Monthly Archives: February 2016
Restaurant, Review
Review: The SweetSpot Bakehouse
by JOHN ADAMS •
One can order cakes as either rounds (six, eight, and ten inches), and traditional sheets (one-fourth, one-half, and full), or cupcakes of a regular or small size. Batters range from traditional (white, chocolate, yellow, marble) to the somewhat-less-traditional (lemon, almond, carrot, or red velvet). After having the red velvet, you may find it becomes part of your traditional menu, as it’s memorable enough to impress, but subtle enough to fit most tastes. The red velvet, with a buttercream icing, is a treat as either a cake or a cupcake. (I’ve carried the red velvet cupcakes to friends far outside the town, in places with intense competition among bakeries, and yet to find a recipient who wasn’t impressed.)
They’ve easily the talent to bake a fine wedding cake, or larger cake for another, special event.
I’ve had a good part of the menu, on many visits over two months’ time (and on other, earlier visits that are not part of this review).
You’ll find a daily choice of donuts, Danishes, cupcakes, muffins, scones, cookies, and croissants. My favorites include the raspberry croissants and blueberry muffins. There’s a cream cheese coffee cake muffin that’s perfect for someone looking for the richest possible muffin on earth. I’ve yet to find a scone that my wife did not like, among a number of seemingly-endless varieties.
Holiday offerings over Christmas included fruit pies and fruitcakes, both of which were excellent. The fruitcake may not look like what one has seen elsewhere, as they’re not so colorful as what one often sees. Often, that’s because mass-produced fruitcakes (of poor quality) rely on poor but colorfully-dyed ingredients. Having spent almost a lifetime enjoying fruitcake, since I was a small child, I can say the Bakehouse’s is among the softest I’ve had, and that’s a highly-desirable quality. Fruitcake gets a bad reputation, and is a joke to many, because it’s so poorly prepared. If you’ve shied away from fruitcake at Christmas, this coming holiday will be your chance to try a fine cake.
Inside, the Bakehouse has six stools along a window counter, and three tables (two small, one larger). Patrons entering on Main Street will see the kitchen as they walk in, with small seating area to the left from the door. Outside, there’s a drive-thru window that I’ve used successfully many times.
Aside from the principal offering of baked goods, the Bakehouse has an all-day breakfast menu (bagels, breakfast sandwiches, oatmeal, granola), and a small lunch offering (soup of the day, grilled cheese, and a ham & cheese croissant).
The coffee’s from the Just Coffee Co-Op, a Madison-based roaster. It’s a small roaster, with a colorful history, but I don’t think of it as a match for Ancora or Colectivo. It’s easily better than anything you’ll find at a fast-food restaurant, and probably better than at many restaurants in town. Some of what I’ve had in town tastes like instant coffee, instant coffee being one of the many mistakes of previous generations, now thankfully – for the most part – behind us.
Service is relatively quick in this small environment, either inside or at the drive-thru. Most patrons aren’t staying, though, so on my visits I’ve yet to see all the seats inside occupied.
I wrote about the SweetSpot Cafe recently, as a follow-up to an earlier review, and I’d say I prefer the Bakehouse on Main over the Cafe near Cravath. The Bakehouse is mainly one thing (with a bit added on) and does that one thing well.
Enjoy.
LOCATION: 1185 West Main Street, Whitewater, WI 53190 (262) 473-5080. See, Google Map and directions embedded at the beginning of this review.
ONLINE http://www.sweetspotwhitewater.com/bakehouse/ and http://sweetspotwhitewater.com/Downloads/CakeMenu.pdf
OPEN: Mon-Fri 6 AM-6 PM, Sat & Sun 6 AM -3 PM.
PRICES: Croissant and coffee for about $5, classic cakes from $15 for a 6-inch round cake to $75 for a full sheet, speciality cakes for about 30% more.
RESERVATIONS: Unnecessary for regular service, including some cakes awaiting purchase; obviously needed for specific cake orders.
DRINKS: Coffee, tea, juice.
SOUND: None that I noticed.
SERVICE: Friendly, relaxed.
VISITS: Many (morning, afternoon, evening).
RATING: 3.5 of 4. Easily recommended.
