Snapshots from Christmas in Cincinnati

Cincinnati Country Club ©Kim Smith 2013Liv and Alex copyLiv and Alex

My husband’s extended family has been celebrating Christmas Eve together since they emigrated from Germany in the mid-1800s. I was feeling a tiny bit melancholy because the older generation (now in their 80s and 90s) is retiring from hosting the parties. The festivities will surely still go on, although not in quite the same high style as Christmas’s past because many of the next generation (such as ourselves) have made their homes far and wide.

_DSF5764This year was my mother-in-law’s turn to host the party. The table was beautifully decorated and I love the simple and cheery touch of the cardinals on the apples.

Bumbleberry cake BonBonerie ©Kim Smith 2013jpg copyBumbleberry Torte from BonBonerie

Cincinnati was settled largely by German immigrants and judging by the countless established bakeries dotted throughout the city, I imagine the original emigrees were fabulous bakers. One of Tom’s cousins, Debbie, created a cookbook based on favorite family Christmas recipes, including recipes that date back to the 1800s, recipes from the family’s cooks, and recipes from old German great aunts who also lived in the big house and whose job it was at Christmastime to make thousands of cookies. When we spend Christmas at home and not in Ohio, Liv, Alex, and I love to cook from the family Christmas cookbook and the cookies especially are the yummiest you could possibly imagine. _DSF5794My father-in-law, who is the most kind-hearted man I have ever met, has a wonderful sense of humor, and is a great storyteller, too–and boy does he have many stories to share from a life richly led!

Liv Alex and Hannah

Cincinnati Country Club snow ©Kim Smith 2013Dusting of snow Christmas Eve morning

Cincinnati Country Club  -1©Kim Smith 2013_DSF6033Cincinnati is just that much further west that sunrise is nearly an hour later than in Gloucester. The club that we stay at is set within a golf course sited on a hill, with beautiful panoramic views of the surrounding countryside. Cincinnati Country Club  -3©Kim Smith 2013JPG Cincinnati Country Club -4 ©Kim Smith 2013Getting ready for Christmas Eve celebration #2! _DSF5990Always a challenge to get loved ones to stand still long enough for a photo!

_DSF5987Liv and AlexNutcracker ©Kim Smith 2013 copyDouble Exposure Fuifilm X- E1

End Notes: In poking around online, I found a photo of the home of Great-aunt Kitty, where the Christmas Eve parties were held continuously for many years. Tom has fond memories of wonderful Christmas’s spent there and especially of the “kiddy table,” where all the cousins and siblings sat together (no adults!), and I gather, where many food fights occurred. The house, still standing, was donated to the Cincinnati park board and you can see more photos of the gorgeous interior at this link: The Gibson-Hauck House. While in Cincinnati we also visited the Rookwood Pottery studio. If you have ever seen Antiques Roadshow, you probably know how beautiful is Rookwood pottery. This post is already too long so later in the week I’ll do a little post about Rookwood.

Hauck Gibson HouseGibson-Hauck House

Blue Cheese Dip

 

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Blue Cheese Dip

Ingredients

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 1/2 cups sliced shallots

1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

1/4 teaspoon fresh ground pepper

3/4 cup mayonnaise

3/4 cup sour cream

1 1/2 cups blue cheese; crumbled

Step-by-Step

1 heat olive oil in medium size frying pan; add sliced shallots; cook 15-20 minutes on medium/ low heat until shallots caramelize

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2 whisk together mayonnaise and sour cream; add crumbled blue cheese; season with salt and pepper; mix well with hand mixer

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3 add and mix three quarters of caramelized shallots to mixture; mix well

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4 transfer to serving bowl; top with remaining caramelized shallots; serve with potato chips

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Rubber Duck Multitasking Polar Dive Preparation

My new swimsuit arrived today from Coastal Dog Apparel in plenty of time for the New Year’s Polar Plunge. These thing are pretty snazzy and might be just the thing for a cold dip. Comfy and loose outer swimsuit with an inner swimsuit that is form fitting. Keeping those kibbles and bits all snug is key when diving into 42° F ice water.

