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Milk And Honey

Dan rec­om­mended a place to eat in Willits, so we stopped at Gribaldo’s for lunch. He actu­ally told us that he didn’t remem­ber the name of the place, but that it had a big sign that just said “DINNER” (not “diner”) and that it was in Willits across from the Taco Bell.

I was orig­i­nally going to go with a break­fast dish, but the wait­ress rec­om­mended the fish, which is locally farmed in Fort Bragg. She did not lead us wrong! Tim C and I both got the 3-​piece fish and chips, expect­ing each piece of fish to be like a roll of quar­ters. Instead, we got this:

Each piece was big­ger and thicker than a chicken breast!

Con­tin­ued to SF with a mild case of food coma after that. Got Tim C back to his place OK, though. I went home after that, and the plan was for a nap between the morn­ing and evening fes­tiv­i­ties, but unfor­tu­nately I did not have time for it if I wanted to take the bus out and not worry about park­ing and poten­tial drunk dri­ving later. Hopped in the shower and ran to the bus stop.

Met up with Aaron L, Sue L, and Gio Linh at Plouf, where I was dying to have moules et frites for the first time in for­ever! Started the night off with a Chouffe. Gio Linh appre­ci­ated the bot­tle, if not the contents:

For din­ner, I got the “prix fixe,” which was a soup or salad, moules, and a dessert. The soup was a clam chow­der. Over­all, not as good as the chow­der from Crudo, but it was inter­est­ingly spiced — there was some heat from chili oil on top. The mus­sels were great! My only com­plaint there was that I wish they gave us more broth in the bowls for dunk­ing our fries and bread. And for dessert, I had the prof­iteroles. You should have heard the waiter say it, because Gio Linh couldn’t hold back her laugh­ter. The cream puffs had ice cream instead of reg­u­lar, and the whole plate was cov­ered with a dark choco­late sauce, pis­ta­chios, and raspberries.

Unfor­tu­nately, both my bor­rowed cam­era and my phone seemed to be low on bat­ter­ies, so I did not get a lot of pic­tures, but here’s the main dish:

After that, Gio Linh went home because she’s still a baby. Aaron L and Sue L also went home because they had Bay to Break­ers in the morn­ing. I wan­dered around the cor­ner to Rick­house, where I met up with Albert T and Tim C.

Our first round:

There was a solid line out­side at this point, though, and the rain was pick­ing up, so we moved to the Bur­ritt Room to met up with Almira V, Dorothea C, and Chris H. Unfor­tu­nately, my cam­eras com­pletely died at this point, but I really like this bar. No line or cover to deal with out­side. Very chill bar area with ample seat­ing. (Yes, I’m old and I like to sit and chat with friends while I drink.) There’s a side room with music and danc­ing if you wish. And most impor­tantly, the drinks rock!

My first drink was a “Torii Toddy,” which was Japan­ese whiskey with hot chrysan­the­mum tea and some other fla­vor­ings. (It’s fun to watch the drinks made, each bar­tender has a set of 12 or so small unmarked glass bot­tles — think soy sauce bot­tles at an Asian restau­rant — of aro­mat­ics.) It doesn’t sound like it would be a good combo, but it was amaz­ing. And prob­a­bly the best self-​medication I had for the cough I had that night that was aggra­vated by our walk through the rain.

We sat around there for a while, talk­ing about our jumps and what we were going to do for next year. (Still noth­ing set yet. Any sug­ges­tions?) Then Dorothea C gave me a ride home and that was that.

You Don't Know Forbidden Castle Pucks

After we wrapped up Act 1 of the Games of Non­cha­lance, Thu H and I caught a bus back to my place, and I drove us to meet up with Aaron L and Sue L for some board game action and to watch the Sharks game. Orig­i­nally, Sue L was going to host, but Chris T and Tina K offered up their place, so we headed to Hayward.

Got there in the mid­dle of a game of Car­cas­sonne. Got to try Kona Brew­ing Co.‘s Koko Brown, a coconut beer.

Pretty damn tasty!

Also had some Asahi Black while we watched the Sharks game. Chris T and Tina K also put out a cheese and dried fruit plat­ter and we classed it up with mul­ti­ple wines, includ­ing a Passover kosher one. Aaron L explained that to make wine good for Passover (“the bread­less hol­i­day”), they remove the yeast early before it raises. Not sure where that point is in the wine fer­men­ta­tion process, but it def­i­nitely tasted like it was stopped and then fortified.

Jason G also stopped by, and we played a cou­ple of games of You Don’t Know Jack, which Chris T had for his XBOX. Turns out, he used to play the orig­i­nal on PC back in the day, too! Play­ing with four play­ers at once was really fun. I really wish we could do it with the Steam ver­sion. Or bet­ter yet, net­work play!

After that, we taught every­one For­bid­den Island. Started on Nor­mal on a rel­a­tively easy board (all the impor­tant spots near the cen­ter), but still lost due to the water level reach­ing instant death levels.

After that, headed home. All in all, a fan­tas­tic way to spend a Saturday!

Saunt Lora's Proposition

In Anathem, Saunt (or “Saint,” as we would say on Earth) Lora said that all pos­si­ble ideas have already been found, in other words, there is noth­ing new to dis­cover. Sim­i­lar notions have been brought up in our own world.

I def­i­nitely agree with Con­rad. On a the­matic level, I think every­thing has been done. You could also look it at in terms of the innovation/​execution divide. Hav­ing the idea is easy, mak­ing it work is much harder. Look at The Social Net­work. Or at all the re-​makes and mash-​ups in entertainment.

Any­way, I bring this up because Aaron L and Sue L brought Dixit to games night at Tim C’s yes­ter­day.

(Not to be con­fused with the inter­na­tional actress or the pro­fes­sor — who con­fus­ingly wrote a book on strat­egy games.) The “ele­va­tor pitch” for the game is “a visual Apples to Apples.” How­ever, I like the exe­cu­tion of Dixit a lot more.

Every­one gets a hand of six cards. Each card has a “weird French paint­ing” on it, accord­ing to Aaron L. (My art his­tory knowl­edge is quite lim­ited, but they are vaguely rem­i­nis­cent of Jules Chéret, but with­out any text, and with much odder sub­ject matter.

Like in Apples to Apples, you take turns being the “sto­ry­teller.” How­ever, instead of draw­ing a cat­e­gory card, you choose one of your own cards and make a short story (or at the very least, a phrase) describ­ing your card. Every­one else plays their best match­ing card. The cards are shuf­fled and revealed, then every­one has to guess which was the storyteller’s card.

If every­one guess right, or every­one guesses wrong, the sto­ry­teller made it too easy or too hard, and so every­one except the sto­ry­teller gets 2 points. If there are both right and wrong guesses, then the sto­ry­teller and each player that guessed right gets 3 points. In either case, every­one who got their card guessed also gets a bonus point for each guess. (But you can’t “guess” your own card.)

I think the guessing/​point-​system makes it a much more inter­est­ing game than Apples to Apples. You can play it straight, or you can play the play­ers. The visual basis also makes it a bit more inter­est­ing than words, since you can focus on just spe­cific ele­ments of your pic­ture if you choose. You’re also not lim­ited by words’ connotations.

Any­way, the game was great. After­wards, we had the worst round of For­bid­den Island ever. I think we lost four games straight. :(

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