election dreams fulfilled!

Yesterday was like electoral Christmas. Early in the day Indiana’s vote count was finalized, and a 22 point shift led to an Obama win in the state where I grew up! Every state I’ve ever lived in — Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, DC, and Maryland — went for Obama. Nearly every state I’ve visited went for him, too — Ohio, North Carolina, Florida, New Mexico, Oregon, California, Washington, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Delaware, and New York. The two that remain — Georgia and Arizona — were close enough to make me happy. I’ve also visited Tennessee, but it may be a few more cycles (lifetimes) before I see that one shift. (And, by the way, looking at the places I’ve lived, is it any wonder that I find Maryland just about as far south as I’d like to be?)

Which is all to say that I’m happy about the results of Tuesday’s election. I’m happy about the senate races, even those too close to call. Mostly I’m happy about the prospect of the return to the national stage of science, and talking and thinking and debating and considering and trying to do the best for the most with the least. In this, I am wholly process-oriented and while others may be focused on specific outcomes they’d like to see come out of the first Obama administration — stronger protections for wolves and polar bears, renewed freedom of states to regulate emissions, lifting of restrictions on abortion access and counseling around the world (for example) — I’ll just be glad to see these things taken seriously and acted on responsibly. I look forward to hearing substantive conversations in DC again for the first time since I’ve lived out here.

In the meantime, between now and January 20th, I wait with bated breath for the Dems to kick the Lieb to the curb and Alaska, Minnesota, and Georgia to settle their senate races.

election dreams fulfilled!

food : Medivnyk, Ukrainian honey cake

On Monday, Election Eve, I had unwittingly double-booked myself. In addition to committing to help get out the vote in Virginia, I was meant to be contributing a dessert to a lunchtime program with a Russian1 theme. My assigned baked good was Medivnyk, Ukrainian spiced honey cake, which I suspect — and the interwebs suggest — is typically a Christmas cake. A quick search reveals that there are as many variations on this cake as there are families; I found five without much trouble, some of which include ingredients like coffee or orange juice or sour cream (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). I don’t actually know the origin of the recipe I used: I was given a recipe photocopied from a cookbook, and I followed it.

If you’ve helped your mother or grandmother make an Irish-style Christmas cake before, the recipe will be less daunting. You put all the additions in a bowl with flour, in my case currants, raisins, and chopped walnuts. You heat the honey and add the spices to it, remembering that baking soda added to hot honey will make it foam like crazy and therefore you’ll need a taller saucepan than you might initially think based on volume alone. You mix the wet ingredients together into a stiff dough, using a mixer. You add in the flour-coated additions, nearly dislocating your shoulder. (I have to admit that at this point I made the incredibly impolite exclamation of ‘no wonder those Eastern European women are all built like oxen!’ for which I most sincerely and heartily apologize.) If you are stronger than I am, you move on to beating the egg whites until stiff and folding those in; if you are as strong as I am or weaker you call in reinforcements in the form of anyone else in the house at the time to dislocate their shoulder by helping you. Once the egg whites are folded in, the dough returns to a more batter-like consistency that can be spooned into the loaf pans. Loaf pans which you have buttered to within an inch of their inanimate lives and which are themselves lined with parchment paper that has been buttered to within an inch of its life on both sides. You then bake the loaves at what seems like incredibly low heat, 300F, for what seems like an incredibly long time, 90 minutes. In my case, the taller loaf pan required an additional 10 minutes or so, and the shorter one probably would have been fine at 85 minutes.

When the loaves are done, you tap them out of the pans, remove the buttery paper, and let them cool to room temperature. They are then loosely wrapped in wax paper and left to stand at room temperature for 1 or 2 days, depending on how far ahead you planned and when you need to serve them. This is the point when you will be wondering if this is the type of cake you soak in a bowl of brandy; it is not, sadly, that type of cake. It is, though, quite tasty, and perfect as an accompaniment to tea or coffee.

Having acknowledged that this is, in fact, a very nice cake, I have to say that I plan to never make it again. Unless I have a Ukrainian friend to impress, and that friend is an elderly person on their deathbed. Because it was hard and I’m a wimp, that’s why! Seriously, though, this strikes me as a recipe that one makes because it’s what one grew up with and it tastes like home and Christmas at Grandma’s. Like, you know, fruitcake. If Medivnyk isn’t in your particular personal or cultural history, it’s a lot of work for a spiced loaf.

