Saturday, July 20, 2019

Into the Woods 2019

Monday, July 15, 2019
As it happened, the Upper West Side’s Power Couple left for a week in the Berkshires midday Saturday and were sitting surrounded by second and third generation family members in a lovely house outside Great Barrington when the lights went out in Manhattan.  We heard about it first from my brother who knew where we had gone, but we eventually got inquiries from others near and far concerned about our ability to navigate in the dark.  

Earlier in the afternoon, we had lunch at Donaji Mexican Restaurant, 389 Stockbridge Road, Great Barrington, offering very good food with good service in a nondescript setting.  I started with a frozen mango margarita ($12), delicious but not particularly intoxicating.  It went well with the complimentary tortilla chips and salsa that came to the table immediately.  I ate enchiladas verdes filled with shredded beef in a green tomatillo sauce, plus rice and beans, a bargain at $18.

Like the famous chicken, we only had to cross the road to get to one of the area’s major supermarkets to purchase sufficient potato chips, cookies and diet soda to last for the week in our rented house.
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My semi-addiction to diet soda is no secret, but it doesn’t preclude my simultaneous devotion to seltzer, an increasingly “hot" drink, if you’ll pardon the expression.  https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/13/style/seltzer-sparkling-water-bubble.html

In fact, I was guzzling seltzer as a wee tot in Brooklyn even before diet soda hit the market in 1952, No-Cal Ginger Ale.  https://culinarylore.com/drinks:what-was-the-first-diet-soda/

Each week, the seltzer man delivered a wooden crate of thick glass siphons, blue or clear, to our home, removing the empties.  Once a job more common than reality TV star, we may be down to our last seltzer man.
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Had we stayed in the Holy Land this weekend and survived the blackout, we might have had brunch in one of the nine places recommended by the New York Times.  

When I read that “[t]here’s no finer place to eat dim sum in New York than Bamboo Garden in Sunset Park, Brooklyn,” I sent out an all points bulletin to the usual suspects arranging a lunch in a couple of weeks, report to follow.
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Saturday’s newspaper carried the headline "Sanders Struggles to Connect, but Refuses to Run on Personality."  Interesting, but more interesting was the headline that appeared over the exact same article on-line "Why Sanders Wanted His Meeting With a Rabbi Kept Secret.”  Discuss.

Tuesday, July 16, 2019
The usually prescient Nate Cohn provides an interesting analysis of prospective voter turnout in the 2020 presidential election.  

In brief, he says, on the one hand, on the other hand.  You may be comforted or agitated as you choose.
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A few of us had lunch in Great Barrington, which necessitated a stop at Soco Creamery, 5 Railroad Street.  I had a cup with peanut butter mudslide (peanut butter ice cream, fudge swirl and crumbled chocolate cookies) and “Dirty Chocolate” (dark chocolate, darker chocolate and milk chocolate) ($5.35).
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The male segment of our clan went to a baseball game tonight, an all-star game at Wahconah Field, Pittsfield, which has stood since 1919 on a site where baseball has been played since 1892.  It is currently home of the Pittsfield Suns, a member of the Futures Collegiate Baseball League.  At first, you wonder about the connection between the sun and Pittsfield, Massachusetts, far removed from Phoenix or Miami in almost every regard.  Once seated, though, you observe that the line from the batter’s box to the pitcher’s mound runs due west.  In summer, the height of the baseball season, all afternoon through sundown, the batter is blinded by the direct rays of the sun coming from above and behind the pitcher.  Of course, this disability applies to both sides, but the pitchers of the Pittsfield Suns have this advantage in all home games, half their season.  As long as they can get the ball anywhere near the plate, this should put them in championship contention year after year.        
Wednesday, July 17, 2019
As has become the custom during our one-week family vacation, I hired a chef to cook a nice meal for us.  It was Austin Banach again, a talented young man who has more than satisfied us before (banachaustin@gmail.com).  He started the adult meal with a bruschetta, diced tomatoes and peaches lightly dressed in olive oil, with a glob of fresh burrata on the side.  "Burrata is a fresh Italian cow milk cheese made from mozzarella and cream," can you imagine?  What followed was a fabulous corn soup, more a puree than a chowder, with three simple ingredients -- corn, butter and cream.  The main course was cod baked with mustard and herbs.  Asparagus in tarragon dressing and black rice noodles in sesame vinaigrette were served with it.  A very thick chocolate pudding completed this outstanding meal.  Sorry you missed it.

Thursday, July 18, 2019
We had lunch at The Marketplace Cafe, 53 North Street, Pittsfield, a funky place that all three of our generations can recommend for its sandwiches, quiche and salads.  It is also convenient to the Berkshire Museum, 39 South Street, currently exhibiting models of Leonardo da Vinci's brilliant designs.  
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We ended our formal vacationing tonight by attending Inside/Out, a free outdoor dance performance regularly held at Jacob's Pillow.  I have borrowed this photograph to give you a feel for the beautiful setting.

https://www.jacobspillow.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/HERO_IO-FelipeGalganniAndCompany_2018cDuggan_031.jpg 
We saw the Bombshell Dance Project, a female (if I am allowed) group, presenting Like a Girl, in which "the company reimagines the phrase 'fight like a girl' through contrasts in athleticism and power dynamics."  Okay, if they say so. 
 
Friday, July 19, 2019
One might think that the Holy Land was carpeted with temples, shrines, churches, synagogues, mosques and yoga studios.  In fact, we seem to be the favored location for chain drug stores and bank branches.  So, I was surprised to read that "[s]ince 2009, the number of commercial bank and thrift branches [nationally] has shrunk nearly 10 percent, or just over 1 percent per year."

But, the Upper West Side is often out of step with the rest of the country.  Within 2/10 of a mile of Palazzo di Gotthelf, you find 3 branches of Chase Bank, 2 Citibank, 1 HSBC, 1 TD Bank, 1 Bank of America, 1 Capital One Bank and 1 Santander Bank ATM for petty cash transactions.  Apparently, we limousine liberals also like liquidity.

1 comment:

  1. Having spent time in Great Barrington designing the play version of "The Diary of Anne Frank" at Barrington Stage many years ago, I recall hardly any major dining venues outside of the somewhat waspy-fusty Red Lion Inn (the last 19th century Inn in New England) up Route 7 in Stockbridge (saw Jennifer Anniston at dinner there in big sunglasses-at night... 'nuff said).
    Of course, 8-10 hour rehearsals with the deprived Frank family made me feel starved, but also guilty for eating more than a bowl of porridge, dry bread, and cabbage soup. Thinking about Anne living on 790 calories a day dampened the pleasure of the Red Lion’s Grilled Faroe Islands Salmon, Lentils du Puy, Mustard Beurre Blanc, Rainbow Swiss Chard, and Pinot Noir (n.b.-don’t care- I drink red with fish…).
    Thanks for your mouth-watering guide to Post-Dining Desert Great Barrington! Next time up there, I’m keeping this blog in the glove compartment… hopefully while designing A.R. Gurney's "The Dining Room"...

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