Monday, February 14, 2011

Obsessing about geometric patterns


Obsessing about geometric patterns

Im working on a little project at the moment (to be revealed soon) and in the process I have found myself obsessing about geometric patterns. I realised this when my interior design stalking kept leading me to collect vast amounts of images where there was always an element of geometric print.
Geometry was definitely not at the top of my preferences back in my school days, however, I have always loved the timeless quality and the sense balance and order it conveys.
The fabulous Kelly Wearstler also seems to favour this trend in her glamorous and swanky Hollywood interiors and a couple of my favourite designers, Jonathan AdlerTrina Turk, and Color Splash the show also feature powerful geometric prints in their collections which I am sure you’re going to love as much as I do. 

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Coffee's Slow Dance


A few years ago, I mothballed the fantasy of getting a professional-grade espresso machine and setting it up in the kitchen next to the meat slicer. In part, I gave up because of cost. It turns out a starter machine runs about $600, and if I wanted to own the same technology and firepower as what’s on the counter of the coffee bar around the corner, the price jumped to $6,500. Thermal-stable dual-boiler systems, assembled by hand in Italy, don’t come cheaply.

Related

Kenji Aoki for The New York Times.
Tony Cenicola/The New York Times. Food Styling by Brian Preston-Campbell.
But the craving faded when I began to pay attention to how I make coffee at home. Which meant paying attention to the professionals, the vanguard of the coffee nuts driven by a sense that whatever they brew could probably be brewed better. I understand that some of you are put off by proselytizing — you want coffee, not a sermon — but where others perceive smugness and superiority, I see enthusiasm and curiosity, which is what we ask of our chefs: cooking isn’t stuck in 1990, or we would still be sitting down to menus with honey-mustard glaze and sun-dried tomatoes. Why should coffee be any different?
Really, the question is, why do so many people think coffee is Italian? Or French? Or Turkish? Why fixate on a notion of authenticity so tied to a particular country that nothing else could measure up? I thought about this when I followed the lead of the professionals and started buying gear — a grinder, a drip cone, a pouring kettle — that was simple, functional and beautiful. They were low-tech, high-fidelity gadgets that cost $15 to $50 and changed how I make coffee. For the most part, the key components came from Japan.
Yes, Japan.
One of the most important coffee markets in the world, Japan imports more than 930 million pounds of it each year — more than France, less than Italy. It’s not a fad. There are coffee shops in Japan that date to at least the 1940s and traditions that reach back even further; it’s a culture that prizes brewed coffee over espresso (although that’s changing) and clarity over body. Coffee is as Japanese as baseball and beer.
Until just a few years ago, much of the coffee gear that made it to the United States from Japan was brought here in suitcases. It wasn’t contraband, just obscure, a trickle of kettles and cones picked up by coffee obsessives or their well-traveled friends who didn’t mind lugging the extra bulk.
One adopter — and importer — of Japanese gear was James Freeman of Blue Bottle Coffee in Oakland, San Francisco and now Brooklyn. Freeman and his wife, the pastry chef Caitlin Williams Freeman, recounted a visit to Chatei Hatou, a Tokyo coffee shop where brewing coffee isn’t exactly a ceremony but is ceremonious. They said beans were weighed, ground, emptied into a filter and preinfused with a little bit of water that let the coffee bloom and release carbon dioxide. Cups and saucers were warmed, a slice of chiffon cake was set in the fridge to firm up. Only then was the coffee brewed, slowly.
“They’re going for a mastery of technique, then a mastery over all the important details of service,” Freeman said. “It adds up to an incredibly elusive experience. It’s hard to manufacture splendidness. It seems as though they have something very difficult figured out.”
In 2007, Freeman started paying close attention to the swan-neck kettles used for filter coffee. The narrow spout produces a thin, precise stream, and the handle brings your hand into a naturally balanced position — instead of flooding the filter and letting it drip, you deliver a measured amount of water over a period of several minutes. It might sound precious or tedious, but the control is enthralling. It’s like picking up a drafting pen after only writing with Magic Markers. More important, the coffee tastes different. The flavors can be distinctive and bright, even sweet. A “bean” is really the fermented seed of a cherrylike shrub, and if coffee is roasted carefully and brewed correctly, you can taste the flower and the fruit.
By 2009, pouring kettles and other gear were stocked by Blue Bottle Coffee and other independent shops like Ritual Coffee Roasters in San Francisco, Intelligentsia in Chicago and Los Angeles and Barismo in Arlington, Mass. The supply was inconsistent — unlike the planned scarcity of limited-edition sneakers. If store ran out of what you wanted, you went back until a shipment came in. It took commitment to join the club. Owning something made by Hario, Kalita or Bonmac was proof of membership.
That all changed in the fall of 2010. Williams-Sonoma started to carry a selection of specialty brewing equipment and accessories from Hario, a glass-manufacturing giant that’s the Pyrex of Japan. Not only does Williams-Sonoma sell a pouring kettle, grinder and filter cone, it also carries the more unusual slow drippers and woodnecks. The rollout was nationwide. The Japanese coffee gear is stocked at most of the company’s stores, more than 250 locations in all, and on williams-sonoma.com. Now picking up a pouring kettle is as easy as swinging through the Mall at Green Hills in Nashville.
The kettle is the “pour” part of “pour over,” which these days is the accepted term for the technique, although Jaime van Schyndel, one of the owners of Barismo, prefers “hand pour,” which may describe it better: coffee made by hand, usually one cup at a time. To be frank, it’s not for everybody. Some will enjoy the ritual. But others will always consider coffee a convenience, a button to push or, once you learn how to set the timer, one that clicks on automatically. I have no doubt that countless pouring kettles and slow drippers will be used three or four times, then boxed back up and put on a high shelf, the fondue sets of our day.
But the sudden rise and widening acceptance of what was unfamiliar marks a permanent shift. The hierarchy has been shattered. Already, a few of the same people who once traveled to Tokyo and Kyoto are now talking and posting on Twitter about a country that draws on a variety of traditions, an emerging coffee culture that might also have something to teach us: Korea. For more info about our Coffee selection check SHIROCOS.COM OR VISIT OUR SHOP AT 216 1ST. ST BENICIA. 

