Miscellanea
Sep. 7th, 2002 09:35 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Bateman's Banana Bread Beer
A deferred pleasure, this. I failed to sample it before supplies ran out at the folk festival. I bought a bottle several weeks ago, but have since had to resort to Co-Proxamol at inconvenient times and hence to avoid alcohol. Finally, an intense banana aroma when the cap comes off and a pleasant, albeit slightly metallic (that could be the pewter tankard, but it doesn't normally intrude), ripe to the point of over-ripeness banana flavour remaining in the mouth. Reminds me of the state I like bananas to get to before I make them into banana cake. Doesn't strike me as particularly potent (and heck I could do with a bit of oblivion right now), but I suspect I'd be better company now than I have been in days (and here I am on my own). A touch of the standard "beery cheery" effect.
Nice, and there's no competition for bananas around here! All mine, all mine.
Abandoned Schemes
I once pointed out a gap amongst all the themed poetry anthologies, of which there are probably more now than there were in my student days, for The [...insert your favourite imprint here...] Book of Dead Pet Poetry. Plenty of candidates for this one. I'm sure there's a market.
I also, more recently (probably drunkenly at my birthday party last year), proposed a compilation album of tracks based on Greensleeves. Just from the pile of CDs on top of the TV I find: Amsterdam on Scott Walker Sings Jacques Brel, Leaving Greensleeves on Leonard Cohen's New Skin for the Old Ceremony, and the eponymous track on Blackmore's Night's Shadow of the Moon. I've a horrible feeling there are many more. Perhaps we'll stick to the sad and cynical renditions.
Sweet (?) Typo
In last week's Grauniad's Review section's contents page, the following item is listed: "33 Children's books: the enthralling Neil Garman, by Philip Pullman". At least the name was correct on page 33. (Obsessive-compulsive proof-reading: spot the technical writer. The ravens passed the "offending" page to other technical author in the household, who failed to spot the typo. So that's competitive obsessive-compulsive proof-reading.)