Monthly Archives:

September 2016

Shades of Time Laid Bare

On this last Saturday of September, in the week we shifted from summer to fall, the mind dwells momentarily on time and how we do our best to manipulate it. In the end it is always a futile cause. Time wins out over everything, and everybody. All we can do is chase it, grab for it, and try to trick it, but the only thing we can ever truly count on is running out of it.

We think we can still it when we go to sleep, but that’s a trick we play on ourselves. Time continues on undaunted and blithely unaware of our efforts. We make our beds into sanctuaries. We pray in different ways to appease the unwavering march. We attempt to contain it in watches and clocks, skewing it on impossible-to-program microwaves and car consoles, purposely setting it just a bit ahead to fool ourselves into thinking we have more of it, but none of this matters.

We cannot beat it, but we can dip into its relentless flow, like stepping into a swiftly-moving river or the churning waves of the ocean. Giving in and letting go can be a powerful choice, and sometimes it takes more control and effort than fighting back.

Swimming in the sheets of my sanctuary, untangling myself from the flights of night, I groggily surface and allow the morning to wash over me.

Time. And time again.

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One Banging Hot Bistro

The New World Bistro Bar on Delaware is great at any time of the year, but I especially enjoy it in the fall, when Ric Orlando’s spicy fare warms the tummy and the tongue in fiery fashion. From a grand selection of hummus to a final cup of guava sweetness, this recent meal was a joy. Give me a beet salad bleeding with color and a fish dish thrillingly doused with a blaring symphony of fresh herbs, and I’m a happy guy. Too many places seem to be afraid of big flavor, especially in the timid confines of Albany, NY, but this space has no time for such wimpiness, and I couldn’t be happier about that.

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Puling Some Bastardized Pork

The original recipe called for some crazy banana leaf action, and digging a pit in the earth to properly cook a piece of pork, but I bastardized it with a slow-cooker twist because if you think I’m going to wrap a piece of meat in a leaf and sink it into the dirt of my backyard, well, you don’t know me at all. This recipe for Conchinita Pibil, modified from a recent New York Times Magazine story, is a spicy take on the traditional pulled pork. Here, an assembly of spices (and some judicial charring and spice-toasting) works to inject some badly-needed life into our pulled pork doldrums. It’s the perfect recipe for fall, when one brings the slow-cooker back into the kitchen, and it produces some exquisite aromas to welcome everyone back inside.

Cochinita Pibil, with a Slow-Cooker Twist

1 pork shoulder (3-4 lbs)

4 Tbsp. salt

4-6 garlic cloves, peeled

1 Tbsp. cumin seeds

1 Tbsp. black peppercorns

1 teaspoon whole allspice

1 Tbsp. red chili powder

½ teaspoon whole cloves

½ teaspoon cinnamon powder

1 Tbsp. Mexican oregano

4 Tbsp. achiote-seed paste (See substitute below if not available)

1 orange, zested and juiced

1 grapefruit, zested and juice

1 lime, juiced

1 small white onion, thinly sliced

Also:

– 1 red onion, chopped

– 1 teaspoon salt

– 1 habanero, seeded and finely chopped

Corn tortillas

  1. Score fat of the pork and evenly salt the meat while making marinade. In dry saucepan over medium heat, toast garlic cloves until charred all over, then remove. In same pan, add cumin, peppercorns, allspice, red chili powder, cloves, and cinnamon. Toast until you can really smell cumin and pepper. Grind spices in food processor until smooth, with oregano, charred garlic, achiote paste, citrus zest and half of citrus juice. {For slow cooker, I kept spices whole and didn’t use food processor, simply mix juice and spices together in bowl.)
  2. Set slow cooker on high and place pork in it, fat side down. Add sliced onion around and coat meat with citrus juice and spice mixture. Cook on high for an hour or two, then switch to low and cook overnight (at least 10 hours).
  3. Remove meat from cooker and shred with two forks, removing fat. Strain out solid spices from remaining liquid, then return meat to cooker to keep warm until serving. Serve in soft tortilla shell, with chopped onion, pepper, and salt if desired. Lime juice may also be used.
Achiote seed paste substitute:
  • 2 Tbsp. paprika
  • ½ Tbsp. white vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • ½ teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed

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Boston’s Fall Call

The search for a Boston bathroom contractor continues, and this weekend I’ll be making my first fall trip to the condo this year. Having spent much of the summer in upstate New York by the pool, I haven’t been in Boston as much as I usually like to be, but that will change in the coming months, when the focus returns to my favorite city.

