Monday, November 14, 2011

Mochimochiland at the gallery hanahou


Today after work we manage to make it to the gallery hanahou right before it closed.  I've had the appointment on my calendar since it first appeared on the Mochimochiland blog, but somehow we found ourselves with just one week left to make it there. 
Although I'd been seeing bits of the show as they appeared on the blog it was really amazing to see how everything came together.  One of the things that the blog didn't give away (or I missed it) is that there were narrative signs along the wall that point out different parts of the exhibit and tell little stories about them.


I really enjoyed all the creative combinations of designs that I'd only seen individually before and wanted to make them all.  I think I went around three times.


My mom met us there and Emma enjoyed being carried by her right at the height of the exhibit and examining all the scenes.


Emma also enjoyed hanging out with my mom in general.




She had to be coaxed to look my way at all.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Day 2

The Parkin Family after breakfast.

I'm a little snuggle bunny!

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Friday, August 26, 2011

Emmeline Virginia Parkin

We're parents!

Emmeline Virginia Parkin
b. August 26th, 2011 at 5:11 PM
8 lb. 1 oz.
19.5 inches

Family's First Photo

Monday, July 25, 2011

More Shower Pictures


Thanks to Enid and her photography skills and her fancy camera, there are now even more great pictures of the shower including some lovely portraits.  Thank you Enid!


Sunday, July 24, 2011

Baby Shower


Today I had a lovely, lovely baby shower.  It was just what I wanted and I had a really fun time.  I'm so glad that so many friends and family were able to join us in anticipating our new arrival.  A special big huge thanks to the wonderful women who worked so hard to make this event such a success.


Saturday, July 9, 2011

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

We have a new house!


Tada! But sadly we are too tired to do more than post this one pic for now. More later....

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Circles in Soho

Updated with more pictures on May 5, 2011.

Yesterday Sofia and I had quite the adventure.  Maybe it was more like an odyssey. We walked all over SoHo. It started out when I asked her to help me find a hat for Melissa's Kentucky Derby party and grew from there.  Since I'd been in Toronto where it is hard to get the kind of bread product I hope for when I order a bagel I wanted to start somewhere that I could get a NY style bagel with fancy cream cheese Sofia found Bagels on the Square and we met up there. As promised by the reviews they sell an excellent selection of proper NY style bagels - chewy on the inside, crispy on the outside (not bread in the shape of a donut) - with an excellent selection of cream cheese and I got to have exactly what I wanted: a toasted garlic bagel  with sun-dried tomato and basil cream cheese.  The only thing that would have made this better would have been for it to be a whole wheat garlic bagel, but I realize that would be some kind of miracle even in NYC.  They do carry wholewheat everything bagels, but evidently to actually get one you have to get there a lot earlier than 11am.

For our next stop we wanted to have hot beverages to go with our bagels so after a tiny fight with google maps and the compass on Sofia's iPhone we went to the Porto Rico Importing Co. on Bleeker.  There we were greeted with the amazing smell of delicious coffee and the beautiful sight of bag after bag of beans that looked good enough to eat.  Sofia naughtily took a few pictures before we saw the sign asking for people not to take pictures. 


Armed with food and drink we sat in a park trying to avoid pigeons and chatted over breakfast.  Fortified with food we set off.

Since the hat shops didn't open until noon I convinced Sofia to nip down to Broome Street to "just look in the window" at Purl Soho.  I hadn't been to Purl Soho since I'd stopped there to help Sofia pick up supplies for our S'n'B with Olivia H, but that was at their old location.  Their new location is a beautiful big (by NY SoHo standards) space that must be four times as large as either of their old locations and now allows them to combine their fabric selection and their yarn selection in the same space.  This actually worked out very well for me because in planning my derby outfit I'd decided I wanted to wear a pair of purple heels, and then do some sort of accented hat/dress combo and Purl Soho turned out to be the perfect place to find the fabric to do this with.  Amazingly I had some self restraint and managed not to buy the kit for their "super easy baby blanket"despite touching the deliciously soft sample blanket in their window. 