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Valentine's Day Entertaining Tips




Let’s face it. The only reason anyone is excited about Valentine’s Day is because there’s a somewhat higher possibility of getting some action. Either you’re in an exciting new relationship, and plan on showing your honey some moves you learned from Cosmo, or you’ve been with your darling for years and are trying to prove that your relationship is still hot. Or maybe you’re all alone and crying into a half-priced happy hour cocktail at Olive Garden, wishing for romance with someone who doesn’t have a criminal record. No matter what your situation, be it attached or woefully on the prowl, it’s never a bad idea to have some at-home-entertaining tips in your pocket. Below, find six tips for hosting a romantic Valentine's Day at home. (Yes, that’s six. Not sex. We ain’t those kind of bloggers.)
1. Move out of your parents house.
Or ask your parents to move out, at least for the weekend. Just figure it out. However, if you don’t sleep in your childhood bedroom, proceed to step 2.
2. Clean your bathroom
Dear Every Guy We -- and All of Our Girlfriends -- Have Dated,
If there’s one thing that signals to us that you absolutely do not have your act together, nor do you care about your surroundings and basic general health, it’s a dirty, disgusting bathroom. Nothing kills the mood like a filthy sink and a moldy toilet and your date digging through her purse for hand sanitizer. If this is the part of your house where you clean yourself, and it looks like a set interior from ‘Trainspotting,’ then we’re not going to have much confidence that your rock hard naked body isn’t like a dance party for microbes. Clean your bathroom before a date comes over. Or just in general. Do it for yourself.
3. Prepare a nice meal, but not too nice.
Microwaving a frozen lasagna tells your date “You are not worth the effort of pre-heating an oven.” You might as well hand them a PowerBar and unzip your pants. But slaving too much in the kitchen can be stressful and distracting. So whip up a nice medium-effort entree (
we heart these awesome, libido-enhancing ideas) and make sure that candles are involved, because everyone looks hotter in low light. But skip the weird gross potpourri-scented candles during dinner. No one wants to eat shrimp scampi while whiffing a pine-scented wax monstrosity you got on clearance after Christmas.
Oysters
4. Drink wine. Get loose. Make out.
See, while you might be stuck at the $7/glass level if you were at a restaurant, at-home entertaining allows you to splurge on better wine, and both of you can get romantically tipsy without having to designate a driver. But can we drop a culinary sacrilege bomb? We’d say stick with white wines, like an effervescent, refreshing Portuguese 
Vinho Verde or an Eastern European Grüner Veltliner, or get silly with a wine spritzer. No one will have the unsightly grey teeth that red wine causes, and you’re less likely to wake up with a hangover. Also? Some people get a little nutty after too much red wine. Like bad nutty. Not sexy nutty.
5. Truth: Half of the reason people like Valentine’s Day is the sweets. 
So when it comes to dessert, pull out all the stops to impress someone by brandishing a blowtorch. A good creme brulee recipe can be baked in a ramekin the night before, refrigerated, and then topped with sugar and blowtorched in front of your date to impress them with the wonder of fire. Also, it’s tasty. Experiment with different flavors of custard like maple, espresso, or even pumpkin. Or add some excitement to plain old vanilla creme brulee by sprinkling flavored sugar atop before torching (we like citrus, ginger, or even rose). Bonus: you can use the line “Is it hot in here or is that just my blowtorch?”
Alie & Georgia
6. Dessert cocktail
As long as we’re celebrating booze and desserts, double up with a sweet Valentine’s Day cocktail. If your romance is still new and sweet, opt for our cupcake cocktail, the 
Red Velvet Cocktail, that tastes like you're drinking batter and has the added, messy bonus of a frosting rim. If your relationship is in that later, comfortable stage (read: boring) you might want to opt for our Chocolate Cherry Bomb, a sweet concoction that packs a surprise kick with, yes, Sriracha sauce. But what if your realize you’re with a dud mid-date and want it to end sooner? Go with our Umami Elixir, which promises to wreck your breath and assure that no one will attempt to lean in for a sloppy, unwanted kiss. Then call up your single pals and go to the movies.
Alie & Georgia

