Joie de Vivre

"Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?" ~Mary Oliver

Archive for Events

211. Highlights of another PDX weekend.

Following a couple days of open enrollment meetings in Portland last Thursday and Friday, Concert Boy & I decided to stay for the weekend and attend the Wordstock Festival. It’s my absolute favorite book & literary festival and Portland is the perfect host! It is held each Fall at the Convention Center (admission is only $5/day or $8 for 2 days) and features 8 author stages, a bookfair with over 150 exhibitors, a series of workshops for writers & teachers, and several special events. This year’s festival featured 170 writers and highlighted food writing, memoir and young adult.

Between literary events, we relaxed in our room at Hotel deLuxe, savored Stumptown coffee, perused Powell’s City of Books, and enjoyed several AMAZING meals (see highlights below)! We wrapped up our weekend with a train ride home, departing Portland just as the sun was setting.

Wordstock

My Wordstock Highlights

  • The beautiful walk from the hotel to the festival on Saturday morning across the sunlit Broadway bridge.
  • Dean Olsher’s spoken-word performance, “From Square One,” about crossword puzzles and the war between thinking & feeling. I loved the format, incorporating sound design and Olsher’s original music. There is an excerpt of the reading here.
  • Seeing the CRAZY, yet compelling James Ellroy (“L.A. Confidential”). Here’s a short interview with Ellroy that was featured in WW.
  • Collecting foraging tips from Seattle-ite Langdon Cook (“Fat of the Land: Adventures of a 21st Century Forager”) & heirloom gardening tips from Bill Thorness.
  • Listening to Julia Glass (“Three Junes”), a National Book Award winner, talk about her family & the families she writes about, her day-to-day connection with her characters, and her haphazard writing schedule (which she blames on not being a morning person — Boy, do I get that!). Here’s a short interview with Glass that was featured in WW.
  • The “Willamette Week at 35″ panel discussion with 5 past & present journalists.
  • Ronault (Polo) Catalani’s (“Counter Culture: Immigrant Stories from Portland Cafe Counters”) intimate conversation about the need to understand & celebrate our cultural differences.

My Food Highlights

Urban FarmerUrban Farmer

Thursday night w/friends — Cocktails & Brandon’s cheese cart at Urban Farmer (located in the historical Meier + Frank building, now the Nines Hotel).

Park Kitchen
Park Kitchen 2

Friday night w/friends — Cocktails at Teardrop Lounge. Wine & small plate tasting menu at Park Kitchen.

  • Fried green beans & bacon w/tarragon aioli.
  • St. Germain salad, smoked cod, fennel, beans & pickled elderberries.
  • Roasted beets, chilies, chicory & walnuts.
  • Marinated smelt & eggplant, saffron onions.
  • Little octopus w/padron peppers & bottarga.
  • Gnocchi w/grilled corn, lobster & mushroom sauce.
  • Lime curd cake w/caramel popcorn & sweet corn sauce.
  • Plum & tomato crisp w/basil ice cream.
  • Double chocolate tart w/Earl Grey anglaise & chantilly cream.

Beast 
Beast

Saturday night w/Concert Boy — Six-course tasting menu with wine pairings at Beast. AMAZING!!!!!

  • Delicata squash soup w/Tails & Trotters pork crackling & tarragon salsa verde. Wine: Brundlmayer Gruner Vetliner Kamtaler Terrassen 2007.
  • Charcuterie plate: foie-gras bon-bon w/sauternes geleé, steak tartare & quail egg toast, chicken liver mousse w/pickled shallot, pork liver & sour cherry pate. Wine: Prieler Sauvignon Blanc Seebert 2006.
  • Braised Sonoma Farms duck leg w/cream of cabbage with truffle & crab-apple confiture. Wine: Clos Roche Blanche Cabernet Touraine 2007.
  • Beet & marinated celery root salad w/fried capers & Homboldt Fog goat cheese. Wine: County Line Rose 2008.
  • Selection of Steve’s Cheese: Anise & fleur de sel shortbread, Bittersweet Farms honey, Mars-Venus grapes & hazelnuts. Wine: Merkelbach Riesling Spatlese Urziger.
  • Olive oil cake w/port poached Seckle peers & spiced Marcona Almonds. Wine: Montellori Vin Santo Bianco Dell Empolese 2001.

205. Love being busy!

OH MY, what a BUSY week!!! — Work has been nuts, I’m dogsitting, I’ve had a couple dates (with a VERY sweet guy that I met at the Decemberists concert), and also several outings with friends.

The Saint

The Saint 2The Saint

I got home from Portland on Friday and met Concert Boy at The Saint on Capitol Hill for happy hour. What a great happy hour! 5 to 7pm daily; they have several drinks & appetizers for $5 each. I had the Old & Nutty (Old Crow bourbon, ginger and extract, orange bitters and nutmeg) and we shared the Ceviche and the Mole Tacos. Everything was wonderful! After HH, we walked to the Northwest Film Forum to see Lake Tahoe. Great, sparse film. Then to Poppy for cocktails & dessert.

Saturday, Mitch and I went to the Sounders game, then the Mariners game, then dinner, and then the Torchlight Parade. Long day in the VERY HOT sun, but fun!

