It was a real winter week this week! And as I think about the highlights, a lot of them are food related. Sorry about that.
I was off work on Monday for Presidents' Day, and the conditions were such that I thought it was a good opportunity to go to Cave Peak again, just as I had done on Valentine's Day. It was a little less muddy this time, and it was overcast, which made it an overall more enjoyable run than two days earlier.
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| This is the turnoff to go up to Rudy's Flat, which was still too snowy and icy for my tastes |
I wanted to do something presidenty for Presidents' Day, so I took my dad down to Draper so we could go to Brooker's Founding Flavors, a quirky local chain of ice cream shops themed around the American Revolution. The ice cream flavors are mostly named after eighteenth-century figures, and they have eighteenth-century-style hot chocolate. I had hot chocolate that was supposedly Jefferson's recipe, and I had a scoop of Abraham Lincoln birthday cake ice cream in it. (Of course, Lincoln is an exception to the overal eighteenth-century theme.)
On Mardi Gras last year, I felt like getting a king cake, but I didn't want an entire cake at home, so I took it to work. My supervisor got the baby in the cake, so she vowed to make one for 2026. And she did! She likes baking, and I was impressed that hers tasted like a professionally made cake.Near our office is a cupcake shop called So Cupcake, and they announced recently they're shuttering at the end of the month. Since it's green season, I went and got a lime cupcake for the very last time. I don't go to bakeries/dessert spots as often as I have in the past, but so many good ones have closed that I feel like I should go to them more to keep them afloat.
Then Wednesday we actually had a snowstorm! We've had little snowstorms on the hill since the end of November, but this was the first substantial one. I remember the days after Thanksgiving being sad because we hadn't had snow yet, but then I looked forward to the cozy, snowy season still to come. And . . . it didn't come. I would listen to a spooky Christmas album and think how it was a spookily worrying Christmas season. And then January wasn't any better. So I'm glad we finally got snow, even if it wasn't snowy for the traditionally snowy holidays. So now I know that nature still knows how to snow. But does nature still know how to snow on Christmas?
I had to drive down the snowy roads for my appointment at The Park Barbershop. The first time I went to them in August, I followed my appointment by going to a boba place in North Salt Lake for the first time. Since it's green season, I went to the boba place again and got an avocado smoothie.
I'm going to Taiwan this week, so I brought in my suitcase, and Reggie enjoyed playing in it. I will miss him while we're gone.
Because of snow, I swam with the swim team on Tuesday and Thursday, and Friday I went on a street run. Though I prefer trails and abhor ice, it was a nice evening for a run, as long as I was bundled up.
Friday I received my order of little green lights for my gold St. Patrick's Day tree. (I have some battery lights, but I don't like burning through the batteries, to say nothing of the hassle of turning them on.) And I also got a set of string lights where you can change the colors with a remote.
A few weeks ago, a friend invited a large group of people to go snowshoeing or cross-country skiing at Solitude Resort, an event called Nordic Nights. Only four of us ended up going, which made me feel better about the times I've invited people to things and no one has come. I took an old set of snowshoes that my sister bought decades ago (probably late '90s). As I put them on, I realized they were broken, so I strapped them on my boots as best I could—I didn't want to pay the money, or deal with the hassle, of renting snowshoes.
There was a one-kilometer snowshoe trail around Silver Lake, and there were little LED candles in the snow to light the way. While we were traversing the trail, one of my snowshoes came off, and I didn't feel like putting it back on if it was just going to come off again. So I had one snowshoe and one boot, and I got to learn the physics of snowshoes versus boots.
I happened to see an old coworker from Sundance (2019 and 2020 festivals) there with her boyfriend. We chatted a bit, and she asked, "Do you still do the thing were you only eat holiday treats?" And then I think her boyfriend said something like, "Oh, this is the guy?" Well, it was something to indicate they had talked about me before. 😆 And then later, one of my friends asked me if I was going to have one of the complimentary s'mores. I said, "I only eat s'mores around the Fourth of July." An older woman walking by heard me and said, "I'm a s'more snob."
It was a fun evening, and it was nice to take advantage of winter. But I didn't think it was worth the price and the crowds if I could just go snowshoeing closer to home. (Well, in a normal year I could.)
It was also an eventful week in dreamland: putting a pet scorpion in a bag of orange and black caramel corn; sleeping next to a lion; feeding treats to a cat that disguised itself as a tortilla and was sitting in a bag of tortillas; going to the Olympics; getting a job at a barbershop / shoe store even though I had zero training, and a client with smallpox-like welts on his skin hugging me.







