Soup is pretty much a perfect meal for me. I could eat it daily for lunch, year round, but in the winter eating soup is a sure way to stay warm. Pictured above is Melissa Clark's Red Lentil Soup with Lemon, which I wrote about here a few years ago. Still a favorite, I put it back into a seasonal rotation; this time with extra carrots.
Thursday, December 04, 2014
soup
Soup is pretty much a perfect meal for me. I could eat it daily for lunch, year round, but in the winter eating soup is a sure way to stay warm. Pictured above is Melissa Clark's Red Lentil Soup with Lemon, which I wrote about here a few years ago. Still a favorite, I put it back into a seasonal rotation; this time with extra carrots.
Monday, December 01, 2014
now it is december
Although many consider the solstice to be the beginning of winter, my less conventional but absolutely regional marker is the first snow. By that token, winter is here. We've had several snow falls and an abundance of cold, which has enabled the snow to "stick." The only way I'm going to make it through winter is to get a good attitude, even though my handsome husband says it is okay to be cold. So, I am attempting to make the most of nicer days (i.e., no windchill, sunshine) with longer dog walks. And, since oldest son has joined the Nordic team at school, I'm contemplating taking up cross-country skiing again.
Monday, November 10, 2014
Wednesday, October 01, 2014
please be awesome, october
Here it is. My favorite month of the year: October. A major month of transition as we shift between seasons. A shift that often carries a reminder of warm summer days but also the promise of cold winter days. A month of transition in diet as we close down the grill and fire up the slow cooker. A month of transition in wardrobe as we pack away the sandals and unearth socks and boots.
I love all of it: the earthy smell of decaying leaves, the unreal beauty in fall foliage, pumpkins, warming spices, wellies, an extra blanket on the bed, a new start.
A more personal transition occurs for me this month as I celebrate my birthday. Never dreaded, always welcomed as an opportunity for change. My New Year. And, this October, I hope to experience a professional transition. While I have had plenty of professional transitions in the past six years, I remain hopeful that a job offer is imminent. So, please be awesome, October.
I love all of it: the earthy smell of decaying leaves, the unreal beauty in fall foliage, pumpkins, warming spices, wellies, an extra blanket on the bed, a new start.
A more personal transition occurs for me this month as I celebrate my birthday. Never dreaded, always welcomed as an opportunity for change. My New Year. And, this October, I hope to experience a professional transition. While I have had plenty of professional transitions in the past six years, I remain hopeful that a job offer is imminent. So, please be awesome, October.
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Glasgow, Day Two
Having been much deprived of sleep the previous 24-plus hours, everyone slept soundly the first night, except for me. The XL beds at CitizenM were plenty comfortable, and I was definitely tired, but messed up by time zones. That, and the sun rises at 4 a.m. My ipad was a constant companion through the wee hours of the morning. I took advantage of the hotel’s free wi-fi to keep up with friends on Facebook, and I read The Accident, Chris Pavone’s new thriller set in the publishing world.
Leave it to a hot breakfast to feel revived! Ever a fan of
the traditional English/Irish/Scottish hot breakfast—bacon, sausages, blood
pudding, eggs, broiled tomatoes and mushrooms, beans, fry bread, and copious
amounts of toast—I was pleasantly surprised by the not-so-traditional buffet
presentation at fancy-pants CitizenM. Even the boys have made a study of black
pudding and had the best intentions to eat as much as they could on this trip.
After breakfast, we trekked to the West End to meet Dorothy
and David for a day of sightseeing. The West End had been described as a
bohemian neighborhood with hip restaurants, hotels, art galleries, and bars. Glasgow's major greenspace, Kelvingrove Park, is located here as well as Glasgow
University and several significant museums.
Our first stop of the day was the Hunterian Museum (above and below), housed on the campus of Glasgow University. The Hunterian, named after William Hunter and comprised of several smaller museums or collections, was a revelation.
We started in the main museum, which includes displays of Hunter’s medical discoveries, scientific instruments, such as those used by James Watt (he of the steam engine) and Lord Kelvin (of the unit measuring temperature) and
the university’s anthropological research,
zoological research,
and the Antonine Wall--the boundary of the northernmost point the Romans reached in Britain. It took 12 years to build the wall and its 16 small forts, which reached across the central belt of Scotland (from the Firth of Forth to the Firth of Clyde). Eight years after completion, the Romans were unable to contain the Caledonians north of the wall and retreated to Hadrian's Wall, 99 miles to the south. Since our time didn't allow for a visit to the Antonine Wall site, I was thrilled to see such major remains at the Hunterian.
