Showing posts with label List. Show all posts
Showing posts with label List. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Things I am thankful for

To start with the obvious, but no less essential: my family, friends and health. Thank god, thank god, thank god.  

My colleagues

Having had really good bosses in the past, from whom I still draw confidence and inspiration

The centering effects of yoga and the comic side effects of zumba

Milo’s antics

My boyfriend fiancé for loving me so unconditionally and beautifully

My trips to Charleston, Buenos Aires, Miami, Maryland and Cape Cod this past year

For the beauty of Connecticut


For not seeing tragedy up close

Comfortable shoes

Netflix

That New York still has the power to make me weepy with happiness and awe

Good dentists

The moment of climbing into bed each night

Wonderful books like Yes, Chef; All That Is; Wild and TheCookbook Collector


Friday nights

My new home

I hope that wherever you are, you are in a happy, grateful place. Happy Thanksgiving, mes amis!

Monday, August 19, 2013

Love, not food

Instead of listing out edible contents of a Vegan Monday, I wanted to share another kind of inspirational log.

A good friend of mine recently fell madly in love, a love different from anything he's ever experienced. He's over the moon.
Another friend, married to a beautiful woman with a beautiful child, had an "awakening" after his wife pointed out they were in a rut. Needless to say, he's fixed it.
Two dear friends recently shared that they're pregnant.
Another good friend here in the city was ready to walk away from a relationship for the greener pastures of independence but stuck it out and is happy for it.
One beautiful friend's heart was broken by his love of over 10 years. 
My cousin got married last month and the whole family is still riding their high of love and happiness.

What's my point? None really. Except that all of our relationships go in cycles. Sometimes you just become aware of how happy and lucky you are. To be surrounded by love. To feel love. To be in love. To recognize the complexities and challenges and even the sorrows of love. It can be crushing and frightening, but mostly wildly wonderful. It can be the best part of life, love.

Monday, June 3, 2013

The New Guard: Diane, A Broad


Like any good expat in Paris, Diane Yoon is obsessed with food. And she has the photos—not to mention delicious recipeson her blog Diane, A Broad, to prove it. She also has sass. Her energy spills from her words and you can practically feel the wind in your hair as she takes you on a ride through her Paris—and beyond.

A continuation of the “new guard” of Parisian bloggers, meet Diane!

Hometown:
Los Angeles. City of angels, city of dreams, city of juice cleanses and no public transportation.

Current quatier:
I live in the 16th, though I used to live in the Marais and am now spending more and more of my time in Montmartre.

How long have you been in Paris?
I've been around for year and change.

What brought you there?
Love (cliché, but true) and a job that lets me work from anywhere.

What do you do for a living?
I work in corporate law doing mergers and acquisitions and business development. I also do some freelance writing and photography on the side, and in a past lives I've also taught salsa dancing and knitting. 

Your favorite thing about living in Paris:
Is it cheating to say the food? Honestly, it's such a big part of all of our lives. I love that in Paris, it's so much easier to develop relationships with the people who bake your bread, sell your fish, and ripen your cheese, instead of just getting it from some grocery store (though I certainly do visit Monoprix now and then).

The coolest thing about being an expat:
French boys aren't used to us aggressive American girls and (usually) find being hit on disarming enough to be charming. 

Your “secret” about Paris:
It's incredibly easy to get isolated and depressed in Paris, especially if you don't speak good French. My secret to enjoying and making the most of Paris was finding a group of like-minded people to experience the city with. For me, it was bloggers. For anyone else, it may be a church group, or a music society, or what-have-you. It sounds corny, but Paris made me realize how important friendship is.

Your favorite thing to blog about:
It really depends on my mood! For many months I blogged almost exclusively about recipes, and I love that topic because it's something that comes from my brain and hands and kitchen that readers can take and actually make something from. It's like a virtual tangibility transfer. Lately, I've enjoyed doing posts about Paris and travel more and more, because my photography has improved to the point where I can actually convey the mood I'm going for with my photos.

