Beats For Your Week – “New York’s My Home”

One of the 106thstreeters is spending some time in a city 5 miles from the beautiful Pacific Ocean. No doubt, she will be returning to her beloved NYC in 2013. Until then, you may find some posts about what’s going on in SoCal. But, just remember, New York’s My Home. With love…

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A Very Merry NYC Christmas & A Happy 2012

Washington Square Park on December 22nd. C. Nelson, 2011.

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Groovin’ Philly Style at Bob & Barbara’s Lounge

One of our all time favorite weekend road trips is Philly–a city that keeps on keeping it real. It’s only a couple of hours away and it has so many great neighborhoods and places to hang out. Near the top of the Philly list has to be the venerable dive bar Bob & Barbara’s. The decor is one of the most pleasurable archives of Pabst Blue Ribbon you could ever imagine (just go, it can not be explained in words). For $3.50 you get a shot of whiskey and a can of beer (Pabst of course) and a huge dose of good vibes. On the weekends you also get The Crowd Pleasers playing jazz late into the night. Fueled by the organ and kept steady by the sax and drums, this band earns their living by putting on a solid show every Friday and Saturday evening. Bob & Barbara’s is exactly how we like our bars–cheap drinks, live jazz, good times, good crowds, and a little bit of grit. Thank you Philly.

The Crowd Pleasers live at Bob & Barbara's Lounge. C. Nelson, 2011.

PBR everywhere. C. Nelson, 2011.

All wives love PBR. Of course. C. Nelson, 2011.

Live jazz every Friday and Saturday. C. Nelson, 2011.

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Coney Island Trifecta

Dusk along Steeplechase Pier. C. Nelson, 2011.

If you’re wondering what to do for your last days of summer in NYC, look no further than the winning combination of the Coney Island trifecta–riding the Cyclone, eating Totonno’s pizza, and drinking at Ruby’s. The 106thstreeters, along with a couple of our favorite F-train dwelling friends, set out on a recent Wednesday evening intent on savoring the last days of summer, as well as the last days of the Coney Island stalwart bar, Ruby’s, before it closes its doors once and for all. Leaving after work, we rode the F train to the boardwalk and headed straight to the Cyclone, where we boarded immediately, took our seats in the first car, and nearly had a private ride.

Before the whiplashing. C. Nelson, 2011.

Yeah, remain seated if you can. C. Nelson, 2011.

Diving straight down into what felt like sure death, we only sustained the usual minor whiplashing the Cyclone gives all its riders, and a minute-and-a-half later we were back on the boardwalk heading over to Totonno’s salivating over the fact that we would soon be eating some of the best pizza in the city.

Waiting for the pies inside Totonno's. C. Nelson, 2011.

A quick pit stop at Best Buy Liquors for some free wine tasting and a few adult beverages to accompany our al fresco pizza dining along Steeplechase Pier, we ordered two classic pies: one margherita and one pepperoni.

Left, pepperoni. Right, margherita. C. Nelson, 2011.

With our perfectly charred pizzas, we walked back over to the boardwalk, where we dined just under the protection of the Parachute Jump, listening to the rhythm of the waves as they lapped the Coney Island sands.

Parachute Jump, sans jumping. C. Nelson, 2011.

As night grew on, we hoofed it down the boardwalk to Ruby’s for a nightcap, knowing that soon this neighborhood would be changed for ever as the businesses along the boardwalk would be torn down in order to “improve” what doesn’t need improving.

Ruby, my dear. C. Nelson, 2011.

Ruby’s will only be there until October so go now for one last drink or two or three. And don’t forget to plug the jukebox–it may be the most challenging musical experience you will ever have.

To Ruby's, with love. C. Nelson, 2011.

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Beats For Hurricane Irene’s Week – “Baby Got Back”

Irene entered the city soft, tender, and wet. She went on all night long, strong yet not too rough, quite sensitive to our needs here in Manhattan. It was a long night we had together that lasted way into the morning hours. After a burst of sunshine followed by a quiet nap and one more round, Irene seemed to have fallen asleep…but no not yet, she came on one more time…a strong wind, stronger than at anytime during the night. One last time, man…”Baby Got Back.”

