Monthly Archives: January 2020

A Story Hut

Coincidence is a funny thing and turns up completely disconnected to anything at the weirdest of moments. I was glancing thru a newspaper article that had this really lengthy and very detailed description of students in grades 2 thru 8 competing in a storytelling competition with everything from poems to parts of the Illiad. The author of the article quoted from the book The Enchanted Hour, The Miraculous Power of Reading Aloud in the Age of Distraction by Meghan Cox Gurdon. (Harper Collins Publishers, 2019.)

It happens that I was just talking to people in Norwich about constructing a living hut somewhere on city property. I was thinking that across from the beach area at Mohegan Park would be a great place to arrange some of the fallen branches from the area woods with a few morning glory and moon flower seeds that could grow over the frame that would be large enough for eight to ten seated children at a time that could be used for a story time. The Story Hut would be taken down in the fall and perhaps another Story Hut erected somewhere else the following year.

Assembling a story hut frame would take a bit of time and a few volunteers but because it uses fallen branches it cleans up the woods and trails of Mohegan Park. This type of hut is not suitable for camping, or campfires, as its not really a shelter but a plant trellis frame for lightweight plants. It would be fun to add some peas and bean seeds to the mix but people have allergies and fresh vegetables right off the vine while listening to a story such as Jack and the Bean Stalk might prove too hard to resist. The cost to taxpayers, and participants is free. Not even the Norwich Recreation Department could create a charge. It will though take some effort and participation. According to the back of the Morning Glory seed packet they should be planted in May. The Norwich Plant Swap just happens to take place on Sunday, May 3 , from 10 -2, so if you’re interested let’s talk.

Anyway, check out the book, The Enchanted Hour, The Miraculous Power of Reading Aloud in the Age of Distraction and lets join together as residents of Norwich, CT in creating our own, however temporary, community and activity centers.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects.

Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference.

Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs .

Milk Jug Greenhouses Needed

Spring was in the air today even if the temperature was cold and snow mounted on the ground. Today, I picked up my seeds from the URI Master Gardener Program. 12 different types of herbs, 24 types of flowers and a variety of 37 vegetables all made available by RI Job Lots.

So this is my vision and I need some help from you to achieve it.

Vision 1 – Turn as many gallon milk jugs into mini-greenhouses as possible.

Needed gallon milk jugs. I am willing to collect them from you in groups of five.

Vision 1a – Get in touch with me if you would like to take responsibility for growing some of the seeds. This would be a great help so do not hesitate!

Vision 2 – Bring extra plants for adoption to the Norwich Plant Swap on May 3rd, 2020.

Vision 3 – Assemble plants of peas, beans, morning glories and moon flowers in a frame large enough for small group story telling. The seeds have been supplied but they need a place and a frame to grow on. Ideas, frame and volunteers welcome.

Vision 4 – Plant flowers and vegetables for soup kitchen and other free distribution. Direct sow seeds will be available at the Plant Swap May 3rd 11 am – 1 pm. Sorry but I am still working on the plant swap location.

Can you be responsible for only one flower or vegetable? Yes.

Can you be responsible for more than one flower or vegetable? Yes.

Can you just add these to your garden? Yes.

Can you choose for yourself from what is available? Yes.

What if they don’t live? That would be sad but that happens.

Can I make a milk jug greenhouse for myself. Absolutely. These directions are from the “web.”

How to start milk jug greenhouses step by step: Step 1: Cut your jugs in half and toss out the lids. Step 2: Moisten the soil really well. Step 3: Add seeds. Step 4: Close your container and seal all air gaps with duct tape. Step 5: Label the jug. Step 6: Set them outside in a full sun location.

So, will you join me in this project?

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely.

Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can.

Together we can make a difference.

Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs .

A Forest Bath

Sometimes I can tell the time of the year by the postings and advertisements I see. The usual and expected ones I can block out with practiced ease. It is one of the reasons I am so strongly against advertising unless you have a physical product to sell. I refuse to believe I am the only person who blocks out advertisements for things that they are not interested in.

What never fails to get my attention though are promotions of products, places and events. I think its because the promotion is usually tied into the teaching or learning of something even if I have to pay for it. I like to learn.

