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Michael D Housewright
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Hipstamatic - Fun Photo Friday

Rodin Sculpture Garden - Stanford University

Hipstamatic fun photo Friday is a joyful exploration of the depths in iPhone photography that help me to document The Blissful Adventurer. These images represent my particular vision of the images I see and are intended to alter mood and shift perspective. Hipstamatic is an application for mobile phone cameras that has inspired me since its inception and I hope very much it remains a fixture in the app world.

Crossing a fabled monkey bridge to the shore. This was what I wanted Vietnam to be

Nothing embodies and embraces the slow modifications of life in Italy like the Tobacconist. What once was the place to buy coveted salt is now home to recharge cell phones and play the lottery. The shop owners endure and their demeanor rarely changes.

Rome is a place where grunge images are all around. Trash cans, scooters, awnings all play integral parts in the swooning banality varnishing something very alive and volatile.

Right outside the Apple store in downtown Denver. I never gave a rat's about Apple until Hipstamatic.These were better than I remembered and I remembered loving them.

One of San Francisco's best coffee roasters in action.

Gorgeous macerated wine from the Republic of Georgia served in traditional clay bowl (piala). These wines can be enjoyed at the wonderful new Wine Salon Et Al in San Francisco's historic Russian Hill hood.

The Blissful Adventurer - Phu Quoc Island, Vietnam (photo by Schmee)

I long to get back to sticky new sand on my arms, clear water, crabs over rice serenity. Hipstamatic will be with me and I will find guidance and share what I find.

 

tags: Italy Stories, Italian Wine, Coffee, Food Porn, Stories, Rodin, Mt. Etna, @Blissadventure
Friday 11.16.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Hostess Ceases Operation - The End of My Childhood

Hostess ceases operation and is closing for good. For a moment let's assume this is true and that the company does not sell to some international conglomerate who lays off the union workers and re-stocks under a new LLC with cheap labor. Let's assume the end is nigh for the dearest little snack cakes and the happiness I gleaned from their hydrogenated shells. Sure, Hostess and its subsidiaries might actually be a major player in the rise of disease, disability, laziness, and learning disorders in the US, but for this poor kid from small-town Texas, Hostess was freedom in every bite.

I practically lived with my Grandparents on both sides of my family during the summers and after school during my formative years. While the focus was always on garden produce and traditional country cooking, the occasional commercial snack was available and sometimes it was Hostess.

This is the gist of my short piece here. I got Hostess only sometimes. Hostess was the Cadillac of sugary snacks and the price reflected it. Our lunches included Little Debbie snacks for 79 cents a box and almost never the glorious, shimmering, foil-wrapped Ding Dongs of my well-to-do classmates. No, Ho-Hos, Snoballs, Twinkies, and Donette Gems were for the rich kids. We got Star Crunch, Fudge Brownies, and Oatmeal Cream Pies. Occasionally I would get a gas station Moon Pie, but almost never any hostess products.

Even the fried pies and the Danish were almost always Mrs. Baird's (a Dallas based bakery that made the best cheese Danish and ennobled all vending machines where it graced the shelves). Hostess was a luxury rarely afforded in our working class home and so when I did get the chance to stay with a friend and he could eat as many ice cream sandwiches or Hostess cakes as he liked I did my best to eat all his folks would allow. Playing The Bard's Tale on an old Apple IIC and eating Hostess was one of the greatest pleasures of my youth. Sadly all they had to drink was Diet Coke so I was always thirsty. I still never got the Diet Coke and Ding-Dongs pairing

Right around my twelfth birthday Hostess opened a factory outlet near my Grandma's house in Grand Prairie, TX. All the great snacks were crazy cheap as they were too old for store sale and poor saps like me cared little about freshness or expiration dates, we wanted some Twinkies and at 1 dollar for a box of 10 and spend $5 get a box of your choice for free, Hostess finally became affordable. Now, you may wonder what kind of guy eats half-stale Hostess snacks and likes it. The same guy who bought a $20 pair of discontinued Guess jeans from Gadzooks in faded grey and at least 1 full inch too short. I wanted the triangle really bad and I got it! Of course the goal of scoring a girlfriend or even a scam session (80's Ennis, TX term for make out) was thwarted by my flood pants and poor choice of color, but my dream of great snacks had only begun.

When I moved into my college dorm I went directly to the Hostess Outlet as my amazing Grandma took care of my laundry and prepared a feast for dinner. I loaded up till I reached the $5 requirement and smiled broadly as I selected a box of new Chocolate Twinkies with a Marks-a-lot expiration date of the day before. I had two heavy bags of pies, cherry cinnamon rolls, loaves of bread, and of course a litany of Ding-Dongs, Snoballs (still likely my favorite) and coffee cake. The outlet was amazing and the women who worked there always seemed so happy to help me in between cigarettes and 60 oz sodas.

