14 September 2009

saturated

I take pleasure in having no formal training in cinematography. I can make an aesthetic judgment of a film without getting caught up in the minutiae or the process, but rather sit back and allow the film to transport me.

The best films bring me to an entirely different world and leave me dreamy and disoriented when I leave the theater. I often won't even be able to recall the plot, but the visual impact will haunt me forever. There are a handful of directors that do this to me with everything they produce, and Wong Kar Wai is certainly near the top of that list.






22 June 2009

cocktail du jour

rain and clouds may persist (at least in the northeast), but calendrically, summer is in full gear! so let's celebrate with a drink. today's cocktail du jour is sure to satisfy your every anglophilic and post-tennis whim. cheers!


PIMM'S CUP NO. 1



Pimm's
lemonade
ginger beer
club soda
sprigs of fresh mint
lemon and/or lime slices
cucumber ribbons or slices or both

mix, garnish to death with the lemons, limes and cukes, and enjoy! when i play a particularly bad match i like to ramp it up with a little extra gin.

18 May 2009

model as muse

for anyone who loves fashion, well designed and crafted clothes are like pieces of wearable art. but anyone with enough money or status can wear beautiful clothes...it takes talent to use one's wardrobe to tell a story, to push fashion forward, and to inspire.

this is essentially the premise of the met's current exhibit, "the model as muse: embodying fashion." the exhibit chronologically explores "the reciprocal relationship between high fashion and evolving ideals of beauty," through original pieces, video footage, and photography.

the exhibit is geared towards an audience with an interest in fashion, but anyone with an open mind can appreciate good fashion photography. a photographer can take the clothes and the muse and give them depth. this is a unique feat in an industry known ultimately for its superficiality. so if for no other reason, check out the exhibit at the met for its iconic photography.

as a good supplement to the exhibit (which was partly and blatantly sponsored by conde nast) the may issue of british vogue ran a piece called "my inspiration," in which fashion insiders "describe the shot that altered their perspective forever." my short list:



melvin sokolsky for harper's bazaar



jean shrimpton by david bailey



paris, simone daillencourt, rinascenti by william klein




penelope tree by david bailey



kate moss




guy bourdin

the list could go on, and it does here.


21 April 2009

diner, williamsburg

you either love williamsburg or you hate it. both are probably warranted. anything that soars in popularity suffers equal backlash, and usually there's a little truth to both sides. so yes, williamsburg can seem a little stale and a lot overwrought, but it's fun. and last time i checked, people still go there. so i'm going to come out and say that i like williamsburg. by admitting such, i am automatically disqualified as a hipster, which leaves you with a predicament: now you don't have to hate me, but you probably won't trust my opinion either. the mind reels.

if nothing else, go for the food. well, go for the food if you're the type that enjoys cuisine of the free-range-grass-fed-hormone-free-organic-grown variety, which fortunately i happen to be. every elitist liberal buzzword can be found on the menu, unless the restaurant happens to be too trendy to have a menu, like diner.


like many restaurants across brooklyn, diner achieves its lofty status by serving great food while channeling the aesthetic properties of a dump. nooo, just kidding, diner -- you don't look like a dump, you look like a diner, natch!

creativity points: +2; williamsburg cliché penalty: -2.

i visited this fine establishment at around midnight on a friday. the kitchen stays open until 1am on weekends, (+1 point) and although it was crowded we were comfortably seated at a booth right away. (+1 point) our waiter was extremely friendly and attentive (+2 points) and we had our wine list, menus, and water right away.

there wasn't a wine under $32 (-4 points), and i don't remember what we ended up getting because it wasn't very memorable. i am of the school that encourages restaurants to put together thoughtful but affordable wine lists, and diner falls short on this point.

but it makes up for it in other areas. the dinner menus we were given listed one appetizer, one side dish, and a burger as the entrée. the recovering vegetarian in me suffered a wave of panic and started praying that, although we were in a diner car, the rest of the menu changes daily. and halleluja! a moment later the waiter was seated next to me, writing out the day's specials on the tablecloth. (+2 points) he described each dish as he wrote, starting with a sorrel soup and finishing up with the $36 steak of the day. we opted to share the soup, and ordered risotto and pork chops.

as soon as the soup came, i had forgotten about the wine. after the first slurp i decided it was too salty, but i was wrong. The sorrel and potato base was complimented by fennel and crème fraîche on top. once everything melded, a perfect balance had been achieved. (+2 points)

the risotto was risotto...there's not much you can do to make it better or worse than normal. the highlight was the use of ramps, which gave it that local/seasonal quality the restaurant strives for. (+1 point)

the great victory was the pork chop. i don't recall ever having enjoyed a pork chop before (remember, recovering vegetarian) but this was phenomenal. it was served with home fries, greens (with shaved fennel, of course) and tied together by an egg over easy. my fellow diner fell into some sort of eating trance from the first bite to the last, and then talked only of that pork chop for the rest of the night. without the egg, this would have been a very good meal, but because the runny egg yolk added so much to the texture and taste of the meat, it was worth (+5 points)!

overall i would say that diner is a good place to go with a small group of friends, maybe for a special occasion. it's a little too low key and noisy for an intimate date, but the noise level was low enough for good conversation over really good food.

total score:10
meaning of scores: undetermined.