Alternatives to Red Roses

With Valentine's Day around the corner, I thought I'd round up some alternatives to red roses and offer up some of our favorite local sources for flowers, tips for arranging them yourself and inspiration for creating something different. Shirocos.com 

Simple but Elegant

We've gotten a few reader emails lately with some interior design projects that I wanted to share so I thought I'd feature them all today. This first one comes from Franco. He is a brand manager in São Paulo and wanted to share his new apartment with us. It's actually more like a little peek, but I think the photography is superb so without further ado, welcome to Franco's Brazilian pad.

Friday, January 28, 2011

January Market

Ohhhh January Market what could be better than you?  The thought of strolling through eleven floors of showrooms (that normally aren’t open on the weekend), seeing the latest and greatest in design, while munching on food so good.
While at market, you really do lose all sense of time and reality.  Those three hours that you originally had to spare, have suddenly vanished, and you can’t remember the last real meal that you had, before your body was taken over by delectable ice cream bars, greasy popcorn, cotton candy and sliced salami.  The overwhelming feeling of excitement upon seeing beautiful new products is almost too much to handle.  But not to worry, you know that a glass of wine from Global Views or a warm cookie from Two’s Company will numb the pain of not being able to take home every fabulous piece that you lay eyes on.  Each new showroom that you stumble upon brings the promise of finding another “wow” piece for a project and ends up catapulting a plethora of exciting ideas.  (am I giving you goosebumps yet?

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Is Honey a FairTrade?

Honey a FairTrade?

The answer is not as well as it should be. Here is what one of the leading organizations (http://beesfordevelopment.org) says about the struggles. Take note about the challenges and then consider how our Green Gold initiative would help fill the gaps:
From its start 10 years ago, Fairtrade honey is now an established product in European shops.  However, there are significant costs and capacity demands associated with certification; farmers must organise on a larger scale than they may be used to. It is arguably rather easier to gain Fairtrade status for products, such as tea, sugar, coffee, bananas and chocolate, that already have historically established, large scale organisation and export routes than it is for honey which frequently has a fragmented and scattered production base and weak market linkages. Producers need to weigh up all the available options very carefully, ensuring they have calculated all the potential costs and considered the logistical problems that will arise.
honeycheesemoney.blogspot.com 

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

You're more than halfway through the week! Warm up tonight with this cocktail:

You're more than halfway through the week! Warm up tonight with this cocktail: Pomegranate Passion Float
Pomegranate juice adds sweet tang to this sophisticated Champagne cocktail. Serve at your New Year’s Eve toast or for an upscale happy hour at home with canapés and appetizers. SHIROCOS.COM

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Gourmet ideas?


  1. Part of Shiroco’s MOVING ON is about moving forward with new gourmet selections that celebrate local flavors. We’d love to hear from you if you have any suggestions for gourmet products. Send us a note and, if we get to carry it, we’ll reward you with a gift certificate for our finest. Click over to our new Website and see a what we're featuring today!

Monday, November 8, 2010

A long time Ago.

“I watched my country turn into a coast-to-coast strip mall, and I cried out in a song. If we could do all this in thirty years then please, please tell me ya’ll, why does good change take so long?” Greg Brown, The Poet Game

A long time ago, as one of the joys of traveling across the United States and in different parts of the world, I got to see and experience many great places, enjoying the faces of the people I came across. I particularly remember crossing state lines and noticing how things changed at lot sometimes and how sometimes they seemed the same.

