January 2014
Get
Clean
10
ways
in 2014
to be happier this year!
Our calendar keeps you on track!
Color Splash
What’s In, What’s Out 2014 design trends
Inside a bright Slingerlands home
The difference between average and exquisite is right above your head
See our
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Publisher George Hearst III Editorial Janet Reynolds, Executive Editor Brianna Snyder, Associate Editor Design Tony Pallone, Design Director Colleen Ingerto, Emily Jahn, Designers Contributing Writers John Adamian, Kristi Barlette, Steve Barnes, Caroline Barrett, Valerie DeLaCruz, Melissa Fiorenza, Laurie Lynn Fischer, Rachel Fiske, Anna Zernone Giorgi, Jennifer Gish, Alistair Highet, Suzanne Kawola, Kerry Ann Mendez, Tyler Murphy, Lucianna Samu, Cari Scribner, Megan Willis Contributing Photographers Paul Barrett, Vincent Giordano, Alistair Highet, Emily Jahn, Suzanne Kawola, Tyler Murphy, Mark Samu, Megan Willis, Leif Zurmhulen Sales Kurt Vantosky, Sr. Vice President, Sales & Marketing Kathleen Hallion, Vice President, Advertising Tom Eason, Manager, Display Advertising Michael-Anne Piccolo, Retail Sales Manager Jeff Kiley, Magazine Advertising Manager
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Circulation Todd Peterson, Vice President, Circulation Dan Denault, Home Delivery Manager Business Ray Koupal, Chief Financial Officer TimesUnion.com Paul Block, Executive Producer Life@Home is published monthly. If you are interested in receiving home delivery of Life@Home magazine, please call (518) 454-5768 or e-mail magcirculation@timesunion.com. For advertising information, please call (518) 454-5358. Life@Home is published by Capital Newspapers and Times Union 645 Albany Shaker Rd, Albany, NY 12212 518.454.5694
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Contents Home
52
In Every Issue 10 12 14 20
Talk Back On the Web Editor’s Note Window Shopping
In This Issue 24 Color Splash
Art and color converge on this one Slingerlands home
31 Welcome, Home Expo!
The former Great Northeast Home Show gets a makeover
32 Trend Watch
What’s hot and what’s not for 2014 home decor
34 Razor Sharp
Entrepreneur Wesley John looks to create the perfect knife
41 Clean Living
A year-long cleaning calendar to keep your home spic and span
Features January 2014
January 2014
19 Home Life
Coming home
36 Design Defined Life@Home | Ideas and Inspiration for Living
Get
Clean
10
ways
in 2014
to be happier this year!
Our calendar keeps you on track!
www.timesunion.com/lifeathome
Color Splash
The endless search for storage
What’s In, What’s Out 2014 design trends
inside a bright Slingerlands home
45 Problem Solved
Don’t empty your wallet to semi-finish the basement
47 DIY Diva
Changeable décor to get all hung up in
48 Dollars & Sense
Travel tips that are light on the wallet
52 Down the Garden Path
Adventures in fairy gardening
54 Tech Tips
These apps can help you make your resolutions happen!
50 Living Green
Eco-resolutions for 2014
On the cover: Photo by Vincent Giordano timesunion.com/lifeathome | 7
Children whose sleep was affected by breathing problems like snoring, mouth breathing or apnea were 40%-100% more likely than normal breathers to develop behavioral problems resembling A.D.H.D. The Journal Pediatrics, Volume 129, Number 4 April 2012
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Contents Life
57
61
In This Issue 59 10 Ways ... ... to be happier
68 Just a Palmful
Mmm, spicy stews on winter days
Features 57 Help Me ...
... preserve family memories
61 Kitchen Crumbs
Tasty tidbits for your cooking
62 Dish
At home with Ross Thompson of the Olde English Pub & Pantry
70 The Vineyard
Go for staff picks!
73 My Space
Melanie Pores’ favorite spot
74 Photo Finish Blue lagoon
68 timesunion.com/lifeathome | 9
Talk Back
The story behind the story ... from our contributors Read below about how our contributors learned new things while working on this month’s edition of Life@Home.
Memory Box
Design Trends Jennifer Gish
After writing about preserving family memories – including scrapbooking – I’m going to give it a go. My 5-year-old twins will be making custom scrapbooks for their grandparents’ Christmas gifts. They won’t be perfect, but the kids’ handwriting will be a priceless memory. See Jennifer’s story on page 57.
Traveling Light Laurie Lynn Fischer In my 20s, I had wanderlust. I backpacked through Europe, Asia, South America and Africa. I also camped all over the U.S. and Canada. If there’s one thing I learned from all that globetrotting, it was the value of packing and spending as little as possible. In this article, local travel consultants share their tips for traveling light. See Laurie’s story on page 48.
Kristi Barlette
Cuttin’ Time Cari Scribner Wesley John took his love of cooking to an entirely new level, and I admire his persistence. After much trial and error, he successfully blended form with function, creating knives that even top chefs now use. See Cari’s story on page 34.
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10 | Life@Home
On the Cover Brianna Snyder
Beets Happening John Adamian Beet greens are great, and there are so many more things to do with actual beets than just to make borscht or salad with goat cheese. See John’s story online at timesunion.com/lifeathome.
We asked ... you answered Join the conversation!
Interviewing the different designers for this piece makes me want to redo my whole house. I didn’t realize gray could work so well as a “color.” Also, the idea that slipcovers are updated to look like traditional upholstery means spills and stains are a lot easier to clean and a chicken wing or red wine incident no longer means replacing the whole couch, or having it professionally cleaned. Refreshing for my wallet, and my family room. See Kristi’s story on page 32.
I loooooved the fantastic color in the home we’re featuring this month. That harlequin pattern is to die for (TDF!) and the bright blues and yellows really made for a happy, high-spirited atmosphere. Bold is beautiful! See Brianna’s story on page 24.
Here’s what our readers said this month on Facebook.
• What’s your new year’s resolution?
least-symbolic family dinners with everyone at the table.
like we were successful in finding another way to bring the sun inside.
Britta: I’ll be giving up sugar and hoping I don’t become suicidal.
• What’s the thing you love most about your home?
Emily: Love when I eye something online for months and when I finally buy it and set it up in my house it looks just as good as I pictured!
Elizabeth: Sunshine all day.
Victoria: When my bed is made and room is spotless, candle lit with my perfect amount of light lamp on so I can read or watch TV before I go to sleep!
Danielle: run a 5k Jennifer: I resolve to try n stop being a terrible ... PROCRASTINATOR!!! Tips anyone? Jenny: more family dinners with everyone at the table ... at least 4 days a week. We always start slipping. Even if I feed them at 5 and it’s fake dinner. So: at-
Tony: The recently-reinvented color scheme downstairs. I have an older house with small windows, so not a lot of sunshine gets in naturally. When choosing bright colors for the living room and dining room, I feel
Vincent: I love watching a good sci-fi movie with the family in our den!
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more
ONLINE
Find more at timesunion.com/lifeathome Explore more content — photos, stories, recipes, videos and companion blogs — all in once place.
VIDEOS PHOTOS Check out more photos online from this month’s @home feature (story on page 24).
Want to learn how to make spinach and feta benedict with chef Ross Thompson? Check out our video online.
STORIES Make Your Own Cleaner Skip the store-bought stuff!
Food Trends Get with the beets
Moldy Houses What to look out for
Made By Hand DIY crafts for the soul
Home Improvement Fall in love with stenciling
LIFE@HOME ONLINE Pinterest
pinterest.com/ timesunionmags Like our photos? Follow us on Pinterest, where we pin all our original photography and more! 12 | Life@Home
Facebook YouTube
youtube.com/ TimesUnionMagazines Want to go beyond the pictures in the magazine? Check out our behind-the-scenes videos.
Life@Home Blogs timesunion.com/lifeathome
Follow our 518 blog for great local finds and our House Things blog for gems dug up around the Web.
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Like us! Join in our conversations! Win free stuff! And stay on top of all our latest stories and news.
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Editor’s Note
Coming Clean Confessions of an unenthusiastic cleaner
I Janet Reynolds Executive Editor jreynolds@timesunion.com
getting lp e h d e e N o clean? t d e t a v i mo t n d ar
t our cale Check ou o do when of what t en head 1. Th on page 4 ow to make see h online to cleaners! your own
14 | Life@Home
care about a lot of things in my home. Cleaning is not one of them. This is not to say that I am a slob (although my husband, who could land a helicopter on his desk at day’s end, might disagree with that statement); rather, I have other ways I would prefer to spend my precious personal time. When my children were younger, the weekends were a time to connect in a slightly less frantic way than during the week. Now that they’re older and — mostly — out of the house, I want to spend time making up for all those years when what I wanted to do was always the last thing on the to-do list. (Read: hardly ever done.) I of course love the idea of a clean house, a home free of clutter where every item has a place and I don’t need to search for an open spot to put down the mail for fear of losing it. But when it comes down to the actual moment of choice on a Saturday afternoon, I invariably opt for just about anything other than running a vacuum or grabbing a sponge and some cleaning fluid. And since we’ve cut back on our entertaining recently — a prime motivator for a cleaning blitz — things are perhaps a
little more cluttered than they have been in our regularly entertaining past. This lack of interest in cleaning could be a point of contention between me and my husband — it certainly is for many other couples. Surprisingly it hasn’t been — and not just because we’ve had cleaning services intermittently in our life together. Perhaps it’s because I made my point of view clear early in our relationship. I remember, for instance, the day my husband made the mistake of noting that the family room floor was not as clean as he liked. “Well, you know where the vacuum is,” I replied as I walked out of the room. “I married you, not the house.” The more likely reason is that my husband is part saint. As with all couples, you’ve got to pick your battles and somewhere between the stacks of books creating a minefield on my side of the bed and the toys strewn in the family room corner, he decided this was a skirmish not worth tackling. Of course he does get other things in exchange. I do all the cooking — and I am a good cook. That’s 32 years and counting of tasty meals with nary a cereal for dinner among them. Seems like a good trade-off to me — especially since he does all the laundry. Maybe he is a saint after all.
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When oranges collide they make beautiful things. Photo by Vincent Giordano. Read more on page 24. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 17
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Home Life
Coming Home By Rachel Fiske
Photo: Image Source/GettyImages.
H
ome is a place that’s been perched on our horizon for the last six months, a shape we could see from the swirl of boxes as we packed them, hazy in the distance but there nonetheless. Our compasses have been fixed toward this point as we’ve hung out in limbo, staying with my partner’s parents and looking (and looking and looking) at houses in the city we set our sights on long before we knew where, exactly, we’d land. Finally, though, we have found our place. We are finally going home. To be precise, or practical as the case may be, home is a yellow house. It is creaky and old and, if the neighbors won’t mind, there is space out back for both chickens and the swing we promised our daughter all those months ago as she watched us box up her toys. It has a brick driveway and enough windows to guarantee that sunlight slips in on even the darkest winter days. This isn’t what makes it home, though. I’ve spent years yearning for the right house — the right floors, the right kitchen, the right number of closets. I was looking in the wrong places this whole time, though. Six months without my own place has shown me something I’m not sure I could’ve seen otherwise: Coming home is something we do over and over again. I left my childhood home at 19. I was in a bad spot and in dire need of a clean slate. So I left and took the first apartment I could find — and afford. Every night after jiggling
my keys in the ratty front door locks, I’d walk into my room and smile. This was mine in a way nothing had ever been before. The only things on the wall were things I loved. The only food I bought was what I wanted to eat. For a year I hung out with myself, endeavoring for the first time to forge some semblance of peace with who I was, who I’d been, and who I might be. It was a pretty epic homecoming. And then my landlord sold the building. I had two weeks to collect my belongings and find a new spot. I asked my boyfriend if I could crash with him while I looked for a place and — after making me swear up and down that I would, indeed, find said new place — he said sure. If you’re thinking that I didn’t follow through on my end of that deal, you’re totally right. After a year of climbing over each other in his studio apartment, we decided to take the leap and find a place actually big enough for two. I’d gone from desperately needing space of my own at 19 to intrigue and excitement about the prospect of making a home with another person. And home we made. We painted walls. We got cats. We rigged together something that vaguely resembled curtains. He didn’t put the silverware away correctly or fold his underwear, but after a long day waiting tables and taking night classes, jumping on top of him on the couch was always the perfect end. It was always the end to want. And just like that, he became part of my home. After a couple of years we decided we’d
like to stick together. Forever. And since nothing says forever quite like having a kid, we figured we’d shore up the whole deal by doing just that. Oh — but wait — we’d need a second bedroom. So back into boxes went our things and, with cats meowing at fever pitch in the backseat, we hauled our life for two across town and began building a home for three. And what a home it was. On a fresh June day, with a breeze circling my ankles, I stood perfectly in our back entrance with our newborn baby in my arms. Staring into the house before me, it came into focus in a way it had failed to in the months of living there while waiting for her to arrive. I leaned to her ear and murmured welcome home. I thought I was just talking to her, but as soon as the words left my mouth I understood that I was actually talking to all three of us. And what I realized as I spoke was that these people were my home now. The place I stood in was just a house, no matter how much I loved the walk-in pantry. I lost sight of this moment of course. It eventually slipped back into the recesses of my brain to hang out with all the other things I’m always forgetting, like how badly I need new black stockings. Six months of being between houses has brought it back into focus, though. Home is never any farther from reach than my daughter and my partner’s hands. The yellow house is just what holds us, a guide to bring us back together at the end of each day. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 19
Window Shopping
Shop Smart Shop Local In each issue, Window Shopping highlights interesting and unique items available at area stores. This month we take a look at some great local furniture finds.
