Showing posts with label Ridiculous Optimism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ridiculous Optimism. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

What about love; don't you want someone to care about you?

When is a meal not a meal?  Prior to yesterday, I might have said when it consisted of trash food, chain food, macaroni and cheese from a box, or only alcohol.  Now I know, however, that a meal can be an experience, thanks to Blue Hill at Stone Barns.  Aside from being a five-star restaurant with an award-winning chef/owner, Blue Hill is renowned for its farm-to-table approach to cuisine.

Arriving in Tarrytown along the Hudson was only the beginning of my bourgeois experience.
The evening began promptly at four o'clock, and our party of seven was seated at a round table near the entrance of the dining room, next to a beautiful--and large--table display of fresh greens.  Our drink orders were placed, our "menus" were perused, and conversation began as a dull murmur.  As expected, our party quickly became the "rowdy table," so you can image our surprise when we were treated like royalty, rather than the heathens we actually are.

Social lubricant; we needed this about as much as Richard Simmons needs caffeine. 
The entire experience seemed to happen in the most surreal ways possible.  To begin, we were sitting at an active, working farm, wearing suits, and about to pay entire paychecks for a single meal, and the anachronisms only continued from there.  Our server was the most incredible woman named Christine I've ever encountered in person.  She knew every ingredient put before us, she was able to keep our attention despite constant interruptions from the uncouth peanut gallery (us), and she smiled the whole time.  Oh, and did I mention that she was cool as shit? Because she was cool as shit.  Because the menu--pictured above with the plant on the cover--is actually just an almanac of month-by-month harvest cycles that explained what ingredients we could encounter during the day with no mention of actual courses, Christine had the nary-impossible task of explaining each course to us.  The questions that she fielded from our table were ridiculous.  "Is this actually charcoal?"  "So wait, do we eat this?"  "Did you know that Tebali Wheat and Barber Wheat ring particularly well with music people because of Renata Tebaldi and Samual Barber?"  The last question pretty obviously came from me, but as a shock to all of us, Christine seemed to be charmed by our particular brand of rambunctious.

"I don't care for shellfish." - Karla.  "Well, the shellfish trees aren't really blooming this time of the year." - Christine
Then came these "Farm Tacos" with lobster knuckle.  This was just one of many time Christine caught us off guard.
It is impossible to count the number of times that a person at our table looked around the restaurant, realized that nobody else was as loud as we were, and tried to shush our group to no avail.  Naturally, when Christine came to us between courses to tell us that we had to get up from our tables, we presumed that we were being escorted from the premises.  None of us could really blame her.  Instead, we were brought to the most beautiful scene that I've ever been given.

My friend's reaction is pretty appropriate in describing how we all felt.

I say without hyperbole that the beauty of the table combined with the shock of our own private dining experience moved a couple people to tears.  Humorously enough, the room was originally the manure shed for the farm (the land was originally owned and operated as a farm by the Rockefeller family; you may be familiar with that name), so the building was designed to access the farm as easily as possible.  Thus, looking from the table, we were treated to the natural beauty whose bounty had been feeding us for two hours by this point.

This is the side of the manure shed.  Shit has never looked so glam.
At our private table (which we coined the Obama suite, as this is surely where the First Family would have dined at this restaurant), we enjoyed fresh bread, homemade butter, lard and honey, and a wonderful summer soup of fresh vegetables.

There was also a pigeon there, just to remind us that we were still in New York, not the English countryside.

After a few more courses in the shed, we were escorted back inside to our original table which was cleaned, freshened, and reset for our arrival.  It is important to note that we were probably ten or eleven courses in at this point, and Christine was kind enough to inform us that we still had a long way to go.  But stalwartly we continued on our merry journey to culinary nirvana, telling tales of diarrhea, vegans breaking their veggie vows in epic ways, and one particularly well-time Karen Carpenter joke; it may have been too soon.  Also in typical "us" fashion, we continued to be the only table seeming to be having any fun at the restaurant. Christine's visits became more frequent than normal, we laughed ourselves to tears in between courses of amuse-bouche-sized tomato burgers, and a particularly tasty combination of grilled watermelon, proscuitto, and cold cantaloupe soup.

This was just one of many times that I took a bite and could only utter: "Holy. Shit. You guys, what is happening in my mouth?!"
Oh, and I almost forgot to mention that at this point Christine started to actually show us the freshest ingredients of the day, so as to let us decide whether we wanted to eat them later in the meal.  Obviously we always did.  I didn't use the phrase "culinary nirvana" lightly.  Shit was real.

