Saturday, August 14, 2010

Monday, February 15, 2010

Post Dessert Party

Hello dear readers. Ken and I and our lovely party attendees know today that we indulged properly on 2010 Valentine's Day! Here's a little accounting:
  1. Chocolate espresso fudge cake - really wonderful
  2. Chocolate chip peanut butter cake - remains will go to Records & Registration today
  3. Triple chocolate pumpkin pie - ho hum
  4. Chocolate pudding pie with whipped cream (aka fire) - untouched, it went home with Carly.
  5. Apple pie - A++
  6. Lemon bars - very lemon-y
  7. Large & luscious oatmeal chocolate chip cookies - A++
  8. Deep dark chocolate fudge cookies - A
  9. Chocolate chip cookies - A+++
  10. Fudgy brownies - brownies were not a major hit
  11. Salted fudge brownies
  12. Supernatural brownies
  13. Fruit crisps - just did not go
    Apple/Cherry
    Cranberry/Apple
    Blueberry/Raspberry
  14. Ice cream - Stewart's & Soy
  15. Fruit - mixed
  16. Cupcakes brought by Carly
  17. Chocolate chip pie brought by Wilma
For the future:
1 batch of cookies will be sufficient
1 batch of brownies at most
1 crisp
1 marquee cake
Apple pie always a favorite
The cheese brought by Shelly was a hit
Mostly regular coffee

For the present: lots of cookies and brownies need a home

So now we are post Ken's birthday, post Valentine's Day and on the lip of Lent. Can spring be far behind?

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Dessert Party

Happy Valentine's Day - a day early. We are having our even-year-dessert party on Valentine's Day, celebrating love with much chocolate. And fruit, don't forget the fruit. Here is the list:
  1. Chocolate espresso fudge cake
  2. Chocolate chip peanut butter cake
  3. Triple chocolate pumpkin pie
  4. Chocolate pudding pie with whipped cream (aka fire)
  5. Apple pie
  6. Lemon bars
  7. Large & luscious oatmeal chocolate chip cookies
  8. Deep dark chocolate fudge cookies
  9. Chocolate chip cookies
  10. Fudgy brownies
  11. Salted fudge brownies
  12. Supernatural brownies
  13. Fruit crisps
    Apple
    Cherry
    Cranberry
    Blueberry
  14. Ice cream
    Stewart's
    Soy
  15. Fruit - mixed
Our recipe sources:
How to Cook Everything Vegetarian by Mark Bittman (our new food bible)
Vegan Express by Nava Atlas (a local woman, she got a master's from SUNY New Paltz)
Death by Chocolate by Marcel Desaulniers (given to me by Candace Vancko after our first party in 2007)
Various things clipped from the New York Times and magazines, including the Thanksgiving issue of the Martha Stewart magazine, seen at TresOlay, my salon in New Paltz.
Our food sources:
Local as much as possible. Flour and oatmeal from Wild Hive (://www.wildhivefarm.com/), local and close. Ice cream from Stewart's (made near Albany). Eggs from Farm and Granary (farmandgranary@gmail.com), local and close. Organic chocolate. Unsalted butter made as close to the Hudson Valley as possible. Apples, blueberries and cherries frozen from the local harvest last fall.
Already stored in the garage: cookies and brownies. To come today: everything else.
Excess on the way!

Monday, January 25, 2010

The real new year...

The spring semester begins today, which means 2010 is really underway. For my readers in the higher education biz, happy new year!

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Happy New Year

Well, 2010. It even resists the keystrokes. How often will we write 2009? Or 2020? Or 2001? What will we call it? Two Thousand and Ten? Twenty Ten? Two Thousand Ten? Ten? We'll have to wait and see, eh?

We celebrated the new year with friends and it was perfect. Dinner with Bud and Millie, with Paula's lasagna and Barbara's apple pie! Oh heavenly. The luxury of good friends. Barbara and Tom came over to our B&B in Frederick and we talked and exchanged gifts. Ken and I were sound asleep at the turn of the decade/year.

We then drove to Deb and Greg, having breakfast with them and Casey and a slew of her friends, who had had a New Year's sleep-over. Amid memories of Casey on the volleyball gym floor in Ann Arbor all those years ago, we toasted the new year and promised to see each other more often. I will see Deb and Greg later in January, so we're getting a good start on that resolution.

Then on to New York City, and a Broadway show and a movie. It was cold, but festive in the city. We oh-ed and awe-d at the tree in Rockefeller Center and watched the skaters in Bryant Park. We saw "In the Next Room, or the Vibrator Play," which is about exactly what the title suggests. It was written by Sarah Ruhl, and was definitely from a woman's point of view. Movies today. Ken saw the Sherlock Holmes movie and I saw the Tom Ford movie, "A Single Man." Very painterly. We saw "Invictus" on Wednesday night, so that makes four movies so far this season. I have ambitions for more.

We came home from the city late this afternoon to a very cold house: the motor that moves hot water throughout the house was burned out. Let's hear it for small towns - the fix-it man was here within two hours and the hot water is circulating as I write.

