3.31.2013

free and made alive

Blooming despite the cold and snow. #reunionboston #liveforgiven #latergram

After hearing Phil Wickham's song "True Love" for the first time a few years ago, I can't go an Easter without listening to it on repeat. For me, it captures the weight and depth of this day: the love, the heartbreak, and the hope of the cross.

May you feel free and made alive, today especially. You are loved. Happy Easter.



"True Love" | Phil Wickham
Come close, listen to the story
About a love more faithful than the morning
The Father gave His only Son just to save us

The earth was shaking in the dark
All creation felt the Father's broken heart
Tears were filling heaven's eyes
The day that true love died, the day that true love died

When blood and water hit the ground
Walls we couldn't move came crashing down
We were free and made alive
The day that true love died, the day that true love died

Search your heart, you know you can't deny it
Lose your life just so you can find it
The Father gave His only Son just to save us

The earth was shaking in the dark
All creation felt the Father's broken heart
Tears were filling heaven's eyes
The day that true love died, the day that true love died

When blood and water hit the ground
Walls we couldn't move came crashing down
We were free and made alive
The day that true love died, the day that true love died

Jesus is alive
He rose again

When blood and water hit the ground
Walls we couldn't move came crashing down
We were free and made alive
The day that true love died, the day that true love died

Come close, listen to the story

3.22.2013

This Place | Tales of Olde

We are still so grateful that we found REUNION when we first moved to Boston. There are so many reasons why we love this community, but one of them is the way REUNION fosters the arts and creativity. We are all meant to create in our own unique ways—to tell our stories.

Lucas, Evelyn, Drew, Ellen, and Jeff tell their stories through music. We are blessed to enjoy their talents at REUNION, and to count them as friends. They recently teamed up for a new project, and I hope you enjoy their first music video as much as we do. (Shout out to Mikhail for amazing videography!)

3.18.2013

a weekend in the Granite State

weekend in the granite state

Last weekend, Ian and I joined eight friends for a road trip to the Granite State. Despite Boston's foot of snow, the roads stayed clear and we made it to the cabin by nightfall. The last car to arrive, Ryan, Kelly, Ian, and I were greeted by simmering pots of chili, a crackling fireplace, and plenty of excellent company.

Saturday, Ian and I stuck with the non-skiing half of the group. We lounged around the cabin, enjoyed some excellent vegetarian fare, and explored New Hampshire. The latter involved a breathtaking drive through snowy woods, exuberant Dunkin' Donuts employees (I can envision the possibilities for an Undercover Boss episode), and the Enfield Shaker Museum. We didn't have time to take the village tour, but my curiosity is piqued.

weekend in the granite state
weekend in the granite state

We arrived at the Ragged Mountain lodge just in time for a round of drinks with the blissfully exhausted winter sports enthusiasts, then we all headed back to the cabin for dinner, college basketball, and Justin Timberlake on SNL.

weekend in the granite state

Sunday, after an epic breakfast of french toast casserole, we loaded the vehicles, said our goodbyes, and meandered back to Boston.

weekend in the granite state
photo by Old Try

On our way home, we took a detour for a photo session at a lumber operation. Ryan and I scurried around in the mud and snow for the best shots, while Ian and Kelly watched us look silly from the car. Worth it? I think so.

weekend in the granite state

We also stopped in Manchester for brunch at REPUBLIC. I'm slightly jealous of Ian's talent for unearthing amazing local spots in cities we've never before explored, but I can't complain. I am still dreaming about the onion and goat cheese tarte.

Thanks to the Whitsons for organizing a fantastic trip!

Click here for Old Try's trip post, full of eloquent thoughts and beautiful photos.

3.05.2013

our new obsession: Taza chocolate

Loved our @tazachocolate tour. The infatuation is now an obsession. #latergram

A couple Christmases ago, Ian and I independently discovered Taza Chocolate Mexicano discs at Brookline Booksmith. We surprised each other when the discs turned up in both of our stockings, filling out the toes quite nicely. (In retrospect, this was a foreshadowing of our wicked good slippers surprise.) We enjoyed our mugs of Taza hot chocolate while patting ourselves on the back for supporting a local company, but didn't give it more thought.

That changed when I saw a Google offer for two-for-one tickets to the Taza Chocolate factory tour in Somerville. This was my counterpart to Ian's local brewery tours. I signed us up immediately.

We arrived ten minutes early for our reservation and browsed the store. Samples are everywhere, and we quickly realized that grating the discs then melting them in steaming milk was not the only way to enjoy Taza—the bars and discs just might be the best straight-up chocolate we've ever tasted.

taza chocolate factory tour

Right at noon, our tour started with an overview of cacao. While known for it's seeds, cacao is also a tasty tropical fruit and that flesh imparts its flavor to the chocolate. The beans are harvested, fermented for almost two weeks to retain more of the fruit flavors, dried in greenhouses, and then bagged for shipment.

