Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Canada? No. I don't live in Canada.





The first thing I should mention is that I moved to Portland, Oregon.

                                                                                                                                      
 



In the most unpredictable of moves I decided to not only stay in the country, but leave 
the one city I insisted was the only one worth living in: Chicago.  




Let me break it down for you:

I was in Chicago, wrapping up my senior year of college and working as a nanny.  I liked being a nanny a lot but I don't want to spend my whole life watching other folks' kids and I knew I certainly wasn't going to use my Latin American Studies degree.  I went into total life-crisis mode, brought to me live and in technicolor by the wonderful people at Depaul University and the tuition bills I will be paying back until I am 105.  So what did I do?  I crawled into bed and I watched the food network.

Most of the chefs on the food network are total nuts; women who cook cleavage first, men who have more ego than salt (and, let me tell you, a cook needs a helluva lotta salt).  I started thinking about food though, thinking about who was making it, wondering what was happening beyond the celebrity chef/foodie world.  I started picking up cook books and really reading them, I mean READING them.  

Know what happened?  I didn't learn shit but I got jealous.  I got jealous that all these people were devoting their lives to food and I was on the fast track to a cubicle job in some dank HR department.  How dare those assholes devote their lives to what they love, I can't do it!  Yeah, well, fuck that, turns out I can.

I decided I needed to get out of Chicago and do something with food.  I loves me the Chi-city, but I knew I'd be stagnant if I stayed there.  They have a wonderful food scene, one of the best in the nation, but I just couldn't be there anymore.  I started shopping around for something new and I found Portland.  I've been here since August 2008.

It's relaxed here.  I feel like people move the way I move, and I like the way we move.  I like the food carts and the farmers markets and the generalized laughter at the hilarity and weirdness that is my life now.  Currently. I'm a culinary student on a massive job hunt.  

I'm not saying this is the right choice.  I'm broke as a joke but I don't feel the nausea on this path that I did when I was on the cubicle trail.  Before, I was familiar with food as an occasional hobby but never even considered it as a career.  Honest: I'm no hot shot, no superstar.  Hell, by no means am I even skilled in a kitchen.  I'm going to be though.  I might not be good (yet) but I'm super food-curious.  Oh, and I also carry a big knife.




Maybe...


...I haven't posted anything in about two years.  

A lot has changed (reference image) and after I walk my dog, I'mna update the shit outta ya.