View allAll Photos Tagged Marrow

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

I got Marrow on the gray C.A.M. torso. I added some leggings made of Barbie sleeves to cover up most of the non-matching pieces. I added a wig from a "What's Her Face" doll. Now she's giving true "Sharon Needles" realness.

 

If you couldn't tell by the name, she's Death's daughter now. ;)

Growing exponentially in membership support from Westchester and Fairfield counties, the Jay Heritage Center (JHC) hosted its annual Fall Family Festival this past Sunday, September 25th, celebrating American culture and traditions. Highlights included costumed tours of JHC's Sesquicentennial Civil War Exhibit "The Jays and the Abolition of Slavery" along with traditional music and activities for all ages.

 

The event was organized by JHC's Young Preservationists, a group of parents committed to the adaptive reuse of John Jay's landmark home as a community learning center for children and adults, a place furnished with lively ideas and people, not just furniture. The fresh vision of co-presidents, Emma Hanratty and Caroline Wallach had great resonance as over 1200 people showed up to applaud their efforts while munching on crisp autumn apples and sipping cider. The weather held as parents and kids painted pumpkins and ran 3 legged races in the old Jay meadow; the property thrummed with traditional folk tunes like Oh Susannah provided by the duo Cracked Walnuts. Nate the jackstock donkey was back courtesy of Tilly Foster Farm and reminded visitors that the Jay estate was once itself a working farm with plentiful crops and gardens. Farmer's market offerings of pumpkin muffins and homemade jams were on hand thanks to Meredith's Bread from Kingston while Cocoa out of neighboring Larchmont satisfied sweet cravings with artisanal chocolates and brownies. The place was filled with butterflies - both the winged wildlife that naturally adorns the landscape as well as vivid butterfly painted faces and balloon animals to take home courtesy of James Daniels.

 

Grownups had plenty to see too as veteran JHC archaeologist, Dr. Eugene Boesch, displayed the Paleo Indian and archaic woodland artifacts he has recovered from the grounds of this national treasure including a 4000 year old projectile point. Bruce Macdonald of Ashwood Restoration opened up his preservation workshop and explained the challenges involved in recreating mahogany spindles for the mansion's 19th century staircase. At the 1907 Carriage House, families saw a sustainable dollhouse and learned that their footprints matter in a power point presentation on invasive trees and plants threatening New York State habitats. But many parents and grandparents were content to just sit in wicker rockers on the veranda to watch their children play and drink in the unequalled view of New York State's oldest man-managed meadow a vista famously dubbed "a time funnel" to the past.

 

The event was part of the Hudson River Valley Ramble weekend which celebrates American heritage in New York State. It also cooincided with President Obama's call to service for National Public Lands, encouraging volunteers all over America to get more involved in the parks they love like the Jay Property.

 

Photo by Cutty McGill

  

Jay Heritage Center

210 Boston Post Road

Rye, NY 10580

(914) 698-9275

Email: jayheritagecenter@gmail.com

www.jayheritagecenter.org

  

Follow and like us on:

 

Twitter @jayheritage

Facebook www.facebook.com/jayheritagecenter

Pinterest www.pinterest.com/jaycenter

YouTube www.youtube.com/channel/UChWImnsJrBAi2Xzjn8vR54w

www.jayheritagecenter.org

www.instagram.com/jayheritagecenter/

  

A National Historic Landmark since 1993

Member of the African American Heritage Trail of Westchester County since 2004

Member of the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area since 2009

On NY State's Path Through History (2013)

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York City, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

Marrow Park, Kingfisher Drive.

Maple-Marrow Budino

Beef carpaccio.

(Matt Accarrino)

 

Twelve Days of Christmas: Matt Accarrino

The Restaurant at Meadowood

Meadowood Napa Valley

St. Helena, California

(December 14, 2013)

 

the ulterior epicure | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Bonjwing Photography

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York City, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

Grilled baguette , Onion Marmalade , at Le Parisien

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York City, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

At Merchant's Oyster Bar on Commercial Drive

Snacks like this might explain the cholesterol results the other week... although most of these went uneaten at the Super Bowl party, and are now becoming stock.

