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Tricolore Treats

28 Thursday Aug 2014

Posted by Teresa in Cooking, Garden, Home

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

cooking, Family, garden, Italian Food, Tricolore

I get a real kick out of making food in the colours of the Italian Flag. Red, white and green. My favorite pizza, the Margherita, is made with basil, tomato and cheese. It was invented in Naples as a tribute to the Italian flag, also known as the Tricolore.

Tricolore

In the dish in this photo I used Basil from my garden and combined it with, tomato, bocconcini and prosciutto to create a Tricolore antipasto. I only wish I could share it with my cousin Antonello in Italy. Its been too long since we’ve shared a meal together.

Here is a link to more Tricolori dishes https://www.google.com/search?q=Tricolore+food&client=firefox-a&hs=y3r&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&channel=sb&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=_Z_-U4UOiJ2MAumogBA&ved=0CFcQsAQ&biw=1441&bih=1060

 

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Making the most of your gifts

21 Thursday Nov 2013

Posted by Teresa in Garden, Home, Photography, Uncategorized

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Tags

childhood, garden, gifts, Italianness, lilies, propagation

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Whenever my mother received a bunch of carnations she would pinch out the green shoots and plant them in the garden. Within a few months they had turned into small plants and soon after flowers would follow. My parent’s garden was always full of plants but I never saw them buying any of them or going to a nursery. It was always a matter of exchanging seeds with other Italians or taking a cutting and propagating it. There was something miraculous about this because it was making something out of almost nothing. I remember being enchanted by the idea of propagation and would pinch new shoots from plants on the way home from school and try to grow them. I found it wasn’t that hard and had a lot of success. I still love the idea, but pushed for time, I often end up buying seedlings off the shelf. However, a few years ago a friend gave me a small pot of ornamental indoor lilies. When they died off I dug the bulbs into the garden and that small pot has become around 50 plants and every spring they pop up underneath the mango tree and put on a show.

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Grevilleas from Outer Space

26 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by Teresa in art, Garden, Home, Photography

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

close ups, courtyards, flowers, friends, garden, Grevilleas, macro photography, plants

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At a distance Grevilleas look like old dry brushes, but up close they look lush, soft and sensual. With a mass of curly insect-like antennae they almost look like they come from another planet. However, I found these in the tiny courtyard of my good friend Cathie P today while we were testing out my macro lens on her camera.

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Sunflowers in the Garden

23 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by Teresa in art, China, Cooking, Garden, Home, Photography, Travel

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Ai Wei Wei, China, Family, home, Italy, Kwinana, macro, Perth, photography, Sunflowers

A few weeks before we left for China I pulled up most of the vegies from the garden. I didn’t want our guests to walk out to a garden full of weeds so I scattered flower seeds randomly in the garden bed. Some of these were sunflowers and they sprouted immediately. We saw the first flowers bursting through just before we left.

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Our guests tell me that they loved walking out and seeing a patch of bright colour everyday. By the time we got back the sunflowers were at the end of their life so I replaced them with basil, eggplants bok choy and spinach. However, they were not ready to give up the garden totally and soon enough seeds from the old sunflowers started to sprout amongst the basil. I was so glad because I’ve always loved sunflowers.

When I was a child I would plant the seeds in any nook and cranny. Then when the flowers were spent I would dry them out and eat the seeds with my mum. I’m going to try this with poppet when these flowers go to seed.

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I love the way the flowers turn with the sun. In fact the Italian name for them is Girasole, which literally mean ‘turn with the sun’. Curiously, they also seem to follow me around. Where ever I go I come across them. Maybe it’s just that they’re common or that they grow almost anywhere or that I notice them because I love them so much. In any case, over the years they have kept me company and cheered me up in my travels.

Kwinana

I took this photo in 1991 in Kwinana, an industrial suburb in Perth on one of my first photographic adventures with poppet’s dad. This was long before digital photography; when you used film sparingly. This was the only shot of the sunflower I took that day and I can still remember the moment the shutter clicked.

When we went to Italy in 1999 we ran into an enormous field of sunflowers driving from Venice to Rome and had to stop and get amongst them. (This is a much younger me.)

Italy Sun

I kept seeing them in China but sadly I didn’t take any photos.  However, it did make me think about Ai Wei Wei’s installation Sunflower Seeds. I haven’t seen it but the idea of it excites me. The work is made up of millions of hand crafted porcelain sunflower seeds. Apparently, sunflower seeds were one of the few treats during the cultural revolution and friends would catch up while indulging in this simple pleasure. I noticed that this practice continues today in other forms. Once when we went to dinner with a group of friends in Shanghai bowls of sunflower seeds were placed on the table at the end of the meal and everyone began cracking the husks open. It reminded me of my childhood when I would dry out my sunflower seeds and them munch on them with my mum.