This is a chicken mushroom, or known by it's street name: "the vegan panty dropper."  Its name is derived from its color and the shape of its growth, however, it actually tastes like chicken.  As the only vegan at the table said: it was a "game changer."
Soon we began to get full.  In our defense, we had been eating for over three hours, and every bite was the best bite that we had ever tasted.  It was like what I imagine would be marathon sex, but with foodgasms every five minutes.  Also, I was regularly laughing myself to tears because we are pretty stellar at amusing ourselves.  Soon the comedy revolved around how much more food they could possibly put in front of us.  Were they actually just fattening us up to slaughter as us the next dish?  As we pondered the potential reality of that scenario, Christine came and took us on another adventure.  This time, we were escorted to another private table on a beautiful stone patio.  I was too overwhelmed to take a picture, apparently, but we were treated to a few more courses, then dessert courses and coffee/tea.

There were TWO of these at the table.  Like a trooper, I ate some other people's shares for them.
It was on this patio that our party's humor gave way to an overwhelming sense of appreciation.  We appreciated the company of one another, the food that we had all been sharing, and the incredible kindness shown to us by our wonderful Christine.  We all came to this dinner with something to celebrate: new jobs, new homes, new prospects, new schools.  What we really got, however, was so much more than a celebration.  We were treated to a perfect storm of food, love, and kindness.  Suddenly my summer of sending our hundreds of resumes and never receiving word back on any of them didn't sting so harshly, and all of those hours I spent working a crappy retail job to just get by while I had two law licenses gathering dust in my proverbial trophy case weren't a huge waste of a summer.  This meal--no, this experience--rejuvenated our souls.

Money couldn't buy what we got at Blue Hill at Stone Barns, but they brought us a bill anyway.  We paid our tabs, and Christine baited us with a final "adventure," which she led us to believe was time and/or light sensitive.  So, after we wrapped up our coffees and teas, we got up from yet another beautiful table and were escorted once again past the same jealous tables of stuffed shirts who got to go on exactly ZERO adventures during their meal...

And then a miracle took place.

Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat?!?!?!?!
A door opened ahead of us, and a bright white light illuminated the kitchen of the restaurant.  This was like Dorothy seeing the Wizard for the first time, except there was not man behind the curtain to ruin the magic.  There was just a kitchen full of some of the brightest young culinary talent in the United States, and one very famous, very accomplished, James Beard Award winner who greeted us with handshakes and a smile.  For some perspective here, Dan Barber is a god.  Getting to go into his kitchen and watch him work is a really big fucking deal.  It would be watching Warhol do screenprinting or Beyonce twerk in a mirror.  For the second time, members of the group were moved to tears.  I, myself, almost cried when an entire hollowed out log was placed in front of us with various chocolates and truffles spread on it.  Chocolate makes me feel things.  Oh, there was also fresh fruit prepared just for us, and those flowers visible in the picture above.  All of this was done just for us.  Nobody else in the restaurant got to see the kitchen or chat with the cute sous chef or SHAKE DAN BARBER'S HAND.  I can't properly explain the magic that took place in that kitchen.  We watched the chefs prepare all of the incredible food that had just delighted us for the previous four hours of our lives, and then we posed for pictures, including one with Christine, obvs.  She is probably the coolest person at that restaurant, and if you have the pleasure of going to Blue Hill at Stone Barns, you should definitely look her up.  She's the bomb.

The evening ended soon after that, but the feelings that our group shared, and the experience of the afternoon/evening was once in a lifetime.  The impetus for going there in the first place was at the recommendation of Robyn's late-sister, Jamie.  Although I never had the pleasure of knowing her myself, I am eternally grateful to her for Blue Hill.  She claimed that it was the best meal she had ever eaten, and I am absolutely sure that I feel the same way.  The food was perfection, the ambiance was beautiful, but the experience was utterly overwhelming.  I challenge you to recall a single meal that you shared with friends which resulted in mass emails between all of you the next day thanking one another for the shared experience and commenting on how unreal it all still seems.  (Please don't actually take my challenge.  It is rhetorical.)

I guess that is really the answer to my original question, though.  Like I wrote, a meal isn't a meal when it is an experience.  We had a meal last night, the seven of us, and it was delicious.  But more importantly, we had an experience last night, the seven of us, and it was epic.

One more piece of food porn for your palate.  This was one of the vegetarian alternatives that came from Brianna while the rest of us devoured our veal like ravenous carnivores.  

Monday, September 12, 2011

Sunrise, Sunset, Sunrise

It has been over a year since I last posted. An uncountable number of experiences have befallen me over the past year, but instead of recounting them all, I am going to write about what I learned. I find that my most pensive and insightful posts have been about lessons rather than the experiences that spawned them.

