To spell or not to spell

DSC_6468

The ABCaesars

For several months, I’ve been volunteering on the committee for New Haven Reads (focused on student literacy) to plan its one fundraiser–the Spelling Bee.  Well, they certainly didn’t need my help planning, as they have the event details down.  So I did some fundraising, and tonight was the big Bee.

2015-10-23 18.09.17I was a greeter, dressed for the chilly night, and got to see every ‘swarm’ as they came in.  Yes, the spellers sign up as teams of 3, and 6 teams, called swarms, compete in each preliminary round.  Swarms.  Bees.  Get it.  The swarms compete in rounds until the last standing vie for the honors of Best of Bee.  High school teams and adult teams compete separately, and interestingly, the high schoolers didn’t seem to dress up.  Did I mention the award for best costume?

2015-10-23 19.47.13

 

 

 

Of course, the swarms come up with good names, too.  I liked the Librarians from Hell, from the New Haven Public Library–pretty ghoulish, but awesome spellers.  Bee-Attitudes were pretty clever, too.  The Greater New Haven Community Chorus team was the Bee Sharps.

Swarm 1 Librarians from Hell on the left

Swarm 1, the Librarians from Hell are on the left

Unfortunately when I was greeting, I wasn’t taking pictures, so I can’t show you all of the funny costumes.  Here are some random shots.

The Opening Ceremony

Gearing up to compete

Doctor Bees

All the bees had fun

Artventures™

I’logo_500m excited to let you know that Artventures™ Game is on the press!  It’s due off on October 19.  Keep your fingers crossed.  Plus amazon has approved the game for its Vendor Express program, pending how well samples sell.

So I hope you’ll help me spread the word about the game.  I’ll let you know when the samples are on amazon.  In the meantime, here’s the scoop.

Follow on Twitter
@artventuresgame
Thank you!
TuckBoxFinal-4

Outer Island

On a sultry, misty morning, the ferry (read motorboat) left Short Beach in Branford to wind through the Thimble Islands to the furthest island out into Long Island Sound, simply called Outer Island.  Friends of Outer Island is sponsoring art classes all day on the island, and I’m glad our photography class was early.

The poetry of the swelter hopefully is in evidence here.

2015-07-19 07.37.12

2015-07-19 07.42.19

2015-07-19 07.43.09

2015-07-19 07.48.41

2015-07-19 08.04.44

2015-07-19 08.28.08

Back on shore, Short Beach was starting to get crowded.  This looks like a William Merritt Chase painting.

2015-07-19 10.17.53

A slide show for more:

Bridges over placid water

2015-07-17 10.57.28Your intrepid blogger braved the early morning start to walk through the construction battle zone that has raged for years in New Haven:  the confluence of 3 highways (including the evil I95) over a tiny, placid river called the Quinnipiac.  The massive bridge needed to make all this highway havoc come together spaghettis over the Q River, and the construction that started in 2009 to improve the chaos will finally wrap up late next year.

Although this could be interpreted...

Although this could be interpreted…

 

 

Given the opportunity to try to understand it all, I joined a meet-up group of hearty souls, some with much better understanding of engineering that I could ever have.  But I reveled in the photo ops.  The detritus.  The equipment.  The patterns.  I hope you enjoy as much as I did.

2015-07-17 11.11.19

2015-07-17 11.25.44

2015-07-17 11.32.17

2015-07-17 11.32.34

2015-07-17 11.32.52

2015-07-17 11.40.56

2015-07-17 11.43.06

2015-07-17 11.45.19

I asked about the noise working on site and was informed that the traffic makes worse noise than the equipment.  Regardless, the geese don’t seem to mind a bit.

 

July 4th sightings

At the Hindinger’s Farm, strawberry season draws to a close, and the goats have a playpen…

2015-07-02 14.29.42

And the post office got the day off…

2015-07-04 14.21.22

Actually, this first Branford, CT mail delivery vehicle is now retired.  Burt Shepard carried the mail in this horse-drawn wagon, made by Studebaker, from 1902 to 1923.  He then used a truck to deliver the mail until he retired in 1933.  His grandchildren donated the Studebaker to the Branford Historical Society.

After a wonderful potluck dinner, we celebrate with a bang and the fireworks over East Rock…

2015-07-04 21.25.19

2015-07-04 21.25.28

2015-07-04 21.27.32

2015-07-04 21.29.25

2015-07-04 21.28.27

Happy Fourth!

 

Secrets

Everyone knows about the not-so-secret societies at Yale, but did you know about the indoor practice polo pony at the gym?

First of all, the Payne Whitney Gym is in a 9-story Gothic cathedral-like tower.  This is Yale after all, and Gothic’s the thing.  Second, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, this gym is the largest in the world.

