Entries categorized as ‘Interactive’

Countdown…3, 2, 1

May 18, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I should be doing any number of other things right now but I am plotting all the tips I got (thanks everybody!!) on my google map of Beijing.  I have become accustomed to whipping up one of these beauties for every city adventure and have quite a treasure chest of recommendations and spots mainly in Europe but now also the Far East.

Anticipation is part of my joy of travel and I consider map making and bag packing every part as much of the trip as the time away…that is how I have taught myself to manage my wanderlust and still hold down a job.  Here’s some of my options for when I wake up in Beijing on Friday morning.


View Larger Map

Those of you commenting to yourselves about what a geek I am….rambling on about the wonderful aspect of spontaneity lost with all this planning are missing the point.  All the prep serves only as a safety net for when you are too tired to be spontaneous or when your growling stomach interferes with going with the flow with a smile on your face.  Whether or not these points are ever seen is not important but you can bet your ass I will have fun trying.

Categories: 21stCenturySisyphus · Interactive · inspirado · tech · travelogue
Tagged:

Beana Bern the Butter Czar

December 14, 2008 · 1 Comment

By far the best title that has ever been bestowed upon me…last night I was dubbed Butter Czar.  For years I have always said that BUTTER=LOVE or, better yet, that butter is my favorite food group and so it is only fitting that I am now, officially, the Butter Czar.  I’m not sure if this is an international appointment or whether or not my Czarness extends to other lands but, regardless, I’m honored and will do what I can to live up this most delicious title.

Last night’s Cookipalooza was, by all estimates, a smashing success.  4 women, 6 varieties of delicious treats and over 3 pounds of butter!  I think my Linzor beauties raked up 2 of those 3 pounds…hence my new designation.  The baking of cookies during the holidaze can sometimes feel like a chore or a drag but yesterday it was (sorry for the pun) sweet.  It fills the house up with laughter and a whift of cinnamon or chocolate and brings a sense of the kind of cheer that we can all sometimes forget the holidays are supposed to be about.  8 hours of mixing, rolling, freezing, frosting and all the rest was so fruitful and so exhausting that I had nothing leftover to motivate me out of the house today.  Looking back, I wanted to go sledding or snowboarding or even just wandering but, before I realized it, it was dark and I also took a look at the week ahead….before I ramble too far off topic, here’s a link for you to get jealous of our mountain of sweet treats.

The whole was certainly greater than the sum of its parts and we all pitched in to help but that box of powerded lovelies on the right is what was responsible for my awesome Butter Czar distinction.  I don’t want to brag but they are f*ckin delicious…so delcious, in fact, that they are inspiring a new category on 2blogornot2blog….FOOD PORN!  Want an induction into the International Society of Butter Lovers?  Here’s a recipie to get you started:

The Butter Czar’s Linzor Beauties:

What you need…

  • 2 1/2 cups unsifted all-purpose flour
  • 3 counces (1/2 cup) unblanched almonds, finely ground
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 2 1/2 sticks unsalted butter, room temperature….always remember, butter does equal love.  Have the chance to pick up organic, farm fresh butter from a happy cow in the Tyrolean Alps?  Do it.  No worries if not but margarine and soy butter is NOT AN OPTION….the real deal or nothing at all.
  • 2/3 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 cup unsifted powdered sugar
  • 1 cup awesomely special jam or marmalade…this time i used Wild Raspberry Rhubarb but you can do what you feel.  Quality jam makes all the difference here so consider it carefully.

What you need to do…

Dough: In a bowl, blend the flour, almonds and cinnamon with a whisk and set aside. In a larger bowl use an electric mixer and cream the butter until smooth and dream-like, ~ 1 minute. Beat in the sugar at medium speed until fluffy and utterly delicious. Lower mixer speed and gradually add the dry ingredients until thoroughly combined and ready to win you friends and lovers.

Divide the dough in thirds. Roll out each portion of dough between 2 sheets of  parchment paper.  Not too thick….not too thin….but just right. Leaving the dough circles between the sheets of paper, stack them on a baking sheet and pop them in the freezer (or very cold back porch) for an hour or two…or a gluwine or two, depending on which takes longer.

Adjust rack to lower third of oven and preheat oven to 325 F. Line two large cool baking sheets with parchment paper.