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Over Iceland

Flying into an American airport is usually very similar. There might be some nice open space, shimmering sea, or mountains to see from the air, but the second you start to get near the runway the urban sprawl starts to appear from all angles. Ugly subdivisions, massive malls, endless highways…it starts to all blur together. However, flying into Iceland is a totally different experience. With nothing but beautiful water and land formations as far as the eye can see, the descent into Keflavík International Airport is stunning. See for yourself and fly Icelandair next time you book a trip to Europe. They have free stopovers that make a quick trip to Reykjavik as easy as relaxing in the Blue Lagoon.

C. Nelson, 2006.

C. Nelson, 2006.

C. Nelson, 2006.

C. Nelson, 2006.

C. Nelson, 2006.

C. Nelson, 2006.

C. Nelson, 2006.

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Beats For President Obama’s Week – “Nobody Knows”

Oi! It has been a rough couple of weeks for President Obama. We’ll let Chicago’s own Pastor T. L. Barrett and the Youth For Christ Choir explain. “Nobody Knows” is from the amazing 1971 album, Like a Ship…(Without a Sail).

Keep on keeping on. Obama 2012.

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Love Thy Neighbor – East Harlem Community Supported Kitchen (CSK)

Eating healthy is easy if you have the know how and means (money and availability to healthy food) to do it. In Spanish Harlem, our food shopping/acquiring choices are simply not adequate. It’s basically a choice between a large supermarket filled primarily with processed and canned foods that are neither particularly wholesome or affordable or the local bodega that is great if you need a pint of milk, a roll toilet paper, or an egg and cheese sandwich.

The 106streeters are really lucky to be members of Community Supported Agriculture (CSA). Splitting a share with our neighbors, our weekly vegetable costs from June through October are way lower than at a grocery store (lower than even most of the non-organic produce) in NYC, and the quality of produce (all organic New York State produced veggies and herbs) is amazing (though you need to clean off some dirt and a few dead insects now and then). Using CSA as a model, Community Supported Kitchens (CSK) are popping up across the county. In Spanish Harlem, we are lucky to have an amazing CSK and neighbor, East Harlem CSK, founded by The Kitchen Table–an East Harlem-based community kitchen and parenting collective, who recently organized one of the most amazing events the 106streeters have been a part of in NYC.

In collaboration with Taller Boricua and Hatuey Ramos Fermin’s EAsT Harlem, the East Harlem CSK created a stir in the neighborhood when 50 or so people of varying ages, backgrounds, and ethnicities embarked on the Community Dinner and Foraging Tour led by artist and expert food forager Emcee C.M., Master of None (also known as Colin). Our first stop was a mere 30 feet from the front doors of the Julia de Burgos Latino Cultural Center (at 106th Street and Lexington) where the Taller Boricua galleries are located. In the small fenced in “green” area adjacent to the northeast corner of the building, we stopped and foraged our first edible plants–common plantain (cook it like spinach), dandelion greens (you’ve seen them all fancified on menus across the globe), and violet (eat the greens; the smaller, the less bitter). We collected the greens while Colin educated us about each one, dropping them into the blue bucket as we went along. Heading across 106th Street towards Central Park, we next stopped at a local playground near the Metro-North elevated tracks and found clover flowers (can be used to make tea) and pepper grass (tastes like wasabi and also called “poor man’s pepper). Heading under the Metro-North, our next stop was at the North end of the George Washington Carver Houses where we found a lovely assortment of edible stuff–wood sorrel (lemony; can make drinks from it), ladies thumb (pink flowers with a black “thumbprint” on the mature green leaves which are edible); lamb’s quarters, “cheeses” (the edible fruits look like little cheese wheels and you can also eat the young leaves). Some residents from the Carver Houses clearly took notice of the large group foraging through the overgrown “weeds” and one woman came over to find out what we were doing. Once informed, she took it in New York stride (which is yet another reason this city is amazing). Heading into Central Park (just past the Conservatory Garden and the Harlem Meer), Colin identified many edibles–bay berries (related to the bay leaf and can be used in soup like bay leaves; also can make candles out of the waxy berries), poke weed (an excellent cooking green that tastes like asparagus; Note: the entire plant becomes poisonous after it get one foot high or greater), Mugwort (has medicinal properties related to women’s reproductive system), garlic mustard (from the broccoli, kale, and cabbage family), either raspberries or blackberries (not ripe yet), and a lot more dandelion greens (which you can also roast the roots and make tea).

