Saturday, November 19, 2016

Zupas Wisconsin Cauliflower Soup

Ingredients
Zupas Wisconsin Cauliflower Soup


  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 white onion, diced
  • 2 teaspoons minced garlic  Coupons
  • ¼ cup flour
  • 2 cups milk
  • 3 cups chicken broth (or vegetable broth)
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 head cauliflower, chopped
  • 1 cup shredded pepperjack cheese
  • 2 cups shredded sharp white cheddar cheese

Instructions

  1. Melt butter in a large pot. Add garlic and onion and sauté until onions are tender. Add flour and stir until mixture clumps up.
  2. Gradually whisk in milk. Add broth, salt, and cauliflower. Simmer for 15 minutes or until cauliflower is tender.
  3. Transfer soup to a blender and pulse until smooth. Return soup to pot. Add cheeses and stir until melted and combined with soup. Serve with extra cheese if desired.

References

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Church in Andorra Branch in Spain

When I travel I always try to go to church on Sundays. I have always found interesting people in all of my travels. It is also fun to see how this global church is so much the same no matter where I travel with some of the small differences. In my latest travels I got to attend church in Andorra. Andorra is a small country in the middle of the Pyrenees. The Andorran Branch was very unique in its own special way. This time I got to experience this with my wife and one of my sons, Dallin, that just got home from his Mission to Denver Colorado.


First the Andorra Branch is not in the country of Andorra but in Spain, specifically in a little town, Lleida. The Branch actually covers all of Andorra and several small towns and villages in the Northern part of Spain. We met the Branch President and his Wife, President and Sister Fower and two young men missionaries (Elders). The missionary couple are from Utah and this is their second mission. Their previous mission was to South Africa.  They have been out in this mission for 3 months. They have been called to help revitalize this little branch in the Lord's vineyard. The Branch has about 25-30 active members and would have more coming except for the long distances some people have to travel to come to church.. The Branch used to meet in Andorra but many of the Spanish members did not have passports to get across the border to Andorra each Sunday. So they switched the meeting place to Spain. According to President Fower, the plan is to strengthen this Branch and then get things happening in Andorra as well.

President and Sister Fower are doing great work for this fledgling branch. They actually live in a small farm house that the branch members come and help with gardening and take care of chickens. The Fowers bought the farm to help teach the members to be more self sufficient.  You can tell that the members absolutely enjoy working with the Fowers.

Sacrament meeting was great and we could really feel the spirit. Even though we don't speak spanish we could understand most of what was being said.  It is great to hear the saints sing the hymns as well. We did our best to sing in spanish and I am sure we helped contribute to this small branches music that day. At the beginning of the meeting, the branch president announced the program and over the pulpit asked Dallin, in Spanish, if he would get up and bare his testimony as one of the talks. For some reason we could understand everything and Dallin agreed. Dallin did a great job.

Overall, another great Sunday in a foreign land. As always the familiarity of Church always brings comfort and new friends.

DWP


Friday, November 4, 2016

Barcelona Culinary Video Oct 2016


Check out our experience in Barcelona with Food and Markets. We had a great time in Barcelona with our Son Dallin walking the Ramblas and the Gothic Quarter of Barcelona. What a great trip.

Check out more Blogs and Videos at http://darrenpulsipher.blogspot.com


DWP



Sunday, July 3, 2016

Manti Pageant - A lost art of american history

We recently had the opportunity to take my kids to the Manti Pageant. This is a pageant as dictionary.com explains it: "a public entertainment consisting of a procession of people in elaborate, colorful costumes, or an outdoor performance of a historical scene." Manti has been the home of the Mormon Miracle Pageant for 50 years. This small town in central Utah, population of about 3300 people, swells to over 18,000 people for the pageant each night for two weeks except for Sunday and Monday. They estimate over 150,000 people come each year to see the free pageant. It typically starts at 9:30pm and ends at 11pm. You should probably have a hotel in one of the bigger towns near by or expect to sit in traffic for about 2 hours to get back to Provo, UT.

The Pageant this year was special because it was the 50th anniversary, happening right there on Temple hill. It was a wonderful evening. One of the things you notice when it gets dark is how many stars are visible. Being from a "light polluted" city in California, we don't get to see all of the stars that we could see in Manti. It was hard not to look at the beautiful night sky and ponder all the great things we have been given in this life.

That is part of the allure of the pageant, the setting. The pageant is held outside at the base of
the small hill that the magnificent Manti Temple sits. The temple is the backdrop to the stage that looks about the size of a football field. The pageant starts when it is dark. There are some spectacular fire effects and lighting that help tell the story of how the people settled the area. It is a wonderful story of how their faith, courage, passion, and drive led them to central Utah and how they built their Zion in Sanpete County.

