Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Kimchi Craving

A couple years ago, I visited a dear friend in South Korea and was formally introduced to Kimchi as well as to an array of other hugely delicious Korean foods.



Right now, I have an intense craving for kimchi, which is essentially fermented cabbage. I'll be the first to admit that it sounds and, in most instances looks, unpalatable, but it's truly fantastic. Supposedly kimchi is readily available in most mainstream grocery stores but I find pre-made, mass-produced kimchi sketchy (which is silly seeing as I am more than willing to eat other pickled foods from grocery stores). So I'm entertaining the idea of perhaps making my own. Tastespotting has many recipes to choose from.

Remember to use your imagination this week

Now that I'm a college graduate with a pseudo-full time job working afternoons and evenings, it's become something of a habit to lay in bed all morning drinking coffee and daydreaming. Basically, I've fallen into a post-school slump in which I do very little.
This charming video, spotted over at Kitsune Noir, reminded me of the importance of living creatively.



I wish you a creative day/week/life. Now, I'm off to try to make my/the world a more beautiful place. Adieu, for now.

Yes, yes, absolutely yes!

In an online article, E! asked if viewers would be interested in seeing Tilda Swinton play Conan. My answer is a resounding yes!



Perhaps one day...

Monday, January 25, 2010

Monsoon Monday at the MFA

I hadn't left my apartment in over 24 hours and was starting to go a little mad, so I decided to visit the Museum of Fine Arts with my roommate, which was almost a mistake considering the miserable January rain we're having today and the fact that both of us got quite wet. Since October, there's been an Egyptian exhibit at the museum featuring the contents of Tomb 10A from 2,000 BC that I'd been meaning to visit for ages. Upon finally going I am happy to report that the exhibit did not disappoint.



Children often adopt strange fascinations with things- trucks, snow-globes, dinosaurs, whatever. Well, my childhood obsession was Egypt. In elementary school, I probably checked out every book about Egypt written in a first to eighth grade reading-level from the library and as I paged through them I dreamed of one day working to uncover a hugely important artifact with mystic properties that would propel me forward on a super-natural adventure while also changing history forever (perhaps I also watched The Mummy a few too many times). Though my career aspirations have drastically changed since childhood, I have always maintained an interest in Egyptian history and artifacts, and was very pleased with the way in which the remnants of Tomb 10A were displayed at the MFA. The tomb casings in particular caught my attention, and they've been hung and lit in a way that allows people to easily study the mastery of the hieroglyphics and carvings of the coffin. The thing about hieroglyphics is that they can sometimes seem like pictures a child with rather impressive fine motor skills drew, but these were not and each hieroglyph was a beautifully detailed works of art. The colors and fine brushstrokes revealed not only the governor's wealth and power, but also the Egyptian's dedication to beauty and precision.

I wonder, if a culture still wrote with hieroglyphics, would there be a greater weight to the words we use? Would we be more careful with what we write? Can you imagine a blog written in hieroglyphics? If they looked anything like those in Tomb 10A it would be a marvelous sight, indeed!

Why did it take me so long to hear about this girl?

I'm very newly obsessed with Janelle Monae. Not only does the girl have the moves and the voice to capture the attention of her audience, she also has fantastic style, bringing an eccentric new flair to female-androgyny. If Andre 3000 were to have a twin sister, she would be Janelle Monae.



I love how she operates outside the realm of reality, insisting that her listeners engage in her sci-fi world as they enjoy her music and are immersed in an imaginative space that is truly original. Few performers have the ability to pull off such an avant-garde persona, but she seems able to rock it and she's only 25. I'm smitten.



AND, SHE LOVES BOW TIES!
For more, check out her website.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Even if it sucks, I'm going to love this!



Joaquin Phoenix has a [much anticipated and supposedly awesome] record coming out.

This video of him jumping is enough to already make me a devoted fan. That, and I love his beard!

