Week in Review – July 31, 2016

I arrived in New York on Monday afternoon to a heavy thunderstorm.  Circled La Guardia for a couple of hours before landing and then took over an hour to drive to the hotel due to the weather.  The travel woes were quickly forgotten as I headed to the Village Vanguard jazz club for an evening with the Village Vanguard jazz orchestra.  This is a 16 piece all star ensemble that plays most Monday nights.  The celebrated their 50 year anniversary in February.

I sat next to a middle school music teacher from Chicago who plays drums in a local big band.  He was a great source of comments on the drumming and the band in general and has several students who have gone on to have professional music careers.  What a thoroughly enjoyable evening.

It was intervanguard orchesting to see the Village Vanguard in a documentary called “Becoming Mike Nichols” that I watched between catch up naps on Saturday – apparently he and Elaine May performed there in their early days as an improv duo.  The documentary was about Nichols work up to and including “The Graduate” which was his first movie at age 36.  It was also Dustin Hoffman’s first movie – Nichols had seen him perform at an off-Broadway production.

IMG_1537Tuesday and Wednesday were long work days at 180 Maiden Lane in the Wall St area.  80 folks locked up in an auditorium with rotating speakers, panels, and group discussions.

Wednesday night was another excellent music adventure.  I took the subway up to the Times Square area and saw Joe Ely performing at B.B. King’s club.  This club is set up like a supper club with good food, drinks, and great seating/views.  I remember seeing Joe Ely for the first time at an outdoor amphitheater in San Antonio over 20 years ago – Ian Moore was the guitarist in his band.  He is a great singer/songwriter, originally from Lubbock, TX.  His stories and songs were very enjoyable – particularly in the solo acoustic setting.  Here’s a movie I made from a few clips I took during the evening.  My favorite song of the evening was “Live Forever” by Billy Joe Shaver.  I didn’t get a video of that one but it did remind me of the Bugs Henderson song, “I wish I could write like Billy Joe”; a tribute to his stellar songwriting skills.

Here’s some Bugs Henderson – I really miss seeing him live since he passed a few years ago.  A trademark Bugs solo starts at 2:48.

Thursday was another work day in New York and then travel back that evening – another weather delayed flight that got me back home pretty late.

Friday night was pizza and wine night with the Wahba’s at their home – trying to distract Patty from her bad news.

On Saturcatfish with ponzu sauceday I made my first Blue Apron meal in a while.  Catfish with ponzu and red pepper sauce, ginger toasted peanuts, garlic infused rice, and sesame seed zucchini.

 

 

 

 

I finishjust mercyed the book “Just Mercy” by Bryan Stevenson this week.  This is a mind blowing account of the racial injustices of the judicial system in the South (particularly Alabama) told through stories of many cases that the author, a Harvard lawyer who has never really earned much of a living, has worked on over the last 20 years.  The progress that Stevenson has driven almost single handedly over the years with many Supreme Court hearings is phenomenal.

 

 

Week in Review – July 3, 2016

I spent most of Monday in the air to Tokyo (13 hours).  The flight was smooth, I watched a couple of movies and slept for about 6 hours.  The first movie was “Eddie the Eagle” – a bit silly but I really enjoyed it.  There’s a scene where his Dad asks not to be interrupted as he watches “It’s a Knockout”.  This was a real trip down memory lane for me as I remember well watching that show and making a family trip to watch it live in Greenock (I think it was Greenock anyway).  I laughed at Eddie’s comment that he was “a bit queasy” going down the 70m jump right before he attempted the 90m.  This also reminded me of a family vacation in Austria where we visited the Innsbruck Olympic ski jump – I remember being shocked at the length and height.  One of my colleagues in Japan is from England and we had a good time reliving the Eddie Olympics over dinner.

Lunch on the flight was duck with a curry sauce which was surprisingly good for an airline meal – I knew I was taking a bit of a risk with duck which can be very dry in the best of places.  My afternoon movie was “London has Fallen” – an action drama about a terrorist attack when world leaders attend the funeral of the Prime Minister in London.  Gerard Butler does his best James Bond act.  A good airline movie but not as entertaining as Eddie the Eagle.

I read a good article in the New York Times on the plane about the actor Paul Giamatti (one of my favourites).  His Dad was the Major League Baseball commissioner when he was growing up – which I did not know.  Apparently Paul didn’t care for baseball growing up and still doesn’t really have much interest.

Tokyo arrival time was 2pm on Tuesday afternoon.  Customs was quick and easy and I managed to get a nice afternoon swim in the hotel pool.  I stayed at the Andaz which occupied the top 5 floors of the Toranomon Hills tower (a pretty swanky building in a nice part of Tokyo). The views from the pool/health club and the restaurant were great.  The building that looks like the Eiffel tower is an old cell phone antenna tower.

tokyo room view tokyo eiffell tower

Wednesday was a very busy day of back to back meetings and I sampled a LOT of excellent Japanese food.  First was a massive bento lunch box with delicious selections of sushi and sashimi.

Sushi

Dinner was a ridiculously good feast at a French style restaurant.  We sat at a bar that was essentially a large hibachi grill and ordered the chef’s choice menu.   This consisted of an amazing array of beautifully prepared and presented dishes.  My favourites included the langoustine, foie gras stuffed burger, and the pistachio mousse desert.  The mousse reminded me of the dessert at Lilette in New Orleans that Anne reshaped after taking a bite when I went to the restroom – also a pistachio mousse.  The care that the Japanese chef put into the sauces and presentation was very impressive – all the more so as we were sitting watching everything he did.

serving sauce pots punkin pist mousse lango foie gras burger first course beef app

On Thursday night a group of us had a traditional Japanese dinner – the kind where you take off your shoes and sit on the floor in your own partitioned room.  Again lots of courses but nothing to compare to the excellent Wednesday night feast.

