3.18.2011

Gordon Ramsay's "Kitchen Nightmares" Looking to feature a Ventura County Restaurant

I just received an email from Gordon Ramsay's "Kitchen Nightmares". They are interested in helping revamp a local restaurant and asked if I'd blog about it. Well, sure I will!

Do I believe quick-fix reality shows can save restaurants? Mmmm maybe? They are looking both for volunteer restaurants and for nominations. Who in Ventura County do you think should be visited by Gordon Ramsay?

In my opinion as a foodie, gardener, writer and critic, I believe we have some of the most amazing resources for food here possible in Ventura County and yet? I am not tremendously excited about going out to eat on the whole. I want to see someone have the opportunity to showcase the strengths of what Ventura County has to offer in a new, fresh way. I believe if the show focused on that it could be phenomenal. Particularly so if they really highlight local produce and cuisine and helped a restaurant that was ready have a whole new life. Here is the info they sent...

NOW CASTING!

FOX's hit show "KITCHEN NIGHTMARES"
wants to hear from Los Angeles!


Are you trying to make some green,
but still running in the red?

Is your food not the best it should be?

Or maybe you have a great location,
but it doesn’t seem to bring in many customers?

Call or Email for Information:
Toll Free: 866-226-2226
KitchenNightmares2011@yahoo.com

Download application or apply online at:
www.theconlincompany.com


and for nominations??

Gordon Ramsay needs your help finding his next
Kitchen Nightmare!

Has your favorite restaurant gone bad? Have you tried a new eatery only to discover it doesn't cut the mustard? If so, we need your nomination! FOX's hit show, Kitchen Nightmares is currently searching for new restaurants to be featured in the upcoming season. If you know of a restaurant that desperately needs expert guidance, we want to know about it! Send us the restaurant's name, location and a brief description why you think Gordon Ramsay should take over.

e-mail us at:
KitchenNightmares2011@yahoo.com
or
call the hotline with restaurant info at 1-866-226-2226.

3.14.2011

Nature protects its precious new growth, do you?


"This is the hardest of all: to close the open hand out of love, and keep modest as a giver."
Friedrich Nietzsche

Today on my walk I was struck by the beauty of these cactus blossoms and then by the volume of spikes surround them. I thought all the way home about why cacti have spikes. What exactly are they protecting? Why don't we have spikes?

From researching I learned that the stem and crown of the cactus is its most vulnerable part. It's responsible for moving, storing and processing water and all of its photosynthetic actions used to convert light into food. The flowers of cacti are how they reproduce and imperative to their growth and survival.

On my walk, I kept thinking about the little budding ideas I have in my mind and about how part of me wants to share them with everyone. I have this desire to give away my very best treasures to the world almost even before I can understand them. Sometimes I give them to benign creatures who give them back or advise me to hold onto them and help me grow them. Other times I've given my precious infant concepts to people who put a cloak of negativity around them before they are even fully formed that often impairs or diseases them before they have a chance to produce. Have you determined who in your world is "safe" to share ideas with and who continually damps them down?

If, like a cactus blossom, your budding ideas are imperative to your survival and what you produce in the world, are you careful to guard who you share them with and when? It's time to find your safe people. God did not give us spikes to protect our thoughts and new treasures but he did give us boundaries. I am learning about how to use boundaries kindly, not as a defense against others but more as an offense to allow budding life to grow.

The cactus flower also requires bats and birds to help its pollen move from one part of the plant to another to fully fertilize. So we too at times need helpful others to move our ideas forward. Part of the wisdom I'm trying to learn is when to keep psychological spikes around my vulnerable new growth and when to let others in.

The cactus spikes protect against predators who want to eat its stem and flowers and sabotage its growth but they allow birds and bats to still seek its nectar. Holding our ideas firmly but with an openness that doesn't suffocate and allows the right others in, is a balance. But if we glean from nature, few plants or animals are completely defenseless. Nor are we meant to be.

When you have new ideas, picture the cactus then challenge yourself to become the best protector and grower you can. Just because we weren't given spikes doesn't mean we aren't meant to foster our creative growth. I believe humans were given choices and boundaries, rather than spikes so we'll learn to be discerning.

Some believe you should greet life with a closed fist and protect and fight and hold tight to what's yours, others meet life with an open palm, defenseless, unprotected and yielding to anyone or thing that comes along. There is a time for both, but I offer up the suggestion of the visual of spines, more like a half-open hand that can both protect and be open to the world and pollinators at the right moment.