Remove one dough package at a time from refrigerator. Peel off top sheet of waxed paper, replace it loosely on top, and flip the entire sheet of dough over.   This step the the super-duper most important kicker to making these cookies work…you’ll know immeadiately if you forgot to do this.  Peel off and discard the second sheet of  paper. Using your favorite cookie cutters, cut the dough to make the “bottom” halves of the cookies.  Using an innovative idea like a pen cap, smaller cookie cutter or knife cut a hole (or a few) into exactly half of all the cookies to make the “tops” of the cookies.  For the ones you see above I found some awesome cutters with top and bottom cutters already made…that’s why they look so lovely.  Space the cookies 1/2 inch apart on a baking sheet and bake for 13 to 15 minutes, or until the cookies are pale golden and feel ready for action. Cool your jets for 5 minutes then move the cooled cookies to a rack to cool some more.  Be smart and keep the “bottoms” on a seperate baking sheet than the “tops” so when the ones with holes bake faster (which, I promise they will) you can take them out and let the others finish.

Repeat with the other two portions of dough.

Lovely-Making: Using a sieve, dust the powdered sugar just over the “tops” of the cookies with holes.

In a small saucepan, boil the marmalade or jam for 2 minutes to evaporate some of its liquid. Cool until warm and spoon about 1/4 teaspoon onto each “bottom” cookie. Center a sugared “top” piece on top of a jellied bottom and gently press so the jelly fills in the holes. Repeat with the remaining cookies.  This is, by far, my favorite step…not counting eating 4-5 with a cup of tea…

Voila!!

They’re delicious though also labor intensive.  The labor, however, is worth it…the butter lets the almonds, powedered sugar and jam melt onto your tounge in a way that is truly dreamy.

Categories: Interactive · deep thoughts · food porn · inspirado · photography

Internet Freeze Tag

April 23, 2008 · 2 Comments

It would appear as though I am “IT”. Whoever says sitting in front of a computer is solitary and unsocial clearly never sat in front of mine. My friend in cyberspace, Emily at WellPutRunOnSentence, has tagged me and I will dutifully (and happily) oblige. The rules seem simple enough:

* link to the person that tagged you
* post the rules on your blog (done and done)
* share six non-important things/habits/quirks about yourself
* tag six random people at the end of your post by linking to their blogs
* let each random person know that they have been tagged by leaving a comment on their blog

As for the six unimportant habits, quirks or things about me….well, I feel like I share this kind of stuff all the time so it’s no so easy to dig up new things but I will try.

  1. I wont “pet your fuzz,” “accept your venus fly trap,” or “poke you back” on facebook but i will, apparently, respond to an internet chain letter if you send me one. I only found this out today.
  2. I swear like a fucking truck driver
  3. I sing to my cats when I feed them breakfast (and other times)
  4. I can spend unusually large amounts of time in front of a computer
  5. I wake up happy
  6. I found it way harder to rattle off 6 random things about myself than I could have possibly imagined

As for the lucky (or not) 6 that can now can now consider themselves “IT,” my fellow friends in blogging, I am going to tag this talented and interesting posse and see what gives:

SarahG. at BrownPaperandString
Joe at TheFullCatastrophe
Sean at spLYNDEd
Robin at InHerOwnWrite
Arianna at UtopianSlumps
Liz at AbstractTheDay

Categories: Interactive · Links · contribution · deep thoughts · webby

You Can Get It If You Really Want It

April 21, 2008 · Leave a Comment

When I was a young girl, I remember spending time at my Grandfather’s house and watching him assemble enormous and complex jigsaw puzzles. Greens over here. Edge pieces over there. It was a highly organized system where the end result was, 9 times out 10, an image of an Alpen village with green meadows, snowy peaks and the occasional waterfall or mountain stream. These grand scenes punctuated my childhood so I had to giggle yesterday when, on my way to Ischgl, I drove around a corner and found myself inside one of these pictures from the ‘old days.’ The winding roads up to the village reminded me of the curves and corners on those 10,000 tiny pieces only in this instance, they were already lovingly connected and assembled into the quaint and dreamy landscape of the Austrian Alps.

I was headed to a mountaintop concert where Jimmy Cliff and his band were scheduled to sing in the sky. I packed and dressed for this gig as I would any other and that, I suppose, is where things got funny. The weather in Innsbruck was warm and sunny and I imagined that the same would be true an hour to my West. Fortunately, I was right about the weather but WAY WRONG about a couple other things. Upon arriving in Ischgl, I schlepd my 40 or so pounds of camera gear up to the Kassa to pick up my Photo Pass and lift ticket thinking that the gondola would drop me off at the ‘concert site’ and things would be predictable from there.