RATING SCALE: From one to four stars, representing the full experience of food, atmosphere, service, and pricing.
INDEPENDENCE: This review is delivered without financial or other connection to the establishment or its owner. The dining experience was that of an ordinary patron, without notice to the staff or requests for special consideration.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 2.25.16
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning, Whitewater.
Thursday will be mostly cloudy and windy with a high of thirty-four. Sunrise is 6:36 and sunset 5:39, for 11h 03m 22s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 92.7% of its visible disk illuminated.
The Downtown Whitewater Board meets at 8 AM, the Seed Capital Screening Committee at 4 PM, and the Community Development Authority Board at 5 PM.
The European Southern Observatory recently took pictures of the plane of the Milky Way. They’re astonishingly beautiful:
This video takes a close look at a new image of the Milky Way released to mark the completion of the APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy (ATLASGAL). The APEX telescope in Chile has mapped the full area of the Galactic Plane visible from the southern hemisphere for the first time at submillimetre wavelengths — between infrared light and radio waves — and in finer detail than recent space-based surveys.
The APEX data, at a wavelength of 0.87 millimetres, shows up in red and the background blue image was imaged at shorter infrared wavelengths by the NASA Spitzer Space Telescope as part of the GLIMPSE survey. The fainter extended red structures come from complementary observations made by ESA’s Planck satellite.
More information and download options: http://www.eso.org/public/videos/eso1…
Via European Southern Observatory @ YouTube
On this day in 1862, the Union demonstrates a new weapon at Camp Randall:
1862 – (Civil War) New Cannon Demonstrated at Camp Randall
James Loom exhibited a new breech-loading cannon at Camp Randall in Madison, Wisconsin The cannon was said to be effectively discharged 50 times in four minutes.
JigZone‘s puzzle for today is of a colorful bird:
Animals
Dog Helps Keep Runways Safe in Michigan
by JOHN ADAMS •
Film
Film: Every Best Visual Effects Winner Ever
by JOHN ADAMS •
Andy Schneider and Jonathan Britnell describe their video:
We had so much fun putting together every best picture ever, we thought we’d highlight every best visual effects winner next.
For the 1927/28 Academy awards, the award was for engineering effects. There was no award again until 1938 where it was called a special award “for outstanding achievement in creating special photographic and sound effects. The very next year the award was combined with sound effects and called the Award for Special Effects. It wasn’t until 1963 that the award became the Award for Best Visual Effects (which it is still called today). It was given every year from 1963 to present, with the exception of 1973. Hope you enjoy!
**Also we apologize for the two title mistakes. We had already uploaded it when we noticed:
*The Thief OF Bagdad
*Reap The Wild WIND
Via Vimeo.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 2.24.16
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning, Whitewater.
Wednesday in Whitewater will be cloudy and windy with a high of thirty-seven. Sunrise is 6:37 and sunset 5:38, for 11h 00m 33s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 96.9% of its visible disk illuminated.
On this day in 1942, Californians worried over a possible Japanese invasion fight the Battle of Los Angeles:
The Battle of Los Angeles, also known as The Great Los Angeles Air Raid, is the name given by contemporary sources to the rumored enemy attack and subsequent anti-aircraft artillery barrage which took place from late 24 February to early 25 February 1942 over Los Angeles, California.[2][3]The incident occurred less than three months after the United States entered World War II as a result of the Japanese Imperial Navy‘s attack on Pearl Harbor, and one day after the bombardment of Ellwood on 23 February.
Initially, the target of the aerial barrage was thought to be an attacking force from Japan, but speaking at a press conference shortly afterward,Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox called the incident a “false alarm.” Newspapers of the time published a number of reports and speculations of a cover-up. Some modern-day UFOlogists have suggested the targets were extraterrestrial spacecraft.[4] When documenting the incident in 1983, the U.S. Office of Air Force History attributed the event to a case of “war nerves” likely triggered by a lost weather balloon and exacerbated by stray flares and shell bursts from adjoining batteries.
Steven Spielberg’s 1941 is loosely based on nervous reactions like the one in February 1942.
