Monday, January 30, 2012

Cocktails - An Infographic

There are times when blogging has its benefits - getting invited to fabulous parties, getting to taste delicious treats, and finding out when awesome products drop.  Today, we were thrilled to learn that Pop Chart Lab (of Candy Chart, and Beer Chart fame) took our advice and made a Cocktail Chart. (The jury is still out on if they took our advice to make a cocktail chart per se - but great minds think alike, nonetheless.) We are suckers for a good infographic - and their new libation chart has us swooning, not to mention thirsty for a cocktail. 


Sometimes you need a little guidance when it comes to cocktail hour.  You've got Gin, Cherry Brandy, half an orange, but no idea what to make.  Just refer to the chart - which will guide you, oh woeful bartender, to the proper measurements, garnishes, cordials, sodas, juices, condiments, and glassware. There are even little flaming icons for when a cocktail needs a little flambé.





Your cocktail hour will never be lost again.

Want one?  (We sure do.)  Order one here: $28.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Faye Dunaway Peels & Eats an Egg

That's all it is.


And that's all it needs to be.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Gastropyromania

What do you get when you mix a pyromaniac, a super sick camera, and a lab where one can blow up whatever their heart desires?

Well, this:



Welcome to the world of Alan Sailer - a mad scientist of sorts.  Mr Sailer is a photographer who builds his own air-gap microflash, read, 1/1,000,000 of a second who spends his nights exploding pretty much everything in sight, sometimes to achieve terrifying effects...

But we are interested in his choices of content - fruits, candies, sodas, all blown to tiny tiny bits.  You know, in case you were wondering what your twizzlers looked like from a different perspective...

Enjoy.










For more on this uber-flash : click here.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Daily Behbeh

Oh Wednesday, what a drag you can be. 

We were delighted when our friend, Jejon Yeung sent us his collection of whimsical and socially poignant drawings of the adorable bear, Behbeh.  Sometimes a little cuteness really helps the day get on. 

Behbeh has adventures that make us hard workin' gals jealous; mud baths, tours of Santa Fe, snowboarding, site seeing.  It also seems that Behbeh is quite the foodie - getting into some delicious finds during his travels.  We must confess, we find ourselves relating to this little guy...like perhaps he's reading our minds... 

A few of our favorites:

Mmmm Chicken Wings




Martinis are a Girl's (and a Bear's) Best Friend

 


The Longest 150 Second's of One's Life

 


Happiness is a Lollipop Bigger Than Your Head

 


Workin' Hard for the Guacamole

 


Drats, My Martini!

 


Nom Nom

 


Sharing is Caring

 


Now Where to Put Them...

 


Wheatgrass Shots - $5 Extra

 


So. Violating.

 


French Fries = Heaven.



Carry on BehBeh - we'll be watching...

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

DIY Chocolate Bars

We're big fans of chocolate here at Gastro HQ - very often a bit of the dark stuff is what we need in the afternoon.  But sometimes just chocolate is a bit dull.  Enter, peanut butter.  Yes, we've been known to slather peanut butter all over a bar of chocolate, undoubtedly ending up all over our faces and frocks.  So ladylike, we know.



Thankfully, designer Elsa Lambient has saved our day!  Chocolate actually designed to hold toppings!  Ms. Lambient has cleverly added two different compartments, one on top for your fruits, nuts, or other gooey additions, and a drawer, as it were, for your neater, crispier treats.  Our imaginations are running wild with the possibilities! 


In the words of the designer:

A modular design allows for three types of chocolate that can support two added ingredients: black chocolate has a hole to contain fruit, milk chocolate has spaces for nuts, and white chocolate is surfaced to hold liquids, and all three contain a hollowed compartment for inserted flavored wafers, perhaps nougat, biscuit or caramel.


And an adorable stop animation?  Now you're just torturing us....

SWEET PLAY by Elsa Lambinet from Jan Czarlewski on Vimeo.



via Dezeen

Thursday, January 19, 2012

All The Cabbage Fetishists, Put Your Hands Up

Cato the Elder once said "It is the cabbage that surpasses all other vegetables."

Babe Ruth is said to have kept a wet leaf under his hat on particularly warm game days.

The leafy green orb even spawned the Cabbage Patch dolls, which ranged from sweet to regrettable (Al Roker and Stephen Tyler versions were made. Why, cabbage, why?)

So cabbage is versatile. I get it. Pickled, fermented, boiled, slawed, in doll form and dolma, it is quite the multiple role player.

But is it sexy?

Bubble or Squeak?

I guess it's a matter of, ahem, taste - but these renderings of green leafed glamazons by artist Ju Duoqi shed new light on cabbage's more appealing properties.

Green Goddess

In this YouTube interview, Ju says one of the things she loves about working with vegetables is how easily you can turn them into pretty much anything she imagines. She's done interpretations of Van Gogh and the Mona Lisa, even small vegetable museums.

Bok Choy Booty

Can the cabbages bring the boys to the yard?

Family friendly or borderline-NSFW? We can't tell.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Charles Dickens Over Rice


Happy New Year! With a food, art and film-filled NYC staycation under my belt, this hostess is back in action, dedicated to bringing you more food, more culture, more art, more design, more everything into your life this year.

During one of my loll-around-and-look-at-pretty-things-on-the-Internet days, I came across "Library," a project by NYC-based artist and curator Trong G. Nguyen. Started in 2007 and currently ongoing, Nguyen paints entire texts of authors like Roland Barthes and Charles Dickens onto individual kernels of rice.

Roland Barthes: La chambre clair (Camera Lucida)

Once I got past imagining how labor-intensive this process might be, I realized the stark and minimal presentation is super pleasing to look at. It's a compact, distilled way of combining both order and chaos: inside the bags, words are jumbled around in a nonsensical mess, but outside the bags are things we recognize, understand and can categorize. Charles Dickens. The Wizard of Oz. Library date stamps.

This book is overdue.

We can take it a step further when we start to think about rice being a food, and how we consume books, or even more generally, stories. We take them in by reading, or hearing, so then something that existed independently on its own outside of you, now exists inside in a different form. Which is really just eating with your eyes, don't you think?

Brain Food

Maybe not the best way to re-read The Wizard of Oz, but thought provoking, when you start to think about the many different forms that stories, can take in today's ever-changing culture and technology.

Books on rice are neither books, nor rice. Discuss.

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