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

Haiku Sunday - The Denver Adventure's Final Days

Haiku Sunday - The Denver Adventure's Final Days is a photo and poetic chronicle of our last two weeks living here in Colorado. Mixed emotions, joy, sadness, and the fear of the unknown all share in this largest HS of all time. (Roll over images with your mouse for the titles)

shining app sized bites

loving the views hating douche

morgue before-after

she tore at the pack

then grabbed scissors to shred the

seams of the cement bag

decisions shaped and

adventures planned taking sip

after sip dreaming

playful turns seem so

innocent till the searing

begins and skin burns

the robiola

melting on the hand while the

kir made her more open

always raw the chef knows

there can be no other way

to build Frankenstein

stirring stirring rice

time stands at bold attention

waiting the flatware

another damn dram

pulled to the lips with a burn

sprayed later from urn

last he had less now

more than before into the jar

not in the glass whore

crying alone is

always better than tears of joy

shed towards losers

wrapped up like a pro

the victim's body smelled fresh

when it hit the steam

a final heaven meal

among angels of the sea

how can we replace?

mister limpet smiled

as he prepared to sound

his horn of demise

the ends of the earth

to find the great fish that are

the end of the earth

rocking rolls of rib

meat in spotlight setting the

mood to imbibe now

days after blue moons

the light now ordinary

but still lights our way

tags: Haiku, blogging, Colorado, Photography, Hipstography, @Blissadventure, humor, food, Adventure, sushi, wine, travel, The Blissful Adventurer
Wednesday 09.12.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Italy Fiction – The Grape Harvest Part 7

An exploration of Italy Fiction - The Grape Harvest Part 7 is the story of a newly published author, his daughter, and their passion for Italian food, life, and danger.

The Grape Harvest

SCENE 1

Mike really enjoyed driving the Ape. As close to wine as he was he had never been a winemaker and the discomfort of the sulfured-overalls did not affect the joy he derived from the costume. Much like a play from his youth dressing the part somehow made him the character. This was a dress rehearsal for deception and Mike would have it no other way.

The miniature truck whined along the road towards Alba and the train station. Trains were slow in this part of the world but anonymity was worth the nuisance. There was a prevailing oncoming wind from the east and the Ape did not make good time under a patch of clouds. Along the wine roads there was not a car nor even an opposing work vehicle to be seen until Mike happened along a grove of trees at the apex of a hill. There was Pino the truffle hunter perfunctorily pointing out the secrets of fungus finding to the soon-to-be devastated German family. The boy was far more interested in the truffle-sniffing dog than the lecture and the little girl twirled at her department store scarf while the mom looked as though she might have felt a hint of moisture in the presence of the handsome Pino. The gun-toting author slowed the Ape to a crawl as he drove by. The little girl made eye contact with him and they gave each other a cutesy wave.

He called out to the family in Italian: “in boca al lupo Tedeschi!”, good luck Germans, as he twisted the handlebar accelerator and the bumblebee crawled back to top speed. Pino yelled out something profane and esoteric about the Teutonics as the writer disappeared down the back of the hill.

SCENE 2

When they pulled away from the villa Viola told Franco she would indeed go to Genova even though she knew she would be returning to Perugia. Her father had always been the most intriguing man she knew and while she had accepted long ago his heart was good, she finally allowed herself to consider it a good heart, inside a very bad guy.

She wondered if she might not ever see him again and that thought gave her a bit of comfort even as the tears formed in the back of her brow and the tingle of loss made its way to her stomach. “we were eating fucking Robiola!...there was going to be carne crudo with white truffle for lunch!...now I want to vomit” she thought as Franco took another corner way too fast for most of the 3 billion non-Italian drivers on earth.

Roberto had given them all time and while Mike could not have known this his leisurely drive in the Ape suggested he indeed expected the winemaker’s running of interference. What he also could not have known was that he would still enjoy a walk with his daughter on this day.

SCENE 3

Mike parked the Ape inconspicuously (for Italy) on the sidewalk behind the Alba train station. He tore away the overalls and left them in the cab along with a 50 euro bill to cover the gas. At a tourist shop on the main street he purchased an ITALIA football jersey and baseball cap from the Juventus Italian soccer club. One look in the bathroom mirror confirmed his suspicion that he would look like the biggest idiot first time Italy traveler on the train and it pained him almost as much as tossing his black V-Neck T into the restroom trash. Wet paper towel on the chest and armpits was a telling reminder of just where this day had gone and while he was happy to clear away the sweat, the residual aroma of sulfur disgusted him and he hoped no one would make the mistake of sitting close to him on the train.