This time the posting was for “Forest Bathing,” in Shelburne, Vermont. The description sounds lovely. You “Experience the winter wonderland and connect to nature. Slowly walk and pause amongst the quiet dormant trees, fluttering birds and scurrying animals. Enjoy the stunning beauty on the land, the light of the sun and the crisp winter air. Give yourself this time to slow down, de-stress and follow your certified guide through a series of sensory connection invitations to practice Forest Bathing and a new level of Nature Mindfulness from 10 AM- Noon.” For only $25 and you will be served a hot locally foraged tea too.

Now the walk and the tea also come with a certified Nature & Forest Therapy guide which I imagine to be very helpful but its almost a five hour trip each way for me so I probably won’t be taking advantage of the opportunity.

But taking a slow walk through a silent forest listening to the birds and the animals scurry about does sound like a wonderful idea so I went to my nearby Mohegan Park and had a very slow stroll. Yes. Even slower than my usual snail pace along two of the five marked trails. This time I looked up every once in a while to see what birds I might spot. I checked the surrounding ground for fresh green growth due to the unseasonably warm weather we have been having and I looked for signs of the tiny waterfalls I see during the wet seasons. In my imagine besides the tiny waterfalls I also need to be on the lookout for the huts and homes of elves, gnomes and small animal homes.

And then my mind begins to wander and here are a few of the questions I began to ask and eventually I looked to the Association of Nature and Forest Therapy for answers when I got home.

What is a Forest therapy walk like? An entire walk is typically 2 to 4 hours long and covers no more than a quarter mile . In that short distance most people experience contact with nature in a much deeper way than they ever have prior to the walk. On Forest Therapy walks, people have a wide range of experiences, some of which they feel are significant, even profound. Guides are trained in the skills and perspectives needed to be supportive witnesses of these experiences.

Why is walking in the woods so good for you? “Studies have confirmed that spending time within a forest setting can reduce psychological stress, depressive symptoms, and hostility, while at the same time improving sleep and increasing both vigor and a feeling of liveliness,” reports Mother Earth News.

What are the real benefits of Forest Bathing? It is proven to reduce stress hormone production, improve feelings of happiness and free up creativity, as well as lower heart rate and blood pressure, boost the immune system and accelerate recovery from illness.

How many trees are in a forest? he answer is that the world is home to over three trillion trees—with almost half of them living in tropical or subtropical forests. There are roughly 400 trees for every human. 12,000 years ago, before the advent of agriculture, Earth had twice as many trees as it does now.

What is a small forest called?’ Forests’ are bigger than ‘woods’. But a small collection of trees is not necessarily ‘the woods’. Something smaller (without specifying actual size) would be called ‘a stand of trees’. (i.e. if you can go into the collection and not see the end of the tree s, then you’re not in a stand of trees).

Mohegan Park is definitely a forest and we had some incredibly forward thinking people in Norwich at one time. I wonder what they would think of the City now?

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs .

Getting Ready for the GBBC

The Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC) is not until February 14 through February 17, 2020 next month but I have been checking out some new and different places around Norwich, CT. Of course, if we finally have some winter weather I might just look out my kitchen window while I sip my ever present cup of tea.

To count the bird has gotten even easier than it has been in the past.

  1. Count the birds you see in any fifteen minute period.
    1. Just keep track of the kinds of birds you see, (For example: 5 cardinals, 3 crows if its a big flock enter your best guess.
    2. and how long you watched. (15 minutes or more)
  1. Enter your information on line at www.BirdCount.org.
  2. Look for the “Submit Observations

You can enter your observations from anywhere in the world through March 1 but the counts should be from just these four days.

So where are the places I am checking out ? Fast food parking lots. Spaulding Pond. Lower Pond. The Little League field. Indian Leap. School playgrounds. Yantic field. The Rose Garden. 8th Street Bridge, Brown Park, Laurel Hill Park, My back yard.

Which birds did I look up pictures of? Crows, hawks, sparrows, ducks, swans, geese, doves, pigeons, cardinals, woodpeckers, wrens and more Here is the list for the New London County as generated eBird.org I have never even heard of some of them.

Date:

Start Time:

Duration:

Distance:

Party Size:

Notes:( Location )

This checklist is generated with data from eBird (ebird.org), a global database of bird sightings from birders like you. If you enjoy this checklist, please consider contributing your sightings to eBird. It is 100% free to take part, and your observations will help support birders, researchers, and conservationists worldwide. Go to ebird.org to learn more!

