Tag Archives: The Head

Feasting Before Fasting

If we drive to Buffalo for fresh paczki, can we justify a trip to NOLA for King Cake?

You probably already know it’s Fat Tuesday, the last hurrah of fatty feasting before the Lenten fast begins on Ash Wednesday. But you might not know it’s also Paczki Day!

If you’re of Polish descent or from a town with a strong Polish community, you’ve likely been celebrating Paczki Day long before I discovered the tradition. For the rest of you, dear readers, it breaks out like this: if you’re celebrating Mardi Gras, you eat King Cake. If you’re observing Paczki Day, you munch on paczki — Polish pastry filled with fruit preserves.

This year, we decided to observe both celebrations with a King Cake from Baker St. Bakery and “buttercream” paczki (pronounced “POONCH-key”) from a local grocery store.

While we enjoyed our treats, we found the King Cake a little underwhelming in the flavor department. And although the boxed paczki included some lore via a note from Herbert Holinko, the fellow who helped start Cincinnati’s Paczki Day tradition, they were no pre-feast a high note.

So, the consensus around here is that next year we’ll give making our own King Cake a stab. And since even the wonderful Polska Chata here in Rochester has their paczki shipped in from NYC, we’ll schedule a Buffalo run to Mazurek’s Bakery to give fresh paczki a try. I hear you can get paczki at Mazurek’s year-round if you visit on the right day!

Head Update

I finished The Head! The Headache was probably the most complex of the inserts, and it’s not quite firing on all cylinders. But I am resisting the instructions to “retire to a darkened room with a couple of aspirin” and instead beginning work on a paper maneki-neko.

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Visions

Wind me up!

Get on the bus!

Get on the bus!

The American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore could be just about the coolest museum I’ve ever visited. They have so many unusual pieces — there’s a surprise around every corner. The art shown here is all “produced by self-taught individuals, usually without formal training, whose works arise from an innate personal vision that revels foremost in the creative act itself,” according to their website. If you’re looking for a little creative inspiration, this place is a must-see.

Here are some of the items that were on display during my visit:

A 10-foot-tall sculpture of Divine.

  • A school bus covered in mirror mosaic.
  • A room full of delightful automata (warning: sound at the link).
  • A hand-worked crochet horse dress.
  • A huge mandala made of colorful paper plates.

The whole museum is full of wonders, plus there is an awesome gift shop. I only wish I lived nearer so I could visit more often.

I got to thinking about the museum again because I have been working on a paper automata sculpture that turns out to have been created by one of the artists featured in the automata exhibit. I had given Paul Spooner’s “Museum of the Mind: Build Your Own Thinking Machine from 192 Pieces of Paper” a go some years back, but didn’t quite finish it up. I’ll keep you posted on my progress this time around.

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