Right Bank or Left Bank:
I'm a Right Bank girl through-and-through

Café Flore or Deux Magots.
I've never been to either. Shocker, right?

Tuileries or Luxembourg:
I prefer smaller green spaces, and I used to live around the corner, so Place des Vosges for me.

Ladurée or Pierre Hermé:
Pierre Hermé if for the Mogador alone

WH Smith or Gaglinani:
Kindle

Steak Frites or Salade Chevre Chaud:
Steak frites, saignant

Costes or Crillon:
I wish

Colette or Merci:
Merci! I love having lunch at their Cinema Café, where they play old Audrey Hepburn movies like Sabrina.

Croissant or tartine:
Croissant, with butter and confiture

Café terrace or canal-side picnic:
Terrace for one or two, picnic for a bigger group

Camembert or Comté:
Comté all the way

Thursday, May 30, 2013

The new guard: Paris in Four Months


Last year, while reading my friend Erica’s ever-popular blog,HipParis.com, I noticed some reoccurring names—les filles who were contributing photos and/or stories to the blog. Call me slow on the uptake, but after a couple months I realized, wow, there’s a whole new generation of expat bloggers over there in Paris! Since I’ve been back in New York, life has gone on in Paris and a whole new wave of free-spirited, fun-loving, starry-eyed women are eating it up as I once did. It’s been a bittersweet delight to follow them since: To see their gleeful smiles, to read about their challenges and triumphs, and to see Paris through their-same-but-different eyes. For they’ve all found each other through blogging and overlapping circles, and I can’t help but think of my nearly two years in Paris and the friends I made from blogging. So I wanted to share a little about each of them in the coming weeks. Here’s to the “new guard” of Paris bloggers!



Carin Olsson of Paris in Four Months is a Swedish photographer who has a way with words. She’s also a kindred spirit, with a bona fide weakness for sweets. She’s thoughtful, elegant, and, man does she have a great eye. My favorite thing about Carin’s photos is that they capture exactly how I used to feel, walking around Paris: charmed, awed, seduced, joyful.



Now it’s your turn—meet Carin!



Hometown:

Stockholm, Sweden



Current quatier:

4th arrondissement



How long have you been in Paris?

In total it’s now around 8 ½ months.



What brought you there?

The desire to see something new and different, experience a totally different city than what I was used to, challenge myself and to learn the language. I moved to Paris the first time during four months and after those months were up I decided to come back again. This time because I’d fallen in love with the city.



Your favorite thing about living in Paris:

Could it be “thing(s)”? In that case it would have to be: the pastries, the architecture, the "joie de vivre", the small streets, the many cafés, the outdoor markets, the food, the parks and the wonderful scent the city has during very early spring mornings and evenings.



The coolest thing about being an expat:

I’ve met so many amazing people. The people I've meet here in Paris so far will be dear friends for life.



Your “secret” about Paris:

Forget the idea of all Parisians being rude! If you try your best (meaning: always greet someone with a "bonjour", say "merci" and don’t forget "au revoir" before leaving) you'll most likely get politeness in return.



Your favorite thing to blog about:

Since my blog is mostly based on photographs I’ll read this question as “your favorite thing to photograph” if that’s okay ;) And that has to be the lovely Parisian streets. It seems like I never get tired of running around with my camera, capturing the white, grey and beige buildings and streets in this city. I also love the city a little bit extra during the springtime when everything is starting to bloom! That makes some gorgeous photographs.



Right Bank or Left Bank:

Oh, this is a hard one. I think it has to be the Left Bank in general for me, but I'm absolutely in love with the lively and cozy Marais neighbourhood, all the new restaurants in the 11th and the luxurious shopping in the 1st. So preferably, a mixture of both.  



Café Flore or Deux Magots:

Le Deux Magots. Just because of the service, actually. They've always been very nice to me and unfortunately I’ve had some bad encounters at Café de Flore (although I have to admit that I still love the actual café).