Sunday, Jen and I walked up to the Bellevue Festival of the Arts and hung out for the afternoon. A couple great finds: Rachel Austin’s “paintings and other lovelies”, Sabrena Wright’s hand stitched bags, and Chihiro Makio’s beautiful jewelry.

OddfellowsOddfellows Cafe & Bar

Monday, Dana and I met for lunch at Oddfellows Café. I love their space — it’s located in the old, open historical Odd Fellows building circa 1909 on Capitol Hill. We both had the Chicken Salad sandwich (with crisp Bibb lettuce and Tarragon mayo on baguette) and an ice tea. Tasty & wonderful to catch up!

Last night, I made dinner for Concert Boy. I tried a new recipe which I highly recommend for this hot weather.

Gotta run! More work to do and tonight, Mitch and I are going to see Jewel at the Zoo.

Stay cool!

P.S. If you haven’t done so, be sure to get your ticket for this super cool fundraising event!

200. Wednesday Whimsy & Wishes

Wow, I just noticed it’s my 200th post today! It’s fun for me to click on the Random Post feature (right hand corner above) from time to time to remember what I’ve been up to for the last couple years. Time sure does fly! :)

Speaking of flying…

Tricia McKellarTricia McKellar 2

These bird photographs by Tricia McKellar were mentioned in DailyCandy last week and I think they are absolutely charming! ALL of her work is really lovely! You can see more on her Flickr site.

On my wishlist this week are tickets to these events:

~ SAL just announced their 2009-10 Wednesday University line-up. The series ticket is $225 and each series is five classes.

  • Fall: Art, Dissent, and Social Change
  • Winter: Mixed Race in the United States
  • Spring: Blues for Hard Times — and For All Times

~ I saw this mentioned on Twitter today — An Incredible Feast – Where the Farmers Are the Stars! It’s on August 23rd & tickets are $80 each. Here’s the description:

This is one of Seattle’s premier food events and showcases an astounding variety of local flavors, all prepared using fresh farm ingredients.  Held outdoors in a farmers market setting, guests can sample over 30 gourmet dishes, enjoy excellent local wines and beers, and meet the chefs and farmers behind the food.  The evening also features country-fair-style games with fabulous prizes, live music and a dessert auction.  Farm stalls are set up just like a market, with the addition of delicious food carefully prepared by some of Seattle’s best chefs.

This year’s Feast will be held at the University District Market site under one big, beautiful tent (this also ensures no one gets wet if it rains!).

~ And finally, Bumbershoot ‘09 tickets are on sale right now and the early bird special is available thru 8/21 — the standard 3-day pass is $80 ($120 starting 8/22) and day-specific tickets are $35 each ($50 starting 8/22). Here’s the line-up so far.

Also on my wishlist is this wallpaper for my guest bathroom. I saw it pictured in a magazine (although I can’t remember which) and I love it!

Wallpaper

Tonight, I’m joining DK and M&G to see the Brazilian singer-songwriter, CéU (her name means “sky” in Portuguese) at the Triple Door. I can’t wait!! Here’s a little taste…

195. An evening with Gloria Steinem.

Gloria Steinem

Mom & I had sangria and tapas at Tango tonight, and then went to see Gloria Steinem at Seattle’s Town Hall. The event was sold out. It was sponsored by Hedgebrook, a women’s writing retreat on Whidbey Island, and the panel featured a group of amazing women — Steinem, Holly Near (singer/songwriter & activist), Nassim Assefi (novelist & global women’s health specialist), Stephanie Kallos (novelist), Pramila Jayapal (writer & activist) and moderator, Amy Wheeler (playwright & Hedgebrook’s Executive Director).

I loved the format of the evening! It included poetry readings, songs performed by Near, and an informal conversation amongst the panel and audience. It was meant to simulate an evening around the kitchen table at Hedgebrook and it did not disappoint.

Steinem has an incredible presence about her. She’s intelligent, thoughtful & well-spoken…and although I realize this is completely beside the point, she’s 75 and absolutely exquisite!

What a lovely group of women & an inspirational evening!

A little about Steinem…

Gloria Steinem is a writer, lecturer, editor, activist and feminist icon. She co–founded New York Magazine in 1968, and founded Ms. Magazine in 1972, where she continues to serve as consulting editor. Her books include Revolution from Within: A Book of Self–Esteem, Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions and Moving Beyond Words. Her activism has helped found several organizations including the Women’s Action Alliance, the National Women’s Political Caucus, the Coalition of Labor Union Women, Voters for Choice and Choice USA. For her writing, Steinem earned a Lifetime Achievement in Journalism Award from the Society of Professional Journalists. She was also inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame.

As a side note, both Steinem and Near are currently working on writing projects at Hedgebrook. Steinem is working on her memoir (working title: “America As If Everyone Mattered). I can’t wait to read it!

Here are a couple great Steinem quotes…

“A woman without a man is a like a fish without a bicycle.”
“The truth will set you free. But first, it will piss you off.”
“A pedestal is as much a prison as any small, confined space.”

And finally, here is an interview with Steinem that ran in the Seattle Times on Thursday and here is a link to the interview she did on KUOW with Steve Scher.

Ciao!

191. Local farm-fresh produce.

PeasPea Flickr photo by Mochiland.