Mmmm....yarn!  (Which I did not buy.)

Walking away with just one yard of satiny soft cotton fabric, four yards of ribbon and one bobbin of thread we continued down Broom and happened upon the Harney & Sons SoHo store.  Of course we had to stop and try their mother's bouquet blend and their Indian spice.


Moving on we finally made it to our first hat store: Eye Candy.  Sadly it was it didn't have what we were looking for so we moved on to another hat shop that we came across just walking up Lafayette.  Unfortunately, despite having a larger variety of nicer hats they didn't have quite what I was looking for.  After that we stopped in Screaming Mimi's which despite having really fun stuff including an adorable scarf that caught Sofia's eye and a purple scarf that I bought, didn't have the right hats.  In desperation we went up to Kmart where I bought an emergency backup cheapie hat.

I was just about to give up when I remembered that I'd seen a hat online at The Hat Shop that I thought might work.  Sofia pointed out that it was "way in the other direction", "back where we started" in fact and got out her iPhone to try to dissuade me by showing me that we were .8 miles smack in the wrong direction.  Nonetheless I persisted in dragging her back the way we'd come.  We passed a vegetarian place, Quantum Leap,  that we've earmarked for a future brunch of some kind which I'm hoping will include waffles or pancakes that are made with whole grains and also edible.

When we finally made it to The Hat Shop we discovered that not only do they have really great hats but they also have really nice sales people.  I admired all their beautiful hats which were really works of art, and admittedly had a bit of sticker shock, before I finally had to ask the nice people about the hat that I'd seen online and I'm glad I did because it was didn't look anything like the pictures.  The sales people even helped me to size it correctly (a hat shouldn't hide your eyebrows or show your forehead), took in the band with a couple of stitches, and helped my to adjust the brim to actually wear it.  After that I felt a little bad that I'd picked out the least expensive item in the store, but I'm very happy with it and if I ever need a really great hat again I'll definitely be back.  (I'd post a picture of the hat, but I don't want to give away my outfit for Saturday.)  I'm only a tiny bit disappointed that I got an enormous bag instead of a hat box, but really that would have been overkill. 

After the Hat Shop we happened to pass Wool and the Gang.  We first learned about them at last years City Bakery knitting event and they sell their kits in fun paper bags.  They have all their patterns in the store ready to wear too and you can either buy the kit or the finished product.  In particular they have a luscious bulky weight fuchsia yarn that I really want to make something out of.

Here Sofia is with the enormous hat bag in front of their fun summer window display.
The abbreviated version of the rest of the afternoon is that I dragged Sofia to H&M where we failed to find a handbag, then to Victoria's Secret where I used two coupons, a gift card and a discount card and had a whole team of very nice sales people help me pick out the perfectly fitted bra before we finally headed to Whole Foods where we enjoyed sushi off the conveyor belt at their sushi bar and visited Ciao Bella for some dessert.

Being the slightly OCD type person that I am, I went and made a google map mapping out our stops and then looked up the total distance.  This is what it gave me:

Needless to say we took much, much longer than the 1 hour and 15 minutes that google estimated, but it was very productive and lots of fun!

Rafting on the Upper Hudson

The Hudson River and Schroon Lake have flooded to historic levels and are causing headaches for everyone along the waters north of Albany. But it sure made for some exciting rafting in very fast water this weekend. This was our raft in the calm parts of the river:


Here's what it looked like in the rapids:

