Category Archives: Local Phoenix

Meet Jill from The Sweet Life Garden, part 2

By | Local Phoenix, Organic Gardening, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Here’s the followup to yesterday’s post highlighting our visit to gardener Jill’s Sweet Life Garden.
Jill uses healthy gardening methods like composting, companion planting and avoids using chemicals on her plants or the pests who might visit. Her garden is proof that you don’t need to buy Miracle Grow to create a stunning green space.

Jill is a proficient gardener and homemaker. For those of you who think a garden takes too much time, be encouraged. Jill says she usually only spends about an hour a day in the garden when it’s not peach season. Along with the plants I’ve shared these last two days, Jill also grows blackberries, blueberries, several other varieties of trees and more. She offers eggs at her farmstand as well as delicious preserves. And the peaches, which were the original inspiration for our visit? Sweet, flavorful and luscious! If you’d like to know more about this garden, please visit Jill’s blog.

Today we’ll look at some of the more creative garden ideas Jill employs. The effect is a very romantic, cottage style garden.

Who knew celery could be so pretty?

I love how Jill manages to tuck so many trees into her space and still grow things underneath them.
Here is an apricot tree planted with catnip, society garlic and other whimsical looking plants.

Apricot tree

Jill has many trees around the property – including two shading the chicken coop, a must in the scorching Arizona summer. One of Jill’s gardening tips is that she keeps them trimmed fairly low. She suggests letting them grow no higher than what you can reach from a ladder. After all, you want to be able to reach the fruit you’re growing.

Here’s another great idea. Jill is training her apples (she has both Fiji and Anna) into an apple hedge growing on the pool fence. How creative!
Tomatoes, my favorite.
See this fountain? Those aren’t just flowers growing underneath.
Alyssum (pest repellant), melons and some kind of pretty purple stalk.   
A closer look at the society garlic.
Let’s finish with just one of the many gorgeous rose bushes Jill tends.

If you just can’t get enough of this garden, don’t fret. It’s featured, along with several others, in the Arcadia Garden Tour which happens twice a year. You missed the spring tour but it’s not too late for fall. Check out Jill’s blog and stay tuned for news from the beautiful Sweet Life Garden. Thanks again for the tour, Jill!

If you love what you see, sign up for email updates. I never spam ya’ and there’s always something interesting to explore around here!

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Caught in Another Car Parade – More Cool Stuff to Do in Phoenix

By | Local Phoenix | No Comments

The last two weeks have been a whirlwind of activities for our family. It seems like every year, we have all these plans to get to some of the great local events that are happening in Phoenix during the beautiful spring weather. But, we have so many family birthday parties and kids parties and events that we are booked up almost every weekend.

Last week, we did attend a local event as a family on accident. On our way home from the Macayo’s on Central where we’d attended the third party of the weekend, this one a family member’s, my daughters noticed classic cars passing us on the road. My 2 year old kept shouting, “Look, Mom!!! Old fashioned cars!!!” We realized there was a classic car event going on as car after car cruised past us.

Dad would have loved this one!

I know it’s not very organic of this mama to love old fashioned, gas-guzzling cars, but it’s in my blood. My car-loving dad was born in 1929 and he could recite a list of every car he’d ever driven – along with all the options like the white walled tires, interior and exterior colors, leather/cloth, engine type and horsepower. He knew when car models changed style and what had been changed. He and his brother memorized these kinds of things as a game when they were kids and he never lost his love for it. So, my girls are used to me shouting out – “Woohoo!! Look at that car!” when we see something older than 40 years go by us.

It’s no surprise then that when we saw all these beauts passing by us, we turned the car around and followed them. It reminded me of the time I got caught in another kind of motor procession – though this one was not for a serious occasion. As we traveled, we got caught up in the excitement of the moment and exclaimed at all the colors and models we liked best as well as the thousands of people lining central. People cheered and aahhhed as the cars went past. In fact, we got so caught up, we failed to realize we were one of the few modern cars on the road. Haha!! The car aficionados got a real treat as we cruised next to a James Bond car in our 2000 Toyota Camry with two little girls practicing their princess wave out the windows!

Just one more cool thing available in Phoenix if you’re looking for an activity. When I googled to find the event, I found quite a few classic car shows going on in the next few months. So, if you missed it, just look around, you’ll find another.

I think this black and red one is just my style!