Thursday was also our friend Pride’s (175 lb Great Dane) birthday.  Here he is being tortured in his 3 year old (legal drinking age for a dog) hat and tie.

Pride

I woke early on Friday, had a short workout and a nice feast from the hugely varied breakfast buffet before heading to the airport for the 11 hour flight back to Dallas.  I thought about attending the Porsche meeting that I saw at the hotel.  There was a tempting option as I got to the gate for the Dallas flight – right next door was a flight to Paris.  The flight was a smooth 11 hours, arrived early and customs and the drive home were quick and painless.

porsche meetingchoices

Diana did a great job of making sure I didn’t nap too long on Friday afternoon and keeping me up until normal bedtime.  This meant I didn’t really have too much jet lag over the weekend.  On Friday night we watched the Olympic trials with a huge highlight being the Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte 200m medley race.  It lived up to all the hype with a fantastic race and Phelps just edging Lochte.

phelps butterfuly

There wasn’t much time for music this week.  Some great saxophone jazz at the Andaz bar on Thursday night was about it.  I did find that there’s a Blue Note jazz club in Tokyo that had some big names – will have to check it out if i ever make it back.

Alicia did have another “gig” on Saturday morning at the downtown McKinney farmers’ market.    She did an excellent combination of flute pieces and guitar/singing and did very well with tips this time.

We watched the movie “Broadcast News” from 1987 on Saturday night.  I’d forgotten how good it was.  Holly Hunter, Aaron Brooks, and William Hurt are all excellent and look so young.

I finished “Shame” by Salman Rushdie this week.  It was a very strange novel set in a country that is “not quite Pakistan”.  I had read good reviews of the book but thought it was really just a bunch of nonsense with an interesting setting.  I think the New York Times got it right with their review stating that –  “It is probably easier to play croquet (as in ”Alice in Wonderland”) with flamingos as mallets and hedgehogs as balls than to give a coherent plot summary of ”Shame.”

Sunday was a relaxing day – a workout followed by coffee and crosswords and some time out by the pool (getting some sun so that I won’t burn in Cozumel).

Week in Review – June 26, 2016

On Wednesday we met Gary Rader, an old EDS friend from Philadelphia, at Jasper’s for dinner.  Going to Jasper’s reminded me of the many dinners there with EDS colleagues and clients.

Finn arrived on Thursday for the weekend.  I cooked Seared Steak and Spiced Potato with sauteed sugar snap peas and tarragon-labneh sauce.  This was probably the first meal that I’d actually fully prepared for Finn beyond an omelet for breakfast.  After dinner, Finn coached Alicia on pool playing so that she can impress a boy that she likes.

On Friday we went bowling and then to the movies.  I won the first game and then Diana came on strongly with a strike in the last frame to win the second game.  We’ll need to go again for a deciding match.  Diana and I saw “The Free State of Jones” and Finn and Alicia saw “Independence Day 2”.  Our movie was set during the civil war and was a pretty depressing reminder of the terrible way that people have been treated during American history.

We went to Rye in downtown McKinney for dinner.  Diana and I split a grouper entree which came with a story about Diana feeding grouper in the Great Barrier Reef many years ago.  The story was accompanied by visual descriptions of the dimensions of the grouper and the faces they make when feeding.

franc logo franc speech brew tanks

On Saturday morning Finn and I took a tour of the Franconia brewery.  This was an excellent tour with great samples and a very entertaining speaker.  The owner and brew master’s great grandfather started a brewery in the Franconia region of Bavaria in the 1800s.  He worked at many of the German breweries before moving to the DFW area 13 years ago.  He noticed an untapped niche for locally brewed beer and founded Franconia which is doing very well.  His great grandfather is at the top of the logo on the packaging.  The presentation was engaging and funny.  I definitely recommend the tour.

Hutchins bbqAfter beer we had lunch at Hutchin’s barbecue joint.  Their smoked barbecue meats are excellent.  Finn had a rib and brisket combo lunch and I had my usual pulled pork sandwich.  We added a couple of treats – Texas twinkies.  These are large jalapeno peppers stuffed with cream cheese and brisket and wrapped in bacon.  I saved some for Diana who also thought it was delicious.

finn bbq twinkieFor Saturday dinner we had planned to go to “Twenty Seven” restaurant in Deep Ellum but were very sad to find out that it had permanently closed.  This was one of our favorites in Deep Ellum that served delicious and eclectic small plates that allowed you to sample several things.  The chef, known as Chef DAT, is going back to doing the pop-up and underground dinners that he was well known for before opening this place.

I made another Blue Apron dinner instead  – Spicy Hoisin Turkey Meatballs with sauteed zucchini and brown rice.

While we were doing our brewery tour, Alicia was playing her first official “gig” at Chestnut Square in downtown McKinney during the farmers’ market.  She played for tips for 2 hours – singing with her guitar and performing solo flute pieces.  Her fingers really hurt afterwards but she did well enough to be asked to perform once a month.  She had a very professional set up with microphones and a good sound system.

A flute A guitarI’m off to finish getting prepared for my trip to Japan tomorrow morning.  Then I’m cooking Crispy Catfish and Parsley Mashed Potatoes for dinner.  Looking forward to sharing news of my Japanese adventures next week.

Week in Review – June 19, 2016

On Wednesday night we met Denny for a drink at Pepper Smash and then dinner at Mexican Sugar in Legacy Town Center.  Denny and Diana had the crab enchiladas and I had fish tacos – both were delicious.  Denny drove to College Station on Thursday for a weekend of soccer championship games with Jack and Mason.  It was very nice to get to see Denny twice during his visit to Plano.

On Saturday we went to see the movie “Genius” which is about the relationship between Thomas Wolfe (played by Jude Law) and his editor, Maxwell Perkins (played by Colin Firth).  Perkins had previously edited books by Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald.  Thomas Wolfe is a Southern writer but not related in any way to Tom Wolfe of “Bonfire of the Vanities” fame.  The movie didn’t get great reviews but we both enjoyed it.

fathers dayCowboys apron and hat

bbq tongsSunday was Father’s day.  Here I am with my loot – Cowboys grilling tools, apron and chef’s hat from Will; Miles Davis art from Campbell, Finn, and Melanie; and a lovely selection of cards.

