Happy Spring: Diversions & Dining

HAPPY SPRING!

(freeimages.com)

For me, the appearance of daffodils, even in the supermarket, heralds the arrival of spring. Today, March 20, is the first day of spring, the spring equinox.  This equinox can occur on March 19, 20, or 21.  Interestingly, according to the Farmer’s Almanac, the next time spring arrives on March 21 in the United States isn’t until 2101, the next century! 

TOUCHING FILM

Minari  (Amazon Prime $)

Minari is one of the Academy nominees for Best Picture.  It’s a mostly quiet film, but powerful and very moving.  This Korean American family of Jacob and Monica and their two children, Anne and David, moves from California to a large tract of land in Arkansas.  

Jacob has dreams of becoming a successful vegetable farmer despite Monica’s doubts.  Their young son has a heart condition, and they live isolated in a rundown trailer.  The parents work at the local hatchery sexing baby chicks while the kids are alone much of the time.  

David and his grandma (latimes.com)

Monica arranges for her mother to come live with them, and she is not at all what David expects.  This Grandma is tough and foul-mouthed and doesn’t bake cookies.   You wonder along the way if this foursome will survive economically, if they will fit in culturally, and finally, if Jacob and Monica will go their separate ways.  

The performances are wonderful, especially that of the boy playing David.  I also found the soundtrack memorable.  Highly recommended!

THRILLING ESCAPISM

The Diplomat’s Wife by Pam Jenoff

First published in 2008, this historical novel was re-released in paperback in 2020.  At the end of the Second World War, Marta Nederman is rescued from a Nazi prison by an American soldier named Paul.  While recovering in an Allied hospital, Marta makes friends with Rose, another patient, and with her nurse Dava.  She has one evening with Paul before he ships out to the Pacific.  

Through a series of happenings, Marta does not return to her native Poland, but ends up in London. She is offered a secretarial job at the Foreign Office and then marries a British diplomat.  How she becomes involved in a secret mission to Prague makes for a suspenseful story with lots of hair-raising twists and turns.  Overall, some of the incidents seem improbable and there are numerous coincidences, but it’s a fast-paced read!

This is one of Jenoff’s earlier works. She has written a number of other novels and often draws on her own experiences working in the Foreign Office.

CULINARY CORNER

Several days ago, we ventured to downtown Sarasota for our first meal at a restaurant since Labor Day weekend last year.  We were celebrating having had both Covid vaccine shots and the conclusion of my term on our condo board. 

Patio (heraldtribune.com)

Rosemary and Thyme has a very large patio.  Tables are nicely spaced, and all servers were masked.  Our table even had several partial walls further dividing it from anyone or anything else!  We dined early, but by the time we finished, this outdoor space was full and service a bit slower.

The menu offers a variety of fish, seafood, and meat entrees along with salads and starters such as fried calamari and fish chowder.  The Chief Penguin and I liked the just-right size and freshness of our Caesar salads.  He then tucked into the hearty meatloaf plate, a signature dish.  I opted for the catch of the day which was a lovely piece of Branzino accompanied by risotto, green beans, and carrots.  Entrée prices range from the low 20’s into the 40’s, the latter perhaps a reflection of staying viable during the pandemic.  The food was tasty and the ambience very nice— we will return.

Note: Header illustration of daffodils courtesy of dreamstime.com.

A POTPOURRI OF VIEWING CHOICES

Today, March 14, is the International Day of Mathematics.  This date was chosen and proclaimed by UNESCO in November 2019.  Previously, 3/14 had already been known around the world as Pi Day.  In celebration of Pi (3.14159), some people bake round pies, both sweet and savory. Perhaps you are having pie today too!

(delish.com)

FREUD’S FEMALE CASE

Hysterical Girl

Filmmaker Kate Novack is the daughter of good friends of ours.  Her earlier film, The Gospel according to Andre, profiled Andre Talley, an illustrious Black member of staff at Vogue.  

This short film (just 13 minutes) takes Sigmund Freud’s account of his lone female patient, Dora, and re-envisions it in Dora’s own words.  It’s fast moving and filled with graphic clips from contemporary history.  Everything from Anita Hill and Christine Blasey Ford at the Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh Supreme Court hearings to images of women being bullied, mistreated, or sexually abused.  Women as objects through the decades.  

It’s powerful and thought-provoking!  For more background, see the following article.  Hysterical Girl is in contention for an Oscar nomination.  