I don’t have much lined up, other than some relaxing alone time, and the lack of plans and expectations, while at odds with my comfort zone, is not unwelcome or jarring. I think it will do me well. There is no greater feeling than fall in Boston. Let the magic begin.

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Fall is Back…

… and better than ever! Currently looking to shake things up on this blog, as always. Hoping for something inspirational. Trying to find a new obsession. Waiting for the fall to chill out and take off.

Every year it brings an ending and a beginning.

A musing on the unstoppable advance of time.

The harvest of beauty and farmers’ good stuff.

It’s about rejuvenation, brought on by brisk nights and bold days.

While most people consider this the time to put certain things to bed (like the garden) it’s always been more of a rebirth for me. Let’s baptize this bastard and send it off into the world, wet and a glorious mess.

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Summer of ’16 Recap: Part 3

The last few days of summer sometimes hold the most exquisite charms, and September casts a spell that few months can match. This year it was no different, as the sun continued to shine, the warmth continued to resonate, and the summer did not want to leave. We didn’t want it to go either.

A September song.

A birthday run-in with the police.

A look-back at Rehoboth Beach, where I found my sea legs again, lulled by the waves, or knocked down by the ocean.

Summer sea creature.

Like sands through the hourglass

Dancing with Whitney.

Sweet September.

Back to school.

Return to delusions.

Brunch with a baby, park with a dog.

Dinner with an old friend.

Washington monuments and Smithsonian solitude.

Porn Again.

A Donald Trump supporter called me a faggot (after telling me to die).

My Gay Roommate.

September morning glory.

gratuitous Nyle DiMarco post.

Tom Ford releases a perfect Vert fragrance for September.

The Justin Timberlake spread.

Match made in heaven: Tom Ford & Jake Gyllenhaal.

Madonna makes the Devil Pray.

September Hunks included Jon Pastor, Jack Whitehall, Danny Mac, Ashley Cain, Conor Fay, Billy Gilman, Max George, Cheyenne Jackson, Christopher Gotham and Sean Smith.

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Summer of ’16 Recap: Part 2

Oh August, how I once loved thee. I still do – birthday months are hard to come by. This year especially, August was a balm after the early days of darkness. The weather remained striking, the days held onto their warmth, and the Summer Olympics brought a stabilizing Zen-like tradition to our evenings. And a heavy/healthy dose of skin.

August in the attic, after I worked my ass off to clean it all up.

Super butt.

Nick Jonas in wet underwear.

Orlando Bloom completely nude.

The penultimate chapter of The Delusional Grandeur Tour finished up here, and here, and here.

Summer fragrance by Tom Ford.

Sexy Olympic team.

Sexy Olympic team times two.

Nude dudes. (Including a naked Justin Bieber.)

A dope named Ryan. (And his bulge.)

A Queen’s birthday, fit for a fever.

A Madonna Timeline, fall-like in flavor, debuts in summer.

My favorite person at the Summer Olympics was not a Hunk at all.

How to get Tom Daley’s butt.

Get in the garden for a second wind.

The world’s greatest athlete: Ashton Eaton.

A Zac-Efron-look-alike in a Speedo: Michael Hixon.

Tom Ford goes green.

Chapter 41

Getting into my birthday suit…. and again.

A grand ginger: Greg Rutherford.

Fading like a flower, but not done yet.

Reading this summer.

Crux of sea and sand.

August hunks included Hugo Parisi, Ning Zetao, Race Imboden, Adam Peaty, Marcel Nguyen, Devon Allen, Chen Aisen, Ryan Murphy, Dan Goodfellow, LaShawn Merritt, Bruno Fratus, Shawn Barber, Danell Leyva, Kyle Snyder,

The end of August.