This pageant has special meaning to me and my family as my family comes from this area. They came to settle in Sanpete county in the 1880's following the Latter-day Saints across the plains from Norway and Wales. They settled in this area and raised their families there. I still have many cousins that live in the area. One of my cousins was key in putting the pageant on this year.

One of the most moving moments was when the Angel Moroni is standing on top of the west tower of the temple (This is actually a person standing there all dressed in white, most LDS temples have a statute on the temple, but this is one that does not have the Angel Moroni on the top of its spire). It is a highlight of the pageant. The Angel Moroni standing on the spire of the temple,was the only thing lit up, when a shooting star streaked across the sky, right over his head. That was just an added bonus to a wonderful evening with my kids.

So if you ever want a great night out, with some fun and inspiring entertainment, check out a historical pageant near you. You might be surprised how entertaining and knowledgeable, they can be.


DWP

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Facetime, Hangouts, Skype - Giving a voice to the deaf

I saw something for the first time at the Las Vegas airport this week. I was travelling home after a hot, 110+ degrees,  couple of days at the Nutantix .NEXT conference. I know what you are thinking. You saw something different in Las Vegas? Surprise, Surprise!!

As I normally do, I plugged in my head phones and listened to some relaxing music, today's choice was Turn Blue by the Black Keys. I know, not your typical relaxing music, but it is great to work to. So there I was completely in my programming zone. Nothing was distracting me. Something my wife can attest. When I am in my programming zone I am a total zombie. After about a half hour, I looked up for just a second, and I saw something I have never seen before.

 I saw an older man holding his cell phone in one hand about arms length, like he was taking a selfie. But he was not taking a selfie. He was signing to the person on the phone. He was using one of the many video calling technologies that are available. I only saw one side of the conversation but it was so expressive. It was actually moving to watch him communicate with his loved one through this little screen in his hand. What an incredible sight to see. Technology being used to actually bring people closer together, instead of being that easy distraction in someone's hand. I am sure the creators of video conferencing where not thinking about how the deaf could communicate with each  other, separated by hundreds of miles, but there it was happening right before me.

So I started thinking. The deaf have been using TTY services and technology to basically text each other for decades (started in 1960s). One of the things that was always missing was the emotion in the speech. Of course that was solved by emoticons which have become common place in text messaging today. My mother-in-law uses emoticons with every text she sends. Thanks Sheila. :-) But emoticons cannot show the expressions that I saw in the 5 minute signing conversation in the Las Vegas Airport. It was almost like watching an opera in a different language (Since I don't speak American Sign Language). So much expression and emotion was being expressed in that conversation. Something that a normal phone call or text just cannot show.

I am going to try and turn on my video camera more often when talking to people remotely. It will accomplish a couple of things. One it will force me to pay attention and only have one conversation at a time. (Think answering email during an hour long meeting). Second, I will get to see people's non-verbal communication during our discussion. Most emotion is shared through non-verbal communication. Lastly, It will give me an excuse to video call my granddaughter who lives 10 hours away, more often. So if you get a video call from me, answer it. Let's have a complete "emotional" conversation. Not just a non-emotional text or telephone call.

DWP



Nutanix is hot in Las Vegas

Nutanix had a great conference in Las Vegas this week. Over 2300 attendees. I have been watching this company over the last couple of years and it is great to see how they are growing and how their user/ potentiality user base is growing.

They have been targeting the hyper-converged cloud space with a focus on Software Defined Storage. They have had success in this space driving Server Based Storage as a replacement to traditional SAN devices. However, they have upped their game. They have a complete SDI solution including Orchestration, Software Defined Compute, Software Defined Storage, Software Defined Network and a self-service portal.

New Technologies

Here is a list of new technologies they have developed:

  • Analytics tools that administrators can use for capacity planning, what-if scenarios, and root cause trouble shooting. 
  • Increased the functionality of their Acropolis Hypervisor so that it behaves more like a hybrid hypervisor, talking to multiple heterogeneous hypervisors at the same time.
  • Migration tool for VMs to Containers. App-aware migration. So it is actually dissecting your VM for the applications running on it and then creating a docker container that matches. Very cool technology.
  • Extended functionality of their Data Fabric technology to include traditional storage for Brown field and green field integration.
  • Acropolis is supporting scheduling containers just like they have done with VMs. They are making data and compute optimized
  • Nutanix is moving up the stack. They are talking more about application and services provisioning on infrastructure, than just infrastructure.
  • Community Edition Nutanix was shown on Intel's Skull Canyon NUC. This is targeted to the developers of apps on top of Nutanix. They are building a development community around their software.

Impressions

Overall Nutanix looks like it has great momentum. This conference had 3 times more people than last year. It was not just developers at this conference. There was a good mix of developers, practitioners, and decision makers. From this conference it looks like Nutanix is here to stay.

