style – REBECCA BREE

THE GREAT ESCAPE

?

Last weekend I stepped into one of the most stylish little boutiques in Vancouver.  It was an accident waiting to happen.  So inviting…..and so pretty…..bree9


Chock full of fashion-forward brands displayed between luxuribree4bree12ous French Provincial furnishings, bouquets of roses and gorgeous extras from Lulu Frost and Tocca.  Should I say more?

They offer chic statement pieces and effortless wardrobe staples with a tightly edited collection of the most coveted clothing and accessories from cutting-edge international designers.bree2bree3

And more….

?bree7

bree11
bree8bree6

You can bet that you’ll find the next big thing here.

Not to mention the owner, Rebecca Bree is a very nice lady.bree14Where? 3680 West 4th Avenue, Vancouver.

Websitehttp://rebeccabree.com/

Photos: d. king

 Food/Wine: Almost Lost

I love finding places of interest that are not considered mainstream and are somewhat off the beaten track….pretty much anywhere I travel.

Photo by Liz Kuball A house cured salmon spread at Bob’s Well Bread Bakery.
Photo by Liz Kuball
A house cured salmon spread at Bob’s Well Bread Bakery.

In my hometown I sometimes stumble across a little hidden gem that is noteworthy. Then I’m excited to have discovered something new but they always seem to get found out.  As in me posting this right now.   Here are a few rare places I’ve come across in the past:

Of special note was the time the car broke down in a place outside Davisville,Texas.  First thought was “this is a major drag.” Then my travelling companions and I ended up spending a few nights at an historic and quaint b+b with great tex mex and discovered cowboy poetry.  Who knew cowboys could be so sensitive?  They came from all over the country and read original poems, some set to music in local venues around town.  Now THAT was something I’ll never forget!  They were amazing and I would go back for more of them cowboys that.

Photo by Liz Kuball Hats at Bell Street Farm.
Photo by Liz Kuball
Hats at Bell Street Farm.
Photo by Liz Kuball A drinks cart in an Alamo Motel suite.
Photo by Liz Kuball
A drinks cart in an Alamo Motel suite.

Another time was camping in the Poncho Villa State Park in New Mexico and just walking across the border to have authentic Mexican food in a cute little place in…Mexico.  There are a lot of other places way too numerous to mention but the short of it is …..it’s always a pleasure or at least a surprise to come across the “little finds.” Like Marfa, Texas which is a little art mecca.

Which brings me to CALIFORNIA WINE COUNTRY (which only has a teenly little bit to do with Marfa):

Everyone is familiar with Napa and lesser known Sonoma has reached it’s peak and has become quite established by now.   Then there’s Solveng, the tiny Danish town just outside Santa Barbara where the movie Sideways was filmed (I did a post about Solveng not so long ago).  So tell me “why did I come so close but yet so far to miss this little dusty backwater town with the nickname “Lost Almost”: a former stagecoach stop with a single main street on the fringe of the Santa Ynez Valley??  Properly pronounced Los Alamos.  You know I saw the sign for it too (darn!).  According to Condé Nast Traveller (CNT) it’s a small town big on flavour.

The once-sleepy Los Alamos (pop. 1,954) now sees a steady stream of wine-country visitors and day-trippers, many of whom are so taken with its languorous, wine-stoned cowboy vibe that they end up spending the night even if their car doesn’t break down.

You know some of these towns get a bad rap where people believe they attract mainly boozers.  Okay; it truth be told perhaps they do.  But did you know that where there’s great wine there’s great food.  Honestly all of these California wine regions tend to have outstanding cuisine.  I even have friends (who like to drink wine) who came a long long way to visit Napa (I did a whole post specifically on Napa for them) and they ended up not even going to one single winery.  They ate and explored the beauty of the wine region itself.  I have firsthand experience in the food versus wine there because I love grocery shopping in the small towns in and surrounding Napa.  They definitely attract Foodies (the debate is still on whether I’m really one or not) and I brought back stuff I can’t find at home.  So on to LOS ALAMOS not to be confused with “the Alamo” (This new L.A. – I’ll see you sometime soon, I promise):