Do you think, kinda like Samson, his musical capabilities grow with the heft of his beard? I mean, he was pretty clean shaven in Walk The Line and he was damn good in it, but maybe his beard has given him a lyrical prowess that he could not properly harness before he grew it out? It's like how Peter Jackson only directs good movies when he's fat.

Check out this Huffington Post article about Joaquin's unreleased genius if you feel so inclined. Or don't, I don't care.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

on DEADlines

So. I'm supposed to be writing an article right now. It's about the fantastic local businesses of Southie (uh, I mean "South Boston" as the 30-something, chino-wearing, stroller-pushing men and women of the area call it) and how everyone should visit the Broadway strip. I gave myself a week to write it and though I have many crappy drafts completed, I have yet to create any semblance of an actual article. Essentially I have failed my first self-given assignment. Awesome.

Instead of writing, I've spent the vast majority of this evening looking at wedding stuff (dresses, flowers, feathers, blogs) for my best friend who is soon(ish) to be married. I'm a bridesmaid. I've never been a bridesmaid before. In fact, I've only been to one wedding, and ohmygosh! it was a wonderful wedding! But in general I don't know how any of this shit works and delving into the strange world of brides[maids] has only driven home the fact that I definitely want to elope if I ever decide I actually want to get married. My friend will be a beautiful bride/wife, though, and I'm so incredibly happy for her and her beau/fiance/(2nd) best friend/boyfriend.



I almost just made a list of things I would do if I were having a wedding, but then I realized how a) disgustingly self-indulgent that is and, b) how stupid it is because I abhor the idea of having a wedding for myself (though I love the idea for other people). BUT, if I were to have a wedding, it would involve bow-ties (for the bride, too), dramatic themes (James Bond, Titanic, LEGO, Peacock, etc.) and an open bar.

Oh! And twinkle lights, of course!

I Love This

And I love Him:



He's always so rational, even about the most irrational of topics: love.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

How We Listen

Wake up in the morning and put on the coffee. Bring your laptop into the kitchen and listen to the Hall & Oats station on Pandora, or maybe it's the Bon Iver station, or Ke$ha- whatever, it changes depending on the morning. When the water's running and you're rinsing out your cereal bowl, you can hardly hear the music. Anyway, it's tinny and strained coming from such tiny speakers. You sing or hum (aloud or in your head) along and are proud when you remember all the words to the second verse.

Carry your laptop around the apartment as you get ready. Put it on your bed as you try on pant and sweater combinations, place it on the edge of the bath tub while you apply your makeup. Your roommate might walk in and ask what you're listening to. She might tell you to turn it up, or maybe to turn it down. Either way, it's barely audible.

You were raised in the kind of home where if music was on, everyone could hear it, could feel it reverberating through their chests. If the music stopped, you half believed your heart had stopped beating, it was that loud. Sometimes neighbors would come over and ask that it be turned down. Your parents would invite them in, offer them a beer, and usually they'd talk about Led Zeppelin or Dylan or Etta James (really, whoever) until the album ended. Your friends thought your parents were simultaneously cool and weird for listening to music so loud, for having speakers that weighed more than a third-grader and stood just about as high.

When you went to college, your dad bought you speakers. "They're good ones," he assured you. They're in a box in the closet- you don't know how to install them and even if you did, your friends would think they're too loud. Instead you use portable computer speakers. At parties, you hook your iPod into them and the people who want to congregate around the music do. Most everyone else couples off into bedrooms, silent, except for their own breathing.

The only time you listen to music really loud is in your car. In fact, it's never silent in your car and the radio is always on. For months you drove without ever noticing the clanking of your broken muffler because of your music. You sing along in your car and at stoplights teenagers make fun of you. You can see their mouths make out the word "Crazy" as they point in your direction through the windows. But sometimes they wink and laugh; they understand and are like you. In the summertime, you're the obnoxious person with the windows down and the music spewing out of the vehicle like a rocking Pied Piper- it's your gift to the world and people follow you with their eyes.