Waterfowl

Pink-footed Goose

Brant

Cackling Goose

Canada Goose

Mute Swan

Wood Duck

Gadwall

American Wigeon

Mallard

Mallard (Domestic type)

American Black Duck

Mallard x American Black Duck (hybrid)

Northern Pintail

Green-winged Teal

Ring-necked Duck

Greater Scaup

Lesser Scaup

Greater/Lesser Scaup

King Eider

Common Eider

Surf Scoter

White-winged Scoter

Black Scoter

scoter sp.

Long-tailed Duck

Bufflehead

Common Goldeneye

Hooded Merganser

Common Merganser

Red-breasted Merganser

Ruddy Duck

duck sp.

Grouse, Quail, and Allies

Ring-necked Pheasant

Wild Turkey

Grebes

Pied-billed Grebe

Horned Grebe

Red-necked Grebe

Pigeons and Doves

Rock Pigeon

Mourning Dove

Rails, Gallinules, and Allies

Virginia Rail

Shorebirds

Purple Sandpiper

American Woodcock

Wilson’s Snipe

shorebird sp.

Alcids

Razorbill

Gulls, Terns, and Skimmers

Ring-billed Gull

Herring Gull

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Great Black-backed Gull

Larus sp.

gull sp.

Loons

Red-throated Loon

Common Loon

loon sp.

Cormorants and Anhingas

Great Cormorant

Double-crested Cormorant

Herons, Ibis, and Allies

Great Blue Heron

Vultures, Hawks, and Allies

Black Vulture

Turkey Vulture

Northern Harrier

Sharp-shinned Hawk

Cooper’s Hawk

Accipiter sp.

Bald Eagle

Red-shouldered Hawk

Red-tailed Hawk

Rough-legged Hawk

Owls

Eastern Screech-Owl

Great Horned Owl

Barred Owl

Long-eared Owl

Northern Saw-whet Owl

Kingfishers

Belted Kingfisher

Woodpeckers

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

Red-bellied Woodpecker

Downy Woodpecker

Hairy Woodpecker

Pileated Woodpecker

Northern Flicker

woodpecker sp.

Falcons and Caracaras

Merlin

Peregrine Falcon

Tyrant Flycatchers: Pewees, Kingbirds, and Allies

Eastern Phoebe

Jays, Magpies, Crows, and Ravens

Blue Jay

American Crow

Fish Crow

crow sp.

Common Raven

Tits, Chickadees, and Titmice

Black-capped Chickadee

Tufted Titmouse

Larks

Horned Lark

Kinglets

Golden-crowned Kinglet

Ruby-crowned Kinglet

Nuthatches

White-breasted Nuthatch

Treecreepers

Brown Creeper

Wrens

House Wren

Winter Wren

Marsh Wren

Carolina Wren

Starlings and Mynas

European Starling

Catbirds, Mockingbirds, and Thrashers

Gray Catbird

Brown Thrasher

Northern Mockingbird

Thrushes

Eastern Bluebird

Hermit Thrush

American Robin

Waxwings

Cedar Waxwing

Old World Sparrows

House Sparrow

Wagtails and Pipits

American Pipit

Finches, Euphonias, and Allies

House Finch

American Goldfinch

Longspurs and Snow Buntings

Snow Bunting

New World Sparrows

Chipping Sparrow

Field Sparrow

American Tree Sparrow

Fox Sparrow

Dark-eyed Junco

White-throated Sparrow

Vesper Sparrow

Savannah Sparrow

Song Sparrow

Swamp Sparrow

Eastern Towhee

sparrow sp.

Yellow-breasted Chat

Yellow-breasted Chat

Blackbirds

Eastern Meadowlark

Baltimore Oriole

Red-winged Blackbird

Brown-headed Cowbird

Rusty Blackbird

Common Grackle

blackbird sp.

Wood-Warblers

Orange-crowned Warbler

Palm Warbler

Yellow-rumped Warbler

Cardinals, Grosbeaks, and Allies

Northern Cardinal

Norwich Community Center

Norwich residents have been talking about the need for a Community Center. A place for:

  • Classes
  • Meetings
  • Dances
  • Fundraising events
  • Gatherings of all kinds
  • Recreational activities

By common definition – A community center should provide a safe place for young people to hang out, make new friends, and stay out of trouble. With a focus on sports and fitness. Community centers can also reduce childhood obesity and promote health and wellness. This entire definition works well for old people, veterans, single parents and families by providing easy access to events, programs, courses, and general information about the community.