A town re-invented (taken from an article by CNT “CALIFORNIA’S NEXT GREAT FOOD & WINE DESTINATION”

The town’s re-invention is due largely to a tight-knit community of creatives, many of them Los Angeles refugees, who came to Los Alamos in search of a second act. There’s Bob Oswaks, who ran marketing for Sony Pictures Television and now mans the ovens at Bob’s Well Bread, his artisanal bakery in a renovated filling station. There’s Jamie Gluck, a former fashion advertising exec who spends his days in a ten-gallon hat at the helm of Bell Street Farm, a rustic-chic lunch spot with a phenomenal crispy porchetta. Across the street, journalist turned winemaker Sonja Magdevski runs Casa Dumetz Wines and the nearby Babi’s Beer Emporium. And just down the block, in the 1880 Union Hotel, the sepia-toned, taxidermy-bedecked Wine Saloon is overseen by actor Kurt Russell, whose own GoGi pinot noir is served at the bar.

How on earth did this happen? The first glimmers came in 2004, when Clark Staub—a 20-year music-biz veteran and erstwhile Capitol Records VP—opened Full of Life Flatbread on the west end of Bell Street. With its obsessively sourced local ingredients and massive 900-degree wood-fired oven (blessed on its first lighting by local Chumash elders), the restaurant was soon luring chefs and epicureans from all over the state—and putting Los Alamos on the map as a tiny but legitimate food destination.

You’re killing me right now

A decade on, Los Alamos is again being transformed by an influx of young proprietors and entrepreneurs eager to put their creative stamp on a town they see as having Marfa-like potential (see??) . Zac Wasserman, the 27-year-old winemaker behind Frequency Wines, is part of the recent surge. “Los Alamos is a blank canvas—you feel like you’ll be able to impact its future and grow with it,” says Wasserman, who first considered nearby Los Olivos but found the town too expensive and oversaturated. Opposite his tasting room, the once-scruffy Alamo Motel (a 1950s relic) has been reinvented by motelier group Shelter Social Club. Now, with a stylish spot to stay the night, Los Alamos is seeing its cool-kid cachet grow. Which raises the question: How long can it hold on to its pioneer-town charm?

For now, despite the drumbeat of new development, Los Alamos retains its egalitarian mix of silver-fox boomers, plaid-shirted millennials, and denim-clad ranch hands. (This is a place where a cherry-red Cobra roadster might be parked beside a dented pickup with peeling Sarah Palin stickers.) And there are still discoveries to be made—like the biodynamic Martian Ranch & Vineyard, run by Nan Helgeland, who’s married to screenwriter and director Brian Helgeland (L.A. Confidential, Mystic River). Typical of Los Alamos proprietors, Nan is no dabbling weekend hobbyist: During the harvest, she’s up at 3 a.m., tending to her vines. Pay a visit and she might take you around her produce garden, show off her Irish Dexter cows, or point out a red hawk’s nest. As often happens in Los Alamos, you may linger a bit longer—and drink a bit more wine—than you’d planned.

Sounds like my kind of crazy, eccentric, wonderful town to eat, drink and dawdle. Better go before it gets too well known and too fou fou.

The full article written by Emily Poenisch includes places to eat, drink and stay:

http://www.cntraveler.com/stories/2015-10-08/californias-next-great-food-and-wine-destination

My blog post about MARFA, Texas:

https://girlwhowouldbeking.com/2012/12/09/scene-in-a-giant-of-a-sleepy-little-town-in-texas/

My blog post about SOLVENG, Ca:

https://girlwhowouldbeking.com/2015/03/15/travelculture-a-tiny-taste-of-denmark/

My DESTINATIONS folder (more to come):

https://girlwhowouldbeking.com/category/destinations/

 