JigZone‘s midweek puzzle is of a gazania:
Food, Science/Nature
Why Don’t Some Hamburgers Rot?
by JOHN ADAMS •
Education, School District, University, UW System
A Theory About the Diverging Futures of the Whitewater Schools and UW-Whitewater
by JOHN ADAMS •
Before I begin today’s post, I’ll mention that there is now an announcement at the Whitewater Unified School District’s webpage about academic success at one of our schools despite economic hardship. It’s a prominent mention, and that’s a good decision – we should lead with what we have truly done. For more on this topic, see Whitewater’s True and Worthy Success.
For today, it’s a working thesis of sorts, that came to me after a conversation with an education policymaker in Madison. It goes like this. While there are concerns about funding education at both the public school K12 and university levels, these programs would face markedly different futures if spending cuts continue.
Although local school districts must by law offer a minimum core of courses, and by law a core of the same courses as other school districts, that’s not true at UW System schools, where one could by restructuring treat the UW System (or much of it) as a single entity, and allocate previously-considered vital subjects between parts of the System. Over time, UW System schools would look less like separate, comprehensive universities and more like unique branches of a larger tree.
That’s not possible for K12 education. No one could offer science in Whitewater, with the expectation that students would take language arts in Fort Atkinson, and calculus in Jefferson.
One could, by contrast, divide subjects between System schools (far more than is true today).
My point is not that this would be desirable, but that it would be possible. It would mean that our comprehensive universities would be less comprehensive, so to speak. (In fact, the risks to a school like UW-Whitewater – and our city – might be considerable.) Cuts within (public schools) and cuts within, but presented as across (branches of a university system), would have a different character in description and impact.
In one case labor would (mostly notably) face layoffs, in the other wage stagnation.
We are not yet at the point of divergent futures, within a common, low-funding environment. We could be on our way, though, by the end of the decade.
I don’t know; I’m persuaded after my conversation that it’s at least one possible shape of things to come.
THE EDUCATION POST: Tuesdays @ 10 AM, here on FREE WHITEWATER.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 2.23.16
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning, Whitewater.
Tuesday in town will be cloudy with a high of forty-four. Sunrise is 6:39 and sunset is 5:36, for 10h 57m 43s of daytime. We have a virtual full moon again today, with 99.5% of its visible disk illuminated.
Whitewater’s Urban Forestry Commission will meet at 4:30 PM today, and her Zoning Code Committee at 7 PM.
On this day in 1778, better instruction begins:
Friedrich Wilhelm Rudolf Gerhard August, Freiherr von Steuben, a Prussian military officer, arrives at General George Washington’s encampment at Valley Forge on this day in 1778 and commences training soldiers in close-order drill, instilling new confidence and discipline in the demoralized Continental Army….
Von Steuben, who did not speak English, drafted a drill manual in French, which Alexander Hamilton and Nathanael Greene then translated into English. The Prussian drill techniques he shared were far more advanced than those of other European armies, let alone those of the ragtag Patriots. The ego-crushing methods of modern boot camp were practiced among the shoeless soldiers of Valley Forge with remarkable efficacy. Most important for 18th-century battle was an efficient method of firing and reloading weapons, which von Steuben forced the Patriots to practice until it became second nature.
Before von Steuben’s arrival, colonial American soldiers were notorious for their slovenly camp conditions. Von Steuben insisted on reorganization to establish basic hygiene. He demanded that kitchens and latrines be put on opposite sides of the camp, with latrines facing a downhill slope. (Just having latrines was novelty to the Continental troops who were accustomed to living among their own filth.)
On the merit of his efforts at Valley Forge, Washington recommended that von Steuben be named inspector general of the Continental Army; Congress complied. In this capacity, von Steuben propagated his methods throughout the Patriot forces by circulating his Blue Book, entitled Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States.
On this day in 1846, a malted milk king is born:
1846 – William Horlick Born
On this date William Horlick was born in Ruardean, Gloucestershire, England. A noted food manufacturer and philanthopist, Horlick arrived in the U.S. in 1869 and settled in Racine. In 1872 he moved to Chicago with his brother and began to manufacture food products. In 1876 his company moved to Racine where he began to experiment with creating a dried milk product. In 1887 he trademarked Malted Milk. In 1889 he opened a company branch in New York City and another in England the following year. He constructed additional plants in Racine in 1902 and 1905.