I know I say this over and over again, but I absolutely ADORE buying local summer produce from the farmers markets (see my list of favorites below)! Last night, I was having company — Tanja and Amy came over for dinner — and I can’t tell you how excited I was to be mainly using ingredients (peas, radishes, mint, cherry tomatoes, arugula, farm fresh butter, cherries) that I had purchased at the Bellevue & West Seattle farmers markets this past week. I chose a pasta recipe from Tanja’s copy of Lidia’s Italy (proving to be another favorite cookbook!), made a salad very similar to the one we had at The Corson Building on Sunday with peas & radishes, bought a fresh baguette, and served chocolate & cherries for dessert.

The pea salad turned out great and I loved the freshness of the pasta. The arugula nicely complimented the ripe, sweet tomatoes, and although I couldn’t find any cavatelli (Lidia’s preferred pasta), strascinate (her second pick) or even orecchiette (her third pick, which I really should have been able to find – bad QFC!), I chose a Casareccia instead, which worked fine. Here are the recipes.

Pasta with Arugula & Tomatoes
Serves 4 – Adapted from Lidia’s Italy

1 pound pasta (see note above)
3 cups cherry tomatoes (about 1 pound), rinsed
¼ cup olive oil
4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
¼ teaspoon red pepper flakes
½ pound arugula
½ cup Pecorino Romano
salt

  • Chop the tomatoes up into half-inch pieces. Pour the olive oil into a large skillet over medium high heat. Add the garlic and red pepper flakes. Cook until fragrant, about one minute. Add the chopped tomatoes. Cook until the tomatoes until they have softened, about five minutes.
  • Meanwhile, bring a large pot of water to boil. Sprinkle in a few tablespoons of salt. When boiling, add the pasta and cook according to the direction on the box. With about five minutes left in the time, add the arugula to the pot. Reserve half a cup of pasta water, and drain the pasta and arugula.
  • Turn the skillet with the tomatoes back to medium high, and then toss in the pasta and arugula. Stir together, and cook for a minute or so, adding some of the reserved pasta water if it is too dry. Season with extra salt and freshly grated cheese.

Pea, Radish, Feta & Mint Salad
Adapted from Sunday’s Brunch at The Corson Building

cumin seeds
lemon zest
extra-virgin olive oil
fresh shelled peas
radishes, thinly sliced
shallot, thinly sliced
fresh mint, thinly sliced
crumbled feta cheese

  • Heat small skillet over medium heat. Add cumin seeds and toast until aromatic and slightly darker, about 2 minutes. Cool; grind finely in spice mill.
  • Combine all ingredients; toss. Season with salt and pepper. Serve.

Local Farmers Markets
Here are a few that I frequent:

Kirkland Wednesday Market
Wednesdays 2-7pm, May 6 thru Oct 14

Bellevue Farmers Market
Thursdays 3-7pm, May 14 thru Oct 15
Saturdays 9am-2pm, Jun 6 thru Nov 21

Redmond Saturday Market
Saturdays 9am-3pm, May 2 thru Oct 31

University District Farmers Market
Saturdays 9am-2pm, Year Around

Ballard Sunday Farmers Market
Sundays 10am-3pm, Year Around

West Seattle Farmers Market
Sundays 10am-2pm, Year Around

Mercer Island Farmers Market
Sundays 11am-3pm, Jun 21 thru Oct 11

I also found this list that NW Source put together highlighting all of the local markets.

P.S. Speaking of local, City Stimulus is back July 12 thru 18!! Click here for participants. There are several great offers. Time to try Oddfellows and replenish spices at World Spice.

Happy Summer!

180. Life’s little treasures.

I’m warning you all ahead of time that this is an EPIC EPIC post… one post to basically cover the ENTIRE month of March! I’m settled into my favorite corner table at Top Pot with an Americano and 30 minutes to summarize the last 30 days. And I have SO MANY things I want to tell you about, I don’t know where to start!! There are restaurants, books, movies, music, lectures, sporting events and other various inspirations to talk about, so start where it best suits you.

crushCrush

cantinettaCantinetta

tilikum-place-cafe
Tilikum Place Café

Restaurants | Of course, I start with food…

As part of the Dine Around Seattle event, Dana and I met at Crush early one Thursday evening and secured two seats at the chef’s counter. Jason Wilson’s restaurant has been on my “must try” list forever and while the host was a little snarky (words of warning: Crush favors reservations and we didn’t have one), the rest of the evening was a true delight! We each selected the 3 courses for $30 option, along with the $18 wine pairing. (For those of you who have dined at Crush, you know that this is a bargain!) For starters, I chose the Braised & Grilled Berkshire Pork Belly with Pinata Apples, Parsnips and Bourbon Glaze. Followed by the Alaskan King Cod with Preserved Lemon Sabayon (AMAZING!), Chorizo Broth, Controne Beans and Gremolatta. Followed by the Buttermilk Beignets with Jam, Chocolate Sauce and Cream for dessert. EVERYTHING was ABSOLUTELY DELICIOUS, including the bread that had a hint of rosemary and the perfect dusting of sea salt. Crush is located in a little house turned restaurant on E Madison St. and its all-cream modern interior is lovely. I highly highly recommend this restaurant for your next special occasion…or the next Dine Around Seattle event.