1I know that the Ukraine is not Russia. I expect that the ladies who organized this lunch know it, too. The focus of the day was a visit by Naomi Collins to discuss her book about living in Soviet-era Moscow as an American, and I imagine that time’s linguistic conflation of ‘Russia’ and ‘the USSR’ bore out in the general description of all the dishes as ‘Russian.’

food : Medivnyk, Ukrainian honey cake

election day diary, returns edition

8:05pm Holy god, they aren’t calling Mississippi and Alabama right away? I might yet get my BLOODBATH! In other news, of course Pennsylvania went to Obama, it was polling nearly the same as Michigan and Wisconsin. Thank you for acknowledging that, NBC.

8:13pm THANK YOU, KAY HAGAN! BOOYAH, LIDDY DOLE! BITE ME, JOE LIEBERMAN! In other news, is Shep still going rogue?!

8:25pm The Chinese food delivery person basically ran up to our door, said ‘We’re VERY busy tonight!’ and grabbed the check slip to dash back to the still-running car. Yum, americanized Chinese food!

9:01pm I’m glad to see that the shenanigans around Detroit didn’t make the presidential race competitive there, I have to admit I was a little worried this morning. Also, they are not calling Arizona yet! Woot! Shep just introduced Karl Rove as the architect of something, and I swear I thought it was going to be ‘of McCain’s demise.’ Seems like everyone’s calling Georgia for McCain, which probably means a runoff for the senate seat.

9:19pm OHIO! How sweet was it to hear Shep Smith say ‘There is NO PATH TO THE WHITE HOUSE FOR MCCAIN without Ohio.’

9:35pm We are going to the new bar near our house to celebrate with the masses! Also with big TVs and cable!

10:55pm Virginia goes to Obama! Everybody in the bar cheers! There is lots of speculation about whether Obama will just declare himself the winner before the polls close or what (we wish).

11pm The polls on the west coast close and the bar erupts into cheering and yelling and screaming and clapping and that is why I needed to be somewhere with other people! We listen to McCain’s surprisingly normal-sounding concession (where was this McCain for the past 6 months?) and then we all start crying and clapping and cheering when Obama starts speaking and Jesse is there and everything is just totally surreal and not yet sunk in.

12:30am We keep hoping they will call Indiana, but they haven’t yet. Everybody leaves after we all hug each other and shake hands and congratulate each other and remark upon the enormity of the first black president of the United States. Also we express the desire to be at the White House and regret that the metro isn’t running because it’s a weekday. Instead, we walk home and I have my partner take my picture with our Obama yard sign.

1:15am I am still really wishing we still lived a mile north of the White House so we could join the ecstatic crowds down there! And also waiting for the Indiana result to be finalized; it’s been holding at 99% reporting and a 20k gap for a while now.

election day diary, returns edition

my personal election day hopes and dreams

Obviously the presidential race is the big ticket item, and a future senate majority is the icing on the cake. I’m sure each of you also has our own personal small hope and dream for tonight’s results, and I’m no different.

First, my hope is that Kay Hagan’s race to unseat Senator Liddy Dole in North Carolina is the first one called tonight. Thanks to Dole’s supreme misstep last week, of slandering a Sunday school teacher who has turned out to be totally hardcore, the race is pretty much in the bag. Having it called first, though, will mean that Kay Hagan (badass) will be the senator who hits the magic 50 and makes Joe Lieberman finally officially irrevocably irrelevant. I hope they have a runner ready to personally deliver the memo to his office as soon as all North Carolina precincts are done reporting. I don’t know who I’ll love to hate when Joe’s been kicked to the curb, but I have no doubt someone will emerge.

Second, my dream is of an Obama Indiana. Whether this election or next, I will be cheering on every percentage tick upwards in the balance of Democrats to Republicans in the state where I grew up. More than just bragging rights, I want to see a black man win the majority of the vote in a place where stupid racist crap still happens all too frequently. I want to be able to believe that people walking off their jobs to protest a smear campaign is the true heart of where I grew up.

In the intervening hours between now and when these results might be known, I’ll be in Virginia with umbrellas.

my personal election day hopes and dreams

election day diary

7:30am First pot of coffee of the day brewed! We are checking out the morning TV news, for the first time in memory, to see how long the lines are in Virginia. Not too long, and we catch one really happy looking black guy about our age coming out of the polls and waving to the news cameras. It’s on!

8:30am I go over to our polling place to check out the length of the line (still inside the building) and to talk to the folks in charge about bringing over some coffee for the voters. I get the all clear and come back home to make it in a pot I borrowed from the Women’s Club, with a little help from the interwebs.

9:30am The coffee finally finishes percolating and I take it over to the school with some cups. The line is small now, just inside the main room. Realizing that I don’t have anything to offer folks with this coffee, I head to the grocery store, to pick up some fake creamer, sugar packets, and more cups.

