When I first saw this mural, "don't set that crown on the ground", to me it was an exhortation to hold on to one's power and self-respect- we are all queens in our own way. I have no idea if that is what the artist wanted to convey. I guess we all get to interpret art with our own lens.
This one was just sweet- pointing out to each passerby that each of us brings something to this planet. At a time when so many feel isolated and alienated and struggle to find a place in the world, it is a good message to put out there.
This one with a girl and her dog immediately caught my eye and reminded me of the happy years with my own dogs. I loved the running dog in the borders (
a not so secret animation- how cute!). The artist Linda McNeil writes about the inspiration for this mural
on her instagram post.
This mural has a human heart overflowing with greenery and natural beauty.
This one was one of my favorites- with just three colors and beautiful lines, the artist (
the artist seven) captures such a sense of motion and energy.
This one is by the illustrator Brandon Campbell. I love his doodly pen and ink style sooo much.
Check this out to see his method. This mural possibly reminds us that time is ticking?!
Speaking of murals and social commentary, this was a great mural that commemorates (on gravestones) all the great Atlanta restaurants that have closed. Rising rents are the death of small businesses and they are literally being painted over.
This one was moving-
Infinite love by Nicole Kang Ahn. It is pictured as a traditional Korean vase, with a mother and child, dedicated to the artist's daughter Vera who was diagnosed with a serious medical issue. On the bottom right, hard to read in this photo, it says "For Vera, who I'd choose in this lifetime and a thousand more".
There was so much more we saw during this art walk, including the awesome graffiti in the Krog street tunnel. This tunnel has a
whole archive and everything. Atlanta has so much personality.
* * *
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Yucca fries with queso, and anniversary bubbly |
We went on to dinner at a restaurant that we had
loved 2 years ago-
La Semilla, which serves modern plant-based Latin-inspired cuisine. Given a choice, I'll patronize an all-vegetarian/vegan restaurant any day. La Semilla was just as good as I remember it.
My very favorite dish at this restaurant is the chochoyotes, corn dumplings in a corn sauce with corn chips. An utterly amazing celebration of corn. If you're ever in Atlanta, I highly recommend this dish.
V got a mushroom steak and we shared a slice of strawberry tres leches.
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| The incredible chochoyotes |
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| Lion's mane mushroom steak |
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| Strawberry tres leches cake |
We stayed at a cute boutique hotel in midtown ATL, and it was lovely except that the street noise- drag racing, or something of the sort- made for a terrible night of sleep. How do people sleep through this? I'm spoiled by living in my quiet neighborhood tucked away in a corner of town. The only night owls around me are the actual owls that live in my backyard!
* **
Sunday morning, after a big breakfast, it was back to regular life, with a stop at the big Indian store to stock up on some pantry staples before heading home. I bought some of the vegetables for undhiyu- fresh field beans (vaal), tender eggplant, baby bananas, fresh fenugreek (methi). I've written about this
wonderful vegetable dish before, and after waiting to make it all winter (it calls for a few specialty ingredients), I finally made it.
Unlike the recipe I've linked to, this time, I did not bother to buy or make methi dumplings. Did not use a frozen undiyu veg mix either. I simply mixed the masala paste in a bowl and stuffed it into eggplant pieces and baby bananas. Then I heated a bit of oil in the instant pot and tempered it with ajwain seeds (the magic thing that gives undhiyu its distinctive flavor IMO). I sauteed the remaining masala with field beans, chopped fenugreek and green peas. Then added the stuffed veg, some water and cooked on low pressure for 4 minutes. It made for a wonderful, fresh, spring-like vegetable dish.
* * *
I just finished reading Einstein’s Dreams by Alan Lightman. What a gem of a novel. It is a slim book that I savored over many days. This isn't a story, per se, and there is no plot to speak of. It is a collection of vignettes. The book (published in 1993) is set in 1905 when Einstein was working as a patent office clerk while creating his theory of relativity, which changed our conception of time. The vignettes in the book are Einstein's imagined dreams at this time.In each dream, time behaves very differently than it does in our world, and we get to see its effects. In one world, time is a circle and the world repeats itself endlessly. All mistakes are repeated precisely in this life as in the life before.
In another world, the passage of time brings increasing order. Clothes on the floor in the evening lie neatly on chairs in the morning.
In yet another world, time is a visible dimension. One can look out into the distance and see births, marriages, deaths stretching into the future. One can crawl to the future or rush to future events.
One of my favorite chapters (I would liken them to thought experiments) was clearly based on the philosophy of free will vs. determinism- "...in this world, the future is fixed. In world of fixed future, life is an infinite corridor of rooms, one room lit at each moment, the next room dark but prepared. We walk from room to room, look into the room that is lit, the present moment, then walk on. We do not know the rooms ahead, but we know we cannot change them. We are spectators of our lives." Welp.