2015-05-29 19.11.39

Now, with the important stuff out of the way, we get to the trivia I love.  The practice polo pony.  Admit it, we all need one.  This one is so precious, it’s kept in a locked room.  Still, I send you a ghostly picture of the very one, behind bars.  Oh, I how I longed to ride it and practice my swing!  Alas, too secret for me.

Mory’s is a 110 year old, private club loosely associated with Yale, without actually being a part of it.  It has its own Board of Governors, but members have to be affiliated with the university in some way to enjoy it.  Why?  Another mystery.  But no mystery that it started as a ‘boy’s club.’

 

Julie and I ventured in tonight, just to look around.  A friend of a friend, Ify was happy to give us a tour.

2015-05-29 19.32.51She showed us the President’s Room and the Captain’s Room (sports, not sea) and the Temple Bar, where the students go.  There’s a dress code–business casual–and oldies but goodies on the menu, like Welsh Rarebit (hot cheddar cheese poured over toast, not rabbit).

 

Bush spells it Maury's

Bush spells it Maury’s

 

 

And there are lots of pictures.  My favorite was of George Bush, who misspelled the name Mory’s.  So what else is new?

 

 

 

 

 

Like any private club, Mory’s has its rituals.  A capella groups come here to sing for their dinner.  Yes, the Whiffenpoofs included.  Mory’s is basically their home spot.  Women’s a capella groups sing there now, too.   They sit at a table, order dinner, and not long after, start to sing.  Then they wander around the club singing.

The singing tradition also links to the drinking ritual of the Cups.  Groups order a cup of mixed alcohol, designated by color.  Some are champagne-based (gold), others beer-centered (amber), and liquors can get mixed to make purple, blue, and green Cups.  Hmm.

The Cup–no, not a little thing, but a trophy-sized cup–is then passed around the group, each taking a drink, while singing a drinking song.  The last to drink from the Cup, puts it upside down on a cloth, or harder yet a paper, napkin.  if the napkin gets wet, that person has to pay for the Cup.  Oh boy!

2015-05-29 19.29.26

 

Did I mention that there’s a Cup room?  A room of these trophy like Cups.

 

 

 

After 1972, women were allowed into Mory’s, so our presence wasn’t remarkable.  The secrets are out, if you can get in…

 

Hurry Up and Relax!

In all the rush of the day, what a relief to finally make it to the Aromatherapy class at my Hamden library.

Aromatherapy Workshop

Aaaahhh.

The aroma could be drunk in all the way out the Friends Room down the stairs to the front door.  Nice.

Kim Larkin started by walking us through how we might want to use essential oils (not fragrance oils) for their healing qualities.  Here are 8 ways:

Smell – just take a good whiff

Diffuse – scent up your room

Local applications, for the particular healing properties

Hot compresses

Cold compresses

Massage enhancement

Tenting – that is, put a few drops in a bowl of hot water, drape a towel over your head as you lean over the bowl and get a homemade, delicious steam facial

Misting – spray your room, which I do all the time to my great pleasure with rose scent.  Did you know it takes 60,000 petals to make one ounce of oil?  No wonder it’s so expensive!

You know I can’t resist sharing a bit of history with you.  The Ancient Egyptians used perfume as part of their embalming process.  The word ‘perfume’ means ‘through smoke’, so we can get a sense of how the scents were disseminated.  Frankincense and myrrh were known for their healing properties.

Another real discovery was fleurage–the process of steaming the plant to separate its oil for harvesting.  This, plus trade routes, brought scents across cultures.  In India, ayurvedic medicine, or life knowledge, used the oils.  Ancient Romans, health conscious as they were, used oils for good hygiene.  Persian doctors used Chinese oils to perfect their medicines.  Later, monks used herbal remedies to cure leprosy and other diseases.

While eating a root may have been the ancient form of medicine, we had to cycle through noxious chemicals and pills and antibiotics, before returning to, simply, eating a root for good health.

The essential oil came back to us from Italian doctors and French chemists who worked in perfume factories in the early 1900s.  When one severely burned his arm, he dunked it in a nearby vat.  Turns out, the vat was filled with lavender oil.  His arm didn’t blister, and the burn didn’t scar.  He was convinced and started a crusade for oils that continued through World War II when medical supplies ran low and on to Dr. Bach.

Bach rejected traditional medicine in favor of botanicals that he equated with 38 states of mind.  Use the botanical to heal an imbalance, with one or a blend of Dr. Bach’s flower essence remedies.  For fun, you can complete the questionnaire and see what you think.  I’ve enjoyed using these flower essences in the past and got inspired to look them up again.

You might also get a kick at looking at the healing properties of the oils.

We wrapped up the night by making three goodies to take home: a bath salt, a facial scrub, and a dream pillow.

Our bath salt mix is a spring detox – coming at just the right time.  It’s made with Epson sale and sea salt, as well as the oils.  I chose to blend citruses for invigoration and rosemary for clearing the head and as a memory aid.