We tried a relatively new restaurant called Sugar Bacon in downtown McKinney for brunch.  The restaurant was very nice with jazz music playing but the food was disappointing – pulled pork eggs benedict had hard yokes and very little hollandaise sauce.   Apparently they have some new cooks without appropriate supervision.

Peruvian Chicken Ground Beef Arenpas

Blue Apron meals this week were Peruvian Roast Chicken and Potatoes with greeCod sandwichn beans and creamy jalapeno sauce (my favorite of the three – the chicken spice rub was delicious); Beef Arepas with pickled onion, avocado and radishes (arepas are flat, round cornbreads); and Maryland-style Cod Cake sandwiches with tartar sauce and red cabbage slaw.

I read about the trial claiming that Led Zeppelin plagiarized the song “Taurus” by Spirit for the introduction to “Stairway to Heaven”.  The arguments are interesting and Robert Plant and Jimmy Page ended up winning but if you listen to the Spirit song you can certainly see the basis for the suit – particularly since Spirit was the opening act for Zeppelin on a number of shows.  It does seem that there should be some kind of statue of limitations on these kind of cases – doesn’t seem right to bring this up over 40 years after the fact.

I came across a great cover of my favorite Led Zeppelin song, “Going to California”, while I was reading about the trial.  It’s done by a group called Pressed Strings, a trio from Maryland.

 

Week in Review – June 12, 2016

The highlight this week was a visit to Greenville Avenue for dinner and a concert on Thursday night.

wayward

We tried a new restaurant, Wayward Sons, which just opened across from the Granada theater.  Diana had a lamb brisket and I had English pea falafels.  Both were delicious.

brisket pea falafel

granadaThe concert at the Granada was by the Ian Moore band.  He’s a singer and blues guitar player who rose to fame in the early 90s in Austin.  My favorite song of his is “Blue Sky” and there’s a link to listen to it below.  When we arrived we had a surprise treat of Jason Elmore as an opening act.  He’s a local blues guitarist that we typically see in small restaurants or bars and it was nice to see him on the big stage.  The sound for Jason was great but Ian’s vocals were way too loud and distorted when he sang loudly – this was disappointing since he has such a great voice.

 

Jason Elmore (opening act)
Jason Elmore (opening act)

 

Ian Moore band
Ian Moore band

 

 

 

 

 

 

blue goose

We spent the night at the Magnolia hotel – it was great to wait 3 minutes for a $5 uber from the Granada to the hotel.  For lunch on Friday I had one of my favorites – sour cream chicken enchiladas from the original Blue Goose on Greenville.

 

We decided to attempt the jigsaw puzzle that Denny and Anne gave me for my birthday.  It’s a painting by the New Orleans artist Frenchy and the pieces are all interesting shapes and characters – a fleur de lis, a guitar, a saxophonist.  The shapes and colors made this the most challenging puzzle we’ve ever attempted.  None of the outside edges seemed to fit together normally at all – first puzzle worked from the center outwards.  I think Diana spent at least 12 hours on this one in many sittings.

D puzzleDenny came to visit on Sunday afternoon and spent the night with us – he has work in Plano next week.  He helped finish up the puzzle with Alicia.  I think they did about 20 of the 463 pieces but you would have thought they were the puzzle completing saviors to hear Denny.

 

D puzzle 2 denny with puzzle

The finished product
The finished product
salmon
Steakhouse Salmon

Blue Apron meals this week were: Steakhouse Salmon with thyme-sautéed potatoes, green beans and mushrooms; Spicy miso-glazed chicken wings with purple rice and zucchini salad; and Seared pork chops and fig compote with sautéed kale and faro salad.  Denny joined us for the pork and was impressed that I could cook a decent meal.  My favorite was the miso chicken wings and I liked the fig compote for the pork a lot as well.

 

Miso-glazed chicken wings
Miso-glazed chicken wings
Seared Pork Chops
Seared Pork Chops

 

 

 

 

 

 

We streamed two interesting movies this week.  “Wordplay” is about the New York Times crossword puzzle tournament.  It’s a great documentary about puzzle creators and master solvers.

“Bayou Maharajah” is a documentary about James Booker, a crazy and flamboyant New Orleans piano player with amazing technique combining jazz, classical, and blues.  I enjoyed watching this one with Denny who appreciated all the New Orleans characters and their commentary.

Discover Weekly on Spotify led me to Mary Gauthier and her amazing song, “Mercy Now”.  There’s an excellent cover of this by Mike Farris also.  Searching for some information about Mary led me to an excellent music blog, “The Immortal Jukebox”, which provided great background on her interesting life and has many other amazing articles.

Ordinary (Extraordinary) Stories

 

I finished “All the Light We Cannot See” by Anthony Doerr this week and absolutely loved it.  I’ll right a separate posting with more thoughts.  I’d been savoring the book slowly but couldn’t put it down over the last 150 pages as all the threads that had been building came together.  I’m almost finished with Bob Benmosche’s (AIG CEO who died last year) biography and look forward to writing a post about what I learned from the book.

 

Week in Review – June 5, 2016

This was a much quieter week than the last two.  On Monday, Diana took Kris and Cat to the airport for their flight back to San Jose with a stop at Pappadeaux en route for oyster fest.

Early Tuesday morning I headed to Houston for a couple of days – managed to avoid the majority of the heavy rain and flooding.  That night I went to my favorite music restaurant, Sambuca.  The music was disappointing – a weak cover band doing Beatles songs and the like – way too heavy on the bass and nothing much to keep my attention.  Thankfully, the chilli rubbed scallops on risotto coins was as good as ever. I read some of my book and tried to ignore the music as much as possible.