Then, we crossed the street to visit the Hunterian Art Gallery, featuring the world’s largest public display of American artist James McNeill Whistler's work. I loved his full-length oil paintings of society women and females relatives, including the sketch of Miss Ethel Phillip and Red and Black: The Fan, a portrait of his sister-in-law, for their exquisite detail and non-sentimentality. But, I especially loved the Cartoon of Rich and Poor Peacocks, which was a study for the Peacock Room mural, which was one of sixteen motifs I included in a Furnishings assignment while in design school. (Note to self: add Washington DC's the Freer to list so as to visit the Peacock Room.)
Our first stop of the day was the Hunterian Museum (above and below), housed on the campus of Glasgow University. The Hunterian, named after William Hunter and comprised of several smaller museums or collections, was a revelation.
We started in the main museum, which includes displays of Hunter’s medical discoveries, scientific instruments, such as those used by James Watt (he of the steam engine) and Lord Kelvin (of the unit measuring temperature) and
the university’s anthropological research,
zoological research,
and the Antonine Wall--the boundary of the northernmost point the Romans reached in Britain. It took 12 years to build the wall and its 16 small forts, which reached across the central belt of Scotland (from the Firth of Forth to the Firth of Clyde). Eight years after completion, the Romans were unable to contain the Caledonians north of the wall and retreated to Hadrian's Wall, 99 miles to the south. Since our time didn't allow for a visit to the Antonine Wall site, I was thrilled to see such major remains at the Hunterian.
Then, we crossed the street to visit the Hunterian Art Gallery, featuring the world’s largest public display of American artist James McNeill Whistler's work. I loved his full-length oil paintings of society women and females relatives, including the sketch of Miss Ethel Phillip and Red and Black: The Fan, a portrait of his sister-in-law, for their exquisite detail and non-sentimentality. But, I especially loved the Cartoon of Rich and Poor Peacocks, which was a study for the Peacock Room mural, which was one of sixteen motifs I included in a Furnishings assignment while in design school. (Note to self: add Washington DC's the Freer to list so as to visit the Peacock Room.)
And, although we missed seeing Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s sketchbooks and paintings, which were housed in the gallery, we did get a wonderful tour of the Mackintosh House (below).
The original house had been torn down when the University expanded in the 1960s and was rebuilt of modern materials 100 meters away. Interior photography was not allowed for obvious conservation efforts. Suffice to say, the reproduction was faithfully executed with many of the original doors, windows, furnishings, and other fittings. Walking through the house was like stepping into one of my History of Furnishings textbooks: white everywhere and the organic form of Glasgow roses galore.
After a mediocre Italian lunch, where Simon ordered the best imaginable mashup--pizza with French fries--we all piled into cabs again to visit the Burrell Collection, another private art and artifact collection. The following photos give an idea of the breadth and depth of the collection as well as a glimpse into the beautiful space.
Later, back of CitizenM, John took a nap, but the boys and I walked a mile to the Geek Retreat. We thought we were going to a comic book store, but instead, the shop was a hangout for gaming. A cool idea but not what we were after. Disappointed, we walked back to CitizenM and stretched out a bit before dinner at Stravaigin, one of those hip West End restaurants. This one featured weird and wild food, but also had an off-menu burger for fussy, jetlagged American lads.
The highlight of my dinner was camel meatballs. Yes, camel, which tasted gamey, like antelope or venison. When spiced and sauced, you might not have guessed they weren’t beef or lamb. So good.
Later, back of CitizenM, John took a nap, but the boys and I walked a mile to the Geek Retreat. We thought we were going to a comic book store, but instead, the shop was a hangout for gaming. A cool idea but not what we were after. Disappointed, we walked back to CitizenM and stretched out a bit before dinner at Stravaigin, one of those hip West End restaurants. This one featured weird and wild food, but also had an off-menu burger for fussy, jetlagged American lads.
The highlight of my dinner was camel meatballs. Yes, camel, which tasted gamey, like antelope or venison. When spiced and sauced, you might not have guessed they weren’t beef or lamb. So good.
Up next: the Lake District
Monday, July 14, 2014
Glasgow, Day One
The goal for Glasgow was to adjust to the new time zone, and
the goal would be accomplished by sleeping, eating well, and walking. Our
flight landed at 7:00 a.m., and even though it took some time to get through
passport control, collect our luggage, and travel by cab to our hotel, we weren’t
able to check in until 11 a.m.