Faux Leather Chair and Footstool
Story and photos by Tyler Murphy
Photo provided by The Wood Carte.
Put your feet up and your living room’s clutter away with this recliner/ ottoman set ($75). The footrest opens up to serve as a storage unit. Available at Habitat for Humanity ReStore.
End Table
Hand-Hewn Chairside Stand Constructed of solid hand-hewn pine, this Amishmade piece is one of a complete line of end tables, coffee tables, sofa tables and TV consoles. Available in 3 different colors. $314.95 at The Wood Carte. 20 | Life@Home
Stickley, Audi & Co. is home to a large selection of quality furnishings, including a diverse choice of end tables featuring a variety of designs inspired by antiques. This round wooden table with inlaid gold design ($2,034) is just one of many great choices.
Featured Shops Stickley, Audi & Co. 151 Wolf Road, Albany (518) 458-1846 stickleyaudi.com
Habitat for Humanity ReStore 70 Fuller Road, Albany (518) 275-6638 habitatcd.org/restore
The Wood Carte 1063 State Route 9, Queensbury (518) 793-7655 woodcarte.com
Highlands Double Pedestal Dining set Bring your family together around this distinctive dining set, available in solid cherry or oak. The dining table ($4,271) includes four leaves, allowing it to extend to 122 inches in length. The table-end armchairs ($837 each) are adapted from a 1905 antique model. Side chairs are $743 each. Get the full set at Stickley, Audi & Co.
Stickley, Audi & Co. also features a range of centerpiece art such as these hand-blown glass vases, ranging in price from $70 to $118 per piece.
Amish-Made Boat Bookcase Trio These charming pine pieces, made in Pennsylvania, are available in many different finishes — or unfinished for you DIYers. Ranging in height from 32" to 72", they’re great for books, knick-knacks and more. $59.95 to $249.95 at The Wood Carte.
Photo provided by The Wood Carte.
Hand-Blown Vases
timesunion.com/lifeathome | 21
Window Shopping continued from 21
Our Bloggers Shop
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ONLINE
To stay in our bloggers’ design loop 24/7, go to timesunion.com/lifeathome.
Are you a design and décor junkie? We’ve got your fix at timesunion.com/lifeathome. And check out this month’s picks from our local and national bloggers. There’s more where these came from!
House Things By Brianna Snyder
We Love Lamp We’re totally smitten by this gorgeous antelopehorn-inspired lamp. It was made by the South African design studio Source — run by husbandwife team Trevyn and Julian McGowan — and comes with a polyresin base and white linen shade. It’s 6.5” wide and 23” high, and requires minimal assembly. $169 at West Elm, westelm.com.
Home Décor@518 By Valerie DeLaCruz
Adding a little glamour to your foyer just got easier with this gleaming Camellia bombe chest from Pier One. The hand-painted piece is 24"w x 16"d x 31"h so won’t take up a lot of room but will give a lot of panache. Styled after the curved French accent furniture made
22 | Life@Home
popular during the Regency period over 300 years ago, this updated version mimics more expensive silver leafing and would look great paired with a mirror, artwork, candlestick lamps or your accessory collection. Visit pier1.com.
Color Splash Art and color converge on this Slingerlands home
24â&#x20AC;&#x2021; |â&#x20AC;&#x2021;Life@Home
By Brianna Snyder | Photos by Vincent Giordano
W
hen Anne-Marie GormanDoyle and her husband, Patrick Doyle, lived in Europe, they were tipped off to a furniture sale at their favorite French furniture-maker. “We were moving literally within the next week and we had a half-empty truck to fill,” Gorman-Doyle says. So they filled the other half of their vessel with a gorgeous table, bookshelf, desk and bureau. Those are just a few of the beautiful pieces in this Slingerlands home that make it interesting and special. The house, which the couple bought in 1999, needed a little doing-over when they bought it. And Gorman-Doyle was literally weeks away from giving birth when they bought the home. Once that was settled, “The first thing I did was have the baby,” she says. “And then we didn’t do much of anything.” Gorman-Doyle, who moved from Illinois to London for business school (where she met her Irish husband), didn’t have much experience with home decor. “It took years [to redo the house] because I am just not a natural at this,” she says. “All I knew is I knew what I liked when I saw it. I wanted lots and lots and lots of color.” Gorman-Doyle’s art background helped direct many of her choices. She’s an active
This was just a regular, round table found at a thrift store, but it was converted into a sunflower-shaped game table! timesunion.com/lifeathome | 25
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and enthusiastic artist; she does local theater, the whole family plays music, and every shelf in the house overflows with books. There are four children in this home, ranging in age from 11 to 18; the music room (there’s a music room!) is home to a violin, trombone, and two pianos. Gorman-Doyle chairs the board of Skribblers magazine — “we publish the writing, poetry, prose and artwork of children 12 and under in the Capital Region,” she says — and those interests in art and poetry are reflected everywhere. Just inside the front door, for instance, the walls are painted
a bright and deep yellow. They were painted by GormanDoyle’s friend, the local artist Rae Rau, who did a lot of work in this home along with interior designer Denise Maurer of Denise Maurer Interiors in Troy. A brightly colored harlequin-patterned wall in the kitchen/dining-room area is another of Rau’s contributions and serves as a focal point in the home. (Another fantastic Rau piece is an old table found at a thrift store, which she totally refurbished and fashioned to look like a sunflower. That piece is — appropriately — in the sunroom.) Gorman-Doyle began looking
Local artist Rae Rau painted a harlequin pattern on the dining-room/ kitchen wall. (She also did the sunflower table on the previous page.)
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All I knew is I knew what I liked when I saw it. I wanted lots and lots and lots of color.”
for an interior designer in 2006 and found Maurer. “She showed me her portfolio and I thought it wouldn’t work because it was all so formal,” Gorman-Doyle says. “But then she came back and she said, ‘Look over there. Instead of doing a backsplash, let’s put up chalkboard paint and you can write notes to each other. And I thought, ‘OK. She gets us.” From there, Maurer helped GormanDoyle colorize the house — the living room is a deep pumpkin color, the tile in the kitchen is cobalt blue, the sunroom is bright with yellows, greens and magentas. Maurer also recently helped GormanDoyle redo the master bathroom in bright blues and whites, funky lines and patterns and super-contemporary fixtures. Gorman-Doyle says they’re “done for now” with the house. She got what she wanted: lots and lots and lots of color. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 29
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The Times Union Home Expo will include some great seminars hosted by home experts, such as HGTV’s Taniya Nayak, pictured at right.
Welcome, Home Expo! The former Great Northeast Home Show gets a makeover By Brianna Snyder | Photo by Dan Cutrona
G
et excited! This year marks the first annual Times Union Home Expo. Formerly known as the Great Northeast Home Show, the Times Union Home Expo is going to be a bigger, better version of the GNHS, says Jeff Kiley, magazine advertising manager for the Times Union. “We really wanted to expand the focus to include garden, food and home,” Kiley says. “The word on the streets is [the show is] meant for just remodeling your house, your kitchen your bathroom,” adds Tammy Mortier, event marketer at the Times Union. “We wanted it to be more of a family event to represent everything in the home, not just a focus on remodeling.” This year, the event will feature all kinds of fun and family-friendly events, including an animal-adoption clinic, a battle of the chefs and a “children’s fun zone,” Mortier says, with a bouncy house and other kids’ activities, a Paint and Sip — where people have drinks and paint — and many seminars by home experts, including HGTV’s Taniya Nayak. You’ve seen Nayak on shows such as House Hunters on Vacation and Restaurant: Impossible (on the Food Network). We spoke with Nayak by phone recently in advance of her Home Expo talk, called “Taniya’s Best Advice.” I asked her what usually holds people back from redecorating their homes. “Something people ask a lot is, ‘How do I take the plunge?,’” Nayak says. “How to just tackle the project, that’s the scariest part.
People have great ideas but the execution is what scares them.” Picking a contractor and not spending too much money are two big concerns, she says. If you’ve seen Nayak at work — YouTube her if not; it’s worth it — you know she’s got an almost magical knack for combining style with personal touch. “[This work] comes naturally to me and I feel lucky that it does,” she says. When decorating someone’s home or restaurant, “I choose a lot from what I see in their house already or in their restaurant. … If you can pick out the wholesome things that are meaningful to them, it’s a great starting point.” That might mean choosing one piece of furniture or maybe a meaningful tchotchke and centering an entire room’s design on that piece. The mistake Nayak says many homeowners make is that they get so excited that they want to start tearing down walls and redecorating immediately. If you decide you want to totally overhaul your kitchen on Thursday, she says, don’t expect to be done by Sunday. “The most important thing is to start planning,” she says. “Get some magazines, go online, go on Pinterest, Google images or Houzz[.com] and start to pull together just an idea book.” Get quotes from laborers — will you need an electrician? A
Taniya’s Top Tip: Some people get the urge to paint every room in their house a different color. Nayak says that can start to seem disordered or jarring. Instead, choose one paint palette for your house; grab one of those paint cards at Home Depot (or wherever you’re buying paint) and use only colors on that strip. “It’s a nice way to add contrast to small spaces,” she says.
plumber? — and get multiple quotes. You might find big disparities between what various vendors charge. And if you have no idea what to do with your house but know you want to do something, Nayak says it’s worth investing a couple hundred dollars to hire an interior designer. “That’ll give you some direction,” she says. See Taniya Nayak at the Times Union Home Expo on Saturday, Feb. 8 at 3:30 p.m. The Expo runs Feb. 7, 3-9 p.m.; Feb. 8, 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; Feb. 9, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. at the Times Union Center and Empire Plaza, Albany. Visit timesunion.com/homeexpo. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 31
Trend Watch Gray is in!
What’s hot and what’s not for 2014 home décor
A
vocado-colored appliances, wallpaper border, shiny brass chandeliers — they are all home décor trends that had us oohing and ahhing decades ago. But, as with fashion, what works at one point, eventually looks dated and has you asking “What was I thinking?” So if you’re ready to infuse a little 2014 décor into your space, we have tips from experts on everything from color to design and building trends.