I made a couple of Blue Apron meals – Spiced Lamb and Beef Tagine with Lemon-Garlic Couscous and Labneh, and Chicken Picatta with Fusilli Pasta and Garlic Chives.  Labneh is a kind of yogurt that went really well with the lamb.  This was our favorite week so far of these meals – both had great flavor.

Lamb chick picatta

I signed up for the wine pairings from Blue Apron and those have been very nice.  They send you small bottles that are just right for 2 people and pair with each of the meals for the month.

On Wednesday night, the Golden State Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers very handily.  On Sunday they completely destroyed them – made the Lebron James squad look like a college team.  The performance from the Warriors bench players in both games has been amazing with different players stepping up in each game.  I looked into tickets for game 5 in Oakland – but decided to pass on $700 a seat for the nose bleed area.

We watched the movie, “A Walk in the Woods” – Robert Redford plays Bill Bryson, the travel writer who wrote the book about his months on the Appalachian trail.  I really enjoyed the book and the movie gets a solid B- as reasonably mindless entertainment.  Nick Nolte as Bryson’s traveling companion was entertaining but completely divergent from the book.

New music this week was from Marc Broussard.  He’s playing at the Granada theater on Greenville Avenue later in the year and I wanted to check out some of his music to see if it was a good pick to attend.  I saw him briefly at One Eyed Jack’s in New Orleans a few years ago but we were late and didn’t get too much to judge from.  I liked his music a lot and bought tickets.  Here’s one of my favorites, “I’ll Never Know”.  His phrasing is very similar to Chris Stapleton on several songs.

We have the Ian Moore concert at the Granada next week and I’ve been revisiting some of my favorites from him.  Really looking forward to the show.  Ian sings like an angel and is a fantastic blues guitarist.

 

 

Week in Review – May 29, 2016

Another year older!  Started the day with a delicious “D” omelet served in bed.  Then proved my brain hadn’t completed deteriorated by completing the New York Times crossword in record-tying time – 9 minutes (but it was a Monday, the easiest puzzle).NYT b-day 9 mins

Apparently Google knows it’s my birthday – see the screen I got when logging in to check the definition of a word in my book.

The heavens opened around 8am with a “bouncing” thunderstorm and it seems we can expect more of the same most days this week.

 

google b-day Rain b-day

taco bell

Diana brought me my favorite comfort food for lunch – the Crunchwrap supreme combo from Taco Bell.  It’s probably been a year or more since I had one and I still love them just as much.

I’ve been playing Sonny Rollins “The Bridge” album while working in my home office today.  It’s sounding great – “God Bless the Child” is a real highlight.

 

D assembling

I wandered through to the living room after lunch and came across an unlikely sight.  Diana was assembling a new end table for my end of the sofa – needs to be a bit skinnier to accommodate the new wine fridge unit that was installed a couple of weeks ago.  I got in trouble for this “unauthorized” picture and was told I should be glad it’s my birthday.

I read this article in the New York Times that I thought was spot on about the need for some arts education in technical fields.  Talks about how liberal arts and music majors make some of the most elegant coders.

Might attribute it to the additional year on my age, but I was doing some minor organizing in my home office today and came across this New York Times article that I had saved from the end of 2015 that made a few great points.  You can read the full article at the link above but here are a few or my favorite paragraphs:

“Literary fiction lives.  You see a lot of Fox news-generated trash and formula fiction on the best-seller lists.  American reading tastes have gone the way of the American diet.  Yes, but.  This year, “All the Light We Cannot See,” Anthony Doerr’s magical, World War II-era story of a blind French girl and a Hitler youth nerd continues to sell like tickets to “Hamilton”.  The prose is luminous, the characters unforgettable, the themes universal.”

“Trump and Putin find each other.  The bromance between two of the most odios, bullying, narcissistic tyrants has been building for some time.  Now, they have professed their mutual affection for each other….Trump sneers at women, the disabled, blacks, Mexicans, Muslims, veterans and anyone who is unattractive.  “He is a really brilliant and talented person”, said Putin.  The vulgarian and the war criminal, together at last.”

I had an amazing surprise birthday dinner – I was banned from the kitchen for a couple of hours – not even allowed to glance in the general direction.  Diana manufactured some meat pies (like the New Orleans ones that I love) with her famous mushroom medley.

K and Meat Pies

Desert was a grape pavlova from my Mum’s recipe – the one that was used to disguise the mailing of the 50th birthday pictures to Diana.  D was very proud of her first ever pavlova – it did turn out really nicely.  And there’s lots of leftovers to enjoy all week.

Pavlova pavlova slice K and Pavlova

The present opening took place after dinner.  Here I am with several of my gifts.  A HUGE martini glass full of Maltesers from Alicia, a Steve Earle album from Melanie, and an Eric Clapton album from Campbell.Steve Earle big martini Clapton

Diana said the imported Maltesers to fill up the martini glass were more expensive than the glass.  We’re taking bets on how long until the glass is ready for an “auto-refill”.

I think I’m as difficult for my Mum and Dad to buy gifts for as they are for me.  They did a great job with a really modern and sleek looking candle set.  The snuffer is my favorite part of the design.

Candle

Diana’s gift was a Go-Pro camera and lots of special accessories to use on our scuba diving trip to Cozumel in July.  One of the accessories is a head-strap so that the camera sees what you see.  Going to have fun using that one around the house and during the Sweet Sixteen party on Saturday.

Giants

When Finn and I spent the day in San Francisco, we visited the Giants stadium gift shop.  I was telling him about the Jerry Garcia night at the Giants game and the special t-shirts they make.  Finn surprised me with one as a gift.

Before dinner we watched the finale of “The Voice” singing competition.  My pick for the winner was Adam Wakefield.  Here he is singing Vince Gill’s “When I Call Your Name”.

catfish

On Wednesday I made Crispy Catfish with Yuzu-Kosho Udon and Snow Peas.  Yuzu-Kosho is a traditional Japanese condiment made from the zest of Yuzu (an East Asian sour fruit), chile peppers and salt.  The Udon noodles and ponzu sauce were great.

