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Jazz pioneer Charles Mingus (1922-1979) had a secret recipe for eggnog that by all accounts was delicious, and incredibly potent. He shared the recipe with biographer Janet Coleman who published it in her book Mingus/Mingus: Two Memoirs. Here’s the brew below, followed by Mingus’s “Moanin’.”

Charles Mingus’s Egg Nog

* Separate one egg for one person. Each person gets an egg.
* Two sugars for each egg, each person.
* One shot of rum, one shot of brandy per person.
* Put all the yolks into one big pan, with some milk.
* That’s where the 151 proof rum goes. Put it in gradually or it’ll burn the eggs,
* OK. The whites are separate and the cream is separate.
* In another pot- depending on how many people- put in one shot of each, rum and brandy. (This is after you whip your whites and your cream.)
* Pour it over the top of the milk and yolks.
* One teaspoon of sugar. Brandy and rum.
* Actually you mix it all together.
* Yes, a lot of nutmeg. Fresh nutmeg. And stir it up.
* You don’t need ice cream unless you’ve got people coming and you need to keep it cold. Vanilla ice cream. You can use eggnog. I use vanilla ice cream.
* Right, taste for flavor. Bourbon? I use Jamaica Rum in there. Jamaican Rums. Or I’ll put rye in it. Scotch. It depends.

See, it depends on how drunk I get while I’m tasting it.

 

Steve Unger, who dances on sidewalks in Holladay and Cottonwood Heights, Utah, faced the music in court on Wednesday afternoon after some police officers on the beat apparently did not appreciate his act. Following the court appearance, he has a Nov. 18 jury trial to face disorderly conduct charges. For Wednesday’s court appearance he wore a suit, saying he has never worn one before and never will again.

“What happened to me is pretty absurd,” Unger said. “I’m hoping the judge issues a reprimand to the people who did this to me.” Nearly every day, the 68-year-old retiree dons selections from his brightly coloured wardrobe, ties a bandana around his clean-shaven head, throws on the ear buds, plugs into his smart phone packed with tunes, and heads outdoors. He walks and dances up to 10 miles, sometimes bouncing a rubber ball as he “glides” along streets, avenues and lanes.

YouTube link.

Children from the local junior high say hello, and passers-by in cars wave. But in late August, Unger’s dancing hit a sour note. His improvised moves attracted the attention of Cottonwood Heights police, who said he was blocking traffic. A police officer was dispatched, said she observed him for a time, and then later approached with two others officers. Unger said they asked for his identification, which he initially declined to provide. He was cuffed and given a citation, charging him with disorderly conduct, failure to identify himself, and interference with an arresting officer.

“Everything I did was cooperative,” Unger said. “A 160 pound, 68-year-old man is going to fight with three police officers?” Cottonwood Heights police chief Robbie Russo was in the courtroom on Wednesday and said his officers acted appropriately dealing with Unger and said there are two sides to the story of his charges. Unger said he is not “as angry as a lot of people are about it.” Still, he maintained there’s a “need to underline accountability for police officers.” Before court, Unger said expected the case to be dismissed, adding, “If it’s not dismissed, I’ll ask for a jury trial.”

There’s a news video here.

Feeling tortured by the music his father was playing in the car, a teenager in south west Germany made a desperate plea for help and ended up dragging the police into the family quarrel.

The 15-year-old in Rhineland-Palatinate scrawled a simple word on a piece of paper and placed it against the cars’ rear passenger window. It read: “Hilfe”, German for help.

The teenager could no longer take the Schlager music his father was listening to on the radio and needed an out. A concerned driver noticed the plea and called the police. After officers caught up with the father and son in Enkenbach they were able to confirm that the son was in no immediate danger.

The teenager was apparently unaware of the repercussions of his action, which the police proceeded to impress upon him. “Whether the father will start playing music that appeals to his son’s taste in the future is unclear,” police said. Schlager music is cheesy, sing-along pop music which saw its heyday in the 1960s. It has recently had something of a revival with many German men over the age of 40.

from Nothing To Do With Arbroath