Wednesday, April 27, 2011

A dainty eater


It's a wonderful thing about being alive that you never know when you are going to see something you've never seen before. Like today at lunch (at Penland) when I noticed the person across from me eating a donut with a knife and fork. She wasn't trying to get anyone's attention; that's just the way she eats donuts.

Friday, April 22, 2011

By a pig's whisker


This is Nate Allen making a few remarks just before it was revealed that he and the Knife and Fork crew (in the fork shirts and the far left) had won in the first round of the WNC Chefs Challenge--by a margin of .3 percent, a true photo finish.



Each team makes three dishes and every dish has to use the secret ingredient--it's secret in that the chefs don't know what it is until the day of the competition. In this case, the "ingredient" was a whole hog, of which every part was available to the teams. According to the vote, and the absolute consensus at the Celo table, this Nate plate was the killer dish of the evening: a savory waffle topped with pea shoots, crispy sunchoke slices, andouille sausage, and a tempura ramp. Yummy!

Knife and Fork competes in the quarter-finals on May 23. Tickets are available now.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Hail, yeah!


As everyone undoubtedly noticed, we had a little bit of hail on Saturday afternoon and evening. But in Burnsville, they had serious, crazy hail. This is Schell McCall at around noon on Sunday with a chunk of amalgamated hailstones that were still piled up next to her back porch.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Cartoon trees


I have a funny affection for the locally-beloved Bradford Pear tree. The remind me of cartoon trees, or maybe of every little kid's first drawing of a tree. This time of year, they keep me amused on my way to work.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Massive entertainment weekend


Paul Feldman, Bob Early, and Lerin Williams cooking with high-test at the CCC on Friday night.


Polly and the Posse (yes, that's Bob Early again) tearin' it up at the Pump up the Posse concert and raffle at Penland on Saturday night.


Jeff Goodman and a bunch of Polly's friends (yes, that's Lerin again) raffling on Saturday night.


Ken Harvey telling a story about a peavy (yes, that's a peavy behind him) at Celo Moth Night at the CCC on Sunday night.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Jay's typewriters



I know that nobody who looks at this blog will have any idea who this person is, but I thought almost anyone could appreciate an obsessive collector of antique typewriters. When I was in high school at the North Carolina School of the Arts, this fellow, Jay Williams, was the school's in-house piano tuner and technician. He's also an excellent composer and trombone player and one of the more interesting people I've ever known. I spent a lot of time with Jay during those three years, talking about everything under the sun, listening to music, and occasionally serving as his amaneunsis (how often do I get to use that word?)--notating his music as he dictated from scores he had written in Braille.

Since that time, Jay has had a second career building mostly electronic prototypes for a company that develops new equipment for blind people. I lost track of Jay for a long time, but recently discovered that he and his wife are now retired and living in Marietta, Georgia. So last weekend, when Tammy and I represented Penland School at the photographic education conference in Atlanta, we stopped on the way to visit Jay and Kathy and, among other things, got a tour of Jay's fantastic collection of typewriters--he has 80 or 100 of them.


Look that this little beauty. A Blicksenderfer from the late 19th century. This crazy little machine had all the type on a cylinder that flipped around and changed angles to make the right letter--almost exactly like the famous IBM Selectric of the 1960s.