WHAT’S IN Color: It’s all about gray, say experts. Warm grays work well in living rooms, bedrooms and bathrooms. “All colorways of gray continue to be strong,” says Brendan Flanigan, interior designer and owner of Brendan Flanigan Design in Saratoga Springs. “It is natural, serene and comes in so many different 32 | Life@Home
shades. You can use [it] to create different moods just by going a swatch or two up on the color chart.” Design experts also favor lighter shades of earth tones and neutrals while introducing pops of color with pillows, rugs, artwork and window treatments, according to Stacy Snell, owner of Design on 20 in Guilderland. Bright blue, Flanigan says, is prevalent in many shades, from Moroccan blue with a touch of green to bright navy. Another color trend is the use of monochromatic color schemes. Flanigan suggests thinking beyond neutrals, though. Instead pick a color you love, he says, and layer it on top of itself. “Yes, this will require an eye for color, a few trials, and/or the nod of a designer, but our clients have been loving this look,” Flanigan says. “It is new, hasn’t been done,
and really shows the nuances in color.”
DESIGN TRENDS Increasingly people are getting customfitted slip covered sofas because they are easy to clean, especially for those who have pets or children, says Maggie Fromm, the selections coordinator at Hodorowski Homes In Schenectady and a design consultant at Pottery Barn. Bronze and brushed nickel hardware, such as cabinet knobs and lighting fixtures, are also popular. “The most upgraded feature I see in selections appointments at Hodorowski Homes is the upgrade from a chrome faucet to a bronze or brushed nickel finish,” Fromm says. Texture is popular with homeowners now, too, and complements the neutral hues seen in so many homes, according to Snell. This can be highlighted in everything
Photos: GettyImages. Bedroom, RonTech2000; Kitchen/Livingroom, Spaces Images.
By Kristi Barlette
from wood furniture and leather accessowoods,” Fromm says. ries to mercury glass lighting and linen and Customers also prefer white, wider trim velvet fabrics. and window casing. That white hue is Metallic finishes are becoming warmer extending to fireplace mantels and kitchen with lots of antique brass, brushed gold and cabinets. Cabinetry is either very light copper on the market, says Snell. Sparkle (white) or incredibly dark. has found its way into all design styles with “I’m not seeing any stain finished in the the use of large mirrors, crystal lamp bases middle,” says Fromm. and acrylic furniture and accessories. Flanigan says he’s seeing an upsurge in “Mid-century modern is a huge trend,” large-scale renovations to historic homes. says Snell. “Reproduction furniture styles Clients love the cachet of being in historic with a nod to iconic ’50s modern.” towns and neighborhoods, but want all Clients are looking for a cohesive flow the comforts of a new home, including a from room to room, but still enough variacustom kitchen, built-ins, more storage, tion to create interest, Flanigan says. You want it all to coordinate and flow. Mid-century modern Dining rooms are a great space to do something strong and edgy that complements what you’ve done in the rest of the home. “Dining rooms are like lining on a jacket,” says Flanigan. “You wouldn’t want it everywhere, but that little bit of expression is just right to complete the canvas.” Another design trend is painting an accent wall with a color on the same paint strip but darker or lighter tone.
energy efficient windows and appliances, he says. “We’re tailoring the space to the way people live, while bringing the historic architecture and modern design [and function] to balance,” says Flanigan. The large open space and floor plans of new construction have been refined into more separation, although not necessarily with walls. Use of double pocket doors, archways, pillars, built-ins and fireplaces are architectural details that give some separation while still preserving an open feel, and adding flexibility.
Open floor plan
HOME BUILDING TRENDS Fromm says dark hardwood is the going trend. “Every customer I’ve had in the last month has been interested in darker
Warm wood
What’s out overall • Light hardwood floors • Stained trim • Stained fireplace mantels • Separate formal dining rooms with a fine china cabinet. Instead, try one open floor plan that includes a kitchen with an island or counter space for bar stools, a dining area and a living room. “People want to be all together in one big room for family events, and not stuck in a
formal dining room,” Fromm says. • Garden tubs with jets for master bathrooms. No one uses them and they take up space and collect dust, according to Fromm.
Modern furnishings are shying away from metals and are now available in warm wood, Snell says.
• Oversized floral patterns.
• Cabinetry covering your appliances. The simple industrial lines of appliances are the perfect complement to cabinetry, resulting in an authentic culinary look, Flanigan says. Stop covering your appliance, but do opt for stainless.
• On the other extreme, ultra-modern styles have been replaced with clean lines in natural finishes.
• Over decorating: Is every room in your home a theme? Even in consultations where clients take a bit to
• Overdone window treatments • Matchy formal dining rooms
see their wares aren’t showing well, they love their homes after a purge, according to Flanigan. It can be as easy as loading some boxes, rotating your stock, and taking down that window treatment you painstakingly selected the fringe for 13 years ago. • Contrived design: Make it your own. Add personal effects, buy something vintage, build something or show a collection. If your home looks like a major store or showroom (that you are not in love with), it’s time to switch it up. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 33
Razor Sharp Entrepreneur Wesley John looks to create the perfect knife
By Cari Scribner | Photos by Leif Zurmuhlen
A
n aspiring chef with culinary classes under his belt, Wesley John of Albany was quickly dissatisfied with one of a serious cook’s most valued tools: his knives. And so, after shopping around and testing what was out there, John took a step most gourmet cooks wouldn’t take on – he designed, built a prototype, tested and is now marketing and selling (as well as using) his own line of knives. Called Macklin & Company after John’s middle name and also the family’s Welsh name, the collection includes the flagship line, the Legacy Series. The series includes two chef’s knives, paring knife, pot fork and a leather knife roll to carry the tools. The story of how John became an entrepreneur in such a specialized market begins when he was growing up in the home 34 | Life@Home
of a superb cook: his mother. “My mother was an inspiration to me; some of her dishes I have never been able to fully duplicate, despite their simplicity,” John says. “I had toyed with the idea of becoming a chef but never really pursued it. While in college I worked in a restaurant part time. I read cookbooks voraciously.” With a thriving career as a commercial lender in the banking field, John put his cooking dreams on hold until five years ago, when he enrolled in culinary school at Schenectady County Community College. “I worked by day and took classes in the evening,” John says. “Classes were a joy; I loved every minute of it. My goal is to become a chef once I retire.” But the tools he tried were lacking, so John set about making better knives, with help from his sister-in-law, who’s a profes-
Wesley, of Macklin & Company, and his daughter, Elizabeth. sional chef. “The problem was, the spine along the back edge wore out, so I did methodical research; there was a lot of trial and error,” John says. “It took more than a year to make a prototype. Now, I can slice a tomato so thin you can see through it.” Macklin Knives are constructed with high-grade, stain- and wearresistant steel that allows them to retain their sharpness longer than traditional knives. It’s a much more difficult steel to work with during the manufacturing process, which is part of the cost of the collection. “I learned more about metallurgy than I ever care to know,” John says with a laugh. The spine and heel of the blade are rounded, which provides comfort during longer use. The stabilized, double-dyed Box Elder handle is a Native American wood that has a beautiful grain, making it distinctive and unique. John describes the design as “the best of Japanese and AmericanEuropean style.” John chose the name Legacy Series because the knives are destined to become heirlooms. “These are knives that will be passed down to their children,” John says. “I want a person to buy a knife and leave it as one of their wonderful belongings. These knives will last longer than one lifetime.” All of the materials and labor to produce Macklin Knives come from the U.S. The knives are handmade in Shelburne, Mass. The oil-tanned, 8-pocket knife rolls,
impervious to water, are made by hand by a woman at Jenne Leatherworks in Saratoga Springs. John’s assistant is his daughter, 15-year-old Elizabeth, who’s in charge of the company’s social media marketing. “We’re expecting a really great holiday season,” Elizabeth John says. “We’re not overseas yet, but we’re hoping.” Next up for Macklin Knives is a line of Japanese knives. Who knows what John will cook up after that. “It took a huge investment of time and money to get this far, and we’ll keep going,” John says. “This was truly a labor of love.”
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timesunion.com/lifeathome | 35
Design Defined
The Endless Search for Storage
By Lucianna Samu | Photo by Mark Samu
A
sk any builder for the top five must-haves in new construction and you’d have your response without hesitation: Kitchen with a walk-in pantry, two sinks in the master bath, large walk-in master closet, hardwood floors, media room, tons of storage. The very idea of homeowners coveting a list of must-haves is a relatively new phenomenon, and one I was recently able to put to a test thanks to a little mishap with (off) a ladder. Nursing a pair of dislocated ribs and hoisting the white flag in surrender, I begrudgingly agreed to follow my doctor’s order for bed rest. Using my time to watch around-the-clock home improvement pro36 | Life@Home
graming, I learned a great deal about the modern American homeowners must-have list, and calculated the probabilities for what I believe will rise to the number one item on everyone’s new build list of desires: Storage, storage, and more storage. It’s serendipity really, that once I leave the comfort of my nonstop home improvement extravaganza, I’ll be returning to work on two new construction projects. Fine tuning the space planning for new construction and renovations alike is my specialty, and my newfound design compatriots are providing me a wealth of creative solutions, in response to the dilemma it appears everyone faces at the moment:
Where can we put all the stuff? I’ll spare you my opinions, on the whys and what-the-hecks, of how it is everyone claims to be feeling so pinched for storage or closet space. Let’s agree this is partly a result of our wish to keep organized but mostly a function of our penchant for coats, and hats, and boots, and holiday decorations, shoes and more shoes, stuff, stuff and more stuff. As a design mandate, carving out a closet everywhere the opportunity exists isn’t necessarily difficult, but like every good design solution, a little planning can transform even the most mundane solutions into space planning triumphs.
CAPITAL DISTRICT COIN DEALERS ASSOCIATION Beginning with what is truly the mousetrap of storage — the common hook — making space for our daily needs is easily improved with a little ingenuity. Like me, my television friends have an affinity for using multiple hooks. Depending on what will be hanging from them, hooks affixed to lengths of wood can be stacked in rows, making space for a row of coats, then a row of scarfs, maybe another row of purses. Second only to the common hook in usefulness is the common hanger. I prefer the wooden kind and hang them, too, from the hooks. Belts, bags, scarves, tights, jewelry, towels — the possibilities are endless. All the hook and hanger storage scenario requires is a tiny bit of extra time. Recently, I outfitted an entire closet with boots hung from wood tension hangers. Not only did this idea keep the boots from flopping over, but it placed them all within easy reach and full view. Tension hangers are becoming difficult to find but are well worth the effort to source. Measuring a mere 8 inches wide, they make for the easy storage of table cloths, bed linens, and boots as it turns out, inside a shallow closet, or simply from a closet pole that can be hung wherever space allows. The dream closet of the moment is costing many who own older homes a bedroom. I’ve pondered the limits of 1950s-era closets, wracking my brain trying to recall how many coats and shoes I myself owned growing up. I was relieved to be reminded, during my bed rest television festival, that modern era house hunters are unwilling to compromise when it comes to a big master
bedroom closet. To achieve this must-have when the actual closet is nowhere to be found, setting built-in closet shelving flush against the bedroom wall is gaining momentum. These arrangements, while similar to including closed sub-closets within the confines of a walk-in closet, are offered up in endless configurations to those who shop catalogues. Available now in pretty colors and serviceable finishes, what could have once been perceived as an ad hoc storage solution is instead a perfectly acceptable approach to gaining space. Another design element that’s fast becoming a boon to those on the hunt for concealed storage is “real” barn door hardware. Fitted with this by-pass style hardware, doors can be hung to conceal any recessed space, and travel along a track affixed overhead or from the ceiling. Taking stock in whatever space an older home may have to offer, sometimes cutting off one end of a room entirely, and lining the width end to end with doors on a barn hardware track, is a ready made spot for this type of setup. I can’t recall the last time I didn’t install at least one barn style door in a renovated home, and I’m pleased to see all my daytime television design compatriots appreciate the flexibility of this ingenious means to found storage. Like the pocket door, these barn door systems require less space than a door that swings. And so, another idea comes to mind — that hooks can be placed on the doors, and hangers can be hung from the hooks, and more stuff can be stored where once there was none. Think it’s time for me to get back on my feet!
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Clean Living
A year-long cleaning calendar to keep your home spic and span
By Kristi Barlette | Illustrations by Emily Jahn
Forget waiting until spring to start your household cleaning. Instead, keep your home clean year-round with our monthly calendar.
