Categories
Living

March 08: Your Living Space

COFFEE TABLE LIBRARY
Eastern standard

Unless you plan on relocating to Japan and building a new home, Marcia Iwatate and Geeta K. Mehta’s Japan Houses is unlikely to provide ideas about how to decorate your living room. However the striking, almost alien, re-definition of luxury that it presents is domestic titillation for the minimalist mind. Focusing on highly stylized architectural anomalies that embody the classically Japanese approach to technology, space and innovation, it’s an exotic and intriguing visual tour that will leave you with a strangely intense desire for your own rock garden.—Lily Robertson

HOT PICK
Speaker of the house

The aesthetics of electronics generally make us squirm, but this little bookshelf speaker—the Mirage Nanosat Prestige, which we spotted at Crutchfield—charmed us with its good looks. It’s cute. There, we’ve said it. And we’re told it sounds pretty good, too.—E.H.

HELP LINE
Pump up the volumes

Question for Susan Scott, owner of Clear Spaces Consulting: How can I reorganize a bookshelf to make it look neater?

Answer: Scott compares arranging items on a bookshelf to being a painter who responds to a blank canvas. “[Bookshelves] make the difference in the room when they’re organized right,” she says.

First step: “Pull them all off and do a good dusting,” she says. “Then you can decide if it’s important to have them grouped: novels all together, cookbooks, reference books. That’s a good way to start if that’s important to you. If not, you can do it by size. I like to stack books according to size—lining them up that way, making stacks on the floor.”

Next, think about things you can intersperse with groups of books, like framed photos or pottery. “Many times people have photos on top and books at the bottom, and it looks better when it’s integrated,” says Scott. Think variety and balance. “If you start putting books to the left, go two thirds of the way across. Then that [remaining] space could be filled with a photograph. Then come the other direction on the next shelf down. The books are not all lined up together, they’re placed like a checkerboard.”

Since the middle shelves are both the most visible and the most convenient, that’s the spot for your most prized objects and most often-used books. What goes on the margins? “Some people are really attached to their National Geographics or Gourmet Cooking,” says Scott; “those might go at the bottom. Turn those so they can lay flat. Reference books and catalogs go at the bottom because they’re heavier and not as attractive.”

And there are some things, Scott says, that don’t deserve to be part of the display at all. “The beach novels—I would put those somewhere else,” she says. “For some reason, the torn edges are sad-looking. I would pass those on to a friend.”—Erika Howsare

Categories
Living

March 08: Your Kitchen

SECRET INGREDIENT
Tastemakers

Dried spices can sit on supermarket shelves for a long time, growing dimmer all the while—and how long has that cayenne been in your pantry? You know it’s supposed to be spicy, right? To perk up elderly spices, toast them briefly in the oven or fry them in oil at the beginning of cooking, Indian-style.

Most of the Mediterranean seasonings begin as leaves, including parsley, basil, oregano, thyme, and sage. They degrade very rapidly in dried form, but can be found fresh in most stores (or grown easily at home and dried in a cool, dark cupboard). The spices that start as seeds—mustard, coriander, fennel, cumin, peppercorns, and cardamom—can be purchased and stored whole and ground just before cooking. 

Throw some seeds and coarse salt in a mortar and get grinding with the pestle; the task is complete when your arm is tired. If you get your workouts at the gym, turn a coffee grinder into your spice mill, and chunk and grind some bread to clean it between uses (and to wow your friends with spiced breadcrumbs).

Finally, there are a few spices that are best not eaten; these should be used for flavor infusion (like bay leaves in tomato sauce, lemongrass in coconut rice, star anise in baked goods, kaffir lime leaves in tom yum). The conscientious chef removes these spices before her guests bite into them.

If you’re restocking your spice shelf this spring, Bantry Bay Tea and Spice Company is headquartered right here in Charlottesville (bantrybayspice.com) and its retail-size jars are sold at Foods of All Nations and C’ville Market. Compared to commercially prepared spices, Bantry Bay’s goodies are vibrant in color and flavor and markedly fresher. In addition to standard spices, proprietor Pat Mullarney has exotic herbs such as zataar, ras el hanout, sumac, and a full line of nuts, dried fruit and teas.—L.R.

