Now’s the time to start looking out for those street vendors selling 2.5 lb bags of cherries for five bucks, perfect for Anna Thomas’s COLD CHERRY SOUP, an unusual first course for a summer supper!
From page 91 of THE VEGETARIAN EPICURE BOOK TWO:
You’ll need:
2.5 lbs fresh, sweet dark cherries
5 cups water
4 Tbs. sugar, or more to taste
1/3 cup white wine, or to taste
Juice of 1 or 2 lemons, or to taste
1 cup heavy cream
Wash the cherries, remove their stems, pit them, and put them in a large enameled pot along with the sugar and the water. Bring to a boil and simmer for about 15 to 20 minutes. Drain the cherries, but do not discard the liquid. Remove 24 cherries and put them aside.
Rub the remaining cherries through a fine sieve and return the puree’ to the cherry liquid. Add a little white wine and fresh squeezed lemon juice. If the soup is too sour, add a little more sugar.
Chill the soup. When it is quite cold, whip the cream, without sweetening it. Put 4 of the reserved cherries into each of 6 bowls, and divide the soup equally among them. Finish each serving with a generous spoonful of the whipped cream.
Serves 6.
Thanks to Anna Thomas for this elegant summertime treat and for her culinary classics THE VEGETARIAN EPICURE BOOK ONE and BOOK TWO and her 1996 release, THE NEW VEGETARIAN EPICURE : http://www.vegetarianepicure.com/
Here are the famous clips of Hitch at the University of Toronto.
Topic, “Freedom of Speech”.
Hitch exercised his right to make the following revolutionary statement, “Our problem is this: our prefrontal lobes are too small and our adrenaline glands are too big and our thumb finger opposition isn’t all that it might be and we’re afraid of the dark and we’re afraid to die and we believe in the truths of holy books that are so stupid and so fabricated that a child can and all children do see through them and I think religion should be treated with ridicule and hatred and contempt and I claim that right”, which will undoubtedly go down in history as one of the most sophisticated declarations ever of the free individual’s right to eschew the notion of religion.
If you’ve forgotten this album, definitely pick it up this weekend: FIGHT LIKE A BRAVE, ME AND MY FRIENDS, BEHIND THE SUN…completely perfect album from start to finish.
Good time for initiating projects pertaining to emotional growth, making decisions that have been hard to arrive at, licking old wounds for the last time and rising from the ashes, expecting just rewards after a period of strife.
“I have been accused of being a ‘black magician.’ No more foolish statement was ever made about me.I despise the thing to such an extent that I can hardly believe in the existence of people so debased and idiotic as to practice it. ” – Aleister Crowley
Jimmy Page photo above, taken by Herb Greene, 1968. Page’s interest in Crowley would be, like Crowley himself, grossly misrepresented and misunderstood. Perhaps even maligned.
In the early 1970s, Jimmy Page owned an occult bookshop and publishing house, “The Equinox Booksellers and Publishers” in Kensington High Street, London, eventually closing it as the increasing success of Led Zeppelin resulted in his having insufficient time to devote to it. In “I’m With The Band,” Pamela Des Barres recalls one of the more interesting aspects of her relationship with Page: scouring Hollywood for rare occult literature to ship back to the Guitar God.
The infamous Boleskin House, (purchased by Page, formerly owned by Aleister Crowley) lies on the edge of Loch Ness in Scotland. Sections of Page’s fantasy sequence in the film The Song Remains the Same were filmed at night on the mountainside directly behind Boleskine House.
Jimmy Page interview below, from Guitar World January 2008:
(Guitar World) Could we talk a little about the meaning behind your Sequence [in The Song Remains The Same movie]?
(Page) To me, the significance is very clear, isn’t it?
(GW) Well, I find it interesting that you were choosing to represent yourself as a hermit at a time when you were really quite a public figure.
(Page) Well, I was hermetic. I was involved in the hermetic arts, but I wasn’t a recluse. Or maybe I was… The image of the hermit that was used for the [inside cover] art-work on Led Zeppelin IV and in the movie actually has it’s origins in a painting of Christ called The Light of the World by the pre-Raphaelite artist William Holman Hunt. The imagery was later transferred to the Waite tarot deck [the most popular tarot deck in use in the English-speaking world]. My segment was supposed to be the aspirant going to the beacon of truth, which is represented by the hermit and his journey toward it. What I was trying to say through the transformation was that enlightenment can be achieved at any point in time; it just depends on when you want to access it. In other words you can always see the truth, but do you recognize it when you see it or do you have to reflect back on it later?
(GW) There was always a certain amount of speculation about your occult studies. It may have been subtle, but you weren’t really hiding it.
(Page) I was living it. That’s all there is to it. It was my life – that fusion of magick and music.
(GW) Your use of symbols was very advanced. The sigil [symbols of occult powers] on Led Zeppelin IV and the embroidery on your stage clothes from that time period are good examples on how you left your mark on popular culture. It’s something that major corporations are aggressively pursuing these days: using symbols as a form of branding.
(Page) You mean talismanic magick? Yes, I knew what I was doing. There’s no point in saying much about it, because the more you discuss it, the more eccentric you appear to be. But the fact is – as far as I was concerned – it was working, so I used it. But it’s really no different than people who wear ribbons around their wrists: it’s a talismanic approach to something. Well let me amend that: it’s not exactly the same thing, but it is in the same realm. I’ll leave this subject by saying the four musical elements of Led Zeppelin making a fifth is magick into itself. That’s the alchemical process.
Stairway To Heaven: a glorious manifestation of the great work
The Crowley quotes that revolutionized occult thinking for Page and countless other seekers of truth:
“Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law.”