The tourists and the snowy owls all flew away. I wonder why?
The tourists and the snowy owls all flew away. I wonder why?

To prepare for the chill the Rubber Duck went off to Stage Fort Park to check out the snowy owls.

This is a photo of a sexy potato which has nothing whatsoever to do with this post.
This is a photo of a sexy potato which has nothing whatsoever to do with this post.

Guitarists Mark Small & Raymond Gonzalez at Cafe Shalom next Saturday, Jan 11

This just in from Natalia Carollo …

Cafe Shalom at Temple Ahavat Achim
Saturday, January 11th at 7PM
Tickets $10/per person

Raymond Gonzalez
Raymond Gonzalez
Mark Small
Mark Small

Enjoy music performances by Mark Small, a classical guitarist-composer-arranger who has penned classical, jazz, pop, and sacred music for chorus, wind ensemble, orchestra, piano, and guitar, and Raymond Gonzalez, a guitarist and composer who combines classical, jazz, Celtic and Latin influences into his songs and solo guitar compositions. His topics range from ethereal to- well, songs about pigs and mermen and most things in between.

Johnny A ~ Shalin Liu Performance Center ~ January 18, 2014

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Get tickets here>   http://tickets.rockportmusic.org/single/SelectSeatingSYOS.aspx?p=2002&z=3

Essex Aggie – 100 Years Old

The Essex Agricultural School was founded in 1913 at Hawthorne (Danvers) MA, on land granted by descendants of Nathaniel Hawthorne. They raised  cows, learned how to milk them, and then sent the milk to be processed and bottled. This unused bottle was given to me by Gloucester resident  Gus Olson, former president of Essex Agricultural and Technical High School..
The Essex Agricultural School was founded in 1913 at Hawthorne (Danvers) MA, on land granted by descendants of Nathaniel Hawthorne. They raised cows, learned how to milk them, and then sent the milk to be processed and bottled. This unused bottle was given to me by Gloucester resident Gus Olson, former president of Essex Agricultural and Technical High School..

What happens when two events ( A Wedding and Plunge 4 Pete) collide on Good Harbor Beach?

What happens when two events ( A Wedding and Plunge 4 Pete) collide on Good Harbor Beach? Lots of peace, co-opertion and goodwill! It was an afternoon to simply smile.

Best-Janet

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West Parish Student in Boston Ballet

Hi, Joey.  Here is something for you.  The photo was taken by Rhian’s mother, Michelle Williams.

West Parish Student Danced in Boston Ballet’s Nutcracker for Third Year

Ten-year old West Parish student, Rhian Williams, performed in the Boston Ballet’s iconic production of The Nutcracker at the Boston Opera House for a third consecutive year.  Rhian, the daughter of Michelle and Paul Williams and granddaughter of Ward 5 Councilor Elect, Bill Fonvielle and Atlantic Vacation Homes president, Carole Sharoff, has been a student at the heralded Boston Ballet School for five years.   In this year’s production, she danced the part of a mouse that emerges from a fireplace and runs off with a giant cookie.  In previous productions, she has been a doll and a page. 

Nutcracker 2013

Be Careful This Morning- Black Ice Everywhere

We came down the dock at 4AM to offload a truck of bait and the truck driver went ass over teakettle.  The temps are above freezing but there’s black ice everywhere.

Lighthouse Beach Snowy Owl Sighting- Photo from Carl Gustin

Joey,

This snowy owl was spotted over the weekend enjoying a visit to Annisquam near Lighthouse Beach.

Carl Gustin

Gloucester, MA 01930

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GloucesterCast 12/29/13 With Toby Pett and Nichole Schrafft

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podcasticon

Topics Include:

Setting the Table for a Regal Butterfly Comeback, With Milkweed

Monarch Caterpillar Milkweed ©Kim Smith 2013Monarch Caterpillar Eating Common Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) Foliage

Thank you GMG readers and Monarch Butterfly friends for forwarding the following article from the NY Times!

