Well, 5/6 ain't bad.
First, I'm a sucker for Sichuan numbing hot spicy flavors (Mala and all of the other related variants). I've been trying to figure out where I can acquire the taste close to home and just last week finally found a couple of places that make prepared dishes with it, which was awesome. But then, I went to Din Tai Fung with a colleague, L, whose wife is from Sichuan. We ordered spicy noodles and I lamented how difficult it is to get Sichuan numbing spice. L mentioned that her wife ships spices to the US in bulk because apparently our Californian imports do not meet L's wife standards. Through some miracle of making my desire known to the universe, within one week of seriously starting my quest to acquire Sichuan spice sources, I was offered some of the imported stash from L's wife for home use. JACKPOT!
Green = numbing Sichuan peppercorn;
Red = ridiculously spicy pepper flakes.
Mortar and pestle for scale.
This is easily a 3 year supply. Thank you L!
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Rice stick noodle bok choy stir fry with peanuts, spicy shirataki noodle soup (made it twice -- better with a poached egg), and spicy veggie soba ramen-style pre-race soup were all delicious. After this many meals, E has requested that I rein in the numbing spice, both in frequency and in amount per serving. Apparently, there can be too much of a good thing.
Not gonna lie -- this spicy mushroom miso veggie soba pre-race dinner was amazing. |
#2, sleep? Yeah. I did lots of that.
#3, very little running? Check. Total weekly mileage before the start line on Sunday AM was 10 miles, almost all of it at target race pace or faster. I felt fast, strong, and pleased with my lack of pain.
#4, lots of stretching, rolling and a visit to the ART specialist? I did these as well. The beastie balls make rolling while indulging in screentime very easy, and I found time to stretch a couple times in the week in an effort to avoid major issues. The ART visit was wonderful on Thursday and I left thinking that a half finish was easily doable.
#5, an awesome half marathon? Nope. Not even close. My AM went perfectly. I slept fitfully (typical pre-race stuff for me), woke at my 6:20 alarm, did the obligatory AM rituals, got out the door, to the Starbucks for the latte and juice and back on the road by 6:45 AM. I made it to my parking spot before 7:30 AM, and I thought of my friend Cat while waiting for the buses.
This race's shuttles used to be yellow US school buses, but now, in peak SF tech something or other,
they are the tech company buses put to good use on the weekends.
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4th SF Kaiser half start. 1st DNF. |
I headed out for a fast first downhill mile and, it was easy and fast, so as planned, I built in walking breaks and hit the 5K right about on target pace, even though the last mile in the first 5K is significantly uphill. I felt good.
It was warmer than expected, but not too warm. Similarly, it was more humid than I'm used to, but not egregious. I mean, I was sweating like crazy, but that's my gig. If it's over 60, regardless of the humidity, if I'm working at a decent effort level, I'm losing water like no one's business.
I took a Gu at the water station after the 5K and then I picked the pace back up. I tried to keep the target pace but I was falling behind despite what felt like appropriate half marathon effort for how early in the race it was. This was, of course, frustrating, as I'd picked a relatively "easy" target pace. At the 10K mark I was seriously considering stopping. In addition to the lackluster pacing (which killed any desire to push through for a nice time), my left hip was starting to tighten up and I was concerned that I'd lose all the (minimal) fitness gains I'd made if I pushed it too far. I have a tentative crissy field 5K next weekend as a training race and a real 5K in Austin the week after. I knew I wouldn't be able to do a good job at either of them if I pushed today too far.
4 comments:
The noodles look freaking delicious. And I actually like the blurry photo of me and the mimosa. :)
@jen -- I actually really like the photo, too. And yes, the noodles were amazing, if I do say so. (Very easy to digest pre-race, as well.)
"who needs juice for mimosa" are words to live by.
And your noodles look awesome! Love the kimchi and cilantro!
Glad you could make it!! (Also I hope you don't mind if I borrow your brunch picture since I completely failed at taking any.....)
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