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Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts

Sunday, 29 September 2013




                      PUTTANESCA 

Photography by Lorelei Albanese

SAN JUAN -  Who knew you could find a New York-style pizza
restaurant in, of all places, San Juan! Puttanesca Trattoria would
be perfectly at home in Greenwich Village, or the East Village.
Instead, it inhabits a small corner in a seedy part of town, across
from a 24-hour Walgreens and neighboring Walmart store,
offering comfort food and a funky ambience imbued with the
spirit of that favorite movie classic that is The Godfather.

On an otherwise quiet Sunday night, the place was lively and noisy
as families with children and couples on dates enjoyed their pizzas
while a few diners waited around at the entrance for a table to clear.

At the bar -- well lighted to allow for a maximum view of a multitude
of spirits in a rainbow of colored bottles -- waiters went about filling
orders and the cook spun his pie crusts in the air prior to consigning
them to the brick oven. On the night we visited, a broadcast of a
soccer game in Italy was playing on the giant overhead TV screen:
battling it out on the field were Livorno versus Rome.


©Puttanesca Trattoria Facebook Page

Puttanesca offers a selection of pizzas with all kinds of toppings,
aperitifs such as chicken wings and mini croquettes, entrées like
cheese calzone and lasagna bolognese. The desserts lineup:
cheesecake, tiramisu, house lemon tart, triple chocolate cake.

But if you come here the centerpiece is, of course, the pizza,
which is quite good. The pie crust has just the right thickness,
the cheese is plentiful, the toppings varied enough to please
everybody, and the portions generous. Maybe the crust
could have used a little more time in the oven and the service
could have been faster, but the place is so enjoyable that neither
the pizza's lack of perfection nor the slow service seemed to
matter much.

This is definitely the kind of restaurant to enjoy with friends on
a night when a conventional dinner just won't do and all you
want is the comfort of sinking your teeth into that delicious sea
of cheese and tomato sauce swimming atop a crust of baked
pizza dough. This place is gregarious, the waiters are
accommodating, and the prices easy on the pocketbook. Plus
the beverages include an eclectic selection of beers, with brands
from many different countries.

All in all, this is a place you will definitely want to return to.

PUTTANESCA TRATTORIA
1207 Fernandez Juncos Ave. 
787.723.6666
Open for lunch, dinner, coffee & drinks
Check Facebook page for hours of operation



Photography by Denise Blasor

"We're all stopped short by wonder some time."
New Zealand artist Len Lye


IN THE KITCHEN: easy does it!

This recipe, which a former San Juan reporter turned yoga
instructor likes to prepare for her children, is simple
as pie and makes a perfectly delicious sweet treat.

All you need is mashed dates and shredded coconut and
almonds. For lack of a food processor, a food chopper
was used to mash the dates with very fine results. Divide
the resulting paste into little balls that you then roll into
the mixture of almonds and coconuts (Bob's Red Mills
distributes an unsweetened shredded dry coconut that is
very good.)

The result? Small spheres of delectable wonder to pop
into your mouth as dessert. It takes about two dates and
a spoonful each of shredded coconut and almonds to
make up one of these little balls of raw, tasty goodness.



A SIMPLE TIP: Allium scallions




With their thin, elongated shape and multiple 
stalks, scallions are a bit exotic looking. Yet they
belong to the onion family. Growing this lovely
plant with many culinary virtues is a breeze:

Next time you buy a bag of scallions at your 
neighborhood supermarket, cut off the ends 
and place in a jar filled with water.  Make sure
to change water regularly to ensure healthy roots
and allow plant to grow out. That's about it!





BOOKS, BOOKS, BOOKS

LOS ANGELES:  Books
are an endangered
species, of sorts, but not
at The Last Bookstore,
the "literary emporium"
located in downtown L.A.

If you are mad about
reading, here you'll find
a selection of more than
100,000 books priced at
$1 dollar, each. And
that's only the mezzanine
level.