I also tried a new Italian restaurant with Tanja, Cantinetta. It just opened recently in an old dental office on Wallingford Ave. N and it’s wonderful what they have done with the space. It’s welcoming…simple, rustic and convivial. I arrived early and the staff immediately made me feel at home while I relaxed with my book and a glass of wine until Tanja arrived. There were so many wonderful things listed on the menu, we had a hard time choosing, so we selected several items to share. Beets with Fresh Mozzarella and Pistachio Pesto. Kale with Preserved Tomatoes and Cranberry Beans. Mussels with a Puttanesca Broth. Gnocchini with Oxtail and Jerusalem Artichokes. Chocolate Torta. Bombolini with Citrus Confit. Yum, yum, yum! Highly recommend!

Oh, and there was also Tilikum Place Café where Heather and I enjoyed brunch one rainy Saturday morning. It opened last November and has a great atmosphere, very “neighborhood bistro.” We each ordered a Dutch Baby — Heather had the sweet version (with pan-roasted apples) and I had the savory version (with duck confit and cranberries). It was the perfect place to spend several hours catching up over a wonderful breakfast and pot of French press Lighthouse Roasters.

Thank you again my friends! Words never adequately express how blessed I feel to have you in my life! The way you each savor the world and share your hearts and enthusiasm with me inspires my every moment! xoxo

I still have several restaurants on my “must try” list, including:

Hopefully I’ll check off one or two more in April!

the-uncommon-readerpleasure-domewithout84_charing_cross_first

A Novella, Poetry, Letters | I didn’t have much reading time this month, but I did discover a couple of small treasures… Along with poetry by Yusef Komunyakaa & Donald Hall, I also savored a wonderful little read, The Uncommon Reader: A Novella by Alan Bennett. I discovered Bennett because I had previously read (and adored) another one of his novellas, The Clothes They Stood Up In. Here’s a little more info:

From Publishers Weekly
Briskly original and subversively funny, this novella from popular British writer Bennett (Untold Stories; Tony-winning play The History Boys) sends Queen Elizabeth II into a mobile library van in pursuit of her runaway corgis and into the reflective, observant life of an avid reader. Guided by Norman, a former kitchen boy and enthusiast of gay authors, the queen gradually loses interest in her endless succession of official duties and learns the pleasure of such a common activity. With the dawn of her sensibility… mistaken for the onset of senility, plots are hatched by the prime minister and the queen’s staff to dispatch Norman and discourage the queen’s preoccupation with books. Ultimately, it is her own growing self-awareness that leads her away from reading and toward writing, with astonishing results. Bennett has fun with the proper behavior and protocol at the palace, and the few instances of mild coarseness seem almost scandalous. There are lessons packed in here, but Bennett doesn’t wallop readers with them. It’s a fun little book. (Sept.)

84, Charing Cross Road was another wonderful little find this month, which I discovered in a used bookstore…

Amazon.com Review
84, Charing Cross Road is a charming record of bibliophilia, cultural difference, and imaginative sympathy. For 20 years, an outspoken New York writer and a rather more restrained London bookseller carried on an increasingly touching correspondence. In her first letter to Marks & Co., Helene Hanff encloses a wish list, but warns, “The phrase ‘antiquarian booksellers’ scares me somewhat, as I equate ‘antique’ with expensive.” Twenty days later, on October 25, 1949, a correspondent identified only as FPD let Hanff know that works by Hazlitt and Robert Louis Stevenson would be coming under separate cover. When they arrive, Hanff is ecstatic–but unsure she’ll ever conquer “bilingual arithmetic.” By early December 1949, Hanff is suddenly worried that the six-pound ham she’s sent off to augment British rations will arrive in a kosher office. But only when FPD turns out to have an actual name, Frank Doel, does the real fun begin.

two-loverslittle-childrencarolinehappy-go-lucky1

Movies | Dustin and I saw Two Lovers at the Seven Gables starring Joaquin Phoenix (superb performance even though he has morphed into one strange dude!), Gwynneth Paltrow, Vinessa Shaw and Isabella Rossellini (lovely as always!). Mom & I saw the charming (yet also a little creepy) animation in Coraline at the Metro. And on DVD, Little Children and Happy-Go-Lucky. I recommend them all!

portland-cello-project1

Music | Last night, Bruce & I had a bite to eat at Union (oysters with horseradish & lemon; ricotta dumplings with rabbit ragout; excellent!) and then went to see the Portland Cello Project at The Triple Door. PCP is a group of 18 (8 were in Seattle) classically trained cellists who do more than just the normal repertoire. A couple songs were performed by PCP only and on others they collaborated with Weinland*, Anais Mitchell and Seattle’s Throw Me A Statue. Weinland’s Adam Shearer MC’d the show. It was like our own little one-night SXSW festival! EVERYONE was fabulous!!! 5 Stars!

Also in music, I downloaded the new Neko Case CD this month — Middle Cyclone – and I am loving it!

*Weinland is also going to be at the Sunset Tavern this Thursday, April 2nd starting at 9pm. Cover charge is $6.