Taking part in a community center brings a sense of accomplishment and joy, and that’s important because family time brings a stronger sense of connection within the family.

Taxpayers and residents I take this opportunity to give you Dodd Stadium. That’s right our very own, not always convenient minor league baseball stadium. It has indoor and outdoor spaces, facilities, playground, meeting rooms, exercise rooms, food facilities, and more that are not fully utilized. Its a baseball stadium with potential in addition to on-site convenient parking.

Community Centers fall into two categories: those with pools and those without, and come in three basic sizes: small (under 15,000 sq. ft.), medium (from 15,000 sq. ft. to 32,000 sq. ft.) and large (over 32,000 sq. ft.). The largest is over 60,000 sq. ft. and the smallest is about 3,000 sq. ft.

It needs to have convenient parking, public restrooms, cooking facilities, and capacity for multiple groups.

Taxpayers and residents I take this opportunity to give you Dodd Stadium. That’s right our very own, not always convenient minor league baseball stadium. It has indoor and outdoor spaces, facilities, playground, meeting rooms, exercise rooms, food facilities, corporate meeting spaces and more that are not fully utilized.

The facility has a seating capacity of 6,270 and features areas that are ideal for hosting events of all types including a multi-tiered BBQ pavilion, indoor batting/pitching facility, climate controlled luxury suites, and its own restaurant and bar.

PAST EVENTS INCLUDE:

High School & College Baseball

  • High School Soccer
  • Concerts
  • Wedding Ceremonies
  • Banquets/Awards Dinners
  • Corporate Events/Conferences
  • Business Meetings
  • Fantasy Sports Drafts
  • Holiday Parties
  • Charity Fundraisers
  • Barbecues and Picnics
  • Team Building Events

I will grant you it is not the most perfect solution to even our cities most current needs but it is a facility we are not taking full advantage of while it is in good shape. It even has night time lighting.

During the Unicorns season I am certain we can arrange other accommodations. In kindergarten most of us learned the importance of sharing so as adults I am certain we can review the concept and put it into practice.

It is not on a current public transportation schedule but with a little prodding and assistance and time that could be changed.

A brand new, state of the art facility with all the bells and whistles and pools would be wonderful but why don’t we use what we have now to its fullest potential before we burden the taxpayers with more.

That is correct, I used the word burden. Taxes in Norwich, CT are a burden and one that will continue to grow as unfunded educational demands will continue to be placed on cities and towns, our infrastructure continues to age and fail, our population ages and our large industry leaves our state in droves. Electric Boat cannot save us all.

How much longer do we need to wait? Why do we have to wait? In the last election, promises were made, why should we be made to feel guilty for expecting them to be kept, or at least an attempt made to keep the promises. To at least follow-up on the suggestions. What our leadership refuses to do, we, the taxpayers and residents must do for ourselves.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference.

Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs .

2020 is blue

Did you know there is a designated color of the year? Every year a color is chosen by the High Court of color. I never even knew there was a high court of color. But apparently it is Pantone, and the color for 2020 is classic blue. At least according to Vogue and the New York Times articles. Multiple articles. So who am I to argue. So now is the time to spruce up your wardrobe with blue as you are going to be wearing a lot of it.

Almost every month has at least one but usually more designated wear this color or that color to support or protest something. So mark these on your calendar to wear blue –

January 2020 – January 11th, 2018 is National Human Trafficking Awareness Day in the United States and the Blue Campaign, a project of the Department of Homeland Security, wants you to wear blue on the 11th to pledge solidarity with trafficking victims and help end slavery now.

February 28, 2020 Rare Disease Day

March 1st – National Dress in Blue Day is celebrated each year on the first Friday of March.

April 5th, 2020 – Rock & Roll Day

May 5th, 2020 – National Teachers Day

June 19, 2020 The Men’s Health Network founded the Wear BLUE Day campaign to raise awareness about men’s health.

October 5th 2020. The first Monday of every October is World Day of Bullying Prevention™!

