Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Still in love with Chair but not with table and a little note on Sin
Moving along and completely changing gears, last night I came across this little gem of an article from Wired - the 7 deadly sins mapped across America! Fun! The information was collected and graphics created by Kansas State University and the accompanying intro from Wired notes “Christian clergy, likely noting the Bible Belt's status as Wrath Central, question the "science." Valid point—or maybe it's just the pride talking.” Ahahahahaha!!!! :)
Anyways, I thought this was funny and worth sharing! Note that the Pacific Northwest particularly suffers from greed, envy and pride - its like Puffy/P-Diddy once said, Mo money mo problems!
Friday, September 25, 2009
Chair love and other stuff
Both are from Pier 1 and I love the café/French farmhouse look of these chairs and as for the table, I think its unique but not so wild & crazy that it came mesh while with other styles and looks. The sad thing about the table is that it doesn’t expand so we couldn’t buy it for a dining room table :(. And the sad thing about the chairs is that they’re $119 a piece!!!! {Choke} Maybe the sale fairies will magically sprinkle sale dust on them and drop them by $50 and then we’ll all live happily ever after! Le sigh…
Aaaannnnndddddd, if the sale fairy worked her magic and I won the lottery and bought said table set, I would have these Etsy finds on my table top for those who came over for a visit - the stoic sheep would be filled with strawberries and the wicked vintage serving tiered tray would be covered in lovely little pastries! I think this would make me very popular no?
Keep Calm & Carry On bowl by Rae Dunn http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=5334039
Tipsy Time Machine http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=7011217
Of course it would be easier to win the lottery if I actually played it...maybe that will be this evening's activity...hmmmm...
Bon weekend!
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
30 Things To Do Before I'm 30
In no particular order:
* Lose 30lbs and stick to it
* Print off photos & create albums from the last several years
* Stay in better touch with friends and family
* Go home for a visit other than Christmas
* Work towards getting my career on track
* Moisturize daily – I never do this and my skin hates me for it
* Drink at least 3 glasses of water a day – I don’t like water, its weird, I know
* Wear the skirts and dresses I own instead staring at them in the closet
* Go for walks after dinner
* Learn how to drive a standard/stick-shift car
* Use the cookbooks and food magazines we already have
* Research our new posting like crazy, wherever that may be
* Call my Nanny more often
* Buy a used sewing machine and learn how to use it
* Get back to jewelry making and my little Etsy shop
* Read more books – both the light fluffy stuff and more topical politico stuff
* Go for a walk/hike in one of Washington’s rainforests
* Visit the Oregon Vortex because I like weird stuff like this
* Go to a ballet
* Frame at least 1 of the 2 giant antique posters we bought in Brussels
* Hopefully find and commit to upholstery for our wingback – I’m cursed with my mother’s fabric/upholstery indecisiveness!
* Learn how to reupholster a wingback chair!
* Bake Jamie Oliver’s Chocolate-Beer Bread Pudding and Joy the Baker’s Peanut Butter and Bacon Cookies (this will defeat the 30 lbs lose, but perhaps they can be a reward? Hmmmm…)
* Start to acquire my ‘fancy’ tableware
* Go to the gym or do a workout dvd weekly
* Treat myself to a manicure, pedicure and massage
* Throw away clothes I haven’t worn in 4 years
* Give sushi one more chance – we’re already at 3-strikes-you’re-out, but a fourth attempt won’t kill me
* Get through my permanent residency application process without having a nervous breakdown from a) the cost, b) the amount of repetitive paperwork, c) the inevitable losing of paperwork in the system, d) all of the above – I’m not worried about the interview, we’re married for real, point finale.
* Find several missing items that have gone awol since my move from Vancouver
So here’s to 29! 365 days and counting till the next major milestone.
PS ~ A very Happy Birthday to my birthday twins Erin and Mark!
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Quote of the Day
~ Trudy A of Seattle (one of my colleagues)
Sunday, September 20, 2009
You know you've acclimatized to the Pacific Northwest when...
Friday, September 18, 2009
Flee fleas!!!!
So after some minor panicking at my inability to be a good puppy-mommy, I went out and bought some flea/tick shampoo and flea/tick medicine/serrum and Moose had a bath. While he dried off, I went into overdrive with washing everything I could think of that he had touched/sat on and then went out to Pet Smart when it opened at 9am to get carpet and upholstery santizer. The laundry is done and the furniture has been sprayed down and our bedroom has had the carpet cleaned but there's still more to do and all the fun from this morning awaits me when I get home tonight. Good times.