GET THIS GEAR
El molcajete y el tejolete

Traditional cuisines around the world rely on the daily grinding and cooking of various grains, nuts and spices. In Mexico, spice grinding is accomplished in un molcajete (volcanic rock mortar and matching pestle, or el tejolete). For the traditional heavy black tool (along with lighter weight ceramic and wooden models) visit the El Paso Tienda Latina (1221 E. Market St., 984-3040). Proprietor Imelda Huerta established the first tienda Latina in Charlottesville 13 years ago, and today offers sunny greetings and shelves full of Mexican products (don’t miss the handmade corn tortillas from Harrisonburg). Buen provecho!—Lisa Reeder

GREAT TASTES
Jambalaya

This Cajun classic, courtesy of The Virginian restaurant, makes enough spicy stew to keep you and your honey warm through winter’s last dregs.
 
8 oz. sliced boneless chicken breast
1/4 lb. andouille sausage, sliced 1/4" thick
6 large shrimp—21/25 ct.
3 oz. sliced green peppers
3 oz. sliced yellow onions
6 oz. pureed roma tomatoes
14 oz. cooked basmati rice
2 oz. sliced jalapeno peppers
1 tsp. cayenne pepper
 
Heat the chicken breast in a large sauté pan coated with a little olive oil. Once the chicken has cooked through, add the shrimp and andouille and heat until the shrimp turns pink. Add peppers, onions and jalapenos and sauté until the peppers are tender. Add rice, tomatoes, and cayenne and let simmer for five minutes. Serves two.

Categories
Living

March 08: Your Garden

GROUND RULES
Peekaboo   

Early bulbs tease in and out with varying temperatures. No need to worry: Fickle weather is their middle name. A lesson to us all, they grow as fast as they can when conditions are good and batten down during difficult times.


Give liriope its yearly haircut this month, but use a light hand if you have bulbs nestled among its leaves.

Species crocus (the fat Dutch boys come later) send up tender lavender blooms on the slightest chance and snowdrops droop their green tipped wings with the first warmish days of winter. Now is the time to make an inventory. Check out vanengelen.com and brentandbeckysbulbs.com, and mark your garden task calendar to tickle a late summer bulb order, so you can fill in the gaps that become apparent now.   

March in the garden
Inventory bulbs
Cut back liriope grasses
Don’t over mulch

If you’re lucky enough to have a fine dark mat of liriope sporting drifts of snowdrops, you have a narrow window to accomplish the annual haircut without damaging new growth while at the same time letting the little bulbs’ foliage ripen as long as possible. Oh, the dilemmas of the gardener. Fortunately, both plants are hearty and can withstand a little mauling.

A dependable fine-textured groundcover with a formal air, also known as monkey grass, liriope is ill-used much of the time, but in thoughtful hands can soften hard lines of architecture and handily cover ground that’s too difficult for turf.

Evidence to the contrary, there is no law that it can be used only to edge a walk in snaky ribbons or form decorative circles around trees. Use it in masses where its leaves can shimmer and move with the breezes. It adapts to a variety of tough situations: hot and dry, full sun or shade, though no bogs or marshes.

Do be careful to know whether you have running or clumping forms. Liriope spicata is an aggressive thug and will take over any space with invasive runners. Liriope muscari grows in mounds and plays nicely with others. “Big Blue,” one of the most ubiquitous forms, is not dependable and may revert to runners. Ask your garden center professional or nurseryman: piedmont-landscape.org.

Each March, cut away old growth to make way for new. This also applies to ornamental grasses (liriope is a member of the lily family) that have not already succumbed to the ravages of winter. Daffodils as well as minor bulbs make fine companions to the grasses, filling up bare spots that appear after spring shearing. As the grasses grow, they cover decaying bulb foliage.

Although one can never have enough bulbs, there is a definite tipping point for mulch. “We have become a nation of over-mulchers,” says Traci DiSabato-Aust, author of the indispensable reference, The Well-Tended Perennial Garden. No more than 2 or 3", especially with shredded hardwood, is necessary or desirable.

Fluff it up and spread it out instead of adding more, and keep it away from tree trunks and the crowns of shrubs and perennials. Too much attracts voles, compacts the soil, starves it of oxygen and sheds water. Do not make volcano mounds around the trees, but spread it out to the drip line and give those roots a good run.

The seeds sowed last month in the salad bowl have frozen a couple of times when I forgot to bring the pot in during the ice storms, but there’s a fine crop of arugula sprouts nonetheless. Their cuttings make a spicy green addition to pretty much everything. I have resolved to plant a good fall greens garden this coming August or September, as that seems to be the only reliable way to have them over winter, but perhaps the bowl will see us through ’til March sowings come up.—Cathy Clary

Garden questions? Ask Cathy Clary at garden@c-ville.com.