The father and daughter met at the electronic ticket kiosk. Viola completely ignored Mike’s existence not recognizing him in the slightest. He knew her immediately and thought how he might simply walk away, but fortune favored the brave and he spoke:

Mike: (in midwest USA accent) do you know where I can get a ticket for Rome?
Viola: (brushing off the question) non parlo Inglese!
Mike: hai capito stavo parlando in Inglese, ma non ti parli Inglese?
Viola: fuck off old man, not the time or day for bullshit!
Mike: Viola (removing the accent and the hat revealing his wiry hair and grey streak)
Viola: Dad! (loud then whispering) dad..what the fuck?
Mike: where you headed?
Viola: where do you think?
Mike: company?
Viola: you buying?
Mike: do I have a choice?
Viola: you never have
Mike: truer words…..

The two purchased first class tickets to Perugia and made their way to the regional train for Milano Centrale station. Of course there was no first class car for the local train and the two sat quietly among elderly men and women on their way to the city to see loved ones who had migrated to the factories and shops of Italy’s ugliest city.

Scene 4

Mike explained what had happened with the German and how he had narrowly escaped death. Viola questioned him incessantly as to the whats and whys with only vague answers and non-sequiturs in return. This was not going to be the day when it all came to light, not yet.

Mike was enamored with his daughter’s mind and her patterns of speech which mirrored his in so many ways. He had always assumed genetics was a bit of bullshit and at the same time he was very clearly created from the molds of his own father and his late grandfather. Complexities of human interaction were the principal studies of his characters when he wrote, and he had learned long ago that the best information comes from the most open and vaguely leading interaction.

While it was true he had killed someone that morning, he knew intimately the details of that chapter and preferred to satisfy his curiosity questioning his daughter. What was her story? What had she seen? Assuming she was not a very good girl, he wondered where she might have broken bad.

As they chewed on breaded chicken sandwiches from the Chef Express just outside track 11 at Milano Centrale he quickly knew he would not be disappointed….

To be continued.

tags: Italy, wine, Photography, The Blissful Adventurer, italy trains, blog, ape, Adventure, Piedmont, Juliet Housewright, Michael Housewright, @Blissadventure, italy travel fiction
Wednesday 08.29.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

IMO Thursday - Vanessa Trevino Boyd is a Wine Star!

This week's IMO Thursday - Vanessa Trevino Boyd is wine star and Beverage Director at Philippe Restaurant + Lounge in Houston, TX. She oversees one of the city's most thoughtful wine lists and this past April she was awarded ‘Best New Sommelier’ by Food & Wine magazine. So why then am I lauding this young woman when she clearly has plenty of allies? Because she is a dear friend and she goes about it the right way. At the end of the day choosing wines for a restaurant is no different from choosing great ingredients for the establishment's kitchen. One must trust the supplier and sample the goods. I have seen Vanessa meticulously smell and taste limes before making a margarita. I have watched her cut tomatoes and inspect their every nuance before placing in a salad. In June of this year when she came to Colorado to work the Aspen Food and Wine Festival we sat down for lunch at one of the most recognized restaurants in the area and within minutes the sommelier on duty (also the GM of the place) was asking Vanessa's opinion on a myriad of wine related subjects because she remarked on the quality of the wine and the provenance of some of the produce. 

Vanessa is not a self promoter. She is not flamboyant or overt in her style. She is in every sense a quality maven. Quietly and without much fanfare she moved from NYC where she excelled at Michelin lauded Alain Ducasse at the St. Regis with an 1800-selection list to manage the wine program at my former employer The Tasting Room and Max's Wine Dive. We met at a friend's birthday party and were fast friends. We had actually met briefly once before in NYC and I enjoy recalling how I met this very serious wine pro who honestly intimidated me a bit at the time. Intimidating is likely the last word I would use to describe Vanessa person to person. She asks great questions of her guests and when she delivers a new wine experience to clients and they are wringing wet with childlike smiles of new discovery she simply goes about her work and the customers keep coming back to Vanessa.