To procure their cacao beans, Taza has developed direct trade relationships with farmers in the Dominican Republic (near and dear to our hearts), Belize, and Bolivia. Just like Fair Trade standards, direct trade deems fair wages and sustainable practices as imperative. But Taza's direct trade goes above and beyond, partnering exclusively with certified organic farmers, offering compensation above the minimum fair trade requirements, and visiting the farms at least once a year to cultivate (pun intended) those relationships.

taza chocolate factory tour

After learning about the beans, we moved on to the production portion of the tour, and on went the hair nets. We started in a room stacked floor to ceiling with gigantic bags of raw cacao beans. It smelled like a fresh, clean barn thanks to all the burlap, which seemed fitting since chocolate is an agricultural product.

Our guide informed us that after the beans spend time in the giant roaster, they move to the winnowing machine, which separates the cacao nibs from the shell. We sampled raw cacao nibs—tastier than I expected. We also learned that Taza is mindful about waste, sending discarded cacao shells to local farms as fertilizer.

taza chocolate factory tour

Next we moved into the packaging area, where finished chocolate is wrapped and boxed. Standing in a gigantic room full of chocolate delivers an intoxicating dose of chocolate scent with every breath, and the pyramids of Mexicano discs are so tempting. A special machine can wrap fifty-six chocolate discs per minute, but the square bars are still wrapped by hand. Taza ships these stacks of chocolate boxes to hundreds of retailers in forty-eight states and seven countries.

taza chocolate factory tour

We finished the tour back in the store area, with giant windows into the actual chocolate-making area of the factory. Authentic Mexican stone mills, or molinos, use hand-carved granite discs to grind the cacao nibs into something like peanut butter, called cocoa liquor. The liquor then moves to a tank where the sugar is incorporated. This mix is either piped to another molino that blends the cocoa liquor and sugar for the Mexicano discs, or further refined for the slightly more European chocolate bars. Finally, the chocolate is tempered to achieve the perfect texture and snap, then molded and cooled, ready for packaging.

taza chocolate factory tour

The tour ends with shots of hot chocolate for everyone. We got to try the naranja y canela, which adds orange to the traditional cinnamon-flavored chocolate to create their holiday flavor.

So how is the chocolate? Delicious. It's not the overly sweet fare handed out on Halloween. Taza chocolate has a slightly grainy texture thanks to minimal processing and tiny ingredient lists, but it still melts in your mouth. The flavor is powerful but not overwhelming, almost savory, and it doesn't linger. Everything was delicious, but our favorite flavors were the salted almond and the coco besos coconut bar (limited edition for February but not yet out of stock online).

We came home with an extra-large mug and a molinillo chocolate whisk to elevate our at home hot chocolate experience, along with a generous sampling of Mexicano discs. We'll be sure to keep our Taza stash well stocked from now on.

If you're in Boston and enjoy chocolate, make time to browse the store and take the tour. And please, bring us with you.

3.01.2013

thankful list | Feburary

#watertown is #upsidesown @sasakidesign #igboston #architecture #winter

01. taking home an editing project home instead of staying late at the office.
02. brunch with friends (including a super happy baby).
03. clean laundry.
04. migraine medicine.
05. a husband who takes care of me.
06. a new step in REUNION's growth.
07. music that was exactly what I needed to hear.
08. meeting our community group's first baby!
09. community group Super Bowl watch party.
10. a Russo's chocolate croissant for breakfast.
11. a half day off of work thanks to the snowstorm.
12. Netflix to start Battlestar Galactica while snowed in.
13. feeling like a kid with two feet of snow.
14. hot chocolate.
15. Valentine's date night watching the Oscar-nominated animated shorts.
16. an annual physical that confirms I'm still super healthy.
17. access to good healthcare.
18. dinner and YouTube videos with the Browns. Love them.
19. Taza chocolate and the factory tour.
20. still making the Gungor concert despite the one-week snow delay.
21. music.
22. a (holiday) Monday off after serving at REUNION.
23. Ian's help around the house.
24. knocking out six loads of laundry in one fell swoop.
25. a good chat with Grandma Marilyn on her birthday.
26. the opportunity to assemble a style guide for REUNION.
27. dinner parties with friends.
28. Ian's excellent culinary skills.
29. an awesome team for REUNION setup.
30. celebrating Fox's birthday with a brunch party.
31. playing with baby G.
32. watching the Oscars with Ian.
33. waking up (we didn't make it to the end) to discover Argo won.
34. a good night's sleep after a full weekend.
35. Australian meat pies for lunch.
36. more proofreading projects at work.
37. discovering green smoothies are tasty.
38. cozy  blankets.