15 May 2010

Spaghetti garlic & oil

Spaghetti garlic & oil or 'aglio e olio' is a perfect dinner for a Saturday night in where you don't want to do more than just throwing a few things in a dish. That's basically what aglio e olio is. You cook minced garlic in low-heat olive oil (extra virgin for rich taste). Then throw in cooked pasta al dente. Finally add salt and pepper to taste. As a finishing touch I find it refreshing to have a few plumb juicy cherry tomatoes that can nicely round up the plate.

14 May 2010

The Little Street


The Little Street (circa 1657) is one of the lesser known works of the Dutch painter Jan Vermeer. Since he was not a prolific artist (or at least never got to be, for he died relatively young), the public mostly comes to associate with the Girl with the Pearl Earring (1665) or the Milkmaid (1660).

As with Vermeer's other works, the Little Street depicts a genre scene of a Delft town. However, unlike others that tell of the domestic sphere, this is one of the few that shows the urban landscape that teases the blurry yet intimate boundary between the public and the private. While the viewer is, at first, presented with the sheer architectural magnitude of a house's facade, s/he gets to sneak a glimpse into the delicate smaller world, thanks to the human presence.

The painting exudes such quiet poetry where the meticulously detailed urban fabric is punctuated with the stillness of human activity. This reminds me of the gently opened mouth of the Girl with the Pearl Earring who stands against an otherwise muted background. Or the flowing milk in the Milkmaid. This is how Vermeer captures a moment.


The final intriguing touch to it is the point of view. The painting exhibits a mix of the public and private life, a mild hint of voyeurism, and the contemporary urbane activity of 'people watching.' Are we looking from the same point as Vermeer? Are we invited into his world?


The painting is part of the Rijksmuseum's collections in Amsterdam.



08 May 2010

Oh the things I find in my bedroom.

Yellow t-shirt. NYC cab yellow. Must have bought this at either Siam or Khao San rd. Value of not exceeding 200 baht.

In case anyone should wonder, that's a monkey and it says 'baby mild' underneath.

03 May 2010

A Year in Provence

I'm at the bus station waiting for my coach to Khon Khaen, a city 400km northeast of Bangkok. Have an hour to kill so I might as well blog from my BlackBerry.

I know I'm going to be labelled unoriginal being saying this but I love Provence. (Even though the 'Provence' that I've experience is a one day-trip in Aix-en-Provence). Of course being me, I like the medieval town and its civic square, the twist and turns of the streets, the narrow facades. And the clam shady courtyard. Everything that the ideal urbanism embodies.

As I was cleaning my bedroom saturday night, I pleasantly chanced upon (ok I lie, I hid it) a book I received as a gift for being a nerd in high school. I'm not sure if 'A Year in Provence' by Peter Mayle will be as unoriginal and clichéd as I want it to be, the foreword by Julia Child suggests otherwise.

Some 20 pages into it now. So far so good.