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So far Sarah Walker The Curated House has created 396 blog entries.

The Curated Collection | Elizabeth Lennie

Happy Canada Day! In celebration of the birthday of our home and native land, I had to share one of my favourite Canadian painters with you today. I adore Elizabeth Lennie‘s work for many reasons, but I think it is her subject matter that has most captured my Canadian heart. She understands and expresses our nation at play, capturing the essence of our outdoor pastimes in a way that is beautifully nostalgic. I am easily transported and transposed into her work, back to a younger, more innocent time. Back to a time when “time” seemed to stretch on infinitely. Back to a time when “summer” meant two months off to just play.

My guess is that this Canada Day long weekend, many of you will be spending your days by {or even better, in} the water, just as Lennie imagines you.

I know of few artists who have perfected the art of painting water with such a casual, painterly stroke. As her work has evolved, there appears to me to be an even greater air of expression and “oneness” between Lennie and the water. She has clearly spent many years researching her paintings by plumbing the water’s depths, feeling the pull and drag of it between her fingers as she draws herself through the blue, dappled-light of liquid dreams. From surface to underworld, Lennie captures the azure essence of what draws us all in and allows us to lose countless hours while finding our sense of play again.

Each time I view Lennie’s latest collections I am inspired to simply get outside. I also pine for a pool in the backyard and a weekend cottage retreat. A pool was perhaps the one and only luxury my family had growing up, and it turned me into the water baby I still am today.

Elizabeth Lennie‘s work is available through Art Interiors in Toronto.

How are you spending your Canada Day weekend? I hope it involves some play time, much laughter, and the opportunity to connect with the ones you love.

xo
s.

By |July 1st, 2013|1 Comment

Foodie Friday | A Recipe for Kale Chips from Doug McNish’s Eat Raw, Eat Well

Noah and I decided to vacate the house while Graham was working on the drywall last Saturday and headed out for a visit to the Evergreen Brickworks market. You all know about my love affair with markets, and this one has a particularly local, organic bent to it that fits like a glove. The drive there? Not as awesome. But what awaits at the other end is worth a little Toronto traffic.

{Image source}

Although I was very excited to see the many varying vendors there selling their organic produce, fresh sheep and goats cheeses, gorgeous baked goods and so on, there was one singular booth for which I had really made the trip. I was there for Doug McNish.

I first met Doug at an organic, raw food restaurant in Mississauga. There, Doug opened my eyes {and my palette!} to the possibility that raw food could be totally gourmet and incredibly satisfying. So when I heard that he had a booth at the Evergreen Brickworks and – even better – a new cookbook with over 400 raw recipes, I made a beeline straight for him. I’ve been dying to learn how to cook raw haute cuisine since my first meal at Doug’s original restaurant, not because I am going totally raw, but because I want to incorporate more vibrant and healthy recipes into my repertoire and enjoy eating those meals.

Along with an incredible lunch of collard green falafel wraps and an amazing desert of raw walnut and cacao brownies, Noah and I also snatched up a copy of Doug’s cookbook, Eat Raw, Eat Well.

One of the first recipes I tried was the Sour Cream and Onion Kale Chips. Now, there are many scales upon which to measure one’s cooking success, but I would say a young boy willingly consuming most of the batch equals a major win! Noah seriously loved them and so did Graham and I. They are truly amazing and will replace chips for SURE! After many requests for the recipe from the Instagram photo I posted, I touched base with Doug and he has generously agreed to let me share it with you here today:

INGREDIENTS:

1 1/2 cups raw cashews, soaked
1 bunch green kale
1 small red onion
1/2 cup filtered water
1/4 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
1 1/2 tbsp apple cider vinegar
1/4 tsp fine sea salt

METHOD:
Start by covering the cashews with 3 cups of water and soaking for 30 minutes.

Meanwhile, starting at the bottom of each stem, strip away the frilly green leaves of the kale and, if necessary, tear into smaller pieces {about 2 ” each}.

Discard the stems, wash the leaves and transfer into a large mixing bowl.

Using a mandoline, slice the red onion very thinly. Break up the rounds with your fingers and add to the kale {Sarah’s side note: in my rush to make these, I didn’t read carefully and just threw my red onion into the blender with the cashews and everything else. Still worked brilliantly!} Drain the cashews after 30 minutes. In a blender, combine the soaked cashews, filtered water, lemon juice, vinegar and salt. Blend at high speed until smooth and creamy.

Toss over the kale until it is thoroughly coated. Spread the kale out onto non-stick baking sheets in a single layer. {Sarah’s side note: I used 2 full heads of kale for the amount of coating produced and spread it all out over 3 cookie sheets lined with parchment.} Dehydrate at 105 F {41 C} for 10-12 hours or until cripsy. {Sarah’s side note: I discovered my oven has a dehydrate setting!! Amazing!! If yours doesn’t, you can pick up a dehydrator online and will want to crisp them up this way to preserve all of the raw enzymes and nutritional goodness packed into the kale.}

 I absolutely love sharing recipes that taste just as good as they are good for your health. Thank you, Doug, for sharing your culinary genius and healthy inspiration with us!

xo
s.

By |June 28th, 2013|1 Comment

An Update for Project Ugly Duckling {including some VERY good news!}

I received a very, very happy phone call last week and it has been all I could do to keep the news of it under my hat until now. As it would happen, the lovely ladies at Kravet Canada follow my blog and read last Tuesday’s post about my love affair with Fornasetti’s Nuvole wallpaper.

This may feel a bit like a genealogy for a moment, but Fornasetti wallpapers are made by Cole and Son, and Cole and Son is distributed by Kravet. It’s one big happy designer family with many different personalities and aesthetics represented in the clan.

Well, last Wednesday I received an unexpected call from Sonia at Kravet {as a side note, this woman has the most perfectly shaped eyebrows you’ve ever seen…seriously…I have confessed my eyebrow envy to her many a time}. To my utter amazement and total delight, Cole and Son has decided to sponsor the wallpaper!!! Eeeeeee!!! I’m pretty much covered in bruises from pinching myself since I got Sonia’s delightful call and cannot WAIT to get this stunning, statement-making paper installed! Oh happy day!!!

The truth is, we are just at the drywall stage, repairing the walls now that the electrical has been done, and I’m waiting for the mudder and taper to fit us into his schedule. {Mudding and taping is the ONE job Graham won’t do – he values his sanity too much. Read: mudding and taping is the messiest, most tedious, WORST job in a reno!} Once the mudding and taping are done, Graham will get the trim up and we’ll paint the trim and crown and ceiling, etc…and THEN the wallpaper can go up! So I have to take my patience pill for now and wait a couple of weeks for the gorgeousness to be revealed to you all. Things are always much slower when you do the work yourself, but gratifying too {and of course, WAY cheaper}.

Next on my to-do list is lighting, so I’ll update you with that next week as we keep plugging away on the beautification of Project Ugly Duckling. She’s still more duckling than swan right now, but I can visualize her transformation and am rather giddy at the anticipation of the reveal!

Happy Thursday!

xo
s.

By |June 27th, 2013|3 Comments