Each town looked different in some way. Restaurants and small stores looked what I experienced in the places I called home. It was kind of amazing just how different these businesses could be though I could always find things that reminded me of places I was fond of.

Going to a small town store could become something slightly different or it could be a real adventure. I loved finding brands of goods I had never heard of before. And I was pretty surprised to see that even the smallest often had products from elsewhere in the world, so it felt to me again like I was traveling to other countries without leaving these new small places. It even felt like I was in a good size town and I could get pretty much whatever I needed.

I actually think this was one of the reasons many of these small town conveyed a sense of community—what they offered made the place feel alive and like a place I could pretty much count on for giving me what I needed.

Over the last few years since I’ve settled in a small town, my thoughts have changed a bit. Before I opened my store I commuted from Benicia to Oakland daily, passing through places like Walnut Creek, Berkeley, Albany. Each one of those had their own local stores that I very much liked, but they were already losing their special pleasures because of signs for the WalMarts, Targets, Kohls and the larger numbers of McDonalds, Burger Kinds and even Starbuck.

As much as they offer something, are these what are really needed in our little towns?

I know that small town stores like ours don’t have every single thing people are looking for but they really do add something above and beyond that we can be proud of. I’m convinced that if we can make the best of these hard times because of customers who stick with us, we’ll all find a return to the days when it won’t be as challenging to get what we need from our local shopping experiences.

My idea of creating Plan B project came from this. And we have confidence it will be something for everyone as it grows.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

SAVE GAS/ SHOP LOCAL

Save Gas / Shop Local

Recent news reports identify so many challenges to mall hoping and traveling for holiday sales. Even the big stores are giving us less than we like, making malls in California less exciting. And, of course, don't get any of us started on the up-going price of gas and all the traffic! 

So why not start shopping locally? 

Here in Benicia, California, many merchants are banding together to showcase what we have to offer our neighbors. Local residents can see the great opportunities available right here. With little threat to their safety or wallet. 

Have you turned into a local shopper yet?

Why Local?

Why Local?

A good reasons to shop at locally owned businesses:

Significantly more money re-circulates in your community when you buy from locally owned, rather than nationally owned, businesses: More money stays in the community because locally owned businesses purchase from other local businesses, service providers, and farms. Purchasing locally helps grow other businesses as well as your community's tax base.

Local businesses provide most new jobs: Small local businesses are the largest employer nationally, and in most communities provide the most new jobs to residents.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

HOW TO FLEA

The great stuff sells before 6 Am; get there early, before the dealers snatch up the best things. You probably have to pay extra for early birds but is worth it.

Don't forget to get a large cup of coffee- for me it's too early to be up on a weekend.


Negotiate. You can always walk away and go back later.

Be sure to bring the measurements of the spaces you are gonna be furnishing and a tape measure when you are at the market shopping. A great table won't do you any good if you can't fit it through the front door.

While great merchandise is snapped up early, you can still get stuff at the end of the day- that is when the real bargains happen. No dealers wants to lug a giant armoire back onto his or her truck.

Have fun. 

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Fashion Meets Decor?


Photo Blog April 15 Fashion Decor Living Room Wallpaper
Fashion designer Tory Burch recently hired celebrated photographer Tina Barneyto shoot a series of limited edition prints for her spring 2010 collection. At once eye-popping and elegant, the pictures were shot in Tory’s own Upper East Side New York apartment, which she was decorating at the same time she was designing the collection.
Photo Blog April 15 Fashion Decor Living Room Green Sofa Velvet
Not surprisingly, the creative thread that runs through Tory’s clothes also ties together her apartment: vibrant colours, fearless pattern, uptown polish. Do you recognize the grand dame sitting in the corner, posing as the matriarch of this fabulous fictional family? That’s Polly Mellen, the legendary former Vogue fashion editor and creative director of Allure. At 85, she’s still as spirited and stylish as a green velvet sofa.
Photo Blog April 15 Fashion Decor Wallpaper
Tina Barney is brilliant at drawing out the relationship between how people dress and how they decorate their homes, which has made her a fashion favourite. She has shot ad campaigns for Theory and Bottega Veneta, as well as editorial for W Magazine, Vogue Homme, The New York Times and many more. Tellingly, her mother was a model in the 1930s before becoming an interior designer.
Photo Blog April 15 Fashion Decor Dining Room Red Walls
Right now at Shirocos we are   busy putting together our August store style , which takes a closer look at the creative sparks flying between runways and rooms, as well as the people across disciplines who help shape and define style today.  Right now Im full of  inspiration and got me wondering, should I paint one of my kitchen walls glossy red, as in the dining room above?
Photo Blog April 15 Fashion Decor Living Room Wall Texture
Now  I’m going to go rifle through my closet for ideas on how to dress my home.
Photo credits:

VIVA LOS Tacos Tuesday!!!!!

