Friday, December 24, 2010

Recipe for Making a Bomb Christmas Dinner

Very unorthodox Christmas, but if I have learned anything from Euro-snow nearly ruining our plans due to inability for Europeans to work without freaking out and running out of de-icing liquid, it is that Christmas is where family and good company is. So here in pictures is how I rocked the Christmas dinner and how you can too. No real quinessential "Christmas" roast but still good rustic food with some European and Californian influence. Hope everyone had a good one and enjoy the photos:


Portugese Kale Soup:




1. Add stuff















2. Put it in a pot with stock and simmer








3. Pour it into a bowl





Salad: put greens together and make a dressing. Straight forward:






Pasta with Clams and White Wine:

1. Get clams





2. Get Pancetta




3. Cut up some Parsley



4. Put stuff together, add some white wine and some hot pepper for a kick and serve




Duck Breast with beet roots and watercrest:




1. Get some foil, put the beets in there with rosemary, olive oil, salt/pepper, and balsamic and pop in the oven for 35 minutes at 400F



2. Once that's ready cook your duck and put it on top. Make sure you rest it so the juices redistribute into the meat.



Should be pretty straight forward ya? Haha. Anywho hope everyone out there is enjoy Christmas and having a wonderful break. Was going to write a post about London but got too lazy so just check the album on FB. Anywho, love peace and chicken grease.

K

Sunday, December 12, 2010

To the Skies

The boys at Green Street are back at it again. Fresh off their tour in Tokyo they come back to Identity Bar and give another dynamite show with some new beats. Now back with new mindsets as well as new friends (DJ Tomoko and Ucca in attendance at the gig) they're ready to show the world some new tracks this coming winter. Check them out here and watch out for them as they perform at 2011 South by Southwest in Austin TX.

Pictures from the show:





Sunday, November 21, 2010

Facillitator of That Go Life

The frequency of these posts have decreased significantly. It has truly been tough to keep updating this blog on a regular pace with work and life. All I can say is that I'm glad I took the GMATs near the end of September, because with the way life and work is going there would have been no way for me to find time to study.

This media industry life is a fast paced experience. Never working a 9-5, being able to work with everybody in the company. The competitive nature of building together presentations for pitches. And talking about it and drinking it until Kingdom Come with your coworkers. It is a very interesting dynamic in that my team, my office, my coworkers are all people that I genuinely and wholeheartedly enjoy being with.

Excited that my San Francisco giants won the World Series, anxious to see how my Sharks will do this season with some team roster changes, wondering how the English Premier League is going to turn out.

Meeting new friends, seeing old friends, losing touch with best friends. Drinking with coworkers, brunching with study abroaders, catching up with fraternity brothers.

Loving the leaves change color, hating the winds gusting harder, excited for the holiday season approaching faster.

Hating how this city is starting to lose it's novelty, hating that I have become just another person in the city working his life never realizing that he's in the capital of the world. Losing all excitement, losing all wonder that he works with builders that tower over his head. Then going out with friends, downing shots the bartender sends, eating food in the morning hours, waking up to beautiful scenes of the fall time sun beams. Sitting by the pitch on top of a pier playing soccer on the roof with the skyline to the south. Wondering where else could you ever find a place where the ambiance could ever match the place you're playing soccer right now.

Loving the city can't believe I live here, but realizing I've been here for nearly a quarter of my life. One day when I leave and pack up my things I will finally realize the city's grasp on me.

I hope you all have a wonderful Thanksgiving holiday wherever you are. Will try to get some posts in before the new year.


Love, peace, chicken grease.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

THE GIANTS WIN THE PENNANT

THE GIANTS WIN THE PENNANT! THE GIANTS WIN THE PENNANT!

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

I literally have no time

to update this blog.

But while you wait listen to this new track from my folks at Green Street:

Sunday, August 22, 2010

The Death of Organic Communication

You see it everywhere, especially in New York City. Bistros, fine dining, fast food, outdoor bars. Like a quickly spreading epidemic I walk by these tables and see couples sitting having a beer, or food. But there is no speaking, no yelling, no communication. Well there is rather, but all on smart phones. Take a look again at your nearby restaurant and you'll be shocked by the number of people sitting face to face but on their smart phones - texting, BBMing, fbing, four-squaring where they are.

