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Showing posts with label Nepenthe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nepenthe. Show all posts

Saturday, December 26, 2020

Big Sur (California) Christmas by Ruth Paget

Big Sur (California) Christmas by Ruth Paget Big Sur (Monterey County – California) Christmas with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget by Ruth Paget 

I have lived in Monterey County California for more than twenty years with a hiatus in Stuttgart, Germany for several years. 

During this time, my family has kept a Christmas tradition of driving to Big Sur over the Christmas holiday to enjoy the scenery and support the local economy. Our first stop is the gas station in Marina followed by Starbucks for hot chocolate, ice coffee with white moka, and warm, buttery croissants. 

 We listen to Christmas carols on the radio and complain about Carmel car congestion like everyone else. The radio begins to die out in the Carmel Highlands where the Santa Lucia Mountains creep in and you start to drive on a cliff, which drops down to the ocean. When the radio dies out, we pull out a Mozart CD for our ride down the coast. 

We have on of two destinations in mind depending on our finances: Nepenthe or Fernwood. Nepenthe is a little more expensive, because I always want to go to the gift shop and buy environmentalism books, Jack Kerouac or John Steinbeck books, French vanilla perfume, artisanal soap made from goat milk, and Putumayo folk song CDs for the ride home. Sometimes I even buy notecards with paintings done by owner Erin Gafill. 

Fernwood, our other family outing choice, has a small motel behind it and a large bar in front of it. The bar is a locals spot with a large screen TV tuned to golf tournaments current and past. The wood paneling inside is redwood; Julia Pfeiffer State Park with its redwoods is close by. Even the chargers for meals are redwood. Their best meal is the BBQ platter with chicken, ribs, beans, and coleslaw with sultana raisins. We have watched several hole-in-one shots while eating there as boisterous patrons yell, “Yeah. Yeah. Good shot!” and applaud. 

Fernwood does not have a gift shop. It has a grocery store. As a child, Florence preferred Nepenthe for goodies. We had food at home. I like Nepenthe’s food offerings. On a recent visit, you could still order a good meal using take-out and terrace seating during Covid-19 measures. My husband Laurent and Florence ate steak and fries, and I ate a shrimp BLT (Bacon Lettuce Tomato) sandwich with pinto and garbanzo beans on the side along with coleslaw. We shared a cheese platter for dessert. 

In the gift shop, I bought the book Waste and Want: A Social History of Trash by Susan Strasser, because Strasser wrote that almost everything was used in the 19th century that was produced; trash is a modern invention. 

 I noted that the ride to Big Sur was much smoother and wondered if recycled plastic bottles were being mixed in with the tar to lower the cost of paving there. On the way home, we listened to more Mozart and watched hawks swoop down the cliffs to glistening slate water. 

I finally feel after twenty plus years in Monterey County California that sunshine and warmth are normal for Christmas weather after growing up in freezing, cold Detroit, Michigan. Both communities, though, do share a common love for creating and promoting contemporary music often composed and rehearsed during the winter months. 

 By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Europe’s Lessons: How and Why Europe is Beautiful




Ruth Paget Photo


Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Eating Eggs Benedict at Nepenthe with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget in Big Sur (California)





Eating Eggs Benedict at Nepenthe with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget in Big Sur (California)



Nepenthe has Hollywood history that insiders know about and smile when they shop for books by the poet Hafiz and Big Sur resident and poet Robinson Jeffers.  (Jeffers is also one of the poets chosen as a Big Read author by the National Endowment for the Arts.)

My husband and I would take our daughter Florence to Nepenthe as a child to eat at the Phoenix Café, which is the “Grand Terrace” used in the film The Sandpiper that starred Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton in 1965.

The Phoenix Café has great brunch and a stunning view over the Pacific Ocean with cliffs dropping down into the ocean below.  You have to order at the counter, but waiters bring out your order.

Florence and I ordered Eggs Benedict, which is a poached egg over a thick slice of ham on top of toast.  The whole thing is covered in Hollandaise Sauce.  When I make Eggs Benedict at home, I melt grated Swiss (Emmenthal) cheese on top of them.  Florence can make these, too, even without an egg poacher just by sliding the eggs into boiling water.

At home, I serve Eggs Benedict with prosciutto or San Daniele ham from Northern Italy, if I can get it.

The restaurant upstairs is more expensive, but they have a deck where you can sit at a counter overlooking the Pacific Ocean and eat meaty Angus burgers with coleslaw and mounds of fries.  They will even bring you mayonnaise, so you can eat your fries with mayo like the Belgians do.  (The French do this too, but hide the mayo in cute tubes.)

I love the store at Nepenthe – the Phoenix Shop.  In the past, they used to carry French vanilla-scented perfume that I liked, blank-page journals in large format where you can paste brochures about historical monuments, wildlife, and wildflowers.  I would put purchases like this in one of their distinctive, purple bags to advertise the store.

Nepenthe also used to carry science and economics books for visitors from Silicon Valley.   Today the bookstore carries various books about other religions including many Asian and Native American beliefs, cookbooks, and poetry. 

On my last visits to Nepenthe, I have bought books about Saint Hildegarde von Bingen from Germany, travel as pilgrimage, and books about the “Nordic” lifestyle written by a Finn.  (Most Scandinavians from Sweden, Denmark, and Norway do not consider the Finnish to be one of them.  Their language, for example, is completely different from these other three languages.)

Florence always got something for her journal here or Putamayo music recordings from around the world.  I have always felt that you can find something cute to feather your nest at home with at Nepenthe.

By Ruth Paget - Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

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Ruth Paget Selfie