Thursday, April 28, 2011

The Bata Shoe Museum


To add a little variety to my travel schedule I spent this past week in Toronto, Canada. I've been to Canada a few times before, but this time I actually managed to do a tiny bit of non work related adventuring so I braved the public transit system and made my way over to The Bata Shoe Museum.  Hannah recommended this the first time I traveled to Toronto and although that didn't work out I kept thinking of it when I had Toronto on my itinerary so this time I found out that they are open late on Thursdays and I made my way over there.  The museum itself really isn't that big with only four exhibits total, but the building is a fun shape and is meant to resemble a shoe box with the lid askew.  On a regular basis they have a historical exhibit of footwear through history which is interesting and informational, but one of their current exhibits is The Roaring Twenties: Heels, Hemlines and High Spirits.  This was particularly fun because the shoes in the Twenties were really spectacular and the exhibit included clips of dancing in these amazing shoes that made me tired just to watch them.  The shoes in the twenties had such great lines, and colors, yet many had practical straps and heels of moderate height and width.  In particular, the collection included two really awesome pairs, one a black and gold starburst pair:
(from The Bata Shoe Museum website)
 and a black pair with rhinestone heel:
(from their brochure)
I have to admit that if they'd been selling modern reproductions I might have come home with a pair. 

One of their other fun exhibits included pairs of shoes donated by JUNO award winners.


 The showcase included this fun pair of beat up Harley Davidson boots worn by Nickleback. 


There was also a pair of amazing thigh high boots worn by Nelly Furtado in another case that I couldn't get a decent picture of.  Overall an excellent way to spend a couple of hours after work.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Istanbul Market

An unexpected bounty (clockwise from top left): lahmacun, sour cherry juice, pomegranate syrup (nar), honey and mixed nuts, olives, Turkish baklava, double pistachio Turkish delight, parsley, tomatoes, red onion, manti (tiny, meat-filled pastas), kaymak. Missing from photo: a very shy jar of pickled Turkish pickled peppers.

Oh happy day! Chance did us a good turn today as we got lost trying find our way from Corrado's Pet Market to the Garden State Parkway. Phoebe (the GPS) took us on some back roads and we passed a sign reading Istanbul Market. On a whim we turned around and took a peek.

Just as we had hoped, it was a little slice of Turkey back home in the States. The proprieters were, true to Turkish form, extremely friendly and genuinely nice. The other patrons were polite and cheerful and mostly Turkish. And of course the shop was full of all the food we loved during our recent trip to Istanbul.

The picture above shows the few things we picked up this time, but now we know where to go to pick up spices and ingredients that are hard to find elsewhere. And they had fresh Turkish baklava, which we can never get enough of. We even found kaymak, which we never expected to find outside of Turkey, and some of the better olives we've ever had. I'm not sure what they do differently in Turkey, but their olives are bursting with flavor. They tasted even better than they smelled.

We can't recommend this place enough. The cashier even made fun of us for not tasting things before we bought them. As he said, "it's Turkish tradition! Next time you come here you taste everything you want before you buy, ok?" What's not to like?

Last, but not least, we found some frozen lahmacun on our first spin through the aisles. We were careful not to get our hopes up, since it wasn't likely to be in the neighborhood of the lahmacun in Istanbul, let alone the one we sought out on our trip (Istanbul Eats claims it's the best in the city). Well, happy days are here again because this lahmacun is delicious. We chose the hot variety (which wasn't very hot anyway) and added the traditional chopped tomatoes, chopped parsley, and lots of lemon juice. We skipped the onions, mostly because we forgot. It was absolutely amazing and I'm so happy we have 8 or 10 more in the freezer. Hurray!

Lahmacun, all dressed up for supper.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Knitted Donut!


Tonight Todd and I went to City Bakery for their City Bakery Night of Knitting on the Rocks (With Chocolate Too!).  I learned about this fun and tasty event on the Mochimochi Land blog and signed right up.  I was lucky enough to find empty seats at the Brooklyn General Doughknits workshop table and we got to chat with Anna Hrachovec and the nice people from Brooklyn General.

This year they didn't try to have people do more than one workshop which was good, because last year there really just wasn't time. The tickets were significantly more expensive, which I think discouraged a lot of people from coming, but made for smaller crowds.