I suppose an important lesson I learned is that communication requires emotion. I consider myself to be emotionally mature and possessing of the ability to communicate but I realized that it is very challenging to have and do both. It is rare that I should find myself unable to empathize with a companion and even rarer that I wouldn't be able to strike up a conversation. Just yesterday, I befriended many people while wearing tiny fairy wings at the Renaissance Festival; I was the self-proclaimed largest fairy there. Here's the thing, though: I often make new friends on a purely superficial level. These superficial friends (hereinafter 'superficials') exist in all of our lives. If you are anything like me, though, when you go through a deeply moving experience, whether public or private, you might be surprised how many of these superficials step up to the plate to assert the assistance of their strength. Superficials are the true test of my ability to feel and communicate simultaneously.

In late July, my father's cancer finally won out and he passed away. Although he was ready, the rest of us are still feeling his absence, and I think we always will. Looking back through the blog, I came across an old post about my dad's cancer and that was when this idea came to me. After I had written about it, I had my dad read it and his reaction came as unexpected to me. Somehow, he was surprised by my reaction to the news and to the feelings that I was experiencing. Even near the end, he was shocked to find out how much I was feeling. My father went into liver failure, almost overnight, and his brain started to suffer from the sudden overabundance of non-filtered toxins in his blood. Thus, when he said something that didn't make sense, we just started to take it in stride. These shady moments, though, mostly served to punctuate his moments of lucidity. One night he had gone to bed and suddenly turned on his light. My mom was crying in the living room so I went back to check on him. To say that I was startled by my father's violent outburst is putting it mildly. "WHAT THE FUCK IS GOING ON OUT THERE? WHAT AREN'T YOU GUYS TELLING ME?!" If you've never had to remind your father that he was dying and that it made you sad, consider yourself lucky. But even when faced with his own mortality, he thought I was sad because of something else, not just him. This would seem to suggest that I wasn't adequately communicating my emotions to him. I'm not looking to be reassured about this, as a very great blessing, I don't really carry any regret or guilt about the whole thing. The last words my father and I exchanged were "I love you" and that's as it should be. But if I can't adequately tell my father how I'm feeling, how the hell am I supposed to express it to a superficial?

That's just it, though: I don't express it. What I've learned is that instead of making everybody else feel weird, I crack a joke, say something reassuring, and move on. But the fascinating thing is that I think my approach has actually just made the whole thing worse. People react very strangely when I make light of the situation or feign a light heart. The truth is obviously much darker. I'm not a robot, and as much as I'd like it sometimes, I feel deep sadness like the rest of humanity. Apparently I'm not special. . .

Lame.

Although it is infinitely harder, I've started to consciously tell people that I'm not doing very well, and that it is very hard. The plain truth. Who would have thought it was so hard? Don't answer that, by the way. I am well-aware that the truth is often harder, but I just didn't expect the truth to be this hard. But be faithful, if you find yourself sugarcoating it for the cheap seats in the back, where the superficials like to hang out in the theaters of our lives, the first word is the hardest. It isn't the truth that poses the challenge; rather, it is the commitment to tell it.

Thus the lesson: even though it sucks, when people ask me how I am feeling, they are getting a cold, hard truth-slap square across the face because sugarcoating it just won't suffice. It makes me seem unfeeling, it makes them feel uncomfortable. Who needs it? The added benefit to this approach has been the seamless transition of various superficials into actual friendships.

There are obviously a million lessons that I've learned from my father, and particularly from the last couple weeks that I got to share with him, but this one feels like a particular winner. I might not always make you laugh, but if you converse with me, you will learn about me rather than the ridiculous tales that I weave to create false familiarity. So long surface-level banter, hello meaningful conversation.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

"I'm just a love machine and I won't work for nobody but you"

First, I must say, that I am blogging robot. I have blogged a lot in the past week, I tell you.

Anywhichway, today I bowled for the second time this week. I subbed on a team with a group of new friends that I made. A few of the team members were acquaintances of mine prior to tonight, but before my bowling experience, I would not have considered any of these people as 'friends.' Unsurprisingly, though, all it took was a pitcher of beer, some serious laughs, and TONS of inappropriate humor and I now find myself with a bunch of new BFFs. It is here that I shall branch into the meat of this blog post: my ability to make immediate friends.

For most of my young life, I challenged myself to never be introverted, to thrust myself into social situations headfirst, and through my tooth and nail approach to relationships, I have made lots of friends in my day. Now, as an adult (in the eyes of the law, at least), this skill rarely lets me down, and has given me a seemingly infinite network of people to rely on and places to travel. My life is full of love and friendship and I feel blessed every day for the people I know and the relationships that I have. It is nights like tonight that remind me how many blessings I can find in my surroundings.

Now, by this point, if I were reading this blog post, I would presume that there is a giant "BUT" coming. And usually your intuition would be correct, but tonight, I am going to go for broke and just leave you on a positive note, reader. No matter the adversity, no matter the shit storm flying your way, blessings are not so hard to find, if you look in the right places.

(don't worry, I'll get dark again by my next post, I'm sure)







Bitches. (There. Happy? Good. Me too.)