Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Oh my god - they're giving me a garden!!!!!!!

Okay - I know I have yet to post the big Christmas blog - but this bit of news takes precedent. I checked my email today and found a gem! The guy at the White Crane Springs Community Garden (doesn't that sound beautiful) was letting me know that they had a garden plot open up and do I still want it? DO I????!!! With all of my heart and soul, do I want that plot. And dad just bought me herb seeds for christmas. Oh my god, I am SO excited. I'm already planning ways to get the most out of a tiny, 6x8 foot plot.

Here is a picture of the gardens:



This is honestly one of the best Christmas gifts I could have asked for - what a treat! And even better news is that it will only take me one bus to get there. It is located in the Inner Sunset District, which is a little ways away from us, but, as luck would have it, there just happens to be a bus that goes directly there. Oh, I'm going to pee my pants, I'm so excited...

So, I just wanted to send this little bit of excitement out into the universe - I will post the Christmas blog shortly, with pictures. Oh, and I noticed that Charlotte left a comment that she might be making her own cheese at home, so I thought I would post instructions for anyone else who might be interested:

Homemade ricotta:

What you need: 1 gallon of milk (or double recipe), 1/4 cup white vinegar, a large colander lined with cheesecloth (I got mine at New Seasons and Williams Sonoma)

1. Heat the milk in a large saucepan to 185 degrees, stirring to prevent scorching. Don't let it boil.

2. Turn off the heat and add the vinegar and stir the milk a few times. You should start to see the cheese and whey start to separate a little bit, and become thicker. Let the pot sit for a couple of hours, for more cheese curds to form.

3. Drain the cheese through the cheesecloth and colander. Let the cheese sit for awhile in the colander to get firmer cheese. Pull up the corners of the cheesecloth around the cheese and squeeze the liquid out. Again, squeeze less liquid for softer cheese, more for firmer cheese. Salt the cheese to your taste, or leave plain.

The ricotta will keep in the fridge for about a week, so I read. Also, the whey (liquid left over) can be used to make other cheese, or I've also heard that it is an excellent liquid to use to make bread. Oh - and you can't use super-pasteurized milk - pasteurized or raw milk only. Super-pasteurized will not form curds.

I usually only use a half-gallon of milk, but if you want a lot of cheese.

Okay - happy cheese-making all! It's good stuff....

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Hiatus

The blog is officially on hiatus until January - there is just too much going on, and not enough time to write at the moment. See you after the New Year! And Merry Christmas to all! :)

Thursday, December 11, 2008

60 degrees is warm, people!

DAYS TIL WE COME HOME FOR CHRISTMAS: 12

Thing that I like about San Francisco:

THE GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE FOGHORN

It has a lovely musicality to it - slightly haunting - and is the sound of cozy, warm fuzzy fog. I haven't heard it in awhile, and we have been pretty fog-free around here lately, and I have found myself missing it...

I don't have too much to say - after the high of my chicken cutting, cheese, butter and granola making weekend, I've settled back into the gentle rhythm of life. :) We did have a delicious spinach canelloni dish for dinner last night which I can take no credit for. I have discovered the world's best cookbook. Nothing wrong can come from this cookbook, it seems. Every recipe that i have tried (5-6) has been not just good, but fantastically good. It's called "Food to Live By" and it's by the woman who runs Earthbound Farms, which is a huge organic farming conglomerate here in California. I'm sure you've seen their bagged salads in the grocery store. But the cookbook is really great - it uses really normal ingredients, no fancy-schmancy ingredients you've never heard of - and the flavors in the foods are usually amazing. So I used my homemade ricotta cheese in the cannelloni and combined with garlic, onions, basil, thyme and parmesan cheese, topped with some organic tomato sauce from Bi-Rite(new favorite grocery store, remember) - they came out just absolutely fabulous. Neil doesn't really care that much for pasta and he even commented on how yummy it was. He actually took the leftovers for lunch, which he doesn't do unless he really likes something.

