A Fish Called Frida

image

This is Frida. We realized after naming Frida that the colorful Bettas with the long tails are actually males. But I’m pretty sure fish don’t care about our gender norms.

image

After some research I learned that (a) Bettas like having plants in their tank – both to hide in and to keep the water oxygenated (b) they can tear their fins on plastic plants (c) they can coexist with live pothos plants. There are other plants that are even more recommended for fish tanks, but I thought I’d start with what I have and add a pothos cutting to the tank. Frida likes to swim around it and sleep on top of a leaf near the surface like it’s a hammock.

image

Bettas are more interactive than a lot of fish. They notice you and recognize the people that feed them, doing a little happy/feed me dance when you walk by.

I seriously didn’t know one little fish could make me smile so much.

image


Microblog Mondays: Write in your own space

Good stuff for makers, artists, and wanderers!

Did you get a copy of our shiny, new, just-relaunched Maker/Artist/Wanderer newsletter in your inbox?!

image

If not, you have another chance! Sign up by Wednesday, and I’ll pretend you were on the list all along.

I’ll send you the latest issue while you still have time to take a free dance class (in Phoenix) or send a free letterpress snail mail card (anywhere). And in time for a heads up on the happenings going on across the US this month that I handpicked to share with you guys.

image

Next month’s newsletter is already in the works with goodies like a free ecookbook.

To get in on all this goodness, just enter you email address on our newsletter page or below.

image


What should we send you?




Microblog Mondays: Write in your own space

Seattle Restaurant Week and Elliott’s Oyster House

Seattle Restaurant Week

My recent Seattle trip happened to coincide with the first part of Seattle Restaurant Week (SRW), where local restaurants entice diners out of their normal routines with 3-course dinners for $30.

image

SRW goes through Thursday, October 29, so if you’re in Seattle, you can still join in!

  1. Check out the full list of 165 participating restaurants on the SRW site. You can sort by neighborhood, dietary restrictions, etc. Click on your restaurant of choice for location and menu information (subject to change).
  2. Ask for the SRW menu at the restaurant. It may only be available by request and may differ from what’s listed online.
  3. Look for lunch. Many (but not all) SRW restaurants also offer lunch menus with 2 courses for $15.

Restaurant

Elliott’s

SRW recommended Elliott’s Oyster House, located right on the Seattle Waterfront, near Pike Place Market.

Elliott's Oyster House, Seattle

Really, it felt like a bit more of a touristy joint than I may have chosen on my own. But (a) I do like to eat seafood when I’m actually on a coast, (b) sometimes even the touristy locations can surprise you, and (c) SRW offered to pick up the tab.

So I thought it was worth a shot. And it was. The food was good and so was the view. You can see Puget Sound from just about any table inside or out on the patio.

image

Phillip’s sister Liz (along with her two boys) braved the traffic/parking to drive us. I think both situations are currently worse than usual, due to some city project that has put a gaping canyon of construction directly in front of the restaurant. (Don’t worry, there’s a bridge.)

image

Oysters

When you walk into Elliott’s, you see bins and bins of different varieties of oysters. So many. And they change up the selection seasonally.

image

The oysters remain intact and unshucked until ordered. Fortunately, the staff includes some fast shuckers.

Oysters at Elliott's Oyster House, Seattle

Menu

Oysters are not on Elliott’s Restaurant Week menu. Maybe it’s a cost thing. Maybe they just want people to branch out and try some of their other offerings.

image

Their SRW menu included other types of seafood that aren’t in the name of the restaurant, as well as beef and vegetarian dishes. The day we were there the offerings varied a bit from what was online. So Phillip, Liz, and I perused our options, while the boys set to work coloring their sea-life-themed kids’ menus with those cool triangular crayons that don’t roll off the table.

Lights at Elliott's Oyster House, Seattle

One nephew decided to color the fish and everything around them blue.

I asked him “Is it all blue because they’re underwater?”

He looked exasperated and simply said, “no.” Then went back to coloring.

Sometimes it’s better not to question art.

image

The kids’, plates piled high with fish and chips, were served at the same time as our first course, which we all appreciated. (Bringing us food and not the boys would’ve been fun for no. one.)

image

Liz had a delicious New England style white clam chowder made with a good dose of bacon. I had coconut prawns on top of a mango salsa. The prawns were crispy and coconutty yet kind of needed the accompanying Thai chili sauce to complete them.

Coconut shrimp at Elliott's Oyster House, Seattle

For the second course, I ordered the blackened trout salad. While the fish wasn’t cooked the way I’d expected, it wasn’t bad. It was served under a salad of mixed greens, walnuts, and apples, so that (literally) covered any minor flaws.

image

Phillip thoroughly enjoyed his salmon reuben, and Liz had a really good steak sandwich.

Lunch is not a contest. But I think Liz won.

image

Near to Elliott’s:

Thank you to Seattle Restaurant Week for the Elliott’s gift card. We also received CityPasses from Visit Seattle.

Seattle Revisited

Right as plans were really falling apart for an Italy trip this year, an event popped up in my Facebook feed.

The authors of the Four Windows project (including my brother) have all finished the novels they’ve been writing over the past year and would be doing a reading in Seattle.

pike-place-alley

I saw the invitation for their reading and thought, “I wish I could be there.” Then I realized I could.

seattle-sl

Turns out that, when you’ve been trying to figure out how to get from Arizona to Italy, getting to Seattle suddenly seems very doable and inexpensive by comparison.

plane-grand-canyon

In fact, by the time you read this, I plan to already have been there and come back home.

Microblog Mondays: Write in your own space