Bombay Sapphire Summer Grill and Cocktails

Vanessa Bourget and Terri Potratz.  Raj Taneja photo.

Last week, Bombay Sapphire hosted an intimate soiree to showcase their newest cocktails and food pairings for the summer season.  Rob Rainford of the TV show License to Grill demonstrated some BBQ techniques with Bombay-marinated lamb and steak while Merlin Griffiths, Bombay’s global brand ambassador and senior mixologist, showed us some delicious new cocktails. Last year’s event at the Shangri-La was absolutely stunning, and so too was this event at a loft in the heart of Gastown.

My favourite drink of the night was the Sapphire Sangaree:

4 oz Bombay Sapphire gin
2 oz Ruby Port
2 oz Cointreau
3.5 oz lemon juice
topped with seasonal fruits and mint for garnish.
(makes 4 cocktails/1 pitcher)

Visit the Bombay Sapphire website Inspired Entertaining section for loads of great recipes, mixology lessons, entertaining tips, and more. There’s some fantastic ideas for summer parties to be found.  More photos of the event, courtesy of Raj Taneja and Urban Mixer, can be found here.

Things I Learned in the Yukon

I traveled to Whitehorse in the Yukon for 8 days for a larry. knitting retreat, my goal to get a bulk of the collection for 2010 knit up all at once in an inspired environment.  I also had the benefit of visiting one of my greatest friends in the world, who is a force of inspiration herself: living in a one-room cabin in the woods, with no electricity or plumbing, and managing to do it all with a smile on her face.

1. If you have a choice between sleeping in this bus and sleeping outside, choose outside.  I know it’s tempting when the bus is headed to Pleasantown…but much to my own surprise, I managed to get a decent night’s sleep after drinking a bottle of wine next to a blazing fire and watching the Northern Lights, despite the freezing cold weather.  No toes were lost to frostbite.

2. When you’re stranded in Skagway, Alaska on a holiday weekend before the cruise ships have rolled in for the summer, and the only thing open in town is the liquor store, it’s perfectly acceptable to get drunk mid-day and roam the fake-movie-set-looking-town and investigate everything that’s closed for the season, such as: trains (none of which were unlocked, damn).

3. You can eat seaweed right off the shore here.  And take buckets of it back to Canada to dry and use for salads and whatnot.  Make sure to wash the sea snails out, and dry the seaweed before it rots.  There are supposedly only 2 poisonous plants in the Yukon, so if you’re in a bind you can pretty much eat anything in the woods and you should be ok.

4. If a door doesn’t make sense, don’t go through it.

5. Work gloves and winter boots are about the only accessories you need here.  Fashion as I know it is basically moot – which introduced a really interesting element to my design process.  Functionality and necessity are key.

6. Silence is golden.  I spent 5 straight days working alone in this cabin, with only a cat to keep me company.  There’s no noise, except for the fire slowly chugging along in the stove.  No electricity = no music.  This was difficult for me.  After a while, you really learn to appreciate the silence, the softness of thought that grows from silence.  And the opportunity to talk to other humans.

7. I can work hard, chop wood, chip stairs into the wall of ice up the hill next to the cabin to prevent serious injury to myself from slipping and falling, and learn the delicate balance of keeping a wood stove fire burning; I can be covered in cuts and scrapes and bruises and not complain, be dirty for days on end, make the most of what I have around me, and take responsibility for myself.  I’m more capable than I gave myself credit for.

Mom on Skateboarders

hail strathcona, full of distaste

Mom: “What is with all of these adult men on skateboards? It’s ridiculous. Grow up.”

We witness the potentially gruesome elimination of a speeding skater narrowly greasing past a truck turning left, and Mom becomes annoyed at the inconvenience of such idiocy around us.  We pass a third grizzly skateboarder who’s is either a ripe young age of 17 or has eclipsed age 30 (anyone’s guess), and the taunting begins:

“Hey, I like your shiny wheels,” and “Nice paint job” she says, barely able to stifle her laughter as she mockingly imitates a girl going for the guise.

“Ooh, where’d you get that toque?” Mom adds, as we conveniently pass the hub of hipster at Main/7th, laughter erupting in her Jeep as a stoplight pauses us between Gene and Foundation for a prime time view.