 

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Summer of ’16 Recap: Part 1

Charles Dickens could not have written a better opening line for ‘A Tale of Two Cities’ than that oft-quoted chestnut which perfectly encapsulates this past summer. Best and worst of times in one deliriously-winding roller-coaster of a sunny season, it was equal parts fun and fright. The weather was glorious, and we’ve been spoiled when it comes to sunny weekends, but beneath the pretty veneer darker happenings marred the months that were supposed to be so carefree.

Things began, as they always do, in June.

Tom Hiddleston got mired in the mess that is Taylor Swift.

A night of ‘Fun’ theater, because we’re only human.

Summer shoes.

Summer read.

Summer blooms.

Summer monsters.

Summer skinny dipping.

A naked Olympic hero.

June Hunks included a preview of Olympic hotties: David BoudiaAlex NaddourSteele JohnsonJohn OrozcoJake Dalton & Sam Mikulak.

By the time July arrived, we were deep in the madness, but there were glimmers of hope.

At least it smelled pretty.

The Delusional Grandeur Tour continued with Samsara, Healing, and Water.

Madonna’s most summery album, ‘True Blue’, turned 30 years old.

Summer playground.

Adam Lambert put on a sexy shirtless show.

(Naked) Ode on a Grecian Urn.

Olympic preview.

Naked Body Issue.

A Tom Daley treat.

Summer man-candy.

Summer Special Guest Blog: Colin MacArthur.

This Messiah came in the summer.

Taking my Mom to a gay bar.

Buck it.

Summer sunflower.

Nathan Adrian naked.

Spring thaw in summer…

Salvation in summer.

Shirtless Joe Jonas.

Summer baseball.

Summer sidewalks.

Double Hunks of the Day.

Other July hunks included John Cena, Conor Dwyer, Connor Jaeger, Matthew Josa, Nathan Adrian, Seth Rollins, Adam Gumula, Adam KenworthyRobert Sepúlveda Jr., Arthur Nory, Ji Wallace, Jesus Luz & Alex Bowen.

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The Frat Boy Within

Buried deep within my body is a ridiculous frat boy who finds humor and uncontrollable laughter in clips like this. I’m somewhat ashamed to admit that I could watch these all day. On some rainy Sunday, I may have done just that.

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Lightness & Levity

Live! Laugh! Love!

I’ve always hated that mantra.

The preponderance of those who use it seems to be a most unhappy lot.

Unless you’re Auntie Mame, you really can’t get away with telling me to live.

If you tell me to laugh at something, it immediately becomes less funny.

As for love, well… you must love me. And we all know how that went.

This post is for the dark times in which we live, a little breather to inject some lightness and hope into what is turning into a very disturbing time. Let’s move from my sarcastic beginning to a series of hopeful quotes, without cynicism or shade.

In the sweetness of friendship let there be laughter, and sharing of pleasures. For in the dew of little things the heart finds its morning and is refreshed. ~ Khalil Gibran

“Laughter is a sunbeam of the soul.” ~  Thomas Mann

“To jealousy, nothing is more frightful than laughter.” ~ Francoise Sagan

“You don’t stop laughing because you grow old. You grow old because you stop laughing.” ~ Michael Pritchard

“The human race has one really effective weapon, and that is laughter.” ~ Mark Twain

“With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come.” ~ William Shakespeare

“The beauty of the world, which is so soon to perish, has two edges, one of laughter, one of anguish, cutting the heart asunder.” ~ Virginia Woolf

Today, I’m choosing laughter.

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Matt Bomer’s Sexy Stripper Moves

Matt Bomer has bared his beautiful butt a couple of times on this blog. He was a Hunk of the Day, and a member of the ‘Magic Mike’ butt brigade. Here are a few fun GIFs and photos of said posterior, for your afternoon/evening viewing pleasure.