ART – Gogh Figure! Splendor in the grass

CROP ART?vangogh1

One of Vincent van Gogh’s olive tree paintings has literally sprung to life, reproduced as a large, growing field in Minnesota. Last month the Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia) unveiled a 1.5-acre work of crop art by Stan Herd, a Kansas-based artist who has planted many earthworks around the world, including a re-creation of one of Leonardo da Vinci’s sketches of gliders. Commissioned by Mia to celebrate the museum’s centennial, this most recent piece replicates van Gogh’s “Olive Trees,” one of 15 known paintings of the trees the artist produced in the fall of 1889. That specific work actually hangs in the museum, but Herd’s has sprouted on a site belonging to media firm Thomson Reuters, near the Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport.vangogh4Herd has cultivated the field since spring, and his sprawling artwork will remain on view through the end of the fall. Prior to the planting, he had to carefully determine which specific plants and soils to incorporate in order to best represent van Gogh’s particular palette. The painter’s brushstrokes, too, demanded the mowing and digging of many serpentine paths.vangogh2“You can see this is darker, so I’m planting these kind of more verdant, green plants, he explained in a video about the crop artwork’s creation, pointing at a gridded version of the painting he used as a plan.

“The amazing thing about van Gogh’s painting is that there’s not a single straight line in the whole canvas,” he added. “Everything is organic and curved and flowing, and it’s like a pulse.”

The result, just slightly muted in tone, is impressively faithful to the original painting. Mia chose the site specifically so planes arriving to the airport will pass it, so you’ll be able to see it from above if you’re flying into the city — just be sure to choose a seat on the left.vanghogh3

Source: Claire Voon for hyperallergic.com

Photos:  all images courtesy Minneapolis Institute of Arts unless otherwise stated

Health MATTERS – the benefits of being Happy

far outweigh the non-benefits of being unhappy.  But who is happy all the time?  Being happy all the time is just as not normal as being sad all the time!happy7Life throws you some curveballs and it seems almost everyone I know right now is carrying a heavy personal load in some way be it with their family, love relationship, health, finances or job.  I know a family whose house burnt down on Thanksgiving day no less.  They’re just thankful that they made it out alive & now they’re lucky to have found their cat that ran out when the firemen arrived.  Their personal belongings gone.  The situation is not a happy one but they themselves are generally happy people and other than being shaken up by this devastation they’re dealing with it in an emotionally stable manner even with having to soon face starting all over again from scratch.  It will not be as easy as looking for a new job. Which leaves me with the conclusion that aside from family, if you strip yourself of all your worldly belongings and material goods you are left with only yourself in your own skin and your bare emotions That is really all you have that is your own. My thoughts are if you are an emotionally balanced person you will be able to face any negativity that comes your way in a more graceful and stable manner to be able to get through it faster than someone who is not.  happy3I believe your emotional health is at the crux of your quality of life. Without happiness, hopefulness and well-being, it’s difficult to reach your full potential and embrace each day as it comes. Even though some days leave you listless and it can be really hard to get through them. But you’ve got to suck it up and get on with it or get over it! If anything, I’ve always been hopeless hopeful.  Hope gives you; well….it gives you possibilities.  You can see yourself succeeding instead of failing.  Maybe you’ll end up failing but the thing is you expected not to.  You’ll pick yourself up, brush yourself off and start again because you have faith in yourself and your abilities.  Mainly you have faith in yourself that you can and will overcome temporary setbacks. This is what John Lennon had to say about it:happy8The following is what Dr. Mercola has to offer on the subject:

Your emotional health is also intricately tied to your physical health, such that an emotionally imbalanced person will be at a greater risk of chronic diseases and acute illnesses like colds and flu.

It’s thought that genetics account for about 50 percent of your “innate” happiness while life circumstances make up another 10. The rest is under your control, and the first step to harnessing it is to choose it and believe you can be happy.

Research shows, for instance, that when people were told to attempt to feel happier when listening to music, they were (as opposed to those who were told to simply relax).

It was the intention to become happier that made a difference.

It might help to consider your emotions as a form of energy. According to Dr. Bradley Nelson, when you feel an emotion, what you’re really sensing is the vibration of a particular energy. Each emotion has its own vibratory signature, and when intense emotions are felt, they can become trapped in your body, much like a ball of energy.

These “balls of energy” can become lodged just about anywhere in your body, where they can then cause disruptions in your body’s energy system, which underlies your physical system much like an invisible matrix.