Moral of this story, if you take your dog to a beach, make sure he's wearing a flea collar.
Bon weekend! I hope yours is flea free!!!
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
You, Me and Francis Ford Coppola
Long time, no blog, what gives? So I’ve been absentee from the blog for a week mainly because I’ve been distracted by other things but I’m back and with a photos and updates of our trip to San Francisco which we took over the Labour Day weekend. San Francisco is a great city and we had a really nice time as the weather was perfect and we got to see nearly everything we had set out to see. We had two fabulous dinners, one at the excellent Café Claude which was feet from our hotels and came recommended by Time Out magazine and it certainly lived up to its praise. The other meal was at Kuleto’s, recommended by a colleague, and for being located on a street that looked and felt like a tourist trap, this restaurant was anything but a trap – it was lovely Italian food served in a lovely and surprisingly intimate (for a large) restaurant.
As for the title of this post – as you’ll see from the photos (I took about 300 photos so below are a smattering of them), Mike & I stumbled upon Mr. Coppola’s very own restaurant in which we not only enjoyed our late afternoon lunch but were also treated to a unintended sideshow by Mr. Coppola’s family/friend v/associates (we’re still not sure the connection these guys had to the director but it was obviously close) who were without a doubt members of the mafia from New York. Awesome.
All in all, San Francisco is a great weekend visit and an excellent cardio/leg work out. If you’re ever down there, my recommendations would be this: 1) you must have at least 1 meal at Café Claude and 2) avoid the wharf unless you want to see the sea lions or take a tour of the bay – it’s a total tourist trap and could do with a good power wash.
Without further adieu:
Here is Mike inside Francis F. Coppola's restaurant - Mike wanted me to take the mafia godfather's picture but I dare for fear of ending up by in the bay with bricks in my pockets...just joking! I'm sure deep down, he was a very nice man.After a rather epic trek up one of the many many hills in the city, we were awarded with this lovely view
We took a boat tour of the bay as part of our Expedia package and nearly missed out on seeing the Golden Gate Bridge up close and personal - this is what the bridge initially looked like - a black specter in the fog
but then the captain turned to boat hard starboard and then we got this view
Yay! Its a bridge!...
One of the great things about San Francisco is the amazing architecture and architectural details that you can see pretty everywhere in the city, here's a sampling (and this is only a small sample of all the photos I took of houses):
This sign is a fixed to the fence shown above - I guess this hood was a bit rough during a time when $10 was a serious award
How amazing is this gate?!
Chinatown in San Francisco was very impressive
We also went out the the San Francisco Palace of Fine Arts, designed in 1915 by Bernard Maybeck - it is a very beautiful park and it is definitely worth making time for.
On our last day there we made our way to the Gaybourhood and it was fabulous! It was very warm that day so we stop in at Orphan Andy's for root beer floats - it had an awesome 50s/60s dinner dive feel and the burgers were the size of a small child!
Also in the hood is the Harvey Milk Plaza
Hopefully sometime soon Prop 8 will be shot to hell (where it belongs) and Mr. Milk's dream for equality will finally be realized.
San Francisco is known for its trolley but perhaps what is less known is that the city is also where vintage trolleys go to find rebirth. Below are two trolleys from the 40s mid-West America and the early 20th century from Milan, Italy. Both were very pretty!
Lastly, I swear this is the end of the deluge of photos - one of the only things worth going to the wharf is the sea lions. They're amazingly huge stinky beasts and here are 3 of about 20 photos I took of them.
All in all, I give San Francisco...
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Oh Yum!!!
I came across this gem moments ago on The Times (London) website and knew it had to be shared! We're hoping to have our friends Shaun & Melissa over for dinner soon so perhaps this will be the after dinner sweet treat. I'm also thinking my friend Kate would appreciate this as a pick-me-up during our résume bonanza in a few weeks.
