day 115 – The Chocolate Box Shoppe

My daughter E challenged me to write a little something to go with a picture I was musing over.  I DO miss Berkeley where this was taken.  And I wanted to take a break from memoir ( I am so sick of talking about me) and write a little fiction to wet the whistle.

     “Here’s another tray, Dani!”

     “Oh thanks, Poopsie.  Now the whole display case is set and full of chocolates.”  Dani arranged the toppled shiny red candy hearted peanut butter filled bon bons neatly, lining them up behind the viewing case.  She raised her head as a passerby walked in front of the glass front of the Chocolate Box Shoppe and then returned to her former stance, head and hands focused on her task.

    Jangling, a brass bell, attached to the entry door, announced a customer.

     Dani stood up straight and swishing back her auburn, blond wavy locks, first on the left and then behind her right shoulder, inquired.  “Can I help you?”

     “Yes”, the handsome broad smiling stranger answered.  “I’d like to get an assortment of chocolates for my mom.  I’ve never been here before but I was walking by trying to figure out what to get her for her birthday and it dawned on me, she’s crazy for beautiful, artful sweets.”

     “Would you like to try a sample?” piped Dani.  She could not help but notice he was not wearing a ring of any sort and his green, brown eyes, framed by dark, long and curled up lashes were absolutely “Mesmerizing!” she thought.

     “Thank you.  I’d love to.”  He replied.

to be continued? 

 

 

day 106 – The Carousel

The effortless slow spinning of the carousel reminds me of the wheel of life.

Today I pray for two friends and their families.

I contemplate.

As a brand new one day old great grand baby searched into its dying great grand father’s eyes, the two put all their focus into seeking and knowing each other for an instant and then both grunted and fell asleep.

This is what I heard today.

Poetry

Photos by my daughter V – Thank you

day 105 – The Grill

“Lets send her pictures!” my husband suggested.

“Fabulous idea!” I agreed.

Lest you believe you cannot get a decent, gourmet, fine-dining experience up in the Mountains of San Bernardino, I assure you I can vouch for this restaurant.   It’s one of the first signs of civilization after climbing just 25 minutes up loopy, winding and coiled up the edges of Highway18 on your way up to Lake Arrowhead.  At the first light, take a left then a quick right into the woods on Hwy 189 until you find yourself in the town of Twin Peaks.  There you will find your second unassuming enclave of individual cabins for rent on your right called the Antler’s Inn.  The first choice had always been our nesting perch for years when the children were teeny and it is called Pine Rose Cabins, situated on your left.   Each cabin is outfitted in a cozy theme and they all have kitchens.  I imagine the Antler’s Inn is the same and just as reasonable.  A great escape for the children so they can play in the snow or a romantic rendezvous for a couple in a picturesque forest almost storybook setting.

Am I enticing you?  Do I sound like a commercial?

The Grill at Antler’s Inn is a foodie mecca so make a reservation.  The outside is a typical country log cabin chalet with a sweeping porch lit up by twinkly Christmas lights and comfortable seating.  The interior is beamed high with jumbo swaths of rounded lumber and lit gently by a massive alpine hand-carved wooden chandelier.

The upper-level, modern and hipster sushi bar makes up for the drab and outdated window treatments on the main level dining room and bar.  But upgrading or changing out the fabric on the interior of the divided pane windows is my only counsel and will not keep me away.  The staff is elegantly dressed, prompt, eager to inform and please on a busy Saturday night.  Check out their website and check out these pictures.

 

We had three starters, two entrees and one dessert.  We chronicled the entire evening and shared the meal with my BFF in NY via smartphone.

The BLTA pizza or Bacon, Lettuce, Tomato, Avocado Pizza was a crusty pie topped by a Caeserish salad.

The special Sushi Roll of the Night was a spectacular Lobster Roll with shrimp and lobster and caviar.

The Cajun Seared Ahi Sashimi was enough for two and was one of the finest cuts of Ahi, seasoned so well I commented on how you didn’t need ginger, wasabi and maybe just a dash of soy for this well plated appetizer.

