nunu


Ahoy!

Matey! This sailor sweater I’m wearing is accidentally and embarrassingly appropriate for Saltie, the tiny nautical-themed sandwich outpost in Williamsburg where salt is a major player (NYC’s salt war be damned). And my lunch date is wearing a navy pea coat and a wool beanie! Egads.

The lassi: Today it comes with quince and it is salty, sweet and sour (S.S.S.) Satisfying!

The sandwiches: I order “The Captain’s Daughter:” sardines, a pickled egg, parsley, salsa verde and dill and he orders “Scuttlebutt,” an even saltier technicolor combo of pickled beets, capers, squash, olives, feta, a hard-cooked egg and aioli.

Jarmuschian: A seat at the window a very square stool frames a scene of complicated telephone wires from which sneakers precariously hang. There are shadows of pigeons flying overhead. A man heaves flat packs of new pizza boxes into a cellar next door and the music playing reminds me of the Ethiopian jazz in “Broken Flowers.”

A four-shelf minimalist glass and painted steel case: Olive oil loaf, Eccles cakes, a pork and potato slice—it’s a little bit of England-in-Paris a la Rose Bakery, but in Brooklyn.

“coco a go-go”

For the title alone…

Dirty Martini in V magazine (on stands Jan. 14), photographed by Karl Lagerfeld.

Continue reading ‘“coco a go-go”’

mary mary quite contrary

I killed many plants during the years 2000-09, R.I.P.

In 2010, I will give “gardening” another go, the indoor variety at any rate.

My new place is near the waterfront in an area with a history as a bustling shipyard.

What kind of potted plants do cruise ships sail with? What species of plant would be indigenous to a vessel always in transit? Would the plants have to be tropical if they primarily sail the seas in the tropics?

And: are New York apartments akin to desert climes in the winter?