JANUARY
FEBRUARY
MARCH
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
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1. Empty and clean out all closets, cabinets and the pantry. Remove everything, wipe it all down and vacuum the floor. This will also give you a chance to discard expired or unused items. 2. Designate one area to be your list spot. Whether it’s on paper or on your phone, it should always be with you. Some common lists: shopping, books to read list, errands, home to-do list, work to-do list, music to download list and a kids to-do list. 3. Organize your home paperwork and files by Jan. 31. Get your taxes in early. 4. Make a resolution to get organized by the end of the year. Set yourself up for success with some easy and obvious progress. Take a walk around your home and purge the obvious trash and unnecessary items. Was losing weight also on your list of resolutions? You just lost several pounds of clutter.
1. Vacuum shades and blinds when they are still up. Next, wash in the tub. Let them dry thoroughly before rehanging. This will also give you an opportunity to see if the high areas of your windows are dust- and cobweb-free. 2. Dust all light fixtures, ceilings and ledges. These should be places that aren’t dusted on a weekly basis and need a step stool or ladder. 3. Vacuum and wipe down your washer and dryer. Naturally, your lint drawer should be cleaned out after every other drying session (or so). If you think your dryer is not performing at full capacity, you might want to disconnect the exhaust duct and remove any blockages. 4. Wash seasonal linens and bedding.
1. Prepare for summer: Get lawn care company quotes, pool maintenance quotes, and research kids’ camps. Decide if you want to participate in a CSA. 2. If you have indoor plants, dust the leaves and clean the floor or shelves under the pots. If you really love your plants, bring them into the shower and lightly rinse them. It’s easy for indoor plants to get dusty and dry during the winter months. 3. Prepare for spring cleaning: Make sure you have enough cleaning solutions (glass cleaner, furniture polish, all-purpose cleaner, bathroom cleaner, Magic Erase sponges) and cleaning equipment (vacuum bags, rags, paper towels, toilet bowl brushes, rubber gloves). If you do your spring cleaning yourself, create your list room by room so you don’t get overwhelmed. 4. Clean all light fixtures.
5. Wash all baseboards. Use a dryer sheet to clean; the dust clings to them and they smell great.
APRIL
MAY
JUNE
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
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1. Clean your window screens. First, vacuum the screens from the inside (make sure to cover your floor). Remove the screens, squirt them down with the hose, and let dry in the sun. 2. If your windows fold in, wash the exterior windows and sills. If they don’t fold in, try to reach first floor windows and wash the exterior. Try newspaper or coffee filters for streak-free windows. 3. Usually, by the end of April, the snow and mud have dissipated. At this point it would be good to get your rugs and carpets cleaned. You can rent cleaning machines or schedule a service. 4. Wipe down walls and doors for fingerprints.
1. Clean your garage. Organize tools, sports equipment and make sure your lawn care items are ready to go. 2. Clean patio/outdoor furniture. 3. Now that the weather is nicer, it’s easier to thoroughly clean your car. Get out your shop vac and clean out all the little pebbles and such that have collected all winter. If the dirt is minimal, you can probably use your home vacuum. Or, if you want to use a powerful vacuum, collect some quarters and go to your nearest carwash. 4. Store winter items, donate what you didn’t wear this season, and re-arrange for spring and summer. 5. Vacuum under and behind beds and bedroom furniture.
1. Clean walls and touch up paint where necessary. Remember touch-up paint should be light and shouldn’t require you to repaint the entire wall. 2. Switch warm bedding to light bedding. Use this to easily add a different color to your room. 3. Organize your bookshelves. If you have kids, store away seasonal books and books that are too easy for them. Remove books from bookshelves, dust shelves and books. Donate any unwanted books to your local library. 4. Organize linens, linen closets, bathrooms and guest bedrooms. Purge your guest bedroom of old clothing and donate, and go through and toss old medications, toiletries and makeup. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 41
SEPTEMBER
JULY
AUGUST
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
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1. Clean the inside of all your garbage cans and trash bins. Bring everything out to your driveway on a nice day, put a few drops of liquid dish soap in each one, and use the hose to power wash them. 2. Re-stock your medicine cabinet. You might have done this in January but you should go through this twice a year. Make sure nothing has expired and that you are stocked with Band-Aids, pain medications, toiletries, allergy meds, cold medicine, etc. 3. Clean the gutters, organize your shed, make sure your grill is being consistently cleaned. 4. Don’t forget the clutter that gathers on porches and other outdoor spaces. Tend the garden. 5. Scrub grout in shower with an old toothbrush; also works great on toilet hinges.
OCTOBER 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
1. Fire Protection Week is this month. Make sure your smoke and monoxide detectors have fresh batteries. Also, dust the detectors to make sure that the units stay clean. 2. Replace lighter bedding with warmer bedding. 3. If you have central air, change your air filters every 30-60 days. You might want to do it more frequently if you have allergies or pets, or less frequently if you have no pets, single occupancy or a vacation home. 4. Change the setting on your humidifier from summer to winter. 5. Clean out the garage, so as the weather turns cold, you can fit your car in the garage. 6. Sweep off steps leading to home and clean exterior doors.
1. Most homes have a “collect all” spot for keys, mail, loose change and random items. Make sure you only have one spot and keep it as organized as possible. If you have a junk drawer you can organize that using a utensil tray/organizer to separate items.
1. If you have window A/C units, remove them or cover them for the winter. If you remove them, clean the filter and drain the unit of water. 2. Clean random appliances and furniture — coffee maker, stove hood vents, china cabinet, knickknack cabinet.
2. Make sure all your Tupperware have matching tops. 3. Prepare a monthly meal plan. Either get a recipe magazine or go online. Print recipes, put in plastic packets that can go into a three ring binder, and divide by each week. This makes things much easier when it’s time to go food shopping and prepare weekly meals.
3. Organize your kids’ homework area, backpacks, lunch boxes so everyone is ready for the morning rush. 4. Clean inside all appliances as well as behind. 5. Defrost freezer.
4. School and work schedules are more regular come fall so establish some good daily routines now.
6. Clean dishwasher: Run an empty cycle with a cup of vinegar inside a measuring cup; then sprinkle baking soda around the bottom of interior; this will help freshen the smell.
5. Clean all vents and registers, replace old filters. 6. Organize your office. Label items and purge or shred old paperwork.
NOVEMBER 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
DECEMBER 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
1. Prepare for holiday guests. Move all your furniture and clean underneath. Vacuum in between cushions and under beds. Leave no ottoman unturned.
1. Go through your basement closets, and rooms to organize clothes, toys, and other items. Organize by three piles: keep, discard and donate. Keep track of your donated items for tax purposes.
2. Clean rugs/carpets. Yes, you may have done this back in April. Twice a year is typical if you have people in and out of your house, kids or pets.
2. Prepare for guests again: Make sure you have plenty of nice towels, bathroom supplies and thoughtful items in the bedrooms. You can find a small basket and fill it with shampoo, conditioner, contact solution, a toothbrush, toothpaste and dental floss. They may not need it but if they forget something it would be nice to have. Make sure the bedrooms have are tissues, working lights, extra bedding, extra pillows and some water bottles.
3. Thoroughly clean out your refrigerator and oven. If friends and family are visiting they will most likely be opening one of these appliances. 4. Organize your food storage containers since you’ll be handing out or receiving holiday leftovers and baked goods in the coming months. Clear out outdated food; don’t forget the freezer.
3. Take down your holiday decorations in a timely manner.
5. Clean laundry room. Create a cleaning bucket with all of your needed cleaning supplies that you can carry from room to room; this uses your time more efficiently.
Sources: Erica Gray, office manager, The Maids in Albany; Debreen Oliva, owner of D.O. Organize in Saratoga Springs; Katie Whitt, owner of Albany Home Cleaning in Albany.
42 | Life@Home
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FEB. 7 - 9, 2014 TIMES UNION CENTER & EMPIRE STATE PLAZA
FEATURING: INTERIOR DESIGNER
TANIYA NAYAK Saturday, Feb. 8, 2014 Taniya Nayak from HGTV and Food Network’s “Restaurant Impossible” is here with not just any advice, but her BEST ADVICE on all things design. She’ll dish her inside scoop on kitchen and bathroom tips, how to get the most bang for your buck, when to hire a designer, and plenty more! You don’t want to miss this exclusive sit down session with our celebrity designer.
OTHER ATTRACTIONS INCLUDE: The Earl B. Feiden 2014 Battle of the Chef
Saturday, February 8, 2014s Local Chefs will compete at the Home Expo for the Capital District Top Chef. The audience will have an opportunity to win gift certificates to local restaurants and be a guest judge. Stay tuned for more information and how you can nominate a chef to participate. Sponsored by Earl B. Feiden.
Paint & Sip Studio, A New Way to Paint the Town
Friday, February 7, 2014 40 lucky people will have the opportunity to work with a local artist from Paint & Sip and be instructed step-by-step to paint a one-of-a-kind painting. No experience necessary. Just a fun event to relax and enjoy painting and maybe find a newfound talent! Sponsored by Earl B. Feiden.
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Problem Solved
Pole Problems
You don’t have to empty your wallet to semi-finish the basement
BEFORE
By Brianna Snyder “After” photo by Emily Jahn
Top Tip “Think outside of the box and consider adapting inexpensive materials — like bamboo — to create one-of-a-kind looks,” Maurer says.
PROBLEM Those ugly support poles are usually just an unfortunate feature of an un- or semifinished basement. But Denise Maurer, of Denise Maurer Interiors in Troy, had a solution for her clients in Niskayuna. The homeowners wanted to turn their partially-finished basement into a family recreation room, Maurer says, so she suggested some “inexpensive, quick, fun and non-traditional ideas.”
SOLUTION They sprayed the basement ceiling white, “including all the duct work and wiring,” Maurer says. On one wall, they had a mural installed, and then they put down vinyl flooring. And those pesky poles? Those were wrapped with bamboo poles to add a funky vibe to the basement and obscure the obtrusive poles.
timesunion.com/lifeathome | 45
MONDAY, JANUARY 20 10AM - 4PM · ALBANY MARRIOTT, 189 WOLF ROAD
Top Employers ready to hire!
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GET TOP CAREER ADVICE IN AN HOUR! Sign up for the FREE career advice speed roundtable and talk to experts in interviewing techniques, how to make a lasting first impression, social media and your career, how to network, how to get in the door and the top 5 skills you need to succeed in today’s workforce. Seating limited to 60 on first-come, first-served basis. Last roundtable sold out. Register at http://speedcareerroundtable.eventbrite.com
GET THE RESPECT AND RAISE YOU DESERVE Attend the Women@Work breakfast panel, Show Me the Money, 7:30-9am. Cost is $25, includes breakfast. Corporate tables available. Register at http://womenatwork-raise.eventbrite.com
To reserve your booth, contact Erin Rosa at 518.454.5493 or erosa@timesunion.com, or your Times Union representative
DIY Diva
Vintage Clothes as Art
Changeable décor to get all hung up in Story and photos by Megan Willis
V
intage clothes (especially ones with oceans of sequins) have had a hypnotizing effect on me. I’ve been hanging prized pieces around the house for about as long as I can remember. Some garments are picked up from thrift stores. Others, like the plaid pinafore pictured here, were hand sewn for my mom-in-law by her mom. I’ve staple-gunned a stranger’s sailor uniform to my wall and once saw a bride and groom’s attire festoon a fireplace mantel in a magazine. It looked magnificent and infinitely better than it ever looked in storage.
Do it yourself • Go through family trunks and boxes;
handmade family heirlooms are great.
• Doors are great for hanging and
framing a treasured garment.
• Infant clothes are nice in small
• Keep clothes out of sunlight as
kids’ rooms and let you hold those babies a little longer.
much as possible. They fade quicker than you’d think.
• Vintage coats and ties draped on wood
hangers work the Mad Men vibe.
• Photograph fragile garments, experiment
with filters and hang the pictures.
Megan Willis has a life-long passion for turning trash into treasure. Her blog, The Davenport Chronicles, can be found at blog.timesunion.com/davenport. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 47
Dollars & Sense
Traveling
When you get a great price, don’t wait!
