Skip to main content

Three topics, one post

 Yesterday, when I started my workout the sky looked like this...




Cue up the eerie music! 






I just love the light pouring through the cornice of the white brick building a block away. (My building was designed by the same architects a few years later)


By the time I was done, it looked like an entirely different day, like the background for an entirely different movie.







On a completely different topic----



I stopped by Housingworks, one of the local thrifts today and there is a selection of  traditional Chassidish coats and jackets for sale.



These were all custom made by Fino. The names of the clients were typed onto the labels sewn into the front pockets. 



 
The quality of the materials and the workmanship were impeccable.



Some of these garments were made of satiny fabrics--perhaps silk and others were made out of superfine wool


I discovered poking about the Fino website that some of these garments are Beketches and others are called Reklech. Beketches and Reklach explains the difference. If you are in need of such garments I suspect that the $45 Housingworks is charging is a steal. I did try one on and it was far too big.


And now, a third topic. 


Yesterday I jammed my finger. The first joint of my middle finger of my left hand got increasingly sore during the day and was a bit swollen and bruised. After checking Dr. Google it was pretty clear that my finger was jammed and not broken. My husband MacGuyvered a splint out of half of an emery board and surgical tape. It almost worked.


I went to CVS and bought a great invention...a finger splint.



This is a brilliant piece of medical engineering. My bruised joint is comfortably supported. The foam and the Velcro compress my finger just enough to prevent further swelling. The Velcro means that I can remove the splint when I do messy work like kneading a loaf of bread or wash dishes.




This is the loaf of bread that is now in the oven.




Comments

  1. So sorry about your finger. Coming into NYC tomorrow to visit with 2 high school friends, leaving Sunday at 3 via Amtrak. Next time I’m in I will let you know and hopefully we can get together or at least say hi in person. Love your posts, please keep sharing your stories!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Looking forward to a real life visit... one with no death involved.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

I love hearing from my readers. I moderate comments to weed out bots.It may take a little while for your comment to appear.

Popular posts from this blog

Connecting with the past

A few months ago I had a craving for my father’s chicken fricassee.  If my father were still alive I would have called him up and he would have talked me through the process of making it.    My father is no longer alive so I turned to my cookbooks and the recipes I found for chicken fricassee were nothing at all like the stew of chicken necks, gizzards and wings in a watery sweet and sour tomato sauce that I enjoyed as a kid.  I assumed that the dish was an invention of my father’s. I then attempted to replicate the dish from my memory of it and failed.   A couple of weeks ago I saw an article on the internet, and I can’t remember where, that talked about Jewish fricassee  and it sounded an awful lot like the dish I was hankering after. This afternoon I went to the butcher and picked up all of the chicken elements of the dish, a couple of packages each of wings, necks and gizzards. My father never cooked directly from a cook book. He used to re...

The light themed tallit has been shipped!!!

 I had begun speaking to Sarah about making her a tallit in the middle of August. It took a few weeks to nail down the design. For Sarah it would have been ideal if the tallit were completed in time for her to wear it on Rosh HaShanah., the beginning of her year as senior rabbi of her congregation. For me, in an ideal world, given the realities of preparing for the High Holidays I would have finished this tallit in the weeks after Sukkot. So we compromised and I shipped off the tallit last night.  I would have prefered to have more time but I got the job done in time. This tallit was made to mark Sarah's rise to the position of senior rabbi but it was also a reaction to this year of darkness. She chose a selection of verses about light to be part of her tallit. 1)  אֵל נוֹרָא עֲלִילָה  God of awesome deeds ( from a yom kippur Liturgical poem) 2)  אוֹר חָדָשׁ עַל־צִיּוֹן תָּאִיר   May You shine a new light on Zion ( from the liturgy) 3)  יָאֵר יְהֹ...

A Passover loss

 My parents bought this tablecloth during their 1955 visit to Israel. It is made out of  linen from the first post 1948 flax harvest. The linen is heavy and almost crude. The embroidery is very fine. We used this cloth every Passover until the center wore thin.  You can see the cloth on the table in the background of this photo of my parents and nephew My Aunt Sheva bought my mother a replacement cloth. The replacement cloth is made out of a cotton poly blend. The embroidery is crude and the colors not nearly as nice. The old cloth hung in our basement. We used the new cloth and remembered the much nicer original cloth. I loved that my aunt wanted to replace the cloth, I just hated the replacement because it was so much less than while evoking the beauty of the original. After my father died my mother sat me down and with great ceremony gave me all of her best tablecloths. She also gave me the worn Passover cloth and suggested that I could mend it. I did. Year after year ...