Interior happiness

Touch wood

Even een extra berichtje, op vraag van enkele lezers. Op zaterdag 1 december verkoop ik deze houtblokken/tafeltjes bij de Yvestownfair, Slinkerstraat 95 in Lommel (België). Allen welkom!

groetjes, Sophia

Hi everyone,

How are you doing?
Do you like to work with wood?

I do because it is natural material, and you don’t know what the result will be… Definitely unique. And I love the feel of wood.

In one of my first posts I already told you the process of how I made these wooden side tables. I still had a few blocks drying in the shed, still with the bark on. They were dry by now, and the bark came off easily. I now sanded the sides as well. The top and bottom really took time to get them smooth, but hey, patience is good. And I love this slow process, it makes you calm down too ;-).

So I got therapy and new – even wider – side tables.

Here are the pictures. You can read the step-by-step list in my former post. But if you still need more info, shoot! If you are interested in buying one, send me a pm.

Have a lovely day, Sophia







Puglia

Dining out in Puglia

Hi Everyone,

How are you? How important is food to you?

I admit that it is pretty important to me. When we bought Casa Vita, I envisioned a big table with all our kids and their partners, and lots of delicious Italian food.

Honestly, I cannot name one Italian dish I do not like – a disaster for my weight yes, but not for my mood!

The photo on top is my own homemade food: a salad with arugula, fresh figs from the yard, lettuce, small tomatoes, ricotta cubes and a dressing with olive oil, balsamic vinegar and crushed figs. The other plate has grilled veggies: zucchini, zucchini flowers, eggplant and fresh mozzarella. Photo by Mable Photography.

Guests traveling to Casa Vita often ask me for recommendations for good restaurants. So I will make up a list below, but you should not refrain from discovering new restaurants … There is so much good food in Puglia. If you are visiting a town, try to wander of the main paths and piazzas and find your way into the smaller alleys. Who knows what you will discover.

Here are some delicious ideas

Carovigno:
Image result for Carovigno centro puglia

Carovigno is a small but lovely town near Ostuni, with a beautiful piazza.

  • Osteria gia sotto l’arco: this is a restaurant we can certainly recommend, a magical ‘gastronomia’ mingled with tradition and creativity!

Martina Franca:

Martina Franca is a fair-sized town in the heart of Puglia. It has some ugly modern areas, but the town’s jewel is its lovely historic center, a memorable maze of winding alleys, where whitewashed simplicity sits side by side with baroque extravagance. The town is built on a hill in the green Valle d’Itria, the trulli area of Puglia. It is about a twenty minute drive from Casa Vita. Martina Franca is an incredibly photogenic town, and it has some beautiful clothing stores too.

  • Garibaldi bistrot: beautiful location, near the Cathedral, pure and good Puglian food, delicious wines, friendly owners.
  • I templari: delicious food, not in the center, but it has a really nice terrace, and also the inside is beautiful.
  • Mehta: I haven’t been there myself. But my friend Susan recommended it.  It is high-end cooking, and the desserts are fabulous. I will surely visit next time and will keep you posted!
  • Terra Terra: This is a smaller and cheaper restaurant located in one of the small alleys. The food is also very good, and they serve vegan dishes too.
  • Nausicaa: Also a top restaurant, with a big collection of wines.

Ostuni:

Casa Vita is officially located in Ostuni, but in fact, in distance it is between the two beautiful towns, Ostuni ànd Ceglie. Ostuni is called la città bianca, it is a white town on a hill. I cannot visit Ostuni enough, it has so many beautiful alleys, piazzas, stairways… Each time you discover something new. If you find your way (it took me some time to figure out how to get to a certain restaurant) to the top, you’ll be rewarded with a beautiful view on the sea.

  • Bella Vista: a nice view, if you are sitting outside at the right spot, you can see the sea. They have great pizzas and antipasti!
  • Taverna della gelosia: it is located between different street levels, beautiful to sit outdoors on the patio, under the trees. The food is delicious and a good choice of wines too. The staff can be a bit stiff though.
  • Il Cielo: this is located in a hotel and has a Michelin Star. Also on our list, must be worth a visit!