Tonight I have to buckle down to the christmas cookie making, because we may (or may not) be having a small get-together with neil's school friends tomorrow night, for cookies, hot cocoa and wassail. So I have to get prepared, just in case. And I'm sure there will be no trouble getting the cookies eaten, even if the event doesn't happen.

On a final note, Californians are big, fat babies. We have had highs in the low 50's and lows in the low 40's this week, and you should hear the people complain about how "cold" it has been! Wow! I'm basking in the warmth, enjoying being able to go out in December without hat and gloves, and people down here are looking for their below-zero size parkas. I saw a guy get on the bus this morning with his scarf up covering his mouth and nose and gloved hands tucked under his armpits like he was just barely holding onto life in these sub-50 degree temps. Are you kidding me? The last time I had a scarf up to keep my chin and nose warm was when we were cross-country skiing in Leavenworth two years ago - AND IT WAS 18 DEGREES OUT. Hmph... Like I said - big babies.

Hope everyone's having fun with their Christmas preparations.

Monday, December 8, 2008

WARNING: Raw chicken parts may appear in this blog

Days until we come home for Christmas: 15!!


Well, I officially did it! I conquered the whole chicken. Saturday night, the chicken was finally defrosted - for some reason it took three days in the fridge to de-frost. I thought that's how long a really large turkey took - not a three pound chicken. On Friday night, I had gone down to Williams Sonoma and purchased a trusty pair of poultry scissors - "the better to cut you up with, my pretty! whoo-ha-ha-ha" (Said in voice of wicked witch of the west). I took these out and watched my online tutorial one more time (thanks you-tube) and faced the chicken head on. And it wasn't nearly as bad as I thought it would be. I tackled the legs first, and they practically popped off on their own. 




then the wings were a little bit harder i couldn't get them to pop out of their joints but I finally managed to snip them off. Ten I split the back from the breasts and set it aside to make stock with. Getting the breast bone out was actually the hardest part. I ended up splitting it in half and basically having to tear it out, but the breasts didn't look any worse for the wear. Then I took the ribs and skin off and voila! Boneless, skinless chicken breasts:




Then I split the thighs from the drumsticks and removed as much skin as possible and TA-DA!! Take that whole chicken:

So, there you have it. I did it. And the whole chicken only cost $12 and it only took about 15-20 minutes to cut it all up. It was an organic, free-range chicken and Neil actually commented on how much better it seemed to taste than regular chicken. I don't think I'll go back to the old way. We'll see how long that lasts. :) 

So, in the spirit of doing things myself, I embarked on a whole day of making things from scratch. First up: Ricotta cheese for cannelloni later in the week:




Then, since I was really feeling in the swing of things, I decided to conquer something new: butter! It's so simple to make, you just whip heavy cream in your stand mixer until it goes past whip cream and the butter and buttermilk separate, and voila again! Butter!


Then, you "wash" the butter with ice water - meaning just process it some more - until all the buttermilk is removed, and then salt it and put it in the fridge. It was a lot of fun!




Then, to finish off the day, I made some homemade granola - with slivered almonds and coconut flakes and maple syrup, brown sugar and cranberries. I had some in my homemade yogurt today and it was delicious. I'll post it soon, if anyone is interested. Yummy!

I felt like it was a very successful weekend in the kitchen. Oh, and we finally got the lights up on our tree. Maybe soon we will actually get the ornaments on. But it looks very beautiful, and I am finally starting to get in the Christmas spirit. It's been a little colder here this week, and it was overcast on Sunday, so that helps! Neil has his last few classes this week and then, after Friday, he is all done until Jan. 20th. I think it will be a nice break for him, he's been working pretty hard and I think he's a little bit tired out.

Ok - I'm off to make some Christmas cookies and Wassail!

Friday, December 5, 2008

Oops!

Forgot my favorite thing about San Francisco for this last post, so here it is:

THE SWEET POTATO FRIES AT PACIFIC CATCH ON CHESTNUT ST.