Your body cannot tell the difference between an actual experience that triggers an emotional response and an emotion fabricated through thought process alone—such as when worrying about something negative that might occur but has not actually happened, or conversely, thinking about something positive and pleasant.

The latter, of course, will help your body to express many of the health benefits associated with happiness, while ruminating or focusing on negativity can literally manifest disease.

The Health Benefits of Happiness

Happiness not only feels good… it’s physically good for your body, too. For instance, past research has found that positive emotions –including being happy, lively and calm — appear to play a role in immune function. One study found that when happy people are exposed to cold and flu viruses, they’re less likely to get sick and, if they do, exhibit fewer symptoms.

The association held true regardless of the participants’ levels of self-esteem, purpose, extraversion, age, education, body mass or pre-study immunity to the virus, leading the lead researcher to say:

“We need to take more seriously the possibility that positive emotional style is a major player in disease risk.”

Further, in a study of nearly 200 heart failure patients, those with higher levels of gratitude had better mood, better sleep, less fatigue, and less inflammation, which can worsen heart failure, than those with lower levels.

What this means is that investing in your own happiness should not be viewed as a self-indulgent luxury. It represents an important piece of the puzzle when it comes to piecing together your overall health.

Your mind can only take so much stress before it breaks down, yet many neglect to tend to their emotional health with the same devotion they give to their physical well-being.

 Strategies to Stay Emotionally Healthy

It’s clear that your emotional state is intricately tied to your physical and mental states. So what can you do to stay emotionally healthy? Like achieving physical fitness or a healthy weight, this is an ongoing process… something that must be tended to each and every day. The good news is that small steps add up and can make a major different for your emotional health. Tips for emotional nurturing include:

  1. Be an Optimist

Looking on the bright side increases your ability to experience happiness in your day-to-day life while helping you cope more effectively with stress.

  1. Have Hope

Having hope allows you to see the light at the end of the tunnel, helping you push through even dark, challenging times. Accomplishing goals, even small ones, can help you to build your level of hope.

  1. Embrace Your Quirks

Self-deprecating remarks and thoughts will shroud your mind with negativity and foster increased levels of stress. Seek out and embrace the positive traits of yourself and your life, and avoid measuring your own worth by comparing yourself to those around you.

  1. Stay Connected

Having loving and supportive relationships helps you feel connected and accepted, and promote a more positive mood. Intimate relationships help meet your emotional needs, so make it a point to reach out to others to develop and nurture these relationships in your life.

  1. Express Gratitude

People who are thankful for what they have are better able to cope with stress, have more positive emotions, and are better able to reach their goals. The best way to harness the positive power of gratitude is to keep a gratitude journal or list, where you actively write down exactly what you’re grateful for each day. Doing so has been linked to happier moods, greater optimism and even better physical health.

  1. Find Your Purpose and Meaning

When you have a purpose or goal that you’re striving for, your life will take on a new meaning that supports your mental well-being. If you’re not sure what your purpose is, explore your natural talents and interests to help find it, and also consider your role in intimate relationships and ability to grow spiritually.

  1. Master Your Environment

When you have mastery over your environment, you’ve learned how to best modify your unique circumstances for the most emotional balance, which leads to feelings of pride and success. Mastery entails using skills such as time management and prioritization along with believing in your ability to handle whatever life throws your way.

  1. Exercise Regularly

Exercise boosts levels of health-promoting neurochemicals like serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine, which may help buffer some of the effects of stress and also relieve some symptoms of depression. Rather than viewing exercise as a medical tool to lose weight, prevent disease, and live longer – all benefits that occur in the future – try viewing exercise as a daily tool to immediately enhance your frame of mind, reduce stress and feel happier.

  1. Practice Mindfulness

Practicing “mindfulness” means you’re actively paying attention to the moment you’re in right now. Rather than letting your mind wander, when you’re mindful you’re living in the moment and letting distracting or negative thoughts pass through your mind without getting caught up in their emotional implications. Mindfulness can help you reduce stress for increased well-being as well as achieve undistracted focus.