Marrow, Waffles, Caviar

 

Saison

San Francisco, California

(July 24, 2018)

 

the ulterior epicure | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook | Bonjwing Photography

Marrow "Cracker Jacks"

 

Studio at The Standard

Copenhagen, Denmark

(September 9, 2014)

 

the ulterior epicure | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Bonjwing Photography

St Nicholas, Bedfield, Suffolk

 

I've now been visiting this remote little church for twenty years. I love to cycle around the back lanes of Suffolk as summer becomes autumn, the land quietly putting itself to bed for the winter, woodsmoke in the air, the edgy cries of pheasants in the woods, the light whitening out as the afternoon lengthens.

 

When I first came to St Nicholas, it was in early October 1998. They were getting their church ready for the harvest festival, one of those very English events which must seem curious to a foreign visitor. Harvest festivals are one of those peculiarly Anglican inventions. Like many such ancient traditions, they actually only date back to the 1840s or so. Most Suffolk village churches have them, and do them very well. For some churches, it seems the only time apart from Christmas that the building comes alive.

 

On this occasion, half a dozen people were busy arranging apples, and marrows, and pumpkins, and leeks, piled in crates and carrier bags at the entrance to the church. They chatted as they did so, and it struck me that this was a kind of communion, the parish being together and talking to itself.

 

There is a particular smell to a medieval church filled with fruit and vegetables. Once experienced, it is never forgotten, and instantly draws your imagination back to ancient walls, soft wood and cool tiles. For me, it still recalls the beautiful late medieval roodscreen at Bedfield, lined with apples and onions.

 

I had cycled here along the track from Tannington. Once this leaves the farmyard behind, it becomes the kind of track you'd have found all over Suffolk before the 1920s and 1930s. When you look at an old road map of Suffolk, you find many more byways marked than there are today. Some of them were surfaced, many have disappeared completely. The track between Tannington and Bedfield seems to be still deciding whether or not to settle on the latter option, for at several points it becomes nothing more than overgrown tractor ruts in the mud. But for most of the way it is a gravel track which for part of its route winds pleasantly through woodland.

 

Once, in the last year of the 20th Century, I passed a real gipsy caravan on this track. It was late winter, and the cold afternoon light was fading. The brightly coloured caravan had come to a halt, the little horse pulling miserably at the coarse tussocks on the field side. Behind, a man was working at a makeshift forge, the coals flaring suddenly in the uncertain dusk. He nodded once as I passed. I still don't know if it was real.

 

I came back later in the year on the occasion of the Historic Churches bike ride, and Bedfield church was bathed in the honeyed warmth of late summer. A giant puffball grew by the churchyard gate, and would have made a fine meal if the rats hadn't got to it first. Again the church was busy, a smiling lady at a table signing the forms of a couple of teenage girls with their dad. On this occasion, I could see the roodscreen without having to negotiate fruit and vegetables.

 

Unusually, the panels contain eight Old Testament prophets in gorgeous reds and greens. The faces of some of the prophets have been viciously attacked with a knife. This may have been the work of mid-16th century reformers, but it appears as though the same thing done at Brundish, a couple of miles off, was actually work commissioned by the iconoclast William Dowsing on behalf of the puritans a century later. Dowsing never came to Bedfield, though, but perhaps the Brundish churchwardens did. We stood together, the smiling lady and me, imagining the past.

 

Why even do it? It may simply have been a result of the injunction against images, that fundamentalist mistrust of the beauty of the human face being depicted. We have had a reminder with the evils meted out by the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq that fundamentalism never did anybody any good, and the terrors of the Cromwellian night extended far beyond destroying artwork. As Eric Maria Remarque observed, tolerance is the daughter of doubt. So it gives me immense pleasure to see that behind the wicked knife slashes, the prophets seem a jolly lot, with smiles on their faces and the attitudes of old friends having a good time. Perhaps that is why they were attacked.

