Marvel Puzzle Quest Builds And Character Colors

by A.J. Coltrane

By request. Note that the builds differ based upon intended use, teammates, or preference:

Character Rarity Build 1 Build 2 Build 3
Invisible Woman **** 3/5/5
Nick Fury **** 3/5/5 5/5/3
Wolverine **** 5/5/3
Character Rarity Build 1 Build 2 Build 3
Beast *** 5/5/3
Black Panther *** 5/3/5
Black Widow *** 5/3/5
Captain America *** 3/5/5
Captain Marvel *** 3/5/5 4/5/4
Colossus *** 3/5/5
Daken *** 5/5/3
Daredevil *** 5/3/5
Deadpool *** 5/5/3
Doctor Doom *** 5/5
Falcon *** 5/5/3
Hood, The *** 5/5/3
Hulk, The *** */*/5
Human Torch *** 5/4/4 5/3/5
Iron Man *** 5/5/3 5/5/2 5/5/1
Loki *** 5/5
Magneto *** 3/5/5
Psylocke *** 5/3/5
Punisher, The *** 3/5/5
Ragnarok *** 5/5
Sentry *** 3/5/5
She-Hulk *** 3/5/5 5/3/5
Spider-Man *** 3/5/5
Storm *** 5/3/5
Thor *** 3/5/5
Wolverine *** 5/3/5
Character Rarity Build 1 Build 2 Build 3
Ares ** 4/4/5
Black Widow ** 3/5/5
Bullseye ** 5/5
Captain America ** 3/5/5 5/4/4
Daken ** 5/5/3
Hawkeye ** 5/5/3 3/5/5 4/5/4
Human Torch ** 5/5/3
Magneto ** 3/5/5 4/5/4
Moonstone ** 5/5/3
Spider-Man ** 3/5/5 4/1/5
Storm ** 5/5/3
Thor ** 3/5/5
Wolverine ** 5/3/3 5/4/4 4/5/4

And the color chart:

Character Rarity Yellow Red Blue Purple Green Black
Invisible Woman **** Active Active Active
Nick Fury **** Active Active Active
Wolverine **** Active Active Active
Character Rarity Yellow Red Blue Purple Green Black
Beast *** Active Active Active
Black Panther *** Active Active Active
Black Widow *** Active Active Active
Captain America *** Active Active Active
Captain Marvel *** Passive Active Active
Colossus *** Active Active Active
Daken *** Active Passive Passive
Daredevil *** Active Active Active
Deadpool *** Active Active Passive
Doctor Doom *** Active Hidden Active
Falcon *** Passive Passive Active
Hood, The *** Active Passive Active
Hulk, The *** Active Active Passive
Human Torch *** Active Active Active
Iron Man *** Active Active Active
Loki *** Active Hidden Active
Magneto *** Active Active Active
Psylocke *** Active Active Active
Punisher, The *** Active Active Active
Ragnarok *** Active Active
Sentry *** Active Active Active
She-Hulk *** Active Active Active
Spider-Man *** Active Active Passive
Storm *** Active Active Active
Thor *** Active Active Active
Wolverine *** Passive Active Active
Character Rarity Yellow Red Blue Purple Green Black
Ares ** Active Active Active
Black Widow ** Active Active Passive
Bullseye ** Passive Hidden Active
Captain America ** Active Active Active
Daken ** Active Passive Passive
Hawkeye ** Active Active Passive
Human Torch ** Active Active Active
Magneto ** Active Active Active
Moonstone ** Active Active Active
Spider-Man ** Active Active Active
Storm ** Passive Active Active
Thor ** Active Active Active
Wolverine ** Passive Active

Rick Bayless’ Tomato “Carpaccio” Salad

by A.J. Coltrane

The Actual Title is much longer than that — Heirloom Tomato “Carpaccio” With Tomatillo Salad, Avacado and Fresh Herbs. LWN recipe link here.