Television | G3 and I finished watching Season 4 of The Wire. It was just as fabulous as the other seasons! We only have one more season to go and then we’re going to have to decide on a new series to occupy our Netflix television time. Suggestions?

montero

Soccer, March Madness & Hockey Playoffs | I completely heart Fredy Montero, the Columbian forward for our new Seattle Sounders FC team. OMG, he’s adorable! Okay yes, he’s a little young for me — 21 — but the kid can kick! He scored two goals in the first game, along with one assist, and then another goal in the second game. Speaking of the first game — the INAUGURAL game! — I was there and it was one of my favorite Seattle sports moments. (Thank you Bruce for our amazing seats!) I’ve actually attended most of the inaugural Seattle games over the last several years, including the Mariners at Safeco, the Seahawks at Qwest, the T-Birds at their new arena, and the Silvertips. I’ll always be loyal to our local teams and a sports fan in general, but I feel the Sounders pulling on the strings to my heart. :)

March was the ultimate sports month! There was hockey (the T-Birds were in the playoffs & I attended game 3, thanks Mitch!), March Madness and two Sounders matches. And even though the T-Birds (shush Brendan), the Huskies AND the Zags lost, it was an exciting month and I spent more time than I’d like to admit hanging out in pubs.

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Lectures | On the 18th, Heather, Mom & I met for an early dinner at Matt’s in the Market and then attended Scott Simon’s special SAL event at Benaroya. Simon has published a few books and is best known as the host of NPR’s “Weekend Edition Saturday.” He was very sweet and engaging. He read from a couple of his books and talked about his upcoming memoir about adopting two babies from China with his wife, French documentary filmmaker Caroline Richard. Here’s a little sampling of Simon’s work: “Reflections on Welcoming a New Family Member.” You can also follow him on Twitter @nprscottsimon.

I also attended Yusef Komunyakaa’s poetry reading on the 26th. Komunyakaa was born in 1947, grew up in Louisiana, and uses his childhood experiences to inform many of his works: growing up in the rural South before civil rights, his familial relationships, jazz & blues, and his later experience of serving as a combat reporter in the Vietnam War. He was awarded the Bronze Star for his work with the military newspaper, The Southern Cross, and won the 1994 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. Currently, he is a professor in the Creative Writing Program at NYU. He was fabulous! Here is a sample of his poetry, if only he could read it in his rich voice for you…

My Father’s Love Letters

On Fridays he’d open a can of Jax
After coming home from the mill,
and ask me to write a letter to my mother
Who sent postcards of desert flowers
Taller than men. He would beg,
Promising to never beat her
Again. Somehow I was happy
She had gone, and sometimes wanted
To slip in a reminder, how Mary Lou
Williams’ “Polka Dots & Moonbeams”
Never made the swelling go down.
His carpenter’s apron always bulged
With old nails, a claw hammer
Looped at his side and extension cords
Coiled around his feet.
Words rolled from under the pressure
Of my ballpoint: Love,
Baby, Honey, Please.
We sat in the quiet brutality
Of voltage meters and pipe threaders,
Lost between sentences…
The gleam of a five-pound wedge
On the concrete floor
Pulled a sunset
Through the doorway of his toolshed.
I wondered if she laughed
And held them over a gas burner.
My father could only sign
His name, but he’d look at blueprints
And say how many bricks
Formed each wall. This man,
Who stole roses and hyacinth
For his yard, would stand there
With eyes closed and fists balled,
Laboring over a simple word, almost
Redeemed by what he tried to say.

Also, I think I’ve been remiss in mentioning the Junot Diaz SAL lecture at Benaroya in late February. It was fabulous! I loved how he kept it real and there were so many quotable moments. A group of us (Tanja, Heather, Kate, Mary, Mom, G3 & Bruce) attended and we all met for dinner beforehand and conversation afterwards at Union. Another fun & inspiring evening spent in the company of friends!

Other Inspirations | Thanks to Ms. Boyd, I discovered a website full of fun wallpapers and icons to “redecorate” my Mac with – pixelgirlpresents.com. This also inspired me to finally clean out all my old electronic files and back everything up to my new external hard drive. While doing this, I realized that I have 2879 songs stored on my computer and according to iTunes could listen to my iPod for 8.8 days without hearing the same song twice.

Thanks to little notes from all of you, I also discovered a couple new blogs that I am very much enjoying:

Other inspirations included joining a volunteer group, some heavy Spring cleaning in my condo, a sunny walk across the UW campus to admire the cherry blossoms, reconnecting with more old friends thru Facebook, and trying to stay current with technology by joining Twitter (@joiedevivre9).

Tonight, I’m meeting Tanja & Amy for dinner at Café Presse and tomorrow, April Fools’ Day. Happy Spring!!!!!

178. Time to make a “A Powerful Noise!”

APN_TYPE_TREATMENT

 Be the change you want to see in the world.

You may never know what results come of your action, but if you do nothing there will be no result.

Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.

— Mahatma Gandhi

Last night, Tina and I attended a special one-night event, A POWERFUL NOISE Live, which was presented in over 450 theatres across the country. We were both so touched and inspired by what we saw and heard. It was an incredibly powerful experience; one which I will not forget!!!

The event was held in honor of International Women’s Day (March 8th) and featured the acclaimed documentary, Powerful Noise, followed by a town hall discussion broadcast live from New York City with expert and celebrity panelists including former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright; Christy Turlington Burns, CARE advocate for maternal health and contributing editor for Marie Claire magazine; CARE President, Dr. Helene Gayle; New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof; and actress Natalie Portman.

