Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Grilled Plantains with Brown Sugar Glaze


I really want to try this recipe. It's Bobby Flay rendition, of course! I have been Obsessed with plantains ever since I had some plantain chips from a Cuban Cafe at my friends birthday. They were as addictive as crack! I include this recipe because it's not mine and there's no special secrets to hide.....hehe.

Once I finally make this I'll take an inferior photo to this one..HA!


Grilled Plantains with Brown Sugar Glaze

Adapted from Bobby Flay

Ingredients

4 very ripe plantains, peeled and sliced on the bias 1/2-inch thick
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
4 tablespoons light brown sugar
2 tablespoons fresh orange juice
1 tablespoon honey
2 tablespoons coarsely chopped cilantro
Salt
Freshly ground pepper



Source: Seriouseats.com

D-Squared Skeleton Heels


If the Ancients were fashion forward, these could have been made at the same time as the World's Oldest Shoe from the last post.
I kind of want them.


Encino Man

It may seem as though fashions and trends change by the minute, but some things are truly classics. Archaeologists from UCLA and Ireland unearthed a leather shoe in a cave in Armenia (a women's size 7) that they believe to be 5,500 years old. The vegetable-tanned cowhide is held together by a crisscrossed leather cord. Pre-dating the Iceman's shoes, it's the oldest known closed-toe style. Cavepeople wearing Ann Demuelemeester-style lace-up flats? Talk about a serious vintage find. (Ecouterre)




Thursday, June 10, 2010

A Road Less Traveled








Mad Max






Source: Fashion Gone Rogue

The Original Air Jordan's

Call it the ultimate vintage score. Archaeologists from the University of California Los Angelesand Ireland have discovered the world’s oldest known enclosed leather shoe: a lace-up, shaped for the wearer’s right foot, in a women’s U.S. size 7. Unearthed in a cave in Armenia, the 5,500-year-old shoe is so immaculately preserved that its lace is still intact, despite being 1,000 years older than the Great Pyramid of Giza and 400 years older than Stonehenge. Whom it belonged to is cause for speculation. The smaller size suggests a woman, but it could also have fit a man with diminutive feet.


For a find that dates back to the dawn of civilization circa 3,500 B.C., the shoe’s resemblance tomodern-day footwear is striking. It comprises a single piece of vegetable-tanned cowhide that is is laced along the front and back seams with a leather cord.

The shoe comprises a single piece of cowhide that is laced along the seams with a leather cord.

Stuffed with grass, perhaps as insulation or to maintain its shape (a Copper Age shoe tree, perhaps?), the shoe has the cave’s cool, dry interior to thank for its pristine condition, along with several layers of sheep dung that formed a protective seal against fungal decomposition.

“The crusts had sealed the artifacts and archaeological deposits, and the artifacts remained fresh-dried as if they were put in a can,” according to Gregory Areshian, a visiting associate professor at UCLA’s Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, who served as the dig’s co-director.



Although the Armenian discovery is believed to be the oldest example of closed-toe leather footwear, other discoveries lay claim to being the most ancient. A pair of Native American leather sandals, discovered in a cave in Missouri in the 1970s, predates the Armenian shoe by an estimated 2,000 years.

A pair of Native American leather sandals predates the Armenian shoe by 2,000 years.

Previously, the oldest known enclosed shoes belonged to Ötzi the “Iceman,” who died roughly 5,300 years ago and was found in the Austrian Alps in 1991. Talk about a kick in the head.



Story and Photos: www.ecouterre.com

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Plaid and Pastel





Yes, Please.


Chameleon Ring- Etsy


Pendleton Overnighter- Urban Outfitters

I don't normally like rompers, but this would be great to show off my tat- Dolce Vita