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Picture of the Week.   LFI.   “Old Car.” Los Angeles. By Chae-Hoon-You. 11/24.

 

CELIA CRUZ AND TITO PUENTE

“A Night of Salsa.”

 

 

Celia Cruz
Rafael Lopez.

March of the Toreadors

New York Giants. By Moe DEmby from his days as a professional photojournalist. © Undated at the Meadowlands Giants Stadium. Blogfinger staff.

New York Giants.   2015.   By Moe Demby from his days as a professional photojournalist. © Undated at the Meadowlands  Stadium. Blogfinger staff. Click to inflate the ball. See comments for analysis 

 

LEONARD BERNSTEIN with the NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC.  “March of the Toreadors” from Carmen.

 

 

Carousel. 2004. By Jack Green IV.

Carousel. 2004. By Jack Green IV.   Click once to enlarge.

 

By Paul Goldfinger, Editor  @Blogfinger.  Re-post from 2014.

 

Some of you might recall dining at the former Captain Jack’s restaurant. We liked to go there for the crispy duck which is actually still on the menu and quite good. You may also remember the large, colorful and striking oil paintings on the walls which were done by the chef/manager of the restaurant, Jack Green IV.

 

Jack’s family is well known in Ocean Grove because they go back several generations. Jack IV, the artist, has a family of his own and he actually is the father of JG V.

 

When it comes to Ocean Grove, Jack is on board with tradition. He and his family live in a tent each summer, and Jack retains his contacts with the surfing community in town.   He says, “Surfing, rowing and cooking are my hobbies, but art is my one true passion”

 

Jack IV has been an artist all his life. He studied  at the  Pratt Institute in New York City, but, although he continues to paint, mostly in oils, he currently has a day job as a construction manager and realtor.

 

Jack IV’s parents have a fine display of his work in their Ocean Grove condo. It was there that I got to photograph a large two-section oil painting of the Carousel House in Asbury Park near the Ocean Grove border. Jack’s technique is alive with color. It’s as if the whole painting shimmers with energy. That seems to be how the artist feels about a place that he has known his whole life. His rendition of the Carousel is cinematic—you can imagine it going round and round. And maybe you can see other things in it as well.

 

The Carousel House, a Beaux-arts design, was built in the 1920’s. It was part of the re-design of the Asbury oceanfront that included the Casino, Convention Hall and the Berkley-Carteret Hotel. In 1932, the original carousel was installed. It was made by the Philadelphia Toboggan Company and called #87.

 

In 1990, the carousel was moved to Myrtle Beach, SC, and the Carousel House was refurbished recently.

 

THEME FROM CINEMA PARADISO.  By Ennio Morricone.

Tanglewood rehearsal.

Tanglewood Music School rehearsal. Paul Goldfinger photo.   Lenox, Mass.

 

Joshua Bell   “Short Trip Home.”

 

Gulf coast, Florida. By Paul Goldfinger © 2014

Gulf coast, Florida. By Paul Goldfinger  2014. Click once for a  bigger  look

 

CHARLIE SHAVERS.  “Baby Won’t You Please Come Home.”   The Definitive Black and Blue Sessions.   Recorded in Bordeaux, 1970.

 

Paul Goldfinger. Asbury Park 2018 Blogfinger.net

 

Paul Goldfinger. A. Park 2018 parade.

 

THE IRISH ROVERS:

 

Making guacamole at the Lakes Park Farmers Market in Fort Myers, Florida.    By Paul Goldfinger. Click once for larger view.

 

A  Blogfinger Guacamole Festival. Do this for the Super Bowl

By Eileen and Paul Goldfinger:

Guacamole was invented by the Aztec Indians in Central Mexico. They grew avocados and tomatoes and they even had corn from which they made tortillas. It’s unlikely that they used tortilla chips and guacamole dips while watching their equivalent of Monday night football, which was human sacrifice on a grand scale.

Aztec mask. Louvre. Note the guacamole color. If you eat too much mole, you can get that color.

Cortes, the Spanish invader, conquered the Aztecs in the 16th century, taking over Tenochtitlan, the capital. He introduced horses and onions to the Indians. Maybe he liked guacamole (the ‘g’ was pronounced like a ‘w’) and improved the recipe with his onions, because the dish and its name have survived to this day. He apparently didn’t like the name of the place, because it became Mexico City.  And Montezuma, the Aztec loser-king, wound up having a gastrointestinal disturbance named for him.

On the other hand, let’s remember that the Aztecs also gave us chocolate and popcorn. Currently you can find a big selection of avocados at Wegmans where they can show you how to select the ripe ones and how to ripen the hard ones.

