Foliage

This is a weird time of year.  All the exuberant color is fading to brown and the world seems to be giving up and dying, letting everything get very cold and windy.  It's not the happiest time for me - I'm not a cold weather person.  I prefer the sun and heat of summer - running through the grass, staying up til late, even mosquitoes don't bother me much. But it's always good to enjoy whatever moment I'm in.  Below are a couple shots of leaves and flowers and things from my wanderings yesterday. fall color in arlington, va leaves and flowers in arlington, va and washington, dc flowers on the national mall washington dc flowers on the national mall washington dc

Dinner: Basso56, Manhattan and ABC Pizza, Home

As much as I love food, I am not a food blogger.  The number one problem I have in taking pictures of food is forgetting to do so before I dig in.  Normally, by the time I remember that I want to "blog this", we're already halfway or more through the dish.  This makes for ugly pictures and totally destroys any attempt at presentation either from the restaurant or myself.  That said, I love love love love (love) food.  In the hierarchy of love in my life, we've got George-Food-Photography and there is little room for anything else.  Which of these would I give up for the other?  It is very very difficult to think about that question and so I'm not going to.  Suffice to say that the trifecta there provides at least 80% of the joy in my life. On to the food! Our first images are from Basso56, located in the Theatre District, mid-town Manhattan.  I found this place through Yelp, which is my new favorite thing.  The yelpers liked this place and so did we.  Below you'll see (in order) duck breast with figs and balsamic reduction, goat cheese-stuffed eggplant and scallops with porcini mushrooms and orange oil.  Yes, we ate many other things that night.  Our first courses were beet salad and ricotta cheese (him) and buffalo mozzarella with speck (me).  The speck (smoked prosciutto) was freaking amazing.  I need to have more speck in my life.  For dessert we had chocolate crepes and hazelnut gelato.  So obviously I remembered to photograph our middle course but not the beginning or end.  This is completely typical.  I get excited and just dig in. It was also just one of those lovely nights where George and I really had a great conversation, letting the whole rest of the world blow away.  This seems to happen with us at nice restaurants, which is really great because otherwise you're just having some food. The other thing that happens with me far too much is I get the food or it's ready to eat and it's hot and I know it's going to be tasty and I just can't be bothered to make the photo look pretty and so normally I don't even bother posting.  But this little concoction I made deserves some mention.  What you see below is what I've just decided to call ABC pizza because that way the headline for this post fits on one line.  The ABC stands for Apple-Bacon-Caramelized onion.  And yeah, it was really, really good. Here's the recipe: Crust: Mix 1c white flour, 1c whole wheat flour, 1/2 tsp each salt & yeast and 3/4c warm water.  Knead until smooth, about five minutes.  You might have to add a little more flour so it isn't sticky.  Divide in two.  Roll out thin on parchment paper. Toppings: I didn't use a sauce for this pizza and it didn't need.  For each pizza, I thinly sliced one small apple and laid the slices out so they covered the pizza right up to the crust.  Then I added chopped bacon and the caramelized onions.  Each pizza got about 1c of mozzarella on top and a generous drizzle of the wine sauce. The onions and sauce: Caramelized onions are one of cooking's greatest joys.  Slice up an onion or two or three and maybe some shallots (I did).  Then take your enameled cast-iron pan (really, this is your best best.  I don't know how else to do this) and melt a lot of butter in there (maybe 1T for each onion).  Put the flame on low low low and cook the onions for an hour.  They'll get brown but shouldn't burn anywhere. When you take the onions out, there will be lots of lovely burnt little bits of stuff on the bottom of the pan.  Pour 1c or so of red wine into the pan and turn the heat up.  Scrape the bottom of the pan with a silicone spatula, trying to get up as much of the bits as possible.  Cook until you can scrape the spoon through the wine and the liquid doesn't immediately fill in the trench left behind.  Then melt another 2T (or more) of butter into the sauce and turn off the heat.  This will separate as you're preparing the pizzas, which is fine.  Empty the pan into a bowl and whisk until it comes together again. Cooking: A half-hour before you start the first pizza, turn your oven up to 500*.  If you have a pizza stone, put it in.  If not, just use a pan (but don't preheat it).  When the oven is hot, put the pizza, parchment paper and all, onto the stone and cook for 10 minutes or so.  The cheese will dry out some, which is fine because the apples will cook down and provide moisture.  If your oven has bad hot spots, turn the pizza half way.  Then remove and eat.  Be prepared to eat a lot.

Tuesday “on the web”

A couple extra photos from Galveston I found while processing some other stuff.  Here you've got three tiny succulents decorating the Four Points Sheraton we stayed at.  Below, sunrise over the Gulf of Mexico.  Look closely at the horizon line and you'll see a big tanker and an oil platform.

On the Web

Every week I save my favorite links from around the internet and present them here on Tuesday.  Click around and enjoy! Pictures around Mallorca, Spain Looking at these photos makes my influences totally obvious. I see what I am trying to do all over the place here. You know how you have that thing you say all the time and then you watch a movie from your childhood and realize you have been ripping off E.T. or Flight of the Navigator for the better part of two decades? That's what looking at this post feels like. Apple Varieties Disappear from US Markets This issue is near and dear to my heart, despite my having failed at gardening this summer. A hundred years ago, Americans ate an enormous variety of vegetable and fruit varieties - many families growing their own variations. Now we let big agriculture take care of that for us, and they have chosen to grow only the easiest, sturdiest, prettiest varieties - leaving many of the tastiest to go extinct. I'm always looking for the cool names at the farmer's market. Budget Puzzle: You Fix the Budget This nifty little interactive thing on the New York Times website allows you to select different options in an attempt to fix the enormous budget deficit our country faces.  When you pick enough options, the puzzle tells you "You solved the deficit!"  Honestly, I'm surprised by how easy it is, you know, in a complete dictatorship by a tax-friendly liberal.  I didn't even have to touch Medicare or Social Security! Sexual Inventory Stocklist "When sex is newer to us, we may not even have a sense of all there is to talk about. It can feel like being asked what you want to eat at a restaurant without having a menu to even know your options."  I found this enormous checklist of sexual activities, beliefs and attitudes very interesting.  Even being married, there are a couple things on here that I just don't know what my husband would put.  You might share it with your significant other, or just quiz yourself and see what happens! Top 10 Misconceptions about Photography and the Law Even if you think you know what your rights are as a photographer, it's always a good idea to double-check.  Then when the man is staring you down, telling you to quit photographing or erase your images, you'll know enough to stand your ground confidently. cacti in the hotel in Galveston, Texas sunrise over the Gulf of Mexico