Monday, May 23, 2011

The Recipe: Chicken Marbella



A wonderful and beloved friend of mine enlightened me to this wonderfully easy chicken recipe.  The garlic and prunes mixed with the capers and olives along with the red wine vinegar provides this simple dish with so much depth of flavors! Pair it with grilled asparagus drizzled with olive oil, salt and pepper or a couscous dish.  This is a great dish to entertain guests too!  It requires little work and yield about 10-12 servings if you follow the recipe below.  Oh! And it is gluten free.

The Silver Palate Cookbook is where this came from but to save you from buying the book here it is, straight from Epicurious:

Ingredients

4 chickens, 2 1/2 pounds each, quartered 
1 head of garlic, peeled and finely pureed
1/4 cup dried oregano
coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1/2 cup red wine vinegar
1/2 cup olive oil
1 cup pitted prunes
1/2 cup pitted Spanish green olives
1/2 cup capers with a bit of juice
6 bay leaves
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup white wine
1/4 cup Italian parsley or fresh coriander (cilantro), finely chopped

In a large bowl combine chicken quarters, garlic, oregano, pepper and coarse salt to taste, vinegar, olive oil, prunes, olives, capers and juice, and bay leaves. Cover and let marinate, refrigerated, overnight. 

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Arrange chicken in a single layer in one or two large, shallow baking pans and spoon marinade over it evenly. Sprinkle chicken pieces with brown sugar and pour white wine around them.

Bake for 50 minutes to 1 hour, basting frequently with pan juices. Chicken is done when thigh pieces, pricked with a fork at their thickest, yield clear yellow (rather than pink) juice.

With a slotted spoon transfer chicken, prunes, olives and capers to a serving platter. Moisten with a few spoonfuls of pan juices and sprinkle generously with parsley or cilantro. Pass remaining pan juices in a sauceboat.

To serve Chicken Marbella cold, cool to room temperature in cooking juices before transferring to a serving platter. If chicken has been covered and refrigerated, allow it to return to room temperature before serving. Spoon some of the reserved juices over chicken.

The Know: Lululemon Athletica


Discovering something great is even greater when you share it, don't you think?  The last two exhilarating weeks have been heavily focused on yoga.  For four days a week I have been visiting CorePower yoga studio in NW Portland learning the various flows and salutations of Vinyasa in a room heated up to 103 degrees Fahrenheit.       HOT!!

Well, a room this hot is sure to make one sweaty!  So, I had to find a few pieces of athletic wear that not only is comfortable and provide ease of movement but is cute, duh!


These pants are great and they were on sale, even greater.  They are uber comfortable and wicks all the sweat outward.  Love these zippers in the back, great for holding keys and IDs.  You never know, after hot yoga I sure need a drink.  I hope no one at CorePower reads this.


Visit Lululemon Athletica.  They have stores in North America right now but they have a website!  Their clothes are geared towards yogis but you can use them in almost all types of physical training.  For women, there are various support specific to how much you will be... um... moving.  These are by far the most comfortable and flattering sports wear I have ever worn.  

The BEST PART?!?!? Free alterations at every Lululemon store.





The above tank top is great.  Its flowy with the right amount of support and lift.  Good to use in circuit training and low impact cardio.  It is NOT good for yoga, as I have found out... the flowiness tends to flow over your head as you downward dog.


Thursday, May 19, 2011

The Artist: Dinh Q Le (Lê Quang Đỉnh)

While visiting the Portland Art Museum last Friday, I was inpsired to learn of Lê Quang Đỉnh (Dinh Q Le).  At first glance I thought to myself what a unique affect on a photograph.  A closer observation delightfully surprised me that it is not just a photograph.  Rather stripes of photos weaved together in the traditons a SE Asian basket into a larger photo bearing layers to create symbolic and historical photo from the past. 

Look at this piece below... do you notice anything? There are two monumental pictures interlaced together: Tom Cruise in Born on the Fourth of July and a famouse photograph taken during the Vietnam War.


Untitled (Tom Cruise & Willam Dafoe,Born on the 4th of July/Highway 1)  2000
Source: Elizabeth Leach Gallery

Lê Quang Đỉnh

Born in Vietnam, at age 10 he and his family immigrated to Los Angeles after the Vietnamese invation of Cambodia.  Inspired by his aunt, Dihn Q Le studed photopgraphy at University of California, Santa Barbara and later received his Masters from the School of Visual Arts in New York.  He spends his time living between Los Angeles and Vietnam.
Untitled (Robert De Niro, The Deerhunter/bombing victim)  2000
Source: Elizabeht Leach Gallery

From Zero to First Generation  1997
Source: Elizabeth Leach Gallery

Untitled (Columbia Pictures) 2003
Source: PPOW
His array of artwork inlcudes not just photography but videos, sculptures, and urban intervention.  Most notable of his work are photo-weavings using traditional Vietnamese techniques.  Dinh Q Le would take strips of photos and weave them as one would weaving a basket.  Each work contains layers of weave, providing observors with layers of deep metaphoric feelings as they gaze at his pictures.
I am Large. I Contain Multitudes (1)  2009
Source: Elizabeth Leach Gallery

Source of photos: Elizabeth Leach Gallery and PPOW Gallery