible Life Choice?
- Scott Dobbins on Chinese Government Blocked Me, France Too
- jayjay on Ninjavideo Died! Back to Real Life!
- Max on Why HSBC Sucks
Categories
Tags
blog bus Cantonese CCE center for career education CEO China chinese CIA college Columbia columbia experience overseas Columbia University dildo facebook Fujian google HBO hiking HK Hong Kong HSBC interns Ivy Ball Kowloon Mao martial arts newspaper New York NPR NYC pick-up school science sex subway summer swine flu The Wire TV university vegetarian Wellesley wine wordpressArchives
- July 2010 (8)
- June 2010 (28)
- May 2010 (2)
- February 2010 (1)
- January 2010 (8)
- December 2009 (4)
- November 2009 (9)
- October 2009 (12)
- September 2009 (6)
- August 2009 (4)
- July 2009 (4)
- June 2009 (10)
- May 2009 (8)

Go Ahead, Feed the Fish
According to the Chinese lunar calendar, today is Duanwujie (端午節), or the Dragon Boat Festival. Celebrating this holiday includes eating zongzi (粽子), glutinous rice wrapped and cooked in bamboo leaves, racing dragon boats, and drinking realgar wine. I’ve never drank this wine before. Realgar is an arsenic sulfide mineral, the wine has the mineral mixed into it, and I’m pretty sure it would taste nasty.
My grandmother knows how to make zongzi. She is quite deft at it. The ones she’s made have rice, red beans, shitake mushrooms, and pork wrapped in bamboo leaves.
Mmmm
The festival’s origin usually goes like this: Qu Yuan (屈原) was a poet and statesman for the Chu Kingdom during the Warring States period (476-221 BCE) in China. He opposed the king’s decision to ally with the increasingly powerful Qin state. The Qin state later unifies China under the rule of Qin Shi Huangdi, who later became paranoid about assassination attempts and built a huge clay army for his afterlife. Talk about fiscal irresponsibility.
Three seconds later
So, the Chu king doesn’t listen to Qu Yuan and accuses him of treason. The statesman is exiled and spends his time writing poetry. Qu Yuan’s worst fears come true when Qin conquers Chu many years later. In protest of his corrupt government, he commits suicide by drowning himself into the Miluo River.
Hearing the awful news, the villagers paddled boats in search of Qu Yuan and threw rice into the river, supposedly to prevent the fish from nibbling at his body. (I’ll let you in on a secret. Fish actually hate zongzi. I fed them to my goldfish before. They died.)
Currently Reading: hilarious Batteries Feel Included blog (http://batteriesfeelincluded.blogspot.com/search?max-results=1)