 

St Nicholas sits on the edge of another farmyard, although a proper road connects it to the fine pub and the village beyond. The tower dates from the 14th century, when the entire church seems to have been rebuilt, although there's quite a lot of evidence of the earlier church, including a fine Norman north doorway. There are three niches on the west face of the tower. From their relationship with each other, we can deduce that they probably contained a rood group.

 

Peter and I came this way in June 2007, as part of my plan to revisit the 650-odd Suffolk churches I had explored more than six years earlier. Quite honestly, we didn't expect to get in, because what I haven't mentioned was that, in those days, Bedfield church was just about the only medieval church in this part of Suffolk which was kept locked without a keyholder. However, as with several other places in the area on this beautiful day, St Nicholas was undergoing its spring clean. The grass was being cut, the benches polished, the floors mopped. In fact, they were just finishing, cars pulling off. As we walked up the graveyard path, we met the keyholder coming the other way. She was very kind, and very helpful. She went and checked with her husband that it would be okay for us to see inside, and then let us into the Priest door, and we stepped inside to the trim interior.

 

The church is smaller than it looks from outside. There was a major restoration in 1870, which left St Nicholas looking the very model of a rural parish church. The brick floor is an organic setting for some lovely rustic woodwork. It seems that the village had an enthusiastic carpenter in the late 17th century, for the group of benches by the door, the font cover and the pulpit all date from this time The benches are haunting, and it doesn't take much to imagine our ancestors tight-packed on them, shuffling their bottoms awkwardly at the preaching of the Word. I assume that most churches once had benches like this, and that they were destroyed at the time of 19th century restorations. The font cover is intricate, and it opens up without the need to remove it, as at Bramford and Boxford.

 

This was all well and good, but something was nagging me as we poked around. And then I was startled to notice that the rood screen had gone. Now, this isn't the kind of thing you usually expect. Surely it couldn't have been stolen? Fortunately not, for I was told it had been removed to be cleaned by the artist Christine Easton, who lives in the village, and would shortly be returned.

 

When it came back, so did I. I had also been told that Bedfield church was now open every day, so with some enthusiasm I cycled down the track from Tannington again, which twenty years on is now near impassable in places, necessitating getting off my bike and lifting it over rubble.

 

Ahead of me, St Nicholas was beautiful in the early autumn sunshine, a diadem at the end of the long track. I stepped inside to its instantly familiar homeliness and small-scale elegance, to the sight of the old screen as if it had never been away. Beyond the screen, the sanctuary was a riot of tiles and gothic lettering. vibrant in the light. Decoration of this type was deeply unfashionable for most of the twentieth century, and it did well to survive.

 

A poignant ledger stone to Thomas Dunston bears a simple skull and the inscription Hodie Mihi, Cras Tibi ('Mine today, yours tomorrow'). It is dated December 25th 1657, which is Christmas Day for us, but not for Thomas Dunston, for this was during Oliver Cromwell's Commonwealth, and the celebration of Christmas, like so much else, was illegal. Hard to imagine, now, perhaps, although intolerance survives like a virus in abeyance, and always needs to be guarded against.

If you have never tried bone marrow, you my friend, are missing out. Just go to the grocery or market and ask for cow bones. They are super cheap and easy to make. If it's not cut ask the butcher to cut it up for you anywhere between 1 inch and 3 inches. Just make sure they are all the same size. Put them on a pan and pop them in the oven at 400 degrees for 30 minutes. OR if you are making soup pop these bad boys into the soup for flavor and a tasty marrow treat. To eat, take a small fork and pull out the marrow. It may look fatty but its packed with nutrients. You can eat it by itself (my favorite way) or spread it onto crusty bread. YUM!!!!

