• Housewrighter
  • Imagery
  • Video Production
  • About Michael
  • Contact
  • Housewrighter Musings
Michael D Housewright
  • Housewrighter
  • Imagery
  • Video Production
  • About Michael
  • Contact
  • Housewrighter Musings

Holiday Meals in Colorado (it could have been Puglia)

Happy Holidays Blissful Reindeer!

Today I will not bombard you with anything more than images of a beautiful few days of holiday dining with our dear friends from Southern Italy.

As the four of us were fish out of water this Christmas we decided to celebrate together this important holiday; and around this house that means with great food and vino.

Laura Giordano was our guest chef and she along with her partner Antonello Losito own and operate The Cooking School La Cucina at Gelso Bianco in Puglia, Italy. Laura also authors the blog A Pinch of Italy.

Please enjoy the photos (and a slideshow) from a few blissful days.

The Apps - A selection of world cheeses and artisan condiments along with some lovely Riesling as well as Juliet's special holiday Chex Mix

The First Course (La Pasta)

Laura made from scratch a famous pasta from Sardinia called Zapuletas. These round discs of yummy were served with a rich mushroom sauce and were just amazing.

The Main Course - Dry-Aged Colorado Beef Tenderloin butter seared and seasoned with I Profumi di Chianti (a seriously seasoned salt from Panzano) and black pepper from Phu Quoc Island Vietnam. Some russet and sweet potatoes au-gratin along with an asparagus salad.

Dessert - These little Bigne' (cream puffs) came in vanilla, cinnamon, and amazing chocolate. The flavors took me right back to Rome in 1992.

The Wines- My last bottles of Koehler-Ruprect Riesling Kabinett and 2003 Run Rig. I had held on to the RR since my days at TTR. It is still the finest wine made in Australia IMO.

The Next Two Days - Laura and Antonello gave us an amazing Staub dutch oven for Xmas and I used it to make Ragu' della Carne Misto which was mostly wild boar and we devoured it along with a 2006 Brunello di Montalcino. Juliet rocked out a Pumpkin bread and we must have gained 5+ pounds over the weekend.

tags: @blissadventure, A Pinch of Italy, adventure, Antonello Losito, christmas, Colorado, Juliet Housewright, La Cucina at Gelso Bianco, Laura Giordano, Michael Housewright, Natale, pasta, Photography, Puglia, Southern Visions, the blissful adventurer, Zapuletas
Wednesday 12.28.11
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Merry Christmas

Dear Friends and Family,

This has been a truly remarkable year for Juliet and I. We sold our Italian travel company so that we could actually travel more often and I could focus on becoming a full-time writer.

We traveled to the Bahamas, Hong Kong, Vietnam, and spent the last 6 months in Colorado where I practiced my photography more than my writing and I have enjoyed it immensely.

This was our first year to not go to Italy in a very long time and we hope this will be the last time we have to make such a monumental sacrifice for us. We are also not at home at Christmas and we have personally assured one another this will be the last time barring an emergency we miss Christmas with our families.

Luckily for us our Italian family has joined us here and my mother, brother, step-dad and my brother's girlfriend all paid us visits here in Colorado.

I had hoped so much to be able to tell everyone today where we will be next, but alas we have not yet accepted a deal to our next destination. Clearly we are a bit disappointed but we are using this as a lesson to become more patient and accepting of each day as its own unique gift. It is good to be alive, we are fortunate to be Americans and with the means to travel, ruminate, and take stock at the amazing gifts we all have in this tiny blip of time we exist on this earth.

Juliet and I would never trade for another family, another life, or to be anyone we are not. The reason for this is love and nothing more. We are loved unconditionally by our families and we in turn feel like our decisions will best return the love we have been shown since infancy. I have gotten to know some much less fortunate people over the past few months who struggle everyday to love and be loved. Friends, this is the kind of depravity I cannot abide and I understand so much more clearly than I did in my youth just how important and really critical it is to simply have love in life.