Although we spent most of our time at the Brooklyn General table I also met a nice woman from Knitty City who gave me a bag and a fun clicky tape measure in exchange for contributing to their charity project which will become a blanket to be sent to Japan.

Again they had tons of delicious food including their super rich hot chocolate and macaroni and cheese.  I managed to only get one serving of food, but ended up succumbing to two cups of hot chocolate.  Overall a fun and worthwhile event.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

My Dad Makes Amazing Pizza


On a recent house-hunting marathon up to Connecticut we took a swing through Ossining, NY on the way back. My father owns a pizza place (Sal's Pizza), which makes some of the best pizza I've ever had. Their dough is to die for. 

After treating ourselves to some of the specialty flavors—including bbq chicken ranch, buffalo chicken, and their tasty original pizza—we got to watch my dad make some pies too. This is him getting started on a regular-size original pie.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Beyond Downtown San Francisco


Now that I have a little more time to spend outside of work I was able to catch up with some friends that I've been meaning to see.  I caught the correct train in the right direction and got off at the right stop without mishap and even got a seat and got in some knitting.
I was a little early so I got to people watch outside the train until Sarah walked up at the appointed time.  After a little indecision we decided to go to a place we thought would be Oaxacan, but turned out to be Salvadoran instead.  But that turned out to be ok, because after a peek at Cafe Platano's delicious sounding menu we were sold.

While waiting for Alain, Sarah and I poured over the menu and had everything picked out before he arrived.  Although we didn't even make it off the small plates menu.  We made excellent choices including: fried platanos, fried yuca, an avocado salad, pastelitos, corn tamales and of course pupusas.  Sadly as often happens with food I was to excited to remember to take and pictures of anything.  But it was great to catch up with Sarah and Alain, to get a glimpse of their neighborhood, and to help them find a tasty new place to eat. 

Creme Brulee Cart

After my successful choice yesterday, the guys were willing to take my suggestion when I wanted to look for another cart from the list Todd found in November so we went over to the Creme Brulee Cart on Market at Sutter street. 


Unlike many of the places on the list, the creme brulee is really sold from a tiny cart, not a truck so we almost missed it.  There is just one guy at this cart which is really like a cooler with wheels.  When you make your order he takes out these small foil cups, sprinkles sugar on the top, torches it, adds more sugar, torches it again and then if you're not planning to eat it right away he puts a little lid on it.


I opted for the "Yes Please" which has balsamic glazed strawberries in a nutella custard.  It was amazing.  It could have been overwhelming but the proportions were just right and the moderate serving size was just right for a post lunch snack.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Curry Up Now


In November, for my birthday (for which I have a back post queued up), Todd planned out a wonderful trip to San Francisco. I don't want to steal too much content from that post, but although the trip centered around the amazing Cavalia show, Todd came up with a number of other exciting things to do. One of which involved tracking down reportedly delicious food with mobile places of businesses based on this article.  We picked and found Curry Up Now on our very first afternoon and discovered that at least this cart was even better than the article purported. 

Fast forward to today for lunch when I suggested this to my coworkers.  We were almost frightened off by the enormous line, but it moved quickly and it was worth it.  The food was every bit as good as I hoped and remembered, particularly the fresh and perfectly fried samosas which are good enough to eat without any condiments.  To further prove my point, we all decided no to head straight into food coma so we all saved some of our food for later, but by 5pm the guys polished off their leftovers and there was serious samosa envy.  Score 1 for Olivia's lunch suggestions!

Friday, March 11, 2011

After Work Adventures in SF

This is the first post in a while that lives up to the name of this blog: I'm currently waiting to fly home on a redeye.  I've been coming to San Francisco three days a week for six out of the last seven weeks and tonight is the first time I've had time after work to do anything not work related.