November 14, 2020 World Diabetes Day

and don’t forget every Friday for a $5 United Way donation is wear your blue jeans to work day.

So get ready ladies and gentlemen for a celebration of the blue haired ladies, fresh looking blue jeans, blueberry everything from burgers, potatoes, drinks and delicious healthy desserts, teenagers not blasting the blues and visits to fresh and salt waters guaranteed to chase the blues away!

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs .

Hot Cocoa 2020

Sometimes the stuff I get in my e-mail account is just too amazing to be altered. This time it is an e-mail from the Quartz Obsession <hi@qz.com> written by Natasha Frost, edited by Whet Moser, and produced by Tori Smith.

They are a curious bunch of writing characters who ask some of the most delicious questions. Todays article was all about Hot Cocoa! The writers were obviously not aware of the great importance of cocoa to Norwich CT but I will repair that oversite as soon as I finish this cup of cocoa from Craftsman Cliff Roasters of 34 Broadway, Norwich, CT https://craftsmancliffroasters.com. Allow me to recommend a very, very, dirty hot cocoa that is indeed even better than being wrapped in a cozy, warm blanket in front of a cheery fireplace on a freezing cold evening.

Their article brings to light all sorts of commentary I will admit I have never, ever heard told before.

For example: The “hot chocolate effect” is the name given to the rise in pitch heard when repeatedly tapping a cup of hot liquid once a soluble powder like hot chocolate, instant coffee, or salt has been added, as you might while stirring it with a teaspoon. It is also known as the allassonic effect.

Did you ever watch the 1934 Disney Hollywood Party, where a brave battalion of hot chocolate soldiers must venture forth and draw (candy) swords against warring gingerbread men, perched atop a cookie castle? Wouldn’t it be fun to watch a movie and this short Disney classic while drnking a cup of cocoa?

In 1636, the Spanish historian and travel writer Antonio de Léon Pinelo pondered a difficult question: Did drinking hot chocolate break ecclesiastical fasts? At the time, monks and other members of the Catholic church spent a significant portion of the year fasting, including abstaining from meat, eggs, and other tasty foodstuffs. Hot chocolate didn’t obviously break any God-given rules, but it seemed deeply suspect.

This 17th-century book, written entirely in Spanish, explores the various views of theologians and other thinkers on this hot topic. Despite the pope giving the drink his blessing, the anti-chocolate brigade did score some wins—the drink was banned by some orders, like the Carmelites. Mind you, you can hardly blame them, writes Mexican historian M. Mercè Gras Casanova: “The drink’s extraordinary quality and delicacy led some to conjecture that such a delicacy must necessarily be a sin.” And I confess to even enjoying this sin, perhaps a tad too much.

Coffee brings you up, tea cools you down. Hot apple cider pairs with a cold morning at the farmer’s market; consommé is for the ailing; butter tea is largely the province of yak farmers on the great Tibetan plane, or, in its coffee form, of biohackers in Silicon Valley.

Hot chocolate is like none of these. It is a treat, but not so holiday-bound as eggnog or mulled wine; it gives you a lift, but you can still have it just before bedtime. It befits the young and the old, the sick and the well, urbanites and country-dwellers. Most of all, it is a drink that says, “I love you.” (You can use it to remind yourself of that, too, if you need to.)

Wherever you go (almost), you will find a version of it. Colombians add cheese. Filipinos may include peanut butter. The Viennese top it with a thick slug of whipped cream. In Mexico, where it originated, it is minimally grainy and maximally invigorating. But where did it come from, and how did we all fall in love with it?

550: Calories in a large Starbucks hot chocolate—the same as a Big Mac

$13.95: Cost of a razzle-dazzling Frrrozen Hot Chocolate at the deeply kitschy Manhattan restaurant Serendipity 3

2,000: Cups of chocolatl poured and consumed every day in the court of Montezuma, the 16th-century Aztec leader

1,291: Instagram hits for the hashtag #blossominghotchocolate, Dominique Ansel’s telegenic chocolate-marshmallow concoction

7:3: Ratio of dark to milk chocolate in British food writer Felicity Cloake’s “perfect” hot chocolate

24 g (8 oz): Daily ration of chocolate provided to polar explorer Robert Scott’s men on their 1911 trek to the South Pole

35%: Growth of Mexican hot chocolate on US menus since 2015

People have been turning the seeds of the cacao plant into drinks for thousands of years—in Mexico, cacao-based beverages have been a staple since at least 1,900 BC. Later, cacao was a popular drink among the Maya, who took it warm, and the Aztecs, who preferred it cold and seasoned with spices like chile and vanilla. (It was said to have been brought to humans by the god Quetzalcoatl, who was cast out by his divine peers for sharing it.)