“I wanna dive into that lusciousness!” remarked my BFF.

 

Later, our bread and house salad with feta and balsamic vinaigrette.

“Hitting all the notes.” She astutely noted.

Chicken Penne Gorgonzola Cream with mushrooms, shallots, sun-dried tomatoes and pine nuts.

 

Crab, Shrimp, Scallops Salad with candied slivered almonds, avocado and tomato buttermilk vinaigrette

“I think I just gained 5 pounds just looking at this amazing food!” my BFF merrily remarked.

“Phone calories don’t count.” My husband retorted.

Coconut Chocolate Crème Brulee

Using coconut milk as the eggy base, the pastry chef added Godiva chocolate and caramelized the sugar top till it was crackly like ice atop a frozen lake.  Like a well executed crème brulee, the creamy pudding under the sweet layer was not too sweet, the texture made my mouth purr as I swirled the crème around the inside of my mouth, the well defined simple flavor profiles spoke to each other in whispers and its temperature feel was cold like it’s supposed to be.  Too often I have received warm pudding or the caramelized layer which is either broiled or torched is not snappy (you want to be able to shatter the layer with a couple of hits from the side of your spoon as if you were ice fishing and may I add, hear it go – crack); both of these errors are just not the proper, definitive or classic preparation but all too often that is what I have settled for and so have you, I am guessing.  The Grill not only got it right, it took it to a whole new dimension.  Using creamy, rich coconut milk as the base was creative and decadent.  Pairing it with chocolate was genius!

“That chef is diabolical, in a devilish way!  It’s a Mounds crème brulee,” My BFF respectfully acknowledged and compared.

“Loved it. Every bite!” she pronounced in virtual dining ecstasy and we all thoroughly left sated and content!

Enjoy the Academy Awards!

day 103 – Arugula

My first time in Europe was in the City of Lights or Paris. Among other many morsels of meals, I had a salad with Roquette. I was convinced it tasted just like Arugula and soon investigated and sure enough it was the one and the same easy to grow from seed annual grown for its flavorful green lobed leaves.

Upon further query, I realized all the English cookbooks and chefs like Jamie Oliver, his nemesis Gordon Ramsey and Nigella Lawson mention this nutty and spicy plant as Rocket.  When we traveled upon English shores years later, it was verified by my very own taste buds – Rocket=Arugula.

This quick growing edible leaf matures quickly and is best sown in cool weather and is a rather thirsty plant.  It is perfect for Southern California from December to February.  Just keep sowing seeds every two to three weeks and you will be shot right up to Rocket heaven.  It has the least amount of carbohydrates of all the lettuces if that is a concern.

Here is a recipe for Arugula I created for a five-course menu – New York Themed Luncheon.  It was my starter followed by Prime Rib and sides.  Ideally, the dressed greens are an amazing presentation and taste sensation when placed gently inside Parmesan Cup-Shaped Nests but feel free to just partake of the delectable arugula.  The simple dressing makes the arugula stand out and it is well partnered with tangy, crusty Parmesan.  What a cute Easter Basket rendition of salad for your Easter Brunch, Lunch or Dinner!!!  If the Baskets don’t come out just so, just break them up and add to the salad as if that is what you meant to do all along. Keep it Simple, Sista.

 

Arugula in Parmesan Baskets

1 bag of Baby Arugula Salad Leaves (or if you are growing it, around 4 generous cups)

2 and 2/3 cups of SHREDDED Parmesan Cheese

Juice of one organic lemon (preferably from your own backyard, if you live around here)

1-Tablespoon Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Salt to taste

 

Heat a nonstick 10” skillet over med. Hi heat.

Sprinkle 2/3-cup cheese evenly into hot pan.

Cook Cheese “crepe” until slightly golden underneath.

Using a spatula and your fingers, carefully lift out webbed “crepe” and drape the uncooked and pliable side over an upside down glass tumbler, making sure to press firmly to shape it into an upside down bowl over the glass.

Lift and turn baskets over very carefully when cooled.  They can sit for several hours.