What happened to the love of sharing food with someone you love?

What happened to the joy of food?

In an era where smart phones are becoming as much of an accessory as lipstick or your watch, communication is becoming more electronic and interconnected than ever before. You can hold 34 conversations simultaneously on your phone while updating where you are all while learning the latest Perez Hilton gossip. But this activity becomes infectious, and this worries me as the sheer activity of live communication becomes second to what buzzes in your pocket.

You see it all the time, the table is silent but to the noise of fingers clicking on the phone. Why bother going out then? The premise of going out to eat, grab a bite, catch up with a friend has lost all its value and novelty as you drive your attention to your 2.5x4" screen. The idea of being able to physically engage with your companion all while surrounded by the ability to enjoy food is something special and one of the few times in life where you can just slow down and forget what else is going on.

The inner foodie in me kills me when I see it. So do me a favor, and for the sake of all food lovers, conversation lovers, and people lovers out there: turn off your damn phone. Things can wait for 60 minutes.


>>>EDIT>>>

Seems like CNN and Netiquette agree with me as well:

Article here

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Perpetual Motion Door Stopper

I can't believe its already been roughly two months since I started working. The life is live has hit the gas pedal and balancing work and leisure has been a tougher process than I thought. Go out too hard Friday and your Saturday is wasted recovering (not young anymore). But can't complain, fresh grad, employed, living in New York City.

Got the work grind during the day, GMAT classes at night, only time to run and exercise to clear my thoughts are early in the morning. I thought waking up at 6:30 each morning would be a struggle, but once you get into a routine its not so bad. Somehow I couldn't get this down when going to 8AM classes during school. Work has taken off, and I'm busy day in and day out. I can't complain, this industry is so exciting, fast paced and I love the environment I work in. From crunching the deliverables to talking to my bosses about my weekend and then staying late on failblog with my superviser - its a great mix of work and play. As busy as I am, its tough to stay on top of my GMAT studies. Quite frankly the task of taking another test sucks, and if I had a choice I would never want to take a standardized test again.

With all this that is my life I see stories pop up on my social networks or through the grape vine of my old high school classmates getting married, settling down. I really can't fathom the prospect of that at my age of 22. With the whole world left to see I couldn't imagine having to get tied down to a place, a routine, a situation and start thinking about a family. Quite frankly, I make only enough money annually to support myself. Which blows my mind to my high school classmates that are married and getting ready to have a bun in the oven. More power to you, but a certain part of me wonders shouldn't you have explored a little more before you made this big choice? At such a young age we have so much to live for - I for one still need to work in 2 more international cities before I settle down - so much we have yet to figure out about ourselves.

I can't complain about this fast paced life that I live; I love every waking minute of it. Only here can you learn how to manage with 4-5 hours of sleep a night and go at it hard the next day. But maybe its not for everybody, maybe people strive for that slow paced life. I would expect people to make one big circle. Go off to college, do some work or some other commitment abroad or across the country and eventually come back. Majority of them just stayed within a 30 mile radius of home. Looking back I wonder what I would have been had I stayed in California for school, went to a UC, just let things happen. I truly believe everybody once in their life given a chance should, no, needs to work in New York City. See if you can live it - I can't believe I've been doing it for 4 and 1/2 years.

Best news ever - Dad hooked me up with tickets to London in December. The excitement is absolutely amazing and I can't wait to go. Saving up now so I can get a Nikon D3000 and snap some sweet pictures. And writing about it. Yes. BOMB.

So anyway, live your life! Hold nothing back. Friends leaving, friends coming, Electric Zoo coming in a view weeks. Work the grind, make the cheeze, spend the cheeze, drink it away, rinse repeat. Enjoy the humidity, hate the cold, soak up the sun, exercise the head, mind, and soul. Get out of relationshits, learn to be independent. Learn how to iron a shirt, make your own stock, cook a steak.

Live the life you see fit.

Outtie.