All we can do is try to do the best we can

Source: Dr. Mercola – articles by Mercola.com

Feel-good Friday: turning over a new LEAF

As with snowflakes, it is said that no two leaves are alike

or with your dog
or with your dog

Nature will bear the closest inspection. She invites us to lay our eye level with her smallest leaf, and take an insect view of its plain. – Henry David ThoreauFall2Not that I have much choice in the matter but I’ve let go of summer and I’m embracing Fall, realizing that I adapt quite easily to the given seasons and welcome the change.  We always adjust and every season has its beauty.  Besides I always loved Autumn Leaves the song in all its variations.  leaves3If you’ve ever been to places like Quebec , Vermont or Maine to witness the Fall Foliage you have seen nature in all its colourful glory.

patterns on pavement
patterns on pavement

Fall1On a regular walk the other day I really paid attention to the leaves in all their shapes, colours and the varying degrees of vegetation…on the ground, on the trees and falling from them and especially all the dried up ones that make crunchy noises when you walk over them.  It’s appreciating and welcoming nature and the changes that go along with each season.  I’m in a more symbolic and poetic mood lately cause life is too short to worry about stupid things, things you can’t change and I’m willing to embrace whatever will come…especially if it’s something good.

A few quotes I like:leaves1

October is the fallen leaf, but it is also a wider horizon more clearly seen. It is the distant hills once more in sight, and the enduring constellations above them once again.
No winter lasts forever; no spring skips its turn.Knowing trees, I understand the meaning of patience. Knowing grass, I can appreciate persistence.A woodland in full color is awesome as a forest fire, in magnitude at least, but a single tree is like a dancing tongue of flame to warm the heart. – Hal Borland

Fall3

Photos: d. king

because DOGS need culture too
because DOGS need culture too along with nature

Beauty: make like an Egyptian

HOW TO CHANNEL your inner CLEOPATRA or NEFERTITI – take your pick.

Photographed by Eilzabeth Brockway for Vogue
Photographed by Eilzabeth Brockway for Vogue

They were both beautiful, powerful women of their time.  They used natural cosmetics made of malachite and naturally colored clay they would dry in the sun and then burnt to achieve the right red pigment perfect for cheeks and lips.  Seems like a lot of work.  I’m sure that both Cleo & Nef had help to attend to that part and then loaded it on with a heavy hand.  But they were regal, glamorous, rich and desired. This is 2015 so where am I going with all this?

Photographed by Kevin Tachman. Makeup by Pat McGrath
Photographed by Kevin Tachman. Makeup by Pat McGrath

Besides the fact that I stayed in a hotel across the street from The Egyptian Museum in Cairo for almost one month and was fascinated with the world’s most extensive collection of pharaonic antiquities and think I may have seen it all….and tried to imagine what life may have been like as a pharaoh (as the longest-reigning female pharaoh in a man’s world  – coincidentally there’s a book called “The Woman who would be King”).  I know it’s a long shot but I like to think we have something in common.

This is going somewhere I promise….

Kre-at Beauty 24-Karat Gold Lashes, $295; for information: barneys.com
Kre-at Beauty 24-Karat Gold Lashes, $295; for information: barneys.com

The METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART has a brand new exhibition “Ancient Egypt Transformed: The Middle Kingdom,” which highlights the cultural and political renaissance that flourished in the civilization over the span of nearly 400 years.

Spitfire Girl Potion Collection Spray Perfumes, $45 each; spitfiregirl.com
Spitfire Girl Potion Collection Spray Perfumes, $45 each; spitfiregirl.com

Among the pieces on display are canopic jars used for mummification, and ornate royal jewelry inlaid with precious stones and coated in gold.  Ahh….gold!  I left Egypt with some beautiful 22kt gold jewellery which included a ring that has an inlaid Pharaoh and a pair of good luck scarab earrings and matching pendant.

Tarte Stroke of Midnight Brush Set, $44; sephora.com
Tarte Stroke of Midnight Brush Set, $44; sephora.com

Even more than 3,000 years later, a dash of bright gold—prized by the Egyptians as a divine and indestructible element and associated with the sun god Ra—still makes our hearts flutter.  Just ask the gilded aficionado Pat McGrath, who adorned Parisians last week with her forthcoming 24-karat inspired eyeshadow hue (in above photo).

