Saturday, June 27, 2009

Ah, the weekend!




Hello, my friends. Sorry for the week without posts ... it's been an insane week. In and out of Chicago the same day, packing up my entire office to move to a new location, and Friday I volunteered at a Habitat house. While exhausting, this gave me an absolute appreciation for the cool, quiet calm of my own home and made me feel utterly blessed. This new home is for a single mom who has been in and out of shelters for years. One of my colleagues, instead of helping with the build, is tutoring her in English so that she can find a job and support her young daughter. See? There are good people who happen to spend most of their time behind desks.

So now it's time to recharge my batteries. What do you do to rejuvenate yourself?

Sunday, June 21, 2009

The West Side Market

Those who know me (or have been around my blog long enough), know that I'll travel pretty far for a good farmer's market. My husband took me to the West Side Market this weekend for my birthday - the place of our first date. The original market was built in 1840 across the street from the current building, built in 1902.

While we're fairly spoiled with our own market in town, you can't beat the cultural and culinary diversity at the West Side. When you walk in, your senses are pleasantly assaulted by the smell of strong coffee, baking bread, exotic cheeses, and any number of other food smells. You can hear people haggling over a price of meat or a basket of fruit in several languages.

If you visit, come prepared with a tote to carry your treasure; you will inevitably become intoxicated by the atmosphere and buy more food than you can possibly eat in a day or two.





















































































Do you have a market that you like to visit?

Thursday, June 18, 2009

How does your garden grow?

I've been growing most of my usual plants this year and a new favorite.




My nasturtiums haven't completely taken over the pots ... yet.




This is my first time growing tomotios ... I love the green little lanterns (thank you, Leann, for the colorful phrase).





I planted these bulbs years ago and can't, for the life of me, remember what they're called. Do you know?

And now my husband and I are off to an adventure to the place of our first date. Do you ever revisit old, romantic places?

Monday, June 15, 2009

Dreaming in Color

My husband and I went to Oakland Park Nursery yesterday to plan the next phase of turning our backyard into the garden escape we've always dreamed of. While the "bones" are all in place, we still have many other plants and trees to add to make it complete.




I really want to have Foxgloves.



... and this Snow Queen Hydrangea.

What sort of garden escape do you dream of?

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Pesto!





I grow a lot of basil, and one of my favorite things about summer is turning it into pesto. It takes only minutes, and I use a recipe by Marcella Hazan, the authority on Italian cooking.

Pesto by Food Processor Method2 cups tightly packed basil leaves
1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
3 tablespoons pine nuts
2 cloves garlic
1/2 cup grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese
2 tablesspoons romano cheese (optional)
3 tablespoons butter (I skip this step)

Briefly soak the basil in cold water and pat dry. Put the basil, olive oil, pine nuts, garlic and an ample pinch of salt in the food processor and blend until you have a smooth, uniform consistency. Tranfer the mixture into a bowl and fold in the cheese. (If you choose to add the romano and butter, you would do so at this point.)

I often throw the pesto in the freezer until I'm ready to use it. It keeps its flavor nicely.

What did you eat this weekend?

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

...and then one night




One old friend met another old friend in a garden. And it was beautiful.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Memories of Camping





When I was little, we used to spend several summer weekends at a campsite in Westfield, Vermont. On the corner of the campsite was a general store where, when we had arrived and my childish energy knew no bounds, my father would give me a quarter and I would run to buy myself an Eskimo sandwich. Naturally, this must have bought my parents time to set up camp. My other sisters and I would shed our clothes (we had put on our bathing suits underneath), grab a towel, and follow the dirt road up the hill to the natural pool in the woods. On our way we would encounter other kids on their bikes, without helmets, barefoot and with towels around their necks. We would all return later, hungry and pleasantly exhausted, our bathing suits stained green from the moss and slime that grows on rocks in moist northern environs.

My father grilled hotdogs and hamburgers -- nothing fancy like today's gourmet grillers. My sisters and I would hang out with the Paxton boys, the sons of the family that owned the campsite. They would tell us scary ghost stories well into the wee hours, and I became convinced that the bridge on the grounds was haunted and I would not survive traversing it alone.

Every morning, my father would get up early to cook bacon and eggs on the fire. We would then go for a walk, the two of us alone. He would stoop down to point out chipmunks or interesting birds to me, and stop to light a cigarette from time to time. He was so handsome in those days, wearing a hat, and his skin turning brown in the sun. I haven't been camping since I was about ten years old, and wow do I miss it.

Do you have fond childhood memories of camping?

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Closer





My Sweet Bay Magnolia has finally bloomed, and while this may seem an uneventful occasion for most, it made me pause and reflect upon the year that has passed and how much, and how little, has changed in the year since I last photographed its blossoms. While the nuances would get lost in a blog post, I feel myself getting closer to a vision of life that involves more joy and less stress.

My husband and I tackled that basement this weekend. In October of ’08, I saw this at Inspired Room and printed it out as motivation. I longed for a basement and garage that I could walk into and know exactly where to go to find whatever it was I was looking for, and to end those needless trips to Lowes to buy yet another pack of sandpaper or quart of varnish because I couldn’t find the one we bought only weeks ago. What’s more, I haven’t been in my studio in the basement for too long because of the chaos surrounding it. It is a myth that messiness and creativity necessarily go hand-in-hand. We opened boxes we hadn’t opened since we moved in six years ago. I went through paperwork of things that I kept over several years and found humor and solace in the things I was interested in and chose to keep.

Our basement doesn’t look like the one in my fantasies … yet. But I can make my way to the place where I paint, and I have lots of inspiration as fuel.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Samson



I'm loving this 2007 song from Regina Spektor called 'Samson.' It's an interesting take on the old story; making Samson a co-conspiritor to his own demise. And you have to love a songstress who wears red lipstick. Spektor has a new release that you can find here. If you've heard it, let us know what you think ...

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