Monday, September 9, 2013

A Visit to Put-In-Bay/South Bass Island (Ohio)

As much as I’ve always been intrigued with islands and geographical points of interest…and despite the fact that I’m from the upper Midwest USA, we’d never been to any of the Lake Erie Islands. 

Among others, we’ve been to Mackinaw Island, the 4 major islands of Hawaii, Vancouver Island, the Isle of Skye, Cape Breton Island, Prince Edward Island, North Carolina’s Outer Banks, South Carolina’s coastal islands including Hilton Head, Georgia’s Sea Islands, Sanibel, the Florida Keys, North Padre Island, the San Juan Islands, Cedar Key, and the South Island of New Zealand.  But we’d never visited this group of islands…despite the fact that we’ve lived within driving distance of them for most of our lives…

The Lake Erie Islands are a chain of islands in Lake Erie. The above photo shows some of them.  In addition to the islands shown above, other major islands include Kelley’s Island and Pelee Island.  There are 26 of them in total.  Most of them are part of Ohio with Pelee Island being the only major island in the group that is part of Ontario Canada.  Many of the islands are large enough that they are popular tourist attractions with car and passenger ferries running from the mainland as well as between some of the islands.  There are also some small airports and numerous private marinas which provide other ways to reach the islands.

Our family took this passenger ferry from Port Clinton Ohio to Put-In-Bay on South Bass Island.  Jet Express II was built in 1992.  It is 98.4 feet long and 28.5 feet wide.  It will carry up to 395 passengers and with its twin V-12 diesel 3600 HP engines, can power the boat at speeds up to 40 MPH. 
Jet Express operates 4 boats, all of similar size and capacity.  Routes are between Port Clinton and Sandusky on the mainland and Put-in-Bay on South Bass Island as well as to Kelley’s Island.  Miller Boat Line operates vehicle/passenger service between the islands and the mainland from their mainland base at Catawba.  They operate 4 mixed use vessels… Another firm operates a small passenger ferry service between South Bass and Middle Bass Island.
For information regarding all of the ferry services to and among Ohio’s Lake Erie Islands, you can go to http://www.travellakeerie.com/ferryboats.htm.
FYI… You can also take a ferry from Sandusky OH to Pelee Island, Ontario Canada.  For more information, go to http://www.ontarioferries.com/index.html.  The vessel used on this route is the MV Jiimaan.  It’s about 200 feet long and it can carry up to 400 passengers and 40 vehicles.

On the way over to Put-in-Bay, we passed this rather distinctive home which is located on the south end of South Bass Island.
Built in 1924 for use by the Ford Motor Company, the Great Lakes freighter 'Benson Ford' was used to transport iron ore and other materials across the Great Lakes for the growing auto company.  The ship was 612 feet long by 62 feet wide.  After more than 50 years of service, the ship was decommissioned and purchased for intended use as a barge.  However, it never sailed again. 
Eventually the company opted for a less conventional use of the ship.  In 1986, the entire forward superstructure of the ship was removed and transported by barge to South Bass Island.  The 62 foot by 59 foot section would be initially used as a 7,000 square foot, four story summer home.  The home included the walnut paneled state rooms, dining room, galley, and passenger lounge designed by Henry Ford for his own pleasure while traversing the Great Lakes on business.
It was later sold again.  The father and son that bought the ship home renamed the ‘ship’ the Benson Ford and have utilized the unique structure for personal use ever since. With recent renovations, the structure includes a garage and massive family room, five bedrooms, five full baths, a dining room, living room, reading room, galley, and the pilot house, which offers spectacular views of the setting sun off the western shores of the island.
For more information as well as interior photos of the home, go to http://shiponthebay.com/.  It has been featured on both HGTV's Extreme Homes and MTV's Extreme Cribs...

