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‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات market. إظهار كافة الرسائل
‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات market. إظهار كافة الرسائل

A Foggy Day in San Francisco

San Francisco has only one drawback - ’tis hard to leave. 
Rudyard Kipling 


A stroll around the old French Quarter of New Orleans, the weather as hot and steamy as the city’s reputation; dinner and theater, of course, in vibrant New York, a sidle up to an ice cream truck to appease our sweet tooth, vanilla for her, chocolate for me; and now a morning under the fog at the Ferry Building Farmer’s Market and lunch in San Francisco. Dianne Jacob and I have made it a rule and a tradition to spend time together whenever we are lucky enough to find ourselves at the same conference. I flew to her city, San Francisco and together we wended our way over to and through the market, snapping photos and ogling the great foods and products, chatting away the morning.

Bundles of vibrant vegetables, bins of colorful spuds, baskets of tantalizing, intriguing greens, fragrant citrus and grapefruit so sweet a bite excited no pucker, no grimace, no spurt of tartness. Cheeses nutty, earthy, salty or mild, hunks and wheels jumbled together on card tables, slices picked off the sharp edge of a knife for the tasting; these and more carried us through the market, up and down the crowded aisles.








The pewter sky threatened rain yet remained clear, settling into a steely mood, anything but dismal. The fog hung low over the mountain, swallowing up the distant edges of the bridge creating an eerie, magical black and white vision. Tables spattered with shimmering raindrops, buckets filled with brilliant tulips, irises and peonies, snap snap snap experience the market through the lens of a camera.

(photo courtesy of Dianne Jacob)


What fascination at a market! I find myself three or four mornings a week at our own local market – never ever considered a “farmer’s” market. What else would it be? We purchase our vegetables, local, seasonal, fresh, much with the dirt still clinging to leaves and roots, fragrant bread fresh from the oven, cheeses heady with the farm. Our meats, chicken and fish come from the market, carried home in a fabric carryall or basket, nestled in between the choucroute, Indian dal, tiny ratte fingerling potatoes from neighboring Noirmoutier and bottles of wine from Nantes’ muscadet vineyards. So a market should be ho hum daily fare to me, shouldn’t it? A market should hold no secrets, no fascination for me. But this one does. I see colors and kinds of vegetables I have never known to exist? I see baskets filled with rare fist-sized morel mushrooms, a sight to behold, eliciting a squeal. I see eager, hungry people waiting in line for typically American food that I sorely miss when in France. And I turn and look out over San Francisco Bay, the water glistening under soft gray skies, a gossamer haze of fog still and silent, suspended in midair. There is something enchanting, something that inspires childlike wonder even in this jaded soul.







Lunch is always the most difficult choice for two who can’t ever seem to decide. Paper plates on knees, Asian flavors, the newly emerged sun warming our faces as we collect our belongings around us on this wooden bench overlooking the bay, pigeons clacking and fluttering around our feet.

A tight hug and away. Until next time.


Leaving San Francisco is like saying goodbye to an old sweetheart. 
You want to linger as long as possible. 
- Walter Cronkite

VISUAL FEAST III

MUSICAL INTERLUDE


Music for the eyes, my saunter through my market, a swing through the grocery store and tumbles of cauliflower, watery green enveloping creamy white; heaps of citrus in silken orange, neon bright, the shimmer of overhead lights leaving a smear of shine; knobbly spuds and gnarly tubers in violet fading to black or a rainbow of warm chocolate browns; the harsh pinks of rabbit flesh, arms stretched out in supplication, empty eyes staring into nothingness, the shock of Eraserhead images lying placidly, violently in the butcher’s case. I capture my visual feast, a winter’s palate of earthy, rooty things, sordid beauty broken by the pale charm of buckets of roses, sweet and a hint of romance. A week of replacing words with images, visual moments, illustrations of my city, my life, filtered, sharpened to a pointed observation or muted to a fuzzy, romantic recollection. Taste with your eyes, your imagination.

Head down, working, so many projects, so little time, I decided to share some of my visual thoughts, the expressions of my day, a walk through my culinary world, a brief interlude. We shop often and as I trail behind the man pushing the cart or carrying the basket, I slow down and ogle the voluptuous charm, the allure of both the lovely and the ugly. I hold up my iphone and frame these objects of desire, sweet and savory delights. I let him worry about the recipe, envision a dish from the season’s best and brightest. I surround myself with art, the banal becomes dazzling, the lumpy, elegant, the edible, visual.





And I share just two announcements:

On Thursday 24 January at 11:30 a.m. EST (that’s 17:30 here on the European mainland, 8:30 a.m. Pacific Time US) I am hosting a Google+ Hangout. Google+ Guru Chef Dennis Littley has organized a time and a virtual space where I, along with my friend & co-instructor Meeta, will be presenting and talking about our From Plate to Page food writing, styling & photography workshops. Joining us will be two former Plate to Page alumni Robin (P2P Tuscany) and Simone (P2P Weimar) who will give a participant’s viewpoint. There will be plenty of time to ask questions about the workshop as well as food writing and photography.

I am extremely proud and excited to share the news that friend and food photographer Ilva Beretta and I will be leading an Experts Are In session at the IACP 2013 conference held in San Francisco in April. Strategies For Expats will be a discussion on the particular and unique position we who are living and working in a country other than our homeland and readership base find ourselves in, the challenges we face as freelancers straddling two cultures, two countries and how we can make it work.

Et bon appétit!

 Sweet and saucy!

Papy Lapin... and beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

A loaf of bread, a bottle of wine and...

The heady aroma...

 What?

Deux cafés, s'il vous plaît!

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