SLAVERY ENDS IN JAMAICA

The Long Song  (PBS Masterpiece)

Mistress Caroline & July (pbs.org)

This series is sent in Jamaica beginning before the Christmas Rebellion of 1831 and continuing through the abolition of slavery in 1833.  It’s a different piece of the slavery story based on a novel by Andrea Levy.  

July is a young slave woman who captures the attention of the plantation’s white overseer.  Enamored with each other, July and Robert Goodwin have what resembles a common law marriage when he takes Caroline, the plantation owner, as his wife.  

This is an engrossing story with painful images, but an almost too pat ending.  Levy, a British author with Jamaican roots, also wrote the novel, Small Island.

INDIA IN THE 19TH CENTURY

Beecham House  (PBS Masterpiece)

John Beecham flanked by his mother & his brother Daniel (britishperioddramas.com)

The first episode of this 6-part series is a bit slow and when we set out to watch it a year ago, we gave up.  This time around, we were more patient and got caught up in the intrigue.  Set in Delhi in 1800, it focuses on the enigmatic, handsome John Beecham who arrives at the palatial Beecham House with an entourage including his baby son, but no mother.  The British are there through the East India Company, an emperor reigns, and the French vie to keep the British at bay.  There are secrets, treachery, and class and caste differences.  

The production is lavish while the complexities of the interrelationships draw in the viewer.  The series ends with a cliffhanger, a mystery that awaits no planned second season.  And fans of Downton Abbey will recognize Beecham’s mother as Mrs. Patmore, the cook. Worth watching.

WHICH GRANDPARENT IS THE CHOSEN PARENT?

Black or White  (Netflix)

(nydailynews.com)

Kevin Costner is a lawyer and a grandfather raising Eloise, his biracial granddaughter.  When his wife dies in a car accident, the other grandmother, Rowena, and her n’er-do-well son (the girl’s father) sue to gain custody of Eloise.  Octavia Spencer plays Rowena, an enterprising businesswoman, who feels strongly that the girl will benefit from being a part of an extended Black family.  

The film focuses on the legal battle with a wise Black judge presiding in the courtroom.  It’s a good film, not a great one, but the little girl who plays Eloise is delightful!

Note: Header photo of a decorated pie courtesy of newschannel10.com

March Diversions

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY

Tomorrow, March 8, is International Women’s Day.  The theme for 2021 is Women in Leadership:  Achieving an Equal Future in a Covid-19 World.  IWD was started in 1910 at the suggestion of a woman named Clara Zetkin at a conference of working women in Copenhagen.  In 1914, Germany marked the day on March 8 because it was a Sunday.  Ever since, IWD has been observed on March 8, Sunday or not. It focuses on women’s rights.

It’s also worth noting that in the United States and several other English-speaking countries, March is Women’s History Month.  This month is a time to celebrate and appreciate women’s contributions to events in history both recent and past.

OUTING

Yesterday, just to get off our little island, the Chief Penguin and I went to downtown Sarasota to shop at two of our favorite stores.  It wasn’t a wine and cheese expedition, but rather one for books and cheese….and fancy butter and crackers.  Although Sarasota did not extend their mask mandate, both shops required masks, sanitizing, and social distancing.  (Not so the restaurants we passed which were packed with patrons cheek by jowl.)

Happy book buyers BEFORE Covid! (Mapquest.com)

Bookstore 1 this year is celebrating its 10th anniversary.  They have a wide selection of current fiction and nonfiction plus cookbooks, mysteries, and children’s books.  I think they are stronger on picture books than middle grade readers, but I found several volumes for a granddaughter.  I have missed buying note cards in museum shops and so was pleased to find both blank cards and greeting cards to add to my collection at home.  And I succumbed to a new biography for myself—not that I need any more books right now, but how can I resist?

Louise and two assistants (herald tribune.com)

Artisan Cheese Company, helmed by Louise and her band of knowledgeable young women, has survived the pandemic and continues to stock a wide range of distinctive and unusual hard and soft cheeses.  The C.P. goes for the soft stinky ones (Oma, for example). I’m always on the lookout to try a new cheddar with bite or another variation on gouda, gruyere, or manchego.  And the store stocks imported butters, crackers, jams and spreads both sweet and savory, as well as a variety of homemade soups, pot pies, and sinfully rich mac and cheese.  Plus wine!  Needless to say, we never leave empty-handed!

