Ultra-Wide

My new 17-40mm ƒ/4 ultra-wide angle zoom lens was delivered this afternoon, so I tried it out downtown (and on the rib roast I picked up on the way home tonight — we are having standing rib roast instead of turkey for Thanksgiving). The lens is sharp and has good edge to edge detail, even wide open at slow shutter speeds. The photo of Liz in Patrician Designs was shot at 17mm, ƒ/4 at 1/20 sec at ISO 100. Liz is a little soft because she was laughing, but the sharpness and depth-of-field is impressive. I bumped up the ISO to 400 when I photographed Megumi in Cafe Giuseppe (1/30 at ƒ/4). I photographed the mutual life building at ƒ/11 and One Up at ƒ/7.1.  The rib roast was a little more work. I used two flashes, one on the camera, the other in my hand. At 17mm, I was about 3 inches from the roast, so I had to use manual focus, hold the camera with one hand, while aiming the flash with the other (I was too lazy to get out a tripod, which would have made doing the photo much easier). The exposure was 1/160 at ƒ/5.6 ISO 400.

Kitty and a Cake

 

We celebrated Laurie’s brother’s birthday tonight. Laurie made a chocolate Irish whiskey cake that was wonderful. Romeo, who is Laurie’s parent’s cat, was being especially cute tonight. The Sandias were in great pink form tonight, so I got up on the roof to get the photo. We are working on upgrading and consolidating our electrical service, which will allow us to remove the power pole with the light on it in the photo of the Sandias.

 

 

 

Canned Goods

 

An asian woman checking out before us at Sprouts this evening had something like 30 cans of coconut milk (probably the store’s current stock). After the lady left the checker said “That was a little strange!” I just smiled and told the checker it was a run on coconut milk — the scene reminded me of Spain. During the three and a half years we lived in Madrid, the food staple we missed the most was hot New Mexico green chiles. There were green pimientos readily available in Spain that looked just like green chiles, but I think a bell pepper from New Mexico is hotter than those pimientos, so we were in a sad state of chile withdrawal for the first several months in Spain. One day, while looking at the ethnic food section at El Corte Inglés (I had never thought of the food we eat daily as ethnic, before living in Spain), we found cans of  Old El Paso roasted jalapeños. The gods were smiling on us! While not quite to the level of the local green chile we ate back home, roasted jalapeños were a great substitute. So we happily bought Old El Paso roasted jalapeños from our local El Corte Inglés for several months, until one day we bought the last can. We innocently asked a store clerk if he knew when they were getting more. He checked with the manager and told us they were no longer available. Upon seeing the panicked look on our faces, he told us the other stores might still have some. I spent the next day running from one end of Madrid to the other, and by the end of the day I had bought out the remaining stock of Old El Paso roasted jalapeños from every El Corte Inglés in Madrid proper and the surrounding afueras (suburbs). Thus I didn’t think it at all strange to see an asian woman buying up Sprout’s stock of canned coconut milk.