When eaten with a barbeque salmon sandwich they are the most delectable little morsels of goodness! They just melt in your mouth and they come with two delicious dipping sauces as well. Oh my, I'm getting hungry just thinking about them!

Thursday, December 4, 2008

My new favorite grocery store

Yesterday I took an incredibly inefficient trip to a grocery store in the Mission. I rented a zipcar on my lunch break to head over to this grocery store that I had read about that sells local, organic groceries at cheaper prices. The grocery store was awesome and I love it and it's my new favorite store. However, it was not a wise choice to try and visit it on my lunch break. The Mission was a lot farther away than I thought it was, and my directions told me to go down Market Street, which is the main street through the city. So beyond the journey taking forever, I was so sure that I was going to hit another car, a bus, or one of the three million pedestrians trying to cross the street on their lunch hour. It was a stressful trip. Once I got to the grocery store, I found that it is so small that it doesn't have a parking lot. So I had to find street parking - not an easy task anywhere in San Francisco. Time taken to merely get to the grocery store - 1/2 hour. Considering I have an hour for lunch, that left me approximately 0 minutes for shopping. But shop I did... I was enchanted by the store - it was like a little slice of organic heaven. Of course you all know by now that I've been reading a lot of books lately about eating locally and organically and all the research that I had done so far lead to this store as excellent source of both local and organic items. It did not disappoint. There was the milk from the first organic dairy west of the missippi that is sold in the old-fashioned glass bottles (easier to recycle):




AND!! It was a $1.50 cheaper than at the organic grocery store near our house. YAY!



And then there was the locally produced yogurt sold in little ceramic pots:

This is kind of expensive, actually - but it comes in a ceramic pot, for goodness sake! :) There was the meat case, full of locally grown, grass-fed animals. Beef and pork from Marin Sun Farms - where the "cattle are fed grass for their entire lives, and are raised, slaughtered, and processed in the Bay Area". They had a really nice little produce section and a wonderful cheese selection, including Rogue cheese which I was excited to see. (I always like to see little hints that remind me of Oregon).

Nothing can be perfect, however, and I'm sure that not everything in the store was organic or locally grown. I saw green and red peppers from Mexico. But atleast there is an outlet where you have a better chance at getting good, whole food at fairly reasonable prices. I have been shopping at the Real Food Company which is about 8 blocks from my house. Very convenient but also very expensive. I bought some bulk unbleached all-purpose flour the other day without really realizing how much it was going to cost. When I got the cash register I saw it ring up 3 pounds for $8.50. WHAT!!??? Also, for a company that is supposed to be supporting local, organic foods, their olive oil selection was all imported from either Italy or Spain!! For those of you who don't understand why I'm so indignant about that, two hours north on I-5 is the olive oil mecca of the U.S. There are olive trees as far as the eye can see and billboards touting the California olive oil at every exit. So if I can get good olive oil from two hours north, why bring it from thousands of miles away!? Sorry, just a quick little rant is ok every now and then, right! :)

So we go to church in the Mission now, and I figure I'll just swing on by after church from now on. I'm already making the trip, so that makes it convenient.

So, I was glad to find my new discovery, but by the time I had finished gawking at all the wonderful sights and buying some yummy fresh mozzarella and parmigiana reggiano cheese, I realized that I only had 10 minutes to make it back before my zipcar reservation expired. Completely irrationally, I thought I would be able to make it back. When I had two minutes left and I was still basically in the Mission, I conceded and realized that I would have to extend my reservation. Since you're not supposed to talk on cell phones in CA while driving a vehicle, I had to put the cell phone on speaker phone, dial the zipcar number and extend the reservation all with the cell phone in my lap. Hmm... Which was probably the kind of activites that the law was supposed to prevent. Anyways... I got the reservation extended and was able to relax a little.

Later, reflecting on the day, I realized that I had just spent $15 to spend $13 at the grocery store. Not really coming out in my favor, there. But, it was more than just the purchase - it was the experience, the adventure, the possibilities that made the cost and the trip totally worthwhile. Even though I was 20 minutes late back to work. Oops.