South Bass Island is the most popular island…but it’s also the ‘action island’ on the US side of the lake.  Put-in-Bay is also a family spot and the home of “Perry's Victory and International Peace Memorial”, but it is also a very popular spot for partying!  Day trippers make up the bulk of the ferry passengers…and many of those passengers stay in ‘down town’ Put-in-Bay, traversing among the many restaurants and bars. (Several of the bars ban anyone who is under the legal drinking age)

Here we’re following Amy (driving), David II as well as Emmett Lee and David III on down the road toward the Perry Peace Memorial.  The principal method of transportation on South Bass Island is via rented golf carts.  Several services provide this service, some furnishing electric golf cars and others a gasoline motor version.  Four, six and 8-person golf carts are available.
Golf Carts are licensed as motor vehicles on South Bass Island and they’re driven on public roadways just as cars are.  Bicycles and mopeds can also be rented.  In addition, you could bring your car over to the island via Miller Boat Lines…

David III and Emmett Lee posed at the base of Perry’s Peace Memorial with this ‘soldier’.  He was dressed in a uniform copied from those used in the War of 1812 between the USA and Britain.
The Battle of Lake Erie, sometimes called the Battle of Put-in-Bay, was fought on the 10th of September 1813, in Lake Erie off the coast of Ohio during the War of 1812.  Nine vessels of the United States Navy defeated and captured six vessels of  the British Royal Navy.  This ensured American control of the lake for the rest of the war, which in turn allowed the Americans to recover Detroit and win the Battle of the Thames to break up the Indian confederation of Tecumseh.
This was one of the biggest naval battles of the War of 1812.  The British lost 41 killed and 94 wounded. The surviving British crews, including the wounded, numbered 306.  In total, the Americans lost 29 killed and 94 wounded.  For more about this sea battle, go to  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Lake_Erie.

Laurie took this photo of David III, myself, Amy, Emmett Lee and David II at the Perry Peace Memorial.  It was a hot day and we wisely opted not to climb all the way to the top of the monument…
 

Perry's Victory and International Peace Memorial is operated by the National Park Service.  It features a 352 foot tall monument, the world's most massive Doric column.  It was constructed at Put-in-Bay between 1912 to 1915, in order "to inculcate the lessons of international peace by arbitration and disarmament." Beneath the stone floor of the monument lie the remains of three American officers and three British officers.  It is among the tallest monuments in the United States.  Only the Gateway Arch, San Jacinto Monument, and the Washington Monument are taller.  In 2002, a new visitor center was opened.  It depicts the battle and contains various artifacts. The memorial is visited by over 200,000 people each year.

As we cruised from one end of the island to the other, we passed South Bass Island’s airport.  Helicopter and bi-plane rides are available.  We stopped and watched a couple go up in this open-cockpit 1935 Waco bi-wing.  I love the sound of those piston engines!  The price was $160 for 2 persons for 15 minutes.  For more information, go to http://www.putinbaybiplanerides.com/.
The Waco Aircraft Company (WACO) was an aircraft manufacturer located in Troy, Ohio, USA. (The name has nothing to do with Waco TX) Between 1919 and 1947, the company produced a wide range of civilian biplanes.  The company initially started under the name Weaver Aircraft Company of Ohio but changed its name to the Waco Aircraft Company in 1928/29.  For more information as well as a number of photos of Waco airplanes, you can go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waco_Aircraft_Company.

Here’s a photo of our ‘Ohio family’ on the south end of South Bass Island. (Left to right: David II, David III, Amy and Emmett Lee) It’s a happy and loving family, that’s for sure!

The federal government purchased two acres at Parker’s Point, at the extreme southwest tip of the South Bass Island in May 1895.   Unlike the day's typical design of a large lighthouse with a small, detached keepers dwelling, South Bass Island’s Lighthouse consisted of this large, two-and-a-half-story, redbrick dwelling with an attached, twelve-foot-square tower. The tower stood forty-five feet tall when finished and was crowned with a fourth-order, L. Sautter and Cie., Fresnel lens that produced a fixed red light through the use of a ruby chimney in its lamp.  South Bass Island Lighthouse was lit for the first time on July 10, 1897.  Operations ended in about 1959 when the structure and light were replaced by an automated electronic light mounted atop a steel tower…

This is the vehicle ferry boat landing near the south end of the island.  The Miller Boat Line operates these ferry boats.  Pictured here are the ‘William Market’ and the ‘Islander’.  The Islander…to the right…is the smallest of these ferries at about 90 feet long and 38 feet wide.  All of the others are just a touch longer at 96 feet.  The other 2 boats in the company’s fleet are named the ‘Put-in-Bay’ and the ‘South Bass’.

Emmett just had to get in the water!  This is Stone Beach at the South Bass Island State Park and Campground. 