DWP

Monday, May 23, 2016

American Rite of Passage 5th grade overnight field trip

CA poppies on one of the hikes
I recently had the opportunity to go with my daughter, as a chaperone, on her 5th grade overnight field trip. The trip reminded me of my 5th grade field trip I took so many years ago.  It was fascinating to me how some things haven't changed over the last 37 years and how different other things are .

The Same old thing

First, the camp focus and location.  My daughters camp was at Marin Headlands, just north of San Francisco. It was housed at an old Cold War missile base. It was a very cool location, right next to the beach. There are miles of hiking trails, places to see and wildlife everywhere.  My 5th grade camp was in the Sierra Nevada mountains, just south of Yosemite National Park. If I remember my camp, from almost 40 years ago, we talked about nature, ecology, and environmentalism. Things have not changed. They still teach the same things, but they sure made them more fun than I remembered, and gave them new names. Like Garbology. 

Garbology

Ice Plant on one the hikes.
That is right, the study of garbage. Specifically the amount of garbage the kids produced while at camp. This was brilliant! They assigned kids to sort the garbage after each meal. Liquid,  edible, and non-edible. They weighed it and then kept track. This taught the kids great scientific methods, and gave them a goal to achieve after each meal. In the evenings they would look at the results. Great lesson on so many levels.

Hiking

Hiking seems to be one of those things that all 5th grade camps seem to have. I totally understand the philosophy around this. It gets the kids out in nature, they get to see the beautiful world that we live in and most of all they are dead tired at night. :) As a chaperone I appreciated the exhausted kids at night. We really did not have to tell the kids to be quiet very often. Lights out at 9:15pm and by 9:30pm most of the kids were already asleep. Maybe we should do that with my kids at home. Hike them around the neighborhood for 6 hours and then tell them to go to bed. 

Suspension bridge to St.
Bonita Light House
The hikes at Marin Headlands are incredible. With ocean views and beaches all around, every hike had beautiful views and great learning experiences for the kids. Because Marin Headlands was an old missile base there are lots of old bunkers and batteries for the kids to explore and learn about. Most fascinating was and old gun turret hole that had been filled up with water and wildlife had taken it over. 'Newt Nation" as it is called by the camp. The kids got to see an ecosystem of newts, frogs, snakes, and insects and how they have overtaken something in a short 30 years since it was last used. 

One thing that one of the camp "Educators" mentioned, is that kids today are not as in shape as they have been in the last 15-20 years, the length they had been working at these camps. Too much screen time. The "Educators" are pretty good about pushing the kids and not listening to the complaining. And really only the first hike was the only time I heard complaining. But by the third day the complaining was back, but mostly by the parent chaperones. One of those may or may not have been me.

Home Sickness

Hawk Cove near Camp
One thing that has not changed is kids and home sickness. For many of these kids this was the first time staying away from their parents. And those are typically the ones that were having the hardest time. Luckily all of the kids made it through the first night with only a couple calls home, but no one leaving. I remember the same thing from my 5th grade trip. 

For many of the kids at the camp this was also the first time the kids have lived in a dormitory. One thing they learn quickly is they have no privacy. There was some difference from when I went to camp. The showers when I went were just an open bathroom with shower heads. Everyone was scared to take a shower. I only remember one or two kids taking showers in the three days of camp. I was not one of them. The showers for these kids were isolated stalls with shower curtains.  So we had more than half the kids take showers each day and about 75% took them at least once.

Madeline and a WW II gun

Bunk beds

Bunk beds have always been part of 5th grade camp and this was no different. The only difference this time is as an adult, I had to share a room with 2 bunk beds and 3 fully grown men. Being 6 feet tall I would have thought that I would get the bottom bunk. But the other two guys I was with were taller. And because the bottom bunk did not have a foot-board or headboard I ended up on the top bunk. It has been years. I think my mission was the last time I was on the top bunk.

Luggage and Hair products

I have never seen so much luggage for 3 days and 2 nights in my life. I think there should be a rule that you must carry your own luggage. No roller boards. You have to carry your own stuff. Kids were coming with enough clothes to survive for weeks. I blame roller-board luggage for this. The problem with roller-board luggage is they do not work well in the grass or dirt. So we had several kids not able to get their luggage where it needed to be.

Madeline on the beach
Another thing I do not remember from my 5th grade days was the amount of hair products the boys had. Hair Gel, Gorilla Snot, Hair spray, etc. No wonder the kid's suitcases where so large, they had to bring everything from the bathroom with them.  Some of the boys were actually late to breakfast because they were doing their hair. Can you believe that? What is happening to our children :)

Right of Passage

In the end it was great to get to know these kids in an unfamiliar environment. Watch some of them conquer their fears and work together to solve problems. I especially enjoyed the time I got to spend with my daughter Madeline and watch her face challenges and overcome them. 

DWP