When traveling by public transportation, things are different. Everyone is plugged into their iPods on the T. They listen to music without moving to the beat. Their feet do not tap, their fingers do not drum, and rarely will a head bob to keep time. Only the crazy people sing, and when they do they sound deaf. Their words blend into each other, like they're talking under water. You never interact with anyone on the T- you're alone with your noise.

One day a man steps on the train with a ghetto blaster. He's shuffling around in time to some old Madonna track that came out before you were born. His music is loud and distracting so you take off your headphones. Other people in the car do the same. As you look around, you notice that people are becoming animated, are smiling and interacting as they communicate this man's insanity. Their feet tap along with his shuffle, they give the man encouraging smiles. When he gets off a couple stops later, the train goes into mourning. People mutter and put their headphones back on. They sink back into complacency.

This is how we listen to music.

Oops...

I accidentally saw Sherlock Holmes twice in the last 24 hours. Probably, I could repeat the entire script to you verbatim, but I'll withhold so as not to bore you with my crap English accent. Jude Law's genius was more apparent on the second viewing, but still it's the image of Robert Downey Jr.'s eyes that I can't get out of my head. They're just so big! And so, so brown...



Speaking of Brown, Scott Brown is our new senator in Massachusetts. A friend and I snuck into Brown's victory party at the Park Plaza Hotel this evening and tried to get a glimpse of him. Because neither of us possessed the proper security identification, we were unable to see anything good. Instead, we witnessed the largest mass of drunk Republicans I will probably ever see congregated in a single place, unless, of course, my brother seriously delves into politics as he one day hopes to.

Oh life, where to next?

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

JP- 40 Minutes Away by Train, 10 by Car

It's always funny to look at a subway map and chart a round-about path to a particular destination. Okay, I'll ride into the city, transfer to the Orange Line and take it to Jackson Square... no, I'll take it to Stony Brook... Then, upon looking at an area map you realize that you probably could have walked a more direct path in less time and feel like a chump for having risked the threat of Swine Flu by taking public transportation to a place so geographically close.



After spending the entire day indoors on Sunday, my roommate and I ventured out that evening to pop our Jamaica Plain cherries. We went to visit a friend who recently moved into the mecca of cool, first stopping in her sweet little apartment which is predominantly decorated with cacti, before migrating to Bella Luna and the Milky Way Lounge (http://www.milkywayjp.com/) where we snacked on calamari and olives and enjoyed a smattering of cocktails. My friends were delighted by the drink menu and changed beverages often, passing their glasses across the table insisting each of have a sip. I was more laid back than my cohorts and was still in my Sunday football funk, so I stuck with my usual Harpoon IPA for the evening.



Jamaica Plain is an interesting part of the city. It's simultaneously family-focused and alternative-lifestyle themed. I imagine children who grow up in the area learn lessons on open-mindedness on their daily walks to school as they pass gay bars, tattoo parlors, sketchy convenience stores, eco-friendly boutiques, party houses and beautiful old homes with tidy front yards. I'm in no place to pass any real judgement on the area seeing as I have spent hardly an entire evening there, but from what I saw through the rain, I found it quite charming and homey in that it literally reminded me of parts of the Twin Cities. A little bit, it's like Dinky Town, with small shops and paper lantern-lit restaurants surrounded by residential, old neighborhoods. Our friend said that living in JP feels like home, that she loves the energy and quirk of the area. I'm happy for her, for that's what we're all doing- looking to feel at home.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Post-Avatar Questions

After having finally seen Avatar, I was struck by a couple questions. They are listed below.




1. Kingsley Amis once wrote: "Although some undiscovered tribe in the Brazilian jungle might conceivably prove an exception tomorrow, every present-day society uses alcohol, as have the majority of those of the past." He goes on to suggest that in the absence of our societal alcoholic tendencies, Western Civilization would most likely collapse. Regardless of the actual validity of this statement, it made me curious to know if the Na'vi have anything similar to alcohol on Pandora? Probably it rains intoxicating fluid on their planet, but regardless I'm curious to know if their synchronized dancing is contingent on some kind of Na'vi manufactured high, or if they're all just naturally high.