ON YOUR WINDOWSILL
Put your hands together


Unusual activity enjoyed by the prayer plant: joining you in the shower.

So-named for its habit of folding its leaves up at night, the show-stopping prayer plant (maranta leuconeura) blooms in late spring through early summer with small white and purple flowers. Maranta are slow growers, so re-potting is rarely necessary, and biannual trims are sufficient. Too much direct sunlight and they turn brown, curl up, and die. No question. High humidity is their other big requirement and daily spritzing is recommended, as is placing them among other plants, or putting a bowl of water close by. Some even suggest taking prayer plants into the shower with you every once in a while. They also need slightly acidic soil, so treat with equal analysis acid fertilizer or add a little peat moss.—Lily Robertson

Categories
News

Breezy apocalypse [February 10]

Traffic lights go dead and chaos erupts on area highways today after high winds knock out power for thousands of customers. In the county, several brush fires rage after sparks from downed power lines are fanned by the 54-mile-per-hour breeze. Oakencroft wine lovers are especially tense—crews have to contain a fire threatening the vineyard, according to The Daily Progress.

Previous "This Just In" articles from this week:

Because basketball sucks… [February 9]
UVA Football announces 2008 schedule

Hillary and Barack return [February 8]
Democratic hopefuls to make second Charlottesville appearances

Royal treatment [February 7]
Wine Business Monthly gives kudos to King Family Vineyards

Second student arrested for gun-toting [February 6]
Both students involved are under 14

Less than super [February 6]
Virginia waits for state primary on February 12

Local roadblock [February 5]
UVA historian implicated in 9/11 cover-up

Categories
Living

February 08: Design, living and trends for home and garden


Behind closed doors

Cleanin’ out the closet is more than a now-sort-of-passé Eminem song. The yearly act of actually purging one’s closet hasn’t gone anywhere, and now—with outdoor tasks at a minimum—is the time to do it.


Wouldn’t it be nice to see some empty hangers in the closet?


Daunted? If you begin with a clean room and divide your closet into separate sections, the process will become almost effortless. (Almost.) Start by labeling boxes or plastic containers as “Garbage,” “Charity,” “Keep,” and so on. That way, after examining each garment you can place it in a designated box.

Then attack your closet section by section. When you are deciding what stays and what goes, look for items that are too small, stained and just plain old. Also, remember the 12-month rule: If you haven’t worn it in the past year, it must leave the premises.

Charities like Goodwill and the Salvation Army are always looking for donations. During the winter months, they naturally need jackets, hats, gloves, and other warm things, said Timothy Burke, thrift store manager for the Salvation Army. “We never have a problem of too much. We take most all of the clothes that come in.”
As for the best music to accompany your closet shuffle? See above.—Shayna Strang

White on

February seemed like a good month to track down a trend we’d heard about: white. Yep, good old white is in for furniture, accessories and walls. Sharon Manering, owner of Downtown boutique Quince, tells us that even parents of young kids are asking about white—slipcovers, that is, which can be bleached clean. She also showed us paint and fabric samples to illustrate the surprising variety of shades that qualify as “white,” from subtle taupes to the palest blue tints. The good news? Various whites can work together for a minimal look. We were especially fond of this slatted photo frame in a characterful finish, white on white.—Erika Howsare

House in a frame

Doubtless your house has subtle characteristics that only emerge—maybe from an ordinary façade—after you’ve looked at it, and lived in it, for a while. A group of Susan Patrick’s artworks showing at Angelo have that quality, too—appropriate since they are themselves images of houses.


Susan Patrick’s house images memorialize old homes in a subtly emotional way.


Patrick’s “Houses and Neighborhoods” look iconic at first glance, like the simple shapes we all drew as kids. A house is a box with a triangle on top, and a neighborhood is four such houses in a grid. But look longer and you’ll begin to appreciate the individuality contained in each frame. One house leaps toward you with bold lines and stark shadows; its door seems to jump off the hinges. Another house is serene, balanced, with a flat roof like the stucco structures of the Southwest.


Patrick conceived the works as “memorials to abandoned and demolished houses,” inspired by one she saw destroyed in Nelson County. The show is on view through February 28.—E.H.