The company name was changed to Horlick’s Malted Milk Co. in 1906. This success enabled Horlick to achieve a widespread reputation as a philanthropist in Racine. He also helped fund the first Byrd expedition to the South Pole and the Amundsen expedition to the North Pole. After his death in 1936, control of the company passed to his son, Ander James Horlick. [Source: Dictionary of Wisconsin Biography, SHSW 1960, pg. 177]
It’s a flamingo today from JigZone:
Cats
February 22nd is a Great Day in Japan
by JOHN ADAMS •
Now in its 30th year, Cat Day has lit up Japanese social media with endless portraits of …cats as well as cat-themed doughnuts, cat-shaped biscuits, cat manga, cats staring soulfully out of windows, kittens mewing expectantly and so on. On this day it is Japan’s hugest trend on social media.
What happens on Cat Day?
Known as “Neko no Hi”, it was chosen because the date’s numerals, 2/22 (ni ni ni), are pronounced fairly closely to the sound a cat makes in Japan (nyan nyan nyan).
Via These are the amazing things you can do in Japan on Cat Day @ BBC News.
WGTB, WHEN GREEN TURNS BROWN
Hawking Fallacies at a Price of Over a Million
by JOHN ADAMS •
In the 12.15.15 meeting at which the Donhoue firm advocated note merely wastewater upgrades but waste importation into Whitewater, Donohue’s Mike Gerbitz contends that Whitewater’s large digester capacity (no longer needed locally) is a boon to the city, and that the earlier expenditure (now excess capacity) justifies a new program of waste importation. In fact, his assessment is ill-considered, and represents a garden-variety economic fallacy that one can easily spot and refute. (Whitewater paid over one million dollars in consulting fees for thinking such as Gerbitz’s.) Here’s his argument, appearing at 29:31 on my video of the meeting (I’ll address his claims about what other communities are doing in future post):
I’ll offer some other perspective….And a number of communities in the upper Midwest, particularly here in Wisconsin have decided to leverage some of the investment previous generations have made to make wastewater treatment more cost effective. Thirty-five years ago somebody built, somebody decided to build, very large digesters, okay? Today you’re only using a very small fraction of that capacity, that this community has paid for, and is done paying for, and has been done paying for a long time….
See, Local Government Discusses a Waste Importation Project @ Vimeo, beginning at 29:31.
Gerbitz either doesn’t know – or hopes his audience doesn’t know – that he’s committed the economic fallacy of sunk costs, of believing that past expenditures should bind future action.
On the contrary, it’s irrational to commit to a future course simply because one has spent lavishly on a project in the past – one looks at the present possibilities for spending, and decides from among all present options what’s best going forward. (I’ll show later that advocacy for waste importation going forward rests – indeed requires – ignorance of the real costs of the project, including the side-effects of it.)
Julia Galef explains the fallacy in greater detail:
So I want to introduce you to a concept known as the sunk cost fallacy. Imagine that you’re going to the store and you’re halfway there when you realize, “Oh wait, the store is actually closed today.” But you figure, “Well, I’ve already come ten blocks. I might as well just go all the way to the store, you know, so that my ten blocks of walking won’t have been wasted. Well, this is a transparently silly way to reason and I doubt that any of us would actually go all the way to a store that we knew was closed just because we’d already gone ten blocks.
But this pattern of thinking is actually surprisingly common in scenarios that are a little bit less obvious than the store example. So, say you’re in a career and it’s becoming more and more clear to you that this isn’t actually a fulfilling career for you. You’d probably be happier somewhere else. But you figure I’ll just stick with it because I don’t want my past ten years of effort and time and money to have been wasted. So the time and money and effort and whatever else you’ve already spent is what we call the sunk cost. It’s gone no matter what you do going forward. And now you’re just trying to decide given that I’ve already spent that money or time or whatever, what choice is going to produce the best outcome for my future.
And the sunk cost fallacy then means making a choice not based on what outcome you think is going to be the best going forward but instead based on a desire not to see your past investment go to waste.