The recipe:

INGREDIENTS

  • DRESSING
  • 3 garlic cloves, unpeeled
  • 1/4cup (lightly packed) cilantro leaves
  • 2 1/2tablespoons light vinegar (like cava or rice wine vinegar)
  • 1/4cup good-quality olive oil (or unrefined corn or peanut oil)
  • Freshly ground black pepper, usually about 1/4 teaspoon, plus addition for the sliced tomatoes
  • Salt
  • SALAD
  • About 1cup Thinly sliced red onion (preferably the long, skinny
  • About 6ouncestomatillos, (preferably the small purple tomatillos – about 6 of them), cut into eighths (about 1 cup)
  • About 6ounces cherry tomatoes (preferably a mixture of red and yellow – about a dozen), cut in halves or quarters
  • 4 to 6medium-size ripe heirloom tomatoes, cored and sliced 1/4-inch thick
  • medium-sized avocado, pitted, flesh scooped from the skin and diced into 1/2-inch pieces
  • generous tablespoon roughly chopped fresh herb (cilantro is an easy choice, but don’t overlook basil, lemon balm, or anise hyssop – even arugula – or mixture of your favorites)

INSTRUCTIONS

In a small, ungreased skillet over medium heat, roast the unpeeled garlic, turning regularly, until soft and blotchy black in spots, 10 to 15 minutes. Cool until handleable, then peel off the paper skin. In a blender or food processor, combine the garlic, cilantro, vinegar, oil and pepper. Process until smooth, then taste and season with salt, usually about 1/2 teaspoon.

In a medium bowl, combine the onion, tomatillos and cherry tomatoes with 3 tablespoons of dressing. Let stand while finishing the salad, stirring from time to time.

On a very large platter, lay out the sliced tomatoes in as close to a single layer as possible.

Just before serving, dot the tomatoes with the avocado and sprinkle with the herbs and fresh-ground pepper (I like the pepper pretty coarse for the tomatoes). Drizzle with the dressing, then pile the tomatillo salad in the center, and your impressive tomato salad is ready to serve.

Some pictures:

Roasting the garlic. This is my new go-to way to roast garlic cloves. Turning on the oven to roast garlic seems so wasteful:

140919 roasted garlic

The tomatillo salad, before dressing. We used Sun Gold tomatoes because that’s what we had. (And Apple Cider vinegar as a best substitute for the recommended Rice Wine vinegar.) On the attempt that we served to company we scaled back the quantity of tomatillos a bit. Also, we decided that smaller tomatillos = better:

140919 salad

The “Carpaccio” element. Black Krim, Taxi, and Tigerella:

140919 carpaccio

The finished salad:

140919 combined salad

It’s a really nice recipe. As I mentioned, we scaled back the tomatillos a little bit for company. There’s a nice balance of sweet, fat, acid and salt. Every bite allows the opportunity to mix and match textures and flavors. We especially liked combining Sun Golds with tomatillos. Two thumbs up.

And since we’re overdue for a girl cat pic:

140920 girl cat

WSU couldn’t quite pull it off against Oregon.

NFL Playoff Odds

by A.J. Coltrane

From Nate Silver’s Five Thirty Eight site. NFL playoff odds based on current record:

resized chart

The most interesting thing to me is the huge swings in probability that can take place early in the season — a season can functionally be over after the first three games.

3-0 — 75% playoff odds.

2-1  — 53% playoff odds.

1-2  — 25% playoff odds.

0-3  — 2% playoff odds.

If at any point a team is .500 or below then they’re worse than a coin flip to make the playoffs. Really, a team needs to have at least two more wins than losses to feel reasonably comfortable about their postseason hopes.

I’m guessing there’s going to be a fair amount of freaking out around Seattle if Sunday doesn’t go well for the Seahawks. After seeing this chart I might be a little less inclined to ignore the freakout.

Still, the 1-1 Seahawks are making the playoffs regardless of what happens against the Broncos.

Right?

A Quick Weeknight Pizza

by A.J. Coltrane

A big disadvantage of preparing a two-hour dough is that it’s not enough time for enzymes to liberate natural sugars from the flour. The flavor suffers as a result, and the color is rarely as nicely carmelized as seen on longer-rise doughs.

Last week’s Batali dough got me thinking about adding sugar, or honey, to a quick mid-week pizza. The formula below is influenced by that last recipe, omitting the wine but increasing the water content:

Ingredient Measure Baker’s %
AP Flour 400g
Water 260g 65
Salt 9g 2.25
Honey 1 TBP
Instant Yeast 1.5 tsp
Olive Oil 1 TBP

That’s a lot of flour — the same amount as goes in the No-Knead breads, or even two medium size pizzas. For a single pizza I’ll more often use 200 or 300 grams of flour, scaling back the other ingredients as needed. This was a thick pizza:

140909 pizza

Chopped fresh tomatoes, mozz, basil. The crust was finished with an herbed olive oil. (A post on that later, it’s a nice local producer. We purchased the oil at the farmer’s market.)

The recipe:

1.  Knead all ingredients at low speed for 10 minutes. Let rise two hours. Preheat oven to 500F.

2.  While the oven is preheating, halve the tomatoes across the equator and squeeze out the worst of the juice. Chop the tomatoes, basil, and mozz.

3.  Very lightly oil a pizza pan, apply the stretched dough. Top the dough with the chopped tomatoes.

4.  Bake for 10 minutes. At the 10 minute mark sprinkle on the mozz.

5.  Bake for 6 minutes. Remove from the oven and strew on the basil. Lightly brush the crust with olive oil.

The pizza would have been improved by using somewhat less flour, and possibly by swapping out the AP flour for Bread flour. Marinating the tomatoes in garlic would have been good too.

I was fairly happy with it overall. I think it’s the “right track” for quick weeknight dinners.

 

The New ESPN “Odds And Info” Page

by A.J. Coltrane

ESPN has what I think is a new page — “Odds and Info”. It’s on their front page tab right above “Poker”. Clicking through takes you to a page called “Chalk”, which is about as neutral a name as they could have picked so as not to upset the squares.

The funny thing is that when I stumbled onto it yesterday the tab and page were both named “Betting.” Maybe ESPN instantly got complaints?

Two thoughts:

1.  It’s going to continue to get harder to gamble on sports as information becomes more widely available. That process has been going on since the 1980’s — it’s always been a matter knowing more than the general population. Back then a copy of the Sporting News was enough. Not anymore.

2.  On September 5th, new NBA commissioner Adam Silver said that legalized sports gambling was “inevitable” [ESPN]:

NBA commissioner Adam Silver believes expanded legalized sports betting in the United States is “inevitable,” and the league is open to participating in it.

Speaking at the Bloomberg Sports Business Summit on Thursday in New York, Silver said that he understood that cash-strapped states will pursue legalized sports betting and that the NBA can benefit from it.

“It’s inevitable that, if all these states are broke, that there will be legalized sports betting in more states than Nevada,” Silver said, per Bloomberg.com. “We will ultimately participate in that.”

It’s a change in tune for the NBA, which in 2012 joined the NCAA, NFL, MLB and NHL in suing New Jersey over its efforts to bring legalized sports betting to its casinos and race tracks…

and

“If you have a gentleman’s bet or a small wager on any kind of sports contest, it makes you that much more engaged in it,” Silver said. “That’s where we’re going to see it pay dividends. If people are watching a game and clicking to bet on their smartphones, which is what people are doing in the United Kingdom right now, then it’s much more likely you’re going to stay tuned for a long time.”

More than $3.6 billion was wagered on sports at Nevada sports books in 2013. The American Gaming Association, citing the National Gambling Impact Study, estimates that as much as $380 billion is wagered illegally in the U.S. annually.

Silver seems to think that legally allowing gambling will be good for the NBA, attracting more eyeballs to the telecasts. Given what fantasy football has done for the popularity of the NFL, he may be right. It certainly won’t lead to *fewer* people watching the NBA.

My guess is that ESPN is very quietly trying to get ahead of the curve, or at least not get left behind. Between Silver’s statement, the New Jersey lawsuit, and this new ESPN page, it seems like we’re near a tipping point for legalized sports gambling in the USA.

Something else to help keep me entertained in my retirement!

Recommended “Game” — Untappd

by A.J. Coltrane

Drink beer, receive badges!

That doesn’t sound like an “enabler” app at all, does it?

From the Untappd website:

Explore Nearby Popular Bars & Beers

Not sure where to grab a pint? Untappd shows you popular bars nearby and what’s on tap.

 

Discover What Your Friends Are Drinking

The best recommendations come from your friends, so find out where & what they drink.

 

Share What & Where You’re Drinking

Share reviews, ratings and photos of the beers you drink with your friends around the world.

 

Drink New Beers, Unlock Badges

Expand your palette by trying new & different beer styles and unlock achievements along the way.

 

master-badgeUntappd has a fun “game” element to it. You get badges for drinking different types of beer. You get badges for drinking multiples of one type of beer. You get badges for drinking beer at odd hours. At one point my traveling companion got a badge for drinking on the ferry. “Ohoy Matey!” It makes casual beer drinking a potentially entertaining surprise.

Untappd has a lot of other neat features too. It’s a giant crowdsourced look at what everyone is drinking, and where. You can search by brewery — right now I can see that people are drinking Night Owl at the Elysian. It functions as a journal of what you’ve been drinking — it allows for comments and ratings, and you can save pictures too. We’ve shown this to a few people, most of the time they’ll cackle, then download it as fast as they can.

Highly recommended, and free!