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Yesterday Leslie and I along with our fellow members of the loosely titled Fallbrook Gastronomic Society, had another one of our great culinary/cultural excursions. It was a classic Southern California June day, warm but not hot, with gentle breezes. Gorgeous. Never had to put on my coat when I got outside.
We walked a few blocks through downtown, then took a bus up to Balboa Park and first visited the lovely rose gardens. Along with the Santa Barbara Mission, this is my favorite rose garden. Everyone found their favorites, both for fragrant scents and for color. Mine was probably Chihuly, a yellow orange red flower with variegated petal and unnatural brilliance. Leslie liked one called Wild Blue Yonder.
I like having a bunch of friends that can take the time to smell the flowers. I didn't bring my camera, but Jim Swan did, and he took all of these pictures including the cool Donal Hord sculpture.
We sauntered over to the koi and lily pond, then to the shady and lush botanical lath house, first built in 1915, where we met our fellow denizens who had elected to drive their cars down. A quick jaunt to the delphinium beds at the Alcazar Garden and then a short scoot to the Timken to check out St. Bartholomew, San Diego's own Rembrandt, a great Heade painting of Magnolias and a wonderful Van Dyke. My favorite painting in the collection, a Sorolla, was nowhere to be found this trip. The park had visitors, but wasn't exceedingly crowded. The most beautiful city park in the country, if you ask me.
We ended the meal with a nice chocolate souffle that made it around the large table twice, incredibly! Here is the description from the menu: warm belgian chocolate souffle cake, triple espresso gelato, cappuccino with bruleed italian meringue peaks, raspberry coulis & tuille cookie spoon. Pretty yummy.
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Post lunch we headed off to the Mingei Museum and then to the Reuben H. Fleet Space Center where we caught an Imax Film, Beneath the Sea. We broke up and left the park, my group going to Anthony's at the waterfront where I did have a drink and then we took the train back up to Oceanside. San Diego native, I had never ridden the train. Gives you a great view of backyards and locales you can never see from the road.
We finished the night at Vince's place on the beach with great red wine and appetizers and a beautiful sunset and then totally worn out all we all headed for home. A thoroughly satisfying day. Can't wait for an encore. Good food and good conversation with good friends, as the song says, that's what it's all about.
I liked it better when you were bitchin and moanin about not having any money....now you sound like another overly entitled asshole with too much money and time on your hands, that is, BORING!
ReplyDeleteJeeshhhhh....join habitat for humanity or sumptin....and good luck hunting for beaver. that ever elusive creature. Man's destiny is deeply entwined with the pursuit of it. Beaver, that is.
I'm still broke, Stan - it doesn't mean I can't enjoy a decent meal.
ReplyDeleteJune 16, 2009
ReplyDeleteI thought a lot about this due to our friendship, but it simply has to be said.
As Abbie Hoffman, during the "Trial of the 'Chicago Seven'" shouted out
at Judge Julius ("Julie") Hoffman when
he (Judge Julius) was going on about his newly obtained membership in "The Standard Club" (pre-1965, a "resticted" haunt of the "Waspocracy"):
SHANDA! SHANDA!
SHANDA FUR DE GOYIM!
Hey Judge,
ReplyDeleteA shaynem dank dir im pupik. I remember Hoffman well, duct taping up Seale and Dellinger if my memory serves...
Abbie preached about the dangers of getting co-opted. I'll sell out if I can get a decent price. This club however is full of my friends.
Yes, many of which "friends" are of the carefully selected and "new" variety, and none of whom could qualify to make a Minyan.
ReplyDeleteFeh!
Once again: SHANDA!
JUDGEYOSSELEBEAN
I choose my friends with two criteria, are they nice people and do they have a brain - ethnicity is not apart of my equation.
ReplyDelete