Thunder and Chinese Food

Okay, so I’ve come up with a few ideas. They don’t look too much like my mock-up of a few days ago, except that the first one is a near reversal of the mock-up (I use an old Hasselblad and everything’s backwards). In the first piece, your eyes are drawn to the left, but to a space that’s kind of confusing, and just not very interesting. It’s that ass in the upper left corner that I want your eyes drawn to–and the images below it seem to have too much weight, drawing you away. Perhaps this is good?

The second piece I feel is easier to look at, and there’s a nice tension between the left and right sides–the eyes are directed into the work through the ass and out the other side–cachoong! I want some fabric in there, though, and is it too simple…?

I want to tell you about my dinner last night, in Chinatown. I’m not going to tell you the name of the restaurant, because you’ll have to promise to take me there in order to get it out of me. $35 prix fixe. My friend Su-Chen organized the dinner, and was one of two people in our group who could communicate with the chef/owner, who speaks only chinese. The eight of us filled the restaurant–Su-Chen, Bob, me, Michael, Denny and Ed, and Jeff and Nick. Jeff and Nick were new to me, and made a striking and dynamic couple–one a furry round software engineer with a goatee and Madras shirt, the other a slim Taiwanese recent MFA graduate with ultra cool brushed metal rectangle glasses and white Guyabera shirt. Anyway, there were 12 appetizer courses, and 14 main courses that I can remember, each a meticulously prepared work of culinary art. The cuisine was based mainly on jiangzhe cuisine, from around Shanghai. Most dishes were lightly sauced, and with a few bright ingredients each, except for a small ham hock cooked in a brown sugar/soy sauce that was the one heavy note, oh wait, and the inside-out fried fish with the sweet tomato sauce. Here are the dishes that I can remember…

APPETIZERS

Boiled peanuts
Pressed sliced tofu
Soft tofu with chinese greens
Drunken chicken
Salty duck
Compressed tofu with malanto greens
Deep fried crispy shrimp
Jelly fish salad
Sliced 5-spice beef

MAIN COURSES

Scallops with egg white
Orange beef
Squid with mystery stems
Kung-pao chicken (you’ve never had it like this!)
Pork with brown sugar sauce
Shrimp
Julienned snow peas and bamboo shoots
Julienned celery and compresses tofu
Tofu and edamame
Wheat glutten cubes with fava and ginko beans
Mushroom and basil skewers
Whole fried fish, with sweetened tomato sauce
Whole duck with yellow plum sauce
Crispy garlic eggplant

DESSERT

Corn and coconut milk soup

Mmmmmmmmmmm….

Jam Up and Jelly Tight

I’ve just completed the annual plum jam session: 18 half-pint jars this year, and 3 one-pint jars. I totally forget what I do every year, but this time it’s in the blog–equal weight sugar and plums, 220 degrees. My plums were a little less ripe, so the jam has a sweet and sour bite that is going to be perfect with peanut butter. If you’re into plum jam, let me know and I’ll send you a jar (while supplies last…).

Sarah is in town, and came over last night to celebrate her birthday. She’s the author of Empathy, My American History, etc, and a play on Carson McCullers that got totally trashed in the New York Times last year but she says every performance sold out. Any review it seems is a good review. She brought with her a bottle of Châteauneuf du Pape (’95) that was out of this world. I’ve never had wine like that–bandaids and honey. Is there a term for that bandaid-type taste that seems to permeate expensive french wines? It had to be one of the most delicious wines I’ve ever had. We decided not to have the Russian River Pinot afterwards, even though we knew it was a good one, afraid that it would appear too brash after such a complex sensual experience. Sarah also brought everyone presents–she gave me a CD of the Original Broadway recording of Hair! Yipee!

Oops, there’s Carla–gotta go…

More Good Victuals

Long lunch with Arnie today at Chez Papa, an excellent new French restaurant on Portrero Hill. I had the potato, artichoke, asparagus salad w/bacon and whole-seed mustard vinaigrette, the halibut with fennel, onion and olive oil, and for dessert we shared the tart tatin and the chocolate souffle. Completely delicious, and excellent service. All of the waiters are crazy about the food, and their enthusiasm makes the experience even more enjoyable. Arnie chose the wine, which was great, but by the time I thought of looking at the bottle, I couldn’t really focus that well, so who knows what it was. I’m supposed to go see a Handel opera tonight, but I don’t know if I can stay awake. I was up really late last night with Stanley and Giuliano, dear old friends of Bob, and another great meal (bruschetta with liver pate, flavored with sage and anchovies [!], asparagus again, wild mushroom risotto, and blackberries for dessert). Stanley is a playwright. He wrote a wonderful play called The Chinese Art of Placement, that was produced here a few years ago, a hilarious and wacky play involving a single actor and a single chair. The central character, well, the only character, Sparky Litman, ruminates on the events leading to his current delusions of normalcy as he telephones past and present acquaintances to invite them to help him celebrate, all the while trying to find the perfect placement for the chair and the meaning behind it, and everything else. Giuliano owns a place in Guerneville up the hill from my house there, a cool old mobile home from the 50’s that he’s been trying to replace for as long as I’ve know him. Tomorrow I photograph Chris for the next few pieces in my Thundercrack! series. I’m itching to get to work…

One Meatball

Scooby Doo last night, and awful Italian at Buca di Beppo (“Why did I do it?” I ask myself following every dreadful meal I’ve ever had there) with Bob and Reese.