Ceglie Messapica:

Casa Vita is situated between Ceglie and Ostuni. Ostuni is beautiful and magical, but also touristic. While Ceglie is more of a hidden treasure. It’s not as big as Ostuni, but here you find more local people. I love the piazza with the bell tower.  You can sit here all evening, watching the men hang around in groups, the elderly men with three on a bench, families gathering, kids playing on the square till midnight. This is still the real Puglia. And you can eat very well for less money than in Ostuni.

  • Cibus: a great restaurant, but more meat-orientated. The antipasti we got there were sublime, really delicious.
  • Osteria Pugliese: very typical food. You’ll have enough if you order the antipasti della casa. It is very cozy inside.
  • Pizzeria Grex Ludi: it is the only pizzeria on the main piazza – the piazza with the bell tower. You can eat great pizzas for three or four euros!
  • Trattoria Piaceri e Tradizione: just behind the corner of the square. The cook Giuseppe will prepare you a delicious typical meal. And if you can, sit outside on the balcony, and you’ll have a beautiful view.
  • Antimo: this restaurant is not in the town, but in the countryside on your way to Ceglie, when you come from Casa Vita. It is an organic farm. They use a lot of ingredients from their own land. The stuffed (with ricotta) zucchini flowers are delicious. You can also follow cooking courses here.

Locorotondo

Locorotondo doesn’t really have any specific tourist attractions; the town itself is the main sight. It is also a small town on the top of a hill. It’s just a pleasant place to spend an hour or two wandering, taking photographs and sitting at cafe tables.

  • U’Curdunn: Great restaurant and very cozy and beautiful inside too. Good service and excellent wines.
  • La taverna del Duca: Delicious food, and you can also follow courses ‘how to make your own pasta’!

Alberobello
Image result for alberobello
Alberobello is thé trulli-town and Unesco world heritage site. It is also terribly touristic, a visit during the summertime is a challenge. But I can recommend a very good restaurant just outside the center.

  • Fidelio: A beautiful garden, magical to sit outside, but very attractive interior too, and exquisite food!

Polignano a Mare

This magical town at the rocky cliffs sure is worth a visit. It has many touristic restaurants (not all with a good price-quality balance), but I want to quote these two.

  • Mint: I have been here with a friend, and Daughter has visited with her boyfriend. Excellent kitchen, vegetarian too. It is such a small but beautiful restaurant!
  • Grotta Palazzese: This is more an experience than a good restaurant. You pay for the view and the experience, because you dine in a cave.  Check the site, it is worth going there. But you need to know it is not cheap.

Brindisi

Lecce

Lecce is one hour drive from Ostuni, and it is often called the Florence of the South. Lecce has a lovely historic center (centro storico), and travelers can easily spend a day or two exploring picturesque little lanes and finding the more far-flung Baroque churches. The town’s great artistic treasure is its architecture.

  • Bros’: You wouldn’t think if you see it from outdoors, but this is a superior restaurant. I have had the pleasure to devour their menu, together with my American friends, last year in May. And look who’s been here too! For readers not from Belgium or Holland, this is Sergio, a famous chef de cuisine, who has received three Michelin stars in one of his restaurants.

 

Buon appetito! Sophia

Stories

New York Faces

How are you today?

As you know, I love to take photos. And I love to take photos of people. Freeze their face before they have noticed you are there. I love the looks, the expressions when people are unaware. New York has it all of course. I mean, all kind of people, races, professions, tourists or citizens.

When you look at people you don’t know, do you ever ask yourself, what do they think, what are their lives like? Sometimes you can find one or two clues already: a vain person, someone who wants to stay under control, someone who fears the sun. There is one thing in common though. Do you know? Make a guess!

Yes, they all have a cell phone glued to their hand. To share their lives with their loved ones or with the world. I plead guilty too, although, when I am walking around in a city, I usually still have my big camera with me.

The photo on top is a piece of art in the window of a gallery, do you recognize young Michael?

Before you look at the pictures, I want to share this beautiful poem by Kahlil Gibran.

I have seen a face with a thousand countenances, and a face that was but a single countenance as if held in a mold.

I have seen a face whose sheen I could look through to the ugliness beneath, and a face whose sheen I had to lift to see how beautiful it was.