 I know my dad would have had fun with us this weekend. Who knows, maybe he was calling out the car models with us as we drove!

Multi-family Housing & Creating Community

By | Local Phoenix | 3 Comments

A while back, Taz Loomans at Blooming Rock Blog wrote a post about multi-family housing and how while it’s taking off in some parts of the country, it’s not viewed so highly here in Phoenix – yet. I’ve been thinking about it ever since. Robert and I have lived in a small multifamily housing community for about 10 years. While there are certainly pros and cons and I sometimes still want a single family house (mainly because I need the garden space), overall, we’ve loved it.

These are some of the benefits of a multi-family community.

1. It’s cost effective. Our mortgage is within our budget and we share the cost of major repairs with our neighbors. We save money by buying less “stuff” because a smaller space requires efficient organization. And, in a compact space, we can afford high quality, green remodeling while staying within our budget.

2. Less work for us. We hire landscapers, plumbers, overall maintenance people – at a reasonable cost, also shared with neighbors. Perfect for artists like us – who work all week and perform on nights and weekends. There’s not much of time left for yard work.

3. Less to clean. A larger house doesn’t even appeal to me anymore – for this reason.

4. We can live in the heart of the city. Because we chose a townhouse, we can live in a neighborhood (that would otherwise be out of our budget) near everything we love – like hiking, work, church, urban culture, Grandma & Grandpa *smile*.

5. Affordability allows us to pursue our gifts and passions as careers. Living simply in a multi-family house means we can do what we love – for a living. We have fun all week, not just on the weekend. Don’t get me wrong…we work our booties off and we live more simply…but it’s worth it.

6. More fresh air. Small space – small children? Sanity requires me to get off my duff and get out of the house frequently – to visit local businesses, the library, the park, our garden at Grandma’s house…

7. Community. We know our neighbors. And, they’re amazing. From teachers to engineers, business professionals to a hard core biker-hairdresser, they are an eclectic mix – quirky, kind and always interesting!

 This last point is the most important to me.

The people in our community are great people. Financial decisions regarding the functionality, appearance and value of our property are not the only things that tie us together. We know each other and are invested in each other’s lives. It’s typical for me to go out front to pick rosemary for dinner and find myself in a conversation with two or three neighbors. We look out for each other. If a neighbor goes to the hospital, people in our community often visit – depending on whether or not the person has family.  Rides to the doctor, babysitting and cards to those who have suffered a loss (even a dog!) are the norm here.

Those of you who are into gaming will appreciate the roles played by members of our community. We are a little town unto ourselves. We have the grumpy old man, the healer, the gatekeeper (nobody gets by him!), the resident drunk (position currently open), and the crazy lady who hollars at her kids across the yard (that would be me, oops). There is something refreshing and powerful about discovering it’s possible for such different people to live together peacefully.

These past ten years, we’ve learned important lessons about acceptance (read: love, not tolerance) and community that we might not have learned if we’d been able to drive straight into a garage every night. Our home choice has forced us to recognize our connection to each other and to be more careful of the relationships we need to build and maintain with the people who share our larger space. And our lessons give us a picture of how we should be living in our larger community in Phoenix, in Arizona, the USA, the rest of the world. Our individual choices, financial and social, don’t just change our lives, they change the world for those around us too.

My relationships with my neighbors change me in unexpected ways. They have opened my eyes to seeing the world in ways I might have otherwise missed. And, while our financial fates initially tied us together, we have found true friendships here. As I write this, I’m filled with gratefulness for these neighbors who have become my friends. They have shown us love and kindness, compassion and wisdom in the times we’ve most needed it. If we ever do move, we’ll stay in the heart of the city where we can keep learning and keep building these relationships that make us better people. It’s something Robert and I believe in and it is what we want our children to learn about our city and the world.

We’re doing more than just sharing space. We’re creating community.

Barrio Cafe Review

By | Local Restaurants | No Comments

This weekend, Robert and I were thrilled to have a babysitter on a Saturday night, a rare ocurrence since he works on Sundays. Once I’d styled my hair (no ponytail!), put on makeup and found a shirt that didn’t have toddler fingerprints on it, we made our escape. We drove away laughing at the game my sister had our girls enthralled in – a practice Easter egg hunt with pinecones. Then, it occurred to us that we had no idea where we wanted to eat. So, we Yelped and came up with the Barrio Cafe. What an incredible choice that turned out to be!