Light Travel tips that are light on the wallet
By Laurie Lynn Fischer
C
abin fever sets in. It’s time to take — or at least plan — a vacation. Whether your idea of a getaway means hitting the slopes, the beach, or some other destination, here’s how to hit the road without hitting your bank account too hard.
1. TRAVELING LIGHT
2. BOOK SMART How you make your reservations can 48 | Life@Home
make a big difference in how much you spend, says McKeehan, giving these suggestions: • Travel is like shopping; book when things are on sale. • Book a package instead of making reservations piece by piece. • Booking is like the stock market — here today, gone tomorrow. When you get a great price, pounce on it. Don’t wait!
3. TIMING IS ALL Be flexible. If you’re willing to work within a window of time or depart from home at the drop of a hat, you can score some great deals. If you travel mid-week, tickets won’t cost as much, says McKeehan. “If you’re traveling for a few days, avoid the weekend,” she says. It’s also less expensive to travel at the beginning or end of the season, suggests McKeehan. Not only will you save money,
you’ll miss the crowds. “Everyone wants to ski or go to Hawaii in the winter,” says Gerling. “Consider this type of vacation in off-peak times — going skiing in the springtime, for example. If you can avoid the weeks that the children are off school, you can save a lot. I have found going the first week in December or right after New Year’s is a great time to travel.”
4. FRUGAL FOOD Economize on eating, starting at the airport. “Bring snacks along when traveling with your children,” McKeehan says. Airport food is expensive; plus, it’s probably not as good as what you supply, she says. Once you reach your destination, patronizing local bakeries, markets, and cafes that are off the beaten track can save expense and expose you more to the local culture. “Go to a local grocery store and purchase water and snacks,” recommends Gerling. “It’s much less expensive then eating at the hotel.”
Photo: Richard Drury/GettyImages.
“Pack light and carry on,” says Cindy McKeehan, president of McGeary’s Travel in Pine Bush. If all you have is a carry-on case, you can save time and money. You’ll avoid per-bag and overweight expenses, plus you won’t have to wait at the baggage carousel or worry about your luggage getting lost. Most airlines now charge a fee for checked bags, says Amy Gerling of East Greenbush Travel. She has more than 27 years of experience as a travel consultant; she’s known on Twitter as TravelGerl. “Pack your suitcase and then remove half,” she suggests. “I use this myself. You can always wear the same outfit more then once. Try to coordinate, so you can wear same pants or skirt with different tops. Remember: you will never see these people again, so who cares if you wear the same outfit?”
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6. THE REAL DEAL Many venues offer other discounts for seniors, military personnel, students and children, Gerling says. Sometimes, the break comes through membership in an organization such as AAA or the AARP, she says. “Take advantage of specials on hotels,” says Gerling. “Many times they offer upgrades, free breakfasts, and sometimes free nights. In off-peak times, Disney may offer free dining plans.” Buy multiple-use passes before you go, suggests McKeehan. They might be good
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Work with a local travel professional to plan and book your vacation, advises Sandy Thomas-Comenole of Celtic Travel in Albany. Travel agents provide valuable services that can save you a lot of money and aggravation, she says. “Their expertise, knowledge and experience will help you with all aspects of your vacation,” she says. Travel agents can help budget-conscious travelers find the best deals and get free perks, she says. Travel agents are also there for you, for instance, if you miss a flight or if a flight is delayed or cancelled, she says. Don’t just go online, cautions Gerling. “The Internet is great for researching your options, but not all you read or see is the truth,” she warns. “We are local and real people! We are a phone call away if you encounter any problems once traveling.”
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8. JUST IN CASE It’s better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it. People buy car insurance, health insurance and house insurance. Travel insurance can be equally important, according to Celtic Tours. “Purchase travel insurance to protect your trip investment and yourself while traveling,” Thomas-Comenole recommends. “This is huge in saving money and frustration if anything were to go wrong.” Bethlehem native Laurie Lynn Fischer is a regular Life@Home contributor who began her investment portfolio and launched her professional journalism career as a teenager.
· call 518- 454-5358
In London, they call it the Underground. In Paris, it’s the Metro. Taking subways, trains, buses, jitneys and ferries gives you a chance to get a feel for the locals. You’ll save money if you use public transportation instead of renting a car, says McKeehan. You can also ride bikes, boats or hoof it.
for Breakfast and Lunch 9am to 3pm Monday thru Friday!
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Photo: ©iStockphoto.com/Neustockimages.
If you dine at restaurants for every meal, you won’t have as much time or money left to spend on sightseeing or snorkeling. Instead, Gerling says, “You could eat a big breakfast, skip lunch, and then have a large dinner or you could have a large lunch, late in the day, and then snack for dinner.” Consider renting a villa or condo, suggests McKeehan. “Bring along food, have a barbecue and enjoy your surroundings,” she says. If you stay in a hotel, pick one that offers free breakfast and WiFi, she says. And if you do go out to eat, try someplace that’s “off the main drag,” she says. “So many travel writers have inexpensive recommendations.”
Living Green
A
look back on the 2013 Living Green columns provides an abundance of New Year’s resolution ideas. From home energy audits to safer sunscreen to ways to recycle hosiery, it’s been an eye-opening 12 months for me. My resolutions are to make a more conscious effort to do more than sort out recyclables from household trash, taking into account 50 | Life@Home
the following revelations: Startling, inspirational and just plain quirky, the new book Zero Waste Home by Bea Johnson offers a plentitude of easy and odd ways to reduce household trash and recyclables. What makes Johnson an expert? Her family of four produces just one quart of garbage a year that needs
By Cari Scribner
to be toted to the curb for trash pick-up. Through composting, streamlining and replacing, Johnson maintains a household that’s healthier for the earth and her family. In a world often defined by possessions, the family began by actively downsizing, donating 80 percent of their belongings. The book’s lovely photos show a stark, bright home with little or no clutter.
Photo: Luciano Lozano/GettyImages.
Eco-Resolutions
American households spend an average of $1,036 per year on food that is wasted, for a staggering total of $2.5 billion across the country.
and using turkey lacers as toothpicks. Some initiatives didn’t make sense for Johnson, such as making the family’s butter, and if you dared show up for a dinner party with a boxed pie, you’d be asked to take the packaging home with you and not bring it next time. Johnson’s book is one of extremes, but her mission is to make small changes that, combined, lead to a greener American family lifestyle. The brand of pantyhose I turn to at drugstores, No Nonsense, collects all brands of used pantyhose, which can be turned into park benches, playground equipment, carpets and even toys. Fulfill another resolution by finally cleaning out your dresser drawers and separating the hosiery, nylon knee highs and tights you no longer wear. Then log onto nononsense. com/pantyhoserecycling.aspx to download and print a mailing label. Bring to your nearest shipping center and send away. Collections are handled by a North Carolina No Nonsense plant and then donated to a recycling facility.
Johnson was inspired in part by the Laura Ingalls Wilder collection of Little House books many of us may read as youngsters. With a mantra of “reduce, reuse, recycle, rot,” some of the hundreds of tips in Zero Waste Home include replacing Saran Wrap and plastic food bags with various sizes of canning jars, wrapping her kids’ lunches in clean cloth towels rather than lunch bags,
This summer I will buy extra pairs of flip-flops to support the Flip Flops For Families organization, which ships the rubber footwear all over the world to less fortunate families who walk barefoot in their daily lives. Flip-flops are collected rather than closed-toe shoes because they’re a breathable, light option that can be worn in the hot and humid climates of Africa, South America and other parts of the world. To participate, log onto flipflopsforfamilies.org and click “Donate Here.” You’ll have to mail your donations to Florida, but since the average pair is 13 ounces or less, postage fees are small, especially considering the impact your donation will have on the lives of others less fortunate. A sobering statistic from the Environmental Protection Agency: American households spend an average of $1,036 per year on food that is wasted, for a staggering total of $2.5 billion across the country. More food reaches landfills and incin-
erators than any other single material in municipal solid waste. In 2010 alone, more than 34 million tons of food waste was generated, with only 3 percent channeled from landfills and incinerators for composting. Take heart and support grassroots organizations springing up locally to help alleviate this cycle of waste. Slow Food Saratoga is part of a global grassroots movement with thousands of members supporting smarter food practices, focusing on community and the environment. The group’s mission is to strengthen the community’s bond with foods produced locally, including local farms. Slow Food Saratoga partners with many local farms producing everything from fruits and veggies to Angus beef, promoting growers who supply healthy foods as an alternative to the fast-food lifestyle. Make a resolution to check out slowfoodsaratoga.com for listings of events such as Capital Region Slow Food dinners to support this group that envisions global change in how and what we eat. Resolve to give a gift of cloth diapers at baby showers. I was disheartened to discover that disposable diapers are the third largest single consumer item in landfills, and represent about 4 percent of solid waste. In a house with a child in diapers, disposables make up 50 percent of household waste. And more than 300 pounds of wood, 50 pounds of petroleum and 20 pounds of chlorine are used to produce disposable diapers for one baby each year. There are myriad alternatives to disposables, including the Tidy Tots washable diaper system that includes a patented cover made of waterproof fabric that’s so durable, it’s used in the medical field. You can shop for this product and more at Green Conscience Home in Saratoga Springs. The store also offers baby cribs that have non-toxic finishes, manufactured at a Forest Stewardship Certified facility, and all factory wastes are recycled. Here’s to a happy, healthy New Year to you and your family. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 51
Down the Garden Path
A miniature garden arbor and walkway make a cute setting for your fairies.
Life in Miniature
Adventures in fairy gardening
By Kerry Ann Mendez | Photos courtesy Natureworks
I
just wrapped up garden maintenance for the day and it is a blustery 20 degrees outside. I know. You’re thinking I’ve been in the eggnog again. Nope. I was just getting my daily garden fix from a fairy garden in the sun room. Now gardeners in the Northeast can truly garden year-round. Fairy gardening, or miniature gardening as adult fans prefer to call it, has become wildly popular in recent years. It releases the inner child in us all. Fairy gardening is an easy way to introduce children to the
52 | Life@Home
joy and life-time hobby of gardening. These whimsical gardens also warm the souls of elderly plant lovers who are not able to garden as they once were. And for some, it’s a way to realize our landscape dreams, even if we cannot afford the life-size version. These miniature landscapes, though small in scale, can still pack a wallop of satisfaction, and are unquestionably lowmaintenance and wee little money. For great advice on how to create magical fairy gardens, I went to the
queen of miniatures — Diane St. John at Natureworks garden center (naturework. com) in Northford, Conn. She helps folks of all ages release their gardening fantasies and overcome the hesitation of building their first fairy hamlet. “It’s easy. Just put a plant, rock and some moss together and ta-da, you have a simple fairy garden. If it moves you, add some hardscaping, such as a patio or stone path. Then tuck in a cute little chair, arbor, gazing ball or whatever and the fairies will come.”
Start with a container that grabs your fancy. As long as it has a drainage hole, it will work. Diane prefers clay pots, as they tend to breathe better. Be sure to use a quality indoor potting medium. As with outdoor gardening, great soil is the key to great plants. Organic Mechanics Blend Potting Soil, which includes worm castings, is a popular pick at Natureworks. After placing the soil in the container, fashion the landscape. In many ways, the same garden design principles apply. Remember to consider scale; how colors work together; putting taller plants or structures in the back of the garden (from where it is most often viewed); and varying foliage sizes, shapes, colors and textures. Actually, designing miniature gardens is wonderful practice for creating gorgeous shade beds, as most of the color and interest also comes from foliage. There are oodles of darling plants to fill your garden. For rooms with bright light, Diane recommends Fittonia (lovely leaf patterns in red, pink, silver or white); Hypoestes (funky pink, red or white spotted foliage); hens and chicks; creeping thymes and tiny succulents. Selaginella (spikemoss); moss harvested from your own backyard (or packaged dehydrated moss that is easily revived); Soleirolia (baby’s tears); Nephthytis (cool, limey-green leaves); Peperomia and miniature ferns such as Autumn fern and Maidenhairs are perfect for dimly lit spaces. If you want flowering plants, they will most likely have to be faux … but some remarkably good-looking choices are available.