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York City, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

Eugenio Finardi

Teatro Elfo Puccini - Milano

20 Settembre 2013

 

ph © Mairo Cinquetti

 

© All rights reserved. Do not use my photos without my written permission. If you would like to buy or use this photo PLEASE message me or email me at mairo.cinquetti@gmail.com

 

Figlio di madre statunitense (cantante lirica) e padre bergamasco (tecnico del suono), ha doppio passaporto italiano/americano. Dopo l'incisione di un disco di canzoni per bambini all'età di nove anni ("Palloncino rosso fuoco"), "Gege" (così era conosciuto nell'ambiente musicale di quegli anni) inizia la carriera negli anni settanta come musicista rock, in gruppi quali Tiger, Il Pacco e L'Enorme Maria dove ha modo di conoscere il giovane chitarrista italo-brasiliano Alberto Camerini.

 

Inizia poi a scrivere canzoni con testi in inglese, e nel 1973 la Numero Uno (casa discografica di proprietà tra gli altri di Mogol e Lucio Battisti) pubblica il suo primo 45 giri, con "Spacey stacey" e "Hard rock honey", brani con sonorità vicine all'hard rock, cantati in inglese, di cui Finardi scrive le musiche (i testi sono della cantautrice californiana Marva Jan Marrow).

 

Decide quindi di passare all'italiano, con testi impegnati ed ideologici, e viene messo sotto contratto dalla Cramps di Gianni Sassi, Sergio Albergoni e Franco Mamone, che pubblica il suo primo album nel 1975: si intitola "Non gettate alcun oggetto dai finestrini", e contiene anche una cover rock della canzone folk "Saluteremo il signor padrone".

 

Il successo arriva l'anno dopo con "Sugo" che porta in se due delle sue canzoni più famose "La radio" e "Musica Ribelle".

 

Segue l'album "Diesel" 1977 considerato tra i suoi migliori, che contiene altri brani divenuti famosi come "Non è nel cuore", "Diesel" e "Scimmia"; quest'ultima racconta drammaticamente la sua esperienza con la droga.

Dalla collaborazione con il gruppo "Crisalide" che vede tra i componenti Ernesto Vitolo alle tastiere e Stefano Cerri (figlio del più famoso chitarrista jazz Franco Cerri) al basso elettrico nasce l'album Blitz del '78, che contiene tra gli altri i brani "Extraterrestre" e "Cuba", nei testi si nota marcatamente il disagio dovuto al riflusso culturale nell'Italia di quegli anni.

 

Sempre con i Crisalide viene pubblicato "Roccando Rollando" del '79, che si allontana dalle sonorità rock dei dischi precedenti, accostandosi anche al reggae in "Legalizzatela", al calypso in "15 Bambini" (con cui partecipa al Festivalbar 1979) e alla ballad acustica in "La canzone dell'acqua".

 

Nel 1981 esce l'album omonimo "Finardi" dove in alcune canzoni collabora con l'autore dei testi dei Pooh Valerio Negrini. In quest'album domina la canzone "Trappole", di cui scriverà anche la versione in inglese. Scrive "Laura degli specchi" per Alice. Dopo un disco in lingua inglese "Secret Streets", dove rivisita anche alcuni brani del disco precedente, nel 1983 è la volta di "Dal Blu" che contiene "Le ragazze di Osaka" e "Amore diverso". L'album è dedicato alla figlia Elettra, nata con la Sindrome di Down.

 

Seguono Vorrei svegliarti col quale debutta al Sanremo 1985, preludio dell'album "Colpi di fulmine", album che si apre verso registri più sincopati e di matrice jazz.

 

Dolce Italia è del 1987, mentre nel (1989) il cantautore pubblica "Il vento di Elora" con la celebre "Vil Coyote" dove traccia in modo originale similitudini tra la vita reale e i personaggi dei cartoni animati.