04 February 2009

avant garde + icp (not the clowns)



when i grow up i want to have an apartment in the city and an estate in the country, preferably in europe. i also want to dress ridiculously inappropriately and traipse about industrial landscapes and the countryside, milking cows and riding subways in couture. that's the life!



Align Center




unrelated: if you live in the new york area, check out the international center of photography. they will be featuring fashion photography all year, so i'll be there practically every day. i haven't gone yet but i will be there anon. one of the exhibits, "weird beauty" will feature photography by steven meisel, cindy sherman, mario sorrenti, nick knight, steven klein, miles aldridge, paolo roversi, and sølve sundsbø...





the weird beauty exhibit is just one of four fashion exhibits. i am so freaking excited.

30 January 2009

sushi

i don't usually get sushi for dinner. i always feel like it's not enough food, especially for the price. but everyone in new haven raves about miya's, and i finally tried it tonight.

i've always heard about how delicious and innovative the sushi at miya's is, but i'm of the school of thought where sushi is just sushi. yes, i understand there's a little room for creativity, but it's usually the same ingredients assembled into a roll. don't get me wrong, i love good sushi, but it's pretty standard fare.

not so at miya's. the chef draws from several types of cuisines to create his sushi and it makes it worth the price and the hype. here's the meal, in reverse order:

we ordered the japafrican queen roll, which is, according to the menu, "sushi created by african bushman to nourish them during their seasonal migrations. eggplant, goat cheese, apricots, avocado, pickled radish, scallions & ethiopian berbere spice mix, wrapped in our freshly made teff grain crepe." that's that spongy ethiopian bread! we also got a kimchee seared tuna roll, which was very simple, not at all expensive, and out of this world. it was made with tuna that was spiced with kimchee spices and seared at high heat to seal in the flavor of the kimchee but keep this inside raw. it struck a perfect contrast in texture between the seared outside of the tuna and the melt-in-your-mouthiness of the inside.

we started with tokyo fries and "it's the great pumpkin, miso" soup.

those are the toyko fries. they're really skinny and crispy fries served with spicy curry and tomato alioli sauce. the pumpkin miso soup was like miso with actual flavor.

we got a small bottle of the dragon lady sake, which is "ginger, lemongrass & clover honey sake. victory drink of lesbian chinese pirates of the south china seas. also popular with sorority girls everywhere." it was unfiltered, so it was cloudy, and came with a stick of lemongrass in it, which gave it an orangish color. it was amazing, but the sweetness overpowered the sake flavor a little too much. it was great with the meal, though, and i can understand how it could get you girl drink drunk, as advertised. next time i want to try the chinese firecracker sake, which is "aged hot chili pepper & citrus sake. painfully euphoric; contains over a thousand secret flavor components. the perfect sake to sake bomb. not for the meek."



the whole dining experience was very fun, and i would definitely go again next time i have a big budget and a small appitite. as far as creativity goes, miya's outshines every other place in new haven. as far as actual quality of sushi goes, though, i'd have to say that the jury is still out.

27 January 2009

dior couture


Align Center



christian dior jump started 2009 couture in paris this week. couture designers may have spent as much time defending their trade as they did executing it for these shows, due to the current economic climate, blah blah blah. whatever! couture has never, in my world, been something that people buy and wear. it's more like art and escapism, which people need in "times like these." dior's line was a perfect silver lining to the recession cloud. everything looked like cakes and old fancy wallpaper or fine china. it's like eating macaroons, drinking tea, and reading baudelaire in your rich aunt's upper east side apartment. scroll back up!


10 January 2009

home improvement

if anything says more about a person than the clothes they wear and the food they eat, it's the place they live! (or perhaps the things they say, the way they treat people, their ambitions, their insecurities? ...nah.) anyway, my apartment needs a lot of work before it says anything remotely flattering about me. there are a few things i love...










other than a few great tables from craigslist, a fake fireplace, my jewelry, books, magazines, and a few other little things that i love, my little dwelling needs a lot of work. the place is wall to wall hideous carpet, there are no shelves in the "pantry," so all my food is on the windowsill, and there are drop ceilings. i didn't include a picture of those, because it's just too painful.

there's not enough room for my clothes and shoes, so soon all this crap may be homeless...





my mission in 2009 is to make this place better than just livable on a verrry tight budget. pretty soon i'll have a lot more time than money. maybe i can film the process and strike a deal with tlc or hgtv!

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