They even have recipes for “mole” (pr. mo’lee), which is how the dish is called at our house, so named by our sons Michael and Stephen.  Eileen must be related to the Aztecs (Jewish Aztecs are called Jaztecs) because she makes a mean mole while playing Miles in the kitchen.

Several years ago  we were at the Lakes Park Farmers Market in Fort Myers, Fla.  where some guys have a business making big batches of mole to sell to the tourists — maybe like Montezuma’s guacamole makers did.

It’s fun to watch them make their recipe in big stainless steel vats. They have an assembly line including a device for quickly separating the pit, the skin and the green  fruit that actually goes into the recipe.  Huge amounts are made for the Super Bowl.

Wegmans  sometimes has a special display for May 5  to promote guacamole among the gringos of Monmouth County.

Our post about the health benefits of avocado will appear on May 8.

 

 

Selecting avocados at the Farmers market. Paul Goldfinger photo. Ft.Myers, Fla.

 

GUACAMOLE RECIPE:  by Eileen Goldfinger, house and garden editor  @Blogfinger

2 Haas avocados,  2 Campari or small plum tomatoes seeded and diced,  ¼ cup diced red onion,  ½ jalapeno pepper sliced and mince  (optional,) ½  juiced lime,  ½ teaspoon garlic powder,  ½ teaspoon sea salt,  ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, Tabasco sauce to taste (optional.)

Cut two ripe avocados in half, and remove the pits and the skin. Use a fork to mash one avocado in a medium size bowl. Add the tomatoes, onion, jalapeno pepper, garlic, salt and black pepper to the mashed avocado.

Stir gently together. Dice the second avocado into half inch pieces and add to bowl and stir gently.  Squeeze the juice from the half lime into the avocado mixture and stir.  Add Tobasco sauce, one or two drops at a time, and taste to adjust seasoning.

Serves four   (that would be four regular people or two Goldfingers)

 

SOUNDTRACK:  Oh no!   It’s those mariachis; they follow me wherever I go in Mexico.  Montezuma’s revenge is not gastrointestinal, it’s those darned  mariachis.

Quick, Eileen, let’s run away and buy a fajita from the guy  with the horse and wagon on the street.  Don’t worry—I’m a doctor.

 

Leoma Lovegrove is a Florida artist whose gallery is on Pine Island, southwest Fla.   This vehicle is shown at her outdoor backyard gallery on the waterfront.   She also loves to do Beatles’ themes. March, 2017. Paul Goldfinger photo.©

 

BARBARA COOK from her album (Close as Pages in a Book) of songs by lyricist Dorothy Fields.

 

 

 

October 7, 2023. Paul Goldfinger photograph on the bypass between the Casino  OG side and the Asbury boards. With permission from Mom.

 

These girls went to the A. Park  Zombie Parade.   They are good friends at age 5.  Despite the horrid Zombie  depictions on the AP side, Mom told us that the girls were not afraid…..they had a great time.

Now they were heading home to Ocean Grove. The Ocean is to the left, and the Casino to the right.

Note that there is a movement to save the Casino from demolition.  We received a link. (below) from James Calder of Ocean Grove.

 

CLICK ME

 

BROADWAY CAST ALBUM OF OLIVER:

 

 

Mulberry Street, near Chinatown. By Paul Goldfinger © Sept 2013.

Mulberry Street, near Chinatown.  By Paul Goldfinger, MD, Blogfinger.net.   Sept 2013.  Click once to enlarge.  ©

 

Little Italy has been fading away for years. Yet you can still take a food tour there and visit family businesses that exist after more than one hundred years.

On Columbus Day,  the Italian-American community is celebrated —-Paul Goldfinger, Editor @Blogfinger.

 

SALISBURY CATHEDRAL BOYS AND GIRLS CHOIR   “The Lord is my Shepherd”

A Great Blue Heron hunts in the Ft. Myers, Fla. Camelia River. Paul Goldfinger photo. Click to enlarge. 2018.

 

THE INK SPOTS.

 

 

Point Pleasant Marina. By Bob Bowné. Special to Blogfinger © Point Pleasant Marina. By Bob Bowné. 2021.  Special to Blogfinger ©  Click to. enlarge.

 

LEON REDBONE:   “Nobody Cares if I’m Blue”   from his album  Red to Blue

 

Paul Goldfinger. Scanned from a 1960’s negative (Tri-X). Central Park

 

PALAST ORCHESTER:   “As Time Goes By.”