On Thursday Adamo (Diana’s youngest brother) and Diana’s Mum (Clorinda) arrived in the evening.  We were busy with preparations including moving a bed downstairs into Diana’s office and this entertaining hot tub repair – a seal had to be replaced so that the hot tub didn’t drain in the evenings when the pool pump is off.

Pool repair

The big sixteenth birthday on Friday started out with Alicia’s driving test in a city an hour away called Bonham – apparently the only place that she could get an appointment on her actual birthday.  It was raining heavily and the hour drive to the test office was quite trying for Diana and Alicia.  In the end it was worth it.  Here’s Alicia with her temporary license after passing her test.

 

A license

After that excitement, Adamo and I picked up Kris and Cat (Alicia’s godparents) from the airport.  On Friday evening, the group plus 3 of Alicia’s best friends had a special birthday dinner at Gregory’s Bistro in Adriatica (a development styled after a Croatian village in walking distance of our home).  Gregory’s recently moved to this location and we’re very happy to have them so close.  Everyone loved their meals and Lydia and Gregory were very gracious hosts.

Here I am with Penelope and Clorinda arriving for dinner.

P and clorinda

Here’s a series of pictures taken in Adriatica before dinner.  Three generations, Alicia with her godparents,  the whole crew of girls, and my favourite (Alicia with her Grammie).

3 generations A and god Alicia and dinner crewA and Clorinda

Gregory made his famous (and rarely created these days) chocolate souffle for everyone.  Here’s the birthday version:

A and gregory soufle

After all that excitement, it was time to get organized for the big party at the house.  Decorations were hung, a photo booth with streamers and silly accessories assembled, flowers distributed, snacks set up, the outdoor inflatable movie-screen erected, balloons blown up and tied to the mailbox, and the largest project – photo boards of Alicia’s life – assembled with great precision.

We had 25 kids and somewhere around 20 adults for the evening.  Cavalli’s set up their portable brick pizza oven in the driveway and everyone got to choose their personal pizza.  The pizza and appetizers were a big hit with all.  The party ended up being a huge success.  Here’s a video that Alicia’s friend Andrews (headed for film school now that he’s graduated from high school) put together:

On Sunday Clorinda and Adamo headed home.  We took Kris and Cat to Deep Ellum (an eclectic neighbourhood just East of downtown Dallas) for drinks at the Twilite Lounge and dinner at the Freeman (a fantastic New Orleans restaurant).  There was a great jazz band playing during dinner.  Diana and I split the shrimp etouffe (spicier than usual but still amazing).  On the drive home we replicated the infamous J.F.K drive through downtown Dallas past the school book repository and the conspiracy laden grassy knoll.

 

 

 

 

 

Week in Review – May 22, 2016

I made a last minute trip to New York on Monday for a 6 hour meeting that ran from 1-7pm.  It was difficult to find a flight that got there in time, so I tried Virgin America for the first time.  Virgin was a pleasant change from American Airlines – the seats seemed a bit larger and the in-flight entertainment was good – including the ability to order food and drink from the seat back entertainment screen.  I watched a remake of the movie “Point Blank” on the flight – it was like a Warren Miller ski/snow board adventure film – great stunts and scenery with a weak plot and acting – good material to pass the time on a plane.  Here’s what I thought was an over the top demonstration of law enforcement as I was pulling up to my hotel to change for the meeting.

Wall st enforcement

The conference room that I was confined to for 6 hours at least had a very nice view.

175 Water view east river

After the meeting I attempted to visit the Village Vanguard jazz club in Greenwich Village.  On Monday nights the Village Vanguard Orchestra plays – they and the club are celebrating their 50th anniversary this year and are world renowned.  When I got there the show was sold out but there was a short line for no-shows.  I got in line and unfortunately was the first one in line that didn’t get in – the last group of 4 taken was right in front of me.

Village Vanguard sign Village Vanguard selfie

Here’s a video of the orchestra so that you can see what I missed.

I was pretty tired at this point (car service picked me up from home at 5am) and so just headed back to the hotel with the help of the New York subway iPhone app.

Subway

On the walk from the subway station to the hotel I passed “bookend” restaurants for my time with Mark DeBenedictus at AIG.  Bailey’s is where I had breakfast with Mark when he first pitched me on the idea of leaving HP and joining AIG.  Giardino D’Or is where we had Mark’s last supper on the evening that he left AIG.

bailey mdb giardino

Tuesday began with a few meetings and then a flight back to Dallas.  I read a bit of my “All the light we cannot see” book – the setting has now moved to St Malo which reminds me of our family vacation in Brittany and several visits there.  I also discovered some new music on the Virgin in-flight music channels.  Here’s some things I enjoyed listening to:

Hearing the band “Pearl Django” made me think of the jazz music played at cafes in Paris – apparently it’s known as “French Jazz” or “Gypsy Jazz”.  The Pearl Django music is inspired by the jazz guitarist Django Reinhard.  Here’s some of their music and an excellent French Jazz playlist that I found on Spotify.

Guy Clark, a classic Texas songwriter, famous for “Desperados waiting on a train” and “LA Freeway” passed on Tuesday.  I remember watching a great cover of this at Tolbert’s restaurant in downtown Dallas over 20 years ago – can’t for the life of me remember the name of the musician performing it.  Here’s Guy Clark’s original version.  I also recommend the versions by The Highwaymen and Jerry Jeff Walker.  It was interesting to read that Guy was also an excellent guitar maker and made a living doing this while writing songs in LA prior to his move to Nashville and the release of his classic albums.