I have seen an old face much lined with nothing, and a smooth face in which all things were graven.

I know faces, because I look through the fabric my own eye weaves, and behold the reality beneath.

Here comes the list with people. Let me know what you think!





























Interior happiness

A day in New York

Hi there,

How are you today?

Yes, I am in New York right now. I got the great opportunity to join Hubbie, who’s here for his job.

We are here for five days. I don’t think it makes sense to tell you the obvious places to visit in New York.

I had brought a magazine Feeling which had a special on NY and also the little booklet The 500 Hidden Secrets of New York, and both have been very helpful. It is so exciting to discover new places, new areas in this town. There are endless wonderful things to do here.

So I am going to give you an example of a great day activity.

Start at 34th Street East (and First Ave.) where you take the East River Ferry in the direction of Long Island City. Since Manhattan has become so expensive, people are moving to other areas, such as LIC and Williamsburg, just over the East River.

Long Island City has a large beautiful park, next to the river, where you have an amazing view on the NY skyline.

View of Manhattan from LIC


View of Williamsburg from the Ferry

View of lower Manhattan

Next you can take the Ferry again, and make a stop in Williamsburg (part of Brooklyn).  Brooklyn Heights is such a soothing retreat from the business of Manhattan.

A walk over the Brooklyn bridge is amazing. This bridge is one of the oldest bridges in the US – finished in 1883.  Building it took 14 years – and it connects Manhattan with Brooklyn.



View from Brooklyn Heights

You can walk further to the heart of Manhattan, and to the very pretty boroughs like SoHo, Tribeca, East-Village. Just stroll around, shop, have a cocktail or check out one of the amazing good restaurants. A lot of “hotspots” are summed up in the hidden secrets booklet.

A cute vegan restaurant “the broken coconut

La Fayette, great for breakfast

The apartment by The Line, an interior store, but actually it looks just like an apartment


Canal Street Market, where different stores are under one roof



Delicious and healthy lunch at Gelso Grand

We walked over 16 km’s today. So if you have followed our example, you’ll be knocked out by now. Easiest is to take the subway to wherever your hotel is and call it a GREAT day. Enjoy!

Sophie

 

 

 

Puglia

Picasso in Puglia

Hi there,

Do you like Picasso’s work?

It is quite exceptional to see the work of a Spanish artist here in Puglia. My friend Habiba and I were lucky. It was a small exhibition though, just roughly thirty pieces of mainly pottery designed by Picasso, from the forties till the nineties.

We saw the exhibition “L’altra metà del ciello” in the Palazzo Ducal in Martina Franca. Built in 1668, this was once the palace of the Caracciolo family, the dukes who presided over the town’s glory days. Nowadays it houses the town hall, a library and Martina Franca’s tourist information office. It is beautiful inside, all painted walls with bible stories. The huge chandeliers gave it an enchanting feeling.

Do you know the perfect trick* to get into an exhibition for free? Well, we knew the exhibition would close at 1pm and were a little late. We arrived at the ticket office at 12:30 and the guy behind the counter just announces us that the cash register is closed. The museum was still open till 1 pm and would open again at 3 pm. I already knew from a friend that it was a small exhibition, doable in half an hour. So we couldn’t pay, and therefore couldn’t get in anymore.

Just before, when we were driving to Martina Franca, Habiba and I had discussed our disapproval of bureaucracy and how people working in public administration offices often misuse their power to counteract their frustration with their job.

Faced with bureaucracy in reality now, it was we who got frustrated. I tried my best Italian to tell the guy we were so much looking forward to this visit and that we couldn’t come back in the afternoon. We both switched to our most depressed look on our face and turned back to the entrance. “Aspetta!” he called out to us. He winced and told us to quickly sneak in to the museum, without paying.

I guess the guy -let’s call him Matteo- I guess Matteo was frustrated with bureaucracy himself.

Mille grazie Matteo, per la tua disobbedienza al sistema!

We still had a perfect lunch (a salad) on the piazza Roma, just in front of the Palazzo Ducale.

Ciao, ciao,

Sophia

*Don’t try this yourself, Art and Culture needs to be cherished, and can use our support!

 

 

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