Believe it or not, the facial scrub is made with granulated sugar (for exfoliating) and a couple of drops of oil, combined with a carrier, such as grapeseed, almond, or avocado oils.  I used grapeseed, because I had it handy.

2015-05-12 20.17.53

My dream pillow will go under my pillow tonight and has lots of rosemary, as well as jasmine–the King of Oils, which takes 8 million flowers to make just 2 ounces–for self-confidence and easing of the joints, plus lavender and chamomile for calming relaxation.  It smells like a little bit of heaven.

These are all super simple.  Give them a try and let me know what you think.

 

A watery day

2015-04-26 14.31.45On a blustery spring day, I visited the charming Colonial town of Essex, CT.  I started at the delightful Connecticut River Museum, celebrating all things about that river.  I had always heard it was terrific.  No understatement!

While I’ll share my favorite part in a moment, the American history that touched the riverbank at Essex makes the museum worth a visit.  In the Revolutionary War, Connecticut’s war ship (all 13 colonies were asked to build one), the Oliver Cromwell, was built here in 1776.  An 1814 skirmish with the British, part of the War of 1812, was likened to Pearl Harbor for its surprise and devastation.  At the unmanned fort, 27 ships were burned, and the town’s economy was blasted apart.

Artist rendition of how the Turtle worked

But, oh boy!  The best part was climbing into a replica of the first submarine, called the American Turtle.  Now this thing is small.  I can tell you because I smacked my head on it getting in.  Ouch!  2015-04-26 14.41.53

The idea was to take a bomb in the submarine and hook it to the bottom of a British war ship, and bye bye ship.  Well the submarine worked – the propeller was a huge innovation.  The bomb was ready.  But drilling through the submarine to attach the bomb to the warship hull, not so much.  So even though Yale graduate David Bushnell made a great case to Benjamin Franklin and made three attempts, the submarine was scuttled and the original eventually lost.

Two replicas at the museum were built off detailed plans that survive.  Climbing inside — it’s worth the price of admission.

2015-04-26 14.45.02

I also really enjoyed the special exhibit on Connecticut artists working under the Works Progress Administration in the 1930s.  The pieces are small enough that maybe they served as studies for the ultimately larger works, like murals in post offices and schools.

You know I want to know all about women artists and women’s lifestyles.  Here’s a glimpse from this exhibit.

Haddam, Looking East, Cornelia Vetter

Cornelia Vetter, Haddam, Looking East, n.d.

At nearby Haddam, Cornelia Vetter began working for the government arts project after her husband died in 1933.  She did 18 paintings for the Federal Arts Project.

Grading the Tobacco, Harold Barbour, 1938

Harold Barbour, Grading the Tobacco, 1938

Harold Barbour painted a series of watercolors, on work in the tobacco barns.  Here, woman work in the sorting shop.  After the tobacco leaves cure in the hanging shed, the leaves are sorted into grades.  During the Depression, sorting and transplanting, as seen below, proved to be great jobs for women.

Transplanting, Harold Barbour, 1938

Harold Barbour, Transplanting, 1938

Look at this beautiful charcoal.

Tuna Boat, Beatrice Cuming

Beatrice Cuming, Tuna Boat, n.d.

So many women artists to discover and enjoy.

 

Then I strolled down the street, from the gem of the little museum to the country’s oldest, continually operating inn, open 239 years.  The 33-room Griswold Inn was build in 1776, a busy year in busy Essex.

Inns were central to Colonial and early Federal life, and the Boston Post Road was essential for information flow between New York and Boston.  How did information flow?  Over the communal tables at inns like the Griswold.  We all sat around one such table to hear the owner Geoff Paul tell great stories about the art collection in the inn.

Owner Geoff Paul, an enthusiastic speaker

Owner Geoff Paul, an enthusiastic speaker

Geoff spoke about the origins of the steam-powered ship in Connecticut, long before Robert Fulton, and the intricacies of ship portraits, that owners were pickier about than paintings of their wives.

Like a good art historian, Geoff taught us what makes a great marine painting.  Flags show the wind, so create movement; the more flags the merrier (and more expensive).  Angling a boat toward the viewer enhances that sense of power.  Geoff favors works made at the time the ship sailed, not nostalgic works painted later.  Paintings of the moment often are celebrations of American ingenuity and prowess and could be coupled with the Brooklyn Bridge or highlight new installations of electricity–other technological marvels that allowed ‘man’ to get the sense of ‘triumphing over nature’.

The Connecticut

Antonio Jacobsen, The Connecticut, n.d. c 1880s

And steamships, Geoff pointed out, represented the birth of the cruise ship industry, providing pleasure outings for the Connecticut middle class.  Board the City of Hartford steamer in that city, steam overnight, spend the day in New York, before returning with another overnight ride.