Christian Louboutin Scarabée Nail Colour, $50 each; christianlouboutin.com
Christian Louboutin Scarabée Nail Colour, $50 each; christianlouboutin.com

We are not suggesting you go full-scale Cleopatra, but a simple swipe of metallic eye gloss or a gold-handled makeup brush is enough to tap into the hue’s brilliant decorative effect.  Maybe make you feel a little pharaohish.

Aerin Travel Gold Hairbrush, $75; aerin.com
Aerin Travel Gold Hairbrush, $75; aerin.com

Why not bring a little Egyptian-inspired glamour to your everyday beauty routine?

Peter Thomas Roth 24K Gold Mask, $80; peterthomasroth.com
Peter Thomas Roth 24K Gold Mask, $80; peterthomasroth.com

From Spitfire Girl’s hieroglyphic-stamped perfume bottles (I love my little collection of Egyptian perfume bottles) to a gold-capped mask so rich Cleopatra might have kept it on her vanity, these are some ways to celebrate the arrival of Egypt by way of New York City.

That was my point all along!

 Source: Jenna Rennert for Vogue

Style: JapaFrench Collaboration at Uniqlo

A Smashing Smörgåsbord of stylish items at a lower price point

Carinne Roitfeld
Carine Roitfeld models a few of her designs

When I was in San Francisco a few years ago there was a long lineup around the corner from Union Square, and ever so curious I had to find out what it was about.  It was the opening of their first UNIQLO location and unfortunately I did not wait to find out what was in store but people were walking out with big bags and bigger smiles on their faces and said there were some awesome deals and steals.

les manteaux
les manteaux

I’m sure I’ll get my chance again because the Japanese fast-fashion retailer (according to reliable sources) is in the process of securing a significant size space at Vancouver’s Metrotown Metropolis in Burnaby.  Two stores are also scheduled to open in Toronto.   I don’t usually go out of my way for a quickie fashion fix however….

And now Carine Roitfeld, global fashion director of Harper’s BAZAAR (my favourite fashion magazine) among many other titles (like former Tom Ford collaborator at Gucci) and a fabulous fashionista in her own right, is getting into the design game.

les foulards
les foulards

Roitfeld partnered with Uniqlo for a 40-piece collection created in collaboration with Naoki Takizawa, design director of the Japanese brand, all for under $200.

les vestes
les vestes
le body - making a comeback?
le body – making a comeback?

Roitfeld explains that she started with the idea of clothes she’d want to wear herself and took it from there. From signature pencil skirts to a leopard coat (fake of course) et beaucoup plus….

Find out what’s hitting Uniqlo stores and Uniqlo.com  on October 29th

It may very well be Parisian Chic for the masses

I don’t mind being a part of that

Photos: harpersbazaar.com

Just Cookies – the old fashioned kind

I had a request for these two terrific tried and true cookie recipes:

OLD FASHIONED PEANUT BUTTER

the plate belonged to my grandmother from Ireland
the plate belonged to my grandmother from Ireland (wouldn’t you know – a Jamaican doctor bird, my favourite).  Named because they’re so pretty they make you immediately feel better.

½ cup of smooth or crunchy peanut butter

½ cup butter

½ cup firmly packed brown sugar

½ cup granulated sugar (or fine baker’s cane sugar)

1 egg

1 tsp. vanilla

1 ½ cups all-purpose flour

½ tsp. baking soda

¼ tsp. salt

Optional – 1 pkg (300g) semi-sweet chocolate chips (or, use Reese’s chocolate peanut butter chips)

Heat oven to 350F.  In mixing bowl, cream together peanut butter & butter.

Gradually beat in sugars.  Blend in egg & vanilla.

Combine flour, baking soda and salt.  Stir into peanut butter mixture.  Stir in chips if using.

Form heaping Tablespoons of dough into balls.  Place 1-2 inches apart onto 2 greased cookie sheets.  Flatten with fork.  Bake approx.. 10 minutes or until golden.

Cool cookies slightly; then move to wire rack.  Makes about 2 dozen cookies.