 

On the evening of March 5, 2009, more than 120,000 people across the United States will make a powerful noise in honor of International Women’s Day by gathering in more than 450 select theatres nationwide to celebrate their role in the fight against global poverty. This unprecedented one-night event will feature “A Powerful Noise,” an acclaimed documentary that follows three extraordinary women: Hanh is an HIV-positive widow fighting AIDS in Vietnam. Nada is a survivor of the Bosnian war who is rebuilding her community through a woman’s cooperative. Jacqueline is an activist working to educate girls in the slums of Mali. “A Powerful Noise” takes you inside the lives of these three women to witness their daily challenges and significant victories over poverty and oppression. Immediately following the film, theatres across America will transform into community forums, as viewers participate in a town hall discussion broadcast live from New York about the role of women in the fight against global poverty. Renowned journalists, activists and experts will discuss action steps that we all can take to help empower women around the world.

I encourage you all to read some of Nicholas Kristof’s NYT articles (link above) and visit the websites below. There are so many ways to contribute, from sharing links on Facebook to donating money to writing letters to giving time.

Also, here’s a great article that ran in The Huffington Post on Monday, written by Sheila C. Johnson who presented this event:

As we prepare to celebrate International Women’s Day on March 8th, consider the state of the world’s women.

Seventy percent of the poorest people living in the world today are women and girls. Women work two-thirds of the world’s working hours, yet they earn just 10 percent of the income. Two-thirds of the adults worldwide who cannot read are women, and two-thirds of the children who do not attend school are girls. Every minute of every day, a woman somewhere dies from complications due to pregnancy and childbirth. And in many communities, women are still the legal property of their fathers and husbands.

There are many factors that sustain poverty, but one factor that is common to poverty everywhere is the inequality of women and girls. Counterintuitive as it may seem, there is something hopeful in this. Because women are the predominant victims of poverty, they are also the greatest untapped resource the world has in the fight against global poverty.

We know that in Africa, for example, children of mothers who receive just five years of primary education are 40 percent more likely to make it beyond the age of 50. A women with seven or more years of education has 2.2 fewer children and marries four years later. And one extra year of education beyond the average increases a young woman’s eventual wages by more than 10 percent. A woman whose business earns money, or whose savings earn interest, invests 90 percent of it into her family.

Woman are the thread that holds together the fabric of society. And if we are ever going to fix the problems of the world — both here and abroad — we are going to do it on the backs of strong, powerful women.

If you start to change women’s lives, there is a virtuous cycle that begins to improve everything else. I am more convinced than ever that the more women hear stories about other women, the more they will step up and help other women.

That is why, as a Global Ambassador for CARE International, and with the help of CARE’s videographers, we set out to find examples of women finding their voices, changing their own lives, and changing the future in the process. We found stories everywhere.

In the slums of Bamako, Mali, we found Jacqueline Dembele, working to save girls from forced labor, abusive husbands, and illiteracy.

In Northern Vietnam, we found Bui My Hanh, who only learned that she had contracted HIV only after her husband and five-year-old daughter died from AIDS. She became an AIDS activist, educating people about the disease, and creating support groups for people living with HIV/AIDS in a place where the disease is regarded as a social evil.

In Bosnia, we found Nada Markovic, a single mother raising three girls, a survivor of the mass genocide of the Bosnian War who started a women’s association that helps families put aside their ethnic differences to rebuild their communities.

These women do not speak the same language, they don’t look alike, and if we hadn’t put them into the same documentary film, A Powerful Noise, they would never have encountered one another.

But they share one thing. In finding their individual power, they are helping empower communities and, hopefully, the generation that will follow.

On March 5th, A Powerful Noise will be shown simultaneously in 450 theaters across America. It will be followed by a panel discussion with leading thinkers on women and poverty. At powerfulnoise.org, you can find ways to join the effort to empower women, as an advocate, as a volunteer, or simply through public displays of support.

In 2006, I traveled to Guatemala and visited a program that helps young women develop leadership skills. At the start of the program, women were encouraged to look in a mirror and explain what they saw. One woman after another said, “I see nothing. I see nothing.” At the end of the program they looked in the mirror again. This time they saw something. One after another said, “I see a woman with a future. I see a partner. I see a mother. I see who I am, regardless of what anyone says.”

Imagine the world we can create when millions — indeed, billions — of women can make statements like that. These are women who have the power to change the world. We have the power to help them do it.

Sheila C. Johnson, a founder of Black Entertainment Television, is a Global Ambassador for CARE International.

Links of Interest

A Powerful Noise – www.powerfulnoise.org

CARE – www.care.org - “CARE is a leading humanitarian organization fighting global poverty. We place special focus on working alongside poor women because, equipped with the proper resources, women have the power to help whole families and entire communities escape poverty. Women are at the heart of CARE’s community-based efforts to improve basic education, prevent the spread of HIV, increase access to clean water and sanitation, expand economic opportunity and protect natural resources. CARE also delivers emergency aid to survivors of war and natural disasters, and helps people rebuild their lives.”