I will leave the preaching to the professionals now and just know that I am who I am because of the love I get and the love I do my best to return.

Tonight I hope I have tinker toy dreams of my youth to see the faces and hear the voices of my dear grandparents who were so integral in the development of my compassion. I miss my family so deeply today and I cannot wait to see everyone so very soon.

Merry Christmas Blissful Adventurers!

tags: @blissadventure, adventure, christmas, Colorado, Juliet Housewright, Michael Housewright, Photography, the blissful adventurer, Travel
Saturday 12.24.11
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

My 1st White Christmas + The Ghosts of Christmas Past

Red wine awakens my senses, inspires my creativity, and gives me the patience to see that calm is not simply an ideal. It also makes me more loose of tongue than usual and freer with comments and criticism. Last night the copious amounts of red wine I consumed allowed me to calmly reflect on the cycles of Christmas Joy and Misery. In the microcosm of the holiday all of life's ups and downs are magnified. The symbiotic times where joy within mirrors the joy of the season is counterbalanced against the personal heart breaks standing in stark contrast to the prevailing mood. It is with great introspection that I will experience my 1st white Christmas and I share with you the ghosts of my first 40 years.

Christmas 1979 - My First Television

It was always very difficult to sleep on Christmas Eve. My brother and I were so jazzed about Santa and what we might receive, we could not contain this energy and we always had very restless sleep filled with dreams of shitty tinker toys and various other antiquated gifts we would have despised (see above photo). We worked hard on our lists and it was nightmarish to think we would not receive what we had worked so diligently to highlight in the Sears Wish Book. For me, Christmas was everything, because my stupid birthday was only 6 days before and so I was often saddled with the Xmas/Bday gift combined while my brother whose birthday is in May always got killer stuff for both.

In our tradition we would always visit my mother's family on Xmas Eve, Santa would deliver Xmas morning, and we would go to my father's family for Xmas lunch. We also knew what we would get from each occasion. On the 24th my uncle would give us some very cool gift, toys, electronics, and always something unexpected. My grandparents on both sides almost always gave us clothes: BORING! Of course Santa brought the mother-lode of wish list greatness (usually).

In 1979 my uncle gave my brother and I our first television. A totally bad-ass 19 inch B&W from Montgomery Ward. I remember the drive home to Bristol that night with our new TV and couldn't help but be a little disappointed I had to share it with my brother. I remember the 8 track of The Eagles "Hotel California" playing on the way home and I kept asking my mom why the doctor needed cash in the song "Life in the Fast Lane". She never really gave me a satisfactory answer.

I was amazed when we got home that my parents took the time to set-up the tv for my brother and I. Typically anything that required effort on Christmas Eve was brushed aside as my parents told us they needed "grown up time". In this case, the TV was set on our dresser, the rabbit ears installed, and the TV went live just in time to watch the Christmas episode of Little House on the Prairie. My mom loved this show and so it became a household staple. With Michael Landon narrating, my brother and I slept better than any prior Christmas and the TV made such a lasting impression on me I cannot even remember what Santa brought the next day.

Christmas 1982 - Le Divorce

In 1982 we moved from Bristol to Ennis when my parents separated. I was looking forward to Christmas because I knew that Jesus and Santa would answer my prayers and bring my parents back together. On the last day of school and a day before my twelfth birthday my mom sat us down and told us that she and my father were officially divorced. My dad would come to see us Christmas morning, but this brought an end to our family being together like it had always been.

I had received an Atari 2600 the previous year (actually it was the model Atari made for SEARS) and so I knew this year I would get so many games and also my parents would be smiling and Santa and Jesus were going to make it all good.

Christmas morning I received 1 Atari game, Pitfall (how appropriate) and a pair of walkie-talkies. My brother got a load of toys and so he could not be bothered to play Walkie-Talkie games with me and I remember standing out in the cold at my grandmother's house in Palmer, TX and trying to raise anyone on the walkie. I began to say awful things out to the airwaves but I knew if Jesus and Santa were not listening; nobody was.