What’s on your browser?: Mix to match

This month’s surfer: Kelly Howard, designer at local interiors firm Alana’s

What’s on her browser: kravet.com

What it is: The homepage of an 88-year-old New York-based business dealing in fabrics, furniture, trimmings and carpet. The main attraction is an extensive search function leading to everything from the Cosgrove Oval cocktail table to black Joseph Abboud tassel fringe.

Why she likes it: “It’s good for those customers who like to do their homework. You can search for fabrics or search for trims; if you were searching for a red toile fabric, you could go through and highlight the things you’re looking for and it will pull those up.” Bookmark the winners and start building a look for your parlor redo.

Quote

“Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.”—William Morris, British designer and originator of the Arts and Crafts movement

Categories
Living

February 08: News and ideas for sustainable living

Natural walls, from Japan to home

As if there wasn’t enough to worry about, the EPA recently concluded that, due to chemicals in our homes, indoor environments are potentially up to 100 times more polluted than outdoors. Hence the proliferation of greener, nontoxic materials, including the so-called earth plasters—clay-based materials troweled onto walls to create a textured finish. One that recently caught our eye: Japanese Wall.


Natural plasters, like American Clay (shown here), can be an eye-catching and air-sparing alternative for your walls

Billed as a more Zen-like way to decorate your home and “re-examine the indoor quality of our buildings,” JWall (as the company nicknames itself) harkens back to Samurai-era Japan, when ceremonial structures were built using earth and straw. The updated JWall formula uses as its secret ingredient diatomaceous earth—a porous chalk-like rock which acts as a natural filter of formaldehydes, carcinogens and bad karma. You’ll be floating on clouds and talking about cherry blossoms in no time.

JWall (japanesewall.com) is akin to textured plaster, and applied the same way onto existing interior or exterior walls, with the claim that it is seriously DIY-friendly. Closer to home, and more easily available, is a product called American Clay (americanclay.com). Made from natural clays and pigments, plus recycled aggregates, the New Mexico-made material comes in a range of hues and is said to be dust-resistant and moisture-controlling—both plusses on the health front. It costs 80 cents to $1.35 per square foot and can be applied over existing drywall.

All greenness aside, the main thing we like about natural plasters? Their textured and, well, earthy look.—Lily Robertson and Erika Howsare

Take a break

Charlottesville City Council recently endorsed a bill to give tax breaks to the greenest among us. Here’s the deal: Energy-efficient houses can earn a 50 percent reduction in future real estate tax bills. So who qualifies for this windfall?

In order to be officially recognized as “green,” homes needs to be 30 percent more energy efficient than the state building code; you must provide 11 months’ worth of bills to prove your house’s efficiency. The question is, how many of us are realistically going to reach this exalted green status?

If your house was build recently, and to Energy Star specs, then congratulations—you’ve already won and are saving about $500 more per year on energy bills than the rest of us. If not, there are a couple of major steps you can take. One is to install more efficient appliances—look for the Energy Star label—which can reduce utility bills by a third.

Another is to reduce energy used for heating and cooling, which accounts for 56 percent of the energy used in our homes. The State Building Code claims that by weatherizing your home—insulating and double-glazing—you will increase efficiency by 30 percent and thus be officially qualified for Charlottesville’s tax break.

Such steps are substantial investments, of course, which presumably is a major reason behind City Council’s move to reward those who shell out up front. Half off real estate taxes is a big prize, but of course we’ll all win if local homes use less energy.—L.R.

Barrel forward

With spring happily looming, now’s the time to get ready to collect and store all that rainwater that (we dearly hope) will fall throughout the vernal months and into the summer. After all, as you may have heard, 2007 was a year of drought locally, so storing water for irrigating gardens and landscaping only makes sense.

One source for rain barrels: local green-living practitioner Brian Buckley (who with partner Terry Lilley was featured in the July 2007 issue of ABODE). Buckley salvaged 100 50-gallon barrels from a North Carolina pickle company and converts them to rain collectors by adding spigots, overflow valves and filter screens. He’s selling them for $80 and will install them on a wooden stand for another $70. Give him a call at 296-3963.—E.H.

Green-eyed lady

I really want to see my carbon footprint get smaller, but when faced with a pile of paper to recycle, my thoughts tend to run a little something like, “How do I recycle paper again? Does brown paper go with glossy paper or newspaper? Or does newspaper go with white paper? Or is newspaper its own thing? Or is…” You get the point. So sometimes—not often, and I’m not proud when it happens—I end up throwing a piece of paper away because I can’t figure out what pile to put it in.

