Tuesday, January 06, 2009

The Kitchen Sisters Interview
Poet C. D. Wright

For those of you in the Bay Area, poet C.D. Wright is speaking at City Arts & Lecture series at the Herbst Theatre, in San Francisco, Wednesday evening January 7, 2009 at 8PM.

We'll be interviewing Wright as part of a story we're producing about photographer Deborah Luster for our series about the secret lives of girls.

Luster and Wright collaborated on One Big Self: Prisoners of Louisiana, a book featuring a collection of haunting, sepia tinted photographs taken by Luster of Louisiana's incarcerated men and women. Wright's poems accompany the self-posed portraits to "ward off forgetting."



This photo was taken
by Luster at a women's
prison in Louisiana.










Here's one of Wright's poems from One Big Self.

Dear Prisoner,
I too love. Faces. Hands. The circumference
Of the oaks. I confess. To nothing
You could use. In a court of law. I found.
That sickly sweet ambrosia of hope. Unmendable
Seine of sadness. Experience taken away.
From you. I would open. The mystery
Of your birth. To you. I know. We can
Change. Knowing. Full well. Knowing.
It is not enough.

Poetry Time Space Death
I thought. I could write. An exculpatory note.
I cannot. Yes it is bitter. Every bit of it, bitter.
The course taken by blood. All thinking
Deceives us. Lead (kindly) light.
Notwithstanding this grave. Your garden.
This cell. Your dwelling. Who is unaccountably free.

Photographer Deborah Luster describes her her collection of inmate photographs in video by Doug MacCash, Times Picayune Art Critic.



Monday, January 05, 2009

television; ikea anga; backsplash

I’ll start off with a non-kitchen picture.  Finally. 

What’s new here? 

-We decided to paint the fireplace white.  We stripped the layers of old paint and varnish, picked, scraped, sanded, primed and painted.  The inside of the fireplace was also painted black. 

-We mounted the television.  The wire situation is yet to be addressed.  There are a few issues.  One, we need longer cables so that everything can comfortably run from the TV to the shelf with the components.  Also, cord management is yet to be resolved.  It’s looking like running everything through flat, paintable tracks is going to be our option.  We considered cutting a channel through the drywall and plaster deep enough to completely submerge the tracks, then re-refinishing the wall.  This just seems like a big job for a minor detail.  (Side Note: Wii Tennis is even more fun.  yeah - I'm pro.)

-The shelf is Ikea’s Anga series.  It fit the space, offered lots of storage and the glass shelves keep the brick in view.

-The base moulding is going in. 

Now something about the kitchen.  We decided on the Marrakesh tile blend from Modwalls – these pictures are from their site.  

Sunday, January 04, 2009

Almond Cheese Tart

I've been using this recipe for many years. The combination of lemony cheese and the rich shortcrust pastry really boost up my appetite.
This tart keep very well in the fridge. I kept the leftover in the fridge and reheat in the oven at 100'C for 5 minute, it's still very yummy.
For the shortcrust pastry: 8" tart pan
1 egg yolks + 1 tbsp cold water
110g plain flour
55g unsalted cold butter, diced
10g sugar powder
pinch of salt
For the Cheese filling:
160g cream cheese
30g sugar
30g butter
2 egg yolks
1 lemon zest
2 tbsp lemon juice
40g egg whites
2 tsp sugar
40g almond flakes
  1. Mix the eggs yolks with cold water stir with a fork until well combine.
  2. Place the flour, sugar powder into the bowl of a food processor, followed by the cold butter and the salt. Turn the processor on and pulse several times until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs.
  3. Add the egg yolk/water mixture and pulse again. Be careful not to overwork the pastry. Stop pulsing when the mixture has the consistency of chunky breadcrumbs.
  4. Turn the pastry out onto a clean, floured work surface and, with floured hands, bring together to make a dough, but don't knead.
  5. Shape into a flattened ball, wrap in cling film and refrigerate for about 30 minutes. You can keep the pastry at this stage for 2-3 days if not using it immediately.
  6. Remove the pastry from the fridge. On a clean, floured work surface, roll it out with a floured rolling pin until it's slightly larger than the flan ring. Using the rolling pin, lift the pastry and lay it over the flan ring.
  7. With your fingers, lightly press the pastry into the sides of the ring. Run a rolling pin over the top of the ring and pull away the excess pastry at the edges. Using your fingers, gently press the pastry up to slightly build up the height of the pastry at the edges. Prick the base of the pastry with a fork.
  8. Make a cartouche (a circle of greaseproof paper) slightly larger than the base of the flan tin and line the pastry case with it. Place some ceramic baking beans inside to weigh the pastry down. Place in the fridge to relax for about 20 minutes.
  9. Preheat the oven to 200C. Place the pastry in the oven and bake blind for about 20 minutes. Let it cool on a wire rack and make the cheese filling.
  10. Beat the cream cheese with sugar until well combine. Add the egg yolks one at a time and mix well. Gradually mix in the lemon juice and zest.
  11. In other the clean bowl, beat the egg whites and two tablespoon of sugar until peak forms.
  12. Fold the egg whites into the cream cheese mixture and fold in half of the toasted almond flakes.
  13. Pour the mixture into the tart and sprinkle over some almond flakes on top. Bake at 180'C preheated oven for 30 minutes.