Early Spanish colonists weren’t so sold, however: Christopher Columbus in particular had little time for it. But gradually, the drink made its way into Spanish life, first among monks and friars and then as a luxury good, popular in the Spanish court. By the end of the 18th century, it had conquered Europe—but wrought misery in the process. Hot chocolate was so popular that it created a thriving market for slave labor in the New World, with cacao plantations variously owned by the English, Dutch, and French.

Though today we think of bar chocolate as the original, most essential form of the treat, the first chocolate bar wasn’t sold until 1847, when a UK-based manufacturer, Joseph Fry, figured out the right proportions of cocoa powder, cocoa butter, and sugar to make a solid bar.

Although some people say “cocoa” to mean hot chocolate, cocoa powder and solid chocolate are two different products made from the cacao bean. Either can be used to make hot chocolate—cocoa dissolved into warm milk with some sugar makes a thinner concoction than the thick Spanish style made from melted chocolate and milk, and used for dipping churros.

Making chocolate is itself a long process. It begins with seeds from the cacao tree, which is native to Mexico. They have a very bitter taste and to improve the flavor, they are piled in vats to ferment for up to a week. After that, they’re put in the sun to dry for another week or two, before being cleaned and roasted.

This gives us cacao nibs, which are then ground into a powder called cocoa mass—chocolate, in its simplest form. But there’s still a ways to go. First, that mixture is heated until it melts into a liquid called chocolate liquor. Next, it is separated into its two parts—dry, crumbly cocoa solids and the fatty pale yellow cocoa butter that gives chocolate its creamy texture. To make chocolate, they’ll be put back together with sugar and sometimes milk.

Cocoa is produced when the cocoa solids are processed into a fine powder. It is intensely flavored, but not sweet at all. It is generally used in baked goods—and hot chocolate, or hot cocoa, of course.

1502: Christopher Columbus encounters cocoa beans for the first time—but is much more interested in gold and silver.

1657: London’s first “Chocolate House” is opened by a Frenchman, who promises the drink at “reasonable rates.”

1828: A Dutch chemist adds alkaline salts to chocolate liquor, creating Dutch process cocoa powder.

1961: Swiss Miss becomes the first instant cocoa brand to hit US shelves.

1975: British soul band Hot Chocolate releases their chart-topping single “You Sexy Thing.”

2009: Emmy-winning choreographer Debbie Allen stages the first performance of the Hot Chocolate Nutcracker, updating the festive Tchaikovsky original.

2019: New York’s City Bakery, home of “America’s most iconic hot chocolate,” closes its doors.


America’s Test Kitchen and Alton Brown have similar, simple recipes for creating your own. Both recommend Dutch-process cocoa powder; as the cooks at America’s Test Kitchen point out, the alkaline salts raise the pH level, giving it “fuller flavor and deeper color.” ATK recommends white chocolate chips; Brown suggests adding a pinch of cayenne pepper like the Aztecs, which he says “ups the flavor ante quite a bit, and as called for here certainly won’t be sensed as ‘heat.’” He also adds cornstarch as a thickener, as is done in Spain and South America. (You can also thicken it Viennese style, with an egg yolk.)

Cayenne or chiles are common ingredients in Mexican hot chocolate, as in this Bon Appétit recipe, which also calls for cinnamon and almond extract. The Latin Kitchen has an even more elaborate version, which includes anise, nutmeg, pink peppercorn, and cardamom.

Not addressed in this lengthy article is whether an individual can overdose on hot chocolate? Or even be addicted. It may be an addiction I can live with.

Thank you for reading and sharing my history and Norwich Community blog freely with your family or friends or anyone you think might be interested or in a position to take on some of the suggested projects. Don’t hesitate to contact me for further information. I am happy to pass along anything I can. Together we can make a difference. Email comments on this blog to berylfishbone@yahoo.com View my past columns at http://www.norwichbulletin.com/section/blogs .