Once, when a steamer hit a part of a bridge that wasn’t made to open en route, maritime law changed, requiring all bridges to have red lights as markers, distinct from lights on shore.  No one was hurt, so the happy ending was that the passengers got to spend the night nearby and see a show at the Goodspeed Opera House, also written about in this blog.  Plenty of other steamer accidents were deadly, borne of races and other mishaps, leading to the founding of the Coast Guard for monitoring and rescue.

Who wouldn’t love the mural that, when the switch is flipped, rocks like the waves on the Connecticut River?  Apparently drunks, that’s who.  They’re not too fond of a suddenly rolling room.  It’s a really ingenious feature that came with this 1960s mural.

Yes, this mural actually rocks back and forth, like waves

Yes, this mural actually rocks back and forth, like waves

You can probably make out the wake at the center.  This perspective puts us on the back of a steamer, viewing our own trailing wake in the wide river.  What fun this whole experience is!

The Inn also has a fragrant, evocative taproom–a busy place on Sunday afternoon.  And then, there’s this room.

It’s another Wow, in a day full of them.  Hung truly salon style, the paintings and ephemera jam every inch of wall and ceiling space of the Bridge Room.  My most favorite were the posters of the women fighting for Temperance.  Starting in the 1820s, women advocated against the reckless drinking that was notoriously tearing up families in the young country.  Recognizing that total abstinence could be difficult when both religion and medicines used alcohol, the petitioners sought moderation.

Great Sots Temperance - cleaned up and frameless

The women marched.  The inn keepers agreed.  Men signed the pledge to take care of their families and stop drinking to excess.  If a man signed his name with a T, then he pledged total abstinence, or to become a T-totaller.  I always thought it was tea-totaller, as in being a tea v alcohol drinker.  Geoff tells otherwise.

Of course, these women went on to fight slavery and advocate for the vote.  Get this.  As late as 1969, women could not stand at a bar in Connecticut.  Yes, really.  So a woman, yet another protester, came in demanding to be served.  In cahoots with the innkeepers, she demanded her arrest.  The case went to the Connecticut Supreme Court in Griswold Inn v State of Connecticut, and the Inn won!

Geoff made clear that the Inn relies on drinking for its sustenance.  And Prohibition didn’t stand in the way.  It is located right on the river.  Sailors knew how to navigate in the dark.  The inn did just fine during those years.   About fifteen years ago, when renovations were being done in the library, Geoff finally learned where at least some of that rum was hidden.  In the ceiling of the library was an 8′ long copper container.  In the ceiling!

Don’t ever be shy about looking up in historic places.  Who knows what you’ll find?

Looking up at a beautiful fan window on Main Street in Essex

Looking up at a beautiful fan window on Main Street in Essex

Up and Down

Reginald Marsh, "Wooden Horses" [detail], 1936, tempera on board; 24 x 40 inches, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, The Dorothy Clark Archibald and Thomas L. Archibald Fund, The Krieble Family Fund for American Art, The American Paintings Purchase Fund, and The Ella Gallup Sumner and Mary Catlin Sumner Collection Fund, 2013.1.1. "Coney Island: Visions of an American Dreamland, 1861-2008"

With two exhibits and an entire museum, I’ve been thinking a lot about carousels.  Yes, the Wadsworth Atheneum has its Coney Island exhibit mounted, the same one I worked on 15 months ago.  And the Yale School of Art has the “Side ShowScreen Shot 2015-04-06 at 3.43.02 PM” exhibit, as a literal side show about the freaky side of the carnival.  In the Reginald Marsh painting from the Wadsworth, the women seem be deadly serious about racing to the finish line, beating out the man in the red bowler.  No simple up and down ride for them.

I learned at the New England Carousel Museum in Bristol, CT that carousels didn’t even go up and down until 1907.  In fact, carousels started as a training tool for knights.  Um, yes, medieval knights.  They would practice spearing rings with lances.

Maybe you’ve ridden a carousel where you tried to snare a ring.  In the Golden Age of carousels, that is the 19th century, that’s where we got the idea of “grabbing the brass ring.”  A winner on the carousel, and in life, grabs the brass ring.  But liability put a stop to that.  Now we have to be content riding up and down.  No killer scenes like Marsh gives us.

Who knew there are different styles of carousel horses?  The first permanent park carousel was in Philadelphia, and the Phily style is oh so graceful.  Moreso than the solid and chunky Country Fair style.  And then there’s the Coney Island style, showy and pretty.

2015-04-04 16.00.18The menagerie animals are great fun.  Hard to believe they fell out of favor for the more popular horse carousel.  Who wouldn’t want to ride a rooster, a giraffe (who’s eyes follow you no matter where you move), a tiger, a hare, or a camel?  If not a horse, then why not a zebra or a seahorse?

 

2015-04-04 16.07.17

 

 

 

 

The horses are completely wonderful, too.  I’ve never seen a three-dimensional carved flower on a carousel horse before.  Tres elegant!

 

2015-04-04 15.58.36

 

 

Or what about a bulldog or a leprachaun, hidden under the saddle?