M
ost fairy gardens also include some type of path or patio made from stones or gravel, as well as whimsical décor. Benches, arbors, bird baths, trellises, bridges and cottages are popular furnishings. You can also tuck in bunnies, squirrels and baby deer without fear of the garden being devoured, or go wild and toss in some pink flamingos! Diane encourages folks to include a small trinket they have tucked away in a drawer that holds special memories for them — perhaps a sea shell or piece of jewelry. A fairy garden is the perfect place to display it. I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the stars of this fascinating world — fairies. Choose from many different personalities
Mini-garden terrariums are a perfect way to satisfy that gardening itch in winter.
Natureworks used a Miniature Garden Birders Cottage with miniature plants and pots in a hanging planter to create this cute mini world
— mostly female — or the mischievous male elves out there. They tend to be more elusive and are best caught online. Caring for your little ecosystem is easy. You may need to occasionally prune some plants that grow a tad faster than others, similar to annual Potato Vine that can quickly overtake its container mates if not held in check. Fertilize the garden several times a year with an organic feed such as Neptune’s Harvest Fish and Seaweed. You don’t want to overfertilize or you will stimulate too much growth or — gasp! — kill the plants. Probably the most common mistake fairy garden caretakers make is overwatering. Before sprinkling water
around the plants, stick your finger into the soil and see if it is dry. If it still feels damp or cool to the touch, step away and do something else with your time. Fairy gardens that are composed mostly of succulents may only need to be watered once over the entire winter! The middle of winter is a terrific time to build a fairy garden and whisk away the winter blues. It’s easy and fun. Just pretend you’re playing with dollhouses, creating your own perfect little world. Enchanting, remember? Kerry Mendez offers more tips and ideas on her website, pyours.com. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 53
Tech Tips
Resolution Solution These apps can help you make your resolutions happen
By Brianna Snyder
THE HABIT FACTOR (ITUNES, $6.99; GOOGLE PLAY, $4.99) This app is based on a book of the same title, and features many tools to help you build better habits and meet your goals. With a calendar, notes section and color-coded, prioritized goal-setting, the app breaks habit-development into training bits, or “target days.” It’s a step-by-step process that breaks down your goals into small accomplishable tasks and helps you calibrate your expectations. For example, if 54 | Life@Home
your goal is to run a marathon, it’ll tell you when you should be sleeping and waking up, when you should be training, what you should be eating, etc. (Look for a light, free version if you’re wary of the price but want to check it out.)
CHECK (AKA PAGEONCE) (ITUNES AND GOOGLE PLAY, FREE) It’s tough to tell if mobile banking has made moneytracking easier or harder. Pending transactions, automatic debits, old-fashioned checks, paperless statements … things get out of hand quickly. If your resolution this year is to get more financially stable, Check is a good go-to app. It monitors your transactions, bill due dates, and various balances, reminding you when various payments are due and when your accounts are running low; then you can pay using the app or schedule payments for later. Check also rounds up all your balances and gives you an overview of all your financial obligations. Very useful.
GOJEE (ITUNES AND GOOGLE PLAY, FREE) Is your goal to cook more and better food? The Internet is a terrifying ocean of resources for the ambitious chef, but what if you’re a reluctant cook who has a tough time keeping up with shopping and interesting recipes? Gojee is for you. Recipes here have been curated by the siterunners, and — here’s the best part — you can filter recipes by what you have already in your pantry. Terrific and plentiful ideas can be found here, so it’ll be tougher to make an excuse for takeout.
DUOLINGO (ITUNES AND GOOGLE PLAY, FREE) Knowing a second language is an invaluable skill, and a great resolution for this year. Rosetta Stone is fairly expensive, which is why we’re into Duolingo, a free language tutorial site and app. The program is fun, with game-like levels and a social component so that you can compete and play with friends.
Illustration: © iStockphoto.com/aleksandar velasevic. Photos courtesy ITunes.
H
appy new year! Did you make your resolutions? When you did, did you get that sinking feeling of inevitable failure? That would be a rational response. According to The New York Times, four out of five people break their resolutions — a third of them before the end of January. I know. Not the motivational news you need today. But we’ve got good news: apps! We’ve found a few that can help you stay on your path and bust those bleak statistics. 2014 is your year! Check these out.
Family Food Wine
Life 55 – 74
The spices of life. Photo by Paul Barrett. Read more on page 68. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 55
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January 20, 2014 Albany Marriott, 189 Wolf Rd., Albany · 7:30-9am PANEL OF EXPERTS ANN REIS
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For over 25 years, Ann Reis has provided customized organization development solutions to a variety of companies based primarily in New York’s Capital District. She brings a wealth of experience and expertise in strategic HR planning and management, leadership development, change management, employee satisfaction and engagement, performance management, and teambuilding
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Executive Coach, Group Facilitator and Organization Change Consultant, Charter Oak Consulting Group. Cathy Crosky works with Fortune 500 companies across a broad spectrum of industries. With a focus on women in leadership, Cathy coaches senior leaders as well as facilitates two roundtables for women business owners — The Women’s Presidents’ Organization’s Springfield, MA, chapter for secondstage entrepreneurs and Women Upfront for firststage entrepreneurs in Berkshire County, MA.
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Preserve Family Memories
hat a holiday season that was. You’ve got a camera filled with photos destined for tightly-themed scrapbooks (baking cookies with grandparents, kids sledding, Hallmarkmoment Christmas tree selection) and have saved 27 copies of the program from the Christmas pageant just so you’d always remember that Tony-worthy performance your little darling gave as Shepherd No. 2. And then you find yourself caught between annual planning at work and taking care of flu-ridden children at home. There is no time for keepsake care. But don’t stuff that stuff in the closet. Here are some tips from the pros on how to organize those special memories any time of the year:
Photos: GettyImages. Vacation photos, Digital Vision; Polaroid frames, E+.
SELF-PUBLISHING: Websites such as Snapfish and even retail websites for CVS and Walmart, allow you to design photo books online. The slick books then hold your memories neatly bound, without having to worry about taping down prints. Lisa Higdon, owner of Clear Spaces Organizing in Albany, says when her husband’s family was selling their Maryland farm, they walked the farm taking photos of the scenes. They then made photo books for all the family members to keep.
CONSIDER THE OUTCOME: If you’re already struggling to find time to scrapbook, don’t make it harder by setting yourself up with a bunch of random photos. Consider how each page might be themed before you press the button on your camera. “It’s in taking the photo, trying to get a close-up photo rather than 10 feet away because when you go to put that (wide shot) in a book it’s like, ‘Where are they?,’” says Kathy ONeal, owner of Paper Crafters
Unlimited in East Greenbush. “If you’re taking different people around the Christmas tree, get a close-up picture of the Christmas tree. Think about what you might want to do at the end. … Otherwise, you say, ‘I’ve got all these pictures. I’m going to make my album,’ and then you start going through them and say, ‘What was I thinking?’”
a tactile person and a picture isn’t worth the 1,000 words holding an object can bring back, Higdon says.”Tim Gunn [the fashion expert] talks in one of his books about how he did that with a person who had a lot of clothes, designer clothes, they didn’t want to let go of. They photographed every single one of them, and then [were] able to let them go,” she says.
IF YOU’RE JUST NOT CRAFTY: “What I usually
BE DISCRIMINATING: “If you go on a trip,
recommend is getting some decorative boxes, either photo boxes or memory boxes, and putting everything related into one category,” such as “kids,” “grandparents” or “school party,” says Catherine Dryden, owner of neat chic organizing in Albany. “If you’re going to have them buried in a box in your basement, you might as well not have them at all. So, you want to have them in a box that’s on your bookshelf, that’s easily accessible, that you can pull out and look at and remember.”
people will save every single stub and ticket, so it’s really a matter when you come home, pick out the two or three things that really remind you of the trip,” Dryden says. “You don’t have to keep every single thing that happened on that trip.”
THE BOX ALSO SETS LIMITS: “They know where it goes, and it goes into that decorative box . The reason I like boxes is it’s a limited size,” Dryden says. “We culled all their travel memories, and we come up with a decorative box that they’re comfortable with and it’s three-quarters of the way full,” she says. If you’re running out of space and want to keep something, something else has to come out, she says.
SNAP THEIR PICTURE: You’re tempted to store away the decorations from your baby shower cake forever (oh, those little booties!). But sometimes a photograph of the item can work just as well, unless you’re
GIVE IT PRACTICAL LIFE: Why let something such as T-shirts fill up a dresser drawer when they could be displayed? “I’ve made T-shirt quilts for my kids, and I saved T-shirts from elementary school through high school and turned them into quilts when they went to college,” Higdon says.
WHAT MEMORIES ARE MADE OF: Want to keep a birth or engagement announcement from the newspaper? “If you’re going to put newspaper articles in [your scrapbook], there’s an [archival] spray you can actually treat them with so they don’t yellow over time,” ONeal says.
LOOK ONLINE: Pinterest, the website that acts as many people’s online bulletin board, is a great place to find ideas for uniquely preserving everything from bouquets with sentimental value to those precious sports ribbons and trophies, Higdon says. Jennifer Gish is the Times Union’s features editor. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 57
»
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10 Ways to …
Be Happier This Year
Bookmark this site Check out happify.com, where you’ll find activities and games carefully designed to help you build skills for lasting happiness.
By Melissa Fiorenza
I
f there’s one resolution you actually see through this year, make it this one: be happier. There’s no better time than right now to vow to make 2014 the year you consciously (and subconsciously) improve your overall mood. To make it easy for you, we’ve listed 10 ways you can do just that. Best part — aside from sunnier days ahead, of course — is that you barely have to spend a cent to get to cloud nine.
1
Listen to more music.
According to a University of Missouri study called “Trying to Be Happier Really Can Work: Two Experimental Studies,” a person can successfully try to be happier by listening to upbeat music. Try it out: Switch your iPhone’s alarm clock sound from its typical monotonous beep to a cheery tune. If nothing else, it will at least get your day started on a more positive note. Or create a Spotify list of happy tunes you can turn to when you’re feel a little downbeat.
2
Photo: Dimitri Vervitsiotis/GettyImages.
Practice self-discipline.
If the words “I have no self-control” have ever rolled off your tongue, consider this: An experiment published in the Journal of Personality revealed that participants who showed the greatest self-control had more good moods and fewer bad ones than those who didn’t. It also showed that the happier participants avoided situations that might tempt them to falter. In other words, rather than collect all your willpower as you walk by the free cupcakes in your office’s break room, take a different route altogether.
3
Keep on pinning.
Think you’ll be even happier once you once actually own that outfit, that handbag, that new sofa you pinned on Pinterest? Turns out, wanting is better than having. One study showed that we actually experience more positive emotions before
purchasing things — just thinking about owning them — than when we do once we actually obtain what we want. How’s that for a good excuse to hide your wallet?
4
Be a little more extroverted.
Research says extroverts are generally happier, and that introverts can feel happier by acting extroverted. On the more reserved side yourself? See if the studies are right; consider signing up for something — such as making a public speech — that you wouldn’t normally jump on and make note of how you feel afterward.
5
Volunteer more.
After analyzing 40 published papers, researchers concluded that volunteers have lower levels of depression — and in addition to boosting your mood, volunteering can also help you live longer. Sold? Visit volunteermatch.org to find opportunities in your area.
6
Help someone out.
This tip comes from Rachel on our Facebook page: “Here is a trick I’ve been trying: When I’m super grumpy and feeling full of yuck, I’m trying to make myself do something nice for someone. It always, always puts me in a better mood.”
7
Don’t skimp on sleep.
You already know the health benefits of getting enough sleep — and the havoc it can wreak on your body when you’re sleep
deprived — but did you know it’s also linked to happiness? In fact, a bad night’s sleep was considered to be one of the top two reasons for being in a bad mood at work, one study showed, right up there with tight work deadlines. Try hitting the sack an hour earlier tonight.
8
Spend time with your loved ones.