The campground was very busy on this beautiful summer weekend… There are 135 campsites and a few cabins in the park.  The ‘beach’ was busy but with all of the rocks, it wasn’t a great place for wading.  There was also a small dock area and ramp for people to use for small craft.  Kayaks were available for renting…

But…back to reality!  We didn’t take a lot of photos of ‘downtown’ Put-in-Bay.  There were lots of shops, places to eat and bars…lots of bars!  There seemed to be a number of bachelor parties and bridal parties underway in town, plus there were lots of other folks out to have a good time.  The town itself was clean and well maintained… Parking, even for a golf cart, was challenging to say the least!  If I were to return, we’d do it on a weekday…just for a little more peace and relaxation.

Here is Laurie with David III and Emmett Lee… Yes, I finally did take a photo myself!  We’re on the top deck of the passenger ferry just getting ready to head back to the Ohio mainland. 
I was proud of the fact that I talked one very drunk young woman into sitting below deck, i.e., away from us, as 'it would be a smoother ride' and she’d be less likely to hurl, barf or whatever.  As we waited in line, to board she kept saying she needed a bag for the trip back…

Amy captured this sunset photo of Laurie and me as we cruised back into the harbor at Port Clinton Ohio.  It had been a good day!

One final photo… This is the harbor at Port Clinton.  This town of a bit more than 6,000 people is also known as the "Walleye Capital of the World."  In addition to its fishing and boating industries, the town is known for the annual National shooting and small arms matches at neighboring Camp Perry, its proximity to the Lake Erie islands, the Cedar Point amusement park and a number of local wineries.  Port Clinton's transient dockage on the Portage River is a safe harbor for Lake Erie boaters.  Port Clinton is sometimes referred to as "Vacation land" due to the large number of tourists that flock to the area in the summer months.
Just click on any of these photos to enlarge them…
Thanks for taking the time to peruse these many pictures and all of the text!
Take Care, Big Daddy Dave 

Friday, September 6, 2013

Quirky…but Interesting and Excellent!

Continuing our visit with our family in the Cleveland Ohio area, it was time for Sunday brunch.  Amy and David II had planned out this long weekend…and they did a fine job of it too… Laurie and I had no idea what we were about to experience but it definitely turned out to be another foodie and cultural adventure!

This is the Beachland Ballroom and Tavern.  It sure doesn’t grab your eye on first glance…
The Beachland Ballroom was built in 1950 as the Croatian Liberty Home, with the ballroom and tavern now occupying the original structure.  In 1976 the kitchen and back bar area were added.  The Liberty Home was active on many social and political fronts and it was a true Cleveland landmark. 
But where's the Beach?  Actually it's less than a ½ mile north of the Beachland Ballroom…

In fact, one of the nation's best known amusement parks -- Euclid Beach – was right at the north end of E. 156th Street.  Euclid Beach operated from 1894 until 1969 and "Beachland" became the slang name for the whole North Collinwood neighborhood in those days.  On E. 185th St. we still have the "Beachland Branch" of the Post Office as well as hardware stores, dry cleaners and other businesses with the "Beachland" name.  On Lakeshore Blvd. there is even a Beachland Presbyterian Church! 

 
Very little of the former Euclid Beach Park still exists.  The actual "beach" is still there, much of which is now the Euclid Beach State Park, a public swimming area.  As shown above, the old Euclid Beach Park archway entrance still remains, looking out of place and now serving as the entrance to a senior citizen high-rise apartment complex. 

For more information regarding the history of Euclid Beach Park, you can go  to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclid_Beach_Park.

Continuing with our Beachland Ballroom experience... Here's Amy, our grandson Emmett Lee, and David II… We’re getting ready to order brunch.

Ahhh…my namesakes!  This is David II with our other grandson, David III.

Here is Laurie, aka. Nana, and Amy, who is responsible for watching out for and civilizing all 3 of her ‘boys’…

Beachland Ballroom and Tavern is a very quirky place.  Believe it or not, Beachland Ballroom considers itself a top music venue rather than just a tavern and restaurant.  In 2000, this venue became Cleveland's most eclectic music club.  You can see the spotlights on the ceiling which are aimed at the stage area.
More impressive yet is the fact that the Ballroom and Tavern, (two different venues in the same building), have music of one type or another going on all the time!  Taking off on Labor Day, the action during the first week in September was/is as follows:  Tue, Sep 3 | 8 PM (7 PM door) - The Carpenter Ants and Cats On Holiday; Wed, Sep 4 | 8 PM (7 PM door) - Oktoberfest Accordion Extravaganza with Johnny Koenig / Kevin Solecki; Wed, Sep 4 | 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door) - Pearl & The Beard with Jack & The Bear; Thu, Sep 5 | 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door) - J. Roddy Walston & The Business with Taddy Porter; Fri, Sep 6 | 9 PM (8 PM door) – Floodwood featuring Al Schneir & Vinnie Amico of moe plus JP & The Chatfield Boys; Fri, Sep 6 | 9 PM (8 PM door) – Caveman with The Hedgehog's Dilemma: Sat, Sep 7 | 9 PM (8 PM door) - The Dictators NYC F__k You Pay Me with I Love Rich, and; Sat, Sep 7 | 9 PM (8:30 PM door) - Hazard Adams.