 

 

 

2015-04-04 15.49.51The museum shows how the animals are constructed form wood and in pieces, even if they appear whole.  Also the animals get smaller closer in to the center pole, an attempt aso the most elaborate carving is saved for the outside ring.  Notice that when you next ride a carousel.  Or maybe, you want to go to Bristol and ride one there!

This slide show will further introduce you to its glories…

Family Photos

Two really sweet exhibits at Yale made me think about my family and family photos and family connections.  No, these shows aren’t at the Beineke or the Art Gallery or the art school.  One is at the Hillel and the other at a center for emeriti faculty.

My friend Julie grew up in a Yale family, her father a professor, her mother a Dean.  Now retired, her father still teaches the odd course here and there and engages with the Koerner Center, named for Henry Koerner, the artist, who after fleeing Europe and famously illustrating the Nuremberg Trials, taught in the Yale art department.

Now, Alan Trachtenberg has an exhibit of his black-and-white portrait photographs at the Koerner.  Each tells a story, not just of the sitter, but instead the relationship with the photographer, and in his absence, with us as viewers.  These are not easy conversations.  Who is the stern woman?  (Turns out, it’s his wife!)  The quizzical young man?  How has the photographer interrupted the couple, and does that explain why they look at us the way they do?

The exhibit at the Slivka Center, No One Remembers Alone, is surprisingly touching, telling the story of a love affair and the family that surrounds it.  It’s a Jewish story, of Abraham and Sophie, who are separated when she immigrates first, to Brooklyn.

https://i0.wp.com/www.jewishledger.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Abram-Sophie-in-Odessa.jpg?resize=447%2C306

They really fall in love through postcards–even the poor could afford the one penny stamp.  A portrait photograph was cheap enough, too.  Like a great love letter, these cards were saved over the decades.  Found in a suitcase and translated from Yiddish, the cards are displayed chronologically at Hillel on a round wheel-like display, where the back is visible, as well as the front.

7 sisters

Chava in 1910

Chava in 1910

While I loved that story, there were also the stories of their siblings.  Chava makes the trip to the U.S. in the place of Gitel, her sister, who fell in love with a young teacher Velvei Schapoachnik.  So much for going to the U.S.

So Chava travels under Gitel’s name, and the ship’s manifest is on display.  But then, in the U.S., she’s an illegal immigrant.  She was terrified of being deported, until she was finally able to naturalize as a citizen about thirty years later, in 1940.

Then there’s her brother Abram.  In 1899, when he was 13, he walked 3 kilometers to the farm school funded by the Jewish Colonization Association.  He wasn’t admitted because he was considered too weak and malnourished for the accompanying farm labor.  But this didn’t stop Abram.  He went again the next day and was turned away again.  He went every day for a month, until his tenacity got him a place in school.

Abram at school

Abram at school

Abram was the only member of his family to be educated, and his career came as a result, cultivating flowers and plants.

And so the love of learning moved through his world, as it does mine.  And I’m grateful to my family, who made similar choices as this family of strangers, who really don’t seem strange at all.

Chocolatesigh

The best experience I’ve had with chocolate took place at Colonial Williamsburg.  I was attending a conference there in February (a Colonial brrrr) and signed up for a post-conference experience: making chocolate the Colonial way.

Ten of us met at a cooking cabin at 7 a.m., where the cows had already been milked, but the rest was up to us.  We divided labor.  Getting the dried beans into a huge fry pan to roast over the open fire (done by a staffer), cracking the beans (ah the aroma!), followed by hours and hours of grinding and pounding by us all.  No matter the cold, we had the door open, letting in the biting wind we all welcomed with our sweaty labor.

Only at the very end, maybe the last hour, we added some spices–we chose cayenne and cinnamon–and milk.  Sugar wasn’t readily available, but we were given a cone to scrape off for our mixture.

After twelve hours, yes really, we each got to taking home a sliver of this drinking chocolate.  Even mixing it with warm milk, the concoction was pretty chalky.

From the primitive to the sublime, I happily braved the Connecticut cold to go to my public library for a presentation by the self-taught ‘Chocolate Lady‘ Maria Brandriff, another Hamden resident.  She gave us an abbreviated history of chocolate, which comes from an Aztec word meaning “bitter water.”  They apparently made their drink much like we did at Williamsburg, and it was a beverage for the Kings, believed to be an aphrodisiac.

Not until the mid-1800s was chocolate used to make candy.  The discovery was conching–using huge mixing machines with slowly rotating blades to blend the heated chocolate and get rid of excess moisture.  It takes an Industrial Revolution to give us the really good stuff.

But candidly, the packed house was there for the goods.  And Maria didn’t disappoint.  First she had us taste decent grocery/drugstore chocolate, after deriding most of the readily available stuff, including Hersey and other mass-manufactured packaged chocolate.  Out of Lindt, Ghiradelli, and Trader Joe’s, I liked the latter’s 54% and 72% ‘Pound Plus’, made with chocolate from Belgium.

