Chile Pepper Festival in Phoenix
As far as I’m concerned, the annual Roosevelt Row Chile Pepper Festival is mostly an excuse to sample really delicious food from a bunch of Phoenix restaurants. The spicy selection includes items like tacos, stuffed chiles, donuts, desserts, and even beverages.
The next festival is this weekend, so here’s the scoop!
How it Works
You buy the number of tasting tickets and/or beer tokens you want at a table near the entrance – there’s no admission cost. Then you wander around the different booths and trade tastings for one or two tickets each. There’s also live music and market areas.
Proceeds raised help support the Growhouse Community Garden’s urban agriculture and education programs.
Last year, we went early, so we could go to Ballet Under the Stars afterwards. We bought our tasting tickets right as the festival opened, and there was practically no line. By the time we left, however, an hour or two in, a lot of people were waiting. Of course, it’s cooler later on. So…pick your battles, I guess.
Food + Drink
If you can’t eat spicy food, this is probably not the festival for you. I mean, you could just go and enjoy the live music. But all the tastings range from mildly to make-you-cry hot.
A few of our favorites:
- Welcome Chicken and Donuts – Thai chili donut.
- Paz Cantina – Blue corn taco with pork and green chiles.
- Otro CafĂ© – Phillip liked the Mexico-style “street corn” with chili powder, cheese, and mayo on it.
At one point, I was ready to douse the fire in my mouth, so I got a smoothie, which was deceptively sweet at first – then the sweet disappeared and the crazy burn kicked in. It was unexpected. Like the photobomb from the smoothie guy.
Although beverage-wise we stuck with water and a bottle of Mexican Coke (and that one mouth-searing smoothie), there’s also a beer garden and margarita station.
Art, Craft + Community
On the market side of the festival, there were a handful of community and artist booths.
I dug the collage work of the multitalented Keisha J. Jones, who also models and makes delicious baked goods!
At the Valley Permaculture Alliance (Trees Matter) booth, you could make newspaper seed-starter pots, which inspired a CraftHack project.
Entertainment
When the music started, we watched Flamenco por la Vida. They perform flamenco music and dance superbly.
Some of their adorable pint-sized students danced, as well.
This Saturday, Flamenco por la Vida will be on stage at 9pm. I’m not sure if students will be joining them or if that’s past their bedtime.
There are several other performances during the festival, as well as cooking demonstrations and pepper-eating contests.
The band Mariachi Luna de Mexico played after we’d left. In fact, they strode in like some kind of guitar-wielding posse, just as we were headed to the parking lot.
– Festival Info –
- The 2016 Chile Pepper Festival will be Saturday, October 1 from 5-10pm.
- New location:Â 128 E Roosevelt St, Phoenix (Roosevelt/2nd St.)
- Limited street parking will be available.
- Light rail: Central Ave & Roosevelt St. stop is only about a block away (0.1 mile)!
- All-ages event. If you plan to drink alcohol, be ready to show your ID and get a wristband at the entry.
- There is no admission fee. Food, beverages, and handcrafted items will be for sale.
- Details at chilepepperfest.com.
Room with a View in Big Sur
I saw this image on Pinterest of what looked like a tiny cabin with large picture windows. The caption said “Big Sur,” but the link was broken.
A few years ago, Phillip and I drove down Highway 1 through Big Sur – wooded mountains on one side and cliffs dropping off into the ocean on the other. It is one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever been.
Which may be why, in a late-night, insomnia-fueled obsession, I had to find out more about the place in the photo.
Eventually, I spotted it in a vacation-rental listing in Big Sur.
The listed lodging is this cute vintage trailer nestled in a valley and off the grid.
A few yards away is the “cabin,” which turns out to actually be the bathroom, housing a cast iron tub with an ocean view.
It’d be a nice place to soak awhile, don’t you think?
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Photos:
DIY Costume Hacks from Phoenix Comicon
There are lots of reasons to wear a costume coming up: this weekend is Keen Halloween (more on that in the last section), then there’s Phoenix Comicon Fan Fest, followed closely by actual Halloween. Plus, all the various October costume parties and fall festivals and whatnot.
If there’s such thing as a costume-wearing season, this would be it. And, if you were thinking of making your own costume, then costuming panelists from Phoenix Comicon 2016 have some tips to help you out.
1. Duct tape
You can make an entire costume from duct tape. In fact, one speaker, Huntington Keith, won a scholarship contest by making Firefly cosplay/prom outfits for himself and his date. It took about 40 hours of work for him to construct her shindig-worthy dress with its layers and layers of ruffles. He also made himself a tux.