Now onto one very eclectic and interesting brunch!  Laurie had the Smoked Salmon and Latkes. ($8.00) Smoked salmon is served on house-made potato pancakes and then the salmon is topped with a poached free-range egg and the dish is served with lemon crème fraiche.  I'd never seen potato pancakes made with hash browns...but it worked! 

This is the Beachland Basic with an order of sausage gravy and a scratch-made buttermilk biscuit. ($6.50 + $5.00) It came with house-made sausage and Stone Oven Siciliano toast.  FYI…Wild Mushroom Gravy is also available.
For those of us who would like a cocktail with our brunch, Beachland Ballroom and Tavern has a nice full page brunch cocktail menu available.  How about a Russian Quaalude with vanilla vodka, Kahlua, Amaretto and Irish cream! ($7.00) Would you prefer a Hot Chocolate or Coffee Drink? ($5.00) Or…how about trying a champagne cocktail, ($5.00), or a Spicy Bloody Mary? ($6.00)

This is a full order of the Southland Ballroom and Tavern’s Deep South Biscuits and Gravy with home fries. ($8.00) Seasonal fruit also accompanies this dish…

This is one of our 2 orders of this offering.  It’s the House-Made Buttermilk Biscuit Sandwich with Fried Chicken and Home Fries. ($6.50) The chicken is buttermilk marinated and the sandwich is served with pickles, whole grain mustard and natural Ohio honey.  FYI…Gluten free biscuits are available.

These are Emmett Lee’s Buckwheat Pancakes. ($8.00) These house-made pancakes are made from locally produced buckwheat and buttermilk and they’re served with seasonal fruit.  They are also accompanied with Ohio maple syrup and a choice of locally smoked bacon, house-made sausage, roasted Portobello mushrooms or the vegetable of the day.

Emmett went with this nice looking bacon as his side…
Other brunch items include: Savory Vegetable Tart du Jour ($8.00); Duck’s Egg Omelet and Toast ($8.00); Vegan Special ($8.50); Eggs Beachland ($9.50); Smoked Salmon Nicoise Salad ($9.00); Chicken or Pinto Bean Chilaquiles ($8.00) and; the North Coast Turkey Sandwich. ($8.50)

This trendy offering is Beachland Ballroom and Tavern’s version of Chicken and Waffles. ($9.50) This is buttermilk fried chicken served over house-made waffles with sides of natural Ohio maple syrup and hot sauce.  FYI…gluten free waffles are available.
We truly enjoyed our brunch and our experience at the Beachland Ballroom and Tavern!  The food was interesting and very good too.  Service was fine despite how busy the place was, the prices were fair and the setting was fun.  This restaurant is worth going out of your way if you’re anywhere in the Cleveland area.
The Beachland Ballroom and Tavern is located at 15711 Waterloo Road in Cleveland Ohio.  They serve lunch, dinner, brunch and lots of music too!  There is even a DJ on Sundays for the brunch event.  Phone: 216-383-1124.  Website: http://www.beachlandballroom.com/.
Just click on any of the food photos to enlarge them to better whet your appetite!
Thanks for stopping by for this family fun and food experience!
Take Care, Big Daddy Dave 

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

First Nature…Then Fine Art!

This was a busy day!  First we had breakfast with David II, David III and Emmett Lee.  Then we perused the exhibits at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History… When we finished that, David II suggested that we might be interested in touring the nearby Cleveland Museum of Art.  It was just across University Circle from the Natural History museum…

(Amy had to work…and unfortunately she missed a great day out with her ‘boys’ and their terrific grandparents!)  

