Sunday, October 31, 2010

Books and Miscellanea at the Do-tique 5

I hope everyone is enjoying a lovely Halloween evening...The weather and the fall colours here today were just perfect. 

I've been a bit absent from the blogosphere lately thanks to some crazy stuff going on over the past week and most of my "doing" has taken place in front of the computer instead of with paintbrush in hand.

I did manage to bake some more bread and some more granola last week and start on the final touches of our basement make-over. This afternoon featured a trip to IKEA for cozy fall/winter bedding for the master bedroom, which I'm excited to put together tomorrow.

So for this Sunday night, I leave you with an update on the books and miscellanea here at The Do-tique:


Image Credit: Kitty Kelley

I was delighted to finally come across a copy of the newest biography on Oprah at the public library instead of having to read it in snippets at the local bookstore. As much as it might seem that an unauthorized biography of America's "Queen of Talk" would be low-brow reading, I couldn't resist wanting to read more about a woman who has been on TV daily for almost the entirety of my own lifetime. Ms. Kelley's writing is that of an "investigative journalist" and I feel that she seeks to be somewhat sensationalistic in places and gives us an almost tabloid like "tell-all" story. In one place it is mentioned that Oprah was so good at the smutty shows she used to do in the 80's and 90's because there really wasn't much that hadn't happened in her life, so it was easy for her to relate personally to her guests and their wacky situations. 

My readings in university took a turn into documents about well-known mediaeval figures written by their peers. We would read what the individual had written to his audiences and about himself and then read two or three accounts written about that same person by his friends and his adversaries and at the end, try to devise an idea of what was behind what was motivating each person to paint such a different picture of the same individual. Ms. Kelley accuses Oprah of sometimes painting an embellished image of herself - she shows her childhood and adolescence as worse than it may have been and her current public image as much warmer and friendlier than those who work with her might think. Ms. Kelley's picture certainly highlights all of the most sensationalistic moment's in Oprah's life. My guess (and Ms. Kelley's guess in the intro) is that her friends and her "official biographer" would choose to reflect longer on Oprah's good works and astoundingly generous and talented personality. I imagine that the truth is somewhere in  between.

The biography talks a fair bit about Oprah's aspirations as an actress and both her successful and less-glowing appearances in movies over the years. The interesting part is that it seems that Oprah's greatest role is the one that she has played in the process of acting out her own life. The biography almost reads as a very dramatic movie script and I understand that it may indeed be turned into a movie one day.

Overall, it is satisfying my curiosity about this very important media icon and makes me wonder if we will ever have an answer to why Oprah's staying power seems to have surpassed that of most of her daytime television competitors and her own icons of popular culture like Michael Jackson and Elvis Presley. As did Oprah, these stars also suffered a litany of childhood traumas, experienced overwhelming, godlike status through fame and fortune, had the power to block out those who were not willing to accept the untruths they wanted to hear about themselves, but unlike Oprah (so far), they ended up succumbing to their own self-destructive behavior. Maybe an addiction to pecan pies and fried chicken isn't quite as deadly as prescription drugs?...

A decent and thankfully brief review appeared at the time of publication in the Globe and Mail.

DIY Rating: 6
 
Interesting but fluffy reading on a woman 
who has truly captured the "zeitgeist" of female
American media consumers for two generations.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Apple Bliss

Photo Credit: Filia Artis


Back in elementary school, my friends and I made up a secret language so that we could sit behind the teacher's desk during free time and talk privately. The one word that I remember best was "a-pop-pop-lop-e" which meant "apple". 

Needless to say, apple also is usually another word for "autumn" around here. We've already been through a bushel of Macintosh apples, which is an early crop, and I was able to pick up another bushel of Ida Reds, which are usually the last ones to be ready in a season. It seems this year that the entire season is about two weeks earlier than usual thanks to a warm spring and hot summer.

Photo Credit: Filia Artis


So, "what's in the oven," you ask? Apple crumble, naturally! It's about the easiest dessert known to mankind. You can learn all my secrets on my recipe page. The great thing is that with this one, if you don't have an ingredient, just substitute something else, it will taste good - guaranteed! There will be a gluten-dairy-free version there as well.



Photo Credit: Filia Artis

Baby and I stopped off at Ostrander's during our tour of the County on Monday to buy the apples. I love their sign and I love their apples. There is an option to pick your own or pick up a basket of ready-picked. You can find them on County Rd. 8 just outside of Waupoos.


