Archive for November, 2009

Thanksgiving

November 30, 2009

I hope that everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving! I equate Thanksgiving with fall, so I could not resist adding some gorgeous red maple leaves to this post! I loved maple trees ever since I was a child, so much that my father brought a sapling with us when we moved from Detroit to Baton Rouge. Then one day the cable guy accidentally ran over my tree when he was laying underground cable. I went from agitated to distraught when I realized that he accidentally replaced it with the wrong tree–a Southern sweet gum tree, which did not produce gum as I had hoped.  Now almost twenty years later, I am living in the North again, and I had forgotten how truly beautiful maple trees are!

Thanksgiving did not go as planned as we had to cancel our trip to Chicago at the last minute due to a family emergency, so we ended up cooking dinner at home. I’ve experienced so much change this year that I don’t even know where to begin, and I would never have imagined that I’d have a photography blog that people actually read! Thank you so much to my readers for encouraging me to keep posting pictures!

maple leaves
maple leaves

We stick an aluminum tent over the turkey (thank you Alton Brown!) so the breast meat doesn’t dry out. It makes the turkey look like a superhero and give a whole new meaning to “dressing”!

Super turkey

Beautifully colored turkey!

Nicely colored turkey

I know this doesn’t look like much, but we are still trying to finish the leftovers!

Turkey with all the sides

Olivia

November 17, 2009

I wanted to post this session before I leave tomorrow for my upcoming trip DC and Chicago (contact me if you want a shoot while I’m in town!). I was super excited to do a shoot with Olivia, who is studying theater arts to become an actress. It was raining literally all weekend, but the rain stopped and the sun came out right when I was leaving my house for the session. To top it all off, it was warm too! So I knew this shoot was going to be awesome!  We ended up walking around Brookline and found some cool places to shoot!  I had so much fun editing these pics, that I had such a hard time picking out which ones to show you!  If you want to see all the photos, head over here.

Isn’t Olivia gorgeous?!  I am so jealous of her long eyelashes!

olivia headshot

Wow, I did not know that ivy also changes colors!  So pretty!

olivia red vines
olivia fence
olivia wall

I found some trees that still had leaves!  Score!

olivia collage
olivia wall
olivia red door
olivia stairs
olivia sitting on stairs

Ben and Jerry’s

November 16, 2009

When I first moved to Boston, one of the first thoughts were, “I’m going to be closer to the Ben and Jerry’s factory!” I’ve been wanting to go for months, so when we finally had a free weekend to drive up to Burlington, I was so excited! When we entered the factory, it smelled exactly like I had imagined it…like ice cream and fresh waffle cones, yum! The tour was fun, but I wished it was a little longer, maybe because I didn’t want it to end! The lobby TV shows a longer documentary than the tour video of how Ben and Jerry started the company, and since I’m a nerd, I watched the whole thing and loved it. Anyway, here are the pics from the tour! (It’s a long story, but we actually went to Ben and Jerry’s twice, so that’s why you’ll see some pictures with a rainy background and some with clear skies.)

The international sign for “this way to ice cream!”

welcome to Ben and Jerry's

The Ben and Jerry’s ice cream van.

DSC_0018

They have cute painted cows everywhere! You get a small sample of the “scoop of the day” ice cream, but we wanted to eat more, so we bought an ice cream cone too.  The ice cream tasted better and fresher than the pint I buy at the supermarket, but Frank said he couldn’t tell.  We also went to the ice cream graveyard to pay respects to the ice cream flavors that they retired.

Ben and Jerry's collage

Look how big the milk, cream, and sugar containers are!!

milk cream and sugar

A pic of my friends’ shadows. Thanks for the awesome weekend!

Friends at Ben and Jerry's

The beautiful sunset on the drive back to Boston.

Sunset in Vermont

Vermont

November 11, 2009

A few weeks ago, some of my friends from DC flew up to Vermont for the weekend, so Frank and I drove up to see them. I was so excited because I was dreaming of taking photos of bright red maple leaves covering the Vermont hills, even though we were going a little past peak foliage season. When we got there, I was so disappointed because it rained all day Saturday and Sunday was too windy to go hiking. And I did not see a single maple tree with lush red leaves! Even though our plan to spend the whole weekend outdoors was scrapped, we still had lots of fun exploring Burlington and our trip quickly revolved around the local food. Vermont is filled with dairy farms, maple houses, cider mills, and so much more, so we ended up taking more factory tours than I’ve ever taken in my life (including Ben and Jerry’s, which will be featured in the next post)! Almost everything I eat over the weekend was tasted really fresh, and I love how the locals are so proud of their food that all the restaurants we went to mentions “locally grown in Vermont” in their menu whenever they can.

Frank was really nice and did all the driving, which leave me free to take pictures from inside the car.

Vermont

We planned on hiking near Mt. Mansfield, the highest point in Vermont, only to find that there were no more leaves!  Maybe I’ll come back in the winter for skiing.

Mt. Mansfield

Since it was raining, we decided to stay dry and visited the ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center. It’s a fairly small aquarium, but they had lots of different frogs and turtles. We were lucky to catch a special tour of baby soft-shelled turtles, which was held in a special room that’s not open to the public. The baby turtles in the photo are four weeks old and are endangered, so the aquarium staff raise them over the winter where they become the size of four-year old turtles. Then they are released back into Lake Champlain.aquarium collage

Here’s a view of Lake Champlain.

Lake Champlain

Inside the Lake Champlain Chocolates store. They make amazing chocolates, and my jaw dropped upon entering the store when I saw the mouth-watering caramel apples and a over dozen different types of fudge! I was really disappointed to find out that their factory tours are only given M-F, but they do give out chocolate and hot chocolate samples in the store.

Lake Champlain chocolates

Next stop: Cabot cheese. They have so many different varieties of cheeses! I probably sampled close to twenty of them, and I don’t think I tried them all! I really enjoyed their extra sharp cheddar. They also make interesting specialty cheddars like “hot buffalo wing cheddar” and “horseradish cheddar.”

Cabot cheese

Now for beverages. Right now is apple season, so at Cold Hollow Cider Mill we got to see the workers use an old-fashioned cider press (I found out later on their website that they make cider year round). The leftover apple bits are sent to local farms and fed to livestock.

Cider press

Finally, we visited a microbeer brewery called the Magic Hat Brewing Company. I was a little confused when we pulled up because the first thing I saw was this huge metal tower, and I didn’t believe this was a brewery until I went inside.  The facility is decorated with lots of groovy modern art, and they have both guided and self-guided tours of the factory. Beer drinkers will love this place because you can sample nine different beers at the bar. I love their beer tap handles!

Magic Hat
Beers on tap