It’d be super-cool if you decided to stay.
{click on above image to go to the mixtape}
Posted In mixtape, music{click on above image to go to the mixtape}
Posted In mixtape, music{via ffffound}
+ I love these little candy pouches!
+ Do you send out Halloween cards?
+ A great city guide representing my hometown of Pittsburgh, PA!
+ Outstanding in the Field is a fantastic concept: a traveling dinner party tour.
I know that when it comes to raw fish, the world divides into two distinct camps. There is the “I love it SO much I could eat it every day” camp. That is the one I live in. Then there is the “Get away from me with that raw fish” camp, and that is the one that my teenager lives in. And while it is possible every once in a blue moon to get someone to cross from the teenager’s camp to mine (I did it with my Southern husband but it was before we were married and for all I know it was one of his sneaky dating techniques), I’m not even gonna try. All you anti-sushi people out there? I love you anyway, and I will be back soon with something that is completely cooked.
In the meantime, however, we must discuss the tuna tartare recipe from my current favorite cookbook, STONEWALL KITCHEN FAVORITES. This is an amazingly quick, easy and (if you are pro-raw fish) spectacularly delicious little number. You need to get sushi-grade tuna, which I promise is not hard… go to wherever you usually buy your fresh fish and ask. You chop it up in tiny little pieces and mix it up with chopped tomato, scallions, some ginger and sesame oil and rice vinegar, and then scoop it out onto sliced cucumber rounds.
It obviously makes a fabulous, dramatic appetizer for whatever fun weekend party you are planning, but the sushi-loving southern husband and I actually had it for dinner one Friday night recently and were deliriously happy. Raw-fishing-eating people that we are. Recipe below, and next post I will return you to your regularly scheduled cooked food.
adapted from Stonewall Kitchen Favorites
8 ounces sushi-grade tuna, cut into 1/2 inch cubes
2 sliced scallions, white and green parts
1 tablespoon chopped fresh cilantro leaves
1 tablespoon grated, peeled fresh ginger
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon Asian sesame oil
1 seedless cucumber, sliced diagonally into 1/4 inch thick rounds
1. Place the tuna, scallions, cilantro, ginger, soy sauce and sesame oil in a medium bowl and mix gently until well-blended.
2. Arrange the cucumber slices on a large serving tray and pile a generous tablespoon of the tuna mixture on each cucumber slice. Serve immediately.
Tag Team Tompkins creates hand lettered, paper cut art featuring some of my favorite things. Quotes. These would perfect for Halloween, don’t you think? {via Paper Crave}
Posted In create, halloween, holidays, paperDave Eggers is a modern day Renaissance man. Writer and publisher? Check and check. Lyricist? Check. Artist? Check. I’ve seen some of his graphics work before, but these illustrations are something else entirely. {via Teen Angster}
Posted In create, illustration“This past year I went back to drawing animals. The process for these pictures is pretty simple: I find an old photo of an animal that somehow has some intrigue, and I use a China marker to freehand a version of that animal onto very smooth paper. Then I think of what that animal might be thinking — if that animal had an antagonistic relationship with humans and was vying with those humans for the favor of a Catholic God.”
I fall in love with dinnerware more than I care to openly admit. But when it looks like art, surely it doesn’t count. Right? This set by Richard Ginori is stop you in your tracks stunning. {via oh joy eats}
Posted In kitchenI love that this necklace. 3 Spikes on a Chain is the perfect combination of rocker chick meets delicate. (The rest of the shop, Lady, is equally amazing.)
Posted In jewelry, wear it