Christmas 1984 - The End of an Era

My father's parents moved to Fairfield, TX in 1984 to a house I helped to build during the summer. Fairfield had long been part of the family and finally my grandparents would be able to retire to a lovely small home with a pot belly stove and an extra room for guests. As usual my grandparents harvested a sparse little cedar for their Christmas tree and while I always thought it was so ugly, I realize now how cool it was to harvest your own tree from your own land. Of course my wimpy, asthmatic ass would nearly convulse in the presence of the tree and I knew all my toys and cool gifts would be at home and not here where I always got underwear, socks, and some sort of educational item like a pen, a notepad, or some book. At least the Christmas candy was always plentiful and all homemade (fudge, peanut butter fudge, date loaf, divinity, and brittle).

Santa had brought me a new dual tape deck portable stereo this year (SEARS of course) and I longed to be home listening to it. Imagine my amazement when my grandfather after all the gifts were gone grabbed my sad self and took me outside where he showed me the beautiful brand new desk he had built for me. The desk was designed to hold my stereo and my TV while giving me room to work underneath.

My grandfather would pass away 2 months later on Valentine's Day. My desk would be the last piece of furniture my grandfather would ever build. I still own and cherish it to this day.

Christmas 2001 - A New Tradition

My first wife and I split in May of 2001 just after our 3rd anniversary. I dreaded Christmas that year because I had really taken to all of the Czech traditions of my in-laws and especially because my brother was also married to a Czech girl and so these Xmas traditions from our home town became the closest thing to fitting into that close-knit society I ever had. Of course, my brother was still married and my mother had adopted many of the traditions of my step-father who is Mexican.

For the previous 8 Christmas Eves I had been opening gifts with my wife's family, eating a huge meal, and enjoying the bounty of amazing Czech pastries made in the bakery by my mother-in-law, who was a legend in the town. I came to really love all of this and it always made the holiday seem so much richer. I had 2 events with my family and one with hers so I was steeped in tradition and Christmas had become so much fun. Now it was over and I had no idea what to do.

That year my mom invited me to spend Christmas eve with her and my step dad. I obliged and boy was I glad I did!. Mexican Christmas eve is heaven for a food geek like me. There were multiple tamales, pozole, beans, rice, rice pudding, and so much laughter among all the brothers and an amazing number of kids. My step-grandmother cooked as if she wore an angel on her shoulder and I miss her amazing food and above all her welcoming kindness. No one questioned why I was there and I felt completely at home.

I went to bed that night and prayed the agony of my lost life would come to a speedy end, then I cried myself to sleep.

Christmas 2006 - The Joy Returned

On December 11, 2006 I met Juliet Williams for dinner at Gravitas in Houston. Since that night we have spent exactly 5 nights apart and this is the story of why there are not 6 of them.

Juliet and I were sitting in my car just outside of The Tasting Room at River Oaks in Houston on December 23, 2006. Juliet had just found out that her family dog (really her dog) had gone missing as she was preparing to go home to East Texas for the holidays.

I remember Juliet tearfully telling me the story of Sadie and how it would ruin Christmas for everyone if Sadie were indeed gone. I had some final gifts to buy before I left town to my family and so I reluctantly said goodbye to Juliet whom I had only know 12 days and yet I was completely, madly, and irrevocably in love with her.

5 long years and 5 bizarre Christmases later, I finally felt the joy again in the holiday, yet we had to be apart as it was just too soon in our relationship to throw ourselves on each others' families. I had been warned in 2003 by my brother that I done this much too early with a girl who burned me and I was not going to risk any one's hearts this year but my own.

As it turns out Sadie was safe at a neighbors and Juliet and I each celebrated a wonderful Christmas with our families; yet something was not quite right. My family could clearly see in me that something was up as they did not recognize the silly smile on my face that would not wane. Juliet was scheduled to work the day after Christmas so she had to in fact drive home Christmas night.

