Sunday Feature: Mar Vista Farmer’s Market Wrap-Up (This Week On Monday)

Sunday I had the pleasure of seeing the Mar Vista Farmer’s Market through Lorraine Wells’ eyes. I refer to Lorraine as the Market Maven. She helped to bring the market into being nearly 3 years ago, and she’s there every week. I’m pretty sure she knows every vendor by name.

She had a delicious menu planned: chicken for Sunday dinner and seafood for later in the week. We started at the seafood booth and she picked up some shrimp and scallops from Ali at Smart Fish. 
Lorraine
When she cooks them up, she’s going to use tangerines, limes and ginger. I made her promise to cook it for me someday!

 

She already had the chicken at home and she was planning to use Shawarma seasonings on it. On the side, she was making basmati rice, spinach and a lovely salad.

 

We headed off in search of the ingredients for her basmati rice side dish. She caramelizes these beautiful onions 

Onions.JPG

from Gama farms and adds them to the rice, along with cilantro from Gloria’s Fruit and Vegetables. 

 

She sautes these shallots 
Shallots.JPG
in a little olive oil and then adds spinach from Gloria’s for a very delicious and iron-rich side dish.
Spinach @ Gloria's
She gets her red leaf lettuce from J.R. Organics, who are part of Community Supported Agriculture, which is a very cool program and you should check it out. And then she adds these awesome tomatoes
Tomatoes.JPG
to the salad for some color and deliciousness.

 

Not only am I inspired to cook these dishes myself, I’m thrilled I got to see the market with Lorraine.
An original post by Sarah Auerswald.

Mar Vista Farmer’s Market Wrap-Up: February 1st

Today I got to catch up with Alison Copeland of Rocker Board Shop fame. The former Mar Vista brick-and-mortar shop is now online and going strong, although we really miss the store! Alison was at the market today selling items from her line of hand-stenciled t-shirts, hats and notecards, ReKon by AC

Alison Copeland
She’s there pretty much monthly, by the way, since on the first Sundays the Mar Vista Arts and Craft Collective part of the Open Mar Vista Group) has booth space down at the south end of the market. 

Anyway, Alison was also shopping for her supper, which was going to be a roasted chicken with these satsumas. Yum! 
Satsumas.JPG
Plus she always keeps a stash of these organic avocados on hand for when she eats quesadillas. 
Avocados.JPG
(Must be all the surfing she does, because I don’t see any evidence of cheese on her body. I’m just saying.)
An original post by Sarah Auerswald.

Sunday Feature: Mar Vista Farmer’s Market Wrap-Up

It’s a gorgeous day in Mar Vista today, the sun is shining, at least in between the dark clouds rolling through, and the market was packed. I met up with my friend, Federico Ceballos, who is planning to make chicken soup tonight. His recipe includes celery, leeks and purple cabbage, which he’s holding here. It also includes carrots, which he was off in search of as we parted.

Federico
(He’s also holding his morning coffee from Venice Grind)

 

The soup sounds delicious. Hmmm, I’ve got a chicken in the freezer. Maybe I’ll make soup, too.
An original post by Sarah Auerswald.

Go Green Or Go Home!

Go green expo 

Well, I guess I’ll go Green, then. To the Go Green Expo, that is. It starts this Friday, January 23rd, downtown at the LA convention center. And guess who’s speaking at the keynote? Ed Begley, Jr. OMG.

But I digress. 

The point is that Mar Vista has some very green folks, and a few of them are trying to get a solar situation going here in our neighborhood, so I am heading to downtown this weekend to see what the state of the art is all about these days. You can read more about the neighborhood plans here in Open Mar Vista.

 

I’ll have a wrap-up for you next week, so stay tuned…
An original post by Sarah Auerswald.

Community Meeting: What To Do With Old Fire Station 62?

Wednesday, January 21st, at Santa Monica College, Bundy Campus multipurpose room #123, from 7pm to 9pm.

Fire Station 62 image

This is the second in a series of public meetings soliciting input on the property and how best to make use of it. Ideas include affordable senior housing and community youth organizations. This is your chance (well, one of your chances) to be heard.

 

Contact Sharon Commins (smcommins@marvista.org) for more information, or check MarVistaCC.org.
An original post by Sarah Auerswald.

Going Mano A Mano in Mar Vista

A Mano1.JPG
I am a knitter from way back, having been taught by my
Aunts, but I haven’t done it in years. Babies and toddlers require the use of
mom’s hands far too much to spare them for knitting.

