Wednesday, August 5, 2009

dinner for ten chez Wood



Champagne and Crostini
( avec des tapenades: noire, pistou, tomatine )

Crema fredda di Pomodori
( basilic, haricots verts, bocconcini, prosciutto di parma )

Raviolis au Daube
( beurre noisette, fresh sage, eschalotes )

Assiete de Fromage
( figue, abricot, cérise )

Sorbet au Poire
( coulis de framboise et fraises du bois )

Perhaps I've missed my calling as proprietor of a Bed & Breakfast. The dishes are dry, the kitchen clean... and I am enjoying the last of the wine and the company, wishing I could make such an honest living and live somewhere by the sea, unmolested by the concerns of the century.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

nel blu dipinto di blu


We have breached the halfway point of this ever so indulgent summer stay. I am therefore compelled to catalogue the feel of this life on my skin before I board the return flight and forfeit my tactile memories to the unforgiving grey expanses of New York.

We have been here two weeks and the days continue drowsily on as they have done. A routine grows around you here if you allow it, creeping vine-like up the shady side of you until you can no longer imagine your former life. Even now as I become maddeningly clock conscious, aware of the looming end, I can't quite imagine myself back where I was. Perhaps it is true that we live in spirals; Though we press ever-forward in our progress, the sights along the way repeat—because we have been there before. We are what changes. Our choices form the scenery doomed to rerun out the car windows when we are lost.

Details of daily living here are fixed. Questions are easily answered. In the morning, the sun blares off the sea through the open windows of the back-facing bedrooms, the light pure and white, and the soundtrack changes from cigale serenade and evening breeze to landscaping motors, deisel engines and barking dogs as the day warms. There is a window each morning when the back patio and lawn are shaded, before the sun works its way up the horizon and over the cypresses. After nineish, the sun clears the foliage and the whole back of the house is flooded with warm and yellow heat until it disappears again over the roof and the shade, like a curtain, is pulled back down.

Breakfast is invariably served in the front, on a stone porch overlooking the garden, from a serving window into the kitchen. If there are new guests, the table is laid with fresh croissants and pains au chocolat, raspberries and fraises du bois, coffee cups and jars upon jars of confiture. Once the newcomers are folded into the routine, as eggs into batter, the production value goes down. Breakfast becomes a personal affair. Wander into kitchen. Fix something. Find a quiet corner of the table with your mug of tea and last night's novel.

At about noon, the sun has crested the roof and so the breakfast porch grows overwarm. Lunch, when taken at home, is served without fanfare on the little square tile table on the back terrace, swathed in shade. Else we go to Le Diamant, a white tent on the rock beach for salads and grilled fish. Or we take ham sandwiches wrapped in tinfoil to the beach.

The afternoon can be frittered away on rare excursions, but typically it lazes by in a steady rhythm of beach to pool to shower—the first and only of the day—that culminates on or around the dinner hour. When the heat breaks and the breeze begins, someone suggests cocktails and, invariably, the lime from a rogue gin and tonic will be seen floating forlorn about the pool the next afternoon. We watch as the activity drains from the gulf like bathwater. Boats and jetskis disappear, the plane-pulled supermarket ads return to their hangars, the water fades from brilliant blue to placid grey. A quiet chill descends.

Dinners out are spectacular, whether the creperie for gallettes or a seven course candlelit affair somewhere in the outlying hills. Dinners in are a joy of garden goods and fresh herbs. Either calls for bottles and bottles of white, red, rosé... Evenings are sedentary: long genial conversations, french standards on the stereo, books on laps. Sleep is marvelous, half drunk and cool for the wind off the water.

Variables include market days, trips to Carrefour, walks into town for a morning coffee, an occasional ferry boat to St. Tropez. These too have a rhythm, a smell, a feeling. Ste. Maxime is pink and white and smells of roasting chickens and baking baguettes too hot to carry home. Bees and flies buzz idly around the flowers and the unattended food. Stores close between one and three for lunch. Church bells peal all Sunday morning and most evenings. Moto scooters weave in and out of the center line of traffic between the stagnant rows of diesel cars on the Bord de Mer, constantly congested from rond point to rond point along the gulf.

Simple tasks like parking are rendered comically treacherous by steep inclines and tiny enclosures. Things happen on a schedule like a loose fitting dress. This is life by the senses. If a loaf of bread is not consumed in its ten hour window of freshness, there will be toast the next morning. If the garden yields a few too many tomatoes, bruschetta is made. If the garden yields too much of everything, ratatouille.

The sky is a heart-wrecking shade of blue. Occasionally a mistral will blow through, wreaking havoc and slamming doors, making an apocalyptic wail ring through the masts of sailboats in their moorings, but this only serves to blow the clouds to sea. Eventually the water warms back up for swimming and the palm fronds lie flat again.

I go through this life with a half formed smile. I take unexpected joy in tidying the kitchen after meals, in making a bed in the morning, in the labored rotation of beach towels. I become the domestic goddess I've dreamt of being, learning the day by feel, as if by Braille, by the body and what it begs for. Coffee made, breakfast, book, coffee cleaned, lunch, sea, sand, pool, shower, dinner, wine, couch, doors locked only to be thrown open the next morning.

In the end it will be the details I forget first. As if this whole world and not just its cheese is unpasteurized. As if it has no shelf life.