Wednesday was a quiet work from home day.  I managed to catch up with a few backlogged crosswords as well.  The Blue Apron delivery arrived and I made Red Curry and Coconut Shrimp Stir-Fry with Rice Noodles and Pea Shoots for dinner.

coconut curry shrimp

On Thursday I braved the commute to Roanoke after a few meetings at home.  A pleasant stop on the way was at the coffee shop in Grapevine where I finished the USA today crossword in reasonable time.

Thurs USA xword

I escaped for a quick lunch at my favorite local New Orleans style restaurant, “Bayou Jack’s” – a bowl of their delicious crawfish bisque.  I heard a number of good new musical artists on the commutes.  Snarky Puppy is interestingly from Dallas and is playing at the Granada theater tonight.

I have to do some research to find out the name of the drummer on the Joey Defrancesco track – he sounded amazing.

I switched from Jazz and the Jam_On Sirius station over to B.B. King’s Bluesville station and came across Eric Bibb – sounded a lot like really good Robert Cray.

I arrived home to find the pool busy draining all its water out into the street.  We’re having the re-plastering redone to remove the streaks and inconsistent staining.

pool

Another Blue Apron dinner on Thursday night.  This time soy-glazed meatballs with jasmine rice, Swiss chard, radish and scallion.  Another great tasting meal.

meatballs

On Friday we headed out to the Four Seasons golf course in Irving, TX to watch the 2nd round of the Byron Nelson golf tournament.  We try to head out for at least one day each year.  It’s not as luxurious these days since EDS isn’t the sponsor – no luxury boxes, food and drink.  Here are Diana and our friend Vinod enjoying the action on the 17th green.

17th hole Vinod and D

We walked most of the course, educating Vinod on the basics of golf as we went.  We watched Ernie Els, Sergio Garcia (getting ready to tee off below), Matt Kuchar and several others along the way.  Sergio ended up winning on Sunday after a sudden death playoff with Brooks Koepka from Florida.  It was an exciting finish with several players having a chance to win.

Sergio

New albums were released this week by 2 veterans – Eric Clapton and Bob Dylan.  So far, I much prefer the Bob Dylan classic song covers.  Eric Clapton’s is pleasant with great musicianship but doesn’t keep my attention the way his older albums still do.  It’s very much of a J.J. Cale tribute continuation with 2 covers and several of the Tulsa musicians that played on all J.J.’s classic recordings.

Sunday dinner was the last of the Blue Apron deliveries for this week – Seared Chicken and Verjus Pan Sauce with mashed potatoes, mushrooms and kale.  I had to look up Verjus Blanc (white grape juice) – the tart, fresh juice of unripe wine grapes.  It is a culinary ingredient indigenous to the world’s wine producing regions that is used in sauce making, for poaching fish and meat, and to dress lettuces, vegetables and fruit.

chicken verjus

I was finally able to track down a near pristine used copy of an album that I loved in University – “Bright Size Life” by Pat Metheny.

metheny back metheny front

This was released in 1976 and was one of the first recordings by both Pat Metheny and my favorite bass player, Jaco Pastorius (of Weather Report fame).  I used Jaco’s solo album to audition hi-fi speakers – 90% of them rattle during his “Portrait of Tracy”.  This album is for Pat Metheny what “Kind of Blue” is for Miles Davis.  All music lovers should hear this music.  The collaboration of Pat, Jaco and Bob Moses on drums is amazing.  The music has a lot of empty space that highlights the way Jaco plays electric bass like a lead instrument and really enhances Metheney’s playing (which almost has a country twang sound in places – a sound rarely heard in jazz).  Moses’ explosive but very detailed drumming is quite unique and adds a very interesting texture to the music.  There’s a new documentary out about Jaco that I’ll have to watch soon.

Week in Review – May 8, 2016

Monday was our last full day in New Orleans.  I suppose all good things must come to an end.  We had an early lunch at St Roch Market.

“St. Roch Market is a southern food hall featuring a diverse lineup of food and beverage purveyors. Open daily, we offer a unique dining experience along with great shopping and an excellent craft cocktail bar. For entrepreneurs, the Market represents the ultimate platform to grow a food brand and build consumer exposure.”

st roch

We had some excellent Bao and a quinoa salad.  The Bao on the left is the Duo – Stir fry mushrooms, cucumbers, pickled roots, cilantro, fried onions, spicy ponzu.  On the right is the Chairman – Roasted pork belly, cucumbers, pickled roots, cilantro, spicy ponzu.

st roch baos

After St Roch we headed over to the Louisiana Music Factory on Frenchmen Street.  This is a local music store that specializes in local Louisiana music.  The Creole String Beans were just starting a concert in the store and played through their new album.

string beans

From the music factory we embarked on the traditional French Quarter ramble.  First stop was at Miss Molly’s for a frozen Irish coffee.  Then stops at Diana’s favorite New Orleans themed stores – Razzle Dazzle, Roux on Royal etc.  We picked up some chocolates at Sucre and then headed back to Frenchmen St via Tableau.

frozen coffee K tableau

For our last meal on Tuesday we had lunch at a relatively new Israeli restaurant on Magazine Street called “Shaya”.  The annual James Beard restaurant awards were presented on Monday night and this restaurant won “Best New Restaurant in the U.S”, a very prestigious award.

Shaya menu front Shaya menu back

http://www.nola.com/dining/index.ssf/2016/05/shaya_best_new_restaurant_jame.html

From the restaurant website:

Shaya is an innovative restaurant with a warm and welcoming approach to the dining culture inspired by Chef Alon Shaya’s Israeli upbringing.  Chef Alon sees modern Israeli food as a grand mosaic, drawing influence from North Africa, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, Turkey and Greece. The food of Alon’s heritage represents a country rich in diversity of cuisine and culture, inspired by years of tradition while also looking to its contemporary future. The menu at Shaya reflects the ongoing evolution of Israeli food, while celebrating the abundance of Louisiana, and Alon’s close relationships with local farmers, fostered by his ongoing work with the Crescent City Farmer’s Market. In keeping with the the ethos of all of the Besh restaurants, Shaya uses seasonal, responsibly- and locally-sourced ingredients.

