SO I've been working a long time on building my Empire and refreshing my work ;) and finally I'm (sort of) ready to reveal what I've been working on...
CHECK IT OUT!
The new,
This weather (among other things) has been terrible for my sense of adventure. Sometimes it's so hard to get out of the house and explore. And after this trip- my daughter's not feeling well. But yesterday my friend Jessie asked if me and little Bel wanted to go see some freshly born baby lambs... and they were precious. And it was so worth venturing in the cold.
I love farm life, and sometimes I kind of crave the simplicity of it. It's got me thinking about more possible adventures to come... (Spring Hurry!)
I've always loved poached eggs, fluffy and creamy, especially with hollandaise. So I decided one day to give myself a chance to do it. There were a few terribly gross mishaps... if you've never tried to poach and egg, if it doesn't work out, it can look like a rather disturbing mess.
I researched before my egg performance and decided to go with Smitten Kitchen's method. I served this over a gruyere encrusted black bean cake with wilted kale, fresh sliced avocados and tomatoes and Sriracha always.
The black bean cake was made with shaved sweet potatoes, egg, bread crumbs, mashed black beans, and fresh herbs, poured over a bed of melting cheese in a hot oiled pan. I'll have to perfect this recipe before I share it... as usual it was a quick experiment. Often when I want to make something, I just google or look up my favorite food sites for recipes and combine and play until something works enough to keep doing it.
portuguese girl donuts, boats: unknown, scene, jul's kitchen: fried egg
Water, romance & breakfast... or I'll just take some donuts.
With Valentines just around the corner... I mean tomorrow... I have some inspirations for some things that someone might like instead of the usual. Like for instance, a loving morning in...
I hear the birds chirping out the window and I can't help think about Spring even though it is still February. And I wonder if they know it's still early to get out their whistles and happy sounds... because even though I long for the fresh bloom of green I dread another snow could be coming.
I have always loved winter. January has long been a time of rest and hibernation. I've felt the comfort of grey and cold an opportunity to live a little deeper, to think a little more or less and recharge from the pull of activity that summer brings. But
not this year. This year I made no attempt at resolutions, I don't even remember new years eve, and I have had no great usual surge towards life. There was no end to 2012 and beginning to 2013- it has been a long run-on sentence with constant similarities of hardship.
I can remember the time my heart ached the strongest that took years to recover. It was from the rejection and abandonment of a boy who flew across the country with no resolution or words- just harshness, blame, silence and his blonde girlfriend. The details aren't important- but what I remember is the ache. I flew to England to live 40 days in a warehouse with similar strangers and experience the strangeness of community and the estrangement of loneliness among them, but really I went there to recover.
I remember the pale blue, daisy-printed sheets that my dried-out eyes were pressed to every morning, and the blur of waking up foreignly only to realize the ache had followed through the night and was still weighing with the sun's new day. And I remember Madonna, a dark-haired girl from Egypt who talked a lot, who slept across from me a few feet away. I remember her voice asking me if something was wrong with me- and the sheer energy it took to explain my story was more than I had to give- so often I would scowl and shrug and try not to hate her optimistic, bubbling Egyptian self.
I would take walks on the English country-side where I found a piano in the belly of a mysterious stone church that always had an unlocked door. And it was there that I would lean my head against the wooden panel where the sheet music went and play chords and melodies and let my eyes drain on the ivory notes underneath me.
I drank tea with lots of cream and sugar every morning and sat with a journal and tried to connect with God, with myself with hope... and I always worried about my weight with my influx of cream and sugar three times a day.
Some days, Madonna would have to talk me out of bed and tell me I was wasting away by being depressed. I would stay up late and call America hoping to find a resolution on the other end of the line, but often would end up sitting underneath the phone trying to imagine myself standing up and walking in hopes my body would follow.
And the ache was deep, the loss was greater and the rejection was greatest. And it took years to recover. It took many long walks and pathetic diary scribing, cake & wine, 3AM painting sessions, laying on the floor watching the ceiling fan in hopes the holy spirit would breathe into my shell and revive me again.
Even though it took lots of time after England to recover... I began to notice something. In the midst of the ache, the field walks and garden leisure, the belted songs landing against those chapel walls; something was happening. I started to wake up early- earlier than I had to. My journals became books, my paintings became colorful and I wrote the best and only completed song of my life- Even The Weeping Willows.
And the personhood of what I knew about God transcended life-support to friend, walking partner, tea date and night cap.
So even though the pain still throbbed somewhere between my ribs and chest and some days I needed Madonna to shake me awake, I gained a friend who didn't completely remove the ache but showed me the treasure of companionship and the beauty of a person to sleep next to when hardship is the only partner.
I asked God recently in anger why, in the story about Jesus and friends on the boat, where the sea was storming and raging, he seemed to get mad that they didn't trust him in spite of the circumstances. Didn't Jesus know that sometimes things don't work out even when he is around? Didn't Jesus know that it's scary as hell to be in a sinking boat being slammed by waves and it didn't really seem like they were going to make it and he was taking a nap? And so in this ongoing discussion I told God I was mad at him. I thought he was insensitive to expect his disciples to not worry or just "have faith." And I am irritated as I am these days when people try to poorly teach lessons of God, that the message in this story has always been, "just have faith". Which obviously this story is about me and my life.
