What to do with the leftover tahini after you have made hummus: Goddess Dressing, the best dressing ever.
how many english words do you know?
You can test your English vocabulary using this test from Ghent University. They claim to be using American spelling, but an American in my household would tell you that’s not entirely true. The spelling may be American, but some of the words are surely British.
welcome to sweden
I’ve watched the first few episodes of this series, Welcome to Sweden. It’s a romantic comedy about a guy who moves from New York to Stockholm to be with his Swedish girlfriend. There are cultural clashes of course, and language problems. And it’s pretty funny, to me, to see what Swedish culture looks like through American eyes, and exaggerated for effect. There are lots of details, like the omnipresent Dala Horses. Swedes may think that’s a stereotype, but let’s be honest. We spread those things like wildfire. I have two in my house in California, plus a rarity: a Dala Rooster given to me on my first Easter. At work I have a Dala horse ornament. I don’t remember how it ended up there, but there it is.
All women in the series, except for Lena Olin, are blonde. As a non-blonde Swede all my life I’m slightly miffed, but I also know that the impression anyone traveling to Scandinavia gets is that everyone is blonde. That includes myself, after 20 years in the US, by the way.
Welcome to Sweden will air on NBC this summer. It’s on TV4 in Sweden right now.
finding vivian maier, and making money from her work
When I first heard about Vivian Maier I was super excited. She’s a woman who photographed obsessively all of her adult life, without any recognition, and without ever developing most of her film. After her death her considerable talent was discovered. Her work is amazing in many different ways. It’s documentary, striking, and produced by a very particular mind. Here is a New York Times story and slide show to give you an idea if you haven’t seen her work before.
There are (at least) two movies about Vivian Maier’s life. One was produced by John Maloof, the man who owns the bulk of her negatives. John Maloof has worked hard at promoting Vivian Maier and her work, and he was behind the news stories that surfaced about three years ago. John Maloof’s movie is in theaters right now, and as excited as I’ve been about it, I’ve decided not to see it. It feels like a commercial venture, and it strikes me as odd that a woman who protected her privacy all of her life, shall be making money for someone else. This Boston Globe review of the film is generally positive, but interesting.
The second movie, The Vivian Maier Mystery (available on Amazon and Google Play, and also, at least for the time being, here) was produced by BCC Scotland. This film tells a slightly different story. It puts John Maloof and his actions into perspective, and it asks interesting questions about ownership, fame, and money.
(The image above comes from a story in The New Yorker.)
the poppies
The California poppies are out. For a brief few weeks the hills are green. And orange. And blue, from the sprinklings of some kind of blue wildflower.
Years ago I was sitting at SFO waiting for a friend to arrive from Europe, and next to me sat two English women doing the same. One of them said she was glad her mother came to visit while the hills were green, because the yellow and brown of all other seasons is so sad.
I don’t think the yellow and brown of the burnt grass is sad at all, I think it’s pretty in a whole other way. But the green hills, the blue skies, and the flowers. That’s the beauty of April.
never ever read the comments if you want to keep your lunch
I read this story about the aftermath to the hate crime last fall at San Jose State University, and I think how hard can it be to get it right at a campus that is predominantly non-white, in a city, and a county, and a state, that is predominantly non-white. But then I read the comments, and I realize exactly why. Grown-ups are racist, and why would college age kids be any different?