Quality of service, passion for excellence, and belief that doing a job better every day are the principles that I admire most in a professional. In the information age our natural human tendencies towards fleeting glory are exacerbated by social media and our attention spans are snipped daily by a different variety of carrot. Vanessa carries a torch of consistency promoting wines of place, great acid, and balance with the foods of her talented chef employer. Wine and food in their purist form are always about great ingredients first, execution second, and polished service. No amount of flash can replace substance.

My friend and colleague embodies substance and longevity. She won the best "New Sommelier" award 13 years into her career. There was nothing new about her, sometimes the glass is really deep and takes awhile for the cream to rise to the top. Vanessa is a star in an increasingly crowded and clouded sky of wine talent. If you happen to be in Houston I urge you to dine with her at Philippe Restaurant and Lounge, enjoy some killer Frites with Harissa Ketchup and a bottle of one of her wonderful grower champagnes. Juliet and I experienced several of our favorite date nights with Vanessa at the helm and I think you will too.

I am here today also to share a link to a local Houston Publication called "My Table Magazine". These guys recognize excellence in Houston's dining scene and they have now become aware of the talent in their backyard and nominated Vanessa and her wine program for 2 awards. The vote is open to readers (public) and fans of excellence and I encourage you all to take 2 minutes and vote for Vanessa and Philippe Restaurant. You may vote in the other categories or not as the ballot does not have to be complete.

CLICK HERE and then choose VOTE

4. OUTSTANDING WINE SERVICE
Philippe Restaurant + Lounge

7. SERVICE PERSON OF THE YEAR
Vanessa Trevino Boyd (Philippe)

tags: wine, travel, houston, @Blissadventure, Michael Housewright, Stories
Thursday 08.02.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Haiku Sunday - Italy iPhone Photography by Juliet Housewright

This week's edition of Haiku Sunday - Italy iPhone Photography by Juliet Housewright celebrates the eye of my talented wife on our most recent Italy journey. Juliet's work will have its own gallery on The Blissful Adventurer soon and these images will certainly be part of it. Enjoy today's Haiku and stay tuned for a big announcement tomorrow!

Feet seem happiest

when dappled lights and warmth find

a place to alight

 

Pino knew his boat

was capable of winning

still he hated others

 

life is so simple

at the moment wine is poured

laughing lust looking

vintage boats in tune

with vintage ideas that

are often fleeting

at the market shrimp

clamor over one another

to try to stay warm

fireworks shows were new

to the little boy from Menfi

watching from the sea

excuse me ma'am

I believe this man wants to

grope me, tell him no

never more inviting

than the sea when it is not

to be had that day

A photographer

looks into the lens of life

and records his truth

tags: @Blissadventure, Adventure, blog, europe, food, Italian, Italy, wine, Venice, Puglia, poetry, Le Marche, humor, Juliet Housewright
Sunday 07.22.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Top 25 Italy Moments #11 - Siena Church Driving (New Material)

The Blissful Adventurer Top 25 Italy Moments continues with #11 - Siena Church Driving. After our most recent trip to Italia I had to augment my Top 11 posts with some amazing new experiences which blew us away. We have gotten the list together and now we continue with the rest of the story. 

#11 Siena Church Driving

I started driving in Italy on a regular basis in 2006. Since then I have driven vans, cars, and bicycles. I have pulled trailers, ridden in dump trucks, and driven cars on and off of very tightly packed ferries. I have used a Euro GPS and a modified American Garmin Nuvi 275. I can say with all certainty none of those experiences prepared me for #11 on my list of Top 25 Italy moments.

The Scene - Juliet and I were staying with our dear friends in Montalcino in 2009 and decided to go to the lovely renaissance city of Siena for the day. We found our way there and to a bit of a remote car park on the edge of the old town. We spent the day in the ancient city walking up intensely steep hills, drinking gorgeously roasted local coffee, and refueling our tanks with copious amounts of gelato. The town was bustling on this cool fall day and the sun was extremely bright in the sky over the famous square called Il Campo. The day had been idyllic and our hearts, minds, and stomachs were in the best places imaginable as we prepared to depart Siena for a feast that awaited us with the family that night back in Montalcino. Little did we know what was to transpire.

The Action - We jumped into our trusty Alfa Romeo Mito and set the GPS for home in the hills. We began normally, and as we are want to do, we were discussing the people and events that made up our day and left the directions to the Garmin NUVI 275 girl. This is one of those occasions that I wish I could read this blog aloud as I want very much to demonstrate my female robot impression and give you the run down of what life is like in Italy when Garmin girls go wild!