2. At this current moment, how many people are teaching themselves the Na'vi language? The answer to this question is probably quite alarming.

3. What do James Cameron's dreams look like? If they're anything like Avatar, why would he ever wake up?

4. What do pregnant Na'vi look like?

5. What do baby Na'vi look like?

6. Are there any fat Na'vi?

7. How many people will be Na'vi for Halloween? And how many of those people will be fat?

8. Who chose the crap song for the credit reel? It didn't fit with the rest of the movie. Like, not at all.

9. Why did Dr. Grace wear her slutty Stanford tank top? The Na'vi are not impressed by her collegiate credentials.

10. WHEN WILL THIS BE REAL?

Basically, I loved the movie. Just like everyone else I waited in constant anticipation for GI Asshole to come marching through the forest singing "Savages" like that crazy bigot in Pocahontas and was disappointed when it never happened. Thankfully my enjoyment outweighed this disappointment and I was able to sleep happily, dreaming I was blue and so, so fit.

Thirsty

I'm a gin woman and in the last two weeks I've had two delicious gin cocktails that I can't stop thinking about.

B.A.N.K.
The Westin
88 South 6th Street
Minneapolis, MN 55402



B.A.N.K. features an array of comfortable seating. Sit bar-side, kitchen-side, at a table or sprawled in one of their many lounge areas. Drink the Gin Drop- gin with hints of lime and ginger. It's wonderfully refreshing, perfectly tart and is served in a martini glass.

Bistro Du Midi
272 Boylston Street
Boston, MA 02116

Order the Canadaire. This cocktail is spectacular and is made from tarragon infused gin and lime juice. Like the Gin Drop, it's incredibly refreshing but the Canadaire is a little sweeter, though it still maintains an air of sophistication. Also, it must be said that Bistro Du Midi has, hands down, the best olive oil I have ever tasted in my entire life. A friend accurately described it as tasting like a lush meadow, and I agree completely.

I highly recommend these two drinks to anyone who happens to love gin and is in either metropolitan area. Even if you don't choose to have my recommended cocktails, you're sure to have a wonderful time. And please, let me know what your favorite [gin] cocktails are- I love to explore new libations!

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Eddie Izzard and bow-ties



Last night, my roommate and I saw Eddie Izzard perform at the TD Banknorth Garden. Eddie wore a gorgeous tailcoat, similar (if not the same) to the one he wore two years ago when he toured. He paired the tailcoat with a pair of fantastic jeans that looked great on him but would probably look even better in a pile on the floor, if you know what I mean. If you haven't heard of Eddie Izzard, you need to look him up. Even when his jokes mildly offended me, I laughed. And of course I laughed especially hard when his jokes didn't offend me at all. He is wonderful.

I wore my new bow-tie to Eddie Izzard's show. Bow-ties, when worn correctly, are not at all pompous and awkward, as many people believe them to be. Bow-ties can accentuate wonderful decolletage and work to add flair to an assortment of outfits. In fact, my bow-tie is my new favorite accessory!


P.S. If anyone knows where I can purchase a divine tailcoat with a red lining similar to Eddie Izzard's, please, let me know.

2o1o, You're a Gem

After my annual Christmas pilgrimage home to Minnesota, I've returned to Boston with an insatiable itch to create something. Of course it's entirely possible that this feeling is wholly attributed to the fact that I am now a college graduate and as such have suddenly comes to terms with the idea that everything I ever read or write or do from this point forward will be of my own doing. No longer will my actions be prompted by the will of a professor or academic institute. My life is completely my own. I am birthed anew as a twenty-two year-old eccentric with an appreciation for classic cocktails, bow ties, pipes and glassblowing- though I obviously do not limit myself to such narrow parameters of enjoyment.

With unbounded joy, I cast off this first post and look to the future with sheer optimism. 2010, it's going to be a beautiful year!