ONE – www.one.org - “ONE is a grassroots campaign and advocacy organization backed by more than 2 million people from around the world and every walk of life who are committed to the fight against extreme poverty and preventable disease, particularly in Africa. At ONE, we achieve change through advocacy. We hold world leaders accountable for the promises made to the poorest people, and we press these leaders to support better policies and more effective aid and trade reform. We also support greater democracy, accountability and transparency in developing countries so these resources can be effectively deployed. Cofounded by Bono, Bobby Shriver and other campaigners, and supported by Bob Geldof and other high profile activists, ONE is nonpartisan and works with activists from the left, right and center to mobilize public opinion in support of effective, proven initiatives that are delivering results: protecting families from preventable diseases like AIDS and malaria, putting kids in school, providing economic opportunity and stabilizing communities. To help ensure the policies we advocate are effective, we seek advice from leading African anti-poverty campaigners and policy experts. At ONE, we believe the fight against poverty is not about charity, but about justice and equality. We are honored to be part of a greater movement of people and organizations working to end poverty throughout the world.”

The Girl Effect – www.girleffect.org

176. Music, Food, Football & Metamorphosis

 boat-street

Boat Street Café

spinasse

spinasse-2

Cascina Spinasse & Justin Neidermeyer in Spinasse’s fabulous kitchen

Happy President’s Day my sweet friends! What a beautiful day…and no work! :)

A little update since I haven’t had much time to write lately (and yes Mr. Storm, I have received your emails!). Life the last couple weeks has been busy, busy, but fabulous!

  • Work has been CRAZY (100 hours in 2 weeks), but I’m getting stuff done!
  • I’ve reconnected with several old friends on FB, which has been touching and fun.
  • Unfortunately, I watched the Cardinals lose to the Steelers at Keith & Anne’s Super Bowl party, although it was a great game and since both hosts are Steelers fans, it was a happy house.
  • I’ve had many WONDERFUL meals… Tanja and I enjoyed half-price wine night and a tasty Gorgonzola, sherry shallot marmalade & roasted garlic sandwich at Table 219;  Bruce and I savored wine and an amazing dish of risotto at Spur; Keith & Anne hosted a fabulous dinner party for Joan’s birthday, where we hung out in their beautiful newly renovated kitchen, feasting on lobster, Marguerite’s seared tuna and an incredible assortment of wine; B and I shared some sautéed dates with sea salt and a spectacular dish of pork shoulder and pasta with mushrooms at Boat Street Café; Odie made his famous hanger steak for his President’s Day dinner party, finished off with my apple crisp and his homemade ginger-molasses ice cream; and tonight Mom & I savored every morsel of Justin Neidermeyer’s pasta at Spinasse. My tummy is VERY happy, but also in DESPERATE need of some Pilates! :)
  • I’ve seen several movies, some on DVD and some in the theater… Dustin and I saw Wendy and Lucy(co-written & directed by Kelly Reichardt) at the Varsity and Vals Im Bashir/Waltz With Bashir(written & directed by Ari Folman) at the Metro (I thought ‘Waltz’ was particularly surprising and affecting); Todd, Jess, Thomas and I saw Last Chance Harvey at Lincoln Square, which was just okay although Hoffman & Thompson were wonderful as always; G3 and I finally watched disc 3 of The Wire: Season 4, still awesome!; and I’ve also seen WALL-E (thumbs up), The Duchess (thumbs sideways), Gonzo: The Life & Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson (thumbs up, and he’s crazy!), and Encounters at the End of the World (thumbs up), all on DVD.
  • I caught a late show of Michael Shrieve’s Spellbinder at ToST Lounge in Fremont with Tanja & Miso (who I’m now referring to as ‘Joe’). Shrieve was the original drummer for Santana and his band is amazingly talented! They play every Monday at 10pm. You should all check them out!
  • I met the lovely ‘literary divas’ at Kate’s for February’s book club. We feasted on Kate’s tasty stuffed mushrooms and lasagna, drank wine, and discussed (among many things) this month’s book pick — Richard Russo’s “The Whore’s Child and Other Stories.”
  • Bruce and I attended L’Orfeo at the Moore Theatre which was fabulous! (From the program: “Directly from Milan with Italian soloists, chorus and 30-piece period instrument orchestra, this production has garnered ecstatic reviews throughout Europe. Composed in 1607, L’Orfeo was both Monteverdi’s first music drama and Europe’s first great operatic masterpiece. It retells the story of the musician Orpheus and his quest to bring his beloved Eurydice back from the depths of the Underworld through the enchanting power of his music.”)
  • I attended my third (of six) ”Food for Thought: the Ethics, Culture & Politics of Eating” class at SAL’s Wednesday University. This class is incredibly interesting and pretty much scares you away from all industrial agriculture.
  • Mitch and I attended a performance at Zach’s (his son’s) school. It was absolutely precious! Imagine a bunch of chaotic 6 and 7-year olds dressed as frogs, butterflies, ants and bees singing about metamorphosis. I thought the sweetest part was when one of the little boy’s antennas broke and he became so upset one of the teachers had to fix it before the show could proceed.
  • Bruce and I attended “Strung Out on Chamber Music” with guest guitarist Michael Nicolla at the Q Café in Queen Anne/Madrona. This was part of the Simple Measures 2008-09 season and the program contained a variety of music, from Boccherini to Jimi Hendrix. I love SM’s format for this series. It’s interactive and intimate. Their tagline — “Any closer and you’d be licking varnish.”
  • Mom and I attended “Spotlight Night” at The 5th Avenue Theatre hosted by David Armstrong, their Producing Artistic Director. The program went behind the scenes of their two upcoming productions, Jerry Herman’s musical comedy Hello, Dolly! and Stephen Sondheim’s Pulitzer Prize-winning musical, Sunday in the Park With George. The highlight of the show was the phenomenal Jenifer Lewis, who is going to be starring as Dolly. Musicals are not always my thing (although I love Les Mis & Sweeney Todd), but after seeing her, I REALLY want to see this one!
  • And finally, I enjoyed several chilly (although dry) laps around Greenlake…8 to be exact (4 with Dana, 2 with Odie, 1 with Jess and 1 with JK)…EVERY lap filled with wonderful conversation!