We began to notice we were not on the route we remembered when GG (easy term for Garmin Girl) sent us directly into a covered parking garage. And then kept saying: "in 50 meters turn right" every 50 meters. We finally realized after 3 full circles in the garage that there was one way in and one way out. On our way out we very nearly collided with a large BMW 7 series with blacked-out windows. The shady driver rolled his window down and gave me the old middle and index finger to the thumb shake as I just shrugged and hoped he would not make me any irrefutable offers in the coming days.

As we exited the garage and began to proceed the wrong way down a one way street we saw one of the elusive blue signs that pointed to Montalcino, followed immediately by a white sign pointing to the city center, then a green one pointing to the highway. GG kept screaming at me to make a U-Turn when I saw what I thought was the entrance to a church parking area. Granted I had never seen a parking lot for a church in Italy (or since) so I naturally assumed this was better than continuing on a one way street and I made a sharp right and over a small curb which to me at the time seemed like a pause or a reminder to drive courteously as I was approaching sacred ground.

At this point GG said the equivalent of a verbal Windows Blue Screen, "lost satellite". How could it freaking lose Satellite? Was this a jamming device in the church? As it was, the church was gorgeous and became more so as we approached the front steps in a CAR! Suddenly, a priest appeared from the front door and began waving at me angrily, and I mean pissed off angry for me to go back. Juliet began to cower in the passenger seat as I ignored the Monsignor and pushed down on the gas and turned the car around the walls of the church to the back of the building.

I knew the road behind me would only lead back to the parking garage and the Francis Ford Coppola guy in the BMW. I had to traverse the church and obviously very quickly. As we rounded the back of the structure several dozen pedestrians sitting on the ground and on benches were now in our direct path and I had a very angry priest chasing behind me. At this point Juliet was near tears and assumed we were destined for prison or a manslaughter charge at the very least. This was like a fucking scene from The Bourne Identity or an outtake from The Italian Job. In all honesty I loved it! I was breaking some laws and experiencing a view of Italy few drivers will ever have.

I weaved the car in and out of picnickers, worshipers, gawkers, and standard issue Italian malcontents! It was like Death Race 2000 in reverse with the goal not dissimilar to the old game "Operation". Do not touch the sides was my mantra as I squeezed the Alfa Romeo into a narrow segment between the courtyard and church building which seemed like an exit and a good idea, until a seemingly monolithic 4 inch curb at the end of the courtyard forced my little action film to a sudden halt.

Exasperated, angry, and with a mob of angry Christians on our tail I had little choice but to gas it and jump the curb! I goosed the engine, popped the clutch while gripping the wheel in white knuckle death throes turning hard right directly and emphatically into a:

PEDESTRIAN ONLY STREET! UGH!

With the engine revved I could see walkers diving into stores and a sea of baby carriages at every turn. There were no horns, no scooters, no sounds of any kind except my wife's sobs, and the angry mob of Italians slapping at the car hood, roof, and back windshield.

Then in my field of view and less than 300 meters I saw the cop walking ever so quickly in our direction. Seas of humans parting and the Pharaoh readying his ticket book, his radio, and the stake in which to burn my American ass. In this instant that seemed like the moment of truth sandwiched between my greatest moment of stupidity and the imminent divorce papers back home, a miracle happened.

As I was ingesting a final view of the cathedral in my rear-view mirror an angelic voice jarred me to reality: it was GG!

"In 50 meters - TURN RIGHT....ASSHOLE!"

I accelerated once again dodging a granny on a walker and a fucking living statue painted like a Gladiator (it is Siena not Rome!!!) and ripped the car into the right turn. Then, there was no one, no cars, no people, no priests, just a clear road and a big intersection ahead. We increased speed, made the traffic light and in a moment were steaming towards the south and on our way home.

GG saved us from certain incarceration and herself from blunt force trauma.

The Conclusion - When we told the story that night to our friends they seemed amused but not worried. They knew all too well that any drive through a church courtyard that kills no one, gets one home safely, and makes for a good story was indeed a good drive and a Top 25 Italy Moment.

 

tags: Photography, blogging, food, humor, Blogging, Adventure, wine, travel, michael housewright, juliet housewright
Monday 07.01.19
Posted by Sarah Finger
 
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