10:30am When I get back to the school — with day old donuts in tow! — the line is again stretching outside. I am heartened to see that the Obama volunteers are still outside: if they are at our polling place in Prince George’s County, Maryland, they are truly everywhere. Once inside, I relocate the coffee station to the hallway from right beside where you check in, figuring there would be more takers farther back in the line. Former mayor and current Town Council member Margaret Mallino happened to be in line just then, and graciously agreed to pose for a shot near my new coffee station.

11am Meanwhile, back at the ranch, I’m finally mixing up the cookie dough I didn’t get to last night. It’ll go into the fridge to chill while I shower (!) and then into the oven and it’s off to Virginia for the afternoon. Somewhere in there a lunch consisting of something other than day old donuts will get consumed. Depending on demand, I may perk another pot of coffee at the school for the post-lunch crowd before heading out.

1:30pm A guy I went to junior high with, who now lives in Florida and I’ll refer to as Rainbow941, sent me his analysis while I was in the kitchen making Pumpkin Cookies For Obama: “This is the classic mismatch. Horrible economy, stagnant war bleeding the country dry, old out of touch candidate versus the new, free- thinking, idiologically super hot liberal. GAME OVER.” With which I tend to agree; a similar analysis led me to observe to my partner last week that I could ‘totally see’ why voters elected FDR over and over and over until he died. Which reminds me to share with you where the voting populous was with regard to this very matchup two years ago (no wonder McCain always looked like a pole was jammed somewhere unpleasant during joint appearances). I will feel sorry for the old dude and his dramatic decline at exactly 1:59am this evening, or whenever we get the Alaska results, whichever comes later.

2:30pm It’s now raining, lightly but steadily, and is predicted to keep doing so all night. I am heading to Virginia for the next few hours, to do whatever I can to support the voters and Obama volunteers. Here’s what you can do for me (and Barack Obama!) while I’m gone: (1) Live somewhere warm? (Arizona, Florida, New Mexico!) Buy a 24 pack of water bottles at your local store and drive it to your local polling place; (2) Live somewhere cold? (Colorado, Montana, Pennsylvania!) Buy a gallon of coffee at your local Dunkin Donuts or Starbucks and drive it to your local polling place; (3) Live somewhere rainy? (Virginia, Ohio, North Carolina!) Buy a few cheap umbrellas and drop them off at your local polling place; (4) Got more time than money? Stop by your local GOTV office and help them with whatever they’re doing; (5) Got more free minutes than time or money? Call voters from your own phone; and (6) Do all of this in the evening after work! Lines are going to be long well after the polls close, and poll workers — your neighbors who will have all been there since an hour before the polls opened this morning — and voters alike will thank you.

3:15pm Traffic is slow as I approach ‘that damn drawbridge,’ however it’s mostly going the other way out of the city, which makes me hopeful that people are rushing home to make sure to be able to vote. Once I get to Englin’s house, I make phone calls for about half an hour. I really hate making phone calls, by the way, but that’s what there is to do, so I do it. The local effort is so under control, though, that the calls are to Virginia Beach, in support of Glenn Nye‘s congressional race. As part of the organizing efforts extraordinaire, folks have canvassed the neighborhood twice already by 4:30pm to determine who’s voted. There are a few people left who they haven’t caught, so I head out for another loop of the surrounding blocks to knock on doors as ask if folks have voted. They have or they aren’t home or, in the case of two guys I catch on their porch, they’re on their way to do so right now.

5pm I am getting concerned about getting back to Maryland, and I want to stop at the polls themselves with the snacks I’ve brought. I was hoping for mobs of people after work, so that I could get some good pictures. Apparently I needed to be in Virginia at 6am to get those shots; by 5pm everything is moving along quickly. The Obama volunteers and Election Protection folks are still there, though, so I stop at two local schools and offer up cookies on my way back out of town.

6:30pm Once home, we head right over to the elementary school so that my partner can vote. Someone has very kindly cleaned up the coffeepot that I left there earlier in the day, and I pass around the remaining cookies to my local poll workers and get my photo taken by the local AP guy. The afternoon has been really slow (thus the opportunity to clean up the coffeepot) and everyone’s looking like they’ll be very glad to see the other side of 8pm. We also ran into our new neighbor, who’d been doing Election Protection down in southern Virginia all day. She tells us that she got stuck behind the Obama motorcade on the road last night and went all day on only three hours of sleep, and therefore declines our offer to hang out at our place and drink until the wee hours.

7:30pm Here we are back in our house, TV on, websites loaded, minimal precincts reporting as of yet. Expected first toast: Kay Hagan! In the meantime, I will be glued to the Indiana Secretary of State site. And, the returns blogging will continue in a new post.

election day diary