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Jeremy Cherfas

A space for mostly short form stuff and responses to things I see elsewhere.

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Jeremy Cherfas

It is good to share some of the downs as well as the ups or even the plain level-going. I sometimes censor myself from sharing all the joy because I don't want to give the impression that everything is always perfect, but it darn near is, for which I am grateful.

Jeremy Cherfas

Most people know that Jewish dietary laws forbid pork. A new book asks why the pig — rather than any of the other animals banned by the Hebrew bible — should have become so inextricably bound up with Jewish identity.

https://eatthispodcast.com/pigs

Jeremy Cherfas

Just wow! https://www.c82.net/natural-colors/

The Natural System of Colours: Recreating Moses Harris’ color wheels from the eighteenth century.

h/t https://anhvn.com/posts/2025/weeknotes-29/

Jeremy Cherfas

Eat This Newsletter, for your delectation.

- 16,000 calories per calorie: isn’t that rather inefficient?
- NuFood: ready for water lentils?
- Marmalade, membrillo: what’s the difference?

And more, at https://buttondown.com/jeremycherfas/archive/etn-265-past-and-future/

Jeremy Cherfas

I think my problem with Douthat and this essay is that I just don't find myself attracted to systems of belief, any systems of belief. To be a part of life, yes, but no more than a part, and a part with no special talents beyond self-destruction -- which is easier maybe if life eternal beckons.

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

Latest episode: Food facts are not the answer to fear of foods

Charlotte Biltekoff, author of Real Food, Real Facts: Processed Food and the Politics of Knowledge, on how industrial food and real food talk past one another.

https://eatthispodcast.com/real-food

Jeremy Cherfas

2025-02-15

1 min read

Unfortunately Google was a good one to resurface from this day in 2006, and of course the original inspiration is still up. I played again, and the results were not nearly as interesting or varied as they were all those years ago.

Jeremy Cherfas

I got over the grave disappointment of Apple’s Books messing my Notes and Highlights for long enough to discover that a solution had been close at hand all along: Calibre!

https://www.jeremycherfas.net/blog/a-farewell-to-books

Jeremy Cherfas

Grave disappointment. Cleanfeed has removed the ability to record left and right channels from its free tier, and there's no way I can afford €28 a month for separate tracks. I guess I need to rewrite my podcast instructions for guests. Pity, it worked well.

Jeremy Cherfas

I bought a pair of “cycling" insoles for my non-cycling shoes (trainers) and on the first two rides, coming up the long hill to home seemed a lot less effort. Can that possibly be the result of the insoles? Or self-delusion? Not just a jump in fitness, I am sure.

Jeremy Cherfas

Thanks to improved crop varieties, “From 1961 to 2015, global crop output was higher by 226 million metric tons”. Is that a lot?

Eat This Newsletter runs the numbers and is not impressed. Or might just be mistaken. You be the judge.

https://buttondown.com/jeremycherfas/archive/eat-this-newsletter-264-curated/

Jeremy Cherfas

As I continue to mull over Pixelfed, these suggestions from Matt Haughey make a lot of sense. Will they still do as after I am there? I expect so.

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

Replied to a post on btrem.com :

Brian has an interesting approach to inserting microformats from front matter that I could pretty easily emulate in Twig as I do my resign. Need to think through whether it would increase flexibility or tie things down.

Jeremy Cherfas

Food, folklore and St Brigid

St Brigid’s Day, 1 February, traditionally marks the beginning of spring and the start of the agricultural year. There are special foods and other ritual celebrations, some of which delve in the pagan past.

Listen at https://eatthispodcast.com/brigid

Jeremy Cherfas

It is too easy to connect the dots. Sugar craving, cheap ultraprocessed calories, cheap food for enslaved sugar workers, the hidden horrors behind plenty, information deficits.

I need a pinboard and some red string.

https://buttondown.com/jeremycherfas/archive/etn-263-connectivity/

Jeremy Cherfas

Nice piece from Joe Crawford summarising his history of bookmarks and current use of LinkDing on PikaPods. Me too. The one drawback I have found it that editing my tags online seems to cost me dearly. But editing the XML offline is a huge pain.