It’s for the recycling-challenged (and everyone else) that local do-gooder Teri Kent maintains her website, Better World Betty, at http://betterworldbetty.com. (By the way, Kent also appears in these pages with some advice on greening your kitchen.) With the tagline “Green living made easier,” the website makes reducing Charlottesville’s collective carbon footprint easy by leaving the city with exactly zero excuses. Aside from helping with recycling basics, Kent offers everything from a directory of local businesses that swing green (for example, Terra Bella for your dry cleaning) to a blog of her sustainable living-related thoughts.

There’s also a search tool that allows visitors to plug in whatever it is they want to reuse or recycle; the site will then tell visitors where they can accomplish this goal locally. I’ve had an old PDA lying around the house for a while now, so I typed PDA into Better World Betty’s search feature and I know now that I can take the thing to Crutchfield and they will recycle it for me.—Nell Boeschenstein

The rap on wrap

Paper or plastic?  Neither, right?

When it comes to your own kitchen, the default answer to food storage has been plastic.  But remember, my green friends, plastic bags are made of a non-renewable resource, petroleum, and many require hazardous materials to make!
Solution: reuse, and avoid disposables.

Each week, you bring home plenty of containers from the store. Vegetables and loaves of bread likely come in plastic bags or containers: perfect candidates for storing snacks or sandwiches.  

My friend Adrienne, mother of two, reuses the bags inside cereal boxes.  Another option: biodegradable unbleached wax paper. Integral Yoga sells sandwich bags made of silicon, rather than petroleum-based wax (Natural Value, $3.19). Also, don’t forget that aluminum is recyclable (treat it like a can). I found a brand at Rebecca’s made of 100 percent recycled aluminum, If You Care (no, that’s really the name).

If living plastic-free is your goal, consider glass bowls (Rebecca’s Frigoverre set, $21.99), stainless-steel containers (lifewithoutplastic.com, $14.95) or ceramics. Sigg’s nifty aluminum snack box is available at Blue Ridge Eco-Shop ($24.99).—Teri Kent

By the Numbers

2%

“86 percent of respondents believe that it costs more to build a green building—and not just by a little. Most of those said at least 6 percent more, and a large group said over 15 percent more! For comparison, data reported in past issues of Environmental Building News (EBN) suggests that an experienced team can deliver a green building for a 0–2 percent premium.”—from an EBN report on a 2007 survey by Building Design & Construction magazine

Categories
Living

February 08: Your kitchen

Out on a limb

Apples are an edible expression of regional climate and adaptability, and there are thousands of varieties to taste! Thanks to cider-loving colonists, Mr. Jefferson’s enthusiasm, and modern day Central Virginia fruit growers, we can enjoy distinctive heritage varieties such as Gold Rush, Razor Russet, Stayman Winesap, Virginia Gold, and Ashmead’s Kernel. 

Generally, tart apples like Grimes Golden and Summer Rambo mature first in mid-summer, and are ideal in refreshing summer salads with creamy fresh cheeses. Sweeter apples—Mutsu/Crispin, Lady Apple—arrive in the early fall, and complement fragrant and bleu cheeses and salads with nuts and assertive lettuces. Late season and storage apples like Gold Rush and Winesap can be cooked into rich desserts and stewed or baked into applesauce as counterpoint to filling winter dishes. Served fresh cider cold or hot or spiked with spiced rum as an antidote to whimsical autumn weather; it is also a wonderful addition to soups, cabbage, and leafy winter greens.

If you’re looking for a single apple to suit all your needs, try our local hero, the Albemarle Pippin, which is usually available in stores until mid-winter. Local apple growers include Carter Mountain (977-1833), Chile’s Orchard (823-1583), Henley’s Orchard (823-4037), Vintage Virginia Apples (297-2326), and Wayland Orchard (823-7323).—Lisa Reeder

Apple, Pear and Pecan Gratin with Warm Gorgonzola Sauce

Here’s a fruity, cheesy dessert—and we mean that in the nicest way possible. The recipe comes from local chef Christian Trendel, who created it for a wine-tasting dinner.