I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE my friends! Thank you all for sharing time with me and for such wonderful moments!

On this week’s calendar: dinner with Tanja & Amy, ‘Cooking Night’ at Mary & Grant’s, and an Academy Awards Party at Odie’s.

Off to sleep….sweet dreams!

172. Weekend Wrap-Up: Food, Friends & Film

Another fun & eventful weekend!!!  Friday night, I had dinner with K&V and then went to see Doubt (based on the play by John Patrick Shanley, who also wrote the screenplay and directed the film; starring Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Meryl Streep & Amy Adams).  The story takes place in 1963 and focuses much less on religion and abuse, than it does on themes such as race, guilt, gossip, certainty, and of course, doubt.  I read a review that said that the film was at its best when the conflict was allowed to evolve naturally.  I agree with this wholeheartedly.  Certain scenes did feel somewhat forced to me, but there are so many moments, thanks to the performances by Seymour Hoffman, Streep and Adams, that are riveting and wonderful!  There is one scene, featuring Viola Davis, that is particularly captivating.  Davis plays the altar boy’s mother and packs so much depth and emotion into 10 minutes, it’s crazy.  I also thought Roger Deakins’ cinematography (especially the crooked camera angles) was wonderful.  The moral of the story seems to be a line I use all too often in my job:  Perception IS reality.

Saturday, Tanja and I went to see the presentation of Rick Steves’ Iran: Yesterday and Today in the Rainier Room at the Seattle Center.  The show was really well done.  Check it out on PBS…

Join Rick as he explores the most surprising and fascinating land he’s ever visited: Iran. In a one-hour, ground-breaking travel special on public television, you’ll discover the splendid monuments of Iran’s rich and glorious past, learn more about the 20th-century story of this perplexing nation, and experience Iranian life today in its historic capital and in a countryside village. Most important, you’ll meet the people of this nation whose government so exasperates our own.

After the screening, Rick Steves gave a slide presentation, talked about his visit, and answered questions from the audience.  I love listening to him in person because his persona seems so much stronger to me than it does on television.  He made several statements that really struck a chord, but one in particular has really stuck with me.  I’m paraphrasing, but basically he said that every American bomb that’s dropped and every American bullet that’s shot is his responsibility and bears his name.  I think that this is something we all, as Americans, should feel a responsibility for and an overwhelming desire to affect!

Afterwards, Dana was kind enough to make dinner for us, and so the three of us hung out, drank wine, caught up, and then Tanja read tarot cards, which was fabulous!  According to the cards, this is going to be a year filled with change…bring it on!  :)

Sunday, I met Mary, Grant and Dustin (a fellow HR manager & film enthusiast) for brunch at Crémant.  It was fabulous as always!  We spent nearly four hours dining on delicious food (my favorite bacon & egg pasta included), conversing about politics, movies, books, etc. and wrapped it up with some rich hot chocolate and cognac.  Yum!

Last night, I saw The Wrestler (directed by Darren Aronofsky; starring Mickey Rourke, Marisa Tomei and Evan Rachel Wood), which I still can’t stop thinking about.  Rourke’s performance was absolutely heart- (and gut-) wrenching.  I really loved this film, but be forewarned, it is definitely NOT for everyone.  It’s incredibly raw and gruesome, and completely sad and depressing.  While I was at the theatre, Rourke won a Golden Globe for Best Actor.  Here is the Golden Globe list in its entirety… http://www.goldenglobes.org/nominations/

Love you all!  Happy Monday! :)

162. SAL

  

  

I realized today that I had not yet ordered my tickets for the Seattle Arts & Lectures (SAL) ‘08/09 season. These are some of my favorite events to attend and I actually thought I had placed my order some time back in May…oops! A balcony season ticket is $105 & the special event season ticket is $60. I love that we live in such a literary city and I think you should all get tickets & join me for a drink beforehand! :)

Here’s this year’s lineup:

Richard Russo – Wed, September 17, 2008
Terry Tempest Williams – Tues, October 7, 2008
John Updike – Wed, November 12, 2008
Michael Pollan – Mon, January 12, 2009
Junot Diaz – Tues, February 24, 2009
Mira Nair – Tues, April 28, 2009

And here are this season’s special events:

Annie Leibovitz – Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Scott Simon - Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Shirin Ebadi – Tuesday, May 19, 2009

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