I couldn’t really tell all that much difference between the two levels of bitterness, which really references the amount of cacao to other ingredients, although generally, I like up to 80%.  I not a fan of sugar.  If you try the Trader Joe’s Pound Plus, let me know what you think.  It’s quite reasonably priced.

2015-01-29 19.48.42Then Maria showed us how to make truffles.  First you want to know that the word truffle really does reference the mushroom, because the best chocolates are irregular and gritty and earthy like the pig-discovered thing from the ground.

2015-01-29 19.40.11Anyway, you start with a ganache–an emulsion of heavy cream and chocolate, created by whisking.  You can used canned coconut milk instead of the cream, if for some reason, you’re being health conscious with your truffles.

Now, ganache is pretty tricky.   You need to temper your chocolate so that it will both have a snap when you bite into it and melt on your tongue.  Are you getting in the mood yet?

The problem is your ganache can curdle, called “broken ganache” just like a hollandaise or mayonnaise.  Maria says after many years of making the good stuff, it still happens to her.  Yep.  I’ve already written off trying this at home.  Still it was great fun watching Maria make truffles right in front of us, dipping the formed chocolate in cocoa powder (we each got to sample one.  Luscious.) 2015-01-29 19.52.03

If you get your ganache, you have to decide if you’re going to add flavor through addition or infusion.  Our goodie bag (this was unexpected for a free public program) included Maria’s tea-infused truffle, with its marinated tea leaves creating a juice that was infused into the ganache.  Adding coconut meat and lime juice to white chocolate made the piña colada truffle.  I don’t like these kinds of coconut candies in general, but Maria’s was pretty tasty.

So what you need to know is that the health benefits of chocolate start at 70%, the dark, dark stuff.  Different beans can make the chocolate taste totally different, even at the same percentage of cacao.  Your beans might be citrusy or smokey or fruity, depending on where they come from.  The best beans come from South and Central America, but most of what we get is from the Ivory Coast, where the beans are most prolific, cheapest, and least flavorful.  The price you pay will vary by all these determinants.

But really.  At this cold moment at the end of January, who cares?  Go have a nice piece of chocolate and let it melt on your tongue.  Life is good.

Museum of Curiosities

Old State House, Hartford

 

P.T. Barnum was an elected Representative to the Connecticut state legislature, so perhaps it’s no surprise that the refined, Federal style Old State House has a Museum of Curiosities, inaugurated in 1797.  Now, this exhibit certainly doesn’t attain the level of the bizarre that Barnum promoted.  But how often do you get to see a two-headed calf?

In this, the first capitol building in Connecticut, where the no-doubt somber, initial trials of the Amistad’s rebellious captives took place, before moving to New Haven; where representatives from around New England gathered to decide whether to secede from the U.S. in 1814, in displeasure over the war with England; in this august hall with its Gilbert Stuart painting of George Washington…

…you can bet that people flocked instead to see giant tarantulas, an alligator, a whale bone, a shrunken hand, and yes, even a two-headed pig.  How did this come to be?

2014-12-29 13.40.27First, Charles Willson Peale had already done something similar at Independence Hall in Philadelphia.  The Peale Museum was the nation’s purported first museum.  Here, at Connecticut’s State House, portrait painter Joseph Steward was given the right to have his painting studio in the building.  There, he could capture the likenesses of the important political dignitaries working below.

He also had quite the collection of oddities and whatnots from his world-wide travels.  And his museum was born.  He advertised in the Connecticut Courant newspaper an inventory of just what you could see if you visited, and the exhibit remained in place until 1810.

One advertisement

One advertisement, click to enlarge and read

Why did such a popular exhibit close?  Think about it.  The two-headed pig wasn’t preserved, and it disintegrated.  Ewww.  Same with the other organic specimens.  So it took restoration of the building in the 1990s for the museum to be recreated.  The only original items are the portraits that Steward painted, including of the ubiquitous George Washington, as you can see in the photo above.

Now the challenge.  How do you find a two-headed calf, or for that matter a two-headed pig?  The curators checked auction lots.  No luck.  So a little known farm fact came to bear.  Apparently, two-headed-farm-animal births are not all that rare, and in the midwest, a still born, two-headed calf became the museum’s highlight, this time appropriately preserved.

2014-12-29 13.39.42This isn’t fake.  It’s not a Barnum & Bailey manipulated display.  Stuff happens.

At least I spared you a picture of the two-headed pig fetus in a jar.  Ewww.

2014-12-29 13.39.31

 

 

 

 

 

If it all becomes just too much for you, you can always take a seat at one of the original Legislators’ desks, catch your breath, and reflect on just how good you’ve got it!

2014-12-29 13.48.07

Palette Trees

The Florence Griswold Museum is known for its painted panels on the doors and walls of ‘Miss Florence’s’ boarding house.  Those artists left their mark in perpetuity.

