Sunday, August 30, 2015

Macaron Café -More Than Just Cookies

Looking for a cute place for tea?  Check out Macaron Café. Known for, of course, the French cookie, the macaroons at this cafe have been billed by Zagat as "so authentic they'll transport you to Paris with one bite."  The best part is they're gluten-free and made in NYC.  

Flavors range from basic chocolate and pistachio, to tropical passionfruit and jasmin, to creative sesame tahini and honey lavender.  Feast your eyes on the rainbow colored arrays of cookies and explore the wild variety. 

Chase down the crumbs with a pot of tea.  Choose from herbal and black teas, such as rooibois, green tea, earl grey, and blends like vanilla rooibois.

The cafe also serves breakfast and lunch.  Featuring daily specials, their menu includes croissants, salads, and baguette sandwiches of smoked salmon, chicken, various cheeses, and avocado.  Ingredients are hormone free and organic milk and dairy. 

Seating is limited to stools at the counter by the window or at small tables for groups of 4, maybe 6 at a stretch. 

Locations:
750 Third Avenue
625 Madison Avenue
152 West 36th Street
303 Greenwich Street

More Information:
http://macaroncafe.com/

Monday, January 26, 2015

The Frick Collection


Stroll inside the Frick and inhale the 1900s.  View the private art collection of an industrialist, financier and art patron of the Gilded age in his former mansion. 

While a few alterations and additions were made to Henry Clay Frick's residence to render it a public gallery, the old rooms retain the original decor complete with moldings on the walls and ceilings which are adorned with gold leaf.  The living room, wholly preserved from Frick's time, even has the eighteenth century French furniture arranged as it was then.  The original Persian carpet lies beneath the table in the center of the room, dark mahogany-curtains frame the windows,  El Greco's St Jerome graces the wall above the fireplace, and paintings by Masters such as Bellini, Titian and Holbein dot the walls.     

In the library, the musky scent of old leather from the encyclopedias and tomes of art permeate the room and embrace the visitor; antique vases are displayed on the cadenza, and the dark-paneled walls are punctuated with masterpieces from the British school.  The vast West Gallery with furniture dating from the Italian Renaissance could easily be a wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  Formerly the Ballroom, the hall had been turned into a private gallery during Frick's time.


Many of the alterations made to the mansion were seamless.  The covered courtyard in the middle of the house, reminiscent of Moorish architecture, used to be an open carriage court.  Now it's a delightful resting area for tired visitors to refresh themselves in soothing greenery.  And the previously open walkway off the 5th Avenue garden was walled off with glass and converted into the Portico Gallery.  At the time of viewing busts by Houdon and Clodion, late eighteenth century French sculptors, displayed there gleamed in the slanting afternoon sun.

Although the first floor of the mansion is accessible, the bedrooms upstairs accessed via a gracefully curved ornate staircase are closed to the public, as are the kitchens in the basement.  Both floors, however, are used by the staff.

Visiting exhibitions at the Frick are representational art, masterpieces and classics, to be displayed in harmony with the mansion's aesthetic.  The Frick takes great pride in its minimalist exhibitions and featured exhibits can showcase only one or two works of art.  At the time of visiting, the museum's widely publicized El Greco exhibit consisted of roughly three paintings. 

There are docent-led tours of the museum free with admission, as well as an auditorium with a video loop providing information about Frick, his family and the museum.

Architecture, sculptures, paintings and antiques, there is something for almost everyone at the Frick.  

More information:  
http://www.frick.org/