The Cleveland Museum of Art houses a broad based permanent collection of more than 43,000 works of art from around the world.  The museum has remained historically true to the vision of its founders…keeping general admission free to the public.  We appreciate it too!  With its $600 million endowment The Cleveland Museum of Art is one of the wealthiest art museums in the nation.
 

David II, Laurie and Emmett Lee…just being himself…are pictured in the central atrium of the Art Museum.
The museum was founded as a trust in 1913 with an endowment from prominent Cleveland industrialists Hinman Hurlbut, John Huntington and Horace Kelley.  The facility has been expanded several times with the most recent efforts being completed in 2010.  The original building has been tied together with the new east and west wings via the huge enclosed atrium courtyard which is under a soaring glass canopy.   The Cleveland Museum of Arts’ total floor space is now 592,000 square feet! 
Hinman Hurlbut was prominent in both banking and the railroad industry. For more information, go to http://ech.case.edu/cgi/article.pl?id=HHB.  John Huntington made his fortune in oil and shipping.  Check him out at http://ech.case.edu/cgi/article.pl?id=HJ4.  Horace Kelley made his money in real estate.  For more information, go to http://ech.case.edu/cgi/article.pl?id=KH1.
Now…on to a sampling of the exhibits!

This is a ceramic mosaic Muslim prayer niche or mihrab that dates back to the early 1600’s.  These niches are the focal point in the interior of a mosque.  This particular mihrab is roughly 114 inches high, (9.5 feet), by 97” wide. (8.1 feet) The white glaze presents the most important verses from the Qur’an. 

By contrast, this is a stained glass window designed and built by the Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company ca. 1900.  This beautiful window was originally installed in the Hind’s House in Cleveland.  It is 89 inches high, (7.4 feet), by 45 inches wide. (3.75 feet) Laurie and I love Tiffany glass!  For more on Tiffany glass, you can go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiffany_glass.  If you’d like to learn more about Louis Comfort Tiffany, just click on the following link:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Comfort_Tiffany.
 

This painting, (oil on canvas), is entitled ‘A Woman's Work’.  It was completed in 1912 by John Sloan.  He explored social issues more vigorously than most of the painters of his time, portraying working-class urbanites engaged in ordinary activities. He observed this particular scene through a rear window of his Manhattan apartment. Perched on a narrow fire escape, a woman hangs fresh laundry to dry on clotheslines strung between tenements. The labors of American women at the turn of the 1900s were most often confined to the domestic realm.
For more about John Sloan, go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_French_Sloan.

This oil on canvas was painted by Frederic Edwin Church in 1860, just before the Civil War.  It’s entitled ‘Twilight in the Wilderness”.  Church sketched this spectacular view of a blazing sunset over wilderness near Mount Katahdin in Maine, seen during a visit two years before he actually painted the picture.  The painting was completed in his studio in New York City.  Church often extolled the grandeur of pristine American landscape in his work.  His considerable technical skills and clever showmanship contributed to his fame as the premier artist of his generation.  Church was a central figure in the Hudson River School of American landscape painters.  For much more about Frederic Church, just go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederic_Edwin_Church.
 
 

Given current events with the forest fires in California, this painting is very relevant because of the ongoing risk to one of our national treasures.  This oil painting on canvas mounted on a panel-back stretcher is entitled ‘Yosemite Valley’ and it was painted in 1866 by Albert Bierstadt.

 During the summer of 1863, Bierstadt visited Yosemite Valley in California and made numerous sketches. Back in his New York studio, he used them to produce many majestic paintings, including this view of Half Dome, one of Yosemite's most distinctive features. Such scenes thrilled East Coast audiences and helped encourage early movements to save America's natural wonders. In 1864, President Lincoln signed a bill creating the ‘Yosemite Grant’.  This is the first instance of park land being set aside specifically for preservation and public use by action of the U.S. federal government, and it set a precedent for the 1872 creation of Yellowstone as the first national park.  Yosemite became a national park in 1890.
For more about Albert Bierstadt, go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Bierstadt.

The Cleveland Museum of Art has a very large and impressive collection of Medieval Art…ranging from coins, book illustrations, and paintings through tapestry, weapons and armor. This armored rider and horse is positioned in the center of a large gallery.  The armor is from Northern Italy ca. 1575.
A knight depended on his horse both as a weapon and a means of defense. He had to take great care to protect his charger. From the 1100s on, knights first covered their steeds in trappings of fabric and later of mail. By around 1400, full steel plate armor for horses was complete.  The total combined weight of both the man's and horse's armor is 114 pounds. The etched decoration of this armor is of a type that became fashionable in northern Italy during the late 1500s.