With our edible wild booty collected in our blue bucket, we headed back to the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center where we ate a seriously delicious meal including a quinoa, turkey, and cashew salad, a red bean salad, a variety of fresh brewed ice teas and a lovely green salad made from our foraged greens, dressed in an olive oil lemony dressing.

The event was organized by several people including Terry Rodriguez from The Kitchen Table and Denisse Andrade, among others. The night finished with the five or so groups who randomly sat together at tables for dinner working on creating a sentence composed of random words culled from newspapers and picked from a hat. Beats the hell out of Scrabble and day!

The poster for the event, plus some foraging and post-foraging photographs:

Peterson Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants and foraged greens. C. Nelson, 2011.

Foraging outside the Julia de Burgos Latino Cultural Center. C. Nelson, 2011.

Common plantain leaf, violet leaf, and dandelion green. C. Nelson, 2011.

Field of greens outside the Carver Houses. C. Nelson, 2011.

Colin pointing out edible plants. C. Nelson, 2011.

Unripe raspberries or blackberries. C. Nelson, 2011.

Lady’s thumb. C. Nelson, 2011.

The salad made with foraged greens in East Harlem. C. Nelson, 2011.

The post-foraging crew enjoying dinner together at Julia de Burgos Latino Cultural Center. C. Nelson, 2011.

Word games: our table’s sentence. C. Nelson, 2011.

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Granada in Dimunitive Details

“Granada, tranquil and refined, girded by her sierras, riding eternally at anchor, sets her own horizons, takes pleasure in her small jewels, and offers her bland diminutive: a diminutive without rhythm, almost without grace and charm when one compares it with the phonetic dance of Malaga and Sevilla, but cordial, domestic, affectionate. A diminutive frightened as a bird, one which opens secret chambers of feeling and reveals the subtlest, best-defined nuances of the city.”
Federico García Lorca, 1926

Granada grabs your attention with its beauty. The Alhambra is stunning and the whitewashed buildings sparkle in the sun. But spend a few days exploring this small city, and you’ll start to understand what Lorca means. It’s the little things that make this a very special place, like the unique pastries sold in family owned bakeries or the exquisite tiny architectural details that surround you. Granada is a city you dream about, but it exists in real-time. Step into a bar and order a sherry, and they’ll bring you complimentary food. It’s a long tradition of serving free tapas that continues even in this day and age of money over matter. Wander the alley ways of El Albaicín in the middle of the night, and you’ll hear the sound of an ancient city. Sit in a public park for awhile and a group might come to play guitar and sing the night away. In the hidden corners, the city comes alive, and you’ll find its small, subtle beauty if you keep an open mind and keep your eyes open.

If you can’t make it to Granada any time soon, head over to the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx for  “Gardens of Alhambra.” It runs until August 21st.

C. Nelson, 2010.

P. Glowinski, 2010.

P. Glowinski, 2010.

C. Nelson, 2010.

C. Nelson, 2010.

C. Nelson, 2010.

C. Nelson, 2010.

C. Nelson, 2010.

C. Nelson, 2010.

P. Glowinski, 2010.

C. Nelson, 2010.

C. Nelson, 2010.

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Beats For Your Week – Marriage is so Gay!

Marriage is so Gay.” I saw that on a t-shirt! Ha! Just when you thought the troglodytes who fight against securing civil and equal rights for all people in the United States were getting the upper hand, those of us who actually understand the meaning of civil rights strode ahead into the ethical (and equal) side of history. Plus, who can resist an open bar, white cake, and Deee Lite? Not us here at 106th Street! So, Beats For Your Week goes out to all those in the great state of New York who now have the (equal) right to marry, with or without G*d(s). Thank you to those in the New York State Legislature, the New York State Senate , and to Governor Cuomo who voted for or fought for this historic bill!

For me there are two obvious choices for celebrating love: Curtis Mayfield and Al Green. Now, they can also inspire inner, social, and cultural revolution, but for this week let them speak to love, being loved, showing love, feeling love, and getting love…

If you haven’t seen Super Fly yet, then your life is far from fulfilled. And, if you haven’t seen the sexy love montage to Mayfield’s “Give Me Your Love”, then you are missing out on 1.) cinematic history and 2.) a great inspiration to give someone your love.

Now, continue with  Al Green’s “Simply Beautiful”…just listen to Al.

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