He shared lessons he learned through trial and error that could help with your next duct tape creation.
Duct tape dos:
- Use a flat surface to construct your costume.
- Stretch it as taut as possible.
- Use scissors or an X-Acto knife to cut.
- Covering a t-shirt or other piece of fabric will help the costume breathe better.
- Create texture by putting things such as twine between the layers of tape.
- Buy in bulk. 30 yards will typically cost $5-6, but you may be able to find better prices online.
- Use the color/s you want or find a type of paint that adheres to polyurethane (most don’t).
Duct tape don’ts:
- Because the adhesive starts to melt at about 175 degrees, you can’t mold it like thermoplastics. A residue will form and the top starts to shrivel off.
- It will break a regular sewing machine.
- Permanent marker doesn’t stay.
- Paint usually flakes off.
Making a closure for your costume:
- The ideal closure is actually a piece of duct tape.
- You can handstitch a zipper on, but it would need to be lateral because stress is a problem.
- Hook-and-loop tape may not work when it gets hot.
2. Knitting and Crochet
Shirley Will‏ (a.k.a. @BooMeringue) had a funny and informative panel about knitting and crochet for cosplay. I don’t actually know how to do either of those things, and I was still entertained.
She brought up the fact that knitting and crocheting can look intricate – but there are only so many kinds of stitches.
Iconic knit costumes for nerds:
- Harry Potter
- Tom Baker (Doctor Who)
- Jayne (Firefly)
Since she felt the stripe was too large in most patterns for Jayne’s hat, she created her own. She started by measuring a screenshot from Firefly of Adam Baldwin as Jayne. After estimating the width of the stripe was about the length of his nose, she texted several male friends to ask for their nose measurements(!) and based her pattern on the average. The result is a much more proportionate pattern for a hat that, for legal reasons, she calls the Not-Jayne hat.
More ideas:
- Crocheted cogs for steampunk.
- Make a wide brim on a beanie and fold it up to make a tri-corner or pirate hat.
- Hood with Ewok ears.
Tips:
- There are tons of craft tutorials online. If the first one doesn’t work for you, keep looking!
- Make gauge swatches. She says, “People hate making gauge swatches, but it’ll save your life! You can use any yarn with any pattern if the gauge is right.”
- Have a backup “comfy” cosplay, in case you need a break from your costume or something doesn’t work.
Shirley sells knitting patterns (as well as finished products) in her Etsy shop. There are some free patterns on her site and on gutenberg.org. I also came across Harry Potter knitting patterns on Ravelry and knittingfornerds.com.
3. Other No-Sew Techniques
I ducked in to the tail end of a No-Sew Cosplay panel hosted by artist and cosplayer KatDensetsu.
I was just in time for a discussion of cross-play and binding techniques for women who want to make themselves appear less busty when portraying male characters. (Think Éponine disguising herself in Les Misérables.)
As far as making costumes without sewing, certain materials don’t require sewing and can just be cut to size. There’s also a lot you can do using fabric glue, thrift store finds, paint, and/or iron-on transfers.
Learn more about costume-making and cosplay!
This weekend (9/24-25) is Keen Halloween, which has several craft and costuming panels on the schedule.
Phoenix Comicon Fan Fest is October 22-23 (earlier than in past years) and will feature cosplay meetups and panels on topics like costuming mashups.
Apple Desserts for Fall
It’s apple season here! And I wanted to share a few of the delicious-looking desserts I’ve been seeing recently.
First, if you’re planning to go to an orchard, check out these apple-picking tips from Bon Appetit. I wish I had read an article like that before Phillip and I went to pick apples at Apple Annie’s in Willcox! We had a fun time, but would’ve been helpful to know a few tricks.
Speaking of which, did you know you could core an apple with a metal melon baller?
1. Baked Apples (via a Beautiful Mess): Whole apples covered with puff pastry and stuffed with pecans – yum!
2. Caramel Apple Bar (via Craftberry Bush): A fun idea for a fall get-together, slice up apples for people to dip in their favorite toppings!
3. Apple Pie Bites (via The Blond Cook): A quick recipe for crescent roll-wrapped apple slices that taste like little pies. I’d try these with my DIY Holiday Spice mix.
4. Peanut Butter and Apple Oatmeal Cookies (photo and recipe by Creative Culinary): Okay, peanut butter + apple + oatmeal cookie…how could I argue with that combination?!
Do you have a favorite apple dessert?
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Photos via respective sites.