 

Nel 1990 con La forza dell'amore rilegge in chiave moderna alcune sue canzoni, con la partecipazione di Ligabue, Ivano Fossati (in "Musica ribelle") e Rossana Casale (ne "Le ragazze di Osaka"). Dopo Millennio del 1991 esce "Acustica" con il brano Katia (1993) e "Le donne di Atene" (traduzione firmata insieme ad Alberto Camerini della celebre canzone di Chico Buarque de Hollanda Mulheres De Atenas). Nel 1996 incide Uno di noi, versione italiana del successo di Joan Osborne One of Us; la canzone, ricalcando il testo originale affronta temi legati alla fede in Dio. Segue un periodo di minore ispirazione che coincide con Amami Lara (sua seconda presenza al Sanremo 1999), mentre "Accadueo" è l'album del 1998, che l'anno dopo viene ripubblicato con l'aggiunta del brano citato, ispirato al personaggio immaginario di Lara Croft, protagonista dei videogiochi della serie Tomb Raider.

 

Negli ultimi anni si è dedicato a vari progetti. Con Francesco Di Giacomo, cantante del Banco del Mutuo Soccorso, e Marco Poeta dedica un disco al "Fado", la musica portoghese.

 

"Il silenzio e lo spirito" è del 2003 ed è un album d'indubbio fascino, registrato dal vivo e con canzoni accomunate dalle tematiche religioso-spirituali, come "Orleans" di David Crosby "Hallelujah" di Leonard Cohen e "Il ritorno di Giuseppe" di Fabrizio De André.

 

Il 2005 è l'anno di "Anima blues" e conferma il distacco di Finardi dall'attività cantautoriale. A seguirlo in questa avventura arriva Francesco Venuto, con il quale lavora tuttora.

 

Nel 2007 esce nei negozi la raccolta antologica Un uomo che ripercorre i diversi momenti della carriera finardiana: i primi tre cd offrono una serie di canzoni, presentate in ordine emotivo e non cronologico, scelte direttamente dall'autore, mentre il quarto è una compilation di inediti, provini e rarità. Le note di copertina sono curate da Fernanda Pivano.

 

Il 2008 è l'anno del debutto teatrale di Finardi. Al Teatro dei Filodrammatici di Milano va in scena la prima di Suono da cui viene estratto l'omonimo DVD prodotto da Gianni Salvioni, spettacolo in cui l'artista racconta attraverso monologhi e canzoni oltre trent'anni di carriera. La band che lo accompagna in questo disco e in tour dal 2008 ad oggi è costituita da: Max Carletti (chitarre), Paolo Gambino (pianoforte e tastiere), Federico Ariano (batteria e percussioni),Stefano Profeta (basso elettrico e contrabbasso).

 

Nello stesso anno esce Il cantante al microfono, disco di musica classica contemporanea per voce e sestetto. Assieme all'ensemble Sentieri selvaggi, diretta da Carlo Boccadoro, Finardi esegue le canzoni del poeta russo Vladimir Vysotsky. Vince la Targa Tenco, sezione interpreti.

 

Nell'aprile 2009 ha partecipato all'incisione del brano Domani 21/04.09 di Mauro Pagani, i cui proventi saranno devoluti alle popolazioni colpite dal terremoto dell'Aquila. Nel 2009 ha cantato nell'ultimo album di Claudio Baglioni "Q.P.G.A.", nella canzone "Lungo il viaggio", che è il titolo originale della canzone più nota con il titolo "In viaggio". Nel marzo 2010 produce l'album "L'occhio della Luna" della giovane cantautrice Roberta Di Lorenzo da lui scoperta.

 

A inizio 2011 Il cantante al microfono, diventa un DVD distribuito da Medusa ed edito dalla casa discografica Ermitage.