Once you start paying attention to the sunk cost fallacy you’ll probably notice at least a few things that you would like to be doing differently. And maybe those will be small scale things like, in my case, I now am much more willing to just abandon a book if a hundred pages in I conclude that I’m not enjoying it and I’m, you know, not getting any value out of it rather than trudging through the remaining 200-300 pages of the book just because I don’t want, you know, my past investment of a hundred pages, the time that I spent reading those hundred pages to go to waste.
And you might notice some large things, too. For example, I was in a Ph.D. program and started realizing, “Gee, this really isn’t the field for me.” And you know, it’s a shame that I have spent the last several years preparing for and working in this Ph.D. program but I genuinely predict going forward that I’d be happier if I switched to another field. And sometimes it really does take time to fully acknowledge to yourself that you don’t have any good reason to stick with the job or Ph.D. or project that you’ve been working on so long because sunk costs are painful. But at least having the sunk cost fallacy on your radar means that you have the opportunity at least to push past that and make the choice that instead will lead to the better outcomes for your future.
See, Julia Galef: The Sunk Costs Fallacy.
(It’s worth noting that attempts to refute the claim that costs should be calculated on the margin – and sunk costs ignored – often involve either appeals to the value of concealing past mistakes or contentions that people in real-world situations disregard an on-the margin analysis. Concealing past mistakes is of no advantage for policy here, and does not apply to a capacity now fallen into desuetude when a nearby dairy left the area; claims that people sometimes act otherwise than by following a margin-based assessment only show that some – such as Gerbitz, in this case – either act wastefully or seek to persuade others against a rational outcome.)
Over a million dollars for these consultants – but for it all, garden-variety error presented as sound advice.
WHEN GREEN TURNS BROWN: Appearing at whengreenturnsbrown.com and re-posted Mondays @ 10 AM here on FREE WHITEWATER.
Music
Monday Music: Midnight Blue
by JOHN ADAMS •
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 2.22.16
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning, Whitewater.
Monday in the Whippet City will be cloudy with a high of thirty-eight degrees. Sunrise is 6:40 and sunset 5:35, for 10h 54m 54s of daytime. We’ve a full moon today.
Whitewater’s School Board meets tonight at 7 PM.
In one of the most dramatic upsets in Olympic history, the underdog U.S. hockey team, made up of college players, defeats the four-time defending gold-medal winning Soviet team at the XIII Olympic Winter Games in Lake Placid, New York. The Soviet squad, previously regarded as the finest in the world, fell to the youthful American team 4-3 before a frenzied crowd of 10,000 spectators. Two days later, the Americans defeated Finland 4-2 to clinch the hockey gold.
The Soviet team had captured the previous four Olympic hockey golds, going back to 1964, and had not lost an Olympic hockey game since 1968. Three days before the Lake Placid Games began, the Soviets routed the U.S. team 10-3 in an exhibition game at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The Americans looked scrappy, but few blamed them for it–their average age, after all, was only 22, and their team captain, Mike Eruzione, was recruited from the obscurity of the Toledo Blades of the International League.
On this day in 1922, ice isn’t the site of a victory, but the cause of a problem:
1922 – Ice Storm Wreaks Havoc
Unprecedented freezing rain and snow assaulted the Midwest February 21-23, 1922. In Wisconsin the central and southern parts of the state were most severely affected, with the counties between Lake Winnebago and Lake Michigan south to Racine being hardest hit. Ice coated trees and power lines, bringing them down and cutting off electricity, telephone and telegraph services.
Cities were isolated, roads were impassable, rivers rose, streets and basements flooded, and train service stopped or slowed. Near Little Chute a passenger train went off the rails, injuring several crew members. Appleton housed 150 stranded traveling salesmen, near Plymouth a sheet of river ice 35 feet long and nearly three feet thick washed onto the river bank, while in Sheboygan police rescued a flock of chickens and ducks from their flooded coop and a sick woman from her flooded home.
Icy streets caused numerous automobile accidents, but the only reported deaths were a team of horses in Appleton that were electrocuted by a fallen power line. Sources: Wisconsin newspaper accounts, February 22 and 23, including the Appleton Post-Crescent, the Sheboygan Press, Waukesha Daily Freeman, Oshkosh Daily Northwestern.
JigZone‘s puzzle for today is of a jellyfish: