kfc doubledown

we decided to try the kfc doubledown today.

We went to the KFC on 45th and San Pablo in Oakland:

kentucky fried chicken@45th+san pablo

We ordered our sandwiches and inspected them.  Mine didn’t look as “disgusting” to me as some reviewers (also check out a little side story here) have described:

kfc double down

but it didn’t look too good either.  It tasted super salty, and the flavoring on the chicken totally overwhelmed everything else in the “sandwich” (rox informs me that according to MW, it’s not a sandwich, but a “sandwich” because there is no bread to be found).   you could make out a little bit of the cheese via texture and if you tried, you could taste the “colonel’s sauce”.  It didn’t taste horrible though.  The bacon probably wasn’t necessary – I could hardly tell it was there.  I was scared that I’d get sick.  but I didn’t.

My friend Israel didn’t have much to say.  He just shook his head.

We also got 2 biscuits for 99 cents.  Israel got honey and butter to put on the biscuits, but it was actually “buttery spread” and “honey sauce”.  11% real honey!

biscuits with butter and honey?
no! it's butter spread and honey sauce!
no! buttery spread and honey sauce!

I saw these three guys walk in.

3 hipsters walk into a kfc

(note: Israel made the astute observation that their menu is basically only combos – no individual sandwiches.  Perhaps the margins are just that much higher on the combo meals?)

They were definitely getting double downs – you could tell by their pants and their fixed gear bikes.

fixies three
fixies three. no brakes = combo meal.

and they did.  I can’t blame them though because they were there for the same reason that we were.

foggy mt. tam and an affogato

I went for a cold and sometimes wet ride up mount tamalpais today.  It was my first time riding up there and back.  I thought the fog looked great, though I’m sure the view would have been amazing on a clearer day.

mt. tam in the fog.

I treated myself to an affogato when I got home (and a sausage and beer at rosamunde/toronado before that):

affogato

peleng 8mm f/3.5 fisheye (and a 8mm computar c-mount lens) on the panasonic gf1

After purchasing my Panasonic GF1, I thought it’d be fun to exploit the small form-factor and smaller sensor and try some of the c-mount lenses that are out there on the micro 4/3rds camera.  I purchased an adapter off of ebay that had both c-mount and M42 threads.  I tried it with a TV lens that I bought off of ebay, and then an 8mm lens that I already had for my canon.

computar 8mm f/1.6:

I tried the 8mm computar first:

computar 8mm f/1.6 fixed aperture tv lens

It’s a fixed-aperture lens that only cost about $5 or $10 from ebay.  I didn’t have high hopes – just wanted something to play with.

Here’s a sample image taken with that lens:

sample image taken with panasonic gf1 and computar 8mm f/1.6 tv lens
sample image taken with panasonic gf1 and computar 8mm f/1.6 tv lens

The image circle isn’t very large, and it’s not very sharp.  oh well.  The lens could still be useful for video – the GF1 gives a 2x or 4x digital zoom option, and with 2x digital zoom there’s no vignette.  the 2x digital zoom results in an 32mm 35mm-equivalent focal length though, which isn’t much wider than the standard 20mm f/1.7 kit lens.

peleng 8mm f/3.5 fisheye:

peleng 8mm f/3.5 fisheye mounted on a panasonic gf1, side view
peleng 8mm f/3.5 fisheye mounted on a panasonic gf1, side view
peleng 8mm f/3.5 fisheye, isometric view

The Peleng is a little larger than the computar.  I had to buy some cheapo M42 extension tubes to get the flange/sensor distance within a correct range.   I used the wikipedia table to guesstimate how much more distance I needed, and the 9mm + 16mm extension tubes did the trick just fine.

It’s a bulky lens, and turning the aperture and focusing rings isn’t so easy on such a small-bodied camera.  You have to grip the body really tightly in order to turn the damped focusing ring and the detented aperture ring.  Luckily, at 8mm and f/3.5, everything’s basically in focus.

Photos with the fisheye are still fun in a fisheye sort of way:

primo's parilla on the panasonic gf1 with the peleng 8mm f/3.5

and it’s still plenty-wide.  The grill belongs to the Primo’s Parilla truck in Emeryville.

I think I took this photo near f/3.5, but I don’t remember.  Sharpness is pretty much the same across the entire image, since the sensor is already only capturing part of the image circle.  I’ll post 100% crops anyways:

primo's parilla panasonic gf1/peleng 8mm f/3.5 - center crop

There’s some standard sharpening and so on in lightroom.

here’s a corner crop:

primo's parilla panasonic gf1/peleng 8mm f/3.5 - corner crop

and I’ll throw in a shot with the peleng on a 5D Mark I for crop-factor comparison:

peleng 8mm f/3.5 on a 5D mkI

conclusion:

The 8mm computar lens isn’t very useful at all, but it was fun to play with.  The peleng on the GF1 is a pretty interesting combination with fisheye distortion, a wide field of view and sort of cumbersome handling.  The image quality looks fine to me.

peleng 8mm f/3.5 on a 5D mkI

after the rain

a photo looking west on ashby ave in elmwood, berkeley after the rain ended and the clouds started to clear.

and the sidewalk..

sidewalk on ashby ave

Cotton and company shop to become crossroads

update 05.12.10: crossroads confirms that they’ll have a second rockridge location.  As of May 9th, the shelves were being stocked!

New tenants coming soon – we saw a banner for crossroads trading company while walking by the old cotton and company shop this morning.   I’m guessing that Crossroads is moving from their old location – two spots in Rockridge sounds like a little much.

farm:table

went to farm:table this past weekend for a quick breakfast and coffee.  the cereal and yogurt was enjoyble, the latte was pretty, and the ristretto of an espresso, while lacking some crema, was still very satisfying.

latte art from farm:table on post st.

daylight savings

sunset

Daylight savings means more time to do stuff outside after work:

sunset
sunset during a ride through the oakland/berkeley hills

and the warmer weather means nicer rides on the weekends:

oakland and san francisco, from grizzly peak road
climbing

grizzly peak road. watch out for potholes on the way down.