One meatball for the three of us.

I haven’t seen BC for two days and am missing him. I’m thinking of extending my Thundercrack! piece into a series–fewer images, less structural rigidity. I’d better get into the darkroom. BC’s legs!… more later.

Homey

Back in SF. Fight with Evil Bob II last night. Work this morning after no sleep. Haircut this afternoon. Insomnia tonight.

Need to pitch the woo. But where…?

Well, the weekend in Chicago was filled with interesting little goodies… mid-century antiques on Lincoln Avenue, Giordano’s stuffed pizza and Al’s #1 Italian Beef, Dale Chihuly’s silly glass baubles at the Garfield Park Conservatory and a captivating installation called What Barbara Jordan Wore by Donald Moffett at the Museum of Contemporary Art (which has a great permanent collection, by the way, including several recent pieces by my college mate Paul Pfeiffer that just knocked my socks off–one a video loop of a basketball player filmed from court level, flashbulbs going off in the crowd beyond, the other players digitally removed from the court, his pacing perceived initially as triumphant post-hoop posturing, but with the frequent repetition–the loop lasted only a few seconds–his movements seemed like that of a caged animal–really hot work!)

We visited the Frank Lloyd Wright buildings and his studio in Oak Park on the most perfect day of the year. I was especially wowed by his Unity Temple, which seemed like an anti-cathedral, the interior space so intimate and human, grounded heavily by natural materials like cement and stone, but with heavenly light piercing the all-glass coffered ceiling and side windows.

We spent Father’s Day evening with Chris’ dad Stephanie by taking her out to one of the city’s hottest new restaurants, Spring. The emphasis is on seafood, accented with Asian flavors and sensibility. Some of the flavors were all over the map but came together nicely in the mouth–tuna tartare with a citrus vinaigrette and fish roe, lobster springrolls with mint and a curry-passionfruit sauce, seared sea scallops served on a bed of oxtails and mushrooms and topped with broccoli rabe, a flourless chocolate cake served with a chocolate honeycomb thingy, lavender ice cream and citrus confit (cooked in its own fat?), a chocolate dome of milk-chocolate mousse and flourless cake on a chocolate-almond disk, encased in chocolate ganache and surrounded by foamed (!) almond milk.

Midway Through the Midwest Passage

Today Chris and I went to Geneseo, the kind of town that is called quaint–victorian homes with lawns, a real main street, a public park with a bandshell, and lunch with the ladies. Geneseo is a nice 30-minute drive through corn country from Chris’ mom Pat’s house in Moline, one of the Quad Cities on the Illinois side of the Mississippi. We were accompanied by Beth and Margie (Chris’s sisters), and Beth’s daughter Maggie. I shot some additional video for Chris’ film project about his family, which he started last year. He’s been filming them individually and together, asking them about their memories and experiences growing up. The theme that has emerged seems to be how the family has survived the erratic and often abusive behavior of their father, Jim. Lucky for them, at 60 years of age, Jim decided to have a complete sex change, and became Stephanie. She’s now 67 and lives in Chicago, in a fabulous condo on Lakeshore Boulevard. From what I gather, she wasn’t very good at being a man, embodying a lot of the worst traits that men have to offer–cheating, lying, etc… I think that Jim was so miserable being a man–well, maybe not so much being a man as NOT being a woman, or not being able to DRESS like a woman–that he inhabited his maleness with resentment and anger, and turned it all outward. She’s now engaged with life and ideas in a way that she wouldn’t let herself be as a man. She’s studying art and the violin, and has a little lapdog named Annie. “Mommie take, mommie take!” I’ve noticed that when Stephanie mentions guys, she talks about them in terms of their attraction to her, and when she talks about women, it’s with a yearning, lusty lilt. My own opinion is that Stephanie loves women, REALLY loves women, and has chosen to define herself as heterosexual because her ideas of gender and sexuality are limited by tradition and midwestern values. She loves her creation, though, and her love of self is infectious. She’s my hero in some ways, particularly in how she’s risen so beautifully from Jim’s ashes.