1 cup and 3 Tbs. sugar
1/2 cup pecans
1/2 cup Japanese (Panko) bread crumbs
6 Tbs. cold unsalted butter, cut into cubes
1 lb. Granny Smith apples
1 lb. firm ripe Bosc pears
1 cup heavy cream
1/2 cup gorgonzola cheese
1 tsp. real vanilla extract
 
Gratin:
Heat oven to 400°. Butter the bottom and sides of a 1 1/2-quart shallow baking pan. In food processor, coarsely chop pecans. Add bread crumbs and 1/2 cup of sugar. Pulse to combine. Add butter cubes and pulse until mixture is evenly mixed. It should be somewhat chunky and crumbly. Keeping them separate, core, peel and thinly slice apples and pears. Layer half the apples in the pan and sprinkle sugar over them. Repeat with the remaining apples and pears, except do not sprinkle sugar on the top layer. Spread pecan-butter mixture evenly over top. Bake until top is browned and juices are bubbling (about 45 minutes). The apples and pears should be intact but tender when pierced with a fork. Let cool about 15 minutes, top with Gorgonzola Sauce and serve. Serves six.
 
Gorgonzola Sauce:
Heat cream in a small pot or pan until it begins to bubble. Add gorgonzola, vanilla extract and sugar and whisk until there are just a few gorgonzola crumbles.

Pare of aces

When it comes to peeling any ripe, round fruit (apples, pears, peaches, plums) a sharp paring knife is the best tool as it won’t bruise the fruit.  For your other peeling needs, the inexpensive Y-shaped peeler is the most economical and versatile tool. If you plan on massive mashed potatoes on a daily basis, a long-handled peeler might be more comfortable and, er, ergonomic.

Some options from The Happy Cook, 977-2665: left to right, Kuhn Rikon plastic Y-peeler ($3.50), OXO Good Grips peeler ($11), Wusthof 3 1/2" inch paring knife (promo $35 from $59).—L.R.

Categories
Living

February 08: Your garden

Winter work

February begins the quest for that hopeful time of year memorialized on innumerable seed packets: “when the ground can be worked.” A shovel full of rich Virginia clay faithfully amended with leaf mold and compost will crumble like cake when the moisture’s just right, but wet soil with meager organic matter renders mud more suitable for bricks. If there’s a patch out there where you grew tomatoes last summer, it needs just a bit of digging and amending on a fine winter day to be ready to receive a few handfuls of seeds the first week of March.


This unusual mature variegated English holly graces the entrance of a home on Blenheim Avenue. At this time of year, don’t shear holly; instead, clip.

You say you don’t have a double-dug garden bed raked smooth, high in organic matter and the best of humus? Use potting soil instead in a 12" diameter container. Scatter the seeds, sift 1/4" more of soil over them, tamp down lightly with your knuckles and soak with a fine spray.

Keep it moist in a cool room until the seeds germinate. In a week or two, after the plants are up, they will need bright light, even moisture and occasional feeding with a high nitrogen liquid fertilizer. Sea kelp is a good organic. Once the seeds have sprouted, you can put the pot outside, bringing it in overnight when temps drop below the mid-20s.

Classic French mesclun produces a variety of greens all at once: a pre-mixed packet of leaf and head lettuces, arugula, kale, chervil, radicchio and the like. Sow heavily and as the little plants begin to grow all jumbled up together, harvest the outside leaves and thinnings for the most delicate, succulent salads you will ever eat. You’ll know where they came from and how they’ve been grown.

Along with planning for edibles, February is the time to get the hollies in shape. Valentine’s Day is the traditional starting point. Wait for temps above 40 and take the hand shears and loppers to any shrubs that have gotten out of hand. Cut branch by branch, thin out the middles for air circulation and reduce for height, thinking in terms of one-third.

This is not the time to shear. Save the electric trimmers for summer when you can cut active growth and thicken up the shrubs. Many hollies—the Chinese Burfords, the blue-green Meserve hybrids like Blue Prince and Blue Princess, and the Japanese Helleris—take well to hedging or clipping, along with periodic thinning, but an attack of geometry now will leave you ugly stubs to live with until new growth starts in the spring.

Do not starve the hollies. They do not thrive on barren ground. Apply compost, leaf mold and slow-release organic fertilizers like Holly Tone each fall or in very early spring to keep a lively soil. There is nothing like sunlight glinting off a mass of glossy holly leaves to brighten a winter day. If you don’t have any, get some.

Check out piedmont-landscape.org for an annual day-long seminar, February 14 at the County Office Building on Preston Avenue. Plantspeople, master gardeners, landscapers, designers and sundry others congregate to hear the best in their fields. This year features Rick Darke on “Grasses and the Design of Mid-Atlantic Livable Landscapes.”