Similar to Alon’s other establishments in New Orleans, the wood-fire oven is central to both the menu and the dining experience, starting with the incredible homemade, wood-fired pita. To create the menu, Alon looked to his past (many recipes are those that he cooked with his grandmother), and his recent travels; in 2014, he spent time in Israel immersing himself in the vibrant culture and cuisine of his homeland. Many of the dishes on the diverse menu are meant to be shared.

K&D Shayla Denny and Anne Shaya Keith and Denny Shayla

We sat on the back patio and enjoyed one of the few pleasant and dry days during our visit.  I had the falafel sandwich and Diana had a delicious lamb kebab (my favorite after the lamb ragu hummus.

Lamb Kebab Shaya Falafel Sandwich

On Wednesday we received the next Blue Apron delivery and continue to really enjoy the meals and the cooking experience.  On Wednesday we had crispy cod tacos with chipotle cabbage slaw.  I added all of the pepper sauce to the coleslaw and it was a bit too spicy for comfort.

Cod tacos

Saturday was Pork Tteokbokki with asparagus and spicy black bean sauce.  It also included Korean rice cakes which had a chewy but crisp consistency like the Korean Bao sliders from a few weeks ago.  This was my favorite of the three meals this week.  On Sunday we made Spring Chicken Fettuccine with sauteed asparagus, kale, and rosemary.  Alicia commented that the kale tasted much better than she expected and for a while she didn’t even notice the asparagus that she was eating.

Pork and Rice Rolls chicken fettucini

We had a surprise guest for the weekend.  On Thursday night Diana heard from Paul Castle Dine (PCD) in Australia.  He let her know he was coming to Dallas from Sydney for the weekend on his way to Raleigh, NC and was hoping to stay with us.  PCD worked for Diana when she was in Australia and they became great friends.

D and PCD

We learned when Paul arrived that while he was in the air for 16 hours from Sydney to Dallas, his Raleigh plans had changed and he was to go directly to London.  He is taking a new job with Cisco in London supporting a huge new deal with Barclay’s bank and is moving there from Sydney sometime soon.

On Saturday morning I took PCD for a haircut and then a beer at Delaney’s (our local Irish theme pub).  We sampled the Franconia beer made locally in McKinney.

K and PCD

Then a late lunch at Rye in downtown McKinney.  I tried the barrel aged Negroni cocktail which was much smoother and tastier than I was expecting.

Rye Group PCD

On Sunday we had Tari and Bill over for a mother’s day brunch.  Tari was PCD’s boss in Australia immediately before Diana – so he had his two “chiefs” together.  Tari and Bill are in the midst of a downsizing move from their home in Allen to a private lake community in Gainsville.

Mothers Day

What we anticipated to be a quite week after returning from New Orleans, picked up steam over the weekend.  It was great to host PCD – he’s such an easy guest and hilarious company.

 

Week in Review – May 1, 2016

Garden BloomMonday brought very pleasant weather – 84 degrees and mostly sunny. The garden is in full bloom now but severe thunderstorms, softball size hail (if not grapefruit size – good grief) and potential tornadoes were forecast for Tuesday.  We escaped to New Orleans before the storm arrived and it just brought raine.  Penelope came home today – she looks not too much the worse for wear but is missing her two “bumperettes” that will be installed in a couple of weeks.

bumperretes

Monday night we cooked the last of our first Blue Apron meals – Za’atar chicken and pearl couscous with asparagus and pink lemon compote.   The compote had the pink lemon, agave nectar and chives.   The couscous included asparagus and lemon zest.   Pearl couscous is semolina and wheat flours rolled into little balls, “pearls”, then toasted for nutty flavor and chewy texture.   This was a really nice meal with lots of different flavors coming together.  The Za’tar chicken rub had lots of flavor.  It paired very well with a crisp Sauvignon Blanc.

Zaatar chicken couscous

We landed in New Orleans around noon on Tuesday to lovely weather.  Stopped into “Cooter Browns” on the drive to Denny and Anne’s house so that Diana could enjoy her first dozen fresh oysters.  The place is under new ownership and doesn’t have meat pies on the menu any more – a big disappointment for Keith.  Denny came to the rescue with a typical great recommendation – down the street to “Boucherie”.

boucherie sign

Diana tried the “Sophia Loren” cocktail and liked it.

sophia lauren

We chose “small plate” lunches – Diana had the mussels and collard greens, I had the crispy skin duck confit and Denny had the oyster lettuce wraps – all were delicious.  We sat outside and enjoyed the great weather.

Boucherie App Menumussels

After a quick nap we headed out for an evening of music.  A stop at “Treo” on the way was another great Denny recommendation.  Great cocktails, snacks and “Duct Tape Art”.

treo duct tape art

Our first night of music did not disappoint.  Anders Osborne, John Fohl, and Johnny Sansone performed their annual jazzfest show at Chickie Wah Wah (the music club where Anne had her 50th birthday party).

chickie wah wah

A highlight was “Summertime in New Orleans”, an Anders Osborne song with the lyrics adjusted to tribute Allen Touissant who passed this year – Anders voice, Fohl’s nuanced guitar solo, and Sansone’s harmonica were outstanding.

anders fohl sansone anders fohl sansone 2 K and Denny

My other favorite was “Do or Die” – a John Fohl song that I first heard him perform at “Dos Jefes” cigar bar and have listened to many times since.  I’m hoping that he might be playing there again on Monday night.

The music wasn’t finished after Chickie Wah Wah.  Denny suggested a stop at “DMAC’s” which was an excellent langiappe.  Tuesday’s there are part of a touring singer songwriter night.  We heard two great country singer songwriters – good songs and great voices.  A chance to practice our new Texas two step dancing on the sidewalk.