DIY Rating: 10

The drive to the apple orchard features beautiful views 
of autumn leaves turning, pumpkin farms, rolling hills and the lake. 

The apples are also excellent and the Ida Reds 
will keep for some time in a cool place.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

The Barley Days of Autumn

Cottage on the Bay of Quinte - Manly MacDonald 
Image Credit: Gallery Gevik


No trip to Prince Edward County is complete without a few tasty treat stops...

After antique hunting in and around Belleville, our crew headed over to the Barley Days Brewery between Bloomfield and Picton to pick up some beer.


Photo Credit: Filia Artis



Baby was a most skillful taster and was made "Official Brew Mascot" for the day.


Photo Credit: Filia Artis


The beers are made in small batches and custom brewed by their Brewmeister, Alex. (He was there, but moving around so quickly, we didn't get a chance to snap his picture!) The summer beer that we tried and enjoyed this year was the Loyalist Lager and the new one that I brought home was called the County IPA.




An interesting thing about the brewery is that some of the beer labels feature artwork by Canadian Artist Manly MacDonald 1889-1971 (shown above and at top of post). MacDonald was a contemporary of the Group of Seven. Anyone who is familiar with those painters will recognize the loose resemblance of the MacDonald's impressionistic style with their work. What is unique is that he painted such pastoral and soft landscapes in contrast to several of the Group of Seven artists whose works show the more rugged landscapes of northern Ontario. You can see some of MacDonald's artwork on the beer labels below:




The amazing thing about MacDonald's art is that he really captured beautifully what the county actually looks like! When one gazes out the window of the brewery, the agricultural scene with the rolling grain fields and the lake just beyond are just like in the paintings! 

A short biography about MacDonald can be found here.


Barley Days Brewery
13730 Loyalist Parkway ( Highway 33 )
Picton, Ontario



DIY Rating: 10

Well, are you surprised I would rate this so highly?? 
It's beer, and good beer at that, and all you have to do is show up and enjoy a few samples!

I could DIY that daily for sure!

Notes from the County



The beautiful October weather yesterday lent itself wonderfully to a drive out to Belleville to visit Funk & Gruven A-Z antiques and to have a chance to meet Mike, the shop owner.

There are different levels of antiques out there. The first kind are the "finds". These are usually items that no one would ever normally bring into their home. It just so happens that the finder discovers one of these marvelous pieces hidden under a pile of other stuff and can envision how it would look after some "renovation". Typically, "finds" come cheap, but cost dearly in terms of work input to make them great showpieces.

The second kind of antiques are what I like to call "founds" meaning that they are pieces that are ready to be installed and enjoyed without much, if any, work. Funk & Gruven seems to specialize more in "founds" than "finds" as most of their stock was made up of beautiful pieces that seems pretty much ready to be loved. They were on target in terms of having classic items that are certainly in-vogue at the moment.

Here are a few pieces I would have gladly taken home with me:


Wheat Sheaf Table



Detail of Carving on Oak Desk




China Cupboard from Ireland



Oak Headboard



Loved this mirror



All photos: Filia Artis


Funk & Gruven A-Z
52 Bridge Street East
Belleville, Ontario


DIY Rating: 10 

Worth a visit in person or check out 
their wares though their online catalogue.

Most items were ready to go, so no need for a 
major "fixing up" project if you're not a DIY'er.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Antiquing we will go...

Photo Credit: American Collector Magazine


Today, I will be leaving all the projects and recipes behind to head out on an antiquing adventure with long-time friend, fellow blogger and creative master-mind, Jane Speed of Carte Blanche Creative in Toronto.

Jane


We'll be scoping out Funk & Gruven Antiques in Belleville (among other antique shops), trying out lunch on the beach and hunting down some apples and local cheeses.

Be sure to check out Jane and her team's blog at Carte Blanche Creative Blog and if you're looking for a creative group that is simply awesome, these are the people!

PS, This is an unsolicited rave about their excellence!

Friday, October 15, 2010

Books and Miscellanea at the Do-tique 4

On the stereo...




I recently re-organized our fairly small CD collection here at The Do-tique and rediscovered Peter Gabriel's Up album (2002). I had forgotten how much I like this recording. Most of us know Gabriel from his days as a member of the prog rock band, Genesis and what I remember best are the more popular hits of the 1980's.