Plenty of more books
occupy the ground floor
of the 10,000-square-foot
locale, along with a
taxidermy-style Wooly
Mammoth, a record
shop and a coffee
bar. The brainchild of
Josh Spencer, who
started it out of a
downtown loft, The Last Bookstore is now the largest
independent bookstore in California and hosts regular
literary and musical events. Definitely a must see.

The Last Bookstore 
453 S. Spring St. downtown L.A.
(at 5th and Spring St.) 213.488.0599
lastbookstorela.com


Photography by Denise Blasor

Words are power. 
And a book is full of words.
Be careful what power you get from it.

Yoko Ono


© 2013 Lorraine Blasor all rights reserved

Tuesday, 22 January 2013

FUN with COLLECTING



POSSESSING. THINGS.
Put those two words together and you have a very common human habit that finds expression in collecting objects of all sorts. What makes collecting such fun is that it can be so much more than mere accumulation. Depending on the object of one's fixation, collecting may entail arduous search and study, not to mention travel and even lots of cash. That, of course, is serious collecting. But then there is a type of collecting that doesn't entail too much effort, or expense.  Like for example, you might choose to collect round objects you find on the streets, like marbles, balls, plastic spheres in all sizes and colors. Or at the beach, you might pick up all sorts of pretty shells and show them off in a glass dish coupled with other small trinkets, perhaps
 even intriguing little items
A collection of all things round
 you find lost on the
 street. If you like
books, you could
 collect multiple
versions of a title
you are particularly
 fond of, say different
 editions of "The Owl
 & The Pussycat,"
 that delightful piece
of nonsense poetry
by Edward Lear.
Or maybe you admire
a particular artist; then go for any
book devoted to that artist and stack them
all together as a colorful book tower.
Any way you approach it, building a collection can be very a very satisfying and entertaining activity.You can collect haphazardly or methodically, but whatever you collect can become part of your home decor to enjoy and share with friends as a conversation piece.


Artwork by Lorraine Blasor

The only thing I know is that I paint because I need to,
and I paint always whatever passes through my head,
without any other consideration.

Frida Kahlo
                                                               

➽ EYE ON PRODUCTS 
Two consumer products stood out recently. One
is a can of organic whole peeled tomatoes sold under the
Muir Glen brand and available in San Juan
at Supermax de Diego. What's special
about this product is that the can does not contain
BPA(Bisphenol A), a hormone-disrupting chemical
that can cause hormonal changes and reproductive
abnormalities. Used to make plastic bottles, BPA
also serves to line the inside of metal food and
soda cans, including infant formula. Concern that BPA
leaches out of the can liner into food and drink has
spurred some companies to seek other alternatives
(alas, those too might pose hazards). The
28 oz Muir can retails for $2.77.

The second product is a toilet paper made from
renewable sugarcane husk and bamboo and
whitened with H202, a non-chlorine based
bleach. It is distributed by Walgreens under
the brand name Ology and retails for about
$3 for a package containing 4 rolls.


Artwork by L. Blasor

I AM HOARSE FROM SILENCE.

Theodore Roethke


THEATER IN THE DARK in L.A.

Darkness has a way of magnifying the human voice and
stirring up the mind's ability for visualization. It's also
the magical ingredient in a unique theater experience at
the Odyssey Theatre in Los Angeles which is enthralling
audiences with its current production: "Beyond Dark: The
Best of Theatre in the Dark."

The 90-minute production, staged in a pitch-dark auditorium,
revolves around 17 pieces by different authors and spanning themes
of horror, death, and sex. Each piece is brought to life by a
12-member cast who use night goggles and overhead cables
to navigate the dark stage. In a review published in the
ActorsEntertainment website, Kristina Nikols writes that
"the unique nature of the event's staging lends
itself most successfully to the horror pieces...The visceral
experience heightens the overwhelming sense of fright
and leaves the audience very uncomfortable."

"Beyond Dark" plays Friday through Sunday
until February 9. Check odyssey theater.com for more
information on this critically acclaimed production.


Photography by Denise Blasor

 Behind the sheltering sky is a vast dark universe,
and we're just so small.

-Paul Bowles, The Sheltering Sky


Copyright ©2013 Lorraine Blasor All Rights Reserved✍