Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Pic Today 10/5/11














A STUNNING MUSEUM,
INSIDE AND OUT

The Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis
is located in the heart of a rebounding section
of an older part of original mid town.

Grand old buildings carefully restored,
including the fabulous Fox Theater,
are attracting new galleries and museums.
The Contemporary Art Museum is a crown jewel
and a notable part of the new construction.

Designed by noted architect Brad Cloepfil
from Portland, Oregon,
this striking museum is as interesting to view
on the outside as the galleries within.

Gravel gardens and dramatic sculpture
make inner courtyards a breathtaking escape,
with walkways and glass walls that play
with shadows and sunlight.

What a joy to photograph!


Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Pic Today 10/4/11










MUM'S THE WORD

Autumn is the season for chrysanthemums (mums).
And there's more than a thousand varieties and colors
to brighten up your fall garden.

Hardy mums do well in cold weather, too.

Put a pot of mums at your front door.
Let them say "welcome autumn" to the world.


Monday, October 3, 2011

Pic Today 10/3/11







AUTUMN SCENES
ON A MISSOURI FARM

Corn is being harvested
under beautiful autumn skies
along Mississippi River farms.

A farmer's prayer:
"Rains stay away, Lord,
until the wheat and corn are in."

Amen.


Sunday, October 2, 2011

Pic Today 10/2/11













THIS ART FAIR
WENT TO THE DOGS

The historic Shaw Neighborhood Art Fair
was held this weekend . . . beautiful homes,
beautiful streets . . . lots of trees, lots of lawns,
perfect autumn weather.

And dogs are welcome!

(This art fair truly went to the dogs.)



Saturday, October 1, 2011

Pic Today 10/1/11








THE ART OF GREAT APPLE BUTTER
(A Conversation with Mrs. Odelehr)

The best of anything is always the result
of quality, detail and the passion of one person.
In the case of apple butter,
for which I am admittedly a connoisseur,
that person is Jeanette Odelehr,
from Brussels, Illinois.

The Odelehr family farm is located on an isolated
piece of prime farmland, between Missouri and Illinois,
reachable only by river ferry boat at a junction
of the Mississippi River (north of St. Louis.)

During a recent visit with Mrs. Odelehr,
she passed along a story of how her apple butter
was first started and the secrets of her award winning recipe.

"We were a hard working farm family, growing wheat, corn and soybeans,"
she says, "and about 30 years ago I asked my husband for a new clothes dryer."
"He said no," she adds, "we can't afford it . . . so I decided I needed
some extra income. And my neighbor suggested making apple butter,
and gave me an old copper kettle. So I gathered our fall batch
of apples (tart Jonathans), cored and peeled 'em, and
cooked them down over an outside wood fire."

"It took lots of patience and stirring, and practice" she says proudly,
"but I figured out a simple recipe with sugar and cinnamon.
And after years of learning and keeping things clean and simple,
they told me my apple butter was 'better than most.' I gradually
found some more copper kettles, and put up more butters
in jars, and sold them at our roadside market.
Our fame and reputation has spread over the years,
and now we get traffic from all over at this time of the year."

Mrs. Odelehr now sells her apple and peach butter at area
farmers' markets, and has won awards for her time proven recipe.
"I'm proud of our product and our family name,
and want my children to carry on our old world recipes," she adds.
"I tell my children I'm putting these old copper kettles
in my will, and how each child will get one.
I'm not sure they understand", as she laughs,
"but I sure earned that new clothes dryer."

This is the best apple butter this blogger has ever tasted.