We arrived at Barrio and had to circle the block twice before we could find a parking spot – and we chose the street just to the north so that we could walk a bit. The restaurant is located in a strip of stores along 16th street just south of Thomas. When we arrived around 6:45 pm to put our names in for a table for two, the manager told us the wait would be around an hour. It was a beautiful evening so we parked ourselves on the patio and enjoyed the cool breeze. With us were a lot of other people who were clearly enthused about the coming dinner and unperturbed by the wait – or the view of the laundrymat across the street. After all, it is the “Barrio” Cafe.

In just over an hour, we found ourselves sitting at a table with a great view of guitarist and vocalist Gustavo Angeles and awaiting the creations of Barrio’s James Beard nominated chef, Silvana Salcido Esparza. As we sat there with our stomachs growling at the delicious fragrances wafting from the kitchen, we checked out our surroundings. The restaurant is small in a cozy sort of way and decorated like a neighborhood place – with Virgin Mary candles on the tables and awards framed on the wall.

There were so many delicious looking options on the menu, we had a hard time deciding what we wanted to eat. Robert chose the Torta de Pollo Jaiba, chicken breast seasoned with spiced hollandaise style sauce and topped with crab, avocado and Oaxacan cheese. Since it was a torta, it was on a soft artisan roll and came with steak fries and chipotle ketchup. Doesn’t it look good? His grin after the first bite confirmed that he was happy with his choice.

Um, we’d already devoured a lot of the steak fries before the pic!

I, on the other hand, wanted a real taco. So I went with Tacos de Cochinitapibil, slow roasted pork tacos after the Mayan tradition flavored with sour orange and served with salsa and queso fresco. As our waiter put it in front of me, I knew I’d picked the winner of the evening. The scent that reached my nose was the one that had been tempting me all evening. I squeezed a bit of the floral-fragranced lime on my taco, took a bite and found myself in Mexico.

Oh.

My.

Gosh.

Ok. That’s an exaggeration. I didn’t actually go to Mexico but I might have brushed the border.

Listen. I have had a lot of Mexican food in my life. Not only did I grow up in a Mexican church where I enjoyed the cooking skills of the amazing mamas there (and ate beans with every breakfast!), I have been on quite a few trips to Mexico and enjoyed the best of the taco stands there. My mama made homemade tamales every year at Christmas when we were growing up.

But this taco, my friends, is nothing like anything I’ve ever tasted before now. The pork, cooked to a melting tenderness, was perfectly seasoned. The white corn tortillas tasted like they’d just been made. Unlike typical Mexican food joints that smother their dishes in cheese to disguise the lack of flavor, the addition of queso fresco to this dish simply provided a creamy contrast to the sour orange, spices and salsa. And, there was just enough heat. In short, it is one of the best meals I’ve eaten out in a long, long time.

Sadly, I had promised to give two of my tacos to Robert in exchange for part of his sandwich. And, I’m a woman of my word so I did – hoping he’d say he preferred his food. Just my luck, he fell in love with the taco too. I ate some of his sandwich but saved the rest for him. It was very good and in truth, if I hadn’t already tasted the taco, I probably would have loved it. But, the flavors weren’t as distinct as those of the tacos and it was a bit too creamy for my taste buds that night.

When we finished, our waiter did his best to entice us with dessert options but we were truly so full, we simply had no room for it. And, since we’d promised my sister we’d be home at a decent hour, we headed to the exit. I just had to take a picture of the bar there. Apparently they have over 100 tequilas. I believe it, don’t you?

As we were leaving, Barrio’s manager, Richard asked us where we’d be dining this coming Thursday, April 28, 2011. Apparently that day, Barrio is participating in Dining Out for Life, a fundraiser supported by local restaurants that raises money for the Southwest Center for HIV/AIDS, Arizona’s largest non-profit AIDS service organization. They are donating 100% of their proceeds from lunch that day, served from 11a-5pm. So, if you want to get a taste of Barrio’s incredible food and support a local non-profit, here’s your chance.

While there are some pricey items on the menu, there are plenty of wallet friendly options. So, head on down and support this local restaurant. It’s worth the wait and it definitely beats Applebees. Does anyone really still eat there with options like these?

Barrio Cafe
2814 N 16th Street

 
Barrio Cafe on Urbanspoon