On this same note, I have been getting further into Michael Pollan's "The Omnivore's Dilemna" and it has just been an absolute joy to read. I have been enjoying every page. Not just because I feel like I have just opened my eyes for the very first time, no. Becuase the writing is fabulous as well - there is humor and poignancy and beauty in his writing that makes this book just fantastic. But the knowledge that I feel like I am gaining is wonderful as well. I feel like I want to quit everything and go start farming somewhere!

The whole point of this post was that I read a beautiful paragraph in the book today and just wanted to share it with anyone who might still be reading this blog from time to time. To set the scene, Pollan is visiting a farmer who maintains a complete ecological system on his farm. He raises cows, chickens, pigs, vegetables, the whole works. But he consider himself first and foremost a grass farmer, because the grass is what sustains everything - the cows, the chickens, the pigs and the vegetables. It all starts with the grass. He rotates his crops and animals to take full advantage of this and all the animals and plants on his farm work together in perfect harmony. In this excerpt, Pollan is describing the farmer's practice of rotational grazing, or letting his cattle eat in one area of the field, and then moving them, every night, to a new patch of grass. He does the same thing with the chickens:

"These intense but brief stays completely change the animal's interactions with the grass and the soil. They eat down just about everything in the paddock, and then move on, giving the grasses a chance to recover. Native grasses evolved to thrive under precisely such grazing patterns; indeed, they depend on them for reproductive success. Not only do ruminants spread and fertilize seed with their manure, but their hoofprints create shady little pockets of exposed soil where water collects - ideal conditions for germinating a grass seed."

I just thought that was exquisite and it just made me feel so satisfied when I read it. How perfect - the cows hoofs provide little places where baby seeds can grow. The grass feeds the cows and, in return, the cows feed the grass. The grass and the animals were made - meant - to be together in so many ways that we cannot even begin to fathom. God has made such a perfect system, with so many tiny unseeable variables - how can we ever hope or believe that we could improve on this? He has provided us with food - real food - and all we can do is re-engineer it in an attempt to somehow make it better!? That we can do a better job? Hm.....

The book goes on in more detail, and the chapter about this farmer and his completely symbiotic farm is amazing. If you don't want to read a whole book, just read this chapter. You will learn so much about the way our agriculture system is supposed to work in just this chapter alone...
Well, I guess that is enough proselytizing for one night. I just thought I would share what's been on my mind lately.

Oh yeah - with all this new yummy whole food in hand we had a delicious dinner tonight. I made a potato-leek soup with focaccia bread and salad. The soup was fabulous - tasted a lot like a baked potato - and the focaccia was lovely as well and the salad, well, you get the point, I guess.

Here's the recipe for the potato-leek soup if anyone is interested. I got half of it off of a food blog, and another piece from Emerille Agassie. It makes a really thick, chowder like soup.

3 Tbl butter
1-2 large leeks
1 medium onion
5 cups cubed potato (I used a red and yukon gold mix, but the recipe actually called for russet) You can leave the skins on, it adds to the heartiness of the soup.
3 1/2 cups chicken broth
2 bay leaves
1 tsp dried thyme
1 cup heavy cream
Salt and pepper to taste.

1. Melt the butter in a pan over medium heat. Add the onion and leeks and sautee until the onions are limp, about 5 minutes.

2. Add the potatoes and the chicken broth. The broth should just cover the potatoes. Add the bay leaves and the thyme. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until the potatoes are tender, about 15 minutes.

3. Turn the heat down to low. Using a potato masher, mash the potatoes in the pan until to your own desired consistency (I left mine a little chunky cos' I like it that way). Remove the bay leaves. Add the cream and stir til warm. Add the salt and pepper to taste.

Such a simple soup, but it really was delicious.

Okay - so much for the idea about shorter blog posts. But look at that - it's only the 4th of December, and I already have as many posts as I did in November. Now the only question is if it's too late - did I already scare away all readers with my inactivity? :) Have a great night everyone!