I put all of my treasures away in my dormitory closet with the accordion door. I placed each one in order of expiration with the most recently expired at the bottom so as to enjoy them with as consistently as possible levels of stale. I was set for sugar highs at a moments notice. Then it happened...

I came home on day 1 from class to find Hostess wrappers strewn about the room. Clayton, my new roommate from Orange county had gone into my closet and helped himself to the Hostess. Not only had he pilfered my booty, he had dug into the boxes that were most recently expired. He stole my freshest stale Twinkies and did not even have the common decency to leave a note.

When I confronted him he told me that in his house Hostess snacks were fair game and he could eat all he wanted and that he would happily buy "US" more if I wanted to go get them. It was then that I knew Clayton was a rich boy and that rich boys had little regard for my redneck property. After I asked him to cease and desist his larcenous tendencies he stole a cinnamon roll the very next day and even had the temerity to mark it off my inventory list using a different color pen than I use.

Without any hesitation I went to the Dean of housing and asked for a room transfer. The Dean said he could not accommodate my request so soon in the semester and so I got permission from my parents to move off campus and took up residence with a Senior who did not steal my food.

It was Hostess that taught me my first lesson in independence and revealed my autonomous nature to me all those years ago. Today it is a foundering company canning 18,500 people who are likely very much like my family in the 1980s. Someone's Grandmother and someone's mother are being squeezed by the heavy hands of corporate giants.

My Grandma is watching all of this from her heavenly window and I am certain she smiled at me as I strolled to the counter of  the local Safeway today and purchased 10 Hostess snacks for $10. Ten dollars worth of  stale pastry would have filled the trunk of my 1978 Olds Cutlass 23 years ago. Now I have the means to buy all of the filthy little sugar bombs I want. I devoured a package of orange cup cakes only 45 minutes ago and as much as the memory and the flavor bring joy, I understand only now that the true joy they delivered was from my coming-of-age. I would relish the opportunity to sit again on that velvet-textured brown sofa in my Grandma's living room and enjoy the real food made by her careful hands and let the smells of my childhood waft over me.

It is only now at 41 years of age I see how rich we truly were.

 

 

 

tags: College, Food, Hostess, michael housewright, Stories, The Blissful Adventurer
Friday 11.16.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Travel Photo Tours - Creating while on Vacation

Juliet on Phu Quoc Island (Vietnam)

Travel photo tours is a concept I am developing along with some very talented friends, local guides around the world, and of course my lovely wife, Juliet. The goal is to create dreams on trips rather than offering some canned version of a dream before a journey. As human beings we want to share our experiences almost as much as we want to have them. I believe it is possible to do this while building community and experiencing the world in ways that were simply not possible or affordable only a few years ago. 

New technology, careful use of available tools, and some easy creative guidance turn memories into images that can be shared, used in stories, or made into prints.

Just a few clicks and some creative energy can turn trees into dreams.

or mountains into mind paintings

Our focus will be to craft programs with fun and community being the priority. We will seek like-minded travelers with a penchant for adventure and exploration.

The spiritual journey can be what we make it.

When we travel the everyday becomes the adventure and we want our travelers to take home this belief: that the mundane is a choice not an absolute.

There is a one-word saying in Italian: Magari - if only

Magari Travel Coming Spring 2013

tags: Travel, The Blissful Adventurer, Photography, Travel Writing, juliet housewright, michael housewright
Tuesday 11.13.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Mt. Etna - Volcanoes, Vines, and the Holy Spirit

Mt. Etna -Volcanoes, Vines, and the Holy Spirit is a 3 part series on how I came to meet Salvo Foti, the preeminent voice on traditional (ancient) winemaking on Mt Etna. I am releasing my post now to celebrate Salvo's visit to San Francisco this week. Tune in tomorrow to learn where you can meet Salvo and taste his wines.

New roads in Sicily wreak havoc upon GPS systems. As a matter of fact, old roads do as well. In the 5 hours it took to reach Randazzo on the north slope of Mt. Etna from the southwestern town of Menfi there were no less than 5 dead ends due to construction of new highways and from old thoroughfares that simply ceased to exist. This was Sicily after all and if invading armies with the latest technology over the centuries failed to tame the roads of the Mediterranean’s largest island then what kind of chance did I expect with my discount Fiat Punto and a 2009 Garmin?

One island does not equal one place and on the slopes of Europe’s most active volcano a sense of place and belonging to it are the driving factors behind perhaps the most exciting wine scene since Thomas Jefferson wrote his supplier in Marseilles seeking a fine white Hermitage. Mt. Etna is home to some of Europe’s oldest grapevines, many predating the devastating phylloxera outbreak that ravaged the wines of France and Northern Italy over 100 years ago. It is these ancient vines buried in the mineral rich volcanic slopes of a fiery giant that have inspired a pilgrimage to create the next great wine.