OLD FASHIONED OATMEAL RAISIN:

oldfashionedoatmal(formerly known as writer’s block cookies)

1 cup butter, softened

1 ½ cups dark brown sugar

2 eggs

2 tsp. vanilla

2 cups flour

1 tsp. baking soda

1 tsp. baking powder

2 tsp. cinnamon

¼ tsp. ground cloves

½ tsp. allspice

2 cups rolled oats

1-2 cups raisins

Preheat oven to 350F.  Cream butter until light and fluffy.  Gradually add sugar.  Add eggs, vanilla and 2 tsp. water and beat until smooth.

Sift dry ingredients together.  Add to the butter mixture and mix well.  Fold in oats and raisins.  Drop by spoonfuls onto a greased cookie sheet, leaving enough space for the cookies to spread out.  Bake approx. 10 minutes, until golden.

Makes about 2 dozen good size cookies

Photos: d. king

My COOKIE BOARD on PINTEREST (if you cannot see it please click on the blue title at very top):

Giving Thanks to Artful Food

FOOD and ART are two things to be thankful for in this life

Hannah Rothstein, “René Magritte” (2014) (all images courtesy the artist, via hrothstein.com)
Hannah Rothstein, “René Magritte” (2014) (all images courtesy the artist, via hrothstein.com)

Plating the two together is an interesting concept as you can see from these images from San-Francisco based artist Hannah Rothstein, as she proposes answers to the burning questions about How Famous Artists Would Plate Thanksgiving Meals.

Hannah Rothstein, “Andy Warhol” (2014)
Hannah Rothstein, “Andy Warhol” (2014)

Have you ever wondered what Vincent van Gogh’s Thanksgiving spread would have looked like?  Probably like this:

Hannah Rothstein, “Vincent van Gogh” (2014)
Hannah Rothstein, “Vincent van Gogh” (2014)

Would Jackson Pollock have been as gestural in his deployment of gravy and cranberry sauce as he was with his paints?

Hannah Rothstein, “Jackson Pollock” (2014)
Hannah Rothstein, “Jackson Pollock” (2014)

Would Piet Mondrian have been as thoughtful in his doling out of mashed potatoes and turkey as he was with his reds, blues, and yellows?

Hannah Rothstein, “Piet Mondrian” (2014)
Hannah Rothstein, “Piet Mondrian” (2014)

The results range from appetizing to off-putting, but in most cases Rothstein has done a good job cooking up culinary visual styles associated with each of the artists.

Hannah Rothstein, “Mark Rothko” (2014)
Hannah Rothstein, “Mark Rothko” (2014)

Would the GIRL who would be KING make sure she fit every possible food group on her plate?

GIRL who would be KING, 2015
Certainly she would!  GIRL who would be KING (2015)

What’s on your plate?

HAPPY CANADIAN THANKSGIVING!

Contemplating Closure

HOW COMFORTING IS CLOSURE?  Very.closure3Not in a feel-good sense but in an overall peace of mind sort of way.  Otherwise it’s like an open ended book where you never quite know what happens in the end.

It’s important not only for those who have lost loved ones and were not able to say goodbye but also for relationships that have ended.  It’s like you want to move on to the next chapter of your life gracefully and not keep re-reading the last.

And there is a certain sense of relief in coming to terms with your feelings about a person or a situation and finally being able to let go and start a brand new book. Even when the ending in the last one appeared kind of sketchy. In a psychological sense it’s finding an answer to an unclear situation.  The Aha moment as in Ahhhh…..now I get it! Maybe you’re better off being an open book even if it means you end up hurting someone.closure6

In the case of someone who passed on where you didn’t get the opportunity to say farewell in person or go to the funeral or memorial you can make your own bon voyage by lighting a candle, saying a prayer or paying tribute in some other manner.  Go for a long walk, think about all the things you loved about that person, pull out photos, write something down and make a final toast.  But never ever forget!

The beautiful thing is that memories live forever, regret should have no place and life as usual, carries on.  Draw your own conclusions…

Yes; finding WORDS is important
Yes; finding WORDS is important

In closing..you might consider what Shakespeare’s Hamlet said “you have to be cruel to be kind

m o v i n g r i g h t a l o n g