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Two posts in one day! (and pics)

Just got back from a fantastic run. Actually, it really sucked - my legs and hips really hurt right now. But the endorphins are definitely flowing and I feel really good about finally getting out and doing it. Now that it's dark at night, I don't get that fantastic view of the GG Bridge, but tonight I had a different treat - Christmas lights! On the rich folks houses. They were beautiful and really nice to see so much decoration. I had a feeling that San Francisco wouldn't really celebrate Christmas so much, seeing as how the city goes koo-koo for Halloween, which is sort of the antithesis of Christmas. But, I am happy to say that I have seen many Christmas lights and trees. Neil theory is that Christmas is well-loved here because it is such a big shopping holiday. I think he may be on to something there.

Well, the point of this post was pictures, so without further ado, here is our Thanksgiving fun:







































Giving Thanks

Days remaining to christmas visit: 20

We arrived safely back in San Francisco Sunday night after a completely uneventful 13 hour drive. It was just a wonderful Thanksgiving holiday, spent with both family and friends. I don't think we could have asked for a better break. Pulling back into San Francisco, I felt an unexpected feeling of familiarity - like when you're coming home. I was happy to experience that. Portland will always be "home", but San Francisco is starting to be a better substitute, for now.

Also, I think the dose of rain, fog and dampness was just enough! I was able to absolutely appreciate our beautiful, sunny day yesterday. I rode the train down to the farmer's market and the windows were open and letting the warm, sunny wind blow in. Not bad.

So, in the spirit of my "reconciliation" with San Francisco, and being here for the next year and a half, I have decided to institute a new feature of this blog. With every post, I will list one thing that I like about San Francisco, to remind myself that living here for two years is an adventure and a privilege. Not everyone has the opportunity to uproot their lives and try something new out like we have gotten to. So today's reason why I like San Francisco is:

MY BUS DRIVER.

On my ride into work every morning, I have the best bus driver. He is always smiling, friendly, cheerful and funny. He remembers his riders and if they are running behind schedule, he'll stop to pick them up, no matter where they are. In fact, he keeps an eye out for anyone who might be catching his bus and will stop. He honks at my other bus to make sure that it waits for those of us trying to catch it. In sharp contrast to most other bus drivers in the city who are chronically cranky, he is great and I look forward to seeing him every morning.

Okay - see, that wasn't too hard for me.

So, I noticed that I only posted 3 blogs in November, dropping off sharply from my record high of 10 in October. Hmm.. I'm going to lose readership if I don't pick it up, so my December resolution is to blog 11 times - or atleast more than 3.

We got our Christmas tree all set up and it fits perfectly and looks wonderful. It's already drunk (drank, drunken?) 3 tree stands full of water - thirsty little guy. I think we'll put the lights on and decorate this weekend. It doesn't feel like Christmas down here, yet, though. It's just missing something in the air that usually signals to me that Christmastime is near - I think it's the chill that should be in the air that's really not. It was mid-60's yesterday. I'm not complaining - merely stating the temperature. So, I'll try to get the Christmas music cranked up and get in the Christmas spirit. Only 3 more weeks, now.

I did something a little scary yesterday. I bought a whole chicken. I have never, ever bought anything poultry that wasn't boneless or skinless. (I can hear my mother and grandmother cringing right now). In the spirit of my recent reading material, I thought I would give it a shot. I bought a little, tiny, local organic chicken and it's resting in my freezer now, waiting for me to get up the guts to thaw it out and cut it up. I also made a trip to Williams-Sonoma last night to buy the poulty shears to help me dissect the chicken and make it edible. I like the idea of only paying $3.99 a pound for organic chicken, and then getting to make real, live chicken stock, instead of using those little boullion cubes, which I have no idea where they come from or what they consist of. The whole bird cost only $12. I usually pay $8 just for two breasts, alone. I will let you know how that turns out.

Okay - so I think that the key to blogging more often is to write less each time. So I'll save some juicy tidbits for next blog! I'll post some pictures from Thanksgiving soon...

