by Christina Waters | May 24, 2007 | Food |
And who isn’t on the look-out for some chewy, tender, deeply rich, barely sweet chocolate brownie? Even in a field littered with killer brownies, one stands out bigtime.
Yes, I do mean the heavy, yet tender, intensely dark chocolatey brownie from River Cafe (also available at enlightened farmers markets, like the one on the Westside, Saturdays.)
Made from the deluxe Valrhona chocolate and lightly studded with walnuts, it hits all the right spots. Just barely sweet, this plump, supple, sophisticated square of insanely good chocolate never, ever cloys.
Ever.
And it runs a mere $3 for more than you can decently consume in a single sitting.
by Christina Waters | May 24, 2007 | Art |
Come up and see what talent, hard work, great instructors and an Irwin scholarship, can create. The annual Irwin Scholarship exhibition – opening Wednesday, May 30, 5-7pm at UCSC’s Sesnon Gallery — is
entirely packed with some of the best from some of the brightest. This year’s scholarship recipients — Michael Allison, Nicola Buffa, Katie Dorame, Kevin Dwyer, Adam Harms, Ian Paul, Henry Plant, Sean-Michael Rau, Maria Schoettler, Augustus Thompson, Olivia Vegh — are painters, photographers, installations artists, sculptors, printmakers, whose creativity has been helped by the support of the William Hyde and Susan Benteen Irwin Scholarship Fund.
Juicy artwork, a free public reception, what’s not to like? The gallery is located at Porter College, and is open Tues-Sat, noon to 5pm. For details, check the Sesnon website. See you on Wednesday.
by Christina Waters | May 23, 2007 | Art |
This year’s New Music Works Avant Garden Party is seasoned – both musically and culinarily –
with the complex spices of Thailand. This Sunday, June 3 from 3-7pm, the mysteriously tropical island and lagoon located in a mythic corner up the upper yacht harber, will host a rare and beautiful display of Thai Piphat Music and Dance by the ensemble of Wat Buddhanusorn, the brilliant a capella work of the Ariose singers directed by Michael McGushin, a world premier of interactive installation Ttitriadic Chimes, songs by Paul Hindemith and compositions by NMW founder Philip Collins.
But for the hungry and thirsty, just know that your $35 adv/$40 door ticket price also gets you tipples from an array of wines, beers and exotic beverages – plus the al fresco Southeast Asian delicacies from the woks of Jozseph Schultz and David Jackman. (more…)
by Christina Waters | May 22, 2007 | Movies |
Don’t even think about seeing Away from Her unless you’re prepared to 1) cry your eyes out and 2) have your cultural stereotypes about marriage shattered to pieces.
As beautiful as ever, and radiantly no-longer-young, Julie Christie illuminates the
broken heart of this deeply affecting film, as a woman entering the twilight of dementia. But before the film even unpacks its considerable candor about the loss of memory, it transforms itself into a transcendent portrait of love.
It took me an hour to compose myself after I walked out of the Nickelodeon last weekend (take kleenex and dark glasses!), but once I was able to focus again I realized I’d just seen something breath-takingly rare — a film about the distilled quality of a long love directed by a woman still in her 20s.
Co-starring Gordon Pinsent and Olympia Dukakis (in a searing and unexpected performance), Away from Her opens with a few quirky moments in which lovely Fiona Anderssen (Christie) may or may not be slipping into Alzheimer’s. Set in snowy Canada — indeed with the exception of Dukakis, the entire cast, crew and setting are Canadian – the film observes the difficult moments of recognition, acceptance, and then non-acceptance between the long-married husband and wife as to her condition. Based on a short story by Alice Munro, the script is a tissue of exceptional clarity — and it just stretches to feature length, thanks to the letter-perfect casting and hands-off directorial style of writer/director Sarah Polley.
Christie was always a beauty, back in the 60s and 70s when her incandescent face and generous mouth made her an international sex symbol. But I never thought her much of an actress. (more…)
by Christina Waters | May 21, 2007 | Home |
You know the ones I mean. Locations in which well-meaning, hard-working entrepreneurs keep trying to set up a restaurant business, and which keep resisting any success. Locations whose ill-fated feng shui, or abyssmal karma, bodes against every effort to achieve something like success. There are many such culinary Bermuda Triangles in every town, and the Santa Cruz area is no exception. Here – with input from many readers – is a short list of retail revolving doors. Places that just plain don’t work, no matter how creative the make-over.
1) The very top cursed location is the corner of Ocean and Soquel. What is it about this place? Surely this could be a prime location for something? I mean every hungry, thirsty tourist aiming for the beach has to pass by here, right? Yet over and over – nothing works. Maybe it’s the tiny parking lot, or the fact that it’s just a little bit too far from downtown. This one got the most votes of all! Former Rock ‘n’ Tacos, Maui Maui, something pancake house, something vegetarian, somebody’s bakery & café.
According to Larry Pearson, Players’ Pizza was the last successful restaurant at that site, owned by Terry & Cathy Hutson who closed it down and moved to the Sierra foothills 10 years.. . . Where’s the al qaeda when we need them? Just blow up this building and put it out of its misery.
2) Then there the former Manoff’s, on Water Street that re-re-opened a few minutes ago as another taqueria, after the demise of Puerto Escondido Taqueria. Way too tiny and (it has to be said) ugly. After many years of serving great burgers, Manoff’s went the way of Castagnola’s and the Santa Cruz Hotel. Then it was the Turkey Shack, then Mike’s Soul Food (or was it the other way around?), then some other burger joint, then a taqueria, and now yet another taqueria.
3) Several readers felt that the Art Center dining rooms of former, incomparable India Joze have become another cursed location. (more…)