“We are happy when we have family, we are happy when we have friends and almost all the other things we think make us happy are actually just ways of getting more family and friends,” once said Harvard happiness expert Daniel Gilbert. Take a look at your calendar today and plan a few social outings in the coming weeks.
9
Go outside.
A team from the London School of Economics and Political Science found that being active in an outdoor setting can raise happiness levels. Really want to hit a high? Dr. George MacKerron, one the study’s undertakers, was quoted as saying, “People recorded the highest levels of happiness in marine and coastal locations, followed by mountains and moors, forests and farms.”
10
Smile.
We don’t need a study to tell us this one (although the studies do exist): smiling more often is a simple act you can always do to decrease stress and instantly feel happier. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 59
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Tasty Tidbits
Kitchen Crumbs to brighten up your cooking
By Caroline Barrett
Winter Warm-up Recipe Warm Spiced Chicken Mole Truly authentic mole sauce is made with a long list of ingredients. This quick-to-put-together version is simplified, but still has tons of flavor. Serve it with rice and black beans.
Photos: cookbook and movie photos courtesy amazon.com; citrus fruit photo by Paul Barrett; food scraps photo, Oktay Ortakcioglu/GettyImages.
In the bowl of a slow cooker, combine 1 28-ounce can chopped tomatoes, 1 large chopped onion, 2 dried ancho chiles (stemmed and torn apart), 1 teaspoon chipotle powder, 1 handful each sliced pumpkin seeds and raisins, 1/2 cup chopped bittersweet chocolate, 2 corn tortillas, 2 teaspoon cumin and 1 teaspoon cinnamon.
Stir well to combine and add 3-4 lbs. boneless, skinless chicken breasts. Cover and cook on low for 8 hours.
Use tongs to pull the chicken from the slow cooker. Use an immersion blender to puree the sauce. Use the tongs and a fork to pull the chicken pieces apart, then return to the sauce. Serve with rice and beans. Also makes great burrito or taco filling.
Scrap This Wondering what to do with all your food scraps? If you have the desire to compost but not the space, Radix Ecological Sustainability Center will do the dirty work for you. The company sets you up with a 2.4 gallon compost container and liner. Compost is collected each week and a new liner is left behind. The cost is $15/ week. Visit radixcenter. org for more information.
Winter Foodie Movie
Cookbook of the Month
The Trip, starring Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon, is a lighthearted romp through the English countryside. This pair is on a foodie journey, stopping to review fine restaurants and eat plenty of good food. The laughter and cozy warm dishes will warm you up on a dark winter night!
An American Family Cooks by Judith Chaote A book for families who like to cook, but most of all like to eat. Beautiful photographs and recipes everyone can make. You can find An American Family Cooks for $30.95 at amazon.com.
“
Only the pure in heart can make good soup.” — Ludwig van Beethoven
Food Tip
Have you ever wondered why
Winter is the best time for citrus fruits, when they are at their peak of juiciness. This is also the time to get the best price on a big sack of grapefruit or oranges. Eat citrus fruits for their high amounts of vitamin C and sweet, sunny flavor.
tinyurl.com/LAHJan14-wintereats
we eat more in winter? According to a study at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, humans are very sensitive to light. When there is less of it, we seek out food and eat it faster. We average 200 calories more each day in the winter months.
timesunion.com/lifeathome | 61
Dish
Mazzone Hospitality’s
Ross Annual Thompson Wedding Show
At home with ...
By Steve Barnes | Photos by Paul Barrett
The classic French technique for Hollandaise sauce is one chefs learn in culinary school to show they can do it and then immediately try to find an easier, quicker way. An emulsion of egg yolks, or sometimes whole eggs, and butter, with acidity from lemon juice, Hollandaise is one of the five “mother sauces” of French cuisine from which many other sauces can be created. As traditionally made, Hollandaise requires whisking egg yolks in a double boiler over simmering water, then drizzling in clarified butter until a creamy, thick sauce forms. This can take 20 minutes. “The French way is very tedious, and there are many ways to screw it up,” says Ross
Thompson, the head chef at The Olde English Pub & Pantry in Albany since last summer. Further, the temperature must be precisely controlled; too hot or too cold and the sauce will break, or separate, which usually means starting again. Thompson learned a quick Hollandaise method while working as a chef at a resort in Florida after a culinary education at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He whirs egg yolks in a blender while slowly streaming in melted whole butter. It takes about five minutes,
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Dish and, because the butter is whole, not clarified, the resulting sauce is more stable than classic Hollandaise and has a richer, more unctuous taste and mouth feel. Hollandaise is most often served with asparagus or eggs Benedict; its derivatives, including Bearnaise (vinegar, shallots, tarragon), Bavaroise (horseradish, thyme, crayfish butter) and Dion (mustard), are used to finish a variety of meat, seafood and vegetable dishes. “It’s a great open palate for almost anything you want to put in it,” says Thompson. “It can be as fancy or as simple as you like.” He makes Hollandaise every Sunday for brunch at The Olde English, where it’s part
Spinach & Feta Benedict Serves 2 2 eggs 2 cups baby spinach ½ cup roasted red pepper, cut into ¾ inch strips ¼ cup feta cheese 1 English muffin, split in half Hollandaise sauce (see recipe) For the Hollandaise: 3 eggs 6 ounces (1½ sticks) butter ½ lemon, juiced 1 pinch salt and pepper 3 dashes Tabasco Method For the Hollandaise sauce: Separate eggs; put yolks in blender and save whites for another purpose, if desired. Melt butter in saucepan or microwave. Add lemon juice, salt, pepper and Tabasco to yolks. Start blending and add butter in a slow stream, keeping blender running until all butter is fully incorporated. The sauce should be thick and smooth. If
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of a classic eggs Benedict and the vegetarian version here, with spinach and feta instead of ham or Canadian bacon. Thompson counts himself among those chefs who don’t like Sunday brunch, because it means a morning shift after a late night on Saturday, usually the busiest dinner service of the week. “It’s tough when you have a slamming Saturday night and have to be back at work at 7:30 Sunday to prep for brunch,” says Thompson, who lives 75 miles southwest of Albany with his girlfriend; she has almost as long of a commute in the other direction. He says, “But it’s really popular with customers. They love their eggs Benedict.”
not serving Hollandaise immediately, keep it warm in a bowl set over hot but not simmering water or in a Thermos that has been prewarmed with hot water; Hollandaise that gets too hot or cool will separate. For the eggs: Bring 6 cups of water with 2 ounces of white vinegar to a low simmer in a deep saucepan. Add a pinch of salt. Reduce to just under a simmer. Gently slip 2 eggs to simmering water. While poaching, sear sliced English muffin halves in an oiled sauté pan or cook in toaster. Sauté the spinach and roasted red pepper until spinach is wilted. Season with salt and pepper. To assemble: Once eggs are done, about 4-5 minutes, remove with a slotted spoon to a paper towel to blot dry, then assemble the Benedict. Using the English muffin halves as a base, put spinach and roasted red pepper, eggs and 1-2 tablespoons of Hollandaise per portion. Sprinkle feta cheese over the top and serve.
Want to see how this recipe was made? Watch our exclusive video at timesunion.com/ lifeathome or scan the QR code at the left to link directly to our Life@Home videos on YouTube. timesunion.com/lifeathome | 65
A DV E R T I S E M E N T
Have you heard about this new technology that is FDA cleared, and non-surgical treatment for back pain?
Herniated Disc?
Non-surgical spinal decompression may be the last back pain treatment you will ever need. And you may be able to forget the pills, getting endless shots, struggling through exercise programs...and...risky surgery...because with this amazing new technology...if you are a candidate... they may be a thing of the past. You’re about to discover a powerful state-of-the-art technology available for: Back pain, Sciatica, Herniated and/or Bulging discs (single or multiple), Degenerative Disc Disease, a relapse or failure following surgery or Facet syndromes. Best of all -- you can check it out yourself for FREE! CALL 518-300-1212
I
magine how your life would change if you discovered the solution to your back pain.
In this article you’ll discover powerful new back pain technology that has the potential to be that solution for you. This incredible technology is Non-Surgical Spinal Decompression and the DRX 9000. Here’s the amazing story how it was discovered and why it has a chance to help YOUR back pain...
How Science Helps Back Pain The lower back is a series of bones separated by shock absorbers called “discs”. When these discs go bad because of age or injury you can have pain. For some the pain is just annoying, but for others it can be life changing...and not in a good way. It has long been thought that if these discs could be helped in a natural and noninvasive way, lots of people with back and leg pain could lower the amount of pain medication they take, be given fewer epidural injections for the pain and have less surgery.
Recent medical breakthroughs have led to the development of advanced technologies to help back and leg pain suffers!
Through the work of a specialized team of physicians and medical engineers, a medical manufacturing company, now offers this space age technology in its incredible DRX 9000 Spinal Decompression equipment.
The DRX 9000 is FDA cleared to use with the pain and symptoms associated with herniated and/or bulging discs. . . even after failed surgery. What Conditions Has The DRX 9000 Successfully Treated And Will It Help YOU? The main conditions the DRX 9000 has success with are: • • • •
Back pain Sciatica Spinal Stenosis Herniated and/or bulging discs (single or multiple) • Degenerative disc disease • A relapse or failure following surgery • Facet syndromes A very important note: The DRX 9000 has been successful even when NOTHING else has worked. Even after failed surgery. What Are Treatments On The DRX 9000 Like?
After being fitted with an automatic shoulder support system, you simply lie face up on the DRX 9000’s comfortable bed and the advanced computer system does the rest. Patients describe the treatment as a gentle, soothing, intermittent pulling of your back. Many patients actually fall asleep during treatment. The really good news IS... this is not something you have to continue to do for the rest of your life. So it is not a big commitment. Since offering the DRX 9000 in my Colonie office, I have seen nothing short of miracles for back pain sufferers who had tried everything else. . . with little or no result. Many had lost all hope. Had herniated disk operation 8 years ago another disc became herniated. Doctor wanted to operate have arthritis from 1st one (did not want to go under knife again) very grateful to DRX9000 (thank you Dr. Claude D. Guerra, DC) Very happy camper. Raymond F Niskayuna, NY Age 55 This treatment was a miracle for my cervical disk herniations. Only other alternative was surgery, which I no longer have to face. William I Schenectady, NY Age 63
I was told by a doctor I wouldn’t be able to work. I cannot afford to not work so I tried Dr. Claude D. Guerra, DC, and not only did the pain go away but I never missed a day at work. Rick S Clifton Park, NY Age 42 I would love to shake the hand of the person who invented this machine. It was a life saver for me and a lot better than going under the knife. I HIGHLY recommend this to anyone with chronic back pain. Dawn H Colonie, NY Age 49 Before the DRX 9000 treatment. I had no quality of life. Couldn’t do anything for myself. Thank God for Dr. and the DRX machine. I can live again. Yvette K Schenectady, NY Age 47 I suffered for three years, before I received treatment on the DRX 9000. Today, I can sleep and get out of bed like a normal human being. Before, I couldn’t even drive my car because the pain in my hips, legs and feet were so bad from the sciatica nerve being pinched by my Herniated Disc L4 and L5, which also prevented me from sitting in a chair or even using my computer lap top at any time. Today things have changed due to advance technology therapy on the DRX 9000. They always try
A DV E R T I S E M E N T I would definitely refer people to your office. Dr. Guerra and his staff have made this experience a pleasure. Ed H Hoosick Falls, NY Age 70 Pain free, numbness in the left foot is gone. DRX 9000 is GREAT and does work. Sal L Niskayuna, NY Age 50
Dr. Claude D. Guerra, DC demonstrates the DRX 9000 to a patient
to regulate the treatments that work. What is up with this taught process???? The world is changing and so have I. Frank A Troy, NY Age 52 Before receiving the DRX treatments, my quality of life was very poor. I could hardly do anything other than going to work and going to bed. After the DRX treatments my quality of life has improved 90% which has resulted in me being able to go for long walks without a cane and go shopping. Anne P Burnt Hills, NY Age 70 I am so appreciative of this method of therapy because when I came to the office I had to use a cane and had muscle pain in walking. After 2nd treatment sciatica nerve pain was gone in my left leg. Judith W Albany, NY Age 64 Prior to this treatment my only options appeared to be invasive pain management, or surgery. After receiving 24 sessions on the DRX, I am markedly improved, relatively pain free and am able to function as I had in previous years. Highly recommend to anyone with disc issues. Alan P Scotia, NY Age 53 I would choose this therapy again! Painless treatment that gets your life back to
normal. Stick with it-it works! Linda G Broadalben, NY Age 53 I am so happy I came to Dr. Guerra. I was in a lot of pain and after being on the DRX I tell you I do not have pain. I feel wonderful and the staff are very nice. Dr. Claude D. Guerra, DC is wonderful. If you are in pain try the DRX it really helps. Edith C Schenectady, NY Age 71 I think more people should know about this procedure before considering any surgery. Medications help the pain but they don’t cure the cause. I am back to my old self again. Lorraine B Scotia, NY Age 78 I highly recommend this machine. I had my doubts but it really and truly works. Dr. Claude D. Guerra, DC is a wonderful doctor and his staff is great too. Linda D Clifton Park, NY Age 46
I’m able to go on long walks and get all night sleep (I’ve had 3 surgeries since 2006) Without the DRX I would be in for a 4th back surgery. I’m getting back to doing activities with my 10 year old son. Lisa V Catskill, NY Age 45 I wish to thank you very much for all the help I received with the spinal decompression therapy. Your entire office was very helpful and compassionate. No longer do I sit at night with my heating pads, moving them from sore spot to sore spot. My knees are no longer on fire and I’m able to go up and down the stairs much easier than before. Mable D Ballston Lake, NY Age 68
SPECIAL OFFER Call Dr. Claude D. Guerra, DC’s office at 518-300-1212 and mention to my assistants that you want a FREE back pain/DRX9000 qualification
consultation. It’s absolutely free with no strings attached. There is nothing to pay for and you will NOT be pressured to become a patient.