We eye the gaggle of freshly caffeinated adultescents culminating on the street outside the cafe, and I remind her that the toque is a necessary accessory to the skateboard – even during summer.  Then silently vowed never to date a skateboarder (ever again), if at the very least to spare him a lifetime of misery enduring constant humiliation and good-natured jabbing from my family.  Although I will allow bearded hunks and nothing my mom can say will ever stop me.

You Go, Yoga

We’re nearly a month into 2010, and by some extreme stretch of surprise and wonder I have started this year with a big E: exercise!  I woke up on January 4th and felt like going for a jog out of the blue, and this in turn spurred a new interest in yoga.

room oneimages by Sara Murray, courtesy of Inner Space

I found Inner Space Yoga in Gastown, and it was refreshing to enter a studio that is not only incredibly beautiful and warm, but inviting to beginners.  Previous forays into yoga left me feeling dissatisfied, in the dark, and less confident upon leaving a class than when I entered it.  So I wanted to share this new studio with you, and also let you know about their 28 day yoga challenge throughout the month of February.

tea room

Try to complete 28 classes in 28 days in a supportive environment, and celebrate at the end of the month with a delicious potluck with all the other participants.  You’re also up for some great prizes if you manage to get through the entire month.  Registration is just $90 – I figure even if I manage to get to a couple classes a week, registration beats the $20 drop in fee for individual classes so you can’t lose. Email info[at]innerspaceyoga[dot]ca for more details.

Another great new yoga studio in the Gastown hood is Yoga For the People, which is entirely donation-based.  Check out Reno’s One Love classes on Sunday and Wednesday nights and practice to reggae and dub step.  This class sounds like it’s taking off, so get there early.

As a girl who has carried the reputation of not exercising, ever (except for my ridiculously fast walking pace), I am pleasantly surprised that I’ve found two new healthy passions to explore.  I hope sharing these great newer studios in Gastown can inspire you to do the same!

“larry.” goes to Salt Spring

mill exteriorall photos by Matt Timmons

We at Larry Designs had our big trip to Salt Spring Island this week to drop off more raw alpaca fiber, pick up finished yarn, and get another tour of the Gulf Islands Spinning Mill where all the magic happens.

carding machine

roving

spools

This little co-op mill is one of the few independent spinning mills in Canada, so their continued existence is quite an accomplishment and we hope to be working with them for many, many years to come.

2-ply yarns

Lots of new ideas, new materials, and new techniques are coming together for the “larry.” 2010/2011 collection, and this is just the beginning.  Receiving massive skeins of natural and organic alpaca yarn excites me to no end; you just want to dive in and wrap yourself up in its amazingness.  I suppose that’s why I do what I do!

skeins of larry yarn

We stayed at the Bullock Lake Farm guest cottage, which was absolutely beautiful.  After a day of relentless rain, the clouds parted for a short while on Tuesday so we could enjoy a jog through the early morning mist and golden sunshine, with our dogs frolicking by our sides.  Then back to the cottage for farm-fresh eggs and bacon with home-baked bread, followed by a walk down to the lake past old shacks and cabins.  You couldn’t ask for a more perfect trip.

Remember, you can buy “larry.” in Vancouver at Obakki, The Velvet Room Boutique, Body Politic, and through the grace-gallery!

Obakki Foundation

For those of you in Vancouver, you may have noticed that over the holidays Obakki pledged to donate one warm jacket or blanket to a local shelter for every in-store purchase – but now that the madness of Christmas and the New Year is over, the giving doesn’t have to stop there.  Obakki Creative Director and Owner Treana Peake has long been an advocate of human rights and other humanitarian efforts, and has personally traveled to Africa a number of times (read Treana’s blog entries on her most recent trip here.)  The Obakki Foundation was borne of these ventures, and a new fashion collection reflects some of the poignant answers children in orphanages gave when Treana asked them three basic questions: What makes you happy? What makes you sad? What makes you afraid?

racer back tank

women’s racer-back tank

There are a number of ways to support the foundation: you can purchase clothing or accessories at the flagship store in Gastown or online (women’s, men’s, and children’s items available); you can make a monetary donation through the store or online; or you can purchase a pre-packaged first aid or school kit.

rhombus scarf

women’s rhombus-shaped scarf

100% of all proceeds go directly back to Foundation projects.  A shipping container is being sent from Canada to Africa in a few weeks time, so move fast!  Treana is traveling back to Cameroon in May to personally distribute these supplies to where they are needed most.




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