Sauchiehall and Renfrew scenes |
With time to kill, we explored Sauchiehall, one of Glasgow's several
major pedestrian mall that was steps from our hotel and featured sporting goods
stores, a large W.H. Smith, several grocery stores, bagel shops, noodle bars,
Boots pharmacies, and more. The walking and window
shopping rendered us tired and cranky so we stopped into the bagel shop for
coffee and wake-up tea (breakfast tea, white), then eventually made our way
back to the hotel where we waited for two rooms next to each other.
Fortunately
CitizenM had made a priority of ample, well-designed public spaces with
comfortable sofas for napping lounging and crazy seating on which to climb. CitizenM (“m” for mobile) was possibly the coolest hotel in
which we have stayed.
The hotel offers small but super stylish rooms at an
affordable price. At best our room was 250 square feet but very efficient with
an enclosed shower/toilet and an XL bed built into the far end of the room. The
bed is crowned by a picture window that keeps the room from becoming
claustrophobic.
Most of the room’s features, such as LED lights that change
color in the shower, climate, and entertainment system (TV, music, projected
artwork), are controlled by an electronic tablet.
We took naps and showers and, feeling only marginally less
tired, met Dorothy and David for a late lunch at the Charles Rennie
Mackintosh-designed Willow Tea Room. Charles Rennie Mackintosh (heretofore CRM)
was the biggest draw for me in Glasgow. Like Frank Lloyd Wright, Mackintosh was
an artist, an architect, and a designer. Although his style, which came to be
known as Glasgow Style, had elements of Art Deco and Art Nouveau, it was so unique
as to not fit into either, especially with figures and objects abstracted from
recognition. Sadly we would not be able
to see the Glasgow School of Art, where CRM was a student and then the
architect of the building that houses the current GSA. Just a few weeks before
our departure, GSA had a fire that did considerable damage and disrupted
end-of-term exhibits. Tours wouldn’t resume until after our return home. Ah, we’ll
just have to visit Glasgow again one day.
The Willow Tea Room was named after the street name,
Sauchiehall, which means “alley of willows” in Scottish Gaelic. CRM’s hand is
everywhere—in the abstract Glasgow rose and other botanical lines, and in the
rectangle, which formed a repeating pattern in the fireplace surround, chairs
and settles, and the façade. He designed the exterior, interior, cutlery, and
server uniforms.
Winston and I shared a traditional afternoon tea: a three-tiered
tower of finger sandwiches, cakes, scones with clotted cream and jam, biscuits,
and a pot of the house blend tea. Welcome to Scotland, indeed.
Now that we were fortified, we could do some sightseeing.
Our first stop was the Glasgow Cathedral, which was built by King David I in the 12th century on the sight where St. Mungo was said to be buried.
According the Historic Scotland, this is the only medieval cathedral on mainland Scotland to survive the Reformation virtually intact.
Afterward, Dorothy and David headed back to
their hotel, while John and I took the lads on a long walk.
We climbed up to the
Necropolis. This “city of the dead” boasts enormous monuments and sweeping
views of the city.
Rather than trying to figure out how the bus worked, we
walked back to our hotel. The walk probably took only 20 minutes. Thirty
minutes tops. First, though, we found an Indian restaurant for dinner because when
in Glasgow, one eats curry. Then early bed to beat the jetlag.
Sunday, July 13, 2014
Summer Vacation ’14: The Set Up
You could drive this route in 8.5 hours. We drove it over 10 days. |
The boys are at sleepaway camp for two weeks. I have finally
recovered from reverse jetlag, in which I fall asleep at 9:00 each evening and
wake up at 4:30 each morning. July 4 has been properly celebrated with my
parents on beautiful Lake Kampeska. The photos have been uploaded from the
various devices and the suitcases unpacked. Now
I am ready to write about our trip.
We decided to take our vacation as soon as we possibly could
this summer. Planning started back in January to help fulfill my mother-in-law’s dream
of a Beatrix Potter pilgrimage in the Lake District. To be honest, I had been
looking forward to a return to the Lake District ever since I visited back in 1987. Back then, on each gray, drizzly October day, I vowed to come back and see summer sun one day. And, I remembered that promise whenever I sat down to plan this trip, even though I knew full well that British weather is rather changeable 365 days a year.
The boys were mostly excited about a return trip to England. In 2010, we focused on London, Oxford, the West Country, and Devon/Dartmoor. This time we would stay north. Our itinerary would begin with a few days acclimating in
Glasgow after which we would move our base of operation to a vacation home in
the Lake District. When our week was over, we would make our way across England
by way of Hadrian’s Wall, spend a day in the Borders, then arrive in Edinburgh
for a few days of touring before driving back to Glasgow for our return flight.The only overlapping element from 2010 would be stone circles.
