In Laguna Beach the weather always calls for some version of nice. Sun. Sun with a few puffs of clouds. Sun with a breeze. It is no wonder these long time residents are always in such a good mood. Those of us who hail from New York, as I may have mentioned before, are a bit cynical of sunny niceties. We need a good storm, or someone with an attitude, to show that the world is right.
In Laguna Beach, California, there are four "tides," which are cottages: Low Tide, High Tide, Red Tide and Ebb Tide. Our family lives in one of these cottages. It is a place by the ocean, with many visitors--more in the barefoot days of summer. Everyone exhales. Everyone is the type of person who can handle sand in the house and nights on the deck that never seem to end. Visit us, literally, at http://www.vrbo.com/23551.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
blow out
In Laguna Beach the weather always calls for some version of nice. Sun. Sun with a few puffs of clouds. Sun with a breeze. It is no wonder these long time residents are always in such a good mood. Those of us who hail from New York, as I may have mentioned before, are a bit cynical of sunny niceties. We need a good storm, or someone with an attitude, to show that the world is right.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
herb appeal
Typically I welcome rain and inclement weather in Laguna Beach. All of this sunshine can make a cynical East Coaster somewhat suspect. However this week the rain's presence was a tad disconcerting. With the help of some great local talent and my colleagues, we have been planning the first photo session for Yum for Kids, a new food and entertaining magazine for moms and kids. Part of the shoot will be a pizza making story photographed at a nearby home. We postponed the shoot for tomorrow due to the forecast. Thus I had more time to prepare, marketing for such ingredients as fresh herbs and tomatoes that have yet to be broken from their vine.
real banana bread
For tomorrow's photo shoot, I made banana bread--cracked eggs, mashed bananas--the real deal. Though the two muffins I made with the remaining batter did not turn out as well. Allan said otherwise but he is just being a sweet husband.
* 1/2 tsp baking soda
* 1/4 tsp baking powder
* 1 large egg, beaten
* 3 tsp canola oil
* 2 medium egg whites, beaten
* 3 large ripe bananas
* 1 cup instant oatmeal (maple or cinnamon flavor)
Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 350F.
2. In a 9×5 inch loaf pan, spray with cooking spray or grease the pan. (Margarine works best).
3. In a large bowl, mix together flour, brown sugar, table salt, baking soda and baking powder.
4. Stir in the canola oil and eggs into the bowl.
5. In a separate bowl, mash bananas with a potato masher or fork. Then add bananas and oatmeal to the batter.
6. Pour batter into the loaf pan and bake it for about 45 to 50 minutes. Use cake prick and test in the middle. The bread is ready if it comes out clean.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
take a stand
america's next top models
Monday, April 12, 2010
yahoo for wahoo's
Sunday, April 11, 2010
late for an appointment
ocean tides
Friday, April 9, 2010
a guy's take
sign language
finding a good home
Though this quilt speaks Laura Ingalls Wilder, it became a tad too bulky for our small bedroom. In its former place is the bassinet--story later... Luckily my good friend and colleague, Hillary Black, took it off our hands. In fact it is most likely in a better place, as she has plans to mend all its tatters and frays.
take another nook
Our dining nook is already in the process of a major transformation of the Nicole Ritchie kind. Gone are the wicker chairs, which are replaced by built in benches. Thank you Arturo! They also provide storage space. Once we have the bench cushions and draperies in place, you will see quite a transformation.
spring cleaning
We are not spring cleaning -- how a bottle of Windex would be welcomed in comparison -- we are spring overhauling. In anticipation of the summer, which is a double challenge with renters and the impending birth of our child, there is a lot to do. You will see that many of our cottage elements will be removed to make way for this new chapter. Example 1: the cupboard will, must, become more functional. Stay tuned...
spring!
It's here. The flower petals are springing open, seducing us. It's time to release seasonal clothing from their winter retreat. There are places that always make me happy in the spring: everywhere on New York's Madison Avenue, Central Park, bookstores, flower shops. In Newport Beach, once you past the lunching ladies who shield their appearances beneath their big sunglasses, as if they expect to engage with paparazzi, there is a flower shop that gets you in the mood. Urban Gardener is the place. They dazzle with creative displays, arrangements and sometimes will introduce you to a rose color or flower you've never known before.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
losing my marbles
past imagery
Five years ago I gave up the life I knew, I left New York for California. In New York there were nights that began after 9:00, the constant clanking of great shoes against marble entryways on route to some routine event that, now, is quite fabulous in comparison to the relaxed life I chose. Though, back in New York, I was happiest in my home in East Hampton.
My mother was amazed when she visited us in Laguna Beach, struck by the similarities of my current home to my home in East Hampton. Both are clapboards painted in barn house red. Both are vintage, built with such things as breezeways and potbelly stoves. Though East Hampton is distinctively East Coast, with its windmills and third generation run hardware stores.
This little wall in Red Tide is my love letter to East Hampton. There is a by the numbers painting of a lighthouse, which is probably not the Montauk lighthouse I grew up with, spending an afternoon exploring, but it works. There is also a framed envelope written with my former home's address, enclosed was an invitation to an event. This envelope was pure art, so beautiful it deserved placement in a unique frame my father found at a yard sale. The creator of this lavish envelope is Bernard Maisner, who is arguably the world's best calligrapher. As I traded one ocean for another, I can still be reminded of where I came from.
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
collector's edition
I have always been drawn to pretty, interesting things. Husband is drawn to things. He is a collector. He collects old spritzer bottles, bicycles and even has a brick from the theater where Gone With the Wind premiered. Allan also collects the everyday. Sea glass, as an example, is big with him. These things find a place in our home of three (and growing!), which can be like an epic novel that takes an eternity to read.
the lone tomato
Today Allan gardened. In fact he gardens everyday that is garden-weather permitting. The trees were given crew cuts, pails collected the stray detritus of winter's unforgiving months. As with our home, there is still much to do. On Easter I gave Allan and Olivia a tomato plant. I have hopes to do the very Michelle Obama thing and have our family versed in growing our own food. The benefits are too numerous to site. Allan left the tomato plant today for the call of real life, the most fun outdoor projects saved for last (digging a can shaped hole, releasing the plant from its plastic cage). And how we will look forward to watching this vegetable grow and prosper.