VIVa Los Tacos!!!! 

Grilled Fish Tacos with tomato-Green Onion Relish


Ingredients

  • 1  tablespoon  fresh lime juice
  • 2  teaspoons  canola oil
  • 2  garlic cloves, minced
  • 2  teaspoons  chili powder
  • 3/4  teaspoon  ground cumin
  • 1/4  teaspoon  salt
  • 1/4  teaspoon  freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/8  teaspoon  ground cayenne pepper
  • 1  pound  firm white fish fillets
  • 8  (6-inch) fat-free whole-wheat tortillas
  • Tomato-Green Onion Relish
  • Lime wedges

Preparation

Combine first 8 ingredients in a bowl. Add fish; toss to coat. Cover and refrigerate 15 minutes.
Wrap tortillas in foil. Place fish and tortillas on a grill rack coated with cooking spray. Grill fish, covered with grill lid, over medium-high heat (350° to 400°) 3 minutes on each side or until fish flakes easily with a fork.
Divide fish among tortillas; top with relish. Serve with lime wedges.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Are u a Design junkie AND a wine aficionado? Check this out:


SFMOMA Presents “How Wine Became Modern: Design + Wine 1976 to Now”

Zahia Hadid Lopez de Heredia Pepe Franco Viña Tondonia SFMOMA
Zahia Hadid, Lopez de Heredia, Pepe Franco, courtesy of Viña Tondonia
SFMOMA is betting that in vino veritas is really, well, true as it preps for its debut of “How Wine Became Modern: Design + Wine 1976 to Now” on November 20.
Running through April 17, 2011, the Bacchus-bent exhibit will explore the transformation in the visual and material culture of wine over the past three decades and the role design has played in those changes. The exhibit was organized by the museum’s architecture and design curator, Henry Urbach, and is billing itself as the first exhibition to explore modern, global wine culture as a cultural phenomenon.
Steven Holl Loisium Hotel SFMOMA
Steven Holl, Loisium Hotel, image by Lucas Wasserman
The exhibition was designed by New York-based architecture firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro(DS+R) and is organized as a suite of galleries. Visitors will be greeted at its entrance by the sound of clinking wine glasses, which is triggered by a motion sensor. A newly commissioned work by Peter Wenger that charts more than 200 house paint colors named for wine will hang on a wall nearby and call attention to the ways in which wine-related language and colors have made their way into everyday life.
Frank O. Gehry Hotel Marqués de Riscal SFMOMA
Frank O. Gehry, Hotel Marqués de Riscal, image courtesy Hotel Marqués de Riscal
Next, the Judgment of Paris, the legendary 1976 blind taste test where nine French wine experts chose Northern California wines over esteemed French vintages, resulting in the increased globalization of wine production, gets its due. DS + R will produce a life-size tableau accompanied by sound to provide viewers with a sense of the judge’s gestures and comments along with two winning bottles from the epochal event along with Timemagazine’s original article on it.
Santiago Calatrava Ysios Winery SFMOMA
Santiago Calatrava, Ysios Winery, image courtesy Ysios Winery
Further into the exhibition, visitors will encounter installations on wine labels and brand identity, glassware, and connoisseurship and popular culture. A gallery will be devoted to the new, global, wine-related architecture, including wineries by Santiago Calatrava, Zaha Hadid, Steven Holl, Herzog + de Meuron, Renzo Piano, and Alvaro Siza. The exhibit will present photographs of 30 of the most significant wine-related buildings, while Herzog & de Meuron’s Dominus Winery, Gehry Partners’s Hotel Marqués de Riscal, and Michael Graves and Edward Schmidt’s Clos Pegase will be explored in depth with original architectural models and video interviews between the architect and client.
Glassware Gallery Diller Scofidio + Renfro SFMOMA
Glassware Gallery, image courtesy Diller Scofidio + Renfro
The exhibition will conclude with the Smell Wall, a translucent wall with suspended flacons featuring selections by sommeliers and wine experts that will be organized into flights of scent and presented on a rotating basis. There have been no reports of plans for a drinking wall.
Image courtesy of SFMOMA.