 

Il 21 gennaio 2011 esce il primo libro scritto da Eugenio Finardi a quattro mani con Antonio G. D'errico: "Spostare l'orizzonte - come sopravvivere a 40 anni di Rock" edito Rizzoli.

 

Il 23 gennaio 2011 Eugenio per la seconda volta al Teatro Alla Scala di Milano con un'opera di Carlo Boccadoro intitolata "I cavoli a merenda".

 

Il 28 Gennaio 2011 inizia "Eugenio Finardi Electric Tour 2011", tour che segna il suo ritorno al rock delle origini, riproponendo brani degli esordi tratti da album come "Sugo", "Diesel", "Finardi" e "Non gettate alcun oggetto dai finestrini". Ad accompagnarlo una nuova band formata da: Marco Lamagna (basso), Claudio Arfinengo (batteria), Paolo Gambino (tastiere) Paolo Zanetti (chitarre) e Giovanni Maggiore (chitarre), in seguito si aggiunge Claudio Rossi (violino e plettri)

Il 1° maggio 2011 apre il concertone di Roma con l'inno di Mameli in versione taranta/rock.

* Best of 2007 * Dish

Read about this dish and the other 25 Best Dishes of 2007 on my blog.

 

Beef Marrow

Fried parsley, coarse sea salt, and red wine sauce ($16.50)

 

Notes: I have to admit, I've never really been that big of a fan of bone marrow. I find the stuff too greasy and gloppy. However, ever since I first read about Blue RIbbon's bone marrow many years ago, I've been wanting to try it.

 

Three things that made Blue Ribbon's bone marrow a treat:

 

1. They brought out plenty of toast. They actually brought out a whole plate of toast - but it wouldn't fit on our already over-crowded table, so we dumped them into the half-emptied bread basket and the server tood the bread plate away. I but a couple of slices, which were perfectly toasted and warm on this plate just for show.

 

2. Sea salt. They served course sea salt on the side. After slathering the sloppy marrow across the bread (which makes the perfect mop for this dish), I dusted the toast with the sea salt - *salty crunch* - what could be better??

 

3. The red wine sauce. Rich, thick, complex and wonderful. At first, we scooped the marrow out of the top of the bones, but we soon discovered that this dish was better enjoyed by pushing the marrow out the bottom end and mixing it with the wine sauce before spreading it on the bread. OMG.

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York City, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

This mid-fifteenth century illuminated Book of Hours is written entirely in Dutch on fine vellum, and is remarkable for its eighteen grisaille miniatures. The technique, wherein the figures are modeled primarily in a gray wash, became a favorite in the Netherlands, and the hand behind the paintings in this manuscript has been identified with a group of artists known as the "Masters of the Delft Grisailles." This manuscript has been grouped with more than a dozen related works, including New York PML M. 349, London, Victoria and Albert Geo. Reid Ms. 32, Leiden B.P.L. 224, Brussels, BR 21696, Antwerp, Plantein Moretus Ms. 49, and the Hague K.B. Ms. 74 G 35. The manuscript is comprised of 152 folios and is almost completely intact, lacking only two miniatures, and retains its original brown leather binding decorated with mythological beasts and a now illegible inscription. The calendar is for the use of Utrecht, which helps localize its original ownership, as might a mostly erased ownership inscription that has been partially recovered by Marrow. Hours of the Virgin.

 

To explore fully digitized manuscripts with a virtual page-turning application, please visit Walters Ex Libris.

a great friend of mine (www.baketard.com/) came over recently to cook and take photos. The guy can really seriously cook - amazing food. Here is a shot from the day.

I got 4 rounds of chemo. 2 at the start to stimulate the stem cell production from my bone marrow and 2 after the PICC line was installed to ablate my old immune system. The first round was the toughest because chemo is so foreign to the body. It was very important to drink tons of water in order to flush your system of the chemo.

 

Copyright © 2020 Vic Bonilla All Rights Reserved.

Do not reproduce this image without expressed permission from the photographer.