I will forget the ease with which I use these french pleasantries in daily speech (bon journée, au revoir!). I will forget the cigarette heat of the beach, the sweat prickling at my headband, then the warm water on my naked skin, the world seen suddenly from reverse. I will forget the taste of the tiny apricots, the perfect sauteed blend of zucchini, onions and olive oil, the precise flavor of herbes de Provence. It will seem less credible that rosemary grows like a weed in the garden, that stands of lavender litter the sidewalks.

It will seem impossible to be this happy.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

la vie en rosé


I'm afraid I might belong here. Damn the consequences.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

point of contention


Turner Field, Atlanta, GA, home of the "Braves."

No offense to the citizens of Atlanta and the greater state of Georgia, but I cannot abide your baseball fans.

First of all, the naming of sports franchises according to Native American themes has always irked me—particularly when accompanied by a red-faced cartoon Indian. So immediately I object to the name, the logo and, above all, the Tomahawk Chop.

Not only is it beyond annoying, it's patently offensive. At worst it bespeaks a blanket parody of a vast and varied culture. At best it exemplifies a half-assed attempt at cultural appropriation, a desire to rally with the "noble savages" of yore in order to feel something resembling cultural relevancy. For a further (and more erudite) elucidation of this concept, see Philip Deloria's brilliant Playing Indian. He details how, once we ran the original inhabitants of this land mass we call America onto arid and uninhabitable reservations, we then proceeded to nibble away at their customs, building this concept of the "authentic" into our own national self-image as if to assuage our guilt for having laid waste to an entire way of life.

Also, any team that can't muster up enough fans to fill a stadium, let alone outnumber the opposing team's traveling fan base, ought to rethink their marketing strategy. Sure, there were plenty of boos whenever the rousing choruses of "Let's go, Red Sox" piped up, but they were not nearly loud enough to drown us out.

That said, spending time with my Dad in a new ballpark and watching the Sox (win or lose) is no small thing. So the day itself survived the rampant douchebaggery and will always be catalogued as a happy one.

I'm just saying.

Monday, June 22, 2009

take my weight off the ground


Remember when you were a kid and you wanted something? I mean really wanted something, with every fiber of your being and every conviction that it was the absolute missing link to your continued success as a living organism? Yeah. Growing up means no longer trusting that instinct.

Growing up means having to wonder whether what you want is what's best for you.

At what age must we override our instincts? We start small. We suppose we don't really want to be a fireman when we grow up. We stop reaching for the fruit-roll ups just because they're there. Pretty soon, the teddy bear goes into the closet. The thumb comes out of the mouth. The blankie stays folded at the bottom of the bed. But then, fifteen, twenty years later, we find ourselves suddenly sublimating the (often oppressive) urge to consume the entire basket of focaccia bread at the restaurant. We work off our sins and our sexual tension in the gym. And we wonder what we will do with our lives when plan A inevitably fails.

The question is: Where is the balance between living in the moment and practicing prudence? When did our desires run aground of our well-being? I find myself torn. Between. What I want versus what I thought I always wanted versus what I may or may not need.

The result is indecision. As if it were a disease. I don't even know where I belong anymore. One minute I'm ready to heave myself from the moving vehicle that is New York, next I'm lying on a wooden park bench in a West Village church garden, reading Anna Karenina and loving it here. Or drinking Wild Turkey from a brown bag on the pier, watching New Jersey twinkle across the Hudson, getting my butt wet on the grass. I want so much to be young and stupid, but I also want rocking chairs and living rooms and trees. Trouble is, I don't trust my capacity to commit to either.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

quelle surprise


So I took a day off to recuperate from a particularly stressful few weeks at work. I spent that day walking the streets of the city with an old friend. It was one of those epic New York days that start at the General Sherman statue, span entire boroughs, obscure quests, omelets, costume emporiums, Psychic Jessica and—inevitably—stretch into the evening hours and the dramatic consumption of beer. We logged almost nine miles on foot and knit together a conversation that stretched from Thomas Paine and armchair Catholicism to Roman vacation planning. I had six pints of Guinness for dinner.

We ran into the flaming automobile on our way up Park, right in the middle of Union Square. I mean, really. How many times do you get to witness the spontaneous combustion of the family car?

We ended the evening having stumbled upon the outdoor screening of The Sting in Bryant Park, watching for a little while in the drizzle before calling it in—a whopping eleven hours later.

It was one of those days that reaffirm your personal cosmology, but make you rethink most of your life choices to date. Limitless and perfect and hard to forget. There wasn't even a game on.

Now I ask: If a minivan can just go up in flames in front of Babies R Us on a rainy Monday night in New York City, what right have we to expect rhyme or reason from the universe?

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

(dis)illusion

People change.

They say it all the time, don't they? (the proverbial "they," the unwashed plebes, the cliched masses) Or is it that people can't change? (which is what my mother always told me)

I wonder if time isn't stronger than all other forces, in the end, when I realize the hairpin turns life can take before you even realize you've spun the wheel. Everything begins neutral and even, but some people are left caring more—or drastically less. Suddenly Disneyworld can surprise you after years of cynicism... A grudge grows easier to give up... You've taught yourself to like olives though you abhorred them as a child... Or your dearest friendships fade to labored acquaintance.

Who knows how or when it happens, that slap in the face.