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All you have to do to have fun in Boston is buy Red Sox tickets online!

Little insects make your honey. No, really.

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It's good I am not scared of bees, since I took this closeup.

Read my article at GoodEater.org about the joys of beekeeping wearing funny looking suits.

I’ve still been working on my little jar of Mike Graney’s honey, produced in Boston’s Jamaica Plain. I’ve now mixed it into my nonfat plain Greek yogurt from Trader Joes, along with some Bola granola (see last post), a pretty damn awesome combination. Bizarrely, I kind of like my yogurt to be kinda thin and watery, though.

I also eat it with torn off bits of ciabatta dipped straight into the jar. Hygiene highly questionable. But delicious. Mmm, honey.

Awesome egg sandwiches, tripe-laden bowls of pho, and Lingbo in a beesuit.

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This was a oozy, flaky breakfast sandwich ($3.50) from Crema Cafe, who turns out a mean breakfast sandwich (as well as zuchinni hazelnut loaf and brownie). The english muffin is homemade. I kind of regret eating it, because a Thomas english muffin will just never be the same. Maybe it is just because it’s toasted. Toasted is absolutely key.

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Big bowl’o'noodles from Le’s in the Garage in Harvard Square. This was my friend’s meal, I only tasted a bit. In a very out of character move for me, I prefer my experience at Le’s to be limited to #15 on their menu: the special beef bowl of pho, complete with loveliness like tripe and tendon. Then I absolutey ANNIHILATE it with chili sauce and hoisin sauce.

The only snag in my plan was that I made my friend Ahmed taste it. He almost died. Then I thought this was hilarious, so I started laughing, which turned into a cough, which turned into FIERY SPICES UP MY NOSE.

I cried a little bit, then quietly finished the rest of my bowl, nostrils still singed. Moral of story: if you’re going to choke on something, make it mild.

See below:

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glorious innards bits

glorious innards bits

And also, I made two trips down to Jamaica Plain recently for a GoodEater.org article on beekeeping. Here is a preview of me wearing a crazy beesuit:

fashion statement

fashion statement

I figured after all of this writing and reporting on local honey, I might as well buy some. Then I figured I would buy some bread  and granola too (a girl’s gotta eat). I got some nice loot from the Allandale Farms shop, including a small jar of Mike Graney‘s honey ($4.49).

granola, EatLocalHoney.com honey, and a locally made ciabatta

granola, EatLocalHoney.com honey, and a locally made ciabatta

Sadly, I did something incredibly typically stupid of me and tried to open the honey on the T ride back. Of course, I lost control of the jar and suddenly, I was covered in sticky stuff with nowhere to put it. After some feeble attempts to rip off the plastic seal, I wrapped it in a sheet torn from Stuff magazine and resigned myself to sticky fate. Until I hit Starbucks and washed up, anyway.

It’s good that I find my own klutziness hilarious.

Beautiful women, ramen, and roast pork buns at Ippudo, NYC

It’s funny how it happens: I met photographer Michael Donnelly at the end of a different friendship. I happened to be at the friend of that friend’s apartment, and when I learned that his father had photographed Ruth Reichl, culinary goddess and editor of Gourmet, I knew I had to meet him. He walked out of his room wrapped in a white bathrobe and spoke with a rarefied South African accent. We chatted about chefs, cooking, and Ruth, and the next day, I googled him and sent a thank you email.

We finally ended up meeting again recently at a Japanese ramen restaurant called Ippudo (65 4th Avenue, NYC) at his suggestion. (It was recently reviewed by Frank Bruni in the NY Times. Bruni, sadly, recently resigned as the Times restaurant critic.) Ippudo is the kind of restaurant that subscribes to the entire experience. I had to fight my way through a heavy red drape to make it to the bar, where he was waiting. A slender, long-necked Asian barmaid with ruler-straight bangs handed him his receipt. As we followed our hostess (a butterfly tattoo pinned down by a spaghetti strap across her left shoulder), two waiters cried welcomes in enthused Japanese.

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“They have fantastic roast pork buns,” he told me as we sat down. We both got a bowl of ramen with berkshire pork. In the background, servers served up screams with their sake bombs.

I immediately photographed the roast pork buns (lip smackingly fatty and perfectly spicy). Throughout the meal, he proved to be one of the most photograph-supportive meal partners I’d ever had. Rather than being intimidating (after all, he’d shot for Vogue and Elle), he offered nothing but praise and support. He even failed to offer constructive criticism at my prompting, and just encouraged me to continue shooting.

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Our ramen came, a sunburst of a halved hardboiled egg floating amidst the dramatic mottling of oil on its surface. I fished out the fatty bits of pork first for a taste. We talked a bit about my summer plans, then about racism in the modeling industry. He talked about the honor and intimacy in photography, about beauty (its power, personality, and transience), and also his experiences shooting Claudia Schiffer (a bombshell) and Brooke Shields (who looked pretty but not spectacular in person, but unexpectedly stunned on film). He loved Isabella Rosselini, who was “mousy” in person but fantastic in front of the camera.

“The best girls,” he said, “are a little off. They have to really try.”

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I was glad I took a look at the dessert menu. It came as a tiny red book, smaller than my palm, with each dessert presented as a low-fi picture and facing title. I decided on the matcha brulee, which turned out to be a green tea creme brulee topped by a scoop of green tea ice cream and crown with a paper-thin slice of dessicated strawberry.

He told me about the incredible, short career of Alexa Singer, who shot ten covers of Vogue in one year.

The waitress came with mugs of tea.

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He showed me mockups of the book he was working on, about how chefs communicate through cooking, and pointed out photos of Jean Georges, and Lydia Shire, and the beautiful image he’d taken of Ruth Reichl in a wide-brimmed black hat sitting in a room bathed in light.

“I think I’ll have her write the introduction,” he mused.

A thousand words: What I love about fine dining

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The theater. Definitely the theater.

(Taken at Crabtree’s Kittle House before an 8 course meal. Entry to follow.)

How Asian coeds mark their territory

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Taken after a meal at an Indian restaurant.

I’m really a very, very messy eater (and messy person). I need to leave a little breadcrumb/rice grain trail so I can find my way back home, after all.

Here’s some more food porn.

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Zuchinni-orange-hazelnut miniloaf at Crema Cafe – pretty tasty.

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A wise fortune cookie.

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Sometimes Harvardians take a break from their academic madness and do silly things like have guacamole competitions. Above, the creation of the winning entry – a wonderfully summery, chunky guac with mango and red bell peppers.

All you have to do to have fun in Boston is buy Red Sox tickets online!