Tuileries or Luxembourg:

The Luxembourg Gardens for sure. It's one of my favourite parks in Paris.



Ladurée or Pierre Hermé:

Ladurée for the pretty boxes but Pierre Hermé for anything eatable.



WH Smith or Gaglinani:

WH Smith



Steak Frites or Salade Chevre Chaud:

Steak Frites



Costes or Crillon:

They're both so gorgeous, but I must say that adore Crillon because of the classic beauty (I can't believe they're remodelling the whole hotel now!), but there's no better place to be than at Costes for Paris fashion week…



Colette or Merci:

Merci. I love Colette but it's almost impossible to get through the doors nowadays, it’s always so packed. At Merci I prefer the downstairs area or the used book café.



Croissant or tartine:

Croissant



Rykel or Roitfeld:

Roitfeld



Café terrace or canal-side picnic:

I know it's not an option but I would say Seine-side picnic if possible?



Camembert or Comté:

Comté

Monday, April 22, 2013

My Vegan Mondays & 10 Things You Can Do for Earth Day

I can think of no other holiday better paired with Vegan Monday than Earth Day. I was in college when I became aware of Earth Day. I was always a tree hugger, a raging feminist at my conservative business school. To have one day of the year when other hippies came out, played frisbee in the quad, drank and danced in the sunshine, was a wonderful and affirming jolt to my system. 

I'm still mindful of my practices: my consumption, my connectivity to the earth, how I live and the choices I make. That's not to say I'm perfect or pious. There's so much more I can do. But I'm happy to support my environmental beliefs by not eating red meat, as I didn't today, and I try not to every Monday.

Morning
Coffee with soy milk
A mixture of granola and Cheerios with almond milk

Afternoon
Curried cauliflower wrap
A piece of Jacques Torres dark chocolate bark, courtesy of a generous colleague
A clementine

Evening
Lentil soup

Are you looking for a way to have a lesser impact on the earth on a regular basis? Here are 10 doable ideas:

1. Try Meatless Mondays. Or Vegan Monday. Or do as Mark Bittman does and eat vegan until dinner.
2. Use those strip sockets for your electronics and turn them off when you leave the room or apartment.
3. Opt for bars of soap instead of plastic containers.
4. Limit your use of water bottles.
5. Plant some herbs. Or a tree.
6. Walk or bike to work if you can. Even if it's just one day a week.
7. Go paperless for billing and banking.
8. Reuse your plastic takeout containers. They're as good as Tupperware! I use mine for freezing food, taking lunch to work, to organize pens and makeup in drawers, and more.
9. Walk or jog outside instead of on a treadmill. Again, maybe not all the time, but once in a while.
10. Stop and savor. Watch the sun set. Smell some flowers. Admire a tree's shape. The more connected you feel to the world, the more you're going to fight for it.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Happy Valentine's

To all the loves in my life.
My dear family and friends, naturally
Paris, San Francisco, New York (does Brooklyn get a shout-out all its own??)
Chocolate and homemade cookies
Yoga and spinning
Dancing
Being goofy with AJ
Staying home on a Friday night with Netflix and Milo 
Milo 
Buvette
Miette 
Connecticut
Traveling to new places
Returning to one of my "homes"
Anticipation
Curiosity
Discovery
Falling into a book by Ruth Reichl, Simon Van Booy, Ha Jin, Edith Wharton or Richard Yates
The cyrprus and ecualyptus trees of San Francisco
The skyline of New York driving down Central Park West
Velibing through Place de la Concorde
Hiking 
Walking through the city until I'm bleary-eyed
Cuddles from my niece and nephew 
My pen pals
My soul sisters
Sentimental jewelry
What's imprinted in my memory banks 
Summer 
My BF, Andrew
Where I've been and what lies ahead

Et toi... what loves are you celebrating today??

Monday, November 19, 2012

My Vegan Mondays

I did it. I got through the day all-vegan and without any sweets. A particularly worthy accomplishment seeing as I've had something baked, gooey, chocolaty or otherwise decadent and unnecessary every day since getting stranded in the Caribbean. 