 

Twitter

Instagram

Facebook

Mussels with Beer and Dill 莳萝啤酒青口, Spaghetti Squash Soup 鱼翅瓜瑶珠瘦肉汤, Instant Fried Noodles 靓面坊港式炒面, Choy Sum 菜心

 

Can't beat fresh mussels from the Queen Victoria Market!

So much for a simple soup and noodle dinner :p

 

1kg mussels at AUD6 per kg from Seafood Spot.

Seafood and Oyster Spot

Shop 28 & 29, Meat Hall Queen Victoria Market

Phone: 03 9328 2929

Seafood and Oyster Spot - Queen Victoria Market

For Market fresh seafood including freshly shucked oysters, a huge variety of whole fish, filletted fish and shellfish.

 

Queen Victoria Market

(03) 9320 5822

Crn Elizabeth St & Victoria Pde

Melbourne VIC 3000

Trading Hours

 

Tuesday & Thursday 6am-2pm

Friday 6am-5pm

Saturday 6am-3pm

Sunday 9am-4pm

www.qvm.com.au/

 

On Friday, April 29th, Fire Commissioner Daniel A. Nigro together with Christopher D. Hillyer, M.D., President and CEO of New York Blood Center (NYBC) and Howard P. Milstein, Chairman of NYBC’s Board of Trustees added the names of 8 FDNY bone marrow donors to the “Honor Roll of Life”. This year marks the 12th annual “Honor Roll of Life” induction ceremony for the New York City Fire Department - the single largest group of bone marrow and stem cell donors for NYBC.

 

Today’s ceremony also reunited two FDNY members, Firefighter Michael Wilson of Ladder 166 and Firefighter Fredrick Perdue of Engine 67 with their bone marrow recipients.

 

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

==

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York City, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York City, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

I guess it's fitting that I started the 30-Day June Challenge with with my screaming head and ended it with my grounded feet.

 

The first day, I was wigged out; I needed a biopsy to determine whether I had lymphoma. And five days later, I learned I did. I'd had my first job interview in ages during the month of June, and I got the job in June. I start next Tuesday.

 

I hope it helps keep my mind off all this awfulness I've had to endure. I just hate to think of my friends with years of treatments. This little nothing can't compare.

 

But I'm frightened. I had to take 2mg. of Lorazepam to keep me from freaking. And I spent the rest of the day sleeping, until my husband drove me out to get a manicure and pedicure.

 

Now my back hurts, and I'm going to bed.

 

Thanks for joining me on my challenging June adventure. Let's hope July is as great as June sucked.

 

For the 30-Day Challenge — June 2011

 

Day Thirty: Self-portrait

Bacon Marmalade, Petit Pimento Grilled Cheeses

 

Costa Mesa, CA

  

9 Likes on Instagram

 

2 Comments on Instagram:

 

thedz0: yesssss

 

courtsf: Hot damn

  

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

© Copyright 2014 Mark Warnes Photography All rights reserved. This image is not free for use <a href="http://www.markwarnes -photography.com

The 2nd Annual Linked against Leukemia Gala held May 7th, 2008 at Capitale in New York CIty, benefitted DKMS Americas, the world's largest marrow donor center with 1.7 million donors. The event was hosted by Mario Cantone and attended by various celebrities and NYC socialites including Eva Mendes, Morgan Fairchild, Carol Alt, Astrid Munoz, Amy Ryan, Carmindy, Astrid Munoz, Lauren Davis, AJ Calloway. Designers Derek Lam and Francisco Costa. Cindy Crawford and Emanuel Chirico were honored at the event with the Mechtild Harf award. Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, Sarah Connor and Natasha Bedingfield all performed at the event.

The night's theme was the "Moment of the Match," where 6 year old Kenzie Grant met her marrow donor two years after receiving her life saving transplant from Magda Boysen.

at Le Bernardin in Manhattan

1 2 3 5 7 ••• 79 80