Here is my cute little swatch.
My first stop was this yarn store I've been stalking for a few weeks. On my way to work each day I walk through the Union Square and Chinatown areas and one day I looked up to see a bright red sigh that read "Yarn." When I looked it up I discovered that it actually belonged to ArtFibers and that each day they stay open until 6pm.  I also perused their blog and found some of their patterns that I really liked.  As matter of fact I happen to be wearing a shawl collared sweater today when this caught my eye.  I'd nipped in right before they closed at 6, but Roxanne was nice enough to let me pet all the luscious swatches and then whip up a mini swatch of a purply maroon to see if that would be a good color for the collar and cuffs of the cropped jacket.
This is my swatch next to the sample of the body yarn. 
This picture really doesn't do justice to the rich colors of the yarn.
We thought it picked up enough of the colors in the multicolored main body that I should go ahead and use it.  The next step will be for me to go back next week when Roxanne will even adjust the pattern for my measurements and help me to figure out how much yarn I'll need.  And they are having a 15% off anniversary sale.  How nice is that!

After my fiber fix I had an nice little side trip to Victoria's Secret where I actually managed to use a couple of those coupons that turn up periodically in the mail and usually end up in the trash.  Don't think to hard about this - I bought something sensible. 

For my next stop I revisited a place Todd and I ended up at by accident during our trip in the fall: Lori's Diner.  I stopped by just to look at the menu and was lured in by the mozzarella sticks.  Then once I sat down at the table I decided to be adventurous and ordered the BBQ ranch salad too.  I turned out to be worth the gamble as it was a lightly dressed pile of crunchy (romaine) and healthy (mixed) greens with a zippy ranch/bbq dressing and nearly a whole avocado hidden under the entire chicken breast and the yummy dollop of shoestring onions.  


I know I should have had some self-restraint , but I ended up indulging and having a banana split to round things out.  The bananas, strawberries and cherries make this healthy right.  Anyway, I made a valiant effort and reduced their generous portion to this:


The nice people at Lori's even let me use their wireless internet and didn't seem to mind when I whipped out my laptop and monopolized a table for almost three hours (don't worry I left a very nice tip).  Now I just have a few more hours to kill until wheels up....

Monday, March 7, 2011

Doughnut Crawl

At Dough, our last doughnut stop, we completely lost all semblance of self-control and somehow came home with ALL of these beauties.  Nom.
On Thursday I read this article in the NY Times and came up with a brilliant idea: a doughnut crawl. I sent it to Jess and Todd just thinking that it was a funny idea. But there was considerable excitement and a plan solidified like so:
View Doughnut Crawl in a larger map
1) Doughnut Plant
2) Wonder City Coffee & Doughnuts at the Brindle Room
3) Dough
4) Fette Sau
5) Peter Pan Donut & Pastry Shop
6) Gulluoglu Baklava Cafe

We knew the last two might be a stretch.  As it turned out we did pretty well and even managed to sneak in some bonus stops.

Our first stop, Doughnut Plant, was a popular place to be on a rainy Sunday afternoon, although the line moved quickly and there were plenty of doughnuts available when we made it up to the tiny counter.

Under the board on the left is the doughnut display that emptied as quickly as the staff could fill it.
We had tried some of the Donut Plant's fare before since at Oren's Daily Roast in Grand Central Terminal, so we managed to restrain ourselves and stuck to one doughnut a piece.

From the left going clockwise: a pistachio cake doughnut, a blackberry jelly with vanilla bean glaze yeast doughnut, and a blackberry jelly with peanut butter glaze yeast doughnut. 
As you can tell we were so excited about the doughnuts that we started eating them before we remembered to take any pictures.  The blackberry jam with vanilla bean frosting was my favorite.  The doughnut itself was light, fluffy, tasty.  The jelly was actually reminiscent of good blackberry jam and the vanilla bean glaze was the perfect light and flavorful compliment.  The peanut butter and jam doughnut was similarly well balanced, with a surprisingly un-heavy peanut glaze with peanut chunks that didn't overwhelm the jelly or the doughnut itself.  The pistachio doughnut was good too, with lovely green flecks all the way through and a complimentary almond flavored dough.  In addition to the doughnuts we got chais and coffee. The coffee was good, but the chai was great. Todd said it was as close as he's ever had to Chaiwalla's chai.