Another example of decorative arts can be found in furniture.  This William and Mary style Highboy was built in Massachusetts ca. 1700-1720.  It was constructed from burled maple veneer and it has walnut herringbone bandings.
One of the most notable developments in American furniture around 1700 was the introduction of "highboys"…tall chests of drawers on high stands. These chests, often with bases having elaborately turned legs connected by a framework of stretchers, closely resemble English examples of the late 1600s during the reign of William and Mary.  The decoration consists almost entirely of thin layers, or veneers, of richly patterned wood. These veneers were cut from burls, (tumor like growths on trees), and then carefully assembled and glued to create symmetrical patterns like those seen on the front of this highboy. The brass pulls on the drawers are typical of this period and may be original.

This is the central atrium at the Cleveland Museum of Art.  It is a huge space that ties the new portion of the museum with the original structure!  Even the indoor gardens are works of art… In addition, two sculptures are also displayed…The Age of Bronze by Auguste Rodin (1875 – 1876) and a Hindu image of Ganesha…a popular elephant deity that came from Cambodia. (600 – 800 AD)

This oil painting on fabric by Pierre Auguste Renoir was completed ca. 1890.  The museum has quite a few works by Renoir in their collection.  This painting shows a young country girl offering apples to Renoir's wife, Aline.  The boy in the straw hat may be the artist's nephew, Edmond, but the young girl with the ribbon in her hair has not been identified. The picture was probably completed at Essoyes, in eastern France.
Pierre Auguste Renoir is certainly one of the best known artists and many of his offspring were very creative as well.  For a brief history of this artist and his many famous works of art, just go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre-Auguste_Renoir.

This oil on fabric painting is entitled ‘The Large Plane Trees (Road Menders at Saint-Rémy)’, and it was painted in 1889 by Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh. 
In May 1889, Van Gogh voluntarily committed himself to an asylum near the small town of Saint-Rémy in Provence.  His doctors soon gave him permission to paint on day excursions to surrounding fields. While walking through Saint-Rémy that November, he was impressed by the sight of men repairing a road beneath immense plane trees. "In spite of the cold," he wrote to his brother, "I have gone on working outside till now, and I think it is doing me good and the work too."
Of course, van Gogh is also one of the artists best known to the public… To learn more about him, go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincent_van_Gogh.

This oil on canvas painting entitled “The Harem” was completed by Pablo Picasso in 1906.  This was one of Picasso’s most important paintings from his ‘Rose Period’, (1904-6).  He completed it while in the remote village of Gósol in the Spanish Pyrenees. He based the composition on sketches of his lover, Fernande Olivier, as she combed her hair and bathed.  He was also inspired by J. A. D. Ingres's ‘The Turkish Bath’ that is in the collection of The Louvre in Paris.  Picasso placed Fernande in the context of a harem…
For more on Pablo Picasso and his very interesting and Bohemian lifestyle, you can go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pablo_Picasso.

One last example from the collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art… This is a Native North American Ceremonial Garment/Chilkat Blanket from the late 1800s.  This Tlingit artifact is from the Northwest coast of North America. (Weft twining with cedar bark wrapped with mountain goat hair) Chilkat weaving is a traditional form of weaving practiced by Tlingit, Haida, Tsimshian, and other Northwest Coast peoples of Alaska and British Columbia.  Chilkat blankets are worn by high-ranking tribal members on civic or ceremonial occasions, including dances.
For more on this form of weaving, just go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chilkat_weaving.
 
 

One final photo… Laurie took this picture of David II, David III, Emmett Lee and me as we headed down the escalator at the Art Museum.  Only David III noticed that she was taking the photo...
We really enjoyed our visit to the Cleveland Museum of Art!  The collection is varied and well presented.  The lighting is excellent.  We would recommend a visit to this museum should you find yourself in the Cleveland area.  The Cleveland Museum of Art is open daily.  It’s located at 11150 East Boulevard in Cleveland Ohio.  Phone: 216-421-7350.  Website: http://www.clevelandart.org/.
Just click on any of the photos if you’d like to enlarge them…
Thanks for exploring this extensive art collection with us!
Take Care, Big Daddy Dave
 
 
 
(Sorry about this gap...Can't figure out how to fix it!)
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

