Monday, August 16, 2010

Teacup Tuesday


Teacup Tuesday is hosted every week by Martha and Teri.
Be sure to visit to see all the teacups on parade!

If you've been visiting with me for any length of time, this may look familiar to you.
Mr. Dragon and I enjoy visiting The Path of Tea.
You pick the cup you'd like to drink your tea from and have a delicious goody, too.
My favorite is the Owl cup.
(Yes, I collect Owls and I'm thinking I collect too many things!)





The owner of The Path of Tea tells a story about a woman who would visit the shop almost everyday when she first opened and would ask if she could buy the Owl tea cup. The owner would tell her No, that she couldn't sell her cups or she would soon have no cups for her customers to drink from and the Owls were particularly difficult to come by.
The woman kept coming in, asking and making offers, until one day she came in and made an offer that the shop owner couldn't refuse!

Along came Christmas, and you can imagine my surprise when I opened the package and found this:





Mr. Dragon found an Owl teapot and tea cups that look exactly like the ones at




The teapot comes with a strainer.




Isn't the Owl cute?!

No wonder I think Mr. Dragon is my Knight in Shining Armor!
We both smile and chuckle when we have tea from this set.

Yes, we still visit The Path of Tea and we need to return soon.
They now have origami lessons once a week!

Wishing you well!


Sunday, August 15, 2010

Mosaic Monday: Curds and Whey

Mosaic Monday is hosted by the lovely Mary.

Each mosaic is different. Each a story to tell.

You'll enjoy visiting - I promise!



This week I have a story to tell - all about curds and whey.

Curds and whey, you say?!!!!

Yep.

Mr. Dragon and I had lunch with some dear friends last week and the subject of curds and whey came up. Really!

Someone asked just what is curds and whey and I said, without a moments hesitation, milk products!


Which led me to talking about my Grandfather and his ranch.




Pleasure
Summertime Pleasure-1957


This is my grandfather in his kitchen in 1957.
Just look at the refrigerator, the kitchen table and chairs.
Wow! What memories!

He had a ranch in Oklahoma and raised Quarter Horses.
His wife, Mary, raised Angus cattle.
Visiting with them was a pure joy for me.
Up early in the morning to get the freshly laid eggs.
Off to the barn to milk the cow, which brings me to curds and whey.


Curds are a dairy product obtained by curdling (coagulating) milk with rennet or an edible acidic substance such as lemon juice or vinegar and then draining off the liquid portion (called whey). Milk that has been left to sour (raw milk alone or pasteurized milk with added lactic acid bacteria or yeast) will also naturally produce curds, and sour milk is produced this way.


I remember Mother Mary making her own butter. The cream rising to the top of the milk. Buttermilk. Homemade ice cream. Nothing tastes like fresh milk. Delicious!



I have wonderful memories of visiting with them. Somewhere I have a picture of me on my shetland pony. What a life for a young girl! I wish I had spent more time with them.

The mosaic shows the ranch sign; a party (don't remember if it was an anniversary or a birthday party); grandfather with his pride and joy, Blue Blake; and one of his special colts.

Wishing all of you well!


Sunday Morning

Lantern
Japanese Garden in Hermann Park



"Fall seven times. Stand up eight."


~Japanese Proverb

Friday, August 13, 2010

Postcard Friendship Friday



Postcard Friendship Friday is hosted each week by the lovely Beth.

Each week you can see a variety of postcards from the old to the new, the comic to the serious, a true variety. Be sure to visit!



Several weeks ago I told you about my Fibber McGee and Molly closet and the box I found the linen postcards in. I went back to the closet and the box looking for some old photographs.

I found the photos I was searching for and found these postcards.

I have no idea why they were in the box, where or who they came from.

I have been to Washington, D.C., but much later than these cards were made.

Mysteries!!!!!!







I didn't scan the back of this card as there was very little there:
"47.12 Ceremonial vessel of the type yu. Chinese, Chou dynasty, 10th century B.C. Bronze casting, 9 x 9 inches.
Freer Gallery of Art, Washington 25, D.C."



Freer Gallery of Art



"Freer Gallery of Art, Washington 25, D. C. North Front. Photograph by B. A. Stubbs, Washington, D.C.
The Freer Gallery of Art, The Freer Collection, and an endowment fund to provide for the study of the civilization of the Far East and for the acquisition of fine examples of Oriental art were given in trust to the Smithsonian Institution by Charles Lang Freer of Detroit. Building opened May 2, 1923.
Open daily, except Christmas Day, from 9 A. M. to 4:30 P. M."

The cards were printed by The Meriden Gravure Company, Meriden, Conn.
The company won international renown for the quality of its art reproductions, posters and illustrations for books and catalogues.
They were sold to another company around 1975.

A little more mystery for you, I would write a paper in a graduate class on Asian Art on Chinese Bronzes. I got the only "A" in the class. It wouldn't be until we moved to Houston in 1998 that I would finally get to use that love of Asian Art doing research at the museum for the Asian curatorial staff.

Synchronicity!!!???!!!

Wishing you well and a beautiful weekend!

Happy PFF!