I was at my father's that night and having spent the previous 2 nights without Juliet I had become increasingly anxious and troubled. We had enjoyed an amazing dinner with my grandmother, my brother, and my father and his wife (she is a total bad-ass) and we were settling in to watch some sports and Xmas movies. I had just spoken to Juliet on the phone as she left her parents and we hatched a plan.

I waited 1.5 hours as Juliet made her way south towards Houston and then I told my family that work was pressing and I needed to go in at the crack the day after Xmas to do inventory. Everyone seemed surprised I would leave and drive at night back to Houston. As I explained my fib in greater detail my father looked at me from across the room and said "you better not be going back to see that girl!"

He knew the truth, and so did I. I could not spend another night away from this amazing woman, and certainly not Christmas night. I am quite confident now that my family approves of my departure as Juliet has brought me more joy and peace of mind in these last 5 years than I ever had in my previous 35+.

Merry Christmas to all and to all a great wife! (or husband :-)

Much love and peace,

Michael

tags: @blissadventure, adventure, Bristol, christmas, Ennis, Juliet Housewright, Michael Housewright, SEARS, the blissful adventurer, Tx
Friday 12.23.11
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

And the Winner is....not even Medium and Very Raw

Dear Readers and Fans of Bliss,

I come to you on this day to express my supreme gratitude for all your support during the Anthony Bourdain "Medium Raw Challenge" and to offer some detail and opinions as to how this whole process transpired. As many of you likely know by now I did not win the contest and the winner in fact had only 3 votes. This has caused much consternation among  my voting constituency and I believe it is important to know the rules in detail for the contest, which I have copied here directly from the website. 

The preliminary round will be judged on the following criteria: (i) creativity (30%), (ii) originality (30%), (iii) writing style (30%) ten percent (10%) will be determined by the voting of visitors to the Website. Based on these criteria, ten finalists will be selected. The ten finalist selections will be read by Anthony Bourdain, who will select one essay as the final contest winner. The criteria for the final winner will be based upon which essay Anthony Bourdain decides best answers the question “What does it mean to cook food well?”

Now, as you can see all of the amazing votes cast by the many supporters of the contestants amounted to 10% of the selection process. With this I am OK and 100% willing to accept; however,if you carefully look at the other 90% criteria and the final decision it becomes clear to me that the actual winning essay (http://bourdainmediumraw.com/essays/view/1303) actually missed the point of the competition quite egregiously and frankly I cannot see how the winner even made the final 10. I am not a sour grapes guy. I always knew that I was more likely not to win the competition and as I told many of you,the support I received and the outpouring of love was far more valuable to me than winning ever could be.  At the same time I take a great exception to a contest posting criteria, albeit subjective criteria, to be considered for winning and then awarding the prize to an essay that fulfilled perhaps 60% of the criteria (and that is being generous). The winner did not meet the fundamental requirement of the contest, he did not answer the question,"Why Cook Well?".

How did this happen you might say?  Without diving into conspiracy theories I will leave it ast this. If you have ever read a Bourdain book or watched an episode of No Reservations it is apparent that Bourdain has a soft spot in his heart for the working class guy/girl. I have a sneaking suspicion that rules be damned, a guy slaving over the furniture of the wealthy day in and day out who comes home to eat cold food and is completely absent from the day-to-day life of his family gives old Tony B that cringing feeling of slaving over a hot stove making bullshit continental cuisine for an ungrateful audience that he so eloquently espouses in his books and his television show. It is this feeling that Bourdain could make a difference in this guy's life that likely made him choose to award the 10k to this essay which did not meet the criteria of the contest. Let's face it, we are talking Tony Bourdain here. He has never really followed the rules and that is why most of us love him. The funny part of this would be if the winner really was not furniture mover but rather a clever writer and professor of psychology at NYU who used a pseudonym and a ruse to pull one over on the publisher and old Tony B. Of course,it is possible to suggest that the competition and the rules are subject to interpretation and they most certainly are,and I just gave you mine in these last two paragraphs. Now,I am going to take 500 words to present to you an essay that puts me in the same light as furniture moving Mike and likely would have at least gotten me a sympathy comment from friend of the working man,Anthony Bourdain.

