Saturday, March 5, 2011

do what you love, love what you do


“Take George Lucas, or Spielberg: They’re doing, in my mind, what they truly love. But what they truly love, zillions of people love, so they’re multimillionaires. I’m doing what I truly love, but the audience is way smaller. And Don Van Vliet was doing what he truly loved and the audience is hardly there at all. But it’s OK, because if you do anything that you don’t love for money or fame, you die. You can’t live doing that. It’s hollow. It’s a joke. So be thankful you’re able to do what you love.”

— David Lynch


Tuesday, December 7, 2010

2 ways to keep warm


top by ashley, bottom by charlie

Monday, November 8, 2010

friends on friends

After the corn maze.


After the hump the sky.

Friday, November 5, 2010

chicken!

This is a chicken I bought from Jeffrey at the market. He grew the grain that the chicken ate and fed it surplus tomatoes and zucchini and said "The chicken had a great life and one bad day." I cooked it with garlic, lemon, potatoes and carrots. Mighty tasty.

Here is Vanessa rescuing the rest of the chicken to be used for another meal. She is a vegetarian but hates to waste so she went to town carving and finding every last morsel.

Here is the chicken pot pie made on day 2. The best pot pie I've ever had.

Another shot of the pot pie.

Here is a secret delight I found on my chair one day.

And the recipe that was the inspiration for the first cooking of the chicken.

By removing the back and thigh bones, which is a lot easier than it sounds, you cut your cooking time in half. Also, this is a flexible recipe — you can vary the herbs and substitute any hearty vegetable for the potatoes.

SERVES: 4
TIME: 1 hour

  • 1 3 to 4 pound chicken, washed and dried
  • 1 lemon, cut in half
  • 6 garlic cloves, peeled
  • a few sprigs each fresh rosemary, sage and thyme
  • coarse salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • about 1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 1/2 dozen fingerling potatoes (or any small potato), peeled

Preheat the oven to 450ºF (on convection if possible).

Using a pair of sharp kitchen shears, remove and discard the backbone of the chicken (or save it for making stock). With a sharp pairing knife, remove the thigh bones — simply follow the bone and let your knife do the work for you. You can also ask your butcher to do this.

Lay the chicken, breast side up, in a roasting tray and press down with your hands so that it flattens. Squeeze over the lemon, getting the juice on and around the entire chicken, and throw the lemon halves into the tray. Toss in the garlic cloves, being sure to tuck a few underneath the bird along with the fresh herbs. Liberally salt and pepper the chicken and drizzle over enough olive oil to coat — about 3 tablespoons.

Meanwhile bring a saucepan of water to a boil and season with a few pinches of salt. Boil the potatoes for 8 minutes. Drain the potatoes, put them back in the pot with the lid on and shake vigorously to ‘fluff’ their exteriors. Put the potatoes in the tray with the chicken and drizzle with olive oil to coat (about another 3 tablespoons) and sprinkle with salt and pepper.

Cover the tray with tinfoil, roast for 20 minutes, remove the tinfoil and baste with the juices that have collected on the bottom. Roast for an additional 20 minutes, uncovered, or until a thermometer inserted into the thigh registers at least 165ºF and the skin is browned.