Tasting the wines of longtime producers Gulfi and Benanti as well as newcomer Tenute delle Terre Nere I knew there was something brewing on the mountain as well as under it. I needed to see for myself what was truly happening on Etna and if wine could be produced from the light bodied and pale colored Nerello Mascalese  that was ageable,  with a sense of place,  and flavors that did not mirror or intend to mirror those of France’s burgundy as they have so often been compared.

I had worked in Sicily 6 years ago based in Taormina with Etna always looming in the distance. After my works and studies here I knew I would return. I did not know it would be for wine. I had lived with an amazing family in Taormina and my host father, Aurelio, would routinely open a plastic bottle of Etna Rosso he kept stored in the fridge to serve with dinner each night. The wine, while foxy (not tasting like wine made from wine grapes) cold, and not of high quality, somehow grew on me over nights of watching Italian “Who wants to be a Millionaire” and eating the most exquisite meals I remember vividly.

Every two or three days during my time in Taormina I would go out shopping and  bring home some fine bottle of famous Sicilian wine to share with the family at dinner. Each time I would, Aurelio would drink a quarter of a glass of my selection to be polite, then open the Etna Rosso made entirely from Nerello Mascalese he filled in bulk from a local co-op. When I began to see evidence of this grape sneaking into wine shops here in America I could not help but be bemused and quite skeptical. Was someone actually importing the moonshine I drank in Sicily to the US and how would they market it?

To my great and happy surprise I learned that Aurelio was simply being a humble and supportive citizen. There were many options for Etna based reds and he just happened to like the cheapest ones. The wines grown near Randazzo are another story altogether and at the end of a very frustrating drive I was ready to know why.

...To be continued

Part 2:

Mt. Etna -Volcanoes, Vines, and the Holy Spirit is a 3 part series on how I came to meet Salvo Foti, the preeminent voice on traditional (ancient) winemaking on Mt Etna. I am releasing my post now to celebrate Salvo’s visit to San Francisco this week. Salvo Foti will be pouring wine and discussing how he makes the magic this Saturday at Biondivino is San Francisco's Russian Hill neighborhood from 6-8PM. Come out and enjoy the wines and say hello to yours truly as well as the great Salvo Foti.

Part 2

I arrived at the charming hotel Parco Statella and visited briefly with their fine horses while a girl in a neighboring room rattled on in a language I would later come to find out was Georgian. After a bit I sent an arrival text to Salvo Foti, one of the most integral persons in the wine hierarchy of Mt Etna and as I would come to find out one of the most intelligent men I had met in many years.

Salvo arrived in a lived-in SUV with only 2 doors so my wife had to do the 1980s crawl over the seat belt to find her way to the back. Signore Foti is around 5’9” 155lbs, lean, and strikingly handsome. His grey hair would suggest he was over 50 but his youthful looks and svelte build indicate a much younger man. At first he appeared shy, although as I became more comfortable with my elementary Italian his obvious confidence and complete mastery of his own ideas came clearly to light.

The intended restaurant for the evening was closed on this day and Salvo suggested we see his home and enjoy some takeout pizza with him and his wife. In my 20 years living and working in Italy, I had never had takeout pizza that I did not eat right there on the street and certainly never with a family upon meeting them for the first time. Of course I should have known this would not be ordinary takeout. The pizza had cracker thin crust and the Fotis offered us giant capers from the island of Pantelleria and olive oil from 200-year-old trees to add to each slice as a compliment and an expression of Sicilian creativity and hospitality.

During the meal Salvo explained that his company I Vigneri  came from Maestranzi dei Vigneri. A vineyard workers guild founded in 1435 to protect the traditions of grape growing on Mt Etna. Over the course of the time on Etna, Salvo and his team would reference the men or simply I Vigneri almost hourly. The ancestors of modern men seemed to be held in reverence almost like war heroes. It was as if the soldiers of the vines watched over the work done today offering approval and guiding the hands of the current vigneri. While this borders on superstition, the faith that the team put into this philosophy of curation, set aside over 500 years ago, seemed to carry them through the very difficult tasks of vineyard management each day. The overarching belief is that the only way to make great wine was to create great grapes and the only way to do that (on Mt Etna) is to follow the path of the vigneri.

The following day I met Galen Abbott, an American who resides in Catania and oversees vineyards and a 19th century winemaking building called a Palmento; in this case, Palmento Santo Spirito, or winery(loosely) of the Holy Spirit. Galen is brash and straightforward with an honesty that is rare in such a sensitive world. I liked him immediately. Lean, bearded, and wearing what looked like the most comfortable blue suit made in Italy, it is uncommon to meet an American who gets Italy (specifically Sicily) and its people so intrinsically. Galen spoke Italian like a character from Italian cinema’s great period of neorealismo;and like watching a great film I found myself simply wanting to know what was next.