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A Recap at the Crux of Summer & Fall

This is the week it officially happens: the arrival of fall/the departure of summer. Weather reports have the latter holding on until the bittersweet end. As I write this, we are experiencing a balmy but rainy Sunday morning – an encapsulation of this turn in the year. Some days I don’t mind the rain, and after such a dry stretch this is one of them. I just hope it doesn’t last too long. We’ve only just begun this long trudge back to sunnier days. On with the last week, as we do on Monday morning…

Fall is a Farmer’s Market.

Fall is the glory of morning.

It’s also about being ‘Porn Again’ if you’re the amazing Josh Sabarra.

One of Donald Trump’s supporters told me to “Die. Faggot.” And yes, the most appropriate word is ‘deplorable.’

The eternal question: boxers or briefs?

A pretty poem.

A new season of ‘My Gay Roommate’ comes back and is better than ever.

Powerless to the Zodiac.

Comfort ritual.

Dancing with Nyle DiMarco in his underwear.

More pretty things.

My latest Tom Ford Private Blend, Vert D’Encens, is absolutely exquisite.

Ford’s new film (which looks to feature a naked Jake Gyllenhaal) also looks phenomenal.

Justin Timberlake and his man-spread moment.

The Madonna Timeline returned with a killer-cut from the ‘Rebel Heart’ opus: ‘Devil Pray.’

Hunks straddling the summer/fall seasons included Conor Fay, Billy Gilman, Max George, Cheyenne Jackson, Christopher Gorham,

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The Madonna Timeline: Song #132 – ‘Devil Pray’ – Winter/Spring 2015

{Note: The Madonna Timeline is an ongoing feature, where I put the iPod on shuffle, and write a little anecdote on whatever was going on in my life when that Madonna song was released and/or came to prominence in my mind.}

A stand-out track from Madonna’s most recent ‘Rebel Heart’ album, ‘Devil Pray’ intertwines drugs, booze, religion, and faith into one folksy sing-along, somewhat reminiscent of ‘House of the Rising Sun’ and unlike anything she’s done before. Surprisingly spiritual, melodically accessible, and as fun to sing as it is rich to ruminate upon, this is classic Madonna, over three decades into her reign.

TAKE MY SINS AND WASH THEM AWAY

TEACH ME HOW TO PRAY

I’VE BEEN STRANDED HERE IN THE DARK

TAKE THESE WALLS AWAY

 

I’VE BEEN SWIMMING IN THE OCEAN

‘TIL I’M ALMOST DROWNED

GIVE ME SOMETHING I CAN BELIEVE IN

TEACH ME HOW TO PRAY 

At the end of the winter of 2015, I drive along the Massachusetts turnpike. Dirty snow, but not a lot of it, winds along the edge of the road, and gritty salt and mud spray coats the front of the Ice Blue Show Queen. We are both a little tattered at the end of the winter, both in need of escape. She longs for a sunny day in the driveway with Andy, I long for a similar day behind the house and beside the pool. Each of us pines for something just beyond our grasp, but at the tail end of the forlorn season neither expects much.

AND WE CAN DO DRUGS AND WE CAN SMOKE WEED AND WE CAN DRINK WHISKEY

YEAH, WE CAN GET HIGH AND WE CAN GET STONED

AND WE CAN SNIFF GLUE AND WE CAN DO E AND WE CAN DROP ACID

FOREVER BE LOST WITH NO WAY HOME

 

YEAH, WE CAN RUN AND WE CAN HIDE

BUT WE WON’T FIND THE ANSWERS

IF YOU GO DOWN THEN YOU’LL GET HELP ALONG THE WAY

BUT IF YOU WANT TO SAVE YOUR SOUL

THEN WE COULD TRAVEL ALTOGETHER

AND MAKE THE DEVIL PRAY

In Boston, candles flicker in the condo, their reflection mingling with the patches of snow seen beyond the window on Braddock Park. One reaches the end of its life, quietly expiring in a thin wisp of smoke. It smells like winter; spring is not yet in the air. Hunkering down with a cup of hot green tea, I sit on the couch and open a book, enjoying the simple luxury of the moment, waiting for the winter to go.

