Author: Laren

  • A Pool of Dread

    I’ve noticed a theme lately.  Most of my female friends are in their 30’s, like me.  I’ve noticed that, more and more, when they date someone for a while (good, bad, or other), and then it ends, the thing they are often the most upset about is not the guy himself, but the thought of getting back out into the New York dating pool, which often seems like a hopeless, annoying pool of dread.  I understand this completely.  By the time you hit your 30’s, you know yourself pretty well, and this often means that you’re more set in your ways.  Dating, in the beginning phases, particularly if you’re not meeting anyone you really like, can seem more like a chore than anything else.  At least, after Saturday, I learned that being in the New York dating pool might be a bit better than the Minneapolis dating pool, where there isn’t much real dating, but rather more "happy hours" and such where people just mingle.  If you’re lucky, you find someone you like there (thanks to Katie’s sister Jenny, our Minneapolis correspondent).

    What are your thoughts?  Do you find the breakup worse than getting back into dating or vice versa?

  • Fame

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    A recent conversation made it to Overheard in New York.  Ah, good times.

    Between brunch, mint juleps, margaritas, falafel from Taim, a bike ride up to the Cloisters, frisbee for the first time since 1992, a trip to Morimoto for the great noodle challenge, a few great bottles of wine, Sicilian chocolate, some tasty cheese and good company all around, it was a great weekend.  Here’s the carnage from brunch in the park (I made a frittata with asparagus and ramps, all fresh from the farmers’ market, including the eggs).

  • Ahh . . . Sleep

    After a lovely dinner last night with Bill, Katie, and John B. at al di la (the asparagus salad and the lamb special were my two personal favorites of the evening) and drinks at the Ear Inn afterwards, I slept a little late this morning, which I feel like I haven’t done in a while.  I’m off to the Union Square Greenmarket to buy eggs and onions and whatever else strikes my fancy to put into a frittata for my beach house ladies’ brunch, which is going to be a picnic this time around.  After that, it’s a Kentucky Derby party and then a "Seis de Mayo" party.  All in all, should be a fun day!

  • We’ll Be the Pirate Twins Again

    Dolby1Jay and I are headed to see Thomas Dolby tonight at Joe’s Pub.  Yes, the "She Blinded Me With Science" guy.  I adored him in high school — I actually had a poster of him on my wall (across from Adam Ant, which should give you some nice insight), and had cassette recordings of his concerts that they broadcast on WLIR.  I’m really curious if he’ll dip into his repetoire from what is now (gulp) twenty years ago. . .

  • Time for a Post

    I know, I know.  Haven’t posted in ages.  Mea culpa.  I’ve just been
    knocking myself out at Gothamist, so all of my posting energy is being
    sapped.  It’s sad.

    So what can I tell you about the weekend (I’m not even going to try to
    catch up on last week.  It’s so . . . last week)?  Friday night was a
    Yankees game, then Saturday was an early Mother’s Day brunch with my
    mom at Cookshop.  We walked to the Union Square Greenmarket to buy some
    ramps, then headed to Otto for a little sorbet (we were being somewhat
    virtuous).  After spin class, I went to Rob’s pub crawl for a short stint (yes, I Dodgeballed from Hogs & Heifers), then saw United 93.  Afterwards, we were in no mood to be social (let alone rejoin the pub crawl), so we had a nibble at Bar Veloce and headed home. 

    Sunday I had brunch at Alizinha’s, and got the chance not only to see some of my long-lost blogger chicks, but to meet some new ones, and to eat the most delicious banana pecan muffins ever.  Luckily, I worked it all off by joining Mark for an 18 mile bike ride.  It was the first ride of the season, but it felt pretty damn good.  I finished up the day at Tia Pol, where I joined Andrea for her Dining for Darfur fundraiser. 

    That’s the weekend wrap-up — I’m sorry to make it so quick, but I’m pooped.  Off to bed.

     

  • Life’s Cruel Jokes

    How is it that I can have grey hairs and zits at the same time?  Horrifying.

  • Food Focused

    This morning I read Gotham Gal’s post about how she, a born and bred food person, has had a significant impact over her husband, for whom food was merely a source of nutrition before they met.  She describes it as two worlds colliding, and I understand her completely.  I, too, am a food person (in case you hadn’t noticed), and I realize that I have an incredibly hard time understanding those who aren’t.  Is it really possible that people go on vacation without thinking about where and what they’re going to eat next, even as they are in the midst of a meal?  That people exist who don’t drool over the glossy pages of Gourmet and Bon Appetit as if they were porn?  That there are those who don’t relish the joys of strolling through a bustling outdoor food market, with all of its dazzling colors, mouthwatering aromas, and, if you time it right, free samples?  Apparently, such people exist.  And I am dating one of them.

    I have ventured into this strange territory before.  Nathan, when I met him, was definitely not food-oriented in the same way I am.  But after dating for several years and living together for a decent chunk of that time, I think there was no way that my foodish tendencies couldn’t have rubbed off on him.  At one point after we stopped dating, we met up for lunch, where he described to me how he had recently made pesto with some basil he had recently gotten at the greenmarket.  Now, I don’t claim to have that much influence over people generally, but I am convinced that he probably hadn’t uttered the phrase "I made pesto" before spending time with me.

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    Mark and I have our moments.  The collision of two vastly different food worlds can be wildly funny.  Each of us described our dinner at The Grocery in an email to my friend Rhea, and it was hard to believe we were both at the same table  (I want to publish it here, but we’re in negotiations about the intellectual property rights).  But it can also be tricky.  When we were in London, I mentioned that the one thing I really wanted to do on our day off was go to the Borough Hall Market (pictured above).  At one point, Mark asked if it would be okay if he brought a book.  I’m sure I gave him a look like he had just slapped me across the face.  It wasn’t so much that I would have minded if he didn’t want to come along with me — I’m fine doing things on my own and if he really didn’t want to go, he shouldn’t — but I merely could not comprehend at all that someone wouldn’t want to spend a few hours on a gorgeous spring morning at a market.  Especially if that time happened to coincide with lunch.  He must have recognized the shock and horror on my face — we went, and the book, if it came along at all, stayed tucked away.  I don’t really know if he enjoyed it, but he didn’t seem miserable, and I do recall that he went back for a second taste at the stall selling olive tapenade, so it couldn’t have been too bad.

    Any advice on how to interact with these non-food-focused types (or amusing anecdotes) would be greatly appreciated.

    PS — I wrote this entire entry in bed.  Gotta love the laptop!

  • Back from the Jaunt Across the Pond

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    Still a little jetlagged/tired, but at least now the pictures are up.

    Highlights, in a nutshell: Guys & Dolls, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf?, Fino, dim sum, Christopher, Westminster Abbey, Borough Hall Market, strolling along the banks of the Thames, Cambridge, the Great Eastern Hotel, those awesome biscuits which would be the death of me if I were in our London office, tea at the Landmark Hotel, and the Pro Bono Tour of London.  Whew.  Somehow managed to miss Hugh while we were in town, but we tried.  And of course, I had great company.  Pictures are up on Flickr

  • So I Wanted to Tell You All About Vegas

    and I will, I swear, but my week has been crazy, with a trip to Boston, a weekend in Portland, and now frantically packing for a week in London.  Leaving in a few hours and will be gone for a week.  So, I hope that you can forgive me, and perhaps I’ll manage to write a post on the plane for posting later. 

  • Ah…Passover


    Ah…Passover

    My sister managed to suck down the last of the Manischewitz. The seder was a huge success!