A new year and a new decade - I hope for the best for all of us.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

A New York Movie Day

When you live, as we do, 90 miles from the greatest city in the world, you discover its more obvious virtues first: restaurants, live theater, museums, shopping. Then the next layer reveals itself: movies, small neighborhoods, water, islands. Ken and I are big movie people and we regularly go into New York for movie days. As we have very different taste in movies, we often see different movies, so we work the logistics of four movies in one day. Staying overnight permits a fifth and sixth movie, but we do not do that very often anymore (cue the 90 miles). We went in last Saturday (12/19/09) with a plan for four movies: The Messenger and Brothers for me and Avatar and Nine for Ken. Ever the flexible pair, we ended up instead with Crazy Heart for me, Avatar for Ken and Up in the Air for us both.

When you see two movies in one day, which I love to do, and when the movies you see reflect your taste, then there are certain correspondences that reveal themselves in the time after the movies are over. The combination of the two movies influences your opinion. (As a side note, I wonder if movie critics see more than one movie a day. ) So Crazy Heart and Up in the Air are cooking in my head. They are very similar movies: sober and somber and redemptive. Or at least about redemption of men by women. What a surprise. Both men - Jeff Bridges and George Clooney (talk about your A list) - are isolated in a lonely world. Both meet women who save them and leave them. Both movies end with the men in better shape - although the Bad Blake character is in fantasy better shape. Ryan Bingham ends on a more ambivalent note.

Up in the Air reflects our time more accurately. Both main characters have no financial worries, but Ryan Bingham's job is to fire people. The progression of talking heads is heart breaking, all the more so because they are real people, who really got fired (in Detroit, natch). The snowy, but definitely not picturesque, landscape of the parts of the movie is bleak.

Jeff Bridge's portrayal of a bad boy country singer is without vanity. We see his broad belly and his slack chin. We also see the fantastic body of a much younger woman who falls into bed with him. We can gaze, apparently without harm, on the overweight body of a 60 year old man, but can see only leggy, slim young women. Most movies are made by men, after all. It's their fantasy.

I would recommend both movies, but do not go see Up in the Air expecting a comedy. It's witty and has amusing parts, but it is ultimately a reflection of where we are as 2009 morphs into 2010.


Sunday, December 13, 2009

Christmas Letter (!)

Happy holidays to you all! Another Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Eid al-Adha - holidays at the start of winter, the darkest time of the year. 2009 has seemed to be a dark year in general (This damned recession! These damned wars!), so I am fervently hoping for a bright, kind 2010. It is amazing that the first decade of the 21st century will be in our rear view mirror.
Ken and I have had an active fall. Few people get to have not one but two vacation experiences that involved climbing 4' into a bed, but we did. Our train trip west for Matt's 40th birthday in September involved 3 nights on Amtrak, and a climb into a bunk that flops down from the wall. Our trip south to the Sajay, Midge and Jay's 38' catamaran, involved a climb into a bed with the night sky in our eyes. We are lucky indeed to have had these experiences. The British Virgin Islands are beautiful and I got to do one of my most favorite things: throwing myself into the beautiful waters of the Caribbean. Wowza! We have pictures of both trips to share, but will not do so without your request.
Ken has been away much of the fall at his client outside of Pittsburgh. I spent two weekends there with him, one in June and one in November, and have really acquired an affection for Pittsburgh. What a great city! Very walkable. Great food. Great shopping. The Strip District. The campuses. The neighborhoods. A wonderful tea shop. Fabulous - really - bakeries. In talking to the young people I am privileged to associate with, I am saying, 'consider Pittsburgh'. It seems to be in decent shape in terms of the economy, and housing is interesting and somewhat affordable. And Carnegie Mellon and the University of Pittsburgh - very cool. He is just about done with this client, and hopefully, done for a while with being gone 5 days a week. Lonely for Jackie!
Other fall highlights:
  • Labor Day on the Jersey shore - what a concept! A boardwalk. Surf Taco. Ocean. Beach.
  • Walkway over the Hudson - totally amazing. http://walkway.org/ Check it out! You'll rush to visit us to walk it.
  • The World Series!!!!! Yes, I've become a rabid Yankee fan and it is SOOOOOOO much fun to win. Go Yanks!
  • College football on the east coast: we saw Army beat VMI and Columbia lose miserably to Harvard. Next, it's college hockey at the Military Academy at West Point.
  • Theater: Metamorphoses and The Red Masquerade at SUNY New Paltz and A Little Night Music on Broadway. The latter, which actually opens today, will be a hit, I'm sure.
  • Two concerts by the Community-College Chorale: Benjamin Britten's Rejoice in the Lamb, Verleih uns Frieden by Mendelssohn, opera choruses, including The Witches' Chorus from MacBeth by Verdi. I loved most of the music, especially the Britten. Singing is fabulous.
  • Opera - I went to the Met for the first time and saw From the House of the Dead by Janecek. Amazing, powerful, awesome. I went on a Monday night. How lucky we are to live so close to such excellence!
So, lovely readers - I hope your holiday is the best!