I’ve added these links to Ai Wei Wei’s Sunflower Seeds.

http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/unilever-series-ai-weiwei-sunflower-seeds

http://artasiapacific.com/Magazine/72/SunflowerSeedsAiWeiwei

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Australian Gothic

12 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by Teresa in Home, Photography, Travel

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Austalian, Austalian Gothic, Gothic, landscape, photography, Picnic at Hanging Rock, Wolf Creek

I’ve had a kind of bloggers block over the last few weeks, except writing is not the problem; images are. I’m still struggling to find my eye in an Australian context. I decided to look at some photos I’d taken in Australia over the last few years for inspiration. I came across a series I started working on about 5 years ago I called Australian Gothic. While the images of Australia that populate ad campaigns and soap operas focus on beautiful beaches, lovely sunshine and suburban bliss there is also a literary and filmic tradition that focuses on Australia as a harsh, uninhabitable place full of the unknown. Think Picnic at Hanging Rock, Wolf Creek or Mad Max and you will get a sense of Australia not as a country of endless fun and relaxation but as a harsh, unnerving and ghostly environment. Even the idea of Australia as a place of endless sunshine is turned in on itself, as it becomes something that is overwhelming, blinding, scorching and fatal. There is also a tradition of Gothic architecture that peppers the Australian landscape; churches, schools, tin sheds, rusty windmills and gargoyled buildings. This was the Australia I wanted to reference when I took these photos and I think it might be the one that helps me look through the lens again.

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Life at Home

14 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Teresa in China, Home, Photography, Travel

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Buddha, China, garden, Madonna, photography, travel

We’ve been back from our trip about a month now and I feel bad that I haven’t post a blog yet. It has taken me a while to get over the shock of getting back to everyday life at home after the high of living in China. I’ve always loved China but this time I fell ‘in love’ and leaving felt like I was ending an intense romance prematurely. I cried when it was time to leave the apartment. To make matters worse, on the way to the airport the chauffeur put on the Madonna song ‘I’ll say Goodbye’ which set me off again, even though it also made me feel ridiculous. Before My Tiny Italian Garden returns home to Australia, I though I would add a few last photos from China.

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I’m back and so is my Cavello Nero

25 Sunday Jul 2010

Posted by Teresa in Garden, Home

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Tags

Amsterdam, cavello nero, Croatian Cabbage, Croatian Garden, Deleuze conference, fans, garden, Perth, Tomatoes, wiinter tomatoes, winter garden, world up

A few days ago I got back from the Deleuze Studies conference in Amsterdam where I gave a paper, and guess what? My Cavello Nero has bounced back. You might remember a post a while back where I talked about how my Cavello Nero had been ravaged by caterpillars. Well I was determined not to give up on them so I cut them back–basically to stumps–and they started to grow back. They were just starting to gain momentum before I left, but the growth seemed to be slow. Now they are ready to pick. Its amazing how fast plants grow when you’re not looking.

Speaking of the cabbage family.

On the way back from Amsterdam I stopped into Perth. While I was away Baba and Poppet went to visit both our families who live there. My Mother-in-law has a gorgeous little Croatian Garden. Here it is the middle of winter and she already has tomatoes growing. Now, I know its not a European winter but it still gets down to 0% at night, so it quite a feat. She also has Croatian Cabbage growing, which you leave in the ground and pick leaves as you need them. This means it last ages and grows very tall. Hers reached my chest. And the best part is that she gave me some seeds. I’m going to sow them today.

By the way, the World Cup was on while I was in Amsterdam. I took photos of the fans before the game (still happy at this point). I’ve uploaded some on flickr. If you would like to have a look click on the flickr link on the right side of the blog.

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My Saturday Morning With Poppet

12 Saturday Jun 2010

Posted by Teresa in Home

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Alphabet, Breakfast, Cereal, Crayons, Crown, Drawing, Family, Lily, Motherhood, Pink, Play, Poppet, Teddy, Toddler, Toes, Toys, White

Poppet and I gave Baba a well deserved sleep in this morning. I got up early so I could fit in a little research before Poppet got up. However,  20 mins later I heard him talking to his stuffed toys and that was that. Anyway we had a very busy, enjoyable morning. We had cereal for breakfast, admired the wilting lilies in the vase, played with cars and trucks, went through alphabet cards, did some drawing and twice swept up crumbs and mess in the same spot. When Baba woke up we had coffee and juice in bed with him. I took photos as we went from one activity to another. Sometimes Poppet would direct me, telling me what to photograph. Here are some of the photos.

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