WHAT I’M READING

The Old Drift by Namwali Serpell

This is a highly touted first novel published in 2019, but it’s also a challenging read.  It’s the March selection for my book group and long.  It brings together three intertwined families and the history of Zambia from the early 20th century to present day.  I found the first section about one of the grandmothers slow going, but I am now getting a bit more into it and have read about twenty percent.  We’ll see how it goes and I’ll report back after the book group discussion.

Screen Time: Just Films

Despite having had our first Covid shot, we’re still being cautious about our activities.  Only socializing, mainly outdoors, with a small group of neighbors. And not yet venturing forth to restaurants or cultural events.  Once we’ve had shot #2, we may ease up a bit, albeit still wearing masks when we leave our home turf.    

That’s a long way of saying that we continue to watch lots of films, together, the Chief Penguin and I, and separately on the treadmill.  Here’s this past week’s crop, everything from history to proms to glass and Obama.

1960’s HISTORY

The Trial of the Chicago 7 (Netflix)

(chicago.suntimes.com)

This is the gripping story of a piece of history I was aware of but didn’t fully recall.  Who was responsible for the riot associated with the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago?  Was it the radical members of SDS, the Yippies, and Tom Hayden?  These and other groups were all against the Vietnam War, but how they went about their business varied.  Seven men, plus initially Bobby Seale, were all tried together in one courtroom.

Sacha Baron Cohen as Abbie Hoffman is fabulous.  Mark Rylance as Kunstler is great, and it’s fun to see Eddie Redmayne as the always preppily dressed Tom Hayden.  Frank Langella, who loomed large in The Americans, here plays the aggressive, acerbic Judge Julius Hoffman.   

UPLIFTING REVIEW OF THE OBAMA YEARS

The Way I See It (Peacock)

Pete Souza was the chief White House photographer during Obama’s presidency.  Probably few knew him by name then.  When he left the White House after Trump was elected, he began posting photos of Obama on Instagram with witty, pointed, and cutting captions.  He gained a following, and he made the rounds on the speaker circuit.  This film focuses on Obama and his family with occasional commentary from colleagues like Samantha Power.  

It’s also an account of Souza’s career from assignments for National Geographic to gaining a post in the Reagan White House.  And it details Souza’s evolution from behind-the-scenes photographer to an actively political person. It’s hard to watch this and not feel good about that less contentious time. Recommended!

Looking at his work (documentary.org)

A note about Peacock.  It’s another streaming service for films and TV programs.  I signed up for a free account just to watch this documentary.  That it’s free means that ads interrupt the flow periodically.  You can avoid them if you pay for a premium account.

GLORY HOLES IN THE HOT SHOP

Blown Away (Netflix)

Alex, one of my favorite contestants (newyorker.com)

I like glass, art glass, and when I was a child, my family made several trips to the Corning Glass Center.  Later, the Chief Penguin and I also visited.  Seeing the glass blowers through the viewing window was a highlight every time, watching them create beautiful pieces of Steuben glass.  As a kid, I acquired a couple souvenir miniature colored glass animals.

This Canadian documentary series is the glass art counterpart of the British Baking Show.  Contestants compete against one another and the clock.  Each week they must design and create a glass piece around a particular theme.  They are rated on technical quality, adherence to the assignment, and overall creativity.  Each week, someone gets eliminated.  

It’s fascinating to watch the stages of creation from design through heating, blowing, and shaping the glass to arrive at a finished piece.  And you get to know the personalities of the contestants who last the longest.  Each piece is judged by the resident evaluator and a guest in a field related to that week’s creative brief. The ultimate winner gets a residency at Corning.  There are 2 seasons. I’ve just about reached the conclusion and the naming of the winner in Season 1.

ANGST IN INDIANA

Prom (Netflix)

Streep, Nicole Kidman and others (thefilmexperience.net)

I decided to watch this film because I like Meryl Streep.  Here she plays an aging actress who is brittle and full of herself.  She and several of her co-stars travel to Indiana to help a teenage girl who’s been denied the opportunity to go to the prom with her girlfriend date.  It’s based on a musical and the song and dance numbers are fun.  

I liked the premise of inclusiveness, but overall, I found the film hokey and perhaps even dated.   I recognize I am definitely not the target audience, but I stuck with it to the end.  Perhaps because I was on the treadmill; otherwise I’d have given it a pass.