I must have asked him 5 questions a minute in the first 2 hours of knowing him, with each of his answers more compelling than the next. He told me he learned Italian by moving to Padua in northern Italy and locking himself in his room with works of Dante and reading them over and over till he perfected the language; and 6 months later emerged to become a bartender at a local dive. I wanted badly to disbelieve him and dismiss his tall tale as an impossibility or a cutting room scene from Rainman. After what transpired at dinner that night I had no choice but to accept I had met a man of rare linguistic talent.

...to be continued

Part 3:

Mt. Etna -Volcanoes, Vines, and the Holy Spirit is a 3 part series on how I came to meet Salvo Foti, the preeminent voice on traditional (ancient) winemaking on Mt Etna. I am releasing my post now to celebrate Salvo’s visit to San Francisco this week. Salvo Foti will be pouring wine and discussing how he makes the magic this Saturday at Biondivino is San Francisco’s Russian Hill neighborhood from 6-8PM. Come out and enjoy the wines and say hello to yours truly as well as the great Salvo Foti.

We walked all together through the vineyards at Palmento Santo Spirito and saw vines as old as 150 years resting next to new plantings. The cycle of life in Sicily is as clear as anywhere I have seen. Ancestral vines keeping watch over new ones managed by men following ancient rituals to the tune of making wine without the use of electricity. I assumed Salvo was kidding till he walked us through the dark and dank rooms of the Palmento and explained to us how the grapes are carried up the ramp by hand and into the lava stone pool where they are foot tread to break the skins and allow the juice and pulp to run free into the rock tank below. The temperature outside over 90 degrees while the stone and the vented windows keep the inside temps at 75 or less. This was how the Romans made wine said Salvo and yet they say what I am doing is illegal. Two thousand years of winemaking precedence cannot be wrong but the EU says it is illegal. I want to know so much more.

The Georgians met us at dinner. They were in town to bury a religious icon in the vineyards of a French wine distributor from the UK.  His wife, a former winemaker at the famous Solaia in Tuscany and her brother an aspiring winemaker himself from Australia who had interned with the enigmatic Frank Cornelissen were part of the crew that evening along with a contingent of the hardest working members of I Vigneri. We had all convened on Etna like some backroom episode of “Wine Fantasy Island” and Salvo was certainly our Mr Roarke.

We dived straight into a magnum of I Vigneri’s signature Etna Rosso, Vinupetra. It was compelling in its uniqueness and strangely familiar in its weight. This infant vintage was only recently bottled (by Vinupetra standards) and its youthful fruit and exuberant acid were a lovely spoil to the fresh Randazzo sausage on the grill. Galen and I drank like Americans and ate like Italians. Salvo says Galen never stops talking in either language. I laughed heartily when Salvo said Galen spoke Italian better than him and I smiled broadly when Galen affirmed this. Italian was not Salvo’s first language after all, it was Sicilian. After tasting the Vinupetra I am certain his second language was wine.

There were no sparks from the volcano on this night. The smell of sulfur wafted in and out of the air and I wondered if it was all from the volcano herself or was it the sulfur/copper mix sprayed minimally on the vines to prevent rot. The cool night air pushed me to drink more vigorously and I was so pleased to see the ubiquitous bottles of Coca-Cola absent from this Italian dinner. The Foti children have never had McDonald’s and do not get soft drinks. The ancient Vigneri would like this. They would want them to drink wine, to commune with strangers, and perhaps to indulge in the occasional smoke.

At the end of our pizza meal the night before Salvo asked my wife and me if we wanted  a cigarette. When we told him that we did not smoke, he simply asked “why not?” I had to ask myself this same question looking at a man 10 years my senior, in better health, more contented than I, and living with vines, volcanoes, and the Holy Spirit in his backyard.

Please visit us tomorrow evening with the wines of Salvo Foti at Biondivino in San Francisco

tags: blog, Mt. Etna, michael housewright, Italy, Italian, Salvo Foti, Sicily, Juliet Housewright, Michael Housewright, @Blissadventure, Galen Abbott, Adventure
Friday 11.09.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Fun Friday Photos

Fun Friday Photos is a new segment for me to show creative techniques and experimental photos that exude playful, whimsical, or dramatic twists on their original counterparts. I like the idea of sharing a bit of my behind the scenes work and I hope you all will enjoy telling me your thoughts.

Happy Friday everyone and enjoy the images.

Thanks for viewing these fun Friday photos!

 

tags: Blog, Juliet Housewright, Photography, Travel, Photo Forge 2, iPhone Imaging, iPhoneography
Friday 11.02.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 
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