It’s also time to bring branches inside for forcing. Forsythia, witch hazel, honeysuckle bush (sweet-breath-of-spring), quince, pussy willow and red maples unfurl their flowers in the warmth of indoors. Mash their stems and change the water every week. It’s a treat to have them close to the eye while it’s still bare outside and they make an instructive project for children, illustrating the magic of dormancy and the intricate beauties of nature’s designs.—Cathy Clary

Garden questions? Ask Cathy Clary at garden@c-ville.com.

Raincatcher

Part of the pineapple family, the funky bromeliad hails from South America and makes an excellent indoor plant. There are a multitude of varieties, all of which share vibrant hues and waxy bowl-shaped leaves intended for catching rainwater. The larger varieties hold several gallons of water and, in the wild, support mini-ecosystems for small frogs, snails and amphibians.

All bromeliads have fairly shallow roots so smaller pots are adequate, but the key is that they need to be well stabilized. Otherwise bromeliads are quite reasonable in their demands; no extreme temperatures, consistent moisture, good drainage, not too much soil, and no sudden movements from light to shade. Their only trick is that they reproduce consistently and rapidly, so over-fertilize (especially in winter) and you’ll have an outbreak on your hands. Each bromeliad will bloom once in its lifetime, then will create a “pup” growing out from the base. Cultivate this for a year, and it in turn will bloom.—Lily Robertson

February in the garden

-Work the ground

-Sow greens indoors in a salad bowl

-Tend the hollies

Categories
Living

February 08: Your living space

Off the table

Question for Gordon Latter at Kane’s Furniture: How can I protect my wooden dining room table when my kids use it for arts and crafts?

Answer: Latter tells us there are two main tactics for keeping glues, paints, inks and all manner of liquids from marring the centerpiece of your dining room. First, there’s the table pad, custom-made to fit your furniture. “The table pads are about 3/8" thick,” he explains; “underneath is felt and on top is vinyl. It protects and absorbs heat” and won’t let liquids through. Table pads aren’t long on good looks, though, so you’ll want to pair it with a tablecloth—“When kids are using it, [use] a cheesecloth tablecloth,” says Latter; it’ll wipe up easily. For entertaining, replace cheesecloth with linen or just remove the pad altogether and let the wood be itself. Pads fold up for storage and cost in the neighborhood of $240.

The other option: polyurethane, the shiny coating painted on with a brush. “If it’s an old farm table, that would protect it against the elements and if anything drops on it, it blends into the character of the wood,” says Latter. However, he calls this option “less desirable aesthetically,” explaining, “When you put a layer of polyurethane on top of wood, it takes you one step further from the natural surface and gives it a more commercial look.”

If you do find a puddle of some art supply or other on your tabletop, assess the situation. “Some things can blot up,” says Latter, “and if you apply a furniture polish it’ll take care of the problem.” More serious cases will require a trip to a refinisher.—Erika Howsare

Piece work

Everyone can appreciate a quilt; they’re fun to look at and they’re also an art form in their own right. That’s why we like Anita Zaleski Weinraub’s volume, Georgia Quilts: Piecing Together a History, which concentrates on the rich quilting tradition in that state. Here you can glimpse detailed information on centuries of quilters between long gazes at some truly amazing quilts.

These are special creations; they go beyond familiar patterns (forget Log Cabin; ever heard of Circular Saw?) and display stunning variety, from the stylized to the expressive. There are quilts made from feed sacks, quilts pieced for the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, and quilts that illustrate connections to the histories of slavery and the railroad. Pure Southern Americana.—E.H.

Tea is for tall

Local potter Jan Crowther, who calls her business Frog Moon Pottery, wowed us with her teapot’s daring stretch and delicate ornamentation. We spotted the Palmyra-based artist’s work at Downtown artists’ co-op C’ville Arts; Crowther can be reached at 589-4295.

Categories
Living

February 08: Hot house

Modest at first glance, this little cottage off Rugby Road charms us more the longer we look: There’s that organic-looking stone wall and the big boulder in the driveway, lived with rather than excavated, which connect the house to its site. There’s the sheltered entrance a little below street level, and the classy standing-seam roof. And there’s the fact that this elderly place was built on a split-level plan, long before the ranch house started to define the American streetscape. If only suburbia looked like this.