Each holiday season, the museum also grows another tradition.  New artists participate each year.  Each paints an artist palette to be hung on the holiday tree.  Now over 150 palettes hang on not one, but two trees.

Just like the painted panels, each tells a little story–about the artist, about art, about celebrations of paint.  So fresh and fun.  In case you missed it, here’s a few pictures to give you a sense.

2014-12-27 12.19.452014-12-27 12.19.59

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2014-12-27 12.20.092014-12-27 12.20.24

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

May 2015 be full of color and creativity for you!

A Light in the Darkness

This is my first winter in the house, and what I’m noticing is how very, very dark it is here at night.  For so many years, I have lived with the ambient light of high rises and the urban scene.  So you can imagine how warming those Hanukkah candles have been each night.

2014-12-20 08.54.53

The trees of downtown New Haven wear knitted warmies

We’ve done it!  We’ve reached the Solstice, which is all about light at the darkest time of year.  Now the days start getting longer.

2014-12-20 18.39.57

Thank goodness for these traditions that invite us to light up our worlds in this time of deep darkness.  I light a candle for the important women in my life who are now gone.  The first night and each of the seven nights that follow, the first two candles are lit for my mother Rose and her mother Nettie.

Fourteen years ago, I had a remembrance published in Grand-Stories edited by Ernie Wendell.  Here’s my memory piece from that book.  Enjoy, and may your light shine brightly every night!

 

Let the Candle Burn

Every winter, during the season of darkness, I light candles to honor my grandmother. Whether lighting the menorah for the festival of lights, Hanukkah, or warming a room with a scented candle, I remember a long‑ago moment and a story.

When I was a teenager, years after the novelty of dreidel games of childhood Hanukkah celebrations wore off, my mother and I would light the candles of the menorah and sit together, lights off, to watch their flickering. Sometimes we were quiet.  Sometimes she told me stories.

One year, she told me a story about my grandmother. When mother was my age, in the 1930s, they lived by the railroad tracks. Hoboes would jump off the passing trains and knock on their back door.

My grandmother would give the hoboes food and coffee‑‑for anyone was welcome at their home. Even though times were hard and everyone was poor, my grandmother always found something to share. Her mother taught her to never let someone who was hungry pass her gate. For the weary traveller, an open home is a healing sight.

How did others know this home welcomed them? A notch on the back gate. A candle burning in the window.

For my mother, and for me, the lit menorah belongs in our windows, with its drops of light letting passers‑by know that this is a Jewish home, and they are welcome here. Similarly, I want my life to be equally hospitable, welcoming the weary and the joyful alike.

Sitting in my darkened room, I watch a candle burn and notice the reflection in my large windows to the world. I remember my grandmother and my mother with the tender, poignant candlelight of memory.

I hope that who I am flickers light and hope into the darkness of our winters. Let the candle burn from the window of my spirit to yours.®

Exploding Bath Bombs

2014-12-13 12.13.38‘Tis the season for cheesy crafts, and I love them as much as anyone.  Which is why today, you would have found me making bath bombs.  Mine won’t quite cut it as a gift for anyone else, but that’s through no fault of Erin of Craft Noire, who taught us at the store in New Haven called the Haven Collective.  Check out Erin’s other wonderful craft ideas!

Erin

Erin

 

 

 

Okay, basically, Erin told us, this is like baking a cake.  Mix your dry ingredients together first.  You take baking soda as your main ingredient.  Add about 1/2 that amount of citric acid (found on the canning aisle of your grocery store).  Citric acid makes the bath bomb explode.  Get it?  The fizz for your tub.  Add about the same again of corn starch.

2014-12-13 12.11.35

 

2014-12-13 12.19.21

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Now the artistry sets in.  Mix your wet ingredients separately in a small bowl.  You can use almond oil as a base and add a few drops of essential oils for your fragrance.  Customize it by mixing and matching.  I mixed peppermint and rosemary.  If you want, you can add food coloring for some flair.  Mix your wet and dry ingredients together, adding in epson salts if you like.  I like!

2014-12-13 12.34.29 HDRStir this concoction all together and start adding spritzes of rubbing alcohol.  That’s right.  Put rubbing alcohol into a spray bottle and add 3 or 4 spritzes at a time.  Mix.  More spritzes.  Mix, until you reach the consistency of wet sand.

Essentially, you’re going to make mini sand castles.  You can use any kind of mold or cupcake/muffin pan.  Smush the mixture down firmly, spritz with the rubbing alcohol, then pack more down.  You can also put bits of lavender or more epson salts in first, then add your mixture.  You’ll end up with decoration for the top of your bombs.

When the mixture is firmly in place, wait for it to set.  Maybe about 10 minutes.  It will be firm to the touch.