For our next stop we nipped up to the lower east side and found a parking space around the corner from the Brindle Room (a.k.a. Wonder City).  After a bit of dithering we decided to have our second batch of doughnuts sitting down somewhere other than the car so we got a table and rounded out things with drinks, greens, and granola.

Cheers!
The delicious cocktails, an elderflower sparking and a Tokyo springtime, came in these nifty glasses that looked a little like stemless champagne glasses.  The drinks themselves were refreshing and fruity without being overly sweet.

These were the main event.  From the back: chocolate hazelnut with toasted almond, caramel, powdered sugar, and chocolate with toasted coconut.
These petite and delicious doughnuts were made from mashed potatoes, which I probably wouldn't have been able to figure out if I hadn't read it in the NY Times article.  They texture is much as they describe in the article.  They are surprisingly delicate and satisfyingly crunchy.

Doughnuts, plus tasty house-made granola, plus savory sauteed greens.

When we sat down and cheeseburgers started to appear at the table next to us, my stomach went "oohh and grilled cheese and tomato would be lovely" but my brain vetoed that and went with granola. 

Instead of waddling straight back to the car we decided to make a couple of bonus stops including a pet food store and Downtown Yarns, and as we were looking at the map it turned out that a Bahn Mi place Todd has been wanting to go to was right across the way.


The pet food store had just what we were looking for and hopefully that will make my dad and Griffin happier.  The yarn store was a bust because they had the copy of Fall 2010 edition of Vogue Knitting that I've been looking for but sadly despite having a label stating to ask for additional copies they did not actually have any additional copies and wouldn't sell me the house copy. 

Mmmmm.... Bahn Mi.....
The Bahn Mi, despite taking forever to prepare, was very good.  The meat was tasty, the bread was nice and crusty, and the veggies provided the perfect compliment to both.

After our bonus Bahn Mi we embarked on the Brooklyn leg of our adventure and made it to Dough shortly before it closed. 

Ta-da!  We made it!
Confusingly Dough is at location that used to be a chicken place called Roosters so when I looked it up on the map all I got was dated information and a dated street view that was totally wrong.  But Dough really is at 305 Franklin Avenue.

Even the logo in their boxes looks good enough to eat...

Inside we were gripped by paralyzing indecision.


Which turned into this:


Oh the choices.  So we decided not to choose.  Gentle reader, you'll be relieved to know that we escaped the shop leaving a couple of flavors for next time. 

We decided not to try to make it to Peter Pan's Donut and Pastry shop and instead decided to switch from carbs to protein for our last stop.  Sofia's explorations into Brooklyn have turned up some excellent taste experiences, including this amazing barbecue place:

In warm weather, or at least dry weather, the picnic benches are the perfect place to eat.

Fette Sau or the Happy Pig has an interesting variety of rich delicious meats that are all cooked to perfection with sides that stand right up to them.

Where to start first?
After a little bit of drooling and dithering we came home with brisket, pork shoulder, bacon, sausage, German potato salad, broccoli salad, baked beans, sauerkraut, pickles and potato rolls.  We brilliantly decided to head home with our haul from the last two stops where we were able to enjoy them at a leisurely pace.  The bacon was, hands down, the best of the dishes and the spicy broccoli salad was the most unexpectedly tasty.  The brisket had yummy charred edges and the perfect line of pink just around the outside.  The sauerkraut was delicious and crisp and the baked beans were wonderfully flavorful while being cooked just enough and still maintaining individual bean integrity.

Overall this was an excellent adventure for a rainy Sunday afternoon.