Toss salad with lemon juice, oil and salt at the very last moment before serving into the baskets.

Serves 4

Buen Provecho or Bon Appetit

 

day 97 – I remember when

We all have our war stories to tell.  I was in labor for 28 hours.  The night before it froze (unheard of in Orange County, CA).   Our pipes burst and we called a plumber the day before.  It was the coldest, rainiest February I had ever experienced, here.

They cut me open and our baby boy was born on Feb. 16, 1990 at 10:23pm.  I never knew my heart could just bust out wide open like that every time I looked at him. With each child, my heart just grew and grew every time I gazed upon them. And I could never take my eyes off them.  But he was the first born.  Our world was never the same.

It’s my son’s birthday today.  Funny, how I am sitting here in his old room, turned into media den, watching Top Chef Seattle (where he resides now).

He is a successful, loving and happy 23.  All grown up, working in his field, accompanied by a wonderful woman who we adore as well.

How I miss him.  I miss the baby that made his stoic grandfather cry when he held him in his arms at the hospital.  He was the apple of my dad’s eye.  He resembles him physically and has his mannerisms. My aunt in Argentina cried bitterly when she met him back in 2004.  He was fourteen and looked just like her brother as a teen.  She kept calling him my dad’s name.  She kept staring at him, eating him up.  My father passed away,  a few days later.

I miss the toddler who loved dinosaurs and Disneyland.  We went there every day and he knew the name of all the extinct animals displayed in the tunnel section of the Main St. train ride where the antiquated diorama held primitive adventures, ferns (his favorite plant then) and fake lava spouting out of paint brushed volcanoes.  His love of dinosaurs led him to Michael Crichton and science fiction.  His love of reading led him to a great knowledge of vocabulary, hence the name, Mr. Dictionary.

I miss the preschooler who adored his baby sister enough to let her stick sweet tarts into his nose till they stung and got dressed up in a purple Barney dinosaur suit just so she would hug him.  “I love you, you love me” I heard him singing.  He was amazing with babies and children have always been attracted to him.  It must be the childlike quality of play he owns and wears well.

I miss the young boy we dragged out to the t-ball and soccer fields every weekend.  The youngster who took piano lessons and got into the GATE program.  The brother that led the way for his sisters into junior and senior high school, making our last name one to be respected academically and hard to follow in this town.

I am relaxing here in my arm chair, reminiscing about our first-born, only son, striking out on his own, visiting now with his significant other when he comes back home.  Twenty three years later, I face time him with our i-phones. I show him our eighty degree sunny weather, he unintentionally reveals his childhood plastic dinosaur collection on his bathroom shelf in rainy, cold Seattle.

We, his father and I, celebrate his kindness, his acute intelligence, his depth of heart, his ingenuous humor and the unassuming demeanor he displays as he explores his world in wonder, still.

Happy Birthday, Son.

And Happy Birthday and thank you to you too, J.  (you know why)

 

 

day 84 – Pasta Part 2, Chapter 3

Upstairs, I hear The Man of La Mancha album playing, my dad singing The Impossible Dream loudly, alongside Richard Kiley.  The song resonates with passionate lyrics and musical drama.  There is a grief and depth to its poetry that is akin to The Music of the Night sung by Michael Crawford in The Phantom of the Opera.  It makes me weep with its beauty and inconsolable sadness interpreted between the lines.

I watch as my Abuela places a large quantity of flour in the middle of the table, making a deep volcanic well wherein she expertly cracks three, whole, raw eggs into the core.  Slowly, from the sides of the heaped semolina floured hill, she cups the white dust into her hands.  She scatters the powder into the crater of yellow, jellied mounds. Gently, she incorporates the flour into the eggs, employing powerful and experienced forearms, wrists and hands. Dough is formed.

It was a messy yet magical process.  Unable to resist, I eagerly participated when my Abuela allowed me to.  Although it looked like fun – it proved to be an assignment for robust, skilled and mighty sinew.

