Magical 🍄
Three delicious ways to celebrate my 72nd birthday

On my birthday, lunch at Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley renown for using local, organic foods and credited as the inspiration for the style of cooking known as California cuisine. Restauranteur, author, and food activist Alice Waters co-founded Chez Panisse in 1971 with film producer Paul Aratow, then professor of Comparative Literature at the University of California, Berkeley.

The menu for October 9th. Began with our favorite from our many trips to France–kir royals. Then Gypsy salad for me and Goat Cheese salad for my daughter. We both had the duck confit with squash gratin. Then I had the Apple & quiince galette and she had the bittersweet chocolate pave. Click on photo for next week’s menus.

And then a walk with the granddaughters to burn off all those calories. Looking back up from where we came from.

Looking down at our long way to go. Our Upper Rockridge neighborhood is filled with these “paths” of concrete steps that take you from one street to another.

On night two, a surprise dinner cooked by my expert chef son-in-law of lamb shanks, polenta, and broccolini and carrots. As wonderful as any restaurant.

Ooops! Not to be forgotten dinner on the birthday night with a dear friend at the newly opened Neopolitan restaurant in Danville CA called Laconda Ravello. Absolutely delicious lasagna. Ending with a martini glass filled with doughnut holes covered with sugar and drenched in chocolate. Best new restaurant in town.
When Shadows Are Long
Stirring yet comforting thoughts for my birthday today. Feeling a bit long in the tooth at 72😏
not just from the autumnal
or from the angle of the sun
as the trees provide a much
larger protective canopy
or when even the smallest
house seems to occupy
a much larger footprint
or when the light appears
to streak across the landscape
rather than bathe it from above
no
when, for the entire year,
from solstice to solstice,
when I am able to bask
in the shadows of the greats
as their shade grows longer
covering many more beneath,
then perhaps I too can relish
in all of the beauty they created
and find the stirring that
will cause my shadow
to extend to the horizon
———————————————————-
Passion’s Deprivation
Love this new poet I came across.
Half a crazy morning in Bezerkely
After a ten-minute search for the preschoolers misplaced lunch box and cahier de vie (at Ecole Bilingue each child has a photo-and-words book that they take back and forth between school and home to share what goes on in each place), we take off on the twenty minute ride with the three and five-year-old granddaughters babbling in French in the back seat of my Kia Soul. Delivered safely and even on time, I take off for my next task–calling AAA to tow the family van which had had three of its tires slashed the day prior in broad daylight. But AAA won five stars for being there in 15 minutes with a flat bed, with the driver being appropriately crestfallen and efficient. At Big O, my son-in-law takes over by phone and handles the new tire transaction. I’m a bit shaken so decide to try the donut cure at Dream Fluff, the famous donut shop at Ashby and College.
On the two-block walk from my parking space to secure my drug of choice, I fend off fears that the tire slasher has moved on up from San Pablo Avenue to this neighborhood. Fighting to stay in the present, I start paying attention to my surroundings and am treated to Berkeley at it’s Berkerkly best. I pass the line streaming out the door at the Elmwood Cafe but not until I’ve walked past an elderly homeless man, his used-to-be-fluffy winter jacket pulled up to his ears. Six bags of recyclables and meager possessions are arranged neatly on each side of his scruffy boots. He waits patiently for whatever “next” lies behind his vacant stare.
At the entrance to the Cafe, two Berkeley officers in precision-pressed blues, one with Tony Curtis curls threatening to fall sexily onto his forehead, are being regaled by a tall and equally handsome but completely unpressed and dreadlocked gentleman whose description of the latest neighborhood drama spills out of his mouth at meth-speed, forgive the redundancy. Their patience matches his insistence and, in true Berkeley fashion, there is no hint of acrimony or threat of arrest. A few steps further down, outside my favorite restaurant La Mediterannee, a fashionista fourteenth-month-old points out two tiny scraps of trash to her politically-correct father who nods in all seriousness and confirms that leaving such flotsam on the sidewalk is indeed a mortal sin. Out of the corner of my eye, I notice the freshly filled water dish and plastic tub of doggie treats outside the corner all-natural fiber clothing store.
Donut deal done, I start eating out of the proverbial paper bag on the way back to my car. As I drive away, the homeless man has packed up his belongings and is on his way to “next”. The police pair are inside the cafe, drinking coffee that they’ve paid for. And my morning ordeal disappears in the familiar politics of a world I haven’t visited since my crazed sophomore year at Cal back in 1963.
Pebble Beach Redux
The end of my forgot-my-cell-phone saga at this year’s Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance. It’s the crack of dawn and I don’t realize I don’t have my phone until half-way to Blackhawk Automobile Museum in Danville, CA where I am to take the “field trip” to the event. So I dash into a CVS pharmacy and buy two disposable cameras–yes they still have them. Processing of the film afterwards takes three weeks and the quality of the photos leaves much to be desired. So to the tune of $15 each for the cameras and another $17 each for the processing, I share the results herewith.
Mystic
Poem inspired by photo “Mystic” by fine arts photographer Facebook friend Thierry Tramoni de Bazzacone who lives in Ajaccio, Corsica
necromancer’s brew of
mussel encrusted rocks
bathed in frazzled foam
cavity-riddled molars
hungering to
devour some hapless vessel
raw
gargoyled reefs
drowned in
agitated waves that
somersault into a
winslow homer sea
poisonous mists
deadly enough to
infect stone
sending shelled and
scaly creatures
fleeing for their
lives
hiding place for
tales of woe and
bad endings
yet one that draws our
eyes and hearts into its
murky mystic soul
Love words

love words slide from my lips
evaporating into barrier of
thick unforgiving air before
intended ears can hear
others ooze from
ink-soaked nibs or are
tapped into existence
laying useless
unread by
hardhearted eyes
I am neither heard nor seen
except by those who
hang on my thoughts out of
desperation or
devotion
Cinderella revisited
sitting by the hearth
wearing soot dusted clothes that
beg to be washed clean
stirring gloomy embers with an
iron poker of obsession
hoping to relight passion in
dark dead coals
memories of bright flames
sear my brain
forgetting how fast they
consumed reason
turned ardor to
conflagration
leaving blisters on my
soul
fire that burned
more than warmed
then died
leaving me even more
alone in the
chilled solitary night
can I take my
cinderella self and
search the garden for my
fairy godmother
armed with wand and
pumpkins
not to find a prince
but to take
just one ride in the
golden carriage of
my life






