By Michael Wines

Published December 20th, 2013

CEDAR FALLS, Iowa — Bounding out of a silver Ford pickup into the single-digit wind-flogged flatness that is Iowa in December, Laura Jackson strode to a thicket of desiccated sticks and plucked a paisley-shaped prize.

It was a pod that, after a gentle squeeze, burst with chocolate brown buttons: seeds of milkweed, the favored — indeed, the only — food of the monarch butterfly caterpillar.

Once wild and common, milkweed has diminished as cropland expansion has drastically cut grasslands and conservation lands. Diminished too is the iconic monarch.

Dr. Jackson, a University of Northern Iowa biologist and director of its Tallgrass Prairie Center, is part of a growing effort to rescue the monarch. Her prairie center not only grows milkweed seeds for the state’s natural resources department, which spreads them in parks and other government lands, but has helped seed thousands of acres statewide with milkweed and other native plants in a broader effort to revive the flora and fauna that once blanketed more than four-fifths of the state.

Monarch Caterpillar milkweed -2 © Kim Smith 2012Monarch caterpillar hanging from a Marsh Milkweed (Asclepias incarnata) leaf rib, in the characteristic J-shape, readying to pupate.

Nationwide, organizations are working to increase the monarchs’ flagging numbers. At the University of Minnesota, a coalition of nonprofits and government agencies called Monarch Joint Venture is funding research and conservation efforts. At the University of Kansas, Monarch Watch has enlisted supporters to create nearly 7,450 so-called way stations, milkweed-rich backyards and other feeding and breeding spots along migration routes on the East and West Coasts and the Midwest.

But it remains an uphill struggle. The number of monarchs that completed the largest and most arduous migration this fall, from the northern United States and Canada to a mountainside forest in Mexico, dropped precipitously, apparently to the lowest level yet recorded. In 2010 at the University of Northern Iowa, a summertime count in some 100 acres of prairie grasses and flowers turned up 176 monarchs; this year, there were 11.

Read the story here

Spring Mix Salad With Mango/Ginger Stilton Cheese & Crispy Bacon

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Spring Mix Salad With Mango/Ginger Stilton Cheese & Crispy Bacon

Ingredients

8 cups spring mix baby red and green leaf lettuce

1 1/4 cup Mango/Ginger Stilton Cheese (sold at The Cave, Main Street Gloucester)

3/4 cup dried cherries

3/4 cup whole pecans

8 slices bacon; crisply cooked; crumbled

1/2 cup lemon juice

1/2 cup olive oil

1/2 teaspoon kosher salt

1/2  teaspoon freshly ground pepper

Step–by-Step

1 arrange greens in serving bowl; top with dried cherries and pecans

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2 cut wedge of cheese into bite-size pieces; add cheese pieces and toss

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3 vigorously whisk together olive oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper 1 minute; pour dressing over top; toss and mix well

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4  top with bacon pieces; serve

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Cambridge

Went into Cambridge on Saturday and decided to take a walk on Memorial Drive. I took this picture from River Street Bridge which connects Memorial Drive to Storrow Drive. Such a pretty day.

December 28, 2013 Cambridge

Joey’s Calling You Out to Take the Plunge

rocky neck plunge call

Always a great time, whether you plunge or just come to cheer on the plungers!  The Rocky Neck Plunge will take place on New Year’s Day at 2:00PM at Oaks Cove Beach on Stevens Lane with a body and innards warming after party immediately following at the Cultural Center at Rocky Neck, 6 Wonson Street with chowda and hot chocolate.  A perfect way to start the new year – having fun and being part of this unique community.  Who says nothing happens on Rocky Neck in the winter?!

There will be a van at the corner of Wonson Street and Stevens Lane to collect non-perishable food donations for The Open Door Food Panty so bring along some goods to help fill it up (checks are also welcome).

E.J. Lefavour