 

So when I recently decided to start up again, I headed over
to A Mano to gear up. I still have knitting needles, of course, like any
self-respecting crafter would, but I had no project I wanted to start and I
certainly didn’t have any yarn.

 

A Mano 2.JPG
It’s a bit cramped, especially in Los Angeles’ winter time
when we all wear too many layers and have a hard time squeezing by each other,
but it’s cozy, too. Filled with the gorgeous, touchable stuff we knitters
crave.

 

I chose a cute hat pattern to ease back in and some super
bulky (that’s knitting code for BIG yarn) so it goes quickly.

 

I used to work in a yarn store a few lifetimes ago, and it
was one of the best working experiences of my life. All the employees were
smart, well-educated, interesting women, who happened to also knit. I get the
impression the same is true of A Mano.

 

Of course they have classes, great for picking up a new
skill. And of course they’ll help you if you’re having trouble with a project;
just bring it in and have a seat around the big table in the front window.
Which I can already tell I’m going to need to do since I can’t remember what
some of these abbreviations mean: “wyib”, “tbl”, “sl-P” – huh? Oh well, I know the smart,
well-educated knitters will come to my rescue, as I come back in out the cold
and join the ranks of the knitters once again.

 

I also noticed this important sign in the window as I was
leaving. It seems in the ranks of crafters there are those knitters who look
down on crocheters, at least, there are those who do it elsewhere. A Mano
welcomes all kinds!Crochet-friendly.JPG

A Mano Yarn Center, 12808 Venice Blvd., Mar Vista, CA 90066. (310) 397-7170                            

Check the website for open hours.

 

An original post by Sarah Auerswald.

 

 

 

Milestone!!

I am watching history happen with my friends around me and I am thrilled beyond belief! I raise a glass to America! The good stuff, too!! Proud to be an American is not something I have always felt or said out loud, but I say it today.

 

An original post by Sarah Auerswald.

Venice Grind: Frontier Outpost In Mar Vista

VG coffee sign.JPG
Mar Vista has been sprucing itself up for the past few
years, and there’s more in store in the years to come, but the place that
started it off is the Venice Grind. Coffee and Wi-fi for the Mar Vista crowd.

 

Technically, of course, Soaptopia opened its doors first, so
I want to acknowledge that. But as they say, once the coffee place is open, it
just doesn’t seem like frontier land quite so much to the rest of the new
businesses.

 

So the Venice Grind is like a beacon of sorts. It’s a big
hipster dude standing on the corner with a flashlight, pointing the way in the
darkness and showing by example that, Hey, it’s perfectly safe — come on? What
are you afraid of? It’s totally cool to do business here.

 

VG interior.JPG
The Grind is not spacious, but it is a great space. The
front windows are the place to sit near when you want to be seen by passersby,
and there’s free wi-fi and electric connection, so the small tables are quickly
taken up by bloggers mostly. The back patio is great for
larger groups, weather permitting, which is most of the time in LA. My old playgroup meets there once a month now that our kids are in school, so beware a large group of moms discussing school bond measures and Little League coaching standards.VG back patio.JPG

 

The food is pretty standard: sweet treats and cereal by the
individual box, with 2 types of tasty quiche, that I must say, however, MVM is
a little tired of.  I wish they
would spice it up a little bit. IMHO, it couldn’t hurt. But let’s face it, we
come here for the coffee and to hang out, not for the food.

 

They’ve got a great logo, too, and it looks very cool on a
T-shirt, which I recommend owning.Venice T on JC

Venice Grind, 12224 Venice Blvd., Mar Vista, 90066 (310) 397-2227 open all the time

(Note: shirt comes unfilled. My husband is my model.)

 

An original post by Sarah Auerswald.

Mar Vista Farmer’s Market Wrap-Up

Today I met my friend Melissa Davis, personal chef and food blogger, to see what struck her fancy at the market. She immediately picked up some organic asparagus, which had been a hit with her 5-year-old, and she planned to saute some in a little butter, and roast the rest in the oven with a little parmesan melted over top. YUM!

Melissa
She also picked up some grape tomatoes for salads and kid snacks, and some arugula for a pasta dish: she’ll oven roast some tomatoes and then add the fresh arugula along with olive oil and salt and pepper to the piping hot pasta for a quick toss before eating. The heat just wilts the arugula a little. Sounds delish! I want an invitation to dinner that night! ;-)
Baby eggplant.JPG
I saw these baby eggplants and just had to take a pic. They’re so cute! I don’t really cook with eggplant so I didn’t buy them, but if anyone can give me a recipe I’ll get some next time…
An original post by Sarah Auerswald.