2014-12-13 12.42.04Pop it out of the mold, let it sit for an hour to fully dry, then load up a jar with the hardened bath bombs for a sweet gift.  The air-tight jar also keeps the moisture out.  Wet will turn the bombs into mush.  Your finished bath bombs will last about 2 months.  Of course, you may use them up long before then!

2014-12-13 12.57.13 HDR

 

 

Put one in your tub and watch it explode!  With pleasure.  Thank you, Erin!

Erin demonstrates; plop one in water...

Erin demonstrates: plop one in water…

...and bombs away!

…and bombs away!

 

Commerce, Cassino, and Loo

No, that’s not the name of a new rock band.  Commerce, Cassino, and Loo are all popular card games from Jane Austen’s time.  In celebration of her birthday today, we Janeites in Connecticut gathered for tea to celebrate her and the role of card games in her life and works.  What a hoot!

As you’ve no doubt noticed, the names of the card games are most evocative, and Austen used the inherent characteristics of the games to say something about the characters who were attracted to each.  A metaphor in the cards.

First, she acknowledges that not everyone was a game player (all levels of interpretation meant).  There were two spheres.  No. not the Public and Private Spheres that divided men and women.  But those who sat down to play and the “outsiders” who did not.  Of course, those outsiders might prefer a dance or two in the Assembly Room, versus heading to the Card Room at any ball or social gathering.  They weren’t necessarily stick-in-the-muds.

https://i0.wp.com/www.victorianweb.org/art/illustration/phiz/pickwick/29.jpg?resize=513%2C588

The Card-room at Bath, by Phiz (Hablot K. Browne), April 1837, Steel Engraving, Dickens’s Pickwick Papers

So there were those who played games, ahem, and those who didn’t.  Anne Elliott from Persuasion declines to play cards in Bath, although Captain Wentworth reminds her it wasn’t always so.  Ahem.  Mary Crawford of Mansfield Park enjoys Speculation, a game that can be played by many.  Ahem.

Mr. Woodhouse from Emma definitely prefers Pique, because it can be played by only 2.  Much less change of spreading germs that way, you know.  Pride and Prejudice‘s Lady Catherine de Bourgh dominates the old-fashioned game of Quadrille, while reckless Lydia adored Lottery Tickets, a game of pure chance requiring no thought or strategy whatsoever.  When Elizabeth and Wickham play with her, Lizzie gets all the facts about Darcy wrong.  See the significance of a card game?

Then there’s class.  Lizzie opts out of playing Loo at Netherfield, when suggested by snobby Mr. Hurst.  She says she prefers to read, which kicks off a stream of hilarious digs all around.  But the real reason she declines is she can’t afford the high stakes of their play.  Austen herself avoided playing Commerce, when she couldn’t afford the 3 pence stake.

Instead Austen preferred Speculation, a gambling game.  She even wrote a poem about it, but sadly it was no longer played by the end of the 1800s.  She also enjoyed the board game Cribbage and a card game called Brag.

Fun facts.  Card games were played all over Europe, of course, but the same games might have different rules.  After all, a deck of cards wasn’t static.  The English played with 52 cards, but the Italians used only 40 and Russians 30.  In Spain, games were played with 48 cards.  There were no 10s.

Women, who had no other means of support, might convert their homes into card houses for games of chance.  Typically, they played Faro, named for Pharaoh, a game of chance where, for a change, the player has the best odds, not the House.  In the Western U.S. Faro houses were wildly popular, although apparently, there wasn’t a single “honest bank,” meaning you just couldn’t win against the House.

Two-penny Whist by James Gillray

Several of the games were precursors to popular games now.  Commerce and Brag for poker.  And there was a version of blackjack, known as 21.  Quadrille was so complicated that it phased out in popularity, and whist took over, morphing over time into today’s bridge.  Whist means quick, silent, and attentive, sharing a root with ‘wistful.’  This game requires thought and strategy to be played well, a wistful pursuit.

Others are quirky.  Named for a lullaby Lanterloo, Loo, which I found to be a bit silly and overly simple, involves playing with ivory-carved fish as the chits or counting pieces.  Special Loo tables were designed with fishponds (troughs) on all four sides, for holding your fish as you win them.  Loo was the most popular card game in England and was also the easiest game for cheating.  Trollope writes of a club member who cheats and when found out, gets away with it because the others were too gentlemanly to call him out.  Poor manners.  So if you plan to slip a card up your sleeve or palm another, do it in an English club.  They’d rather be cheated than rude.

Here we are, trying to make sense of Commerce

Here we are, trying to make sense of Commerce

 

Maybe you want to learn more, or get at the rules of these games.  My favorite was Cassino, and the rules are so complicated, you will definitely need a book.  Check out Helpful Sports for Young Ladies, where you’ll also learn more about other past-times.  Perhaps you already enjoy the athleticism of the seesaw and swinging outdoors.  Great forms of exercise for any one!

The Regency line-up

The Regency line-up