Monday, June 16, 2008

Favorite Libations

For fun here's a list of some of my favorite beers in the world. Will update this as I experience new ones! Cheers, Dr. Kowawa

Beers:

IPAs

Island Brewing Company's Island IPA -- from our local brewery in Carpinteria, CA this is one of my favorite IPAs. In winter / spring also try their seasonal Big Island Double IPA.

Dogfish Head -- 90 Minute IPA -- a front-loaded, powerful yet refined IPA deserving of the praise it has received

Bear Republic -- Racer 5 IPA -- found this one at my local Capital Ale House in Richmond, VA and fell in love . . .

Lagers

Grolsch Lager -- the beer with the funny stopper has the skunky goodness; this one is one of Dr. Sweewawa's favorites too

Samual Adams -- Brewer Patriot

Pilsner

Pilsner Urquell -- this Czech beer is one of the best in the world

Ales

Sierra Nevada Pale Ale -- one of the best beers from the California region, mellow delicious

Boddington's Pub Ale -- this ale from Manchester, UK has a unique in-the-can widget that aerates the beer on pouring giving it the characteristic creamy head and smooth body

Anchor Steam Christmas Ale -- every year the folks in San Francisco create a new recipe for this christmas offering, for the purpose of "joy and celebration of the newness of life." It's always a winner.

Miscellaneous

Kasteel Triple -- this is an amazing Belgian beer I first tried at (of all places) a Vietnamese retaurant in Richmond, VA called Mekong. Simply amazing, one of the best beers in the world

Van Steenberge's Piraat -- another very special Belgian beer that we tried at the Mekong restaurant. Wow!

Favorite Champagne

Piper Heidsieck -- enjoyed a bottle of this fine champagne with my parents to celebrate finishing my 3rd year of medical school!

Cabernet Sauvignon

Line 39 Cabernet Sauvignon 2007 -- this wine costs about $10, is from the Lake County region (nestled between Sonoma and Napa), and has delightful hints chewy fruits

Chateau Diana 1221 Cabernet Cuvee -- blend of Sonoma and Napa grapes, complex nutty fruity flavory with persistent pleasant finish

- find link for Chilean Cab, "Natura"

Pinot Noir

Freestone Vineyards 2008 Fogdog Pinot Noir -- "has an intense perfumed bouquet of violets, red cherry, tangerine, spice and black tea, with subtle hints of roasted coffee and creamy oak in the background" ... really enjoyed this one, though pricey at $30 a bottle

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Norwegian Wooten

Victor Wooten performs the Beatles' Norwegian Wood. Cheers, Dr. Kowawa

Saturday, June 7, 2008

The music by the guillotine --- Guang Ling San

The Rice pudding and Qu Yuan

---- in memory of the Duan Wu Festival


One of my earliest memories has to do with rice pudding. When I look back upon my childhood, there is a hint of the faint scent of bamboo leaves in almost anything I can remember. Peel off those dark green leaves with thin ropes around them and the white, jade-like sweet rice with a spell of inviting smell would appear in front of your eyes. Sometimes I think it’s all the fun from my childhood memories as well as the rice puddings that are wrapped in those leaves.

The time to eat rice puddings comes once a year, on the Duan Wu Festival, also referred to as the Dragon Boat Festival. Growing up in the city, I never associated with that name. I never saw any dragon boats with my own eyes anyway. Many years passed, numerous rice puddings with different fillings---mung beans, sweet beans, pork, etc were consumed before suddenly, on one Duan Wu Festival, right after I unwrapped a rice pudding and was busy licking my sticky fingers, a thoughtful question came to my mind:

“Dad, why do we make rice puddings on Duan Wu Festival again? I mean, I know the legend says you’re supposed to throw them into the river to feed the fish----isn’t that kind of odd?”

“So the fish wouldn’t eat the body of Master Qu Yuan.” said my Dad.

It turned out that I had sadly missed the whole point of this festival. It is a festival in memory of one of the greatest poets in Chinese history, but I hadn’t even heard of his name after consuming 80 rice puddings at the very least.

Qu Yuan lived during the Warring States period, when China was split up into seven states, and died around 270 BC or so --- about 200 years later than Confucius. His contribution to Chinese folksongs and poems are as unique and huge as that of Homer to the Greek epic. But, instead of being a blind lyric poet, Qu Yuan descended from the royal house of Chu (one of the states during the Warring States Period), served in high offices and was a political activist until his exile.

Qu Yuan foresaw the danger of Qin (another state) and strongly opposed the alliance with the state. Those who read Chinese history know that in another 50 years or so, Qin would finish conquering all the other 6 states and unite China, but people around Qu Yuan had no way to tell. The young scholar-official placed his pride and integrity above everything else, which unfortunately made him an unsuccessful politician. It wasn’t long before he became the target of slander from the corrupt and timid ministers who voted for allying with Qin around him. His most loyal counselor was banished and he himself was exiled.

The exile must have been a most depressing experience for Qu Yuan, but Chinese culture benefited from it. It was during this 10 year long trip the sad scholar collected numerous folksongs from the towns and villages south of the Long River, organized them into verses with high literature values, and wrote many narrative poems himself expressing his fervent love for his state and his deepest concern for her future.

These works are some of the earliest scholarly poems in Chinese history. They paved the way for poem development in the 2000 years that followed, set the tone for all the beautiful haiku that were to appear, as well as reaching the peak of narrative epic, a position that’s not to be challenged in the entire Chinese literature history.

But the poet remained an innocent fellow. For, you see, an innocent soul is the number one necessity for poetry.

