Followers

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Kevin Van Aelst

Back in school, I sucked at Math and Biology. I might have been an A student if I had a teacher like Kevin Van Aelst!! This New York Times Magazine photographer creatively uses mundane food and household clutter to depict Scientific and Mathematical concepts. These delightful images would certainly have jogged my memory!

Krispy Kreme doughnuts depict cell-mitosis

Pie-chart

Common clouds - Milk Swirls of a cup of coffee

Gummy chromosomes

Gummy Periodic Table of Elements

The world on an apple

Finger prints are created with .....

cheese puffs

sugar

crust on a cherry pie

and mustard on a ham sandwich

Crackers are used to show world time clocks

Sushi-Inspired 'T'

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Robin Antar - Realism In Stone

While most food artists work with well... food, Robin Antar's sculptures are created from stone.







Visit her website for more sculptures of clothing, footwear and other daily objects.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Snow White In Apples

If you've enjoyed food artist Prudence Staite's celebrity faces on pizza, you might like her creations of Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs. 14 varieties of apples were used in these 4 famous scenes. Ms Staite used apples because they are such a big part of the story and they capture the quintessence of the Disney magic.




Sunday, February 7, 2010

Chinese New Year Reunion Dinner

When we were kids, Chinese New Year's eve was a busy and chaotic affair in Grandma's kitchen as we helped our elders prepare auspicious dishes for the reunion dinner. While the older cousins crimped rows and rows of jiaozi dumplings
, we were assigned simpler tasks like peeling mountains of garlic, shallots and arrowroot. Woe to the one who had the unfortunate task of pounding chillies. In those days, there were no food processors and a stone pestle & mortar was used. The burning sensation on the hands would last for hours afterwards!!

Along with the aroma of bubbling broth and the clink of pots and pans, I loved the laughter and gay chatter shared among the cousins and aunts.
I didn't see it before but now I realize that this age-old celebration is like Thanksgiving. It's the time of the year when Chinese families gather together to give thanks for the bountiful harvest as winter nears its end and to ensure the new year brings happiness, health and prosperity. Instead of turkey, we have fish (yee), which is the homonym for abundance in Cantonese , sea cucumber (hoi sum) for happiness, Fatt Choy ( a kind of fungus) for prosperity and several other auspicious sounding dishes.
In Malaysia and Singapore, the "Yee Sang" has become a popular tradition among contemporary Chinese families.

Basically, it is a salad of finely sliced raw fish, julienned carrots, daikon, jellyfish, etc sprinkled with ground peanuts , roasted sesame seeds and shrimp crackers. Each ingredient has a special significance.

The "yee sang" is served as the first course. The fun begins with the communal tossing of the ingredients into the air with chopsticks while wishes are expressed out loud to mark the start of a prosperous new year and it's customary that the higher you toss, the greater your fortunes!

If you don't fancy laboring the whole day in front of a stove, the occasion can always be celebrated in a restaurant or hotel. Thanks to inventive and entrepreneurial chefs, set menus priced in auspicious numbers eg RM588, RM688 are available. The number 8 is homonymous with prosperity.
Even Pizza Hut has the Golden Fortune Cheesy Crown Pizza which is loaded with 8 prawns ( 'Ha' for laughter) and tuna ( 'yee' for prosperity) and surrounded by a golden ring of cheese crowns.
Not a pizza fan? There's always MacDonalds's Double Prosperity Burger!

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Sad Rat


When the picture of a pitiful rat stuck in a New York sidewalk crack was posted in the internet, the unfortunate rodent had its dignity further eroded by Photoshoppers in an exploitable image meme. Kinda sad, really.










Pothole Art

Potholes, of all things are Montreal artists' ( Claudia Ficca and Davide Luciano ) muse. A pothole becomes a beer cooler while another is a vessel for baptism; yet another a baker's cauldron in which doughnuts are frying!
Through a series of guerrilla street-level photo shoots, craters are turned into objects of fancy with a positive, humorous spin.










"We started fantasizing ," Ficca said. "And we thought, "Wouldn't it be funny if we saw a woman washing clothes in a pothole?"