MOTHER MARY CAN’T YOU HELP ME

‘CAUSE I’VE GONE ASTRAY

ALL THE ANGELS THAT WERE AROUND ME

HAVE ALL FLOWN AWAY

 

THE GROUND BENEATH MY FEET’S GETTING WARMER

LUCIFER IS NEAR

HOLDING ON, BUT I’M GETTING WEAKER

WATCH ME DISAPPEAR

My mind wanders back to Brandeis, to a small pool of water in the midst of three houses of worship. Founded on the principles of diversity and freedom of religion, Brandeis ensured that each sanctuary offered a suitable space for its disciples. As a Catholic, I stepped into the church and sat in the last pew, kneeling down as I made the sign of the cross. In a state of loneliness tinged with some slight homesickness, it was a way of reconnecting to my life at home.

Outside, the morning is pretty, filled with a low September sun that was just starting to burn away the fog. When I exit the church, my eyes need a moment to adjust to the light.

I will attend Sunday services only a few more times. My homesickness will soon abate, my loneliness will travel with me for life, and I will come to understand that God can be by my side at all times. That sanctuary opened up to me when I was a little kid, squirming around on the cool, cruel hardness of the dark-stained wooden pews of St. Mary’s church, and I realized that God didn’t require the ritual and the confinement, and certainly not when one was a child. I knew too, however, that my parents did need that tradition, out of superstition or blind faith, and even at that young age I knew that the way through, in the easiest way possible, was to pretend certain things. So I sat upright again, my feet dangling over the wood, my hands cupping a violet I’d picked from the back yard and brought now as an offering to Jesus. 

AND WE CAN DO DRUGS AND WE CAN SMOKE WEED AND WE CAN DRINK WHISKEY

YEAH, WE CAN GET HIGH AND WE CAN GET STONED

AND WE CAN SNIFF GLUE AND WE CAN DO E AND WE CAN DROP ACID

FOREVER BE LOST WITH NO WAY HOME

Shifting back to Boston, like walking to a different stained-glass tableaux, we revisit the end of winter. My book has been closed as my mind recalls those September Sundays at school. There is comfort in those memories, even as they are rife with tension and unresolved issues. One can’t return to certain moments with impunity and safety. Memories carry always the risk of forgotten agony and hidden heartache. Tonight, however, the risk has no unintended or ill consequences. Tonight, it is simply the return to a simpler time.

YEAH, WE CAN RUN AND WE CAN HIDE

BUT WE WON’T FIND THE ANSWERS

IF YOU GO DOWN THEN YOU’LL GET HELP ALONG THE WAY

BUT IF YOU WANT TO SAVE YOUR SOUL

THEN WE COULD TRAVEL ALTOGETHER

AND MAKE THE DEVIL PRAY

The next day, I return to the Massachusetts Turnpike, still bordered by brown snow, still dirty and dismal, and drive back to Albany. I sing along with Madonna as she tells her story. I think of all the places we’ve been together. I think about where we might go next.

OOOH SING HALLELUJAH

OOOH SAVE MY SOUL

OOOH THE DEVIL’S HERE TO FOOL YA

UNTIL MY STORY’S TOLD

SONG #132 – ‘Devil Pray’ – Winter/Spring 2015

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A Peek at the Devil to Come

A dry, dusty road throws clouds into the air whenever a car or truck speeds by.

The barren stretch of scorched earth expands endlessly.

Is this where the world begins, or ends?

Worn wood creaks beneath each step, groaning for the insult to injury of such dire surroundings, such repetitive beatings.

If the devil lives, here would be a good place to find him.

In a few hours, the Madonna Timeline returns, and it’s going to be a devil of a good time. Some of Madonna’s best work comes when she confronts her own relationship with religion and spirituality. Witness the majestic heights of ‘Like A Prayer‘ and the plaintive beauty of ‘Messiah‘, or the delicate yearning of ‘Pray for Spanish Eyes‘ and the choral climax of ‘Nothing Fails.’ Even lesser pieces like ‘Holy Water‘ and ‘Act of Contrition‘ have their hidden merits. Madonna has a God complex, and it’s a gorgeous thing to behold. Coming up next…

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