Jamie Oliver's bread pudding and chocolate-beer sauce
Serves 8-10
*I've added the imperical measurements next to the metric
For the pudding
~ 5 large eggs, preferably free-range or organic
~ 5 tbsp cocoa powder
~ 5 tbsp golden caster sugar, plus extra for sprinkling
~ 300ml single cream (10.5 fluid ounces)
~ 700ml semi-skimmed milk (24.5 fluid ounces)
~ 1 x 800g loaf of white bread, ends removed, cut into 1cm-thick slices (1.76 lbs or 28.5 ounces)
~ 100g good-quality dark chocolate (70% cocoa solids) (3.5 ounces)
~ 1 small handful of pecan nuts, roughly chopped
~ 1 punnet of strawberries, to serve (optional)
~ Vanilla ice cream, to serve (optional)
For the sauce
~ 100ml dark beer (3.5 fluid ounces)
~ 100ml double cream (3.5 fluid ounces)
~ 2 tbsp golden caster sugar
~ 100g good-quality dark chocolate (70% cocoa solids) (3.5 ounces)
~ Sea salt
Heat your oven to 180C/350F/Gas Mark 4. Crack your eggs into a large mixing bowl with the cocoa powder and sugar and whisk until smooth and silky. Gradually whisk in the cream and milk until combined. Cut your slices of bread into rough triangles and add them to the mixing bowl. Push them down gently and leave for 30 seconds, or until they’ve soaked up that lovely chocolate custard. It’s best to do this a few slices at a time rather than all at once.
You’ll need an ovenproof dish or tin about 30cm x 25cm x 6cm (12 x 10 x 2 inches) deep. Layer your soaked bread triangles in the dish, then pour over any remaining custard so it fills the dish. Leaving the chocolate in its wrapper, smash it against the worktop to break it into chunks. Unwrap and poke these chunks between your slices of bread. They’ll melt into wonderful warm pools and be nice little surprises as you’re eating.
Scatter your chopped pecans over the top of the pudding, then sprinkle over some sugar evenly from a height. Pop the pudding into the oven for 25-30 minutes, or until it’s golden and the custard is delicately setting, but still wobbly.
While that’s happening get a medium pan over a medium-high heat and add your beer, cream and sugar. Keep stirring and as soon as it comes to the boil, take it off the heat. Smash up your chocolate as you did before and stir the whole lot into the hot cream mixture with a small pinch of salt. Serve your pudding with your chocolate-beer sauce drizzled over the top. Lovely with a few fresh strawberries and a scoop of vanilla ice cream.
Extract from: Jamie’s America by Jamie Oliver is published on Thursday September 3, 2009.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/food_and_drink/recipes/article6809206.ece?token=null&offset=0&page=1
And should I run out of time to prepare the above described delight - I'll make this instead from The Times Five ways with peaches article:
Baked with almonds
Halve and stone the peaches and pack them, cut side up, into a baking dish. Crumble some amaretti biscuits and soften them with a little Amaretto liqueur. Spoon over the top of each peach, scatter with flaked almonds and bake at 180C/350F/gas 4 for about 20 minutes or until the peaches are tender and the topping golden.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/food_and_drink/article6734485.ece
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
LOL-tastic!
Hy-freaking-sterical!!!!
Enough said!
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Part 3 and the last installment
So, back to Bytown! Part of the reason for our visit home was to witness my baby cousin Shawn getting married to the lovely and fun Miz Chrissy. I can remember Shawn as a newborn – my first memory of him was watching him getting his diaper changed and he still had the remnants of his umbilical cord. But I digress, on August 22nd Shawn and Chrissy wed to the delight of their family and friends! The wedding was a lot of fun and Shawn & Chrissy both looked fabulous as did their wedding party!
Their vows, with my super zoom on so the image is a bit hazy
I stayed for their photos to drive them and their truck back to the reception - as you can see a storm was rolling in. This is Shawn and Chrissy with their maid of honour and best man - Sarah & Simon.
A few days after the wedding and the day before we flew back here, we went up to my Uncle Danny’s cottage on Lac Leslie. The lac/lake is about an hour and half drive from Ottawa on the Québec side of the river and is a really pretty and peaceful place. Danny and Sally’s cottage is located in a cute little bay and the lake itself was named one of the top 5 cleanest lakes in Québec in 2008. It was great to be able to spend time with my parents, sister, uncles and aunt! And yet again, Moose had a whole new set of adventures – it turns out he’s a boater – he loved being on my uncle’s pontoon. I can’t wait to get back up there next year!
The amazing brother and sister duo of Jake & Jersey! My uncles 2 year old golden retrievers
Kisses in the mud
Even though Moose doesn't seem to care for the water, he proved he could swim
The amazing duo amazingly spend hours fishing every day as evidenced by these photos. They walk for hours in the shallow water looking for fish. Their attention span and focus is pretty cool.
Out on the pontoon - I swear my parents have eyes and not just sun glasses as place holders!
Beth & Moose riding the waves
Captain Dan, Uncle Garry and Sally
My dog boats...seriously, its like he lives the high life everyday or something...
Nessie of Lac Leslie and her accompanying boat mark some of the shallower and rocky patches in the lake