Monday, September 2, 2013

Grilled Cheese Anyone? Melt Visit #2

Continuing with our visit to the Cleveland area to see our grandsons and the rest of their family… Following our first class museum experiences, David II took us out to lunch.  He had a place in mind that we’d eaten at previously, only this was a new location for this particularly popular local operation…


This is the Mentor Ohio location for Melt Bar and Grilled.  Laurie and I had visited the first iteration of Melt Bar and Grilled in Lakewood Ohio back in 2010.  At that time, we noted that the place was extremely popular…but we just weren’t impressed.  You can check out our earlier comments on our visit to the original Melt Bar and Grilled if you click on this link: http://bigdaddydavesbitsandpieces.blogspot.com/2010/12/diners-drive-ins-dives-disappointment.html.
You may have noted the reference in my blog link to Guy Fieri’s TV show, “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives”.  Not only has Guy featured this restaurant on his show…but so has Adam Richman on his show, “Man vs. Food”.  Adam won the Melt Challenge, taking on and consuming the restaurant’s monster grilled cheese featuring 13 different cheeses, 3 slices of grilled bread and a pile of hand-cut fries and slaw…actually over 5 lbs. of food!

This is an interior photo that Laurie took at the Mentor Melt Bar and Grilled location.  It is a bright and colorful restaurant with a lot going on visually…

Melt Bar and Grilled was founded by Matt Fish, a sometime musician and professional local chef for 18 years and counting.  Matt had planned to open his own restaurant for quite a while. His concept for Melt—a combination of “comfort food dressed up,” and beer—started from a fairly simple idea…he was always a big grilled cheese fan.  The initial idea evolved from Matt’s observations of different restaurant concepts during his years as a culinary school/restaurant management student, chef and touring musician.
As Matt has described his restaurants, they are “like reliving all your favorite childhood memories again… Only better! The ultimate comfort food fantasy land where all your grilled cheese dreams become a reality!”

This was the Hot Italian…grilled salami, honey ham, pepperoni, sun-dried tomato pesto, roasted garlic, banana peppers and provolone cheese. ($10.50)

This is Melt Bar and Grilled’s 8 oz. cheeseburger/steakburger…with cheddar cheese. ($10.00) It was cooked as requested…medium rare and it was a very nice burger.

This is the Wet Hot Buffalo Chicken sandwich… ($11.00) This is made up with a crispy breaded chicken breast, spicy buffalo sauce, a fresh blue cheese and celery slaw, blue cheese and it comes with a ranch dip.

Emmett Lee isn’t into much variety at this early stage of his life.  This is The Kindergarten…fresh baked bread grilled with American cheese. ($6.00)
If you wanted to 'step out' and try some unusual combinations, Melt Bar and Grilled offers some interesting combos: Chorizo and Potato with fresh ground spicy Mexican sausage, potato hash and sharp cheddar cheese. ($9.00); the Cleveland Cheese Steak consists of slow roasted thin shaved beef, garlic wild mushrooms, provolone, sautéed onions and peppers. ($12.00); The Dude Abides is constructed with homemade meatballs, fried mozzarella cheese sticks, rich marinara, provolone and Romano cheeses. ($12.00), and; Gyro Melt with slow roasted beef and lamb, tzatziki cucumber yogurt sauce, fresh tomato plus sweet onions, feta and muenster cheeses. ($11.00)

This is a better view of the Hot Italian…as two of us ordered the same sandwich.
When we left ‘Melt Bar and Grilled’ this time, we found ourselves a bit more neutral than after our first visit.  We felt that the food was OK, the quantity of food is plentiful, the slaw was quite good, the French fries were just 'so so' and the service was OK… But we still don’t quite understand all the hype.  Our opinion was that our sandwiches were better than during our first visit but I believe that it was because we stayed with more basic creations this time.  As before, the Hot Italian was fine but it still didn’t ‘sing’ to our taste buds.  The ‘Tokyo Tuna Melt’, which had previously disappointed us, was gone from the menu.  Actually, although the sandwiches all included cheese, only Emmett’s lunch was a true grilled cheese sandwich per se.
This location of the Melt Bar and Grilled is located at 7289 Mentor Avenue in Mentor Ohio.  Phone: 440-530-3770.  The company’s website can be found at http://meltbarandgrilled.com/.
Just click on any of the photos to enlarge them…
Thanks for stopping by for a visit!
Take Care, Big Daddy Dave