This record deals a lot with overcoming personal demons, death and re-birth and there are some lyrics that I think are particularly good. The music itself is extremely complex and can even be described as "haunting" in some places.

In the song Darkness, Gabriel explores the experience of facing his own fears and the demons deep within himself that represent the darker parts of his personality. The music suitably creates an atmosphere of terror and then relief:

when I allow it to be 
there's no control over me 
I have my fears 
but they do not have me 

walking through the undergrowth, to the house in the woods 
the deeper I go, the darker it gets 
I peer through the window 
knock at the door 
and the monster I was 
so afraid of 
lies curled up on the floor 
is curled up on the floor just like a baby boy 

I cry until I laugh







Another song on the album is I Grieve. I always like music that tries to take us through that incomprehensible feeling of shock that we experience in the initial moments and days following a death or a loss. Gabriel captures this well:

It was only one hour ago 
It was all so different then 
There's nothing yet has really sunk in 
Looks like it always did 
This flesh and bone 
It's just the way that you were tied in 
Now there's no-one home...

The news that truly shocks is the empty empty page 
While the final rattle rocks it's empty empty cage 
And I can't handle this 

The song ends with a fairly upbeat tempo and the sentiment that humans only live for short moments in time. Life carries on and we are more than the things we surround ourselves with in this life time.






Finally, there is Signal to Noise which is really an incredible song both musically and lyrically. For me, it speaks of the modern world and the existential crisis that comes from so many empty voices bombarding us daily. Deep inside, there is still a truth, but we have to "wipe out the noise" to hear it:





Man I'm losing sound and sight
Of all those who can tell me wrong from right
When all things beautiful and bright
Sink in the night
Yet there's still something in my heart
That can find a way
To make a start
So turn up the signal
Wipe out the noise






Interestingly, we are introduced to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan's tremendous vocals in this song. Ali Khan was a well known musician from Pakistan, primarily a singer of Qawwali, the devotional music of the Sufis (a mystical tradition within Islam). He passed away in 1997, before Up was released. Prior recordings were sampled into the final version of Signal to Noise.






This is an earlier version of the song and the video is from some years before the Up album was released, but it shows Gabriel and Ali Khan performing together.



Thursday, October 14, 2010

Pumpkin Paradise


A view of the Eureka Pumpkin Festival. October 1947
Photo Credit: Life


Have you been to the grocery store this week? Did you notice that all the baking supplies were  discounted? Now that Thanksgiving is over, there seems to be a sale on anything related to that holiday. 


Photo Credit: Filia Artis


One thing that was massively on sale (besides turkey, which I also happened to pick up) was canned pumpkin puree. I've thought about making it myself from scratch in the past, but it always sounds like a lot more work than necessary. 


Photo Credit: Filia Artis

I was inspired by Trina at A Country Farmhouse to try baking some pumpkin spice loaf. It has the welcome effect of making your home smell like heaven! If you are trying to sell your place, be sure to bake some right before an open house...

The recipe was pretty easy to make. It was really the same as any basic loaf. I doubled the recipe and the loaves came out very tasty and are highly recommended by Hubby who insisted that he would like to have eaten an entire loaf by himself in one sitting!



Photo Credit: Filia Artis

Since there was a bit of pumpkin left over, I decided to try making some pumpkin spice granola with cranberries - especially useful since we ran out of breakfast cereal yesterday morning. As I learned about a year ago, making your own granola and muesli is extremely easy and affordable - especially in comparison to buying boxed cereal. It is also about three hundred times tastier! The recipe I found at Two Peas and Their Pod turned out excellently. I substituted in some fresh cranberries that I'd also bought at the post-Thanksgiving grocery sale and they came out nice. I am storing my granola in the fridge just because of the fresh berries.

So here is the pumpkin loaf recipe at Epicurious and the cereal recipe at Two Peas and Their Pod. Both are also linked in on my recipe page.

PS. The granola calls for "Pumpkin Spice Mix" - if you google it, you can easily make your own PSM without having to buy an extra ingredient - it's really just cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg and ginger.


DIY Rating: 

10 for the granola which was a totally no-sweat recipe.

8 for the pumpkin bread which was easy, but created a full sink of dishes to make. 
The bonus is that it was super delicious and way, way better 
than the shipped in version available at Starbucks for a small fortune per slice!