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

FUNK be gone!!

I have had a much more generous feelings towards San Francisco today, despite my bus being 15 minutes late tonight. Our fight is over, for now. This could be due to a few reasons. Today was cloudy, windy and cold! YAY! I am now all cozy in my tiny little apartment, snuggled in fuzzy blankie, with heat dish turned up full blast. Ahh.... Just what I was looking for - appropriate weather for hibernation. I just picked up a cookbook from the library and after I finish this post, I will snuggle up with that. Again, I'll just say Ahhh....
Another possible reason is that I finally got back on the running wagon. Last night Linnea (from work) and I went running together and I have to say, the ambiance was perfect. It was dark and foggy and when it's dark, all the neighborhood lights go on, and when it's foggy, it sort of disseminates the light and makes it very cozy - like you are surrounded by a gigantic blanket of fog. So the run was fantastic - we went for 40 minutes and I just felt like I got a chance to "breathe" again - get the fresh air into my lungs and into my soul. It was very refreshing. And I also felt very cozy and snuggly - even outdoors. 
Another final reason that I'm feeling better was a visit to the Farmer's Market yesterday. It's hard to feel bad at a Farmer's market - all the friendly farmers and beautiful produce and other fun stuff. I went on my lunch break down to the Ferry Building Farmer's Market. 



I had such a nice hour - I got some really nice produce from local farms. It's amazing how much stuff is still available in November. In most parts of the country, farmer's markets are already shut down for the season. I got lettuce, tomatoes, apples, oranges, garlic, onions, carrots, bell peppers, salad greens, potatoes and a few other things that I can't remember now. I got more than I usually get in my Spud delivery, and for the same amount of money. 

I decided to try the market after finishing "In defense of Food" by Michael Pollan last week. I couldn't put that book down! I would encourage everyone to read it. While being full of useful information, it's also a well-written good read. He starts the book by asking the question, "What should I eat?", which appears to be a very simple question. He then spends the book explaining why this is not as simple as it appears. His prescription for eating: "Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants." Again, not as easy as it sounds nowadays. He explores the idea of the "Western diet" and how the nutritional scientists have tried to break everything down into their various nutrients and vitamins, with the idea that if we isolate the perfect nutrients and vitamins, then we can add them to our processed foods to make us more healthy. Because, lets face it, Americans are generally not healthy. His argument is that why does it matter which nutrients in real, whole foods are making us more healthy - if we just eat those real foods more often than we do the processed foods that overwhelm the supermarket shelves, we will be getting whatever nutrients are in there that do a body good. Nowadays, though, the term processed food also applies to our meat and dairy products. Because the cows and chickens and pigs are all eating diets of processed foods and grains that they were never meant to eat in the first place, by the time they get to us on the grocery store shelves, they are also highly processed, even though they appear to be whole foods. So it's getting increasingly harder to even find "real" food. Well, there is just so much in this book and I can't condense it satisfactorily into a paragraph. Just read it. I'm starting another one of his books called "The omnivores dilemma." I think I may have mentioned that when I read one of the books, I get really gung ho about eating and buying locally - thus the trip to the Farmer's market. I loved it and think I will put my Spud deliveries on hold for now and keep giving the Farmer's market a shot. I also found a grocery store near us called "Real Food" that is mostly organic and local. I will give that a try for awhile as well, even though it is more expensive. This new "exploration" of food has really interested me. I made chicken pot pie for dinner the other night with all locally-grown veggies and a wheat crust and I swear, it was delicious. More delicious than usual - or just seemed so. I don't know, but I loved it!

So, again, for any one of these reasons, my disagreement with San Francisco is over for the time being. Feelings of general well-being are back.