Turns out I needed to walk a kilometer or so to another office to snag the pass and then I was set to go. That kilometer was pretty much straight up hill so, before the show even began, I was feeling the weight of my gear in my back and legs. Once the ticket was in hand (thank you Dominik!) I headed to the gondola where I learned that I would be taking this gondola up to a chair lift further up to HEAVEN when I would then take another chairlift down into Switzerland to shoot the show. In retrospect, it is perfectly sensible to think that chairlifts and lots and lots of snowy sliding and climbing would be involved with this shoot but I must not have been thinking about that when I donned some capri pants and my low-top Chuck Taylors. Yeah, thats right. I walked into Switzerland through the Alps in my f-ing sneakers and 40 pounds of camera!! My heavily-geared pals on the chairlifts (donned in parkas, helmets, long underware, ski boots, et al) got a BIG KICK out of my stupidity and cute outfit and a few of them popped by the concert to see if I made it there without freezing…which I did, of course.

Epic is not a big enough word to describe what life looks like from the top of Ischgl. Standing at the top of a mountain where Austria and Switzerland meet and looking around is one of the most imspiring and humbling experiences ever. Words and pictures cannot capture the taste of the air up there, the sounds of the crisp and plentiful snow, the wind blowing through the mountain tops. Coming down into Switzerland on the lift I could finally spy the ‘venue’ and after a very long hike up from the chair lift I was ready to go. All this hiking and sliding and chair-lifting saw me arrive at the stage with only 12 minutes to showtime. Considering how unappropriately I dressed for the show, I was perfectly prepared in all the other ways so I guess it’s a wash.

The ‘pit’ was actullay a snowy ledge about 1 1/2 foot wide and below it was a slippery slope and limitless potential for an embarassing (and potentially) expensive fall. My choice of shoes worried me when I saw this but ended up not being a problem. Like anywhere, I had 3 songs to shoot from this death-defying perch and I made the most of it. Mr. Cliff strutted onto stage wearing a New York jacket and the smile that was periodic on my face up to that point became permanent. The sound was great, the view was truly unbelievable and the whole experience was really fulfilling. Here are some of my favorite shots from the show, though if you are inclined, you can click here to see the whole set including more photos from the TOP.

I wandered down into the crowd of about 15,000 – 20,000 ski-boot-dancing, snowboard-leaning, beer drinking, sun bathers and enjoyed the show. Watching everybody dance in thier ski boots or cruise down the arena jamming to The Harder They Come was surreal. “Dr. Jimmy Cliff” as he was dubbed by his band is so energetic and so good that I, too, put down the gear and boogied. If I could have had my friends and peeps with me on that mountain top, well, that would have been the only thing I needed to make it a perfect day.

After slip-sliding through, and standing on, snow for 4 hours in sneakers I decided that it was best to skip the press conference and ensure that I made it out of the Alps with all my toes in tact. I enjoyed the tail-end of the show from the back of the crowd and as as I was hopping on the chair lift back to Austria, Jimmy Cliff began singing Many Rivers to Cross. Just imagine, Beana on a ski lift washed in sun, high in the Alps, seemingly riding to heaven with, none other than, Jimmy Cliff singing that song. Truly one of those unforgettable moments when a concert becomes a life-affirming adventure

All the pieces came together to create something wonderful and unforgettable. The drive back to Wattens felt like that satisfied moment where, after achieving the assembly of the puzzle and the admiring of the finished picture, you take it apart and put the pieces back in the box only to save the memory and satisfaction of the experience. Fortunately for all of us, some pictures of this adventure remain.

If you want to virtually taste the mountain air, click here for a short ride in the mountains.

.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.

See the Music – Volume 9 is up on Runaway Dinosaur if you liked this story so much you want to read it again!

Categories: Interactive · deep thoughts · event · inspirado · mp3s · music · photography · review · song4you · travelogue · video · written word

Irony, Poetry and Outakes

December 28, 2007 · Leave a Comment

It seems a little redundant to talk about StreetArt and Venice seeing as though the streets of Venice ARE art but, as is my habit, I sought out some of the more interesting works of grafetti while I wandered around. Here are my favorite shots of all the found_art genre, but you can see the rest of the album right here.

“X Marks the Man”

“A Real Life Saver…Or?”

“Stop Deportation”

There is something poetic about spray paint on century-old cobblestones.

In addition to the new StreetArt – Venice album, I also decided to try something new and post the photos that I usually “throw away” as outakes. I always take more photos than I share and usually just choose my favorites to post. For this go around I thought it would be interesting to share those out takes as well. If you think any of these should have a spot in the “official” Venice album, let me know. I’m not always objective about my work.

If you find a photo in this set that you think warrants a place in my official Venice album, leave a comment for me here and tell me which one or paste in the flickr link.  Yup, that’s right, i’m asking for your input.  Behold the new category “Interactive”on 2bean’s Careful Days.

Categories: Interactive · photography · street art · travelogue