Me and Simon (14) waiting to board at MSP |
Modern travelers: Winston, Simon (permanently plugged into his music), John (listening to music and reading a book on the same device) |
Watching a favorite movie, The September Issue, while grounded waiting for a mechanic to fix the plane. |
We left Minneapolis/St. Paul on June 11, though there was a moment when it looked unlikely. The plane had a broken part, and the backup part was broken. For my anxiety, the less I knew, the better. After a
short layover in Amsterdam, we landed in the early morning at Glasgow;
met up with John's mother, Dorothy, and her husband, David; and wasted
no time getting on with our adventure.
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Movies of 2013
For posterity and personal reference, here is my movie list from 2013. My favorites are in bold; avoid-at-all-costs are in italics.
- We're the Millers (funny)
- Saving Mr. Banks (charming and funny; candidate for favorite of the year; Emma Thompson's fantastic 60s wardrobe was inspiring and introduced me to sweater guards)
- Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (Peter Jackson ruined The Hobbit)
- Red 2 (great cast : Bruce Willis, Helen Mirren, John Malkovich; based on the DC Comic of the same name; better than the first movie, which isn't often the case)
- The Internship (Owen Wilson never fails to make me smile)
- The Girls, season two (looking forward to season three)
- Superstar (part of boys' ongoing Will Ferrell film fest)
- Catching Fire (satisfying; for the record, I'm in the Gale camp and the boys and I have lots of debates/arguments about this; in the end, really, Katniss rocks!)
- Blackfish (stunning documentary about the cruelty of keeping orcas in captivity; I will never give SeaWorld a penny)
- Man of Steel (background noise while knitting)
- Hangover 3 (funny as the previous two)
- Anchorman (twice)
- Bling Ring (yucky, sad characters)
- Admission (Paul Rudd, Tina Fey; utterly predictable but still enjoyable)
- Escape Plan (not great, but entertaining; entire family saw at the theater)
- Elysium (huge disappointment; predictable with shallow acting efforts)
- Jack Reacher (not horrible, even though I dislike TC)
- Wolverine 2 (family night at the theater! we had so much fun)
- Homeland, season one (hooked from the first episode)
- Cloud Atlas (thoughtful, great layers in the multiple storylines)
- 2 Guns (date night; funny movie)
- Despicable Me 2 (after seeing this, son # 1 declared he didn't want to [get caught] watching animated movies at the theater)
- Pacific Rim (would have been better at the drive-in)
- World War Z (more scary than creepy; zombies are my 21st century nuclear war)
- Silver Lining Playbook (powerful)
- Red (could have been more-ish re: performances and plot)
- The Heat (Sandra Bollock & Melissa McCarthy are comic gold)
- Magic of Belle Isle (heartwarming; transatlantic in-flight movie; Morgan Freeman)
- Guilt Trip (Seth Rogan is terribly one-note, but I kinda like that note; transatlantic in-flight movie)
- Safe Haven (predictable and a little boring; transatlantic in-flight movie)
- Side Effect (wish I had seen this in the theater; in-flight movie)
- Summertime (Katherine Hepburn; Venice)
- Epic (dollar theater = good value)
- Identity Theft (great comedic duo in Jason Bateman and Melissa McCarthy; she would make reading the phonebook funny)
- Young Frankenstein (classic; M's bat mitzvah party)
- What to Expect When You're Expecting (background noise; pretty unmemorable)
- Time Bandits (annoying, but all my boys love it and recite lines)
- Star Trek: Into Darkness (yes!)
- To Rome with Love (hoped this Woody Allen movie would have been as strong as the one set in Paris; pretty unmemorable)
- Jack the Giant Slayer (okay)
- Life of Pi (wonderful; inspired Winston to read the novel)
- Oz the Great and Powerful (snooze)
- Warm Bodies (saw with John and Simon; we enjoyed this teen zombie romance)
- Zero Dark Thirty (date night with all of St. Paul at Grandview; deserving of all Oscar accolades)
- Waveriders (surfing in Ireland; transported us back to our summer vacation where the boys learned how to surf on teeny, tiny waves of Dingle Peninsula)
- Amazing Spiderman (Andrew Garfield made a pleasing Spidey)
- Ted (funny, and oh so inappropriate; Simon was horrified to watch with his parents)
- Bourne Legacy (why don't I remember the previous Bourne's better?)
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