Photography


 

Literally translating to ‘household of three’,  Ménage à trois, may happen to be some people’s favorite borrowed phrase from the French language.  I snapped this shot in the St Germaine section of Paris, and it seems to capture the (ironic) essence of the French in one split second.   What would your caption be?

 

St. Germaine 9b w 1 Photo of the Week   Paris: Ménage à trois?

Paris, France

 

Sponsored Post: Looking for Paris hotels? This post is brought to you by hotels4u.  Find hotel deals now.

  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week   Paris: Ménage à trois?
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week   Paris: Ménage à trois?
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week   Paris: Ménage à trois?
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week   Paris: Ménage à trois?
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week   Paris: Ménage à trois?
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week   Paris: Ménage à trois?
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week   Paris: Ménage à trois?
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week   Paris: Ménage à trois?



ParmaII 29 Photo of the Week: Food Glorious Food – Parma, Italy

Somewhere along the lines of traveling and blogging, I realized how much I write about, talk about, and just plain eat…food.  It’s like the chicken or the egg sometimes: Do I love to travel because I love to eat yummy foods or do I eat great food because I love to travel?  Just take a look at my food category and you can see I’ve been obsessed for quite some time.

It recently occurred to me how much my love of food has grown over the last decade, from producing restaurant and food stories in Chicago at my previous job – getting to know chefs, restaurateurs, and understanding more about what we eat, to my travels all over the world trying as many savory treats that I could fit in my mouth and stomach.  I finally realized that I was more excited to check out the dining suggestions in my Lonely Planet, than the standard sightseeing stops.  I was creating a tour for myself of cafes, restaurants, and fascinating supermarkets – the real key to local culture.  I mean if food isn’t the great uniter, across all races, backgrounds, and ethnicities, than what is?

Here we have the real deal: some fabulously beautiful wheels of aging parmigiana reggiano cheese from a small family producer in the center of the Italian cheese universe.  I was fortunate enough to get a behind the scenes tour from a local producer in Parma. Too bad I couldn’t fit one of these wheels in my suitcase.

 

  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week: Food Glorious Food – Parma, Italy
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week: Food Glorious Food – Parma, Italy
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week: Food Glorious Food – Parma, Italy
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week: Food Glorious Food – Parma, Italy
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week: Food Glorious Food – Parma, Italy
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week: Food Glorious Food – Parma, Italy
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week: Food Glorious Food – Parma, Italy
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week: Food Glorious Food – Parma, Italy



Is this an M.C. Escher drawing or a real place?  Oh, it is real. I visited the Mezquita or Grand Cathedral and former mosque of Cordoba a few years ago during a month-long visit to Spain.

Built in the year 600, this amazing forest of columns and marble  is often regarded as one of the most accomplished examples of Islamic architecture. Mezquita Cordoba 19 Photo of the Week:  Cordoba, Spain

The Mezquita
Cordoba, Spain

 

  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week:  Cordoba, Spain
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week:  Cordoba, Spain
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week:  Cordoba, Spain
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week:  Cordoba, Spain
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week:  Cordoba, Spain
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week:  Cordoba, Spain
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week:  Cordoba, Spain
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo of the Week:  Cordoba, Spain



Are you traveling for the holidays?  Some find it a chaotic hassle, but I kind of like being in airports or train stations during the hustle and bustle – so many trying to get home to loved ones near and far. I have spent some of my favorite holidays abroad either completely alone or laughing and breaking bread with new friends and making memories that I cherish always (thinking of Sean, Craig, & Helen in Sydney, Elissa in London, Kristy in Sevilla, Adam from Philly in Krakow, Couchsurfers in Milano, Halley, Sonia, Vanessa, & my other Egypt friends).

  1. img r8gnwftg.160x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  2. img vx5y6jt4.179x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  3. img 842ujxaa.180x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  4. img 9wg5xjn8.180x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  5. img zr0bnp9x.160x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  6. img 1zeyub4w.90x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  7. img ou0o8ig3.180x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  8. img 3ah10mou.180x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  9. img qspdlsza.90x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  10. img 2gzi8wan.180x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  11. img fbfw3bsr.160x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  12. img 3en7pe7c.185x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations
  13. img b6w9wmax.160x120 Photo Essay: Train Stations

 

  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo Essay: Train Stations
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo Essay: Train Stations
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo Essay: Train Stations
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo Essay: Train Stations
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo Essay: Train Stations
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo Essay: Train Stations
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo Essay: Train Stations
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px Photo Essay: Train Stations



Typically big-box stores (a la: Wal-Mart, Home Depot, Target, etc.) and over-sized supermarkets have been an American import slowly spreading their bland conformity across Europe and beyond.  But this is a switch.

Eataly 18 New York City: Eataly

I first visited the mega-sized specialty market, Eataly, in Turino, Italy, in 2009.  I’d pegged it as an all-Italian ‘Whole Foods’.   My mouth watered and my eyes glazed over as I roved the many, stark-white aisles filled with sexy bottles of truffle-oil, silky gelato, and an amazing array of fresh meats, pastas, cheeses, and breads.

Eataly 25 300x162 New York City: Eataly     Eataly 20 300x200 New York City: Eataly

The Slow Food organization serves as a consultant to Eataly, and the artisinal super-store has adopted its three principles.  Slow Food is good, clean and fair food. 

  • Food must taste good
  • Food must be produced in a clean way that does not harm the environment, animal welfare or our health
  • Food producers should receive fair compensation for their work

mario batali New York City: Eataly Like Santa bringing us gifts at Christmas, one red-faced, jolly Mario Batali, has now brought Eataly to all New Yorkers.   The huge store sits just across the street from the Flatiron Building and Madison Square Park and is a mecca of Italian foodstuffs, various fancy bar ‘stations’ (more like mid-store restaurants), and boisterous espresso and wine bars.

Upstairs, on the roof, Birreria opened this past summer.   The huge outdoor space is more than a beer garden, as sometimes described, even though they do brew some of their own ales as their name suggests (Birreria means brewery in Italian).   For me, the food is the draw here as the menu is stuffed full with all the delightful fixin’s of an ‘Italian picnic’ – charcuterie, cheeses, mushroom dishes, and other assorted savory morsels.   It’s not cheap, but the views are pretty priceless with the Empire State building looming overheard to the north and the Flatiron building just to the west, across the street, so close, you feel you can touch it.

See photo gallery here. Roll-over & click on each for larger image slideshow.

 
  1. img 7n92a0hs.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  2. img kx0zf6en.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  3. img gbupg99u.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  4. img ys4h6va5.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  5. img dd8fjrnz.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  6. img 6aerzlzh.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  7. img jghjy5jx.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  8. img waroc4me.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  9. img 9nqh50az.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  10. img 7vd5pgj5.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  11. img hbwvuglo.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  12. img y1e7fj87.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  13. img 1ftbgrba.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  14. img och5py6x.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  15. img olvcknqc.180x120 New York City: Eataly
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px New York City: Eataly
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px New York City: Eataly
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px New York City: Eataly
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px New York City: Eataly
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px New York City: Eataly
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px New York City: Eataly
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px New York City: Eataly
  • wp socializer sprite mask 32px New York City: Eataly



Next Page »