Happy anniversary and congratulations, dear Nupur! I seem to remember your "revealing" here, quietly and with no fanfare, that you had gone off to India to get married :). May you and V enjoy many many many more years together.
ReplyDeleteI loved your street art tour of Atlanta - showed me a side of the city I didn't know existed.
I have to say that I was rather dismayed at the thought of Undhiyu without the dumplings. Those are my favorite part of the dish and I will confess that I have helped myself to more than my fair share of them whenever the opportunity presented itself.
Einstein's Dream sounds wonderful - I must check it out.
Thanks, Kamini! The wedding was a bit of a disaster (I fell very ill) but the marriage has been great :) Much better than the other way around LOL
DeleteAtlanta is such an amazing city and I wish we had more opportunities to explore it. Driving through the 8 lane expressways back and forth from the airport, you only ever see the ugliest side of it.
I had every intention of making dumplings with the methi but laziness got the better of me, and the undhiyu did not suffer for it. I hear you on the dumpling (muthiya) love- they are so good and I always pick them onto my plate too ;)
Congratulations!
ReplyDeleteThanks! ❤️
DeleteHas it been 20 years already! I too remember the post all those years back where you announced your trip to India to get married. Congrats to a wonderful 20 and here's to many more!
ReplyDeleteMeenal
Meenal- time flies, right?! Thank you for your sweet note ❤️
DeleteCongratulations Nupur and V! Wish you a lifetime of happiness together. I must confess, I live near ATL, but have never done the Art Walk.
ReplyDeleteI love Undhiyu and always make a big batch every winter (this winter I was lucky, I found ‘konphal’ at the local Indian store) , muthiyas are a must, I love them.
Thank you so much, my dear! If you ever have some time, just go by the Cabbagetown neighborhood and walk around the half mile or so...it is a feast for the eyes. You don't have to do the guided tour to experience this- it was certainly special, but the murals themselves are wonderful to see.
DeleteI hope we can do this in the summer. Thank you!
DeleteAnd the next time you plan a trip to ATL, please spare some time and come visit me. Agrahacha nimantran.
You are so sweet! Thank you!
DeleteHappy Anniversary to you both! Your Weekend trip sounds wonderful! I’ve always wondered how artists manage to map out huge murals. The ones you’ve shared are amazing!
ReplyDeleteI should go hunt for undhiyo veggies at my local grocery store. Your post has tempted me. Such a wholesome dish.
Anu
Anu- Thank you for the note and the wishes ❤️
DeleteWe did discuss how the artists map out huge murals. A couple of common methods are- grid method, with the mural drawn it on paper, making a grid on it, and using the grid to scale it up, square by square. And another method is to use a projector.
Undhiyu is the best dish- a gem! I'd like to make another batch soon.
Happy Anniversary !
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rupa!
DeleteHappiest 20th wedding anniversary to you both dear Nupur and V. What a coincidence!! We just celebrated our 25th this past Sunday. We celebrated the day with a pooja at home with close friends. My boy was home; that's enough for us :)
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely loved the guided arts tour. With my boy a liberal arts major and me an amateur artist, visiting local art museums is a family ritual. It is amazing; each external mural captures the inner emotions of an artist and their connection to an individual, event or a feeling. How precious :)
Ours is a foodie family and we'd love to visit that vegan restaurant on our next trip to ATL.
Einstein's Dream is something I'd enjoy reading.
Wishing you both many more years of togetherness filled with good health, peace and joy :)
Meena.
Dear Meera- Happy silver wedding anniversary to you- that's quite a milestone! Your celebration sounds lovely.
DeleteThank you for the kind wishes, and I wish you and yours the very same ❤️
Happy anniversary! Wish you many more happy years together ❤️
ReplyDeleteThank you so much ❤️🤗
Deletehappy 20th wedding anniversary - your celebration in Atlanta sounds wonderful. The art walk sounds fantastic - I love the heart with the plants and all the gorgeous personal messages that add such richness to the lives of people passing - and the humour of the "ouch" on the building corner where the accident was. Your dinner sounds amazing - I'd love to try the corn dish (esp as my daughter is not so keen on corn lately so I need more in my life). And the cake is so pretty!
ReplyDeleteI had a look at the original undhiyu and am interested at how different versions of the dish can be and how the unusual spices seem to make the dish unique.
And that book sounds fascinating - I am keen to find a world where time goes really slowly so we can get more done in a day :-)
Thank you for the wishes ❤️
DeleteThe art walk really was special- I love when cities and neighborhoods have personality/soul and celebrate creativity. As you say, it makes for such a richer environment.
I've thought about copying the corn dish but honestly, it is so complex and unique that I am not sure how to go about it. One of those times when I don't say those annoying words, "I could make this better at home" 🙃
Undhiyu is a treasure- truly! I've eaten fantastic authentic versions in Mumbai (where there is a huge Gujarati community). I will say they are often drowning in oil. But oh so good.
You will love the book- it has a "careful what you wish for" vibe too LOL.