So the past few days have been about hanging with the BC family, drinking Harvey Wallbangers, and eating lots–LOTS–of fat and protein. If I lose weight on this trip, I’ll completely change my opinion of Dr. Atkins. Later, we’re going to Whitey’s, the home of the greatest chocolate malt in the world. Chris and I have previously visited only in the winter, when everything’s under five feet of snow and the malts don’t melt. It’s about something different then, like even food is about things frozen and unthawable. Last night I had my first Whitey’s malt of the trip. Deviating extravagently from my usual chocolate malt, I had a chocolate malt with a black cherry sunday on top. I couldn’t stand to see it end. The malt girls don’t just mix the ingredients together and stick it under the mixer, no, they mix their concoctions a little at a time, and then hold them under the mixing paddles, move them around, pump the cups, add more ingredients, move them up and down. It’s an aerobic workout. All for me. My malt arrives with a spoon in it that doesn’t move. The state is somewhere between liquid and solid, but neither. I think heaven must be something very close to a Whitey’s malt. Or hell. I’d take either.

A Vision of the Virgin, and of Greek Pastries

Today I saw the Virgin Mary, on Highway 19 in Clearwater, a miraculous vision of the Virgin Mary, her rainbow-hued silhouette reflecting eerily off the glass windows of the international-style bank. Usually one has to squint or stretch the boundaries of representation to see those Madonnas on the walls, or those Jesuses in the tortillas, but this Mary was as clear as the olive in my martini glass, and luminous and beautiful.

And then we had lunch and pastries in Tarpon Springs, a former Greek sponge-diving community turned tourist enclave following the introduction of the synthetic sponge. Parts of town are still charming, and every Epiphany the bishop tosses a crucifix into the chilly Gulf and the prepubescent boys of the town dive in after it. The boy who retrieves it gets a special blessing from the bishop.

I had a completely scrumptious almond cookie, the size of a salad plate, that was like an almond orgy, a slightly crunchy outside covered with toasted almonds that, when bitten into, revealed a chewy inside that spilled pleasure into every corner of my mouth.

First a hop into Carol and Bruce’s pool, and then we’re off to the beach, to spend the weekend in Sue’s husband David’s sister’s condo on Indian Rocks beach. Ta-ta!

Florida

Hot, sweaty, moving from air-conditioned space to air-conditioned space… I am in Florida, enjoying a visit with my sisters, Carol and Sue, and their mates and daughters. Last night we all hung out in the driveway, in my niece Megan’s car, listening to the Dixie Chicks and No Doubt on her new CD player, and then spent the rest of the evening looking at Carol’s prints and ceramics. At 49 she decided to finish her art degree, having spent the last 28 years raising a family and designing dresses.

Today Carol and I went to the Dali museum. The Persistence of Memory was visiting from MoMA.

It was nice to see it again, one of Dali’s really satisfying works. The museum presented sanitized interpretations of these paintings that are so filled with sexual anxiety that even I get nervous around them. His later paintings, called Masterworks, are beautifully painted and visually thrilling, but are weighed down by grand themes that are less interesting to me than his sexual anxiety and Gala’s vulva.

Last night’s dinner:
– Salad of romaine lettuce and hearts of palm
– Zipper peas
– Fried okra
– Steamed squash with vidalia onions and butter
– Alabama white corn bread with local tangerine marmalade
– Sweet potato pie

Mmmmmm….

Wine Country, my Bartender at the Pit

Wine country with Barb and Vick today. We drove up the Sonoma Coast, through Guerneville for some quick cruising and a stop at Armstrong Woods, “It was only a moment for you..,” then on to West Side Drive, and the Dry Creek Valley, blah blah blah. There’s a beautiful new winery on the West Side Drive–called Roshambo. Really. The wines were fairly good–light, but with lots of complexity and fragrance, and the architecture was stunning, a departure from the Sonoma County vernacular combining sleek contemporary lines and curves with beautiful warm wood planked ceilings and large glass windows framing spectacular views. Joe Bob says check it out.

Did I mention cruising in Guerneville? Well (now close your ears, tulip), while munching our sandwiches at what’s-the-name-of-that-cafe-on-Armstrong-Woods-Road? an employee in way tight shorts and an even tighter tank top that rode 3 inches above the top of his shorts, exposing a cute little furry belly, made frequent trips to the front counter for no apparent reason other than to jiggle that 3 inch section of flesh my way. My lunch companions were oblivious to the heated non-verbal dialogue that I was engaged in.

Do you remember The Pit? It was a dance club downstairs from Cocktails, on Howard at 9th, where AsiaSF is now. I often went there after Manny died, just to watch the bartender. He was a black haired fur-ball whose pudgy tank of a body was frequently poured into an outfit similar to the one described above. As he leaned over the stainless steel counter to give patrons their drinks, that same 3 inch section of belly made contact with the counter-top for an instant or two. Imagining the sensation of that live hot belly, on those hot nights, pressed against the cold steel sent shivers down to my prostate…