But one night recently before I fell asleep- in my nightly conversation, rambling or late thinking I started to drift off and quietly I felt the whisper say, "I'm not mad that you don't trust me in the midst of your storm, I just wanted you to crawl up next to me in the middle of it."
I have always loved winter. January has long been a time of rest and hibernation. I've felt the comfort of grey and cold an opportunity to live a little deeper, to think a little more or less and recharge from the pull of activity that summer brings. But
not this year. This year I made no attempt at resolutions, I don't even remember new years eve, and I have had no great usual surge towards life. There was no end to 2012 and beginning to 2013- it has been a long run-on sentence with constant similarities of hardship.
I can remember the time my heart ached the strongest that took years to recover. It was from the rejection and abandonment of a boy who flew across the country with no resolution or words- just harshness, blame, silence and his blonde girlfriend. The details aren't important- but what I remember is the ache. I flew to England to live 40 days in a warehouse with similar strangers and experience the strangeness of community and the estrangement of loneliness among them, but really I went there to recover.
I remember the pale blue, daisy-printed sheets that my dried-out eyes were pressed to every morning, and the blur of waking up foreignly only to realize the ache had followed through the night and was still weighing with the sun's new day. And I remember Madonna, a dark-haired girl from Egypt who talked a lot, who slept across from me a few feet away. I remember her voice asking me if something was wrong with me- and the sheer energy it took to explain my story was more than I had to give- so often I would scowl and shrug and try not to hate her optimistic, bubbling Egyptian self.
I would take walks on the English country-side where I found a piano in the belly of a mysterious stone church that always had an unlocked door. And it was there that I would lean my head against the wooden panel where the sheet music went and play chords and melodies and let my eyes drain on the ivory notes underneath me.
I drank tea with lots of cream and sugar every morning and sat with a journal and tried to connect with God, with myself with hope... and I always worried about my weight with my influx of cream and sugar three times a day.
Some days, Madonna would have to talk me out of bed and tell me I was wasting away by being depressed. I would stay up late and call America hoping to find a resolution on the other end of the line, but often would end up sitting underneath the phone trying to imagine myself standing up and walking in hopes my body would follow.
And the ache was deep, the loss was greater and the rejection was greatest. And it took years to recover. It took many long walks and pathetic diary scribing, cake & wine, 3AM painting sessions, laying on the floor watching the ceiling fan in hopes the holy spirit would breathe into my shell and revive me again.
Even though it took lots of time after England to recover... I began to notice something. In the midst of the ache, the field walks and garden leisure, the belted songs landing against those chapel walls; something was happening. I started to wake up early- earlier than I had to. My journals became books, my paintings became colorful and I wrote the best and only completed song of my life- Even The Weeping Willows.
And the personhood of what I knew about God transcended life-support to friend, walking partner, tea date and night cap.
So even though the pain still throbbed somewhere between my ribs and chest and some days I needed Madonna to shake me awake, I gained a friend who didn't completely remove the ache but showed me the treasure of companionship and the beauty of a person to sleep next to when hardship is the only partner.
I asked God recently in anger why, in the story about Jesus and friends on the boat, where the sea was storming and raging, he seemed to get mad that they didn't trust him in spite of the circumstances. Didn't Jesus know that sometimes things don't work out even when he is around? Didn't Jesus know that it's scary as hell to be in a sinking boat being slammed by waves and it didn't really seem like they were going to make it and he was taking a nap? And so in this ongoing discussion I told God I was mad at him. I thought he was insensitive to expect his disciples to not worry or just "have faith." And I am irritated as I am these days when people try to poorly teach lessons of God, that the message in this story has always been, "just have faith". Which obviously this story is about me and my life.
But one night recently before I fell asleep- in my nightly conversation, rambling or late thinking I started to drift off and quietly I felt the whisper say, "I'm not mad that you don't trust me in the midst of your storm, I just wanted you to crawl up next to me in the middle of it."
Do you ever just get a craving for something and you don't know where to get it? When I was in Connecticut shooting this fall, the chef from the weekend made the most simple, delicious peanut noodle salad. I could have eaten the whole bowl if I wasn't working. So I thought, I bet I could make that at home! I researched recipes and came across Smitten Kitchen's recipe and used a moderation of the peanut sauce and then added my own ingredients that I already had. Which was sliced baby carrots, crushed peanuts and mache. Maybe next time I'd go with some pea shoots or some crunchy thai cabbage to throw in there. I used linguini noodles because that's what I had the first time- and I like thicker noodles.
If you want to make your own version check out this original recipe and put your own spin on it.
Enjoy!!!
HEY P.S. Thanks for joining for Wedding Week... more will be coming soon over the next few months. But now back to regular programming.
This wedding embodied simplicity and nature, and still remains one of my favorite shoots ever.
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