It was 1982 and just days before my birthday my mom called me over to tell me something very important, not that I got to select which puppy I wanted for my birthday or which meal I wanted or cake icing did I want to choose for the birthday feast, but that my father and mother were divorcing and that the separation she had told us about for business was a total lie. Rather than the usual feelings of joy and visceral hype associated with the coming winter break from school and my birthday (12), I was staring blurry eyed through tears and questioning once again why my childhood was on the ropes while I watched with envy as my friends played merrily in the lawns up and down our street. You see, I had young parents, and young parents could not possibly know what kind of damage they were doing to my brother and I with a series of broken promises, lies, and unfulfilled childhood dreams dashed upon the rocks like the great Christmas nightmare of empty stockings and wooden tinker toys from bygone eras rather than a shiny new Atari 5200 wrapped under the tree. Once again, my birthday time was overshadowed by some other grave situation. It sucks bad enough that my birthday comes 6 days before Christmas and that I was always left to ponder the economies of scale associated with that "this is your birthday and Christmas gift combined" while my brother's May 31 birthday always yielded him an end of school year party and other great rewards for blessing the family with another year his joyful presence, but now I had a nice fat D.I.V.O.R.C.E. in my stocking along with the lump of coal in my throat and oh, did I mention, at the end of the "we still love you boys" divorce speech we also got "Christmas is going to be light this year". Light compared to what? When it came to gift time in my house, it was light, lighter, and "here kid, here's a free outdated computer I got for buying a few rolls of carpet" light. In essence, this time of the year sucked and it sucked even worse now.

Thank God for my grandparents and for food. Since I was old enough to remember, my grandparents had food, and lots of it. At our house we were on milk rations,bread rations,and peanut butter rations.  I constantly heard "who ate all the fucking baloney?" I could imagine hearing that now if someone tore into a plate of foie gras or scooped out a hunk of beluga from a prized gift,but who ate the fucking baloney? You see,we were not only getting divorced,but we were also poor and food costs were stifling  to a single mother with 2 hungry boys. My mom, while young and a real emotional mess worked her ass off as a secretary for very likely vacuous and cynical corporate jerk-offs in order to buy basic foods so my brother and I would not go without eating even though sometimes she claimed to not be hungry when in hindsight I know she was.  Also, it is important to mention that my brother and I ate a lot of food, so the odds were stacked against our poor overworked mom and likely our needs and her pain, led to her really nasty sailor mouth that both my brother and I picked up with aplomb. Nevertheless, there was great food at my grandparents' places. We had cold sausage on white bread,cheese toast on white bread, biscuit donuts with powdered sugar glaze,cinnamon toast on white bread,cinnamon biscuits from a can, eggs any way we wanted,egg and bacon sandwiches with American cheese on white bread, and always lots of sodas.  Now, this may sound like a quick road to obesity,diabetes,and perhaps even death,but I was a scrawny kid and couldn't gain a pound with a clothes-on shower so all this food only brought about gastronomical joy, some relief from depravity, and likely some ADHD.  Why cook well?  Because it keeps poor, sad,divorced kids from wanting to do a swan dive from the top of the junior high into a pile of asshole bullies taking them out and ending another life without Christmas.

Dear Tony, I really need that 10 grand to afford my white bread and sausage habit..

tags: family, foodporn, christmas, birthday, Adventure, @Blissadventure, adventure, bourdain, food porn, Medium Raw, sausage patties, white bread
Tuesday 11.02.10
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Powered by Squarespace.