Abuela divides the mother dough into an even amount of sections and rolls each glob into smaller round baby balls of satiny dough.  With a rolling pin, she flattens each on a lightly floured section of the table and then turns them clockwise. She irons out the wrinkles, continues turning and flattening all the way back up to twelve o’clock, then flips the pasta sheets over, like you rotate and spin a mattress.  Dribbling flour overhead like snow softly falling, she brushes her fingers over the smooth surface enlarging it further with her rolling pin, using the same process over and over until it’s the consistency and color of creamy muslin, the delicateness of a baby’s powdered bottom and the thickness and texture of velvet cloth.

The record player needle drops and the diamond point hisses as it swishes back and forth until it catches the groove and the LP album of West Side Story begins to play, starting with the overture.

Según  cuanta humedad haya es la harina que vas a necesitar,” (The quantity of flour is determined by the amount of humidity that you have) she explained simply.  “Tenes que tener cuidado porque si agregras demasiado, la pasta se endurecerá” (You have to be careful, because if you add too much, the noodles will be too chewy).

There was affection and memory in her work and conversation as she persevered past each stage of alchemic transformation, regaling me with tidbits of information and technical details enshrined in historical family customs.

She deftly spreads teensy amounts of flour onto the elongated flat sheets.  Abuela drizzles in flour, waving her hands, she sands, brushes, and sweeps as flour particles disperse with the bottom palm of her four fingers, side to side, up and down so that the pasta sheet is pampered with tenderness, thoroughness and attention.

I hear “I like to be in America, everything free in America” upstairs and mimic the heavy Latina accent and dance up a storm around my Abuela.  She laughs and roars with glee, completely enjoying my antics.  The scent of sauce fills the house. With every breath, I inhale tomatoes, onions, garlic, oregano and bay leaves into my lungs. I cannot wait to enjoy the fruits of our labor!

day 83 – Homemade Pasta Part Two – Chapter Two

Being an intuitive and creative cook, my mom never measured.  For her signature hearty Italian stew, she cooked several portions of beef, sometimes fowl, and mild, sweet Italian sausage in olive oil infused with fragrant, whole bay leaves.  The flesh sizzled as it seared.  Her trusted meat vendor in town saved her choice cuts.  She added slender slices of sweet green peppers, brown skinned onions and celery.  I peeled and she diced crunchy orange carrots and papery white garlic.  I opened and she added the contents of two or three cans of whole red tomatoes and a can of tomato paste.

I was taught to cook by layering, applying, editing, marinating and waiting – but mostly by tasting, smelling, listening and experiencing the preparation and finished product in all its stages.

But today, my grandmother was making and teaching me how to make homemade pasta downstairs in my mom’s sewing room.  My mom had embarked on the savory process earlier without my help.  I performed my Saturday chores, cleaning the bathrooms as well as tidying and vacuuming my bedroom.  Broadway tunes blasted from our RCA record player and stereo speakers as we worked

After stirring and surreptitiously tasting the sauce, I joined my Abuela (grandma) downstairs, in the hobby/laundry room.  She visited from Argentina and lived with us for a little under a year when I was ten years old.  She had scoured the silver splattered Formica topped table to a polish.  A strip of ribbed shiny chrome curved tightly around the edges of the table, like a rimmed, sleek headlight on a 60s winged Chevrolet, driven with swagger by a lacquered – haired rebel without a care in the world.  The table could be enlarged using an extra piece you inserted into the middle.  I helped center the wooden nubs into their respective holes from one end and pushed.

My mom spread, laid out, pinned and cut her inexpensive fabrics using sheer tan McCall or Simplicity patterns on the work surface, producing practical outfits for her daughters and herself.  I learned to make gnocchi, pasta, and pizza atop the smooth, level plateau.   I performed my home – schooled Spanish reading and writing on the sewing room “desk” while my mom manually pressed her foot on her Singer sewing machine or fed our clothes through the pins that squashed our laundry dry while she washed clothes.