Neil and I had a very nice weekend. I did get a little bit of shopping therapy in on Saturday morning. Crossroads was only interested in buying two items from me for a grand total of $10, even though I hauled a duffle-bag full of clothes into the store. However, I found two pairs of jeans, which with the stuff that I sold only ended up costing $23. I will repeat - TWO pairs of jeans for $23!!! Best deal ever. So that made me happy. With shopping success under my belt, I headed off to the Green Festival, which is a HUGE festival of vendors and speakers all about the saving the environment and being green. One point of their festival was to be green even while having a huge event - big events being very large generators of huge amounts of trash and waste. So they had recycling and composting bins available everywhere you turned. Linnea (from work) was volunteering and she took me "behind-the-scenes" or out back behind the exhibition hall, where they were sorting the compost and recycling down even further. It was pretty amazing. So, supposedly, the exhibition was supposed to have a really low impact on the environment, even though thousands of people were gathering there. I saw some really fascinating stuff - the most interesting being the environmentally friendly coffins! Yes, I did just say coffins! They were bio-degradable. And then the also had some urns that were made out of sustainable materials and bio-degradable ones as well - if you wanted to be cremated instead of buried. I circled the building a few times and checked out most of the vendors, but there were SO many people there, so I hit the road after a couple of hours. 

Later that night, it was one of Neil's friends' birthdays, so we went to her party which ended up being very fun. Most of his art friends that we usually hang out with were there, plus a few others that I've met but haven't hung out with much. We had a really, really nice time just hanging out and talking with everyone. We didn't get home until 1:30 in the morning. It's been awhile since I've been out that late. 

The next morning we got kind of a late start picking up the car, but eventually got going in our Chevy Cobalt. We decided to skip the hike and drive south along Highway 1 towards Santa Cruz and Monterey. What a GREAT decision! 



About 20 minutes out of San Francisco, the houses were gone, the road got all windy and we hit the coast. It was a perfectly beautiful day - in the lower 80's. We had the windows down and the wind in our hair. As we wound along the coast, past beach after beach, we noticed a beautiful little cove, down a steep cliff. There was a parking lot up at the top, so we pulled over. When we crossed the highway and looked down into the little cove, we saw a little slice of paradise. 








It was so fantastic that we decided to take a break in the drive, even though we had just started, and walk down to the beach. Wow!! When we got down there, I felt like I was in Hawaii. The sand was white, the water was gorgeous blue and there was a little bit of mist that was just hanging down in the cove, giving it almost a magical feel. It wasn't crowded and there were families and dogs running around. Wow. I love this beach.



















Look at the color of that water! WOW!
I think we'll be back here sometime soon for a day at the beach.









Unfortunately, we couldn't stay all day - we had much more of the coast to see. So we got back on the road again. There really isn't much to narrate for this part of the trip - just fantastic coastline, beautiful, lush fields and gorgeous sunshine. So I'll just post some pics:









About halfway between San Francisco and Santa Cruz is Pigeon Point lighthouse - an old lighthouse that the California State Parks Foundation (where I work), is working to get restored. So we stopped in to look at it and take a few pics. It was kind of cool to know that the place where I work is helping to restore a little bit of history. There is also a hostel there. 



Then we headed South again. The sun started going down and there was a beautiful sunset that just seemed to go on forever...





We pulled into Carmel - a really ritzy, art gallery-type town on the very end of Monterey Bay, just as the last few rays of light were disappearing. We walked out onto the beach there and stood and watched and soaked in the sound of the waves, and the warm November air (weird). 



After we had soaked up enough ambiance, we hopped back in the car and zipped back to SF on Highway 101. It was just a very nice day and great to have the sense of freedom of getting out of the city when we want to. I'm sure we'll be doing it a lot more now. 

I'm off to snuggle with the cookbook now! 

Friday, November 14, 2008

5 1/2 months of summer, and counting...