Here is what you will receive: • A consultation with me, Dr. Claude D. Guerra, DC to discuss your problem and answer the questions you may have about back pain and the DRX9000 • A DRX9000 demonstration so you see for yourself how it works! Due to current demand for this technology, I suggest calling today to make your appointment. The consultation is free. We are staffed 24-hoursa-day, 7-days-a-week. Call 518-300-1212 right now!
It’s absolutely FREE with no strings attached. There is ONE Big Problem: My busy office schedule will limit how many people I’m able to personally meet with...so you will need to act fast. Call 518-300-1212 right now...to be sure you are among the first callers and we will set up your free consultation today. We have the phones answered 7 days a week 24 hours a day so call now... 518-300-1212. (Free consultation is good for 45 days) 2016 Central Ave., Colonie www.albanyDRX.com
I was extremely skeptical at the beginning of treatments - Progress was slow in coming - But... then it worked! What a relief!!! Joan K Delmar, NY Age 71 I had no where else to go with this problem. The DRX 9000 was just what I needed. Many thanks! Burton S Mechanicville, NY Age 50
www.healthsourceofalbasnynorth.com Like us on Facebook: Healthsource of Albany North
Table@Home
Just a Palmful
Mmm, spicy stews on winter days
By Caroline Barrett | Photos by Paul Barrett
I
like to imagine kitchens in faraway places. Kitchens that are nothing like the big, shiny rooms we know in the here and now. I’m talking about a cozy warm place, a little dark maybe. Pots sit on the stove, bubbling. Spices line up on open shelves in big jars. The smell is heaven. I imagine this place as part of a life that isn’t busy. Cooking a stew for hours and hours is the way it’s done. Family sits on chairs around the fire, reading or just looking at the warm flames. No one rushes off. The food that comes from this kitchen is warm and soft and redolent of chiles and cinnamon and pepper. What I like to
68 | Life@Home
dream about is a place where spices are not sprinkled on lightly or measured in quarter-teaspoons. Chiles and garlic are ground and added liberally to everything. I have a friend from Morocco, who explained what happened when she asked her mother for a sauce recipe. Her mother dutifully told her the ingredients: the cinnamon, the chiles and the spice seeds. “I mean in measurements, how much of each?,” my friend wanted to know. Her mother told her to hold out her hand and make it into a cup. “Fill your palm with cumin,” her mother said, “and fill half of your palm with cin-
namon. That is how I measure.” My friend rolled her eyes at this and said she needed to measure in spoonfuls to get it right. I understood her mother, and perhaps the kitchen her grandmother and great-grandmother cooked in. It’s the one from my dreams. The pots are filled with simmering spiced meats and colorful rice. Red, orange and green vegetables line up, waiting to slide into stews. The scent is one you can wrap yourself around and feel instantly tranquil and at home. Back in my own kitchen, the one that I like to think is a blend of the old-world place in my reverie and the shiny new
Moroccan Beef Stew This is a great way to use the lean, grass-fed stew beef available from local farmers. You can find onions, garlic and winter squash at the farmers market this time of year. Also, sweet potatoes are a fine substitute for winter squash in this recipe. ingredients olive oil 1 large onion, chopped 5-6 cloves garlic, peeled and chopped 1 palmful cumin* 1 palmful smoked paprika* 1 /2 palmful cinnamon* 2 lbs. stew beef 1 small winter squash (peeled, seeded and chopped) (1) 15-ounce can garbanzo beans, drained and rinsed 1 /2 cup raisins (apricots, chopped, work well too) (2) 28-ounce cans crushed tomatoes
1-inch piece fresh ginger, peeled and grated sea salt and plenty of pepper to taste 1 large handful fresh cilantro, chopped method In a large pot, heat the olive oil over a medium flame and cook the onion until soft. Add the garlic and stir, cooking until just softened. Add the spices and cook for a minute, until very fragrant. Stir in the beef and cook until it starts to brown, using a spoon to scrape up the bottom bits. Add the squash, beans, raisins, tomatoes and ginger. Stir well and bring to a simmer. Cover and cook until the beef is very tender, about 45 minutes. Taste the stew and add salt and cracked black pepper. * If you like proper measurements, use 2 1/2 tablespoons each cumin and smoked paprika and 1 tablespoon cinnamon.
kitchens of our time, I like to recreate those spiced dishes. This kind of cooking, where nothing is rushed and the rules are loose, is perfect for children. Zoe wandered in to my kitchen on a recent cold weekend day, just as I was beginning to prepare this beef stew. At 12, she is tall and strong and hungry. Always hungry. I love that about her. She came in and asked if she could make macaroni and cheese. I also love that she now asks if she can cook something, not if I will make it for her. Add self-sufficient to the things I love about her. Wait, I said. I’m making something so much better than macaroni and cheese. She
smirks and shakes her head. Zoe knows that I’m always trying to sell something better than white pasta and cheese. There is a time for macaroni and cheese, but that day wasn’t it. On that day, we would eat spice and meat and vegetables. It would be warm and wonderful in our bellies. Trust me, I said. I showed her how to hold her hand to make a little cup, and we poured cumin into it, then cinnamon and paprika. She sneezed and then giggled about it. Our kitchen filled with the warm and fantastic smell of cinnamon, cumin and rich beef. Smells that are so much better than macaroni and cheese. When finally the stew was cooked and
the beef was tender, people paced as I ladled it out. We filled bowls and ate in front of the living room fire. It was almost like the warm and cozy scene from my dreams, except the football game was on. We compromised by turning off the volume. I like to close my eyes and feel as if I could be in that place, the one where time moves slowly and the glow from the fire is just as warming as the spices in the kettles on the stove. Back in the present, Zoe brought her bowl over, cuddled up close to me and dug in to her stew. She loved every bite and ate two bowls of the stuff. And when she was finished, she smiled sweetly and asked, “Macaroni and cheese tomorrow?” timesunion.com/lifeathome | 69
The Vineyard
Staff Picks! They know what they’re talking about Story and photo by Alistair Highet
A
few years ago, I would have hiked a long way around a rack of “staff picks” in my local wine store. For one thing, I don’t want to get into a chat when I’m browsing. And isn’t it kind of cheating to pick a wine that is the right by the cash register with a bunch of signs and arrows pointing at it? Hmm, if the staff likes it, it must be awesome. Who thinks like that? No, so much better to squat in the low aisles among the dust and drag out something that’s wedged between the shelving and the carpet. These days — particularly with the explosion of wine distributors and wine super warehouses — there are too many wines to keep up with if you want to also have a job and a family and a driver’s license, and it is so easy to get lost. Here is where the staff has you beat. They regularly get to try wine. They sometimes get discounts. And they also have good relationships with distributors — meaning that they often know what is hype and what is value. It is also true that the staff in most wine establishments aren’t terribly well paid, so they are very likely to know the hidden gems on their racks that won’t break the bank. So over the last month I’ve walked right to the staff pick rack, grabbed a couple of bottles without much reflection, and walked out. The wines have all been good and very reasonable — and include an entirely new discovery. Ruche [accent on the e up and to the right]! Italy is amazing in the way that is has kept ancient and unloved varietals alive and kicking — still gamely throwing off fruit against the wall of stone outhouses and so on, or poking up amongst the tomatoes. Italy is home to scores of varietals that we rarely see 70 | Life@Home
here, and this was my first sighting. What an exciting change of pace this wine is. The producer is Cantine Valpane, a well-known house in Piedmont, and this grape is particular to the Monferrato zone. The “Rosso Ruske” — the name of the grape is slightly adapted in honor of the owner — is aged in cement tanks so there’s nothing oaky or woody about it, all the more strange that it has such a strong, leathery, bitter, peat, charred bone and dry pepper quality. There is rosemary as well, and then the fruit is black cherry. That peat note is really out there. It all comes together, however, in a very quaffable way — you savor it, but you don’t hang on to it. This is as rustic as it sounds. Evidently the origin of the grape is a mystery — either it is native, or it comes from Burgundy. That’s as far as people have gotten. I think it is a grape to be excited about and I look forward to trying it some more. It cost $17. Here are some other wines I grabbed off the rack, all highly recommended. Alistair Highet is a former editor, restaurant manager, and vinedresser, and has written about wine for over 20 years.
Beau Rivage, Bordeaux Superieur, 2010, $11 Seriously, 11 bucks? This is a Bordeaux blend from an estate owned by Borie-Manoux, a big negociant in the region. The grapes come from all over the slopes on the Garonne and Dordogne. Plum and autumn apple cider, red currant, vanilla, soft tannins.
Costa Al Sole, Marche, Sangiovese, 2011, $12
Mastro Sabando, Barbera D’Asti, 2011, $15
From the eastern central part of Italy, this is an organic wine, with the vibrant, juicy fruit you expect from organic wine. Young, bright cherry, with peppery tannins — a delightfully fun wine for any occasion.
Great quality again. Light and ebullient, with blackberry fruit, cinnamon and spice, lemon zest, espresso, a soft satiny mouthfeel, so very balanced, nuanced, and colorful.
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My Space
W
e all have favorite spots, places where we feel most comfortable or at home. Sometimes it’s a favorite chair or nook in a room; other times it’s outside the house. Wherever it is, it is where we are most at home.
Story and photo by Suzanne Kawola
Who: Melanie Pores, assistant in research and educational services for New York State United Teachers (NYSUT)
FAVORITE SPACE: Her office. WHY: A former public classroom teacher of three decades, Melanie Pores takes great pride in her responsibility as staff liaison for English language learners. “I saw [this office] as a place where all my different souls could come together and be in one space together,” Pores says. She says her role is “a role of advocacy. It’s a role of trying to promote change in a just way.” Early in her career, as an early childhood teacher, Pores started a dual language program in Albany County Head Start. Although not of Hispanic or Latino descent herself, she was exposed to the Spanish language from her childhood best friend who was from the Dominican Republic. “All of her family members became my family members,” she says. She calls her immersion in the language with her second family a gift, and her motivation to support bilingual education comes from this experience. “I feel a sense of wholeness [in this office], because being in this room most of the important parts of my life merge together.”
timesunion.com/lifeathome | 73
Photo Finish
Blue lagoon bathroom. Photo by Vincent Giordano. Read more on page 24. 74 | Life@Home
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