A best illustration of his innocence is the story the fisherman. Qu Yuan wondered to a river and met a fisherman hermit by the bank one day. His long white robe had mud stains on the bottom and curved hem on the edge. A gust of wind blew across the river, bringing the mixed smell of fishes and wet grass as well as boat songs from the distant islands. His wide sleeves and loose sash rose with the wind, his white jade ornament that hung from the sash jingled accordingly. He was tired and curious as he had always been during the trip, he started a conversation with the fisherman.

They talked about his unfulfilled dreams, his loyalty for the King, and his unfair exile. “So why don’t you let go of yourself and drift with the waves?” Said the fisherman on the boat.

But the poet could not. Whether he WOULD not, or COULD not, we don’t know----maybe both. “The entire world is drunk, I am the only one sober. The entire world is filthy, I am the only one clean.” was his reply. He refused to join the current, let go of his own beliefs and drift in the waves.

I found this story to be a very symbolic image. You stand by the river of life, watching the gigantic trend carrying away millions of souls, trying to decide whether you should jump in and join them, or stand by as a lonely observer. The river Qu Yuan once stood by runs through ages, runs across all nation’s history, runs nonstoppingly past our feet. It is that same river that Copernicus once stood by, pondering on whether the Earth circles around the Sun; It is the same river that Monet once stood by, trying to capture the beauty of a sunrise in a “impressionistic” way that is to be blamed by every single art critic in Paris; The main character in Romain Rolland’s novel Jean Christophe, Olivier, once saw the French social trend in his time as river, how he was thrilled by the workers’ strikes, how he was curious about the socialism movements, but he could not join in. All he could do is to stand on the bank, watching the river flowing past him, with its angry waves smashing the bank and wetting his shoes.

Thinking about all these people, I started to understand Qu Yuan more. He was a loner in his time, abandoned by his contemporaries. The trend of culture would not accept him, the drinking party would not accept him. He stood by the noisy river, lonely and sober. He was both doomed and blessed for that.

He pondered and reflected too much. He would often take long walks by a well, look upon his reflection in the water and be his own person, thin and gaunt. His intimate relation with water ended in an ultimate tragedy.

In 278 BC, just as he foresaw, his home state, Chu was eventually conquered by Qin. He felt that he should pay his last respect for his hometown, for a culture that he long loved with both his political passion as a minister and his 10 years of folksong collection as an exile.

He arranged a simple yet beautiful ceremony, a sacrifice to the lost Chu culture during which his was to offer his own life. He waded into the Miluo River with a big stone tied to himself.

Then comes the origin of the rice puddings and dragon boats. Local people rushed to save him, which later became the ceremony of dragon boats competition. But the scholar disappeared in the endless waves, not a shoe of him was found. People made rice puddings and threw them into the river, saying to the fish----please do not eat our beloved poet and minister.

Qu Yuan’s story ended in water. He was carried away by the waves at last. But I would like to think, that it was only his body that was carried away. He left his flesh to the blind trend, and kept his soul for himself, in the reflecting well.

Whether the king of Chu conquered Qin, or the king of Qin conquered Chu made no difference to our lives in two thousand years. Even the hometown of Qu Yuan, Zi Gui village by the Three Gorges, went under water after the dam was built. The river of life is powerful, it washes away everything, pointless or memorable.

If you are not a fan of ancient poems, the only trace Qu Yuan had left that you would know about is the rice puddings. I started eating rice puddings by the age of 3 or 4, and did not care much about Qu Yuan until high school. Splendid stories of the ancient heroes, they inevitably fade away and morph into the mundane life.


Dr. Sweewawa

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Vai -- For the Love of God

Steve Vai meets orchestration. Enjoy, Dr. Kowawa

Will Be Free

Here is a poem I wrote about a patient I encountered while on my Internal Medicine rotation:

Will Be Free

William whose big eyes see the sky
Looked for beauty low and high
Growing up in Mary’s land
He searched, was found by heroin

Thus began the tale of ‘prisonment
The lady lured him with her scent
And made him come to her sweet call
But William flew above it all

The fangs dug deep and drew his blood
The poisonous venom with humors entered
And as he opened wings to soar
A virus chained him down once more

William broke the chains and fled
And breathed fresh air and tasted bread
But then the law caught up with him
And placed him back in bonds again

He thought a lot within his pen
Two months and he’d be free again
And hopes once more took root and grew
But illness knocked him down anew

In guarded room in the E.D.
I met him, did my H & P
As those big eyes looked up at me
I saw him yearning to be free

On the wards he lay there sick
Seemed unfazed by his poor luck
Stoicly he bore the weight
But worsening illness was his fate

The blood flowed free like he could not
Into his brain it formed a clot
Though shackles were no longer there
He could not move, could only stare

Before the dawn I rap the door
Find him staring as before
His eyes move when I call his name
Please blink if you’re in any pain

After great deliberation
We have switched to palliation
William we have done our best
Now it's time for you to rest

Dear William as you look at me
I know you that you will soon be free
Free from the ills and free from prison
Upon god's grace you’ll fly to heaven

The Butterfly Philosopher

One morning Chuang Tzu awoke from his sleep. Coming before his students, he said, "Last night I dreamt that I was a beautiful butterfly fluttering through the fields. Now I awaken. My question is this; how do I know if I am Chuang Tzu, who dreamt himself a butterfly, or if I am a butterfly, now dreaming itself Chuang Tzu?"

Osler Quote

"He who studies medicine without books sails an uncharted sea, but he who studies medicine without patients does not go to sea at all." Sir William Osler, Father of Modern Medicine