Sunday, June 27, 2010

Recycle, Reuse, Restyle

I grew up knowing that recycling was important. We heard it everywhere in the 80s, right? At school, at home, on tv. Don't throw out that plastic bottle because then a fish might get stuck in it and it will take a trillion years to break down! What I'm starting to understand now is that sometimes recycling is not about plastic bottles and metal cans. Sometimes it's about making strategic choices and not buying a plastic bottle to begin with. And sometimes it's about taking something old and making it new. It's taking an out of style dress to a tailor and emerging with a new shirt (made of course from your old shortened dress!). Which brings me to the chunky blue sweater.

My aunt gave me this gorgeous Rowan yarn and the pattern as a present when I went to graduate school. I had only been knitting for a year or two when I made it. Naturally I was proud of it when I was done and wore it a lot, but it was really poorly made--shoddy seaming, ends tied together in knots (!), sleeves built for a gorilla. But this sweater and I had such good times (and I made it) that I could never bear to give it away. It sat on a top shelf in my closet, waiting...



...until January of this year when I ripped the whole thing apart and wound the yarn into balls. Which waited again until I could figure out what to do with it. Then on spring break while visiting my cousin in Minneapolis (a knitter and creative thinker herself),
I found this--Click here to see pattern!

Perfect! So cute! And it called for the exact same yarn, too. Now, this sweater took some fine tuning on my part--I am working with yarn that was dyed like 8 years ago, so if I run out, that's the end. I shortened the body, omitted the collar, and am shortening the sleeves (in progress as we speak).

That's where you come in, dear readers! Vote now for my reinvented blue sweater! Do you like the buttons here, off center, cardigan style...

STYLE A

...OR do you like them double breasted? By the way, aren't those buttons great? I bought them in Amsterdam at this fantastic street market, and they too have been waiting for the right time.


STYLE B



What do you think? Style A or B? Thoughts? I must know!

Friday, June 18, 2010

The Summer of Me

I have waited for sweet peas since my folks gave me the seed packet in December. Sweet peas are my very favorite flower, but they sure took their merry sweet time arriving.



Swoon! That sweet delicate smell, feminine petals and tiny tendrils.



I am in love all over again! (Sigh)



The arrival of sweet peas can only mean one thing--this is going to be a beautiful summer. The summer of sleeping in and crisp morning walks to the local library or farmer's market. The summer of driving up to some funky SF neighborhood and hanging out just because I can. The summer of seeing friends. The long coastal drives and late night movies summer. The summer of lunch beer and more lunch beer. The garden summer, the flowering summer. The summer of all the small things I sometimes forget.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

My Vegetable Romance



Readers, I must confess, I have been swept up in a romance lately... a roasted vegetable romance, a whirlwind of tender slices of Japanese eggplant, baby zucchini, and sweet spring onions. I can't get enough. I mean, just look at these:


How you doin'?



My favorite roasted veggie treat is a throwback to childhood. I remember when the first local farmer's market opened in Redwood City. My parents would take my sister and I to buy the most beautiful vegetables there, varieties of which I never saw at the grocery store, like striped purple and white Japanese eggplant, summer squashes, and pale green Anaheim chilies. My dad would throw all of these on the barbecue and we'd eat everything on thick crusty sourdough with soft cheeses.


We Americans are such a meat loving culture that I don't think it's reasonable to ask the general populace to give up meat entirely. However, eating less meat is not only reasonable, it's easily managed and better for us. Similarly, anyone trying to watch their calories could substitute a roasted veggie side with their steak instead of pasta or other starch. We all know it couldn't hurt to eat more vegetables. The trick seems to be how to sneak them in with things we already like eating until it just becomes habit. For those adults that claim they don't like vegetables, my question is, are you eating the carrots out of a frozen microwaved potpie, because a). that doesn't count and b). yes, you're right, that is disgusting.

The thing I am discovering about roasting vegetable dishes in particular is that I don't miss the meat. I savor every bite, lick my fingers, swig my beer, and then kick back utterly satisfied. Sure, I do reach for that occasional burger or my weekly sushi, but I am getting a real kick out of veggies right now. Delicious, easy to cook, and don't spoil in two seconds like fruit (this is good news for the cook that shops on Sunday but is too busy to cook till Wednesday).



I don't have a barbecue, but an oven gets the job done! I did this tray of yellow onions, round zucchinis and eggplants in a 450 oven for 20-25 min. Slice up, drizzle olive oil, sprinkle of kosher salt & pepper

Stir a bit after about 15 min. I almost like them a dark golden brown, kind of caramelized. The eggplant will shrink considerably in size. Poke onions with a knife tip to see if they're done.

Before...


...and after...think of the possibilities! Roasted veggies go with everything.

You could set out roasted veggie slices with olives, salami and crusty Italian bread.

Gluten free friends (or any of us really) could toss some in scrambled egg with white cheddar and extra black pepper for an amazing omelet. Add green salad and you're good to go!

You could make my folks' famous --and lately my favorite dinner-- sandwich layered with fresh tomato and a shmear of goat cheese.



Or this super romantic dinner:
tossed here with linguine, spicy olive oil, and 1/3 cup chevre.
Creamy delicious. Garden parsley and arugula on top.
Open a little vino, play some dinner jazz, and enjoy.