Sunday, April 27, 2008

Kidos not Condos

University of Texas plans to sell or move the Family Housing development that brings nearly 1/3 of its students to Mathews Elementary. The diversity represented in this population of children makes Mathews a rare and beautiful place on earth. The community is trying to fight this proposal but it doesn't look good.

Sadly two other schools are being pushed out of thriving, urban areas in Central Austin.
Escuelita del Alma named best of Austin 2007, faces an ongoing battle between Las Manitas Avenue Cafe and the Marriott Corp. over the restaurant's and preschools site on Congress Ave. Its existence as the only Downtown preschool, multi-ethnic at that, has always been precarious, but it continues its nurturing commitment under the threat of the developer's wrecking ball. Habibi's Hutch Preschool and Natural Childlife Preserve will be relocating (further out of town) to make way for a project including 45 townhomes, 360 apartments, 20 live-and-work units, and 18,000 square feet of retail. The change would allow Cypress Realty to take advantage of VMU development incentives, which include relaxed requirements on setbacks, building coverage limits, and maximum density. I'm all for Urban Density but not at the expense of the children and hard working families. Huufff... huff....

Photo's below were taken at Mathews International Festival, where we enjoyed a delicious potluck, flag ceremony and dance performances. Ella Rae and her Kindergarten pals performed the Hawaiian Hookie Lau... that song is still stuck in my head.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Auntie and Ella

Hair today gone tomorrow

Sniff.. sniff...



Monday, April 7, 2008

The Big "D"

I adore Austin’s honky tonk arts culture but for an infusion of mature urban delights Dallas delivers. Once we passed the roadside porn trailers, fresh turkey buffet, and I do mean fresh, like in the pen behind the restaurant, and an accidental and delightful detour through Bell Branch, where blue bonnets, indian paint brush and buttercups lined the road, we were greeted by the Dallas skyline. Norman Mailer said the skyline looked like “a bunch of Kleenex boxes stacked on their ends.” True enough – but under those Kleenex boxes lies these treasures…

We gravitated toward the European Masters, Van Gough, Picasso, Manet, Monet, Gauguin and the Texas impressionism, including a massive collection from the Blue Bonnet Landscape tradition.

York Street
You are looking at a whole roasted barramundi. We shared this dish, boar ribs, sun choke and brown butter soup, beats, spinach, oysters and wine pairings. Critic, Bill Addison wrote this about chef Sharon Hage's restaurant, "...such are the enchantments at York Street, which is housed in a building so lithely modern and discreet that you might mistake its exterior for a small graphic design firm. Ms. Hage purchased the 42-seat East Dallas restaurant in 2001, allowing her the freedom to cook in a perpetually evolving and personal style. Her food isn't Texan, and, though intensely fresh, it isn't Californian, either. Yet its soulful individuality registers as distinctly American."

We met Chef Sharon after our meal. Emboldened by the Syrah I gushed to her, "that was the best meal I've ever had. Your restaurant is Che Panisse evolved!"

Balcony Club
Live jazz and an intimate booth at Balcony Club rounded out our night in Dallas. A mixed clientele, we've not seen the likes of since our dates at the 5th Amendment in Oakland, superior music, friendly and professional service and an extensive yet affordable bar left us giddy and wishing that Austin had a comparable venue.

Bread Winners Café and Bakery

Continuing our charmed rendezvous in Dallas, we sailed into this coveted brunch spot where we were seated in the atrium. We cured our hangovers with eggs benedict, chicken fried steak and Italian roast coffee. Yum! To top it off we had our first Texas star sighting. That is right, just across the room sat Ron Livingston of Office Space and Sex in the City fame with his Standoff co-star and possible love interest Rosemarie DeWitt of Mad Men , a must see show on AMC.




Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Heart Mama

Mothers Day is coming up -- May 11. HHmmmnn? ??? ? What would a Mama want? Breakfast in bed with the NY Times is always a winner. Gift certificate at her favorite Spa is also a can't fail option.

As a shameless promoter of all things etsy.com take a look at these gift options...


Modernmama can customize silver jewelry with kids names and dates or whatever else you can think of that might delight Mama. One example is this 'pea in the pod' necklace with names stamped on the sides of the pod.
Check out Forty-Two Roads too. These portrait's are such a nice alternative to the ubiquitous photo option. If you act fast you may be able to commission Ms Forty-Two Roads to make a portrait from your favorite photo. Mama like.
I'm inspired by these handmade flowers from TheRussian too. I think I'll try to make my own version for my Mama and Mama-inlaw. I'll need to treasure hunt for vintage vessels to put them in. Fun.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Little April Showers


If my girl Ella wrote a letter to Bambi this is what it might say….

Dear Bambi,

I saw the movie about you at my Grandma’s house almost everyday when my brother was first born. I really like watching you and your friends having fun. My Mom liked it too – although she cried hard the first time we saw it – and then she talked to EVERYONE at the park about the music and animation. She especially liked the “Little April Showers” part. She showed it to me on the computer. You can watch/listen to it in French too.

I think those hunters that killed Bambi’s Mama and started the forest fire are real jerks. Me and my brother never ever ever play with guns or matches.

Now I watch Princess Mononoke every weekend. It was scary the first time I saw it but not now. I'm sure you would want to be her friend because she protects the animals and forest. I pretend to be Princess Mononoke. I even have a mask and cape like hers. My Dad explained about how the movie was Japanese and kept telling me the name of the director. I like Japanese because my other favorite movies are Spirited Away and Howl’s Moving Castle and I always eat rice.

Stay Sweet.

Ella Rae Jones

For more on the making of Bambi -- including a delightful sequence (in Part 2) of Thumper talking about "Eating Greens....."

Bambi - The Magic Behind the Masterpiece (Part 1)
Bambi - The Magic Behind the Masterpiece (Part 2)

To read about Bambi's influence see this article "Walt Disney cartoons 'contain secret messages on the environment'. Dr Whitley singled out Bambi, which was released in 1942, as particularly influential, saying that many green activists had credited it as the inspiration that first made them interested in environmental issues."