Jeremy Cherfas

Looking for free Seville oranges for your marmalade? Or any other food to forage? The latest Eat This Newsletter has you covered, with a link to Falling Fruit, an interactive map that aspires to be “the best tool available to the contemporary forager”. And more.

https://buttondown.com/jeremycherfas/archive/etn-262-forage/

Jeremy Cherfas

I enjoyed Manu's post about photography and photographers he likes, and even more his page of photographs which has a very neat script to embiggen an image with a click and then smallish it again with another click. Very cool. Worth stealing?

Jeremy Cherfas

2025-01-14

#rabbit_quest #geohashing 20250114-W-AY68O8

1 min read

Composite image. On the left a map showing the location of the quest and my position. On the right, looking up over a wall topped with greenery (plumbago, maybe) at three balconies on the side of a brick apartemnt building. One of the balconies has a few plants on it.

* On foot
* 41.879539, 12.449281
* 14 January 2025
* 426.1 ppm CO2
* OpenStreetMap

One of the things I really like about Rabbit Quest: gives me a target to walk to that is out of my customary loop. This is on the other side of the park, which I do not visit often.

Jeremy Cherfas

Latest Eat This Newsletter.: Two pieces about food and place, two pieces about the perils of industrial food, and one blast about why the food system is as rotten state as it is and, maybe, what we might do about that.

https://buttondown.com/jeremycherfas/archive/etn-260-consolidated/

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

Latest Eat This Newsletter, and the last one of the year. From pedants on pintxos to bread and circuses, all your food-adjacent reading needs.

Find it at https://buttondown.com/jeremycherfas/archive/etn-259-ring-out-the-old/ and while you're there, please consider subscribing.

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

2024-12-26

1 min read

A tin of Swedish ansjovis with the lid half open showing the silvery fish within. The background is an unopened tin, prink with yellow lettering and two red fish on it.

Not to be overshadowed by Rita Hayworth and Gilda, the latest Eat This Podcast also looks into The Swedish Conundrum.

What are Swedes getting when they open a tin of “ansjovis”? Not anchovies. Or at least, not Engraulis encrasicolus.

https://www.eatthispodcast.com/gilda/

Jeremy Cherfas

2024-12-24

rabbit_quest #geohashing 20241224-W-AY68OD

1 min read

Composite image. On the left a map showing the location of the quest and my position. On the right, the Colosseum, an ancient Roman brick and stone structure with three tiers of arches and a top tier with rectangular window openings.

* On bus
* 41.889492, 12.491804
* 26 December 2024
* 425.45 ppm CO2
OpenStreetMap

My first drive-by rabbit. And I only noticed it once I was on the bus and looking distractedly at my phone. Probably doesn't count in the greater scheme of things, but what the heck.

Jeremy Cherfas

Latest episode considers possibly the original pintxo. A plump Cantabrian anchovy, a spicy pickled guindilla pepper, and a juicy green olive, skewered on a toothpick. It's invention is contested, but not its name, nor the inspiration for that name: Gilda.

https://www.eatthispodcast.com/gilda/

Jeremy Cherfas

The stories of Daniel Dennett

Interesting take on the roots of Dan Dennett’s ideas, which did indeed clarify some of them for me.

Jeremy Cherfas

Under Robin Sloan's reading, I fail to see any distinction between cults and tribes.

Jeremy Cherfas

2024-12-19

rabbit_quest #geohashing 20241219-W-AY68OD

1 min read

Composite image. On the left a map showing the location of the quest and my position. On the right, a mocha-brown house with white trim around the windows and other decoraticve elements. There is a motor scooter parked on the pavement outside the house and evergreen trees to either side of the building.

* On foot
* 41.876189, 12.460472
* 19 December 2024
* 425.37 ppm CO2
* OpenStreetMap 

I wanted to bag this rabbit because the house in the photo was derelict for years and falling apart because, we were told, the siblings who inherited it couldn't agree what to do with it. No idea how that was resolved, but it looks great now.

Jeremy Cherfas

New newsletter: One bottled water company now owns Alhambra®, Arrowhead®, Crystal Springs®, Deer Park®, Ice Mountain®, Mountain Valley®, Ozarka®, Poland Spring®, Primo Water®, Pure Life®, Saratoga®, Sparkletts®, Zephyrhills® and others.

https://buttondown.com/jeremycherfas/archive/etn-258-gifted/

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

Back when I started podcasting, in 2013, it seemed sensible to include a page telling people that they could subscribe, and how. Is that still needed today? Does “wherever you get your podcasts” really cover it, or should I add links for all the apps and services?