There's been birthday cake and gifts of baked goods; the chocolate show, plus my chocolate loot from Grenada. I was on a film shoot last week, where I annihilated the craft services table, eating cookies, muffins, M&Ms, pastries, brownies and chocolate-covered god knows what, just because it was there. Ditto for my hotel mini-bar. This past weekend, after a family visit that included baked French toast, waffles with Nutella, homemade apple pie, red velvet-cheesecake, plus malt balls and Buffalo's signature sweet, sponge candy, my mom gave me a one-pound of Twizzlers for good measure. And then there were the three courses of dessert that topped off my 15-course (!) birthday dinner at Eleven Madison Park (it totally lives up to the hype).

In other words, unless I want my 40s to be my chubbiest decade ever, I need to lay off the sweets. And I fully intend to do so, starting today. With the exception of two days (Thanksgiving, bien sur, and an upcoming Breakfast Club at the Four Seasons), I'm not having any for the next two weeks. So, yes, today's highlights included some steamed veggies, almonds and fruit.

And since I haven't been able to keep up at my blog lately, I'll share a few completely random bits.

• I watched Saint Elmo's Fire on the flight home from LA. Awesome.
There are only 35 days until Christmas. Have you started shopping yet?
I miss 40-hour work weeks, regular yoga, my friends in San Francisco, and biking around Paris, but not necessarily in that particular order.
Never underestimate the power of a hand-written letter. 
It's been too long since I've karaoked. 
I want to change my clothes, my hair, my face!
Blood, Bones & Butter, Gabrielle Hamilton's memoir, is something else that lives up to the hype.
I envy friends who can make good cocktails and good dinners.
I haven't smelled the smell of dry, fallen leaves enough this season.
I'm excited for pumpkin pie this Thursday.   
Don't forget there's still money, time and blood to be donated after Hurricane Sandy.
 

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

40 things I’m happy for


40. God. Damn. I have to say, I don’t know if it’s the distraction of Hurricane Sandy and returning to a cold and beaten up New York, having just spent over a week relaxing in the Caribbean, or just that it’s been a great year, but 40 isn’t bringing me down the way 30 did. Hallelujah!

I’m a big fan of birthdays. I love the attention (I do!), the celebrations, and the reflection. It’s great to have an excuse to hit pause and think about yourself—where you’ve been, where you are, and what you want next. It’s also a great reminder of all the wonderful people, thoughts and things that fill our lives. 

Here are 40 things, in random order, that I’m happy and grateful for.

• My health. That I can walk. That my body, nor my mind has given up on me.
I was born into such a loving, kickass family
Curiosity
Chocolate
I still send and receive hand-written letters
Walks along the Hudson. And the Seine.
Netflix
Passion
I realized my dream of publishing a book this year
Milo
High metabolism
Soft cashmere
My list of must-read books just keeps growing
That it’s been over 12 years since I gave up red meat and I don’t miss it
I have the most amazingly thoughtful, generous, caring, fun, goofy, smart, supportive friends
Wanderlust
That I get to see my parents often
Velibs
Back rubs
Artists like Herbert Katzman, Didier Paquignon and Trey Bryan
Bands like Phoenix, The Drums, Aimee Mann, Cut Copy and (always) The Pretenders
Directors like Nicole Holefcener, Sofia Coppola and Terrence Malick
I fell in love for the first time in a very long time
A good Manhattan
A good sidecar
That I got to see my Aunt BJ
Great conversation
My niece and nephew are still full of unselfconscious affection
Yoga
Steve Martin
I have wonderful “families” in three amazing cities: New York, San Francisco and Paris
Dahlias
That I ever started this blog
Coffee with a sprinkle of cinnamon
That Obama will be reelected tonight
Magazine subscriptions
Looking at photographs and remembering
Splurging on something I love
Giving to others
Walking, exploring, noticing, discovering