Dmacs

“D Mac” himself stopped in for a late dinner and introduced himself.  He runs a construction company out of the building next door and runs the bar/music club as a side hobby because he enjoys music so much.

Wednesday was lunch at Commander’s Palace day.   A full 3 hour experience with a lovely table overlooking the courtyard.  I had a coffee glazed quail – beautifully cooked as always.  Diana had drum which came with her least favorite vegetable – peas!

quail drum

Apparently the group was able to consume 8 of the 25c lunchtime martinis.  Left to right – Gary, Alex, Laura, Diana, Anne, Denny, and me.

commanders group commanders bill

The rain poured down very heavily during most of our 3 hour lunch.  The road in front of Commander’s had some pretty good flooding.

valet flood commanders panoramic flood

Here’s Gary wading through the flood to go and pick up his son.

Gary flood

After lunch we stopped by the Columns hotel and sat on the porch.  I got an early birthday gift from the Ogans – a Frenchy jigsaw puzzle.  The pieces are shaped like musical instruments and other interesting shapes.  Signed by Frenchy no less.

frenchy puzzle frenchy columns

After a quick change we stopped at The Irish House for shepherd’s pie and oysters – because we hadn’t eaten enough already.

Thursday was supposed to be the first jazzfest day – with Tedeschi Trucks band and guests Jimmy Vaughan and Billy Gibbons from ZZ Top. However, the rain continued heavily most of the morning including a few hours without power.   The closest we got was this picture posted online right before they played.  Here’s what the conditions looked like during the day.

tedeschi trucks thursday jazzfest rainout

We decided to switch to Friday for jazzfest and had lunch at Chiba sushi where Diana enjoyed the raw fish with truffle oil very much.  Dinner was at Kenton’s in Uptown on Magazine Street (very close to Denny and Anne’s home).  Food was very good – chicken liver pate, trout with mushrooms, and chicken under a brick.

Kentons

Alicia had some big news on Thursday morning – she received an honorable mention in her “concerto solo” contest.  This is an amazing accomplishments as she was the only non-Honors band soloist competing with mostly seniors.  Only 11 out of the 70 participants got honorable.

Friday was the only jazzfest day of the weekend.  Here I am with the schedule I plotted for the day – we ended up following this almost exactly.

jazzfest schedule thurs jazzfest flag

First job was to set up camp at the Gentilly stage and enjoy a bit of the Mississippi Rail Company.  Then over to Congo Square for some of the Tony Hall tribute to James Brown – excellent and featured the saxophone player from the New Orleans Suspects who played in the James Brown band for 12 years.

jazzfest arrival K and D congo james brown

Then back to Gentilly for the end of Bonerama and rendezvous with friends.  Next was the Creole String Beans (the band from Anne’s 50th birthday) with special guest Bill Kirchen, “the master of the telecaster”, and of “Hot Rod Lincoln fame”.  I enjoyed this set very much although the Fais Do Do stage was the muddiest and stinkiest.

muddy thurs fais dos dos

Lunch was a seafood ravigote and an Italian chicken sausage po-boy.  Then a meat pie later in the afternoon.

ravigote

After the Creole String Beans it was back to Gentilly for The Revivalists – very popular and energetic show.  We walked down to the other end of the fairgrounds for a refreshing iced cafe au lait after that show and paused to listen to Los Lobos performing “El Pistole et El Corazon” – a mariachi album of theirs.  My Morning Jacket closed things out at Gentilly with a strong show that finished with Prince tributes.

A very good and full jazzfest day with surprisingly small crowds and not too much soggy ground from the previous day’s downpours.

Saturday brought more rain throughout the day.  We met Diane, Denny’s Mum, at “Martin’s Wine Store” for lunch.  Great black peppercorn pate, brie with champignons, and oyster Rockefeller soup

k and diane

Saturday night was the much anticipated 40th anniversary reenactment of “The Last Waltz” – The Band’s farewell concert at Winterland in San Francisco in 1976.  We had dinner at Josephine Estelle in the new Ace hotel and then walked over to the Saenger theater via the Cellar Door cocktail bar.  Dinner included red snapper, agnolotti (small raviolis with sweetbread, chanterelles and black pepper), and potato gnocchi with chicken gizzards.

cellar door D and D saenger full sign

Here’s the makeup of the band:

The superband will be led by musical director Warren Haynes (Gov’t Mule, The Allman Brothers Band, The Dead) and GRAMMY® Award-winning producer/multi-instrumentalist Don Was, keyboard master John Medeski, country superstar Jamey Johnson, The Meters’ pioneering bass player George Porter, Jr., The Radiators’ Dave Malone, legendary funk drummer, Terence Higgins (Dirty Dozen Brass Band, John Scofield’s Piety Street Band), The Bonerama Horns’ Mark Mullins (Galactic, Harry Connick, Jr.), and more still to be announced as well as superstar surprise guests.

Warren Haynes: Guitar
John Medeski: Keyboards

Michael McDonald: Piano
Jamey Johnson: Guitar
George Porter, Jr.: Bass
Dave Malone: Guitar
Don Was: Bass
Terence Higgins: Drums
Mark Mullins: Horns
Featuring The Original Horn Arrangements of Allen Toussaint

The show was a musical highlight of a weekend filled with musical high notes.  The entire band sounded great – particularly the horn section.  I was nervous about the addition of Michael McDonald but he did a solid job on the songs he sang, including “Helpless” as performed by Neil Young in the original.

Sunday was – you guessed it – another very wet and rainy day.  I decided to pass on Neil Young at jazzfest and instead we had an excellent brunch at the Red Dog diner on Magazine Street.

Red dog red dog bloody crabmeat benedict

We relaxed at the Ogan’s home the rest of the day with various games.  A group competition over the crossword puzzle was quite entertaining.  Then a game of “Pandemic” with the boys where Keith was the “Contingency Planning” character – we were able to foil the game’s attempt to introduce an epidemic.

 

crossword competiton