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

Currently reading: The Amateur: The pleasures of doing what you love by Andy Merrifield, ISBN: 9781786631060



-fiction


Jeremy Cherfas

Substack vs. Indie – The Homebound Symphony

I can easily see why people would choose Substack in preference to what I do here — and indeed, if I had to make my living solely from writing I would almost certainly be using Substack myself. (Also, I would almost certainly be living below the poverty line.) But every Substack user needs to realize that (a) Substack writers are not truly independent, (b) Substack will almost certainly undergo enshittification, and, therefore, (c) anyone using the platform needs an unenshittifiable backup. 

All you really need to know

Jeremy Cherfas

This is madness. I have 653 different tags on my ~4000 bookmarks in linkding. Fully 267 of them have a single entry. Clearly I urgently need to procrastinate by cleaning everything up.

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

2024-11-26

rabbit_quest #geohashing 20241126-W-AY680D

1 min read

Composite image. On the left a map showing the location of the quest and my position. On the right, a pale cream coloured wall with some palm fronds intruding from left and right and ferms and a colocasia on the bottom. There is a yelloqw hosepipe coiled up on the wall.

 

* On foot
* 41.882431, 12.455121
* 26 November 2024
* 424.57 ppm CO2
* OpenStreetMap

Just across the road from my barber, whom I had planned to visit in any case.

Jeremy Cherfas

Bennett's Law says that as poor people have more money they shift from coarse grains to fine and then to animal proteins. But it isn't really a law, more a regular occurrence. Today, the first empirical test of Bennett’s Law, with researcher Marc Bellemare.

https://eatthispodcast.com/bennetts-law

Jeremy Cherfas

Trawling around after briefly noting Cooklang as a way of marking up recipes, I came across a recipe for gnocchi sauce that called for 300ml of cream as well as a burrata cheese and thought to myself, talk about gilding the lily.

Jeremy Cherfas

2024-11-20

1 min read

Links are powerful — that's why Instagram and Twitter and Threads punish and limit them, and why Substack tries to take credit for them. And that's why "wherever you get your podcasts" is such a radical concept — like email, it's a medium that the tech tycoons don't, and can't, own. People can read your writing "wherever they get their email".

Anil Dash lays out the future of S*bst*ck https://www.anildash.com/2024/11/19/dont-call-it-a-substack/

Jeremy Cherfas

2024-11-19

1 min read

Needless to say, it was hard to glean any of these alleged meanings from the works themselves. Rather, they could be discovered only from the descriptions on the wall, which read like the everything-is-connected code-breaking ravings of an overeducated cabal convinced that a hidden semiotic language of resistance lies below everyday objects, camera angles, orientations, and gestures made so very many times before.

https://harpers.org/archive/2024/12/the-painted-protest-dean-kissick-contemporary-art/

Much to agree with, much more to be bemused by.

Jeremy Cherfas

After years of using it for spices, I put my coffee grinder to work grinding, er, coffee because a friend gave me some French Roast beans from The Philippines. The coffee is good, with more than a hint of cumin.

Jeremy Cherfas

Long reads from Eat This Newsletter. Modern industrial production for better and worse. A review on dietetics so you don't need to read the book. UK farmers sharpening their pitchforks; I'm not convinced. And more.

https://buttondown.com/jeremycherfas/archive/etn-256-lengthy/

Jeremy Cherfas

Jeremy Cherfas

2024-11-10

#rabbit_quest #geohashing 20241110-W-AY680D

1 min read

Composite image. On the left a map showing the location of the quest and my position. On the right, a vintage black Raleigh road bike leaning against a heavily graffitied wall with a men at work sign in front of it.

* On bicycle
* 41.884605, 12.475028
* 10 November 2024
* 423.74 ppm CO2
* OpenStreetMap

I went out for a long bicycle ride this morning, having vaguely noted that there was a Rabbit to be bagged not too far from the route. On the way back I dismounted, got as close as I could and took the picture. It was a great ride.