Initially, when my parents immigrated from Argentina and lived in apartments, it was our kitchen table.  After purchasing our first home on Long Island, in the town of Kings Park, on Thistle Lane,  it morphed into a “behind the scenes” activity center.

day 82 – My story Homemade Pasta – Part TWO – Chapter 1

Some of you have read Part One.  Look in older posts or in Archives to retrieve it. I go into a detailed description of my grandmother and you will understand the context better. I am delivering installments of Part 2 over the next several days.  I hope you enjoy reading it, maybe smile and relive some of your own nostalgic moments in the kitchen or new history you are making.

Part 2 – Chapter 1:

I came down the stairs and smelled Italian tomato meat sauce wafting through the air.  It lured me into the kitchen like a Pied Piper flute.  Embellishing the sauce, my mom added and stirred in oregano, salt and red wine.

“Can I taste?” I pleaded.

“Not yet” she replied sharply, turning her head and giving me an “ I know what you are up to” look.

“Can I stir, then?” I pestered, using a different tactic.

“Ok. But don’t eat any yet. The flavors have to meld all day and if you start tasting now, there won’t be any left for the talllarines (noodles). ”

She was right.  My sister and I used to sneak into the kitchen all day and dip pieces of ripped off bread from a fresh Italian loaf and scrape what would stick to the sides of the pot as it condensed over hours of simmering.  Occasionally, we ducked the stolen morsel right into the sauce.  By the time dinner rolled around, more than half the sauce and all of the bread had just about disappeared thanks to our constant pilfering and “tasting.”

Growing up on Long Island, in New York state, I remember processed, packaged, frozen, boxed “food” just starting to appear and appeal to moms and growing families.  Prepared meals were widely distributed and marketed to housewives.  Every family on our horseshoe –  shaped block had one car, one garage, one driveway,  and most mothers didn’t even know how to drive.  We waited for my dad to come home from work to shop in the local supermarket or went on weekends.  My mom staunchly believed in green produce and home –  cooked meals.  My father insisted on it.  We sat at the octagonal dining table, never answered the door or phone during dinner and ate punctually five minutes after my dad came through the door of our house from his job as a design engineer.

day 80

Do you remember Around the World in Eighty Days written by the famous French author Jules Verne and the Oscar winning 1956 movie?

Do you know that Interstate 80 runs from New York to San Francisco?

Today is my 80th day of writing everyday continuously, consistently and constantly publicly on the Internet.

I hope whoever is reading it is being entertained in some way.

Some of you I know are following, and I thank you.  I love receiving comments whether on the site, by telephone or in person. I thank all the readers.  It reinforces my writing habit.  (Check the side for my reply or click on the page you commented on).

Plus, I encourage you to share my link with others if you think it is worthy of doing so.

 

 

 

day 57 – garden party

One of the few books I brought back from New York when I moved to California (via a pit stop in North Carolina for ten months) was my Herb book.

My very first book purchase in CA was the Sunset Western Garden Reference Guide.

My love of plants can be traced back all the way to my parent’s first home in a small suburb of Buenos Aires, Argentina.  In pictures, I am proudly displayed on all fours, probably four or five months old, next to a dwarfed colorful Pinocchio.  This ceramic statue is placed strategically in my mom’s treasured tiny first garden of hopes and dreams.

Trees, flowers, shrubs and gardens in general have become a familiar backdrop to most photographs of myself up to this day.  Close ups of flowers also tend to be the majority of my litany of pictures. A trip to the local botanical, historical, indigenous, private or public garden has long been a destination wherever I am.

You can learn a lot about the climate and culture of a place by their local customs, foods and gardens.  Gardens have been used to bury art and family treasures when invaded by the enemy, they have been used countless times in movies, in art and can teach you math, science, design and the list goes on.  They are an expression of your wealth (think Versailles), your hope (Victory gardens) and your creativity (Disneyland comes to mind).  They can be small, out or indoors and potted.

When I lived in my first apartment, hanging plants hung from WWII ceilings.  The care and nurturing of those first plants reflected the care and nurturing I did or did not give myself.  Plants can be revealing as well as healing.

Gardens, plants, fauna, flora, landscapes and the variety of Earth’s beauty intrigue, fascinate the soul and give us sustenance.