Showing posts with label Ferry Bldg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ferry Bldg. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

R-Evolution Green Bin Liner

 

My kitchen green bin fitted with a newspaper liner

Dean has been making origami newspaper liners for our kitchen green bin since 2012. We got the idea from the SF Chronicle and never went back. Per my directions, he folds a section of newsprint in such a way that a colorful photograph faces out and entertains me as I cook. The link below contains the full instructions, as outlined in a previous blog post. The liner featured above shows a  photo from an article that reports on an immense art installation in San Francisco's Embarcadero Plaza. We seldom go to San Francisco these days, but we happened to travel to the city on Bart and disembark at Embarcadero station the  very day the statue was unveiled. The massive forty five foot construction that greeted us was an awesome sight and we marveled at it along with a few other sightseers. We didn't learn the whole story until we heard the news a few days later.



The name of the statue is R-Evolution, and you can read all about her in the following link:  R-Evolution. The presence of this towering, breathing creation has caused some controversy, and for me it's a relief to opine about the place of art in public spaces as opposed to focusing on more ominous matters.






Monday, July 7, 2014

Food In Jars


Last Saturday I had the pleasure of spending an hour with Marisa McClellan, author of Food in Jars and Preserving by the Pint. She was signing her new book (Preserving by the Pint) at the huge Saturday Farmers' Market in front of the Ferry Building, and I was  representing Book Passage which was providing her books for sale.

Saturday Farmers' Market at the Ferry Building

As the market swirled around us on that beautiful, sunny day, Marisa filled me in on her life story. She was born in Los Angeles, moved to Portland with her family at about age 9, spent a happy adolescence in Oregon and moved to Philadelphia to be with her grandmother, where she married and has lived ever since. She has become an expert on canning and preserving, published two books on the subject, does freelance editing and writes a blog called  Food in Jars.

While we chatted, Marisa's fans would wander up to our table, recognize her from her blog or Face book page, and tell her how much they enjoy her blog and which recipes they had tried in her first book,  Food in Jars,  published by Running Press. The constant favorite was the Strawberry-vanilla jam. I confessed that I was a reluctant canner and didn't eat much jam anyway. She countered by explaining that most recipes in her books are not jams and jellies but ingenious combinations of various seasonal fruits and vegetables. In the new book she emphasizes preserving in small batches and often doesn't use the canning pot at all.  She suggested one summer recipe that really appealed to her followers—and to me: Zucchini Butter with Garlic and Fresh Thyme on page 85 of Preserving by the Pint. The veggie spread is delicious on bread or crackers and can be used as a quick sauce for warm pasta. I was sold, and since zucchini was bursting forth in the market and my herbs were in need of a trim, I made her recipe on the Fourth of July as my contribution to an annual block party in Walnut Creek. I decided to add savory as well as thyme.


My Winter Savory

And my Thyme



















Zucchini Butter with Fresh Thyme and Savory

3 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
5 garlic cloves, gently smashed
2 large zucchini, cut into 1/2 inch cubes
5 to 6 sprigs thyme and/or savory
1/2 teaspoon finely milled sea salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

Place a large skillet over medium heat. Place the olive oil and butter in the pan and allow them to melt together. Roughly chop the garlic and add it to the pan. Add the zucchini. Cook for 15 to 20 minutes, until the zucchini has begun to soften. Strip the thyme and savory leaves off their stems and add them to the pan.
   Lower the heat to medium-low and continue to cook, stirring often. The goal is to cook the liquid out of the zucchini and melt it into a flavorful, spreadable paste. If at any point, the zucchini starts to brown and stick, add a splash of liquid...and lower the heat a bit more. The total cooking time should be right around an hour.
   Divide the cooked spread between 2 half-pint jars. It will keep for up to 2 weeks in the fridge or a year in the freezer.

Gemelli Pasta with Zucchini butter, green beans,  corn and basil

The next day I followed Marisa's advice and used more of my zucchini butter on warm pasta with a healthy addition of green beans and corn kernels, also from the farmers' market. It was quick and delicious, but unfortunately my supply of the zucchini butter is almost gone! I'll need to make more and next I want to  try her Peach-barbecue sauce and Thai-basil pesto. I may become a canner yet!





Monday, June 10, 2013

Farewell Scharffen Berger Store


Sadly, the Scharffen Berger Chocolate store closed it's doors in the Ferry Building on Sunday, June 9th.

Watercolor by Raymond Martinez

The brand will continue, the bars will be available at other locations, but the only Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker store in existence has sold it's last bar of exquisite chocolate. The long-time staff, myself included, who worked in the cozy space for 4, 7, 8 or even 10 years, will scatter, and the local  products that were made for that store, i.e. truffles, the best selling  sea-salt bark, mint and almond bark, chocolate-dipped figs, ginger and orange peel, may disappear forever, along with our famous ultra-thin chocolate chunk cookies and fudgy bittersweet brownies. Some customers have been warned of the closure, but many others will visit with anticipation, only to find another vendor occupying space 14 across from Golden Gate Meat and Acme Bread. Many will be disappointed, having made the trip primarily to indulge in some of the world's finest chocolate and chat with the friendly staff.

The Scharffen Berger shop was among the first to rent space in the renovated Ferry Building when it opened ten years ago in 2003. The reasons for the closure are still unclear. but it's a fact that the store no longer exists. In memoriam, I want to share some photos of my colleagues and myself taken in happier times in our beloved space in the Ferry Building.

Approaching the Ferry Building as we did each workday---a glorious sight!


Main table in front of store featuring variety boxes ribboned by the staff



Full view of the interior space with Jenny hamming it up for the camera
Our store photographed from the corridor by Cy, our manager. 



Allison, Taya, Andrew and Jenny on Halloween 2010




Taya, Jenny and Andrew

Andrew and Jenny in (extra)bitter shirts standing in front of ( bitter)sweet, (semi)sweet & ( extra)bitter T-shirt shelves


More Halloween fun with Hali, Jenny and Andrew the Scot
Jenny ribboning a gift with me, taken by an appreciative customer

Dick Berendt visiting the store  taken by Ricki Pollycove 




Annual "Food from the Heart" poster  and event,  held Valentine's  weekend at the Ferry Building. I have this framed poster hanging at home to remind me of many sweet Valentine's
Days spent here.