It's supposed to be 80 tomorrow. That's 5 and half months of summer for me so far this year - dangerously close to a full half year of summertime. I will stop the whine right there because I'm sure all of you Portlandites are dying for the sunshine. But I will just say that God made seasons for a reason! We all need the off-season to hibernate and re-charge our batteries so that we can enjoy the sun when it does come out. At least this is my pattern. Sun-sun go away, come again another day, little Stephie needs to rest, sun-sun go away! :)

So, long time no blog.. Sorry that I've dropped off the face of the earth but I have to admit, I have been feeling a little blue lately. Which doesn't make me want to write. I don't know if it's the beautiful weather that's been getting me down, or what, but I've been terribly homesick the last few days. Thanksgiving needs to come...NOW!.. I've been counting the days, and we're down to a week and a half (or so.. bear with me if a I shave off a few days to make it seem sooner). We're leaving Wed. morning in a rental car, and probably arriving LATE Wed. night. One of Neil's classmates is from Eugene and will be hitching a ride with us, so we'll have a little bit of company in the car.

The other thing making me homesick might also have been the adorable pictures that my sister sent of my little nephew in his kitty costume for Halloween. They were at a Halloween carnival that my parents school puts on... without us.Then they went trick-or-treating in our old neighborhood...without us. Actually trick-or-treated at our old house. (long, forlorn sigh...)



See also: Pumpkin carving and mom and dad's on beautiful fall day. ho hum...




Neil and I have been getting over head colds all week, so things have been pretty low-key. A lot of lounging around on the couch watching T.V. Nothing exciting to blog about, that's for sure. I thought I might be feeling well enough to return to running yesterday. Then I ran 1/2 block to catch the bus and thought I was going to lose a lung, so I decided against that. I'll take the weekend to recuperate... I have a long, hot bath on the schedule tonight. Neil will be at a lecture until around 8:30 - 9:00, so I will have some (more) alone time... Just what I need! :)

I have been getting a lot of reading in lately, though. I just finished a book called "Plenty" which is about a man and a women living up in Vancouver B.C. that decided to eat only what was grown/farmed/harvested within 100 miles of their home. It was a very fascinating and eye-opening book. Their stories are very interesting and the facts that they uncover and people they meet make for a great book. They managed to do it just fine, even though this meant giving up flour and white sugar (neither was grown within 100 miles of their house). And they became so much more in touch with their food and their environment. By the time they ended the challenge, they ended up still mosting eating locally-grown food, because they valued it and liked it so much more. It makes me think much more about the foods that we eat, and where we get them... I get my fresh harvest box each week, which I try to make as local as possible, but I did break down and buy bananas the other day - from Mexico... I felt bad when they finally arrived. I was also thinking that Spud is just a middleman, as well - so the farmers have to drive all their produce to Spud's warehouse, then spud drives it to me - doubling the fuel necessary. So I visited a farmer's market here in the financial district on Thursday and was pleased to find SO much fresh produce - and straight from the farm to the market, cutting out the middleman. So my next experiment is to discontinue the fresh harvest box and start getting produce from the farmer's market every Tuesday/Thursday (there are two markets).

I think it's good for me to read a book like that every now and then. It's interesting reading, plus it makes you stop and examine your own actions... Other books that i have read lately that made me think a little: "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle" by Barbara Kingsolver (also a local-eating endeavor story), "Fast food Nation" by Eric Schlosser (about the origins of fast-food), and there is one more that I just finished that I can't remember the title - it's about genetically-modified foods. I would recommend any of these as both a good read and very information/eye-opening.

Tonight, I am picking up a new one called "In defense of food" by Michael Pollard from the library. I'm not exactly sure what this one is about, but the author is supposed to be good.

On the docket for this weekend is the S.F. Green Festival tomorrow and also some shopping! YAY! I'm planning on swapping some clothes at Crossroads - the S.F. equivalent of Buffalo Exchange. I have a whole bunch of dressy work clothes that I don't need any more and I'm hoping they will take. I need jeans and sweaters instead... Hopefully the shopping therapy will lift me out of my "mood" because Sunday we are renting a car and driving out to Mt. Tamalpais to do some hiking. It's a lot harder to hike when you're down in the dumps! But that should keep us good and busy and hopefully there will be some good pictures to post on the other side of the weekend.

See you then!