Elizabeth Anne Middleton

Elizabeth Anne Middleton
Playing piano my joy and passion

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Good ol' summertime

Well, the longest day of the summer has come and gone.  Now the days will be growing imperceptibly shorter even while the weather gets relentlessly hotter each day.  If you live in the northern hemisphere, that is.

I grew up on a farm in Kansas.  Summers were hot and sweaty.  Some nights were so hot, we slept out in the backyard on the lawn.  (This was before air conditioning!)  We ran barefoot all summer, went wading in the creek, and tried to catch fireflies into a jar.  Our Dad made homemade ice cream on Sunday afternoons, and oh boy, I loved eating watermelon on a hot day.  We had a "milk house," where we separated cream from the milk from our own cows and where my mother washed clothes with a wringer washer.  I still remember how good the milk house smelled - kinda like milk, I would say.  Anyway, we kept the watermelon and anything else we wanted to keep cool in a tank of water in the milk house. 

Summertime was definitely a time of good eating - everything from huge juicy raspberries and tomatoes from our garden to strawberries from Grandma's strawberry patch, to corn on the cob slathered with butter, with fried chicken nearly every day.  Mother would kill the chicken not very long before it would be sizzling in the frying pan.  (I'm glad that wasn't my job!)  I was such a little sadist in those days - not that I could have killed a chicken - I would torture caterpillars by poking them with a stick and making them squirm.  Geez, I feel guilty now. 

Another example of my cruelty:  we kids would get bloodsuckers (leeches) on our feet and legs when wading in the creek.  We got so used to it we didn't think much about it, just get out of the water with blood running down our legs and go on about our fun and games.   But we had a city cousin who came to visit one day.  Well, we didn't warn her about the bloodsuckers and did she scream bloody murder!  She probably suffers from PTSD to this day.  We were really wild kids, hoodlums, you might say.

 

 

 

Posted via email from PIANORAMA

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Speaking of Weddings . . .


Speaking of Weddings
My first wedding was in a Lutheran church - full of people, me wearing long white dress and veil, groom, best man and groomsmen in tuxedos, maid of honor, bridesmaids, flower girl, ring bearer, music, flowers - the whole nine yards.  A reception with wedding cake, tons of food, towers of gifts and hordes of people followed.   A week's long honeymoon in the Colorado mountains followed the wedding.
My second wedding was in a Congregational church in Boston (which burned to the ground a year to the day later), me wearing a pea green miniskirted dress, with the minister officiating and one witness.  My husband, his sister and I then enjoyed an excellent dinner with plenty of champagne at a restaurant with a revolving view of Boston Harbor.
My third (and last) wedding was in a garden in Santa Barbara, me wearing a forest green flowing hippie style pants and a (definitely hippie style) green top; my husband-to-be might have been wearing running shorts for all I remember.  A woman minister (Verna Yater) officiated and a few close friends attended.   Afterward, for a honeymoon, we drove to the beach, sat in my husband's car, and watched the ocean for a little while.  We went home and ate baked potatoes.
I've played for lots of weddings; from pipe organs in big Catholic Churches to grand pianos in churches and resorts to keyboards in outdoor tents and seen all kinds of individual styles of ceremonies; one couple boogied out the door while I played and the singer belted out "Stand by Me."  Of course nowadays we see all sorts of things on YouTube; anything goes.


Thursday, August 12, 2010

My music now on last fm internet radio

I hope you all get a chance to check this out!  I've been trying to figure out all day how to link up with Amazon.com in order to sell MP3 tracks, but oh, well, another day.  At least you can listen to the music to your heart's content here.  One of these days I'll figure out how to make it easy for people to download to their own computers, too.  Promise.


http://www.last.fm/music/Elizabeth+Anne+Middleton

Posted via email from PIANORAMA

Thursday, August 5, 2010

DELICIOUS BUCKWHEAT SMOOTHIE

Did you know that buckwheat is not actually a wheat grain?  Buckwheat is a remarkable seed of a plant belonging to - of all things - the rhubarb family.  It is chock full of nutrients; in fact one of those almost "perfect" foods, very digestible and a wonderful addition to the diet of folks who are sensitive to wheat.  In the past I was able to find raw organic hulled buckwheat in the bulk section of a local health food market.  Now, it seems the only buckwheat they have is the toasted kind, or what is called "kasha."
So now, I go online - where else? - and it shows up in 5-lb coffee-can type containers on my doorstep.  I also buy organic rice drink from Trader Joe's and raw organic almonds from the local farmers' market.
Here's the recipe:
DELICIOUS BUCKWHEAT SMOOTHIE
Soak a cup of raw hulled organic buckwheat groats in just enough filtered water to barely cover them - they begin to sprout overnight!  Then the container goes in                                     the fridge.  Also soak a cup of raw organic almonds.

Strain and and set aside: 1/4 cup of soaked buckwheat and 4 or 5 soaked almonds
Pour into blender:  

1 & 1/2 cups rice milk, coconut milk or hemp milk   

two fruits, such as:
1 red delicious apple cut into bite-size chunks
1 orange or other fruit cut into bite-size chunks
1 banana cut into bite-size chunks
1/4 cup blueberries or other berries 

Buckwheat and almonds

Cinnamon, ground cloves, ground nutmeg, ground ginger or whatever spices desired

Supplements such as Vitamin C powder or green powder                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Blend until frothy and enjoy!



Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Campaign for Safe Cosmetics and Chemicals of Concern


Learn about a few of the top ingredients and contaminants to avoid, based on the science linking each to adverse health impacts, and they types of products they're found in. To learn more about how chemicals impact your health and where they come from, check out the Your Body, Your Health section.

For each of the chemicals included in this section, a growing body of hazard-based evidence suggests connections to long-term health concerns like cancer and reproductive problems.

These are just a very few examples of the 10,500 ingredients used in personal care products. To learn more about other chemicals, visit EWG's Skin Deep database of cosmetic products and ingredients.

Annie Leonard has a new film called The Story of Cosmetics (toxics in and toxics out!). If you haven't seen her first film, The Story of Stuff, just google it and you'll find it - very thought provoking and worth taking a few minutes to watch. Her latest film really made me take a second look at the labels on some of the things I keep in my bathroom and use every day, things like shampoo and body lotion! Check out EWG's Skin Deep database - you will be surprised at the toxins you'll find in those products you might be using every day - even on your children and babies!

Posted via